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1 posted on 11/30/2013 11:16:07 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Drivel.


2 posted on 11/30/2013 11:19:41 AM PST by Attention Surplus Disorder (At no time was the Obama administration aware of what the Obama administration was doing)
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To: SeekAndFind

Cut regulation and government; and job creation will soar.
Income inequalities will also narrow; more people on the lower end will be able to rise.


3 posted on 11/30/2013 11:21:58 AM PST by HereInTheHeartland (Obama lied; our healthcare died.)
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To: SeekAndFind

what a doofus. This twit is a red diaper doper baby….born with the spoon up his lester so far it addled his brains. Rich people like him don’t create jobs because they live off of the wealth their parents created… you know like the Kennedys


4 posted on 11/30/2013 11:22:16 AM PST by Nifster
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To: SeekAndFind

At best, a sophomoric view of economics. At worst, pure delusion.


6 posted on 11/30/2013 11:23:13 AM PST by taxcontrol
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To: SeekAndFind

Careful. Does this violate Henry’s permanent ban from the securities industry?


7 posted on 11/30/2013 11:24:17 AM PST by x
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To: SeekAndFind

A decided undercurrent of self-loathing...


8 posted on 11/30/2013 11:24:32 AM PST by PubliusMM (RKBA; a matter of fact, not opinion. 01-20-2016; I pray we make it that long.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The homeless guy down the street is creating jobs all the time!


9 posted on 11/30/2013 11:25:34 AM PST by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; me = independent conservative)
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To: SeekAndFind

One thing for sure is poor people create ZERO jobs.


10 posted on 11/30/2013 11:26:06 AM PST by dainbramaged (Joe McCarthy was right.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Blodget is an idiot. Does he think welfare recipients create jobs?


11 posted on 11/30/2013 11:27:21 AM PST by whitedog57 ( Cy)
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To: SeekAndFind
From Wikipedia:

Early Life

Blodget was born and raised on Manhattan's Upper East Side, the son of a commercial banker. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in History from Yale University. After college, he taught English in Japan, then moved to San Francisco to try to be a writer while supporting himself by giving tennis lessons. He was also a freelance journalist and a proofreader for Harper's Magazine.

In 1994, Blodget joined the corporate finance training program at Prudential Securities, and, two years later, moved to Oppenheimer & Co. in equity research. He became famous in October 1998, when he predicted that Amazon.com, an Internet stock which had been a public company for a year then trading at $240 and which many on Wall Street were bearish on, would hit what many considered an outrageously bullish one-year price target of $400. Three weeks later Amazon zoomed past it gaining 128%.

This call received significant media attention, and, two months later, he accepted a position at Merrill Lynch, where he earned as much as $12 million a year. In those days he became a media celebrity and frequently appeared on CNBC and other similiar shows. In early 2000, days before the dot-com bubble burst, Blodget personally invested $700,000 in tech stocks, only to lose most of it in the years that followed. In 2001, he accepted a buyout offer from Merrill Lynch and left the firm.

Fraud allegation and settlement

In 2002, then New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer published Merrill Lynch e-mails in which Blodget gave assessments about stocks which allegedly conflicted with what was publicly published. In 2003, he was charged with civil securities fraud by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. He agreed to a permanent ban from the securities industry and paid a $2 million fine plus a $2 million disgorgement.

Basically, this guy had one career-making call back in 1998 that he parlayed into a Wall Street career that lasted two or three years. The firm he worked for blew itself up five or six years later.

He then got caught talking out of both sides of his mouth and got banned from the securities industry for life.

14 posted on 11/30/2013 11:30:24 AM PST by Steely Tom (If the Constitution can be a living document, I guess a corporation can be a person.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Entrepreneurs create jobs, bureaucrats generally don’t. Investors may create jobs, tax increases don’t. Enterprising poor people can create jobs starting with themselves, regulators can and frequently do stop jobs and may destroy them. Rich people have the capital to be investors and may support entrepreneurs and may hire poor people to do the jobs that they don’t want to do themselves. Government, regulations and increased taxation have a strong tendency to reduce all of the above if not kept in check!

Which side of this divide does our current government fall on?


15 posted on 11/30/2013 11:31:50 AM PST by SES1066 (To expect courteous government is insanity!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Sorry Henry... you’re a dumba$$.


16 posted on 11/30/2013 11:32:10 AM PST by Common Sense 101 (Hey libs... If your theories fly in the face of reality, it's not reality that's wrong.)
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To: SeekAndFind

... and Henry Blogett’s paycheck is signed by a penniless vagabond?


18 posted on 11/30/2013 11:32:56 AM PST by FroggyTheGremlim ("It is not the color of his skin, ... it is the blackness that fills his soul")
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To: SeekAndFind

What we have seen is this country is a collapse of small business wealth, and a narrowing of investment wealth. What we see from the government is a complete waste of wealth, wealth that is needed elsewhere. Take the billions wasted on green energy failures, or the money wasted on Obama’s Democratcare. Can anyone argue that the money the government is wasting couldn’t go to better use in the hands of investors or small business entrepreneurs? How about the money going to Iran? Couldn’t that be better spent in our private sector? It isn’t just a question of how much taxes hurt investors, but a matter of what big government is doing with the money. Big government hurts everyone.


19 posted on 11/30/2013 11:33:02 AM PST by pallis
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To: SeekAndFind

In his world, companies magically appear. His argument begins with companies that just magically appear. Sorry....he gets an F on this.


20 posted on 11/30/2013 11:33:30 AM PST by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: SeekAndFind

Wow so if I want to create a company that has the potential of creating a million jobs I won’t need any initial investors?? Yippee!!! Well I got $50 bucks on me, I could start a lemonade stand...


21 posted on 11/30/2013 11:33:32 AM PST by GrandJediMasterYoda (What do we want? Time travel. When do we want it? It's irrelevant.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Another version of "You did not build that".
For every company in existence, someone had to take the initiative and pour a lot of work and money into it.
It did not "just happen" because government in its infinite wisdom set the economic stage for us.

22 posted on 11/30/2013 11:34:27 AM PST by BitWielder1 (Corporate Profits are better than Government Waste)
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To: SeekAndFind

“...healthy economic ecosystem — one in which most participants (especially the middle class) have plenty of money to spend.”

As if this simply materializes out of thin air.


24 posted on 11/30/2013 11:36:03 AM PST by SgtHooper (If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.)
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To: SeekAndFind
When Yahoo went hyperbolic Henry was asked if one could afford to buy Yahoo at its lofty PE. He replied, “The question is not whether you can afford to buy Yahoo; the question is can you afford not to buy Yahoo”. Yahoo collapsed shortly thereafter.

Henry, “And it ignores the assertions of many investors and entrepreneurs (like me) that they would work just as hard to build companies even if taxes were higher”.

Hogwash. No laffer curve? If Henry is right we need to double taxes straight away and eliminate the debt.

26 posted on 11/30/2013 11:39:46 AM PST by bunnie911
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To: SeekAndFind
"A healthy economic ecosystem — one in which most participants (especially the middle class) have plenty of money to spend."

Hey Henry, how the Hell can there be a healthy "economic ecosystem" with sky high taxes and oppressive regulation on businesses that causes the point of sale being out of reach for the "middle class?" Go back to giving tennis lessons, you were better suited.

30 posted on 11/30/2013 11:47:37 AM PST by bigfootbob
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