I wanted to take an empirical look at various aspects of the state of the country at this point in Biden's term and compare it to both this same point in Trump's term and where the country was when Trump left and Biden took over.

Here's what I came up with. References included. Image
During Biden's term so far, America has had two straight quarters of greater than 6% GDP growth, the latest being at 6.6%. At this point four years ago, the GDP growth was 2.3%.

The US has seen 4.454 million jobs added to US payrolls since 02/2021. Four years ago it was 1.312M. Image
The most recent unemployment rate is higher (5.2%) than it was four years ago (4.4%). We did have a recession last year and this was not the situation in 2017.

More Americans think it's a good time to find a good job than was the case four years ago. Image
The Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate, which is the percentage of the population of working age who are in the work force, is a little less today than it was four years ago (61.7% versus 62.9%).

The National Debt has grown by a greater % now than at this point in 2017. Image
For most of Biden's term in office, the growth in the Dow has outpaced the growth at the same point during Trump's term four years ago. Recent concerns about the Delta virus caused a decline in the market and now the Dow growth is a little less than it was at this point in 2017. Image
Biden's current Gallup approval rating is the lowest of his term so far but it's still higher than Trump's was at this same point four years ago.

The price of gas has risen a good bit. Milk has risen only a little bit. Bread has risen by a relatively small amount. Image
Now when you take a look at what Biden inherited when he came to office in January 2021 and what Trump inherited when he came to office in January 2017, there are some notable differences. Image
Biden inherited from Trump nearly $8 trillion in additional national debt than Trump inherited from Obama.

The Federal Budget Deficit that Biden inherited from Trump is nearly five times the Deficit that Trump inherited from Obama. Image
Trump inherited more than 6 years of continual job growth. Biden inherited none as the most recent job report that had been released as of the date he took office had a loss of 306,000 jobs. Image
Trump inherited a Bull Market that had been running for 7 years and 11 months. Biden inherited a Bull Market that had been in place for less than 1 year. Image
And when Trump took office, the last recession officially ended 7 1/2 years beforehand. When Biden took office, the last recession ended just over half a year beforehand. Image
In the time since the Inauguration, GDP growth has risen from 4.5% to 6.6%.

The unemployment rate has fallen from 6.7% to 5.2%.

In January, not many Americans thought it was a good time to try to find a good job (27%). By August, the most recent poll, 72% thought it was. Image
The Dow has grown by low double digits in the months since Inauguration.

However, the number of people who have been caught at the Southwest Border (US/Mexico) has risen considerably. Image
The Inauguration occurred 9 days after the statistical peak of COVID deaths in the United States (7 day rolling average). A lot of people died in the beginning of the year. And as the more contagious Delta virus began to dominate in July, the deaths have increased again. Image
The number of people who are dying from COVID is significant again. However, unlike in earlier parts of the pandemic, the people who are dying are almost exclusively (percentage-wise) unvaccinated. And a significant percentage of Americans have chosen to remain unvaccinated. Image
The percentage of Americans who have been partially and fully vaccinated has increased significantly. However, daily vaccinations peaked in mid-April. As I have pointed out before, there is a significant difference in the COVID death rates between states.
Image
Gas prices have risen significantly over the course of the year. Milk has risen very modestly. The price of bread has actually fallen.

So this is the data that I could collect that laid out where we are, where we were four years ago and where we were in January in these areas. Image
The economic indicators for jobs and the market are positive. A lot of people feel good about their prospect of getting a good job. The economy is growing. And millions of people who were not working in January have jobs now.

The cost of some items, especially gas, has gone up.
The numbers of people attempting to cross the US/Mexico border has gone up. If you look at the official numbers, you will see that an uptick in border encounters began last October. But it has definitely increased since January.
From January through May of this year, the border traffic mirrored a similar surge in 2019 during Trump's third year in office. But after May, 2019, the numbers came down. In 2021, they have stayed rather high.
If you compare the situation that Biden inherited in 2021 with that which Trump inherited in 2017, the contrast could not be greater. Trump inherited a long-stable economy, a much lower National Debt and Deficit and did not inherit a pandemic that was killing thousands a day.
This is as much of an apples-to-apples comparison as I was able to put together so far to compare where we are with where we were, what Biden and Trump dealt with when taking office and what's changed since January, all in numbers that you can confirm for yourselves.

