Blip
Calculated Risk beat me to this: the economists at Goldman Sachs are now predicting 5.8 percent growth in the fourth quarter. But they also say that the headline number will be highly misleading: two-thirds of the growth will be an inventory bounce, with final demand growing only 2 percent. In short, it will be a blip.
CR does miss one small trick, however: he asks when we last saw growth that high combined with rising unemployment, and says 1981. Thats true. However, the last time we saw an initial report of 5.8 percent growth combined with rising unemployment is much more recent: the first quarter of 2002. The quarters growth was later revised down, but at the time there was much unwarranted celebration (unemployment didnt peak until summer 2003).
So here comes the blip. Curb your enthusiasm.
dave is ok said:I think Coakley still wins in MA. This is the exact same situation as in NY-23 where the republicans are assuming victory and some grand rebuttal of Obama's policies which will not happen.
The one thing I don't understand is how Scott Brown can vote for Romney's health care "reform" which was basically a mandate + tax fine for people without insurance and not vote for the very very similar plan in the Senate. He's a hypocrite.
There is certainly a lot of hype around Brown, but the race getting as popular as it did probably hurt him a lot more than it hurt Coakley.cartoon_soldier said:Politicians take positions on issues based on what they think will get them Elected.
Currently, I think Dems will lose MA.
dave is ok said:I think Coakley still wins in MA. This is the exact same situation as in NY-23 where the republicans are assuming victory and some grand rebuttal of Obama's policies which will not happen.
The one thing I don't understand is how Scott Brown can vote for Romney's health care "reform" which was basically a mandate + tax fine for people without insurance and not vote for the very very similar plan in the Senate. He's a hypocrite.
loosus said:Here is what a fucking "jobs bill" looks like:
--Start finding real, substantial ways of getting the currency of the United States more in-line with that of other nations to curb the absolutely massive exodus of jobs to other nations. I can understand a nation having cheaper labor on a level playing field, but it doesn't make sense that nations can pay their workers $1.50 a day and have them live off of it, whereas in the U.S., $7.50 an hour won't cover the basic necessities.
While the standards of living may be less (substantially less in some of the extraordinarily less-developed countries), very rarely is the difference 42 times (that's the difference between $0.18 an hour and $7.50 an hour). Good luck living off $7.50 an hour in the United States even if you live in a mud hut and no entertainment -- much less $0.18 an hour.Byakuya769 said:Have you ever visited any developing countries to see how people are living off of $1.50 a day? Because the way you're framing your solution seems extremely naive.
Diablos said:I wonder what our boy charlequin thinks about the latest polling developments.
schuelma said:Question for Northeast/Mass dems- is Coakley the best Mass. dems could do?
Tamanon said:From all I've read of the guy, I actually wouldn't be completely surprised if he was still a 60th vote.
GhaleonEB said:Diablos is as bad if not worse than all those labeled with "Chicken Little" during the election. :lol
dave is ok said:The one thing I don't understand is how Scott Brown can vote for Romney's health care "reform" which was basically a mandate + tax fine for people without insurance and not vote for the very very similar plan in the Senate.
C'mon man.Sanjuro Tsubaki said:Still debating going out and voting in few days. For people not in the area though, Brown is ALL over the place in terms of adverts, signs, and word of mouth. Practically everyone I know has asked me if I'm voting for him and he is getting huge support on the local radio stations. Get ready for an upset.
This, Bart, is a crazy person.drakesfortune said:Exact same thing except that the Republican is a Republican, and not a "Conservative Party" candidate where the Republican dropped out two days before the election. Just that SMALL, itty...BITTY difference.
Oh and that means nothing right? I mean, the Republican, combined with the conservative party candidate beat the Democrat. They just split the vote. Kind of like Nader in 2000 with Al Gore.
I love all of the justification and rationalization going on in this thread. The excuses are mounting.
Coakley was over 30% ahead in the polls two months ago.
It's Massachusetts! There hasn't been a Republican senator in over three decades in the state. There is NO state wide Republican holding a SINGLE office in the state, no congressman, no nothing. ALL Democrats. This is TEDDY KENNEDY's seat for FUCK'S SAKE! This race is being fought based on health care reform, Teddy Kennedy's MAIN ISSUE FOR HIS ENTIRE CAREER!
