Wednesday, August 3, 2011

OBAMA'S AMERICA - EVER RICHER WALL ST., BANKSTERS ON THE LOSE PILLAGING, AND LA RAZA IN OUR JOBS & VOTING BOOTHS!

THERE IS NO UNEMPLOYMENT NUMBER HIGH ENOUGH THAT OBAMA AND HIS LA RAZA DEMS WILL NOT STOP PUTTING ILLEGALS IN OUR JOBS!
OBAMA’S ENTIRE ADMIN IS LA RAZA SUPREMACY PARTY INFESTED, STARTING WITH HIS SEC. OF (ILLEGAL LABOR) HILDA SOLIS, A LA RAZA SUPREMACIST.
THE DEMS ARE NOW THE PARTY FOR ILLEGALS, NO E-VERIFY, NO ENGLISH ONLY, OPEN BORDERS, AMNESTY, EXPANDED WELFARE FOR ILLEGALS, AND CONTINUED NON-ENFORCEMENT.
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DICK DURBIN ON OBAMA’S LA RAZA INFESTED WHITE HOUSE
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/sen-dick-durbin-la-raza-dem-ill-pushes.html

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MEANWHILE UNEMPLOYMENT IN NARCOMEX IS UNDER 6%, WHILE IN PARTS OF MEXIFORNIA, WHICH PAYS OUT $20 BILLION PER YEAR IN SOCIAL SERVICES TO ILLEGALS, IT IS NEARLY 30%! LOS ANGELES COUNTY ALONE PUTS OUT $600 MILLION PER YEAR (OUT OF PROPERTY TAXES) IN WELFARE TO ILLEGALS!) VIVA LA RAZA SUPREMACY? OBAMA DOES!

“Recent economic data make clear that the social crisis is getting worse. The economy is stagnating. Millions of people face prolonged unemployment with no end in sight.”


