Beyonce Has A Big Problem With What Melania Was Seen With, Accuses Her Of Stealing From Her

Beyonce Has A Big Problem With What Melania Was Seen With, Accuses Her Of Stealing From Her

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If this doesn’t go to prove that people today have way too much time on their hands, nothing will.

Last month President Donald Trump-hosted French President Emmanuel Macron for the first formal state dinner of his presidential administration.

On the day after the dinner, the president and first lady gathered on the South Lawn of the White House along with members of the Cabinet to greet President Macron and his wife, Brigitte. In a traditional arrival ceremony featuring a 21-g*n salute and a review of troops. The festivities involved nearly 500 members of the five military branches and it’s truly a spectacle to be seen.

But because we all know by now that people just lack the intelligence level nowadays to appreciate a ceremony like this, what caught the eye of the keyboard commandos on the internet wasn’t the ceremony, it was non-other than First Lady Melania’s hat.
We have the lowest unemployment rate since 2000. We have the lowest African American unemployment rate ever recorded. We have companies moving back from overseas and people are getting raises and bonuses. We have a historic summit in the Korean Peninsula and the end of the Korean War, after over 60 years. And the media and internet keyboard commandos are worried about the first lady’s hat?

In contrast when Obama would gloat when our unemployment numbers dropped from 9% to 8.9% the media and the unemployed liberals on the internet would rejoice for months although Obama’s whole 8 years in office were an economic recession.

And yes, today’s booming economy is because of the Obama Administration. It’s because the Obama Administration is gone and has been replaced by the strong Trump Administration which made people started to trust the economy once again.

Here is more on the economic numbers via The Epoch Times:

“The unemployment rate fell to 3.9 percent in April. The only time it has ever dropped so low since 1969 was in April 2000—for one month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Employers added 168,000 jobs in April, fewer than the expected 193,000, partly because “cool weather may have reduced hiring in construction and other sectors,” in a research report obtained from Citibank.

Wages advanced less than expected, at 0.1 percent, which may ease concerns that inflation pressures are rapidly building up, likely keeping the Federal Reserve on a gradual path of monetary policy tightening.

“Today’s jobs report reinforces a number of themes we have emphasized: (1) US growth is set to accelerate in Q2, even as the rest of the world may be slowing, (2) the unemployment rate is likely to drop faster than Fed expectations, and (3) despite strong economic growth and a low unemployment rate, inflationary pressure remains muted,” Citibank said.

Manufacturing added 24,000 jobs, up from a gain of 22,000 in March.
Workers at the NLMK Indiana steel mill in Portage, Ind., on March 15, 2018. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
President Donald Trump cheered the drop in the unemployment rate on Friday, May 4.

“I thought the jobs report was very good. The big thing to me was cracking 4,” Trump told reporters. “That hasn’t been done in a long time … we’re at full employment. We’re doing great.”

The unemployment rate is an incomplete indicator, since it excludes all who haven’t sought a job over the previous four weeks.

Part of the April drop in the rate was due to more people leaving the workforce.

There are almost 95 million people not in the workforce, including those over the age of 16 who don’t work and are currently not looking for work, mostly because they study, are ill, retired, or homemakers (pdf). Among them, there were over 5.5 million who wanted a job in 2017, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

This number has been declining in recent years—a hint that more people who had given up on finding a job are now trying again and succeeding.

Bringing people back to the workforce was one of Trump’s campaign promises when he announced his candidacy on June 16, 2015.

“We have people that aren’t working. We have people that have no incentive to work. But they’re going to have incentive to work, because the greatest social program is a job,” he said in his announcement speech in Trump Tower.

He hasn’t stopped emphasizing the point since.

“Here’s a great stat – since January 2017, the number of people forced to use food stamps is down 1.9 million. The American people are finally back to work!” he wrote on Twitter April 23.