Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Take a Break - Ray Stevens has it Right

I have stated my position on ObamaCare and other jewels in Mr Obama’s crown on a number of occasions.

But in order to broaden the appeal of my message, let me introduce long time musical comedian Ray Stevens with his view of Health Care Reform.  The song is “We the People” and can be found on www.RayStevens.com .  I don’t think the tax and tax methods of the left, the bribes and corruption of the leadership or the communist “equal outcomes” agenda of the President with the punishing debt load which may sink the ship of state are a laughing matter – but sometimes I have to go with the flow.  Ray Stevens has more listeners than I have readers.

Besides, this is more fun than the Mississippi Squirrel Revival and tomorrow is New Years Eve.  A safe holiday wish for you all.

My source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dc_-L4fyLUo

 

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Health Care, Cap and Trade, Grand Larceny and Highway Robbery

Remember my number one rule of government ?

"In order for government to give me a dollar they must first take it away from you by force"

This is the basic premise for all government action. Money and power and the political payoffs of special interests - all at the expense of the taxpayer. Well, lest you think that this is a recent phenomonon, let me direct your attention to an article by George Will which appeared in the Washington Post. It was written in January of 2006 - before the many disastors which the current Administration continues to blame on the previous administration. But it gives a little history (always of interest to me) and it describes a political process in Maryland which looks all too familiar.

My source: http://townhall.com/columnists/GeorgeWill/2006/01/19/robbing_wal-mart 

Robbing Wal-Mart
Jan 19, 2006
by George Will

WASHINGTON -- In 1786 the Annapolis Convention, requested by Virginia and attended by only four other states, called for a second gathering to revise the Articles of Confederation in order to strengthen the federal government. Some revision: The second meeting became the Constitutional Convention. It scrapped the Articles, partly because the Founders were alarmed by states legislating relief of debtors at the expense of creditors, often in ways not easily distinguished from theft.

Something not easily distinguished from theft recently occurred in Annapolis. In legislation ostensibly concerned with any company with 10,000 employees but pertaining only to one, Maryland has said Wal-Mart must spend 8 percent of its payroll on health care, or must give the difference to the state.

The Constitution's foremost framer, James Madison, understood the perils of democracy at the state rather than the national level of an "extensive republic'': State legislatures have fewer factions competing for favors than compete for Congress' favors. States, being smaller than the nation, have legislatures more easily captured by overbearing majorities. Madison would have understood what Maryland has done.

Organized labor, having mightily tried and miserably failed to unionize even one of Wal-Mart's 3,250 American stores, has turned to organizing state legislators. Maryland was a natural place to begin because it has lopsided Democratic majorities in both houses of its legislature. Labor's allies include the "progressives'' who have made Wal-Mart the left's devil du jour.

Wal-Mart's supposed sin is this: One way it holds down prices (when it enters a market, retail prices decline 5 percent to 8 percent; nationally, it saves consumers $16 billion annually) is by not being a welfare state. That is, by not offering higher wages and benefits than the labor market requires.

Labor's other allies are Wal-Mart's unionized competitors, such as, in Maryland, Giant Food, a grocery chain. These allies are engaging in what economists call rent-seeking -- using government to impose disadvantages on competitors with whom they are competing and losing.

Wal-Mart's enemies say Maryland is justified in expropriating some of the company's revenues because the company's pay and medical benefits are insufficient to prevent some employees from being eligible for Medicaid. Well. Eighty-six percent of Wal-Mart employees have health insurance, more than half through the company, which offers 18 plans, one with $11 monthly premiums and another with $3 co-payments. Wal-Mart employees are only slightly more likely to collect Medicaid than the average among the nation's large retailers, who hire many entry-level and part-time workers.

In the last 12 months, Wal-Mart, the largest private employer in the nation and in 25 states, estimates it has paid its 1.3 million employees $4.7 billion in benefits. That sum is almost half as large as the company's profits, which last fiscal year were $10.3 billion -- just 3.6 percent -- on revenues of $285 billion. Wal-Mart earns just $6,000 per employee, one-third below the national average. Anyway, Wal-Mart's pay and benefits are sufficient to attract hordes of job applicants whenever it opens a new American store, which it does once every three days.