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More from @TheValuesVoter

29 Sep
I’m a very imperfect but Bible believing Christian who believes in the rule of law and values faith and facts. Not into weird conspiracy theories. Never even thought about invading the US Capitol.

I need a break from seeing crazy people in the news identifying as Christians.
It’s way too frequent that I hear somebody promoting some severely insane theory about something bad about the COVID vaccine, how they think Trump won the election or they tried to do something extreme and then I hear them make reference to their supposed Christian faith. Stop!!!
Just once, can we have a story about somebody who invaded the Capitol or who went into a tirade about vaccines during a PTA meeting get interviewed by reporters and say “I celebrate Festivus” or something?

Just a couple? Please!
Read 4 tweets
29 Sep
How much have COVID vaccines, which themselves have absolutely nothing to do with politics, become politicized? Here's how much.

Here are two tables that show the states in order of the percentage of their populations which are fully vaccinated along with how they voted in 2020. Image
On a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 means there is no relationship and 100 means they are totally related, the relationship between the percentage of a state's population that is fully vaccinated against COVID and the number of points by which Trump won or lost the state is a 78. Image
For a few examples, Vermont is the state with the highest vaccination rate (and, by the way, happens to have a Republican Governor). And it's the contest where Trump did second worst (only in DC did he lose by a greater margin).
Read 5 tweets
27 Sep
You guys were in charge while the debt increased by almost EIGHT TRILLION DOLLARS in EXACTLY FOUR YEARS! And now you want to stop us from PAYING THE INTEREST on that debt!!!

Fiscal Responsibility my rear end!
Since the Senate Republicans want to go this route, let’s do some math, shall we:

The @SenateGOP took control of the US Senate on 1/3/2015. On that day, the National Debt was:
$18.081 trillion.

Trump was inaugurated 1/20/2017. On that day, the debt was:
$19.947 trillion.
Read 15 tweets
25 Sep
How did Trump take over the Republican Party so completely?

I often criticize Trump’s negative attributes but I am about to compliment one skill that he possesses which all bullies have. He can smell weakness and fear from a mile away.
Remember back in 2015 when a lot of us thought that Marco Rubio was a man of courage, that Ted Cruz was a Constitutional Conservative and that Lindsey Graham stood for actual things? We thought that. We we were wrong. Trump never saw thaf. He saw through them and he was right.
Trump attacks people. But he focuses his attacks on people he sees as weak. He doesn’t tend to continue attacking people who consistently stand up to him. Which is one reason he attacks Mike Lee and Lindsey Graham and not so much Mitt Romney.
Read 13 tweets
25 Sep
45 different men have served as US President. And 11 of them have been voted out of office. Losing is not in itself something to be ashamed of. It happens. About a quarter of the time.

But Donald Trump is the only POTUS in history to deny and try to overturn his loss.
#TrumpLost
Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush all spent their post-Presidential careers after being voted out as respected elder statesmen. They all used their experience to help those who came to office after them in one way or another.
In contrast, Donald Trump is going to spend the rest of his sad life pathologically denying the fact that he lost while trying to overturn both his loss and dismantling democracy itself.

Getting voted out of office is not the thing that makes a former US President a “loser.”
Read 4 tweets
25 Sep
States with the highest number of COVID deaths per Capita over the period from 9/17/21 through 9/24/21:

Alabama (pop 5.0 mil)
New deaths: 1,065
New deaths per 100k pop: 21

Florida (pop 21.5 mil)
New deaths: 2,769
New deaths per 100k pop: 13
9/17/21 - 9/24/21:
West Virginia (pop 1.8 mil)
New deaths: 210
New deaths per 100k pop: 12

South Carolina (pop 5.1 mil)
New deaths: 548
New deaths per 100k pop: 11

Georgia (pop 10.7 mil)
New deaths: 975
New deaths per 100k pop: 9
9/17/21 - 9/24/21:
Mississippi (pop 3.0 mil)
New deaths: 260
New deaths per 100k pop: 9

Alaska (pop 0.7 mil)
New deaths: 64
New deaths per 100k pop: 9

Texas (pop 29.1 mil)
New deaths: 2,443
New deaths per 100k: 8
Read 5 tweets

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