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					Originally Posted by  Chung Tran
					 
				 
				the jobs/unemployment number is great. but it has been on a steady growth course SINCE 2009, when Obama was sworn in. 
 
I will grant you that Obama started from ground zero, his job creation was easier than Trump's. but too many dismiss Obama's strong numbers. 
			
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your obsessive fawning over all things Obama and Democratic is beyond reason. it might be easier to ask you what 
don't you blame on the Republicans? Obama's legacy as president is the worst economic growth for  two term president ever and don't blame Bushy II on that. it was Bill Clinton who lit the fuse on the banking meltdown by repealing Glass-Steasgal which even Sandy Weill who pushed for it has admitted it was a mistake. 
Obama added a record debt to the national debt by any one president, in fact it is greater than all previous presidents 
combined. Obama didn't start from ground zero. that is bullshit butt u won't admit it. 
https://www.euromoney.com/article/b1...teagall-repeal
The inside story: Sandy  and the Glass-Steagall repeal By: Jon Macaskill Published on: Monday, June 10, 2019  1998: As the 1990s came to a close, Euromoney spent time in the US with  Sandy Weill and Jamie Dimon, watching as LTCM imploded and the  Glass-Steagall laws were repealed (from the imagination of Jon  Macaskill). 
 Euromoney was keen to  immerse itself in the workings of Wall Street, so in the summer of 1998  an arrangement was made to shadow Jamie Dimon, who was number two to the  empire-building banker Sandy Weill, and who helped to put together a  merger of Travelers with Citicorp that year. 
  Euromoney effectively became the assistant to the assistant, with an  inside view of a power struggle for the ages. 
The tension between Weill and Dimon was immediately apparent. The New  York Times even ran a story with the headline: ‘Jamie Dimon – taller and  better looking than Weill.’ 
Sandy was furious and gave Jamie a new co-head in the form of Deryck  Maughan, the dapper British banker who nominally ran Salomon Brothers  until anchor shareholder Warren Buffett lost the firm to Weill in a card  game in 1997. 
 Dimon was determined to undermine Maughan as a co-head before the  serious work of integration with Citicorp got underway. He decided to  check on hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM), which was run  by John Meriwether, the trader who had been the real power at Salomon  before he was forced out by regulators. 
“Maughan wouldn’t know a bond trade if it bit him on his Savile Row  tuchas, so let’s find out what the Salomon dealers are copying from  Meriwether,” Dimon told Euromoney, as we took a car from New York to  LTCM’s headquarters in Greenwich, Connecticut. 
Warning signs 
The signs were not good when we arrived. Meriwether was sitting in the  fountain outside the main lobby, pouring water over his freshly shaven  head and muttering “the convergence, the convergence” to himself. Dimon  didn’t even get out of the car. 
“We need to head back and start unwinding whatever trades those bozos at  Salomon have piggybacking on Mr Kurtz here,” he said. 
“We could also call the Federal Reserve and see if they’ll help to  coordinate a bailout across the whole Street,” Euromoney suggested. “The  last thing we want is a crisis where the weaker investment banks  collapse and people lose confidence in the entire system.
”  The bailout of LTCM in September 1998 went surprisingly smoothly, but  troubled waters lay ahead for the relationship between Sandy and Jamie. 
       Watch out though Sandy. Someone else might snap up JPMorgan while  you are still busy pushing John Reed out of the door at Citigroup      - Bill Clinton 
Euromoney was serving drinks at the infamous black tie ball for senior  managers just a few weeks later when Dimon finally lost patience with  Maughan, who had inexplicably kept his position despite huge LTCM-linked  losses. 
“Don’t do it Jamie, he’s not worth it,” we called out. But it was too  late: Dimon had pulled Maughan’s jacket over his head and tipped him  into a pool of liquid chocolate set aside for dipping strawberries in  the shape of the Travelers umbrella logo.
  Weill, who was standing nearby, lost face in front of austere Citicorp  chief executive, John Reed, and had no choice but to sack Dimon, his  long-standing protégé. 
Euromoney’s stint as a Wall Street executive assistant would end the  following year. 
Weill distracted himself from the wrench of dismissing Dimon by renewing  his campaign to repeal the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act that separated  commercial and investment banking activities in the US. 
President Bill Clinton proved an easy sell. He had survived the Lewinsky  scandal but liked to get out of Washington whenever he had the chance,  which is how he came to be on the terrace of Weill’s apartment on an  unusually balmy New York evening in November 1999. 
Charm offensive
  Euromoney was helping to pour iced tea for the guests when Weill mounted  a charm offensive that persuaded Clinton to endorse the bill that would  repeal Glass-Steagall later that month. 
 “Watch out though Sandy,” said Clinton, after he was temporarily  distracted by a passing waitress. “Someone else might snap up JPMorgan  while you are still busy pushing John Reed out of the door at  Citigroup.
”  Weill wasn’t concerned.
   “Even if Chase Manhattan or BofA buy them, what then?” he asked. “Nobody  handles a bank merger like I do. Maybe Jamie could have – after all I  taught him – but where is he nowadays?”
   (Editor’s note: after a period running Bank One, Jamie Dimon in 2006  became chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, which is today the most  valuable and profitable bank in the world.)
 
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