Look, I'm with you guys, I don't think a Republican can win in MA. I don't think Brown will win. I sure hope he does. But I don't think he will. Even so, that this is a race, in the bluest of blue states, that ought to tell you SOMETHING! This is like Obama winning Alabama.
I wish you guys would understand the situation here. The longer Democrats continue to deny gravity itself, the worse it will be for us. We need a more moderate, balanced state of government. These wild swings from super conservative to super liberal governments are BAD. We need a balanced government. Currently we have the most imbalanced government seen in 70 years. THIS is why MA just may fall to Republicans. Most people recognize that this crazy imbalance and this train wreck of a Democrat super majority is HORRIBLE for the country. It's horrible for everyone. Nobody should have that much power.
We need slow, responsible reforms. We do not need the society ripped apart further in the midst of an economic disaster. This is why there is a race at all in MA.
People in this thread sound desperate to explain away how a Republican might win in MA. The answer is the obvious one. It's not the Rube Goldberg machine you're trying to build to explain it away. It's plainly obvious that even in MA they realize that what's going on right now in Washington is immoral, wrong, and bad for everyone.
You should ALL be praying that Brown wins. It is the very best thing that could happen to Democrats. It would give them an out on this horrid bill. They could blame it all on Brown, get out, and recover. Let's be honest, Obama requires a foil. He needs someone to blame his failures on. Blaming Bush for every single problem the man has is not washing with people anymore, and Obama loves blaming people for everything. He accepts ZERO responsibility for ANYTHING. He hates responsibility. Loves blame. It's his best game. So for him to finally have someone to blame things on is something he needs more than anything right now. Democrats will get the seat back in six years, Democrat losses in 2010 will be limited, and this horrid health bill will die. It's a win, win, win for Democrats.
AniHawk said:This, Bart, is a crazy person.
Averon said:Preview of the final PPP poll
http://publicpolicypolling.blogspot.com/2010/01/what-were-seeing-in-massachusetts-week.html
The more I read about this race the more I'm convinced Coakely is just a bad candidate.
What's the point? I've voted for Bush and McCain. I'M IN MASSACHUSETTS! This is the first in the history of me being eligible to vote where there looks like there will be a different outcome.Aaron Strife said:C'mon man.
AniHawk said:This, Bart, is a crazy person.
thefit said:I didn't want to respond because well he sounds like a crazy person but yeah this dude is ranting like a mad man but I'm gonna give it a pass since its Saturday and like me he's probably had a few beers already:lol
Sanjuro Tsubaki said:What's the point? I've voted for Bush and McCain. I'M IN MASSACHUSETTS! This is the first in the history of me being eligible to vote where there looks like there will be a different outcome.
I don't think you understand Massachusetts very well.thefit said:Oh that explains your claim that all the radio stations are endorsing brown. :lol
drakesfortune said:That's true! But I'm pretty excited for the first time since 04. As a conservative I've felt beat down since 04, almost literally since that election ended. It's been bad news. I feel very excited about this year. I'm engaged and excited for the first time in 6 years.
Sanjuro Tsubaki said:I don't think you understand Massachusetts very well.
drakesfortune said:We WILL see. If Brown wins, I'm guessing that you will need to say that phrase and look in the mirror. It isn't me that's out of touch right now.
I don't lean to the right far or at all.thefit said:You just said every radio station is going for brown and you point out you have right leanings I'm guessing all the dials on your radio point to the right or are affiliated to each other and/or have been advertised by Brown. Thats not new or groundbreaking thats every cit/state every election year.
Sanjuro Tsubaki said:I don't lean to the right far or at all.
Democrats ALWAYS win here. I mainly listen to sports radio, however the morning show (which is all politics at this point) and the later shows get into this talk. Republicans exist heavily around here but either they don't show up to vote or Dems who love to complain. It's very backwards and odd.
