JOE BIDEN IS WRECKING THE ECONOMY BUT AT LEAST HIS TWEETS ARE SWEET!

Byl Holte
2 min readJun 24, 2021

When Dire Straits hit it big in 1986 with a song called “Money for Nothing”, they certainly never thought it would become a tentpole of the 2021 US Government and the Biden Administration — but here we are!

Naturally this (like everything Biden does) is having a devastating effect on today’s economy by making it impossible for small businesses to staff up effectively. More and more businesses are using the “WE ARE CLOSED” sign not because of COVID lockdowns but because they can’t find people willing to work for wages that might be less than what they’re already getting for FREE from the government.

According to Biden, “Americans want to work…I think the people who claim Americans won’t work even if they find a good and fair opportunity underestimate the American people”.

But numbers say otherwise. Jobs numbers grew markedly slower than expected in April after Biden signed legislation expanding the expanded unemployment benefits until September, and unemployment ticked up to 6.1 percent.

Biden continued: “I know there’s been a lot of discussion since Friday’s report that people are being paid to stay home rather than go to work,” Biden said. “We don’t see much evidence of that.”

And of course he pivoted to his fallback position of blaming Trump for extending the coronavirus pandemic which “forced” Americans to stay unemployed long-term. He only uses this tactic when he knows he’s wrong.

Biden’s “creeping Socialism”, so applauded and most likely even orchestrated by AOC+3, is as always a national cancer that is now threatening to undo what this country was founded on: Free Market Enterprise. Author and Disney Youtuber Kambrea Pratt tweets it most effectively here:

“Everyone celebrating the “We Are Closed” signs realize that small business are going out and the mega rich corporations will just get bigger right? They practically own politicians. Also there are shortages and big price hikes coming since they can’t keep up with demand.”

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