Delaware Congressmen Mike Castle’ Legacy
May 4, 2008 in 50 state strategy, A Dad's Responsibility, America's morals, Belief in Santa Claus, Bush, Celebrety Status, Celia Cohen, Conservative Movement, Crooks and Liars, David Anderson, David Graham, Death of Conservatism, Death of Democracy, Delaware, Economic collapse, Elections 08, FSP, Fox News, Frank Knotts, Haliburton, Health Care, High Crimes & Misdemeanors, Homeland Security, If this is goodbye, Impeach Bush, Impeachment, Iraq, Iraqi Oil Bill, Iraqi War Deaths, Iraqi oil exploitation, Iraqi troop surge, Media bias, Medical costs, Mercury, Mexican economic benefits, Midwest Drought, Mike Castle, National Security Letters, Nitrous chemicals, Pension Bailouts, Pharisees, Population explosion, Presidental Pardons, Presidential Library, Privatised Toll Roads, Privitize Social Security, Protect Cheney Act, Quantico, Republican Majority Leader, Republican National Committee, Republican intimidation, Republican soul, Rick Jensen, Run on the Bank, Rush Limbaugh, Senator Trent Lott, Soup Kitchens, Spying on American Citizens, State of Denial, Tax policy, Trillion Dollar War, administration policy, blood for oil, breast feeding, cancer clusters, crotch shots, debt, economic fallout, eminent domain, ethics, fiscal responsibility, gasoline prices, global warming, greed is good, gwb43.com, impending attack, inflated gasoline prices, inner city schools, iran, manipulation of youth, military buildup, money in politics, national defense, natural gas futures, no bid contracts, nuclear option, nuclear weapons, oil futures, overdevelopment, per person cost, political favors, poor get poorer, racism, republican ineptitude, rich get richer, slave labor, stock market crash, taxes, war protests
Courtesy of DelawareLiberal.net

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May 23, 2008 at 10:48 pm
Nathaniel
Is the top 1% represented by the stock market growing and everyone else (without large amounts of wealth in it) falling? The reason I ask is because I noticed the sharp drop of the top 1% from 2001-2003 while everyone else seemed to grow in wealth (as measured by distribution). Now the trend seems reversed.