Maryland's new law is, The Washington Post says, "a legislative mugging masquerading as an act of benevolent social engineering.'' And the mugging of profitable businesses may be just beginning. The threshold of 10,000 employees can be lowered by knocking off a zero. Then two. The 8 percent requirement can be raised. It might be raised in Maryland, if, as is possible, Wal-Mart's current policies almost reach it.

This is part of the tawdry drama of state politics as governments grasp for novel sources of money. Forty-eight states are to varying degrees dependent on revenues from gambling. Forty-six states are addicted to their cut, to be paid out over decades, from the $246 billion coerced from the tobacco industry by using the specious argument that smoking costs their governments huge sums. As a result, 46 states have a stake in the long-term profitability of tobacco companies.

Maryland's grasping for Wal-Mart's revenues opens a new chapter in the degeneracy of state governments that are eager to spend more money than they have the nerve to collect straightforwardly in taxes. Fortunately, as labor unions and allied rent-seekers in 30 or so other states contemplate mimicking Maryland, Wal-Mart can contemplate an advantage of federalism. States engage in "entrepreneurial federalism,'' competing to be especially attractive to businesses. A Wal-Mart distribution center, creating at least 800 jobs, that has been planned for Maryland could be located instead in more hospitable Delaware.

Meanwhile, people who are disgusted -- and properly so -- about corruption inside Washington's Beltway should ask themselves this: Is it really worse than the kind of rent-seeking, and theft tarted up as compassion, just witnessed 20 miles east of the Beltway, in Annapolis?

George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner, whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide. Copyright � 2006 Washington Post Writers Group

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

A Few Truths we hold to be Self-evident

It should come as no surprise to my readers that I am shocked and appalled at the direction of movement and decay of our culture and governmental institutions under the current Administration.  It would be an oversimplification of our current situation to point to the election of President Obama as the sole cause of my concern.  The failure of the Republican Party to hold true to conservative values and actions is also a major issue for me now.  But it is the perfect storm of this President and the leadership and majorities in both Houses of Congress that has accelerated the trends.

I should not have to lecture a law professor/President about the importance of the rule of law in our society.  But it may be instructive to point out the reason that the rule of law is critical to our economic engine.  The key is found in a single word: predictability.  Our dependence and reliance upon the rule of law is based on our need to rely upon a set of consistent and predictable rules in our marketplace and in our culture. 

The President seems to be dumbfounded at the response of the economy and jobless rates to his “fundamental changes for the United States of America”.  He seems to think that we can spend our way to prosperity.  He is not only wrong, he is the major cause for our current problems. 

The government sponsored bankruptcy of General Motors and Chrysler violated, in my opinion, the basic rules of law by sacrificing the interests of the bond holders (secured creditors under the law) to the interests of the unions and the government.

The vast restructuring of financial and economic markets by replacement of free market processes with government regulations and taxation has unsettled the business community by rocking their world.  High employment is the by-product of a profitable business environment – not the purpose of it.  The purpose of business is profit and return on investment.  The control structure for the business environment is competition – not government regulation. 

Business must be able to predict their costs and profitability.  It is vital to all  business decisions.  When business cannot accurately determine the marginal costs associated with new hiring for expansion because of uncertainty in health care costs, permitted salaries, uncertain taxation and regulation – there will be no hiring.  There will be no increases in production and there will be no expansion. 

It is time for the President to go back and re-read the Declaration of Independence and revisit the definitions and concept of “tyrant”.  Redistribution of wealth is not a concept that is consistent with American law and principles.  The President and the leadership have demonstrated that they can change or ignore the law – but the principles remain.  And the accountability of our representatives to the people at the next election is still an important part of our system.  The mainstream media has abdicated its role in the social discourse and is complicit in the radical actions of the President and the Leadership.  But the media is business too – and while they have abandoned us today – we will abandon them tomorrow.

Those self-evident truths I spoke of in the title ?  I can list a few…

  • In order for government to give me a dollar – they must first take it by force from you.
  • Government is not the answer – it is the problem.
  • Mr President, the economy and the jobless rate will not recover until you remove your boot from the neck of the free market.
  • Businessmen will not invest when the Government arbitrarily changes the rules of the playing field to suit their agenda.
  • In a free society – it is not the role of government to pick the winners and losers in the economy.