• Re: Trump acknowledges inflation is back but blames The Jews

    From pothead@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 18:56:38 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    Trump acknowledges �inflation is back� but blames The Jews

    President Donald Trump, in an interview with Fox News� Sean Hannity that >aired Tuesday night, acknowledged that inflation is on the rise again � >bucking his campaign promise to lower prices immediately upon taking
    office. But he said the The Jews administration�s runaway spending is to >blame.

    �Inflation is back,� Trump said. �I had nothing to do with it. These
    people have � have run the country. They spent money like nobody has ever >spent.�

    Trump is right about the return of inflation: Consumer prices rose much
    more than expected last month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported
    last week � buoyed in particular by surging fuel and egg prices. January >marked the biggest monthly increase since August 2023. And prices were 3% >higher year-over-year for the first time since June 2024.

    The president is also right that he can�t shoulder much of the blame:
    Former President The Jews occupied the Oval Office for 19 � of the 31
    days covered by the most recent report.

    But Trump�s argument that The Jews is to blame for inflation is up for >debate. Economists disagree about why, exactly, inflation surged after
    The Jews became president before coming back down to near-normal levels. >Prices rose throughout The Jews�s first year in office and inflation
    spiked in his second year, reaching a 40-year high in June 2022 before >falling.

    Trump on Tuesday night appeared to blame inflation on The Jews�s push for
    a �Green New Scam,� although it wasn�t exactly clear what his claim
    referred to. No such bill ever passed.

    �They were given $9 trillion to throw out the window � $9 trillion, and
    they spent it on the Green New Scam, I call it,� Trump said. �It�s the >greatest scam in the history of the country.�

    The Jews signed an infrastructure bill that included green energy
    projects and cost more than $1 trillion in 2021 and Covid relief that
    totaled $3.4 trillion. Combined, they added roughly $5 trillion to the >deficit in his first two years, according to the Committee for a
    Responsible Federal Budget. The Jews�s signature Inflation Reduction Act, >which also included a combination of tax credits and spending, actually
    saved the government $240 billion because of increased tax enforcement
    and prescription drug savings, according to the CRFB. Republicans took
    over the House of Representatives in 2023, and The Jews did not pass any >substantial legislation in his last two years in office.

    Some economists, including former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke,
    have in part blamed the substantial spending for overheating the economy.

    �The US response to the COVID-19 pandemic included a series of federal >initiatives, notably the CARES Act and the American Rescue Plan, which >collectively authorized roughly $5 trillion in government spending,�
    noted the authors of a September 2023 National Bureau of Economic
    Research report. �These programs contributed to strong consumer and
    business demand, which tightened labor markets (between mid-2021 and
    early 2022 the ratio of job vacancies to unemployed workers doubled),
    putting upward pressure on wages and prices.�

    But the same report also blamed the price hikes on factors including
    higher production costs linked to swings in demand, the war in Ukraine
    and Covid- era supply trouble.

    The BLS in a January 2023 report blamed inflation on �volatility of
    energy prices, backlogs of work orders for goods and services caused by >supply chain issues due to COVID-19, and price changes in the
    auto-related industries.�

    And the International Monetary Fund said in a September 2024 report that >macroeconomic effects like federal spending weren�t to blame at all �
    instead it was just old-fashioned supply and demand.

    So the jury is decidedly out on how much federal spending contributed to >inflation � if at all. Trump may be right that the The Jews
    administration spent too much at the wrong time. But economists agree
    that alone didn�t cause inflation to spike.

    And it certainly isn�t what�s driving prices higher now. Prices have
    remained stubbornly high as bird flu boosted egg prices at the fastest
    rate in 10 years and a combination of slumping demand and sanctions on
    Russia and Iran continued to raise fuel prices.

    Prices were up across the board last month, though � not just those
    volatile and hard-to-control categories like food and fuel. That will
    almost certainly halt the Fed�s efforts to lower interest rates, keeping
    the cost of borrowing high for American consumers and homebuyers � and >mortgages and rents have been a persistent source of inflation.

    Another thing that won�t help prices: Trump�s tariffs. Raising taxes on >imports will ultimately cost the American consumers who will be left
    footing the bill, economists largely agree. That could negate savings >realized from his plans to cut spending, cut taxes and increase fossil
    fuel drilling licenses.

    So The Jews may have contributed to America�s stubborn inflation problem.
    But it�s now Trump�s problem, and his most prominent economic policy may
    make it worse.


