Clemson outplayed and outcoached Bama. Congrats to Clemson. They deserved the win. They made the win. Bama just dicked around. However, I am focused on next season already. MAGA Make Alabama Great Again Yes sir boys...next season Bama is gonna whip up on them: “every team they play..gonna make em pay” A tsunami is coming next season.....watch out...take cover..Bama is soon back! The comeback is better than the setback! ITS LIKE TRADING. YOU GOTTA GO ON TO THE NEXT TRADE. LAST TRADE HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH NEXT ONE.
"Like Hoover, Trump has held only one elected office in his life – the Presidency. 1928 was the first time Hoover ran for public office, 2016 was the first time the Donald ran for office." "Like Trump, Hoover was a well-known celebrity long before he reached the presidency. The difference is that Hoover had a reputation as the “Great Humanitarian;" "Like Trump, Hoover was a famous businessman. Hoover made a large fortune as a mining engineer before going into “public service.”" "Hoover was tough on immigration like Trump. When the Depression began he cut the number of work visas to zero, " "Hoover was an opponent of free-trade just like Trump. Hoover signed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930; which raised prices on 20,000 imported goods. Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal and is promising a trade war on steel." "Hoover like Trump was a staunch advocate of public works. He was responsible for the building of the Hoover Dam and pushed for the construction of government-owned airports. Trump’s campaign promises included $1 trillion in infrastructure." "Hoover, like Trump saw the stock market rise to new high highs. The stock market had gone up 20% a year between 1922 and 1929. Then it lost 25% of its value in October and November 1929 and never really recovered until the 1950s. The value of the S&P 500 grew by 79.15% between 2012 and 2017. It gained 20.33% in value last year. Obviously Trump; like Hoover, has no control over the stock market but the similarity is bothersome. The 1920s, like 2010s, were a time of great income inequality. In 1928 the top one percent of Americans received 23.9% of all pretax income, Pew Research reported. By 2013, the wealthiest 1% of American households received 21.2% of all pretax income, Income Inequality reported. The level of income growth is also bothersome with wages for the top 1% growing by 138% since 1979 while those for the bottom 90% grew by 15% in the same period