Community > Posts By > Atlantis75

 
Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 06:46 PM
Edited by Atlantis75 on Tue 10/05/10 06:47 PM
I would make it mandatory, that the candidate must have served at least 6 years in the United States Armed Forces. (any branch)

No exeptions. If the P. of the USA is the "Commander in Chief" of the military, he MUST be someone who has completed basic training and served.

I know..some people gonna say "why".

Why?

Because if the "commander in chief" has the power to send armies around the world, let's have a responsibility and know what it's like being in those combat boots, jumped from planes, walked through the jungle and the desert, engaged in a firefight with enemy.

If the person has ZERO experience in the military, he (or she) has no right to sit on the top of the chain of command. End of story.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 06:11 PM

^looked nice 4hrs ago^

flowerforyou
I will look better tomorrow.:wink: drinker




Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 06:09 PM
I need to shave really bad.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 06:06 PM
giraffe. waving

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 06:05 PM

Only 1.7% would vote to re-elect Geo. W. Bush!

Only 0.3% would vote to re-elect Sarah Palin!

laugh

Only 0.121% would vote to re-elect Jimmy Carter!




We need somebody new, with fresh ideas, integrity and solid as a rock in 2012.

So far I am not impressed with any of the mainstream media clowns currently "hinting" their presidential bid.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 06:03 PM


wow I just realized I wrote "ruing" it. hahaha...i'm powerless lately..


I bet you're "ruing" having written that, huh?

shades


I think it has to do with typing..Sometimes I "auto type" things, since "g" usually follows the "n" in plenty of words, my fingers have their own mind..not to mention, my spell checker failed to underline it.... and yes, to sum it up: I feel less.
frustrated

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 05:58 PM
wow I just realized I wrote "ruing" it. hahaha...i'm powerless lately..

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 05:57 PM



Wow, I just looked an at this point in President Bush's Presidency he was at 91% approval rating and Obama's at 41%. laugh


Hardly remarkable, considering that the 91% rating came right after the War in Iraq started. Anyone who dissented was branded as being a traitor.

What IS remarkable, though, is that that 91 % dropped to the low 20s when it became so apparent how badly Bush's cronies had sold the country out.

Without checking, I'd have to say that's the biggest 'fall' any president ever took during his term in office. Even Tricky Dick didn't fall this hard and he was just weeks from being impeached and removed from office. Hardly something to be bragging about or using as a measuring stick to compare others...

-Kerry O.


Actually the 91% was at the end of 2001 and in 2002.


In 2001 September, United States was under attack. Makes a bit of a difference in opinions when people fear for their lives.


Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 05:52 PM
<----that picture is 4hr old.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 05:46 PM
Edited by Atlantis75 on Tue 10/05/10 05:47 PM
in a relationship?

Which would just "ruing it" for you?

Here is mine:

"You don't think I'm good enough for you?"

This kills me. Makes me want to crawl up on a wall and scream at you like: AAAAAAARRRRGGGH! explode .

And if I would be a complete a$$hole I would say "No, since you asked that one, you just knocked off my interest."

Somehow believing that you are "good enough" for this person or that person, and he or she rejects you..you feel betrayed??

You know, there is such a thing as self confidence, but there is also arrogance and false beliefs.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 05:04 PM
Edited by Atlantis75 on Tue 10/05/10 05:04 PM
and no double posts.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 05:03 PM
hitpoints and mana use.

Atlantis75's photo
Tue 10/05/10 04:55 PM

wat do U think is the appropiate dating age range?


The too youngs and too olds should stay away.:smile:

Atlantis75's photo
Sat 10/02/10 11:34 AM

The place where they make lottery tickets, so I'd know
which ones were winners. bigsmile


What are you gonna do with the money if you are a fly??


Atlantis75's photo
Thu 09/30/10 09:31 PM


If we do not impeach no Bama and repeal health care very, very soon, you will go through - and may be not survive - a vast genocide.




Atlantis75's photo
Thu 09/30/10 09:12 PM

From what ive found out being on here a few months that being nice gets u nowhere


speaking from experience - being a complete a**hole gets you nowhere either.

1 view in 3 weeks! laugh

Atlantis75's photo
Thu 09/30/10 07:36 PM

huh


Eeeerrrm....what a boring existence you have.

Firstly what the perkuck are you doing with a television in the bedroom?

Secondly, aside from hormones elevating and creating a physical response to stimulation....we strange bipeds have this thing called IMAGINATION....which is the PRIMARY stimulus in most sexual experiences, with or without a partner.

Thirdly, sex when participated in with no hangups, or psychological messiness, is energising and invigorating...all manner of incredible creative inspiration comes post coitally...

I suspect you need to throw the telly away, change your eating habits, and get some anerobic exercise OUTSIDE the bedroom, before you enter it with a partner...

your sex life is mechanical and scientifically BORING!!!


I know. ohwell

I lack imagination, creativity and spirit. I'll put it in my profile so everyone is warned ahead of time.

Atlantis75's photo
Thu 09/30/10 11:53 AM
Edited by Atlantis75 on Thu 09/30/10 11:55 AM


Only history will decide the success of a presidency. If the incredible national debt is viewed as a major cause of the fall of the US as a world power, Obama will go down as one of the worst presidents in history.


Nice rhetoric. Too bad, that the recession started in 2007 (some were pointing out the upcoming storm as early as 2004), even from the conservative, most rabid right wing economists.

It's good to find a scapegoat and pack all the problems on it, kick it in the rear and see if things gets better, once the goat has left the town.

