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NAM/IndustryWeek Q4 Survey:
Sharp Decline in Manufacturers’
Optimism

Industry Week, by Chad Moutray

Original Article

Posted By:nhchemist, 12/6/2012 9:55:32 AM

Manufacturing activity has stalled of late, global sales are slowing and the threat of going over the fiscal cliff looms. These are contributing factors to a sharp decline in manufacturers’ optimism, which has plummeted from 88.7% in March to barely more than 50% today. (Snip) The most recent NAM/IndustryWeek Survey of Manufacturers finds that 84.2% of respondents said that political uncertainties—including the fiscal cliff and budget sequestration—were their top challenge. These anxieties are dampening hiring and investment and reducing overall optimism.

Comments:
Long article showing how Washington in general and 0bama in particular is on track to derail the recovery.

  

Post Reply  

Reply 1 - Posted by: whyyeseyec, 12/6/2012 11:25:57 AM     (No. 9051648)

Obama/Dummy policies are working quite well. This is a successful presidency!!

/s



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Below, you will find ...

Most Recent Articles posted by "nhchemist"

and

Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)




Most Recent Articles posted by "nhchemist"



Once more, weighing in on
never-ending gun issue
Union Leader [Manchester, NH], by John Harrigan    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 3/31/2013 9:20:47 AM     Post Reply
Gun control has been driving the news this week, or at least the mail. In recent weeks readers have been encouraging me to dive into the morass. There is so much noise on this issue that I don´t know where to begin. (Snip) There are abundant gun laws on the books. If they were enforced and followed up we might be able to make a dent in gun violence. But laws don´t curb the lawless.

A Tale of Two States
Bangor Daily News[ME], by J. Scott Moody    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 3/28/2013 8:54:21 PM     Post Reply
Today the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis released their 2012 personal income estimates. Personal income is an important economic measure of a state’s well-being. (Snip) Since 1950, Maine has increased taxes and spending dramatically with the introduction of the sales tax in 1951 and the income tax in 1969. New Hampshire, on the other hand, did not. Increasing taxes on the private sector has two consequences. First, higher taxes will mean less money in the pockets of individuals and businesses which will reduce their ability to invest for the future.

Opinion: Too much talk of taxing
The Hill [Washington, DC], by Judd Gregg    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 3/11/2013 10:24:46 AM     Post Reply
Many who march in the army of the president say that all they want is to return to the good old days when Bill Clinton rode the range and rich people paid their fair share of taxes. Back then, they say, all was good. In 2000, the top tax rate was 39.6 percent and there was a 2.9 percent Medicare tax on top of that. (Snip) This means that the top stated rate for taxes is now 43.4 percent — a rate that is higher than that paid in Clintonian times.

Green Cars Have a Dirty Little Secret
Wall Street Journal, by Bjorn Lomborg    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 3/10/2013 8:07:59 PM     Post Reply
Electric cars are promoted as the chic harbinger of an environmentally benign future. Ads assure us of "zero emissions," and President Obama has promised a million on the road by 2015. With sales for 2012 coming in at about 50,000, that million-car figure is a pipe dream. (Snip) If a typical electric car is driven 50,000 miles over its lifetime, the huge initial emissions from its manufacture means the car will actually have put more carbon-dioxide in the atmosphere than a similar-size gasoline-powered car driven the same number of miles.

‘Freedom’ license plate
banned in Washington D.C.
Washington Examiner, by Charlie Spiering    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 3/5/2013 5:28:49 PM     Post Reply
The word “FREEDOM” is among the list of banned vanity license plate slogans for Washington D.C., according to a government file obtained by a Freedom of Information Request filed by the transparency website GovernmentAttic.org. Other banned phrases include anti-tax messages such as "TAXKLLR" and "TAXRUS4" as well as any reference to the President of the United States such as “OBAMA,” “BARACK,” and “OBAMA44.? “RONPAUL” is also banned.

   

 

  


 
Man sentenced in 2011 Portsmouth
kidnap attempt, almost has to
pay for victim´s gun as well
Union Leader [Manchester, NH], by James A. Kimble    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 2/15/2013 5:32:16 PM     Post Reply
Brentwood - A Portsmouth man received the maximum sentence for attempting to kidnap a woman as she got out of her SUV at a shopping plaza, and almost got ordered to pay for the gun she later bought to protect herself. James Perry, 37, was sentenced to 7½ to 15 years in state prison Thursday, drawing harsh words from Judge N. William Delker about the lifelong fear he imposed on the victim, Katherine Booth. "My only regret in this case is that I can´t sentence you to more than the maximum," Delker said. "You are a complete predator. ... You are a walking example of what society fears

Japan is caught
in a stimulus trap
Washington Post, by Robert J. Samuelson    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 2/4/2013 10:05:30 AM     Post Reply
The lesson is that huge budget deficits and ultra-low interest rates — the basics of stimulus — have limits and can be self-defeating. To use a well-worn metaphor: Stimulus becomes a narcotic. People feel better for a while, but the effect wears off. The economy then needs a new fix. Too many fixes may spawn new problems (examples: excessive debt, asset “bubbles,” inflation). That’s already happened in Japan. It’s caught in a trap. On the one hand, it needs stimulus to grow. On the other, the debt from past stimulus measures threatens future growth.

