@annalovesu: 💅🏽

Annalovesu
Annalovesu
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Thursday 21 May 2026 22:20:01 GMT
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jdgwins
JDG :
Cartier ring?
2026-06-06 15:37:33
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vanessamartin198
Vanessa :
Where’s your ring from 😍
2026-06-15 15:30:44
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jesssss__m
jesssss__m :
Loveeeee
2026-05-22 00:42:32
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itslorenau
Lorena l Margate FL Esti 🫧 :
🔥🔥🔥
2026-05-21 23:52:01
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desxxmtz
desxxmtz :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-05-21 23:23:36
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rick.z282
Rick.z28 :
🥰
2026-07-12 22:49:57
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Obama vs. Trump. Who saw prices rise more? This chart compares cumulative inflation during Obama’s second term versus Trump’s first term. For each president, Month 1 starts at the beginning of the term: Obama: January 2013   Trump: January 2017 Then the chart tracks how much prices rose from that starting point using CPI. So if the line is at 6%, that means consumer prices were about 6% higher than they were in Month 1 of that president’s term. This is not showing the inflation rate for one month. It is showing cumulative inflation across the term. And no, this is not saying the president personally controls every price in America. Inflation is affected by energy prices, supply chains, wages, housing costs, interest rates, Fed policy, global demand, taxes, tariffs, consumer spending, and major shocks like COVID. Obama’s second term had unusually low inflation for much of the period. Trump’s first term had moderate inflation before COVID disrupted the economy and pushed some prices around in unusual ways. So yes, the comparison is real. But pretending the president alone controls every grocery bill, gas receipt, and rent payment is just lazy politics. If you only blame inflation on the president when the other party is in office, you are not analyzing prices. You are just doing team sports with CPI data. Same source.   Same method.   Same 48-month comparison. Source: FRED, Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average (CPIAUCSL), Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis / U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Follow for more charts like this.  I make custom charts like this for finance pages, creators, newsletters, and brands. Order a custom chart through the link in my bio.
Obama vs. Trump. Who saw prices rise more? This chart compares cumulative inflation during Obama’s second term versus Trump’s first term. For each president, Month 1 starts at the beginning of the term: Obama: January 2013 Trump: January 2017 Then the chart tracks how much prices rose from that starting point using CPI. So if the line is at 6%, that means consumer prices were about 6% higher than they were in Month 1 of that president’s term. This is not showing the inflation rate for one month. It is showing cumulative inflation across the term. And no, this is not saying the president personally controls every price in America. Inflation is affected by energy prices, supply chains, wages, housing costs, interest rates, Fed policy, global demand, taxes, tariffs, consumer spending, and major shocks like COVID. Obama’s second term had unusually low inflation for much of the period. Trump’s first term had moderate inflation before COVID disrupted the economy and pushed some prices around in unusual ways. So yes, the comparison is real. But pretending the president alone controls every grocery bill, gas receipt, and rent payment is just lazy politics. If you only blame inflation on the president when the other party is in office, you are not analyzing prices. You are just doing team sports with CPI data. Same source. Same method. Same 48-month comparison. Source: FRED, Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average (CPIAUCSL), Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis / U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Follow for more charts like this. I make custom charts like this for finance pages, creators, newsletters, and brands. Order a custom chart through the link in my bio.

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