While one of my options is to move to Ireland, and I've already got a roommate. I probably won't do that. The hard reality is, the election didn't go the way I had hoped. That being said, and as disappointed as i am...and I am REALLY DISAPPOINTED. We have a lawyer AGAIN...we added a billion pages (I am not even sure that is an exaggeration) of paperwork in the last four years, have a president that is pro union, spends money like he can print it, AND thinks taxing 2.3% from the TOP line is a good idea. This is a prime example of a politician that has NEVER run a business.
He is our president and this is America, and I will support him, but Mr. President, do us all a favor and surround yourself with business leaders NOT politicians.
You might find the following article, Majority of Voters See America on Wrong Track, by Tom Curry informative:
"As voters left polling places Tuesday, a majority told exit poll interviewers they felt the country was “seriously off on the wrong track.” But the mood of the electorate was markedly more optimistic than it was four years ago, when a record three out of four voters said the country was on the wrong track.
In preliminary results from early voters in the national NBC News exit poll, 52 percent said America was on the wrong track while 46 percent said the nation was "generally going in the right direction."
Preliminary results from exit polls also showed that most voters, 53 percent, thought the federal government is doing too much, a sharp contrast with four years ago, when the country was in the midst of a financial and economic crisis. At that time only 43 percent of voters said the government was doing too much and a majority, 51 percent, thought the government ought to do more to try to solve the nation’s problems.
Not surprisingly three out of five voters Tuesday said the economy was the most important issue facing the country, but poll respondents were divided as to what specific economic challenge loomed largest.
When asked, “Which one of these four is the biggest economic problem facing people like you?” 39 percent chose unemployment, nearly that many (36 percent) said rising prices, while 14 percent said taxes were the biggest problem and 7 percent said housing."
To read the full article, click here.

J. Robert Saron
President
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