For anyone else, having curiosity and independent and can think on his own read through:

http://obamaachievements.org/list

Atlantis75's photo
Thu 09/30/10 11:07 AM
WASHINGTON — The recession seems to be socking Americans in the heart as well as the wallet: Marriages have hit an all-time low while pleas for food stamps have reached a record high and the gap between rich and poor has grown to its widest ever.

The long recession technically ended in mid-2009, economists say, but U.S. Census data released Tuesday show the painful, lingering effects. The annual survey covers all of last year, when unemployment skyrocketed to 10 percent, and the jobless rate is still a stubbornly high 9.6 percent.

The figures also show that Americans on average have been spending about 36 fewer minutes in the office per week and are stuck in traffic a bit less than they had been. But that is hardly good news, either. The reason is largely that people have lost jobs or are scraping by with part-time work.

"Millions of people are stuck at home because they can't find a job. Poverty increased in a majority of states, and children have been hit especially hard," said Mark Mather, associate vice president of the Population Reference Bureau.

The economic "indicators say we're in recovery, but the impact on families and children will linger on for years," he said.

Take marriage.

In America, marriages fell to a record low in 2009, with just 52 percent of adults 18 and over saying they were joined in wedlock, compared to 57 percent in 2000.

The never-married included 46.3 percent of young adults 25-34, with sharp increases in single people in cities in the Midwest and Southwest, including Cleveland, Phoenix, Los Angeles and Albuquerque, N.M. It was the first time the share of unmarried young adults exceeded those who were married.

Marriages have been declining for years due to rising divorce, more unmarried couples living together and increased job prospects for women. But sociologists say younger people are also now increasingly choosing to delay marriage as they struggle to find work and resist making long-term commitments.


In dollar terms, the rich are still getting richer, and the poor are falling further behind them.

The income gap between the richest and poorest Americans grew last year to its largest margin ever, a stark divide as Democrats and Republicans spar over whether to extend Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy.

The top-earning 20 percent of Americans – those making more than $100,000 each year – received 49.4 percent of all income generated in the U.S., compared with the 3.4 percent made by the bottom 20 percent of earners, those who fell below the poverty line, according to the new figures. That ratio of 14.5-to-1 was an increase from 13.6 in 2008 and nearly double a low of 7.69 in 1968.

At the top, the wealthiest 5 percent of Americans, who earn more than $180,000, added slightly to their annual incomes last year, the data show. Families at the $50,000 median level slipped lower.

Three states – New York, Connecticut and Texas – and the District of Columbia had the largest gaps between rich and poor. Big gaps were also evident in large cities such as New York, Miami, Los Angeles, Boston and Atlanta, home to both highly paid financial and high-tech jobs as well as clusters of poorer immigrant and minority residents.

Alaska, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho and Hawaii had the smallest income gaps.

"Income inequality is rising, and if we took into account tax data, it would be even more," said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor who specializes in poverty. "More than other countries, we have a very unequal income distribution where compensation goes to the top in a winner-takes-all economy."

Lower-skilled adults ages 18 to 34 had the largest jumps in poverty last year as employers kept or hired older workers for the dwindling jobs available. The declining economic fortunes have caused many unemployed young Americans to double-up in housing with parents, friends and loved ones, with potential problems for the labor market if they don't get needed training for future jobs, he said.

Homeownership declined for the third year in a row, to 65.9 percent, after hitting a peak of 67.3 percent in 2006. Residents in crowded housing held steady at 1 percent, the highest since 2004, a sign that people continued to "double up" to save money.

Average commute times edged lower to 25.1 minutes, the lowest since 2006, as fewer people headed to the office in the morning. The share of people who carpooled also declined, from 10.7 percent to 10 percent, while commuters who took public transportation were unchanged at 5 percent.

The number of U.S. households receiving food stamps surged by 2 million last year to 11.7 million, the highest level on record, meaning that 1 in 10 families was receiving the government aid. In all, 46 states and the District of Columbia had increases in food stamps, with the largest jumps in Nevada, Arizona, Florida and Wisconsin.

Other findings:

_The foreign-born population edged higher to 38.5 million, or 12.5 percent, following a dip in the previous year, due mostly to increases in naturalized citizens. The share of U.S. residents speaking a language other than English at home also rose, from 19.7 percent to 20 percent, mostly in California, New Mexico and Texas.

_The poorest poor hit record highs. Twenty-eight states had increases in the share of people below $10,977 in income, half the poverty line for a family of four. The highest shares were in the District of Columbia, Mississippi, Kentucky, Arkansas and South Carolina. Nationally, the poorest poor rose to 6.3 percent.

_Women's average pay still lags men's, but the gap is narrowing. Women with full-time jobs made 78.2 percent of men's pay, up from 77.7 percent in 2008 and about 64 percent in 2000, as men took bigger hits in the recession.

_More older people are working. About 27.1 percent of Americans 60 and over were in the work force. That's up from 26.7 percent in 2008.

The census figures come weeks before the pivotal Nov. 2 congressional elections, when voters anxious about rising deficits and the slow pace of the economic recovery will decide whether to keep Democrats in control of Congress.

The 2009 tabulations, which are based on pretax income and exclude capital gains, are adjusted for household size where data are available. Prior analyses of after-tax income made by the wealthiest 1 percent compared to middle- and low-income Americans have also pointed to a widening inequality gap, but only reflect U.S. data as of 2007.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/28/income-gap-widens-census-_n_741386.html

Atlantis75's photo
Thu 09/30/10 10:50 AM
My plan has failed.


1 2 13 14 15 17 19 20 21 24 25