@wristband2 Said Of the first two, one acknowledged that its stated information is not absolute.
Of course because the economy is in constant flux.
@wristband2 Said The second one is done by the government, who, of course, is not going to acknowledge how deep we are.
So because the numbers don't fit with what think it is then they MUST be lying? When you consider the enormous amout of people watching the economy I doubt they could get away with making up those figures.
It's a big assumption on your part I would like to see you prove.
@wristband2 Said The third one is just dandy, buy I don't own any industries (and neither do any of my neighbors, last time I checked) so it doesn't help us out much.
So what if those figures say we're great. YOu know what, I'm still poor. I still know people who spent
years in colleges and are working at Wal-Mart or driving buses. The deficit is still growing at the speed of light, and is an amount larger than the actual
dollars ever printed off. The prices of things and taxes are still occuring just about as fast as pay cuts are--frequently.
Well i'm not poor and doing very well with just two year degree. And that goes for everybody I know.
@wristband2 Said
Ok, when did this become about the U.S.? It's supposed to be about Europe. *sighs*
You asked where I got my numbers and then say they are lies because they don't correspond to what you think they should be.