The US budget cuts and the fight for socialism
3 August 2011
The agreement worked out by the Obama administration and the Republican Party to cut trillions of dollars in social spending heralds a new period of social upheaval and class struggle in the United States.
Nearly three years after the financial collapse triggered by rampant speculation plunged the United States and the entire world into an economic depression, the ruling class responsible for the crisis is engineering a reversal of every social reform won in the 20th century.
The deal signed into law by Obama on Tuesday will require immediate spending cuts of $900 billion over ten years, followed by an additional $1.5 trillion to be put in place by the end of 2011. On the chopping block are grants for education, funding for food and energy assistance, corporate regulations, and the major federal health care and retirement programs.
Recent economic data make clear that the social crisis is getting worse. The economy is stagnating. Millions of people face prolonged unemployment with no end in sight. States and local governments throughout the country are bankrupt and are responding by shutting down schools and slashing health care. The cuts in federal spending will only compound the crisis.
The Economic Policy Institute released a report on Monday estimating that a total of 1.8 million jobs will be lost next year as a result of the cuts and the failure of the debt limit measure to extend unemployment benefits and a payroll tax holiday for workers. This is only the beginning. Obama himself declared before signing the legislation that it was merely “an important first step in ensuring that as a nation we live within our means.”
The result of the debt ceiling debate has left Obama’s liberal supporters floundering. Even within the exceedingly narrow terms of the official “debate” in Washington, it is widely recognized that the final agreement gives the Republican Party everything it asked for. Obama dropped his demand for a “balanced approach,” i.e., the elimination of a few tax breaks for corporations, signing into law a measure that is comprised entirely of cuts.
Liberal economic commentator Paul Krugman published an essay in the New York Times Monday bemoaning Obama’s “abject surrender.” Krugman pointed out that the president had several other options than the course taken, including increasing the debt ceiling last year when the Democrats controlled both houses of Congress or threatening to use legal maneuvers to sidestep the debt ceiling.
Joe Nocera, another Times columnist, wrote on Tuesday that “Obama should have played the 14th Amendment card” to raise the debt ceiling unilaterally. “Inexplicably, he chose instead a course of action that maximized the leverage of the Republican extremists.”
There is nothing “inexplicable” or even surprising in the outcome. A basic deceit of the Times columnists, as well their counterparts in the Nation and other liberal and “left” publications, is the suggestion that Obama was somehow forced or duped into doing something he did not want to do. Nocera denounces the “Tea Party Republicans” who “have waged jihad on the American people.” Krugman worries that the outcome of the debate over the debt ceiling demonstrates that “raw extortion [by the Republican Party] works and carries no political cost.”
In fact, the demand of the Republicans that any increase in the federal debt ceiling be accompanied dollar-for-dollar by cuts in social spending was welcomed by the Obama administration as an opportunity to pursue an ever more right-wing policy. Obama went even further than the Republicans when he proposed that Social Security be included in the entitlement programs to be slashed in the name of deficit reduction.
This was a continuation of the administration’s lurch to the right following the 2010 mid-term elections, which resulted in significant Democratic Party losses. The election results were seized on by the Democrats as a justification to extend Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy and launch a budget-cutting campaign that has reached a new stage in the legislation passed this week.
Krugman concludes his column with the worried comment: “What Republicans have just gotten away with calls our whole system of government into question.” While his analysis of the relationship between the Republicans and Obama is false, his concerns are justified. The entire political and social system in the United States is being discredited before the eyes of the American people.
Millions of people invested their hopes in the election of Obama, who was packaged as a progressive alternative to the social reaction and militarism of the Bush years. They now discover that his entire campaign was a fraud, and that he was put into power by the same financial oligarchy that had backed Bush for the purpose of pursuing even more right-wing, anti-working class policies.
The working class stands at a historic crossroads. Workers and youth are coming to understand that it is impossible to change anything within the existing political system. Well before these cuts are fully implemented, the working class will begin to fight back.
If these struggles are to be successful, however, workers must draw the necessary political conclusions. There can be no solution to the crisis that does not begin with the understanding that the root of the problem is the capitalist system, under which the economy is subordinated to the profit demands of the giant banks and corporations.
This system is defended ruthlessly by both the Democratic and Republican parties. The outcome of the debt ceiling discussions is a devastating exposure of all those who promoted illusions that Obama could be pressured to the left. It demonstrates that the most powerful sections of the financial and corporate elite exercise a stranglehold over the entire political system.
Moreover, the attack on workers in the United States is part of an international process. Obama’s budget cuts will encourage the ruling class in every country to expand its own assault. The essential ally of the American working class is the international working class.
The unfolding social counterrevolution directed by the ruling class poses the necessity for its opposite: social revolution. The basic question is that of political leadership. From the beginning of the Obama administration, the Socialist Equality Party has explained its class character and the logic of its policies. We anticipated that the measures taken by the ruling class would lead to the reemergence of working class struggle in the United States.
This analysis has been confirmed. The turn now must be to the building of a mass socialist movement. In the coming weeks and months, the SEP will intensify its work among all sections of the working class in every part of the country—manufacturing workers who have seen their wages and benefits decimated, teachers who are being laid off by the thousands and scape-goated for the crisis in public education, service workers who do not make enough to get by, working class youth burdened by debt, the unemployed who have no prospect of a job.
We have every confidence that on the basis of a revolutionary socialist program, we will win the leadership of the emerging struggles. Such a fight, however, requires the active participation of all those who agree on the need for socialism. Now is the time to make the decision to join the Socialist Equality Party.
Joseph Kishore
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THE HISPANDERING PRESIDENT!

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/tom-tancredo-on-barack-obamas-la-raza.html

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/today-obama-addresses-his-party-base-of.html

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OBAMA AND THE MEXICAN FASCIST PARTY of LA RAZA

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/05/barack-obama-expansion-of-la-raza.html
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ON THE GROWIN POWER OF “LA RAZA” FASCISM FOR MEX SUPREMACY
EMAIL THIS LINK:

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/04/history-of-mexican-fascist-party-of-la.html

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“PUNISH OUR ENEMIES”… does that mean assault the legals of Arizona that must fend off the Mexican invasion, occupation, growing criminal and welfare state, as well as Mex Drug cartels???

OBAMA TELLS ILLEGALS “PUNISH OUR ENEMIES”
Friends of ALIPAC,

Each day new reports come in from across the nation that our movement is surging and more incumbents, mostly Democrats, are about to fall on Election Day. Obama's approval ratings are falling to new lows as he makes highly inappropriate statements to Spanish language audiences asking illegal alien supporters to help him "punish our enemies."

