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Changing the Nation, One State at a Time
Take action for a better future.
Join Americans for Prosperity
Changing the Nation, One State at a Time
The big government liberals currently in charge of OUR congress are ignoring "We The People". They are frustrated that we had the audacity to actually rise up and speak out against their expansion of government and further destruction of our economy. Their plan was to be enjoying Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks having re-engineered our country into just another country in the world instead of the world leader. You spoiled that!
READ MORELast night in Portland, Oregon we had hundreds upon hundreds of grassroots activists in a downtown park protesting Al Gore's (without a doubt the largest emitter of hot air in the nation) pro-cap-and-trade speech.
READ MORE1) Harry Reid has had his bill for 6 weeks – shouldn’t the American people have the same time period to review it and know what the bill contains? After all, 2,074 pages isn’t exactly light reading.
READ MOREBy Joel Aaron Foster
Conservatives have been wary of “stimulus job creation” claims for quite some time and now it turns out that the rat you’ve been smelling just went for the cheese. The fun is found in trying to understand how to calculate a “job saved” when any job that is not lost qualifies for the category. It’s like trying to play chess with yourself.
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TOPEKA, KAN. – The Kansas chapter of the grassroots group Americans for Prosperity has prepared a ‘policy primer’ to help Kansans understand what Kansas spends on transportation in the state, and how our state compares with others in the region.
Derrick Sontag, AFP-Kansas state director, said Kansas has had a comprehensive highway or transportation plan for twenty years now.
“There are many in Topeka who believe that the simple act of building new roads and highways spurs economic growth, but the numbers suggest otherwise,” he said. “For example, between 2002 and 2006 Kansas ranked eighth in the country in highway spending per capita, yet our Gross State Product growth lagged at 33rd.”
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