There he goes again... America's 2nd straight "bubble boy" president, as George W. Bush was before him, Pres. Obama is TOTALLY CAPTURED BY, TOTALLY OWNED BY his Neo-Con handlers...
Which is why, if he isn't playing golf, he is doing the shuck & jive "AREN'T THINGS GREAT?!" routine for Jay Leno.... even as the Black voters who voted for him in Ohio, are, according to today's Sulzberger New York Lyin' Slimes reporting, REELING from the RECESSION that is SPREADING... POUNDING AWAY at America's suburbs, like those outside of Cleveland.
and note: This economic duress in the suburbs, is at a time when Obama's Neo-Con swindlers are ARM-TWISTING the SAUDIS to KEEP OIL (gas) PRICES LOW...
Wiith Jewish traitor / financial saboteur Ben Bernanke DEBASING the U.S. dollar, DEFRAUDING millions of Americans out of the value of their savings & paychecks (much less, heaven forbid, pension funds) in order to artificially prop up the fraudulent balance sheets of the banksters who hire him (Mr. Bernanke), oil SHOULD be, and soon will be EXPLODING in price, as the latest round of Bernanke's MONEY PRINTING "Quantitative easing by another name" hits the streets.
Well, Mr. Obama has certainly perfected his Hollywood smile... and after all his George W. Bushian PRACTICE on the GOLF COURSE these past 2 years, one wonders if his golf game has improved....
Outside Cleveland, Snapshots of Poverty’s Surge in the SuburbsON BEHALF of his "of, by and for Golddamn-Sachs & the israel war lobby" handlers, Mr. Obama wants to assure all Americans that "there is nothing to see here... move along... MOVE ALONG!"
By Sabrina Tavernise, October 24, 2011
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/25/us/suburban-poverty-surge-challenges-communities.html
PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio — The poor population in America’s suburbs — long a symbol of a stable and prosperous American middle class — rose by more than half after 2000, forcing suburban communities across the country to re-evaluate their identities and how they serve their populations.
The increase in the suburbs was 53 percent, compared with 26 percent in cities. The recession accelerated the pace: two-thirds of the new suburban poor were added from 2007 to 2010.