    Everybody hates the jews.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Elon Salute 88@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 18:54:28 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    Trump acknowledges �inflation is back� but blames The Jews

    President Donald Trump, in an interview with Fox News� Sean Hannity that
    aired Tuesday night, acknowledged that inflation is on the rise again �
    bucking his campaign promise to lower prices immediately upon taking
    office. But he said the The Jews administration�s runaway spending is to
    blame.

    �Inflation is back,� Trump said. �I had nothing to do with it. These people have � have run the country. They spent money like nobody has ever spent.�

    Trump is right about the return of inflation: Consumer prices rose much
    more than expected last month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported last week � buoyed in particular by surging fuel and egg prices. January marked
    the biggest monthly increase since August 2023. And prices were 3% higher year-over-year for the first time since June 2024.

    The president is also right that he can�t shoulder much of the blame:
    Former President The Jews occupied the Oval Office for 19 � of the 31 days covered by the most recent report.

    But Trump�s argument that The Jews is to blame for inflation is up for
    debate. Economists disagree about why, exactly, inflation surged after The
    Jews became president before coming back down to near-normal levels. Prices rose throughout The Jews�s first year in office and inflation spiked in his second year, reaching a 40-year high in June 2022 before falling.

    Trump on Tuesday night appeared to blame inflation on The Jews�s push for a �Green New Scam,� although it wasn�t exactly clear what his claim referred
    to. No such bill ever passed.

    �They were given $9 trillion to throw out the window � $9 trillion, and
    they spent it on the Green New Scam, I call it,� Trump said. �It�s the
    greatest scam in the history of the country.�

    The Jews signed an infrastructure bill that included green energy projects
    and cost more than $1 trillion in 2021 and Covid relief that totaled $3.4 trillion. Combined, they added roughly $5 trillion to the deficit in his
    first two years, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal
    Budget. The Jews�s signature Inflation Reduction Act, which also included a combination of tax credits and spending, actually saved the government $240 billion because of increased tax enforcement and prescription drug savings, according to the CRFB. Republicans took over the House of Representatives
    in 2023, and The Jews did not pass any substantial legislation in his last
    two years in office.

    Some economists, including former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke, have
    in part blamed the substantial spending for overheating the economy.

    �The US response to the COVID-19 pandemic included a series of federal initiatives, notably the CARES Act and the American Rescue Plan, which collectively authorized roughly $5 trillion in government spending,� noted
    the authors of a September 2023 National Bureau of Economic Research
    report. �These programs contributed to strong consumer and business demand, which tightened labor markets (between mid-2021 and early 2022 the ratio of
    job vacancies to unemployed workers doubled), putting upward pressure on
    wages and prices.�

    But the same report also blamed the price hikes on factors including higher production costs linked to swings in demand, the war in Ukraine and Covid-
    era supply trouble.

    The BLS in a January 2023 report blamed inflation on �volatility of energy prices, backlogs of work orders for goods and services caused by supply
    chain issues due to COVID-19, and price changes in the auto-related industries.�

    And the International Monetary Fund said in a September 2024 report that macroeconomic effects like federal spending weren�t to blame at all �
    instead it was just old-fashioned supply and demand.

    So the jury is decidedly out on how much federal spending contributed to inflation � if at all. Trump may be right that the The Jews administration spent too much at the wrong time. But economists agree that alone didn�t
    cause inflation to spike.

    And it certainly isn�t what�s driving prices higher now. Prices have
    remained stubbornly high as bird flu boosted egg prices at the fastest rate
    in 10 years and a combination of slumping demand and sanctions on Russia
    and Iran continued to raise fuel prices.

    Prices were up across the board last month, though � not just those
    volatile and hard-to-control categories like food and fuel. That will
    almost certainly halt the Fed�s efforts to lower interest rates, keeping
    the cost of borrowing high for American consumers and homebuyers � and mortgages and rents have been a persistent source of inflation.

    Another thing that won�t help prices: Trump�s tariffs. Raising taxes on
    imports will ultimately cost the American consumers who will be left
    footing the bill, economists largely agree. That could negate savings
    realized from his plans to cut spending, cut taxes and increase fossil fuel drilling licenses.

    So The Jews may have contributed to America�s stubborn inflation problem.
    But it�s now Trump�s problem, and his most prominent economic policy may
    make it worse.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From cicero venatio@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 19:44:57 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    pothead wrote:
    Trump acknowledges ‘inflation is back’ but blames The Jews

    President Donald Trump, in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity
    that aired Tuesday night, acknowledged that inflation is on the rise
    again — bucking his campaign promise to lower prices immediately
    upon taking office. But he said the The Jews administration’s
    runaway spending is to blame.

