The average US citizen has lost 13.27% of their spending power since he's in office. Maybe that'd be something more important than empty rhetoric to discuss
On which goods and services? My dollars do better than 87% of their buying power than in 2016. Maybe I'm not "average"?
Incidentally, this is tied to discussions of inflation. Wage increases are a necessary, but not sufficient, criteria for inflation. If all prices except wages increase, that's not inflation - that's massive reduction in standard of living. If all prices, including wages, increase at the same amount - that's inflation.
In a "healthy" economy, the overall price level increases, including wages, but the "standard of living" you buy with a given currency unit goes up. It's hard to measure though - for instance, if you bought a car last year for $10,000, but this year a new car costs $11,000 but also includes three new features (that you may not even use, say, like a lighted passenger sun visor), and you got a 3% raise, how much of that $1,000 increase (10%) is inflation versus how much is "better stuff"?
Conceptually, inflation is any increase in prices that is merely an increase in the numerical price of a good or service without changing the percent of a person's numerical income that is used for that good or service.
Conservative vs Liberal is much more involved than what's been posted before. I've not seen any mention of other important issues like state rights versus federal power (conservative tends to be more for states rights, liberal for federal power) and funding for initiatives (ignore debt issues on this one: conservative tends to be more for free-market funding, where liberal tends to be for mandatory funding through taxes. Put another way - "conservative" is for market-decided wealth redistribution and "liberal" is for government-decided wealth redistribution). There is more than that, too - it's not just "rational" versus "fear" like media is trying to make it.