I think Nancy Pelosi and I have the same idea. Majority should rule, but it seems he's getting what he wanted from the Senate. The House will vote on Friday.
The New York Times
Wednesday, October 1, 2008 -- 9:56 PM ET
The Senate strongly endorsed the $700 billion economic
bailout plan Wednesday, leaving backers optimistic that the
easy approval, coupled with an array of popular additions,
would lead to House acceptance by Friday and end the
legislative uncertainty that has rocked the markets.
Written September 23, 2008 for the Business 200 Exam:
Our environment has completely changed in the past eight years. Globalization has wholly changed the ways we all do business. When bad choices are made, we deal with the consequences. This addition to our spiral downward doesn't add value to the U.S. The contrast between business and government is, in business, if you mess up, you are fired. President Bush is not effectively working through his administration to achieve organizational objectives in this changing environment that has been unstructured and doomed from the beginning. He has obviously been mismanaging the administration. There was and is no planning.
He effectively wants to erase the mess by passing billions of dollars of debt on to our pockets. The central element in the process of management that entails achieving a stated organizational objective seems to be, “f*(% it.” It’s like President Bush wants to try one last dumb thing before he completes his run.
This is definitely not a balance. In his entire run he never served the U.S. He served his ego. Most managers fail with this derailed way of thinking. President Bush has not exercised control in any of the situations this country has been placed in. This example of decision making is unethical and reckless. This choice is definitely not an example of the best business practices or even a strategy. There is no “get out jail free” card, his choices have consequences.
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