:lolthefit said:I stopped at "sports radio"
drakesfortune said:We WILL see. If Brown wins, I'm guessing that you will need to say that phrase and look in the mirror. It isn't me that's out of touch right now.
And Dorgan was a bad candidate too, right? So are all of the POPULAR moderate dems who have bowed out as a result of the tsunami headed their way. You can blame it on Coakley, but before today she was touted as a well respected, honorable woman.
No you are ALL throwing her under the bus. Just like Obama. Just like that lawyer (can't recall the name) that Obama leaked to death, destroyed his reputation etc...
Whatever, we'll see. I'm feeling a bit more confident about 2010 than most of you. If I'm not...well, ha, we'll see. I was the first to admit that Republicans were going to get DESTROYED last year and in 06. Denying reality didn't help those that tried to do it last year. It only made it worse.
I repeat, we need a more moderate government. We need these massive swings to stop. We need stability, a strong opposition, and compromise. COMPROMISE!
reilo said:I remember back in the 2008 election that the national media would call the Obama/McCain election to be in a "statistical dead heat" when Obama was up a good 4 points in the polls. If you are relying on the national media to gauge interest on a special election that had a democrat senator in that seat for thirty plus years, then you are doing it wrong.
Sanjuro Tsubaki said::lol
Clearly you have a much better idea about everything here than I do.
I was just kidding. You really don't understand. I'm sorry.thefit said:Clearly.
Sanjuro Tsubaki said:I was just kidding. You really don't understand. I'm sorry.
You have roughly the same amount of joy in life as Coakley. That is the problem here damnit.thefit said:I stopped at "clearly".
drakesfortune said:And Dorgan was a bad candidate too, right? So are all of the POPULAR moderate dems who have bowed out as a result of the tsunami headed their way. You can blame it on Coakley, but before today she was touted as a well respected, honorable woman.
No you are ALL throwing her under the bus. Just like Obama. Just like that lawyer (can't recall the name) that Obama leaked to death, destroyed his reputation etc...
Whatever, we'll see. I'm feeling a bit more confident about 2010 than most of you. If I'm not...well, ha, we'll see. I was the first to admit that Republicans were going to get DESTROYED last year and in 06. Denying reality didn't help those that tried to do it last year. It only made it worse.
I repeat, we need a more moderate government. We need these massive swings to stop. We need stability, a strong opposition, and compromise. COMPROMISE!
The Chosen One said:The leadership is weak. Max Baucus, Ben Nelson, Leiberman, Landru (sp?), and Snow successfully ran out the clock this past fall with the healthcare bill. But just maybe the leadership (including the WH) might grow some balls if they lose their super-majority.
The problem is the rules of the caucus, which I have no idea whether Reid can even change or if it has to be a caucus vote. The GOP leadership can punish its membership by yanking committee chairmanships on a moments notice, which tends to keep them in line. Reid cannot, and really has no tools to herd his caucus along other than to ask nicely. The seniority system drives it all.MightyKAC said:That has ALWAYS been my problem with Democrats. Since as far back as I can remember they have lack the leadership/conviction/will to get anything meaningful done that thier Republican opposition is pretty much known for.
WickedAngel said:The Democrats have never had a "supermajority" in the Senate. This has already been discussed a dozen times already; the Blue Dogs might as well be Republicans so far as movement on progressive issues goes.
Having the "D" by your name doesn't make you a Democrat.
WickedAngel said:It's beyond absurd to assert that I'm not a Democrat because a handful of Democrats are bogging everything down.
The party at large isn't the problem.
empty vessel said:That's ridiculous. The party at large isn't doing what you want. Is it?
You can call yourself whatever you want, but why bother? It's silly to pick a team and pretend that team is something other than what it plainly is.
MightyKAC said:The Democrats are a team?
When did this happen?
A collective entity perhaps but the Democratic party in power right now can hardly be considered a team. A team is a group of like minded individuals that work together to accomplish a common goal. What we're seeing right now are folk who claim to be Democrats but are following very few of the actual core ideals.empty vessel said:That's what a political party is. A collective entity. This isn't some newfangled political theory.
If you only mean to imply that Democrats are dysfunctional, that's all well and good, but the point stands.