>Now if only Obama can become
>Clintonesque, reach across the aisle,
>compromise, bslance the budget, reduce
>the deficit toward creating a
>surplus. Frankly, I think the next two years will make the last four look like the Roaring Twenties by comparison. Four years ago, my practice pretty much specialized in a product that went out of existence in 2009. I barely managed to hang on and rebuilt it around a different area of tax law. But I think the coming Obamacare-fueled crash over the next two years will probably take that out too.
My advice is that, if you have a private-sector job, pray that you can keep it. Of course, if you work for the government, you'll be OK, so look for government jobs if you can find them. And good fortune.
>This nonsense about whether a phone
>call is better than an
>email, the desperate idiocy of
>the disappointed trying to point
>a finger of guilt and
>create a fall guy.
>
>Nonsense.
Wrong. As I said, the loss isn't Christie's responsibility in any way, shape, or form. But his decision to call Obama and only e-mail Romney is an attempt on Christie's part to keep himself from being tainted by Romney's supposed partisanship and retain his appeal to Democrats. In other words, to Christie, it wasn't about NJ; it was only about Chris Christie.