Opinion

EDITORIAL

'Everything's going well in Nevada'

Posted: Oct. 21, 2009 | 10:00 p.m.
Updated: Apr. 10, 2012 | 9:39 a.m.

Speaking before a carefully hand-picked audience -- most of the 500 tickets to the gathering in the Lawlor Events Center at the University of Nevada, Reno were distributed through the office of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid -- Vice President Joe Biden assured Northern Nevadans on Friday that the Obama administration's $787 billion economic stimulus plan has started to move the nation toward economic recovery. Mr. Biden went on to say that Harry Reid has made sure Nevadans are getting their share.

As evidence of economic recovery, the vice president mentioned that stocks have risen by 35 percent since January, with the Dow Jones industrial average topping the 10,000 mark last week.

"It is the beginning," Mr. Biden said. "It is restoring the savings of middle-class families. We were in free fall in this economy. Everyone forgets that."

But is the market recovering due to the success of the Obama initiatives, or because the Democrats' carbon-trading, "cap-and-tax" boondoggle appears dead? And those savings are denominated in dollars, of course. What the non-stop running of the Washington printing presses is going to do to the purchasing power of the dollar remains to be seen.

Mr. Biden stressed Nevada would have a hard time being "serviced when you don't have a senior senator." Retaining Sen. Reid in office is the "lifeblood of getting any blood to Nevada," he said.

Interesting. So it's the vice president's position that voters in the 25 states whose senators enjoy below-average seniority should expect to get the shaft? Where's that leave tiny Delaware, which presumably got a new senator to replace Mr. Biden just this year? More on that in a moment.

Both Mr. Biden and Sen. Reid declared that 4,000 Nevada teaching jobs have already been "saved" by stimulus funds; the vice president further vowed that on Oct. 30 he will announce just how many jobs, total, have been saved or created by the stimulus plan.

That will surely be welcome. Only three days after the pep rally in Reno, the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation announced Nevada joblessness rose from 13.2 percent in August to 13.3 percent in September, and that the jump in the Las Vegas market was even more severe -- from 13.4 percent to 13.9 percent in the single month.

"Everything is going well in Nevada," Sen. Reid insisted last week, reporting that real estate agents in Las Vegas tell him they see signs of economic recovery, and that Las Vegas hotels remain full on weekends. "We're doing fine," he emphasized

A sunny disposition isn't all bad. Las Vegans certainly are doing their best. But Sen. Reid apparently hasn't had the experience of driving to his favorite Las Vegas pizza joint or insurance or travel agency, only to find the storefront suddenly empty.

The national unemployment rate is 9.8 percent -- bad enough. But in Las Vegas, more than 135,000 people are out of work. Unemployed people don't eat out, or buy much in the way of new clothes or cars. And so the spiral continues.

Back in February, when Sen. Reid was helping to enact the huge, special-interest "stimulus" pork bill, Nevada's unemployment stood at 10 percent. At that time, he promised the Democrats' massive spending bill "would create three and a half million jobs across the country, including 34,000 in Nevada."

Are they hiding all those new jobs up at Area 51?

On top of that, on the very day Sen. Reid and Mr. Biden were engaged in their mutual back-patting at UNR, the Treasury Department revealed the federal deficit had surged to an all-time high of $1.4 trillion -- higher than those of the final four years of the Bush administration, combined.

As for the notion that Sen. Reid must continue in office to ensure Nevada keeps receiving adequate federal support? The Review-Journal reported in February that Nevada's per capita haul from the stimulus plan was $560 per person, second lowest in the nation. Mr. Biden's home state of Delaware, on the other hand, received ... $1,360 per person, highest in the nation.

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  1. Outoftowner Oct. 27, 2009 | 2:23 p.m. Report Abuse

    Now we got that gumshoe wandering around the country spending taxpayer money bragging about how great the stimilus plan is working for Nevadans. Tell that to the 13.5% unemployed out there. Nevada is 2nd in state unemployment numbers and it is going up every month. Thank Obama and Reid for sticking it to us. Biden wouldn't know what a stimilus is much less be able to talk about it.
    Someone should have asked him how much Pennsylvania got out of the deal. Nevada got screwed by the Dumocrats and Harry has to ask that ugly Pilosi bi... what he should do everyday.
    Election time is coming and Harry's time is short.
    Let's hope he doesn't try to do any more damage before he get's booted out of office.

  2. James Jacobs Oct. 25, 2009 | 10:55 p.m. Report Abuse

    Facts you'll never here on Faux News -- or CNN for that matter:


    --Number of months we've been in recession: 20
    --Number of months stimulus has been in effect: 6

    --Number of job losses per month when Obama took office: 700,000
    --Number of job losses last month: 263,000

    --GDP decline when Obama took office: -6%
    --GDP decline last quarter: -1% (and probably positive growth right now)

    --Dow Jones when Obama came into office: 8,000
    --Dow Jones now: 10,000

  3. Miles Monroe Oct. 21, 2009 | 4:32 p.m. Report Abuse

    Yes Brian we do. And we don't deny that Bush was the spawn of the current situation. What we're trying to do is resurrect what little dignity we have left before the Socialists pick the carcass clean.

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