I don't know, in my world things are looking pretty good. Obama is not only doing things to help families, like first time homebuyers credit, like making it possible for people to refinance rather than lose their homes, etc. (And sorry I disagree that those were bad moves.)
He also cracked down on money in Swiss banks that we should be getting taxes from but rich people were able to get out of that in the past.
He is making it a top priority from keeping health insurance and big pharma from continuing to rip us off to outlandish measures. (And I think most would agree this is a HUGE risk, not only politically bc of smear campaigns, but also literally as in I think I know who really killed JFK and Senator Heinz Deadly 1991. Two Senators Deaths Predict the Demise of a Presidency by Virginia McCullough and Kathryn Joanne Dixon .)
Right now the G-20 leaders are working on limiting bank profits. I think they deserve our support.
My point is he is not just writing checks and giving away money, he is reigning in abuse and trying to get help to people who really need and deserve it.
The G-20 leaders gathered with their spouses for a welcoming reception at a botanical reserve, and then they parted for separate banquets Thursday night.
Throughout the day, world leaders descended on the comeback city of Pittsburgh to debate how to keep a fragile global recovery going.
Geithner said the G-20 countries had reached a consensus on the "basic outline" of a proposal to limit bankers' compensation by the end of this year. He said it would involve setting separate standards in each of the countries and would be overseen by the Financial Stability Board, an international group of central bankers and regulators.
Until now, European countries had pressed harder than the U.S. for limits.
"Europeans are horrified by banks, some reliant on taxpayers' money, once again paying exorbitant bonuses," said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.
But Geithner predicted the proposed crackdown on bankers' bonuses would be in place by the end of the year.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel also said she was optimistic that far-reaching agreements are possible in Pittsburgh. She warned against focusing too much on imbalances in the world economy, but added, "I think we have a chance to reach progress in all important fields."
Obama, who arrived from U.N. meetings in New York at mid-afternoon Thursday, chose Pittsburgh as the summit site because the formerly struggling Rust Belt city has transformed itself economically into a rebounding, environmentally conscious community with a diversified economy.
G-20 leaders near banker-pay limits amid protests - Yahoo! News
He also cracked down on money in Swiss banks that we should be getting taxes from but rich people were able to get out of that in the past.
He is making it a top priority from keeping health insurance and big pharma from continuing to rip us off to outlandish measures. (And I think most would agree this is a HUGE risk, not only politically bc of smear campaigns, but also literally as in I think I know who really killed JFK and Senator Heinz Deadly 1991. Two Senators Deaths Predict the Demise of a Presidency by Virginia McCullough and Kathryn Joanne Dixon .)
Right now the G-20 leaders are working on limiting bank profits. I think they deserve our support.
My point is he is not just writing checks and giving away money, he is reigning in abuse and trying to get help to people who really need and deserve it.
The G-20 leaders gathered with their spouses for a welcoming reception at a botanical reserve, and then they parted for separate banquets Thursday night.
Throughout the day, world leaders descended on the comeback city of Pittsburgh to debate how to keep a fragile global recovery going.
Geithner said the G-20 countries had reached a consensus on the "basic outline" of a proposal to limit bankers' compensation by the end of this year. He said it would involve setting separate standards in each of the countries and would be overseen by the Financial Stability Board, an international group of central bankers and regulators.
Until now, European countries had pressed harder than the U.S. for limits.
"Europeans are horrified by banks, some reliant on taxpayers' money, once again paying exorbitant bonuses," said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.
But Geithner predicted the proposed crackdown on bankers' bonuses would be in place by the end of the year.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel also said she was optimistic that far-reaching agreements are possible in Pittsburgh. She warned against focusing too much on imbalances in the world economy, but added, "I think we have a chance to reach progress in all important fields."
Obama, who arrived from U.N. meetings in New York at mid-afternoon Thursday, chose Pittsburgh as the summit site because the formerly struggling Rust Belt city has transformed itself economically into a rebounding, environmentally conscious community with a diversified economy.
G-20 leaders near banker-pay limits amid protests - Yahoo! News
Comment