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President Obama Speaks to the National Council of La Raza at 12:50 p.m. ET
Today starting at 12:50 p.m. ET, President Obama will address the National Council of La Raza, the largest Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the country. Today’s speech will underscore the President’s commitment to the Hispanic community Full Article at Democratic National Committee: Blog

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OBAMA, THE HISPANDERING FIRST LA RAZA PRESIDENT!
NO PRESIDENT HAS WORKED HARDER FOR THE MEXICAN FASCIST PARTY of LA RAZA “THE RACE” THAN BARACK OBAMA.
NO ADMINISTRATION IN HISTORY HAS BEEN MORE INFESTED WITH LA RAZA SUPREMACIST PARTY MEMBERS!

July 13, 2008
Obama's Remarks to La Raza
Barack Obama
As prepared for delivery
National Council of La Raza (NCLR)
San Diego, California
I've got to tell you, being here with all of you today feels a little like coming home. Because while I stand here as a candidate for President of the United States, I will never forget that the most important experience in my life came when I was doing what you do each day - working on the ground in our communities to bring about change.
As some of you know, after college, I moved to Chicago and went to work for a group of churches to help families that had been devastated when the local steel plants closed down. I knew change in those communities wouldn't come easily - but I also knew it wouldn't come at all if we didn't start bringing people together. So I reached out to community leaders - black, brown, and white - and formed coalitions on issues ranging from failing schools to illegal dumping to unimmunized children. We set up job training for the jobless, helped prevent students from dropping out of school, and taught people to stand up to their government when it wasn't standing up for them.
That work taught me a fundamental truth that has guided me ever since: that in this country, change doesn't come from the top down. Change doesn't happen just because someone in Washington says it should. Change starts when you teach a child to read, or register someone to vote, or help a family buy their first home. It starts when you heal broken bodies and troubled spirits; when you organize neighborhoods into coalitions, and workers into unions. It starts when you send leaders to Washington committed to taking this country in a new direction.

