The general idea behind QE is that the the Federal Reserve will inject liquidity into the markets, not to help employment directly, but to cause asset appreciation. With the Dow at 16,000, the Fed is betting that “the wealth effect” will ripple into the general economy, helping to improve tax receipts and eventually pay down the national debt.
For some reason I feel like this isn't going to work.

Also, that statement is blatantly inaccurate.
Uh. Wut.
Ben himself said that the goal of QE would be to reduce the cost of borrowing money for corporations, bring down mortgage rates even further and potentially boost the stock market, increasing wealth effects for consumers to spur more spending.
Moving past the obvious fallacies in your original statement and your apparent complete misunderstanding of the role of the federal reserve, I have one question for you, are you a supply-sider?
My understanding of QE/the Fed is based on statements from Ben Bernanke, and I didn't realize that statements made by the policy makers are "obvious fallacies". It might differ from my personal opinion or those of others, but many people think that QE is supposed to immediately/directly produce private jobs-that is not the case. Job creation is on the government, and since this is the first time that we have had unlimited QE ("get the eff outta of my" - Ben B), it will be interesting to see if the trickle-down theory works. I know I like this idea a whole lot better than the flash in the pan mass mailing of checks to stimulate the economy.
And no, I am for lowering taxes on the middle and lower-class, and increasing taxes on the upper-class to make up the short-term difference, as I believe since we are so materialistic these days, demand fo sho drives upper-class/corporate wealth.