Don't buy the hype! The so-called 'jobs bill' is just more failed Washington stimulus.

Wasn’t one trillion-dollar debt and spending bill bad enough?

Now, top Democrat leaders are admitting it did not (and will not) work. And they’re calling for yet another round of waste and special-interest handouts – this time they're calling it a "jobs bill," but it's really just more of the same failed stimulus policies.

Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) recently said the problem is that the bill wasn’t “as targeted as it should’ve been” and “we need to go back to this and do this again.  We need to do more of that.”

Rather than learning from the tragedy of their first attempt at economic “stimulus,” politicians like Dodd think the solution is to spend even more money we don’t have, on even more things we don’t want or need.

Thanks to common-sense Americans who took action against the first so-called “stimulus,” we came within one vote of defeating it in the U.S. Senate.

Once again, it’s up to you and me to stand up and stop this "stimulus" before it happens.  We can prevent the tragedy of another multi-trillion-dollar “stimulus” bill – but only by taking direct action and turning up the heat on our nation’s leaders.

Take action.  Sign our No Stimulus! petition.  Call and email your representatives in Washington.  And lead your friends and family to do the same.

It won’t be easy, but together we can put a stop to this disastrous plan before it’s too late.

Petition Highlights

Picture and Video Highlights from the First NoStimulus.com Campaign:

AFP President Tim Phillips on Fox News

MSNBC Covers AFP President Tim Phillips, U.S. Representatives Tom Price (Georgia), Michelle Bachmann (Minnesota), Henry Brown (South Carolina), Virginia Foxx (North Carolina), Louis Gohmert (Texas), and Brian Billbray (California) for the delivery of more than 400,000 petitions from NoStimulus.com


Click for Speeches from Senators Jim DeMint (SC), Jim Inhofe (OK), Jeff Sessions (AL), Michael Enzi (WY) and David Vitter (LA) as they receive the first 69,000 petitions on the steps of the Senate