Manchester ambulance service rates
go up about 50 percent
Union Leader [Manchester, NH], by Ted Siefer    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 1/25/2013 2:54:26 PM     Post Reply
The city´s designated emergency ambulance company, American Medical Response, has significantly increased its rates, prompting fresh complaints about large bills for trips to the hospital. Starting on Jan. 1, the company hiked its rates about 50 percent, charging $2,445 for a standard trip to the hospital. (Snip) AMR officials have said that it is forced to raise the rates it charges insurance companies to defray the costs of providing emergency service to those only covered by Medicare or Medicaid, as well as those who do not have insurance and cannot afford to pay.

New Hampshire has most machine
guns per capita in the country
Foster´s Daily Democrat [Dover, NH], by Jim Haddadin    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 1/21/2013 1:42:35 PM     Post Reply
The number of automatic weapons in New Hampshire increased dramatically after 2010, according to federal firearms records, although it remains unclear whether the growth is being driven by civilians, law enforcement or the military. The number of registered machine guns in New Hampshire spiked 80 percent between the end of 2010 and March 2012, according to the most current data available from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). (Snip) ATF data indicates there were 9,863 registered machine guns in New Hampshire as of last March, up from 5,479 in December 2010.

Police chiefs´ rifle raffle riles
some questioning if it´s appropriate
Union Leader [Manchester, NH], by Meghan Pierce    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 1/15/2013 8:54:35 PM     Post Reply
The New Hampshire Association of Chiefs of Police is taking heat for a fundraiser in which firearms are being raffled. The fundraiser - called "a month of firearms" - offers raffle ticket buyers a chance on each day during the month of May to win a New Hampshire-made sporting firearm. A thousand tickets went on sale in October and have already sold out. (Snip) The raffle is supporting the New Hampshire Police Cadet Training Academy and was put together in partnership with Newport businesses Ruger and Rody´s Gun Club,

   

 



 
This Metamorphosis Will
Require a Permit
Wall Street Journal, by Roger Kimball    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 1/15/2013 1:35:00 PM     Post Reply
Like many people whose houses were badly damaged by Hurricane Sandy, my family and I have been living in a rented house since the storm. Unlike some whose houses were totalled, we could have repaired things and been home toasting our tootsies by our own fireplace by now. What happened? Two things: zoning (as in "Twilight Zone") and FEMA. (Snip) Before you could get a building permit, however, you had to be approved by the Zoning Authority. And Zoning—citing FEMA regulations—would force you to bring the house "up to code,"

House panel blocks most GOP attempts
to trim Sandy disaster-relief bill
The Hill [Washington, DC], by Pete Kasperowicz    Original Article
Posted By: nhchemist- 1/15/2013 10:00:58 AM     Post Reply
The Republican-led House Rules Committee late Monday approved a rule for a massive Hurricane Sandy relief package that shuts out most GOP proposals to pare back the size of the bill. The main bill provides $17 billion in relief, and an amendment made in order would add another $33.7 billion, for a total of $50.7 billion. Late last week, Republicans offered amendments that would trim the bill significantly, but few of those were made "in order" by the Rules Committee on Monday.



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69 replie(s)
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Posted By: Dreadnought- 4/11/2013 11:17:15 PM     Post Reply
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Posted By: Drive- 4/12/2013 6:44:47 AM     Post Reply
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American Thinker, by Doug Mainwaring    Original Article
Posted By: Desert Fox- 4/12/2013 6:34:43 AM     Post Reply
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Senate votes 68-31 to move
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Posted By: JoniTx- 4/11/2013 12:23:49 PM     Post Reply
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Posted By: KarenJ1- 4/12/2013 11:51:37 AM     Post Reply
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Posted By: JoniTx- 4/12/2013 1:16:37 PM     Post Reply
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Posted By: Scottyboy- 4/12/2013 9:57:16 AM     Post Reply
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Posted By: JoniTx- 4/12/2013 7:28:32 PM     Post Reply
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Posted By: JoniTx- 4/11/2013 10:41:58 AM     Post Reply
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Fox News, by Lisa Eadicicco    Original Article
Posted By: KarenJ1- 4/11/2013 1:17:23 PM     Post Reply
Global PC shipments fell by 13.9 percent in the first quarter of 2013, and according to analyst firm IDC , Windows 8 could very well be the reason. On Wednesday, the Wall Street Journal reported that 76.3 million PC units shipped during the most recent financial period, marking the biggest decline since the IDC began publishing quarterly numbers 19 years ago. “The reaction to Windows 8 is real,” Jay Chou, an IDC analyst, said to The Wall Street Journal. Increased demand for mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets have also played a role in this decline,

   

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