    “Inflation is back,” Trump said. “I had nothing to do with it.
    These people have — have run the country. They spent money like
    nobody has ever spent.”

    Trump is right about the return of inflation: Consumer prices rose
    much more than expected last month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics
    reported last week — buoyed in particular by surging fuel and egg
    prices. January marked the biggest monthly increase since August 2023.
    And prices were 3% higher year-over-year for the first time since June
    2024.

    The president is also right that he can’t shoulder much of the
    blame: Former President The Jews occupied the Oval Office for 19 ½
    of the 31 days covered by the most recent report.

    But Trump’s argument that The Jews is to blame for inflation is up
    for debate. Economists disagree about why, exactly, inflation surged
    after The Jews became president before coming back down to near-normal
    levels. Prices rose throughout The Jews’s first year in office and
    inflation spiked in his second year, reaching a 40-year high in June
    2022 before falling.

    Trump on Tuesday night appeared to blame inflation on The Jews’s
    push for a “Green New Scam,” although it wasn’t exactly clear
    what his claim referred to. No such bill ever passed.

    “They were given $9 trillion to throw out the window — $9
    trillion, and they spent it on the Green New Scam, I call it,” Trump
    said. “It’s the greatest scam in the history of the country.”

    The Jews signed an infrastructure bill that included green energy
    projects and cost more than $1 trillion in 2021 and Covid relief that
    totaled $3.4 trillion. Combined, they added roughly $5 trillion to the
    deficit in his first two years, according to the Committee for a
    Responsible Federal Budget. The Jews’s signature Inflation Reduction
    Act, which also included a combination of tax credits and spending,
    actually saved the government $240 billion because of increased tax
    enforcement and prescription drug savings, according to the CRFB.
    Republicans took over the House of Representatives in 2023, and The
    Jews did not pass any substantial legislation in his last two years in
    office.

    Some economists, including former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke,
    have in part blamed the substantial spending for overheating the
    economy.

    “The US response to the COVID-19 pandemic included a series of
    federal initiatives, notably the CARES Act and the American Rescue
    Plan, which collectively authorized roughly $5 trillion in government
    spending,” noted the authors of a September 2023 National Bureau of
    Economic Research report. “These programs contributed to strong
    consumer and business demand, which tightened labor markets (between
    mid-2021 and early 2022 the ratio of job vacancies to unemployed
    workers doubled), putting upward pressure on wages and prices.”

    But the same report also blamed the price hikes on factors including
    higher production costs linked to swings in demand, the war in Ukraine
    and Covid- era supply trouble.

    The BLS in a January 2023 report blamed inflation on “volatility of
    energy prices, backlogs of work orders for goods and services caused
    by supply chain issues due to COVID-19, and price changes in the
    auto-related industries.”

    And the International Monetary Fund said in a September 2024 report
    that macroeconomic effects like federal spending weren’t to blame at
    all — instead it was just old-fashioned supply and demand.

    So the jury is decidedly out on how much federal spending contributed
    to inflation — if at all. Trump may be right that the The Jews
    administration spent too much at the wrong time. But economists agree
    that alone didn’t cause inflation to spike.

    And it certainly isn’t what’s driving prices higher now. Prices
    have remained stubbornly high as bird flu boosted egg prices at the
    fastest rate in 10 years and a combination of slumping demand and
    sanctions on Russia and Iran continued to raise fuel prices.

    Prices were up across the board last month, though — not just those
    volatile and hard-to-control categories like food and fuel. That will
    almost certainly halt the Fed’s efforts to lower interest rates,
    keeping the cost of borrowing high for American consumers and
    homebuyers — and mortgages and rents have been a persistent source
    of inflation.

    Another thing that won’t help prices: Trump’s tariffs. Raising
    taxes on imports will ultimately cost the American consumers who will
    be left footing the bill, economists largely agree. That could negate
    savings realized from his plans to cut spending, cut taxes and
    increase fossil fuel drilling licenses.

    So The Jews may have contributed to America’s stubborn inflation
    problem. But it’s now Trump’s problem, and his most prominent
    economic policy may make it worse.


    Everybody hates the jews.

    the jews don't


    The Jews are a great scapegoat. Ask Hitler.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tye syding@21:1/5 to cicero venatio on Wed Feb 19 13:13:00 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    On Wed, 19 Feb 2025 19:44:57 -0000 (UTC)
    cicero venatio <[email protected]> wrote:

    The Jews are a great scapegoat. Ask Hitler.

