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Old April 10th 04, 12:32 AM
Jim Hampton
 
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"Anonymous via the Cypherpunks Tonga Remailer" wrote
in message news:a9661e89b447393f1c9f28aa5b6a38b9@cypherpunks. to...
Election time again..... just so you know:

snip

What you should do is show your sources.

Best regards from Rochester, NY
Jim
p.s. something like this:

Jobs
2,931,000
Number of jobs lost in the private sector since Bush took office.1

135,000
Average number of jobs created monthly under every President since Truman.2

-79,189
Average number of jobs created monthly under Bush.1

2,447,000
Number of people who have become unemployed since Bush took office.1

37 percent
Increase in the unemployment rate since Bush took office.1

4.1 percent
Unemployment rate when Bush took office in January 2001.1

5.6 percent
Unemployment rate in March 2004.1

8,170,000
Total number of unemployed Americans.1

675,000
Number of Americans experiencing long-term unemployment (27 weeks or more)
when Bush took office in January 2001.1

1,871,000
Number of Americans suffering long-term unemployment in March 2004.1

177 percent
Increase in long-term unemployment under Bush.1

11.8 percent
Percentage of consumers who believe jobs are plentiful.3

760,000
Number of workers who have lost their unemployment insurance since December
2002.4

Ballooning Deficits
$5.6 trillion
Baseline surplus for the 10-year period for FY 2002-2011, as projected by
the Congressional Budget Office when Bush took office in January 2001.5

$5.2 trillion
Budget deficit over next 10 years if Bush's 2005 budget proposal is
enacted.6

$2.4 trillion
Amount Bush's budget will raid from the Social Security and Medicare trust
funds over the next 10 years.6

$478 billion
Budget deficit for 2004 as predicted by CBO, if Bush' s proposals are
enacted.6

$188 billion
Amount Bush's budget deficit for 2004 exceeds the highest budget deficit in
history, which was posted in 1992 by Bush's father.6

Bush's 2003 "Jobs and Growth" Plan
$2.2 trillion
Ten-year cost of Bush's proposed tax cuts including additional costs for
interest on the national debt.7

32.4 percent
Percent of tax cut for the top 1 percent of wage earners under the Bush
"growth" plan.8

8.5 percent
Percent of tax cuts for the bottom 60 percent of wage earners under the
Bush "growth" plan.8

64 million
Number of taxpayers (48 percent) who receive $100 or less under the Bush
"growth" plan.9

$30,127
Average tax cut for the top 1 percent of taxpayers under the Bush "growth"
plan.9

$289
Average tax cut for the middle 20 percent of taxpayers under the Bush
"growth" plan.9

$4-5 billion
Amount Bush tax proposal would cost states.10

1 million
Number of taxpayers the Alternative Minimum Tax affected in 1999.11

36 million
Number of taxpayers the Alternative Minimum Tax will affect in 2010 because
of Bush's tax cuts and his failure to address the AMT.11

Lower Income, Rising Costs
1.1 percent
Decrease in real median household income in 2002.12

10 percent
Increase in bankruptcies since Bush took office.13

1,625,213
Number of consumers who filed for bankruptcy in 2003.13

24 percent
Drop in consumer confidence since Bush took office.14

50 percent
Increase in out-of-pocket health care costs for workers since Bush took
office.15

14 percent
Increase in the cost of job-based health insurance in 2003; highest rate in
13 years.15

8.7 percent
Increase in the cost of the 10 most-used prescription drugs in 2003.16

61 percent
Percent of employers who cited rising drug costs as a major cause of
premium increases in 2003.15

11.5 percent
Increase in gas prices since 2000.17

49
Number of states that increased tuition at their public colleges and
universities in 2003. State budget cuts fueled by the Bush recession have
forced colleges to hike tuitions and fees-threatening access to higher
education for low-income students.18

35 percent
Increase in tuition and fees at four-year public institutions since Bush
took office, adjusted for inflation.19



Sources: 1Bureau of Labor Statistics, 3/04; 2House Appropriations Committee
Minority Staff, 3/04; 3Conference Board, 3/04; 4Center for Budget and Policy
Priorities, 2/25/04; 5Congressional Budget Office, Budget and Economic
Outlook: Fiscal Years 2002-2011, 1/01; 6Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, 2/1/04; CBO, An Analysis of Bush's Budgetary Proposals for
Fiscal Year 2005, 3/04; 7Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, 1/30/04,
1/21/04; 8CTJ Fact Sheet, 1/8/03; 9CTJ Fact Sheet, 2/3/03; 10CBPP Fact
Sheet, 1/10/03; 11Brookings Institute, Tax Policy Center, The AMT: Out of
Control, 9/18/02; New York Times, 1/10/03; 12U.S. Census Bureau, "Money
Income in the United States: 2002"; 13American Bankruptcy Institute, 3/04;
14Conference Board, 3/04; 15Kaiser Family Foundation, Employer Health
Benefits Survey 2000 and 2003; 16AdvancePCS, 8/25/03; 17CNN.com, 2/23/04;
18Associated Press, 8/25/03; 19College Board, College Costs 2003



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