You'll know it (although you'll never admit it) when you see the price of gas and diesel fuel come down, which will help reduce inflation and stop the rising cost of food. You'll see jobs going to AMERICAN WORKERS instead of illegals, housing costs being reduced as millions of illegals are deported, freeing up more housing at lower prices for Americans, and you'll see the end of wasteful and idiotic spending on a losing war in Ukraine, on the hoax of climate change, on the costly, anti-American dictates of the Paris Climate Accords, on paying billions to Iran and Russia for THEIR oil while US oil companies ramp up once again to make us energy independent and a chief exporter of energy that will bring tens of BILLIONS back into our economy, all while saving US taxpayers the tens of billions that Biden/Harris demanded we spend to give 11 million illegals free housing, free food, free healthcare, free education, free smartphones, and free debit cards. Then you can calculate the savings that business owners will realize as thousands of criminals and drug dealers are deported, reducing the crime rate, unless of course your family members in BLM and Antifa begin to burn down cities run by Democrats once again as those liberal governors stand by watching it with their thumbs firmly ensconced in their LGBTQ assholes!
Economic reports like these will be a thing of the past, which will leave you morons mumbling in disbelief over how wrong you idiots were with your phony predictions, just as you did in 2017!
Inflation ticked up again in November. Will the Fed cut rates next week?
by
Paul Davidson USA TODAY Dec. 11, 2024
Inflation is moving in the wrong direction.
U.S. inflation picked up for a second straight month in November on a rise in food and gasoline prices, underscoring that the final stretch of the Federal Reserve's two-year battle against sharply rising prices has become more challenging.
Consumer prices overall increased 2.7% from a year ago, up from 2.6% in October, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index, a popular measure of goods and services costs.