That's the kind of change you're making every single day. The theme of this conference is the work of your lives: strengthening America together. It's been the work of this organization for four decades - lifting up families and transforming communities across America. And for that, I honor you, I congratulate you, I thank you, and I wish you another forty years as extraordinary as your last.
I come before you today at a defining moment for our nation. I'm thinking of an article I read in the newspaper a while back about struggling schools in Los Angeles. The article told the story of a boy named Gonzalo, who started falling behind in the seventh grade and wasn't getting the support he needed to catch up. When his mother called the school to complain, nothing changed.
"Maybe the system is not designed for people like us," she said.
Not designed for people like us.
It was a comment about education, but it reflects a broader feeling that so many people today share - that the system just isn't working for them. And they're right. It's not.
The system isn't working when a child in a crumbling school graduates without learning to read or doesn't graduate at all. Or when a young person at the top of her class - a young person with so much to offer this country - can't attend a public college.
The system isn't working when Hispanics are losing their jobs faster than almost anybody else, or working jobs that pay less, and come with fewer benefits than almost anybody else.
The system isn't working when 12 million people live in hiding, and hundreds of thousands cross our borders illegally each year; when companies hire undocumented immigrants instead of legal citizens to avoid paying overtime or to avoid a union; when communities are terrorized by ICE immigration raids - when nursing mothers are torn from their babies, when children come home from school to find their parents missing, when people are detained without access to legal counsel.
When all that's happening, the system just isn't working.
And I know how frustrated many of you are right now. Your jobs are hard on a good day - and having a President who cuts your budgets doesn't help. Having a President who's torn gaping holes in the safety net for the people you serve doesn't help. Having a struggling economy - an economy that's left so many people in need of your assistance - that doesn't help either.
I know that sometimes, you get tired. Sometimes, you start to lose heart. You start to feel like you're walking that long, hard road alone - like no one sees the sacrifices you make or appreciates the services you provide.
But I know how hard you're working. I know the difference you're making in our communities. And I'm here today to make you this promise: I will be a President who stands with you, and fights for you, and walks with you every step of the way.
Because here's something else I know: that when the system isn't working, people who love this country can come together to change it.
That is the history of the Hispanic community in America. From fighting to desegregate our schools and neighborhoods, to organizing farmworkers, to standing up for the rights of immigrants, you've reminded us that those words about liberty and equality put to paper over 200 years ago mean something. And you've sought to remake this nation in the shape of those ideals.
It's work that reflects the character of this community in which so many people have come here with so little, but had big dreams, big hearts, and a thirst to succeed. A willingness to struggle and sacrifice so the next generation doesn't have to. It's the same reason my own father came here from Kenya so many years ago - in the hope that here in America, you can make it if you try.
For centuries, those values - hard work, patriotism, faith and family - the values that have made the Hispanic community strong - have made America strong too.
That's what's at stake this November. This election is nothing less than a test of our allegiance to the American Dream. And it's a test of our commitment to all those who are counting on us to keep that Dream alive - the people you serve every day.
The 12 million people in the shadows, the communities taking immigration enforcement into their own hands, the neighborhoods seeing rising tensions as citizens are pitted against new immigrants...they're counting on us to stop the hateful rhetoric filling our airwaves - rhetoric that poisons our political discourse, degrades our democracy, and has no place in this great nation. They're counting on us to rise above the fear and demagoguery, the pettiness and partisanship, and finally enact comprehensive immigration reform.
Now, I know Senator McCain used to buck his party on immigration by fighting for comprehensive reform - and I admired him for it. But when he was running for his party's nomination, he abandoned his courageous stance, and said that he wouldn't even support his own legislation if it came up for a vote.
Well, I don't know about you, but I think it's time for a President who won't walk away from something as important as comprehensive reform when it becomes politically unpopular. And that's the commitment I'm making to you. I marched with you in the streets of Chicago. I fought with you in the Senate for comprehensive immigration reform. And I will make it a top priority in my first year as President. Not just because we need to secure our borders and get control of who comes into our country. And not just because we have to crack down on employers abusing undocumented immigrants. But because we have to finally bring those 12 million people out of the shadows.
Yes, they broke the law. And we should not excuse that. We should require them to pay a fine, learn English, and go to the back of the line for citizenship - behind those who came here legally. But we cannot - and should not - deport 12 million people. That would turn American into something we're not; something we don't want to be.
While we work to strengthen our borders, we need a practical solution for the problem of 12 million people who are here without documentation - many of whom have lived and worked here for years. That's why we need to offer those who are willing to make amends a pathway to citizenship. That way, we can reconcile our values as both a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws.
But there's much more to this election than resolving the status of undocumented immigrants.
This election is also about the couple I met in North Las Vegas who saved up for decades only to be tricked into buying a home they couldn't afford; it's about the Latino families who are the first ones hurt by an economic downturn and the last ones helped by an economic upturn. They can't afford another four years of the Bush economic policies Senator McCain is offering - policies that give tax breaks to the biggest corporations and the wealthiest Americans, while doing little for struggling families who need help most.
They're counting on us to restore fairness to our economy by giving tax relief to working families; by supporting our unions; by ending tax breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas and giving them to companies that create jobs here at home. They're counting on us to finally come together to solve this housing crisis that's devastating our communities. I especially want to commend NCLR for your leadership on this issue - for helping so many families avoid fraud and foreclosure. I think it's time you had a president who supported your work - and I intend to be that president.