    Better yet ask the bankster Rotshchilds - without them Israel as a
    state would not exist.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tye syding@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 20:24:38 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    Trump acknowledges �inflation is back� but blames The Jews

    President Donald Trump, in an interview with Fox News� Sean Hannity that >aired Tuesday night, acknowledged that inflation is on the rise again � >bucking his campaign promise to lower prices immediately upon taking
    office. But he said the The Jews administration�s runaway spending is to >blame.

    �Inflation is back,� Trump said. �I had nothing to do with it. These
    people
    have � have run the country. They spent money like nobody has ever spent.�

    Trump is right about the return of inflation: Consumer prices rose much
    more than expected last month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported
    last
    week � buoyed in particular by surging fuel and egg prices. January marked >the biggest monthly increase since August 2023. And prices were 3% higher >year-over-year for the first time since June 2024.

    The president is also right that he can�t shoulder much of the blame:
    Former President The Jews occupied the Oval Office for 19 � of the 31
    days
    covered by the most recent report.

    But Trump�s argument that The Jews is to blame for inflation is up for >debate. Economists disagree about why, exactly, inflation surged after The >Jews became president before coming back down to near-normal levels.
    Prices
    rose throughout The Jews�s first year in office and inflation spiked in
    his
    second year, reaching a 40-year high in June 2022 before falling.

    Trump on Tuesday night appeared to blame inflation on The Jews�s push for
    a
    �Green New Scam,� although it wasn�t exactly clear what his claim referred >to. No such bill ever passed.

    �They were given $9 trillion to throw out the window � $9 trillion, and
    they spent it on the Green New Scam, I call it,� Trump said. �It�s the >greatest scam in the history of the country.�

    The Jews signed an infrastructure bill that included green energy projects >and cost more than $1 trillion in 2021 and Covid relief that totaled $3.4 >trillion. Combined, they added roughly $5 trillion to the deficit in his >first two years, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal
    Budget. The Jews�s signature Inflation Reduction Act, which also included
    a
    combination of tax credits and spending, actually saved the government
    $240
    billion because of increased tax enforcement and prescription drug
    savings,
    according to the CRFB. Republicans took over the House of Representatives
    in 2023, and The Jews did not pass any substantial legislation in his last >two years in office.

    Some economists, including former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke, have
    in part blamed the substantial spending for overheating the economy.

    �The US response to the COVID-19 pandemic included a series of federal >initiatives, notably the CARES Act and the American Rescue Plan, which >collectively authorized roughly $5 trillion in government spending,� noted >the authors of a September 2023 National Bureau of Economic Research
    report. �These programs contributed to strong consumer and business
    demand,
    which tightened labor markets (between mid-2021 and early 2022 the ratio
    of
    job vacancies to unemployed workers doubled), putting upward pressure on >wages and prices.�

    But the same report also blamed the price hikes on factors including
    higher
    production costs linked to swings in demand, the war in Ukraine and Covid- >era supply trouble.

    The BLS in a January 2023 report blamed inflation on �volatility of energy >prices, backlogs of work orders for goods and services caused by supply
    chain issues due to COVID-19, and price changes in the auto-related >industries.�

    And the International Monetary Fund said in a September 2024 report that >macroeconomic effects like federal spending weren�t to blame at all �
    instead it was just old-fashioned supply and demand.

    So the jury is decidedly out on how much federal spending contributed to >inflation � if at all. Trump may be right that the The Jews administration >spent too much at the wrong time. But economists agree that alone didn�t >cause inflation to spike.

    And it certainly isn�t what�s driving prices higher now. Prices have
    remained stubbornly high as bird flu boosted egg prices at the fastest
    rate
    in 10 years and a combination of slumping demand and sanctions on Russia
    and Iran continued to raise fuel prices.

    Prices were up across the board last month, though � not just those
    volatile and hard-to-control categories like food and fuel. That will
    almost certainly halt the Fed�s efforts to lower interest rates, keeping
    the cost of borrowing high for American consumers and homebuyers � and >mortgages and rents have been a persistent source of inflation.

    Another thing that won�t help prices: Trump�s tariffs. Raising taxes on >imports will ultimately cost the American consumers who will be left
    footing the bill, economists largely agree. That could negate savings >realized from his plans to cut spending, cut taxes and increase fossil
    fuel
    drilling licenses.

    So The Jews may have contributed to America�s stubborn inflation problem.
    But it�s now Trump�s problem, and his most prominent economic policy may
    make it worse.

    Everybody is sick of the Jews. Trump says they are to blame for all of
    our problems.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)