Biden: We Are Spending As Fast As We Can
Wal-Mart Opening Stores, Hiring Thousands This Year
Germany Warns of Fed Power, Another Crisis
Facing Billions in Red Ink, Airlines Demand Help
Court to Hear Appeal on Chrysler Deal on Friday
Benefit spending soars to new high
Plan to Help Banks Clear Their Books Is Halted
Bernanke Presses For Fiscal Restraint
Inhofe’s Road to Clean, Affordable Energy
American Workers Deserve a RAISE
Who Needs a Ways and Means Committee?
The Great Obama: Pulling A GM Profit Out Of His ‘Box of Cash’
Microsoft: Obama Tax Hikes Will Cost US Jobs
The Global Government Debt Bubble Is Here
Rove: It’s the Economy, Stupid
1 of every 6 dollars of Americans’ income is government check or voucher
MICROSOFT to move jobs overseas if Obama tax plan goes through
Is Your Portfolio Ready for Hyperinflation?
Experts Fear U.S. Will Suffer Zimbabwe-Level Inflation
Dollar Declines as Nations Mull Reserve Currency Alternative
Bernanke: Start Work Now to Curb Deficits
Signs of a New Financial Storm for September Coming from Dubai and Saudi Arabia
California’s Day of Reckoning a Warning to Europe
31-Year-Old “Almost Law Student” in Charge of Dismantling GM
Citigroup Stuck with Bernanke Plan Rivals Plan to Refuse
US Newspaper Revenue Slide Continues
GM Shuts Part of US “Arsenal of Democracy”
Chinese Students Laugh at Geithner
“One of the biggest bankruptcies in history occurred on June 1st yet you would not know this by looking at the stock market. In fact, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) shot up by 220 points. If we look at total assets, this is the fourth largest bankruptcy in history. The Dow is made up of 30 companies that show a supposedly wide cross section of the American economy. The company that filed for bankruptcy was General Motors and was actually one of the 30 components. A company that dates back to 1908 and survived the Great Depression. So how can it be that a company that employs 250,000 filing for bankruptcy is actually good for the stock market and makes the DJIA rally so strongly? The easy answer is the stock market no longer reflects the economic reality on main street.”
Northwestern Mutual Insurance Makes First Gold Buy in 152 Years!