This election is also about the Latino students who are dropping out of school faster than nearly anyone else, and the children who attend overflowing classes in underfunded schools taught by teachers who aren't getting the support they need.
They're counting on us to invest in early childhood education, stop leaving the money behind for No Child Left Behind, recruit an army of new teachers; and make college affordable for anyone who wants to go. Because that's how we'll give every American the skills to compete in the global economy, and all our children the chance to live out their dreams.
This election is about working women who can't find affordable childcare or afterschool programs for their kids; women forced to lose their wages or quit their jobs to care for a newborn baby or an elderly parent.
They're counting on us to help them make a living while raising their kids - to fight for equal pay for equal work, and for childcare, family leave and sick leave, because here in America, there should be no second class citizens in our workplaces.
This election is about the veterans - including so many men and women from this community - who've served this country so bravely, but then come home to face new battles with the bureaucracy at the VA or the deplorable conditions at places like Fort Bragg and Walter Reed. And we've all walked by a veteran whose home is now a cardboard box on a street corner. It's a disgrace.
These American heroes are counting on us to build a 21st century VA; to provide the benefits and health care they've earned, including mental health care; and to ensure that no one who has served this country ever has to sleep on the streets.
This election is about the nearly one in three Hispanics who don't have health care - people for whom one accident, one illness can lead to financial ruin. And it's about the small business owners struggling to stay afloat because of the rising cost of insuring their employees. They're counting on us to fix our broken health care system.
Here's Senator McCain's answer to our health care crisis: vote against expanding the Children's Health Insurance Program - a program that provides health care for millions of children in need. And propose a radical plan that would shred our current system of employer-based health care and tax individual workers for their health benefits for the first time in history. A plan that would be financed by a $3.6 trillion tax increase on the middle class - an increase of more than $1,000 for the typical family. Under the McCain plan, many Americans could lose the health care they have - and pay more in taxes for the health care they get.
I have a very different answer to our health care crisis. I'll take on the drug and insurance companies, cut costs, guarantee health insurance for anyone who needs it and make it affordable for anyone who wants it.
And today, I'm announcing my plan to provide real relief for small business owners crushed by rising costs, an idea championed by my friend Hillary Clinton, who's been leading the way in our battle to insure every American. It's a plan that would help more employers provide health benefits for their workers - instead of making it harder for them, as Senator McCain would do.
We know that small businesses are the engines of economic prosperity in our communities - particularly Latino communities. And under my plan, if you're a small business that wants to provide health care to your employees, we'll give you a tax credit to make it affordable. My plan won't impose any new burdens on small businesses. Instead, we'll help them not just create new jobs, but good jobs - jobs with health care; jobs that stay right here in America; the kind of jobs we need in our communities.
That's how we're going to change the system in this country.
But I can't do this alone. So I'm here today to ask for your help.
Make no mistake about it: the Latino community holds this election in your hands. Some of the closest contests this November will be in states like Florida, Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico - states with large Latino populations.
And if you have any doubt about whether you can make a difference, just remember how, back in 2004, 40,000 registered Latino voters in New Mexico didn't turn out on election day. Senator Kerry lost that state by fewer than 6,000 votes. 6,000 votes. Today, in 2008, an estimated 170,000 Latinos in New Mexico aren't registered to vote.
I know how powerful this community is. Just think how powerful you could be on November 4th if you translate your numbers into votes.
And I'm not taking a single Latino vote for granted in this campaign. We're meeting with Latino leaders across the country. We're reaching out to Latino organizations to get input on my policy proposals. We've got a nationwide Hispanic media strategy. We're recruiting and training Latino organizers. We're holding Latino voter registration drives across America. And when I'm President, I'll be asking many of you to serve at every level of government.
That's how we'll change the direction of this country - from the ground up, vote by vote, precinct by precinct, state by state. And I hope every single one of you will join us. I need your advice and expertise. I need you to organize people to knock on doors, make calls and register voters. I need you to talk to your friends and family, co-workers and neighbors, and make sure they cast their ballots on election day.
We walked together on the streets of the South Side of Chicago. We walked together when I was a civil rights lawyer, registering Hispanic voters and giving Hispanics a greater voice in City Hall. We walked together in those marches for immigration reform. And if we get to the polls this November, we will walk together through those White House doors and into a new future for this country we all love.
That's how we'll make the system work again for everyone. By living up to the ideals that this organization has always embodied - the ideals reflected in your name - La Raza, the people. I'm told that the original phrase was "La Raza Cosmica" - the cosmic people - a term big enough to embrace the rich tapestry of cultures, colors and faiths that make up the Hispanic community. Big enough to embrace the notion that we are all part of a greater community - that we all have a stake in each other; that I am my brother's keeper, I am my sister's keeper; and we rise and fall together as one people.
So to that mother and all those who feel like the system just isn't made for people like you, I say this: that system and this country belong to every last one of us, black and white, Latino and Asian, rich and poor, gay and straight, young and old. And this November, we're going to come together to turn the page on the failed policies of the past. To bring new energy and new ideas to meet the challenges we face. And together, we won't just win an election - we will transform this nation.
Thank you, and God bless you.
Barack Obama is the President of the United States of America.

