Guess you have trouble understanding the spoken word too. Seems to me, and I suppose to most literate people not hampered by a righty comprehension scrambler, that all Obama was doing was chiding an ignorant blowhard for his lack of specifics.
FORMER PRESIDENT OBAMA: What we have to do is to make sure that folks are trained for the jobs that are coming in now because some of those jobs of the past are just not going to come back, and when somebody says, like the person you just mentioned who I'm not going to advertise for, that he's going to bring all these jobs back, well how exactly are you going to do that? What are you going to do
The economy lost 8.5 million jobs as a result of the 2008 financial crisis. It kept shedding them until December 2009. Since that low point, Obama created 16 million jobs, a 11.6 percent increase. If measured that way, Obama was the third-largest job creator in terms of numbers.
Tearex, Crass misrepresentation of Obama's words duly noted.
"Here Obama is admitting he knows nothing about bringing jobs back or how to negotiate a better trade deal. He is clueless and was in way over his head. He is after all a community organizer."
Obama simply told the truth in saying Trump could never bring all the jobs back as he said he would.
Telling the truth is virtually impossible for Trump and dangerous for anyone in his administration. One example of many
Something else happened there in 2010, a portentous development for dissident Republicans everywhere. The rino hunt bagged a congressman named Bob Inglis. Inglis was a reliable rightist—a 93 percent lifetime rating from the American Conservative Union, a 100 percent rating from the Christian Coalition—and he’d represented his district for 12 years. But at a public event, early in what proved to be his final year, he was asked whether he believed humans caused climate change. He made the mistake of committing candor. He said yes, humans cause climate change. The crowd booed and hissed; as Inglis later recalled, “I was blasted out.” He was subsequently slaughtered in a Republican primary—71 to 29 percent—by a more conservative challenger named Trey Gowdy. The lesson of Inglis’s defeat was that any deviance from ideological fealty could kill a career. .. from, Lindsey Graham Doesn’t Want a Primary .. https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=148767048