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WALL STREET’S RAPE AND PILLAGE OF A NATION… and it ain’t over!

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http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/more-than-5-million-households-had.html

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More than 5 million households had their wealth wiped out since 2005
By Andre Damon
28 July 2011
The typical US household lost 28 percent of its wealth during the economic crisis, with one third of these being totally wiped out, according to a recent analysis of Census Bureau data carried out by the Pew Research Center, “Wealth Gaps Rise to Record Highs Between Whites, Blacks and Hispanics”.
While the study headlines racial disparities, the most striking findings concern the general impoverishment of all sections of the population. The percent of US households who have a net worth of zero dollars or below—meaning they have more debts than assets—grew from 15 percent in 2005, to 20 percent in 2009. This means that 5.6 million households, or about 15 million people, had their wealth totally wiped out during the first part of the economic downturn. These figures come from an analysis of Census Bureau survey data for 2005 and 2009.
The study found that, after adjusting for inflation, the median wealth of US households fell from $96,894 in 2005 to $70,000 in 2009, a drop of 28 percent. The majority of this is attributable to the precipitous fall in real estate values, by about 30 percent between 2006 and 2009 and even more since.
The fall in home values has been compounded by falling wages. Between 2005 and 2009, workers’ average hourly earnings fell, on an inflation-adjusted basis, by 5 percent, according to the Labor Department.
Indebtedness has grown as rapidly as wealth has fallen. Between 2005 and 2009, unsecured liabilities grew 33 percent for the population as a whole, the study found.
Meanwhile, the share of household wealth held by the wealthiest ten percent of households grew from 49 percent in 2005 to 56 percent in 2009.
Racial minorities have been particularly hard hit, including by the fall in housing values. The net worth of Hispanic households fell by a staggering 66 percent, from $12,124 in 2005 to $5,677 in 2009. The net worth of black households has likewise tumbled 53 percent. Among Hispanics, unsecured debt grew by 47 percent.
The level of inequality between whites, blacks, and Hispanics is now at the highest level in 25 years, and no doubt longer. The racial differentiation is partly attributable to geography. While whites saw the values of their own homes fall by 18 percent and blacks by 23 percent, the home values of Hispanics fell by more than half.
As the report notes, “In 2005, more than two-in-five of the nation’s Hispanic and Asian households resided in Arizona, California, Florida, Michigan and Nevada, the five states with the steepest declines in home prices.” For Hispanics living in these states, the report noted, “median net worth tumbled from $51,464 in 2005 to $6,375 in 2009, a loss of 88 percent.”
These racial divergences, however, mask the more fundamental growth of inequality between the working class and the wealthy of all races. The report notes that the wealthiest 10 percent of blacks now controls 67 percent of the wealth for that group, compared to 59 percent before the downturn. For Hispanics, likewise, the wealthiest 10 percent controlled 72 percent of wealth in 2009, up from 59 percent in 2005.
The number of unemployed, meanwhile, grew from 7.9 million to 15.2 million between 2005 and 2009. Rising unemployment, too, has disproportionately affected minorities. Unemployment has affected blacks and hispanics disproportionately, with the unemployment rate for blacks currently at 16.5 percent and 11.6 percent for hispanics.
The staggering fall in wealth has had an transformative effect on American society, contributing to the millions of foreclosures and personal bankruptcies. According to figures from Realtytrac.com, there were 10 million foreclosures between 2005 and 2009, the years covered by the survey.
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UNDER OBAMA, THE RICH GET RICHER, AND JOBS GO TO HIS LA RAZA PARTY BASE!
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/obamanomics-wall-st-profits-soar-so.html
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http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/why-rich-and-illegals-vow-to-reelect.html
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THE RICH LOVE HIM! ILLEGALS ADORE HIM! HE’S MEXICO’S ANSWER TO WELFARE. “FREE” GRINGO-PAID HEALTHCARE AND ANCHOR BABY BREEDING… EVEN THE MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS APPRECIATE THE WAY OBAMA HAS NEUTERED BORDER SECURITY AND HELPED THEM EASE DRUG CARTELS INTO OUR NATION.
OBAMA! THE BIGGEST PUNKSTER IN AMERICAN HISTORY!

HE WALKS ABOUT LIKE A SOVEREIGN PRETENDING TO BE ABOVE IT ALL AS HE SERVICES HIS CRIMINAL BANKSTER DONORS AND TURNS THE WHITE HOUSE INTO HEADQUARTERS FOR THE LA RAZA SUPREMACIST PARTY.
REALITY OF AMERICAN UNDER OBAMA’S ASSAULT ON THE AMERICAN WORKER:
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/05/joe-american-legal-vs-la-raza-jose.html

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Proving that President Obama is the first choice of Wall Street and the American super-rich, his reelection campaign announced Wednesday that it had broken all previous records for fundraising, raking in $86 million during the second quarter of this year.
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Obama campaign raises record sums from the wealthy
By Patrick Martin
15 July 2011
Proving that President Obama is the first choice of Wall Street and the American super-rich, his reelection campaign announced Wednesday that it had broken all previous records for fundraising, raking in $86 million during the second quarter of this year.

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