Friday, February 27, 2009

Government: Financing Through Deficits

There's a question of what a budget deficit is. One website defines it this way:

The amount by which a government, company, or individual's spending exceeds its income over a particular period of time. also called deficit or deficit spending. opposite of budget surplus.

Another site agrees:

The amount by which government spending exceeds government revenues.

Nobody seems to say that deficits are good, only necessary at times (say war, or during economic downturns like now). Arguments are made over which way will bring in more revenue, like making the rich pay more, or reducing taxes generally to encourage commerce (thereby producing more in income and business taxes). But rather than tax cuts, I want to see the government spend less. The fiscal troubles of government will never end until the funding is cut off. The government has to take the money from people before it can give it back to us. This reminds me of a quote by Edwin Feulner: "The best way to put more money in people's wallets is to leave it there in the first place."

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Monday, February 16, 2009

Politics: Bennett Makes a Campaign Stop in Southern Utah


On Saturday, February 14, 2009 Senator Bob Bennett stopped by Cedar City. He is starting his reelection campaign. The elections are still about 21 months away, but the political race seems to never stop.

Politicians nowadays must have tremendous pressures; they deal with massive amounts of legislation, must respond to their constituents, deal somehow with special interests, and the media is always watching, waiting for the slightest slip to use as garnish for the news reports. I don't envy them at all.

In fact I have a great deal of respect to anyone who wants to take on that much responsibility. Whether I agree with them politically or not they deserve some approbation.

If I do, in fact, disagree with any politician then it is my responsibility to take the time to lay out my reasons in a letter or email, and, if possible, offer an alternative for them consider. And it is important to understand that any politician may, after considering everything, choose something other than what I might have. I still am responsible for treating them with courtesy and kindness. And a free society demands that people treat each other in that manner.

Comments, suggestions, and questions can be directed to test.veeschay@gmail.com

Friday, February 13, 2009

Congress: The Inmates and the Asylum

MoveOn.org sends me an occasional email. Fair enough, I'll be open minded. In a recent one they were asking me to "sign [a] petition to Congress, urging them to act now to rein in Wall Street greed." Here's the problem with that: It is like asking the inmates to take care of the asylum. What evidence could I put forward to support my view? I point to the 27th Amendment to the Constitution. This amendment states:

No law, varying the compensation for the services of the Senators and Representatives, shall take effect, until an election of Representatives shall have intervened.

This was ratified in the month of May 1992. Apparently in 1989 an automatic "cost of living adjustment" law was passed (here) and "in nine of the last 10 years, Congress has given itself a raise, totaling more than $30,000." (here). While $30K is much smaller than the millions of dollars that go to executives, the executives get it legally. Congress is doing an end run around the very document that gives them the authority to legislate in this nation.

All this reminds me of the quip from Cullen Hightower (here): "Talk is cheap -- except when Congress does it."

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Government: Bailouts Justify Government Meddling

Another post at Cafe Hayek leads me to another great article by Donald Boudreaux; see it here. He is writing about the bailouts, or, more specifically, the limits put on executive salaries at companies that accept the government's money. (Or rather the taxpayers' money that the politicians spend as if it were their own.) Early in the article Don lays down this point: "[T]he most egregious problem ... with all ... restrictions and requirements that are attached to bailout funds, is that it sets a frightening precedent." That precedent, as I see it, is that the government now has the responsibility to manage these companies that it keeps alive.

That precedent is very dangerous. If it is justifiable, then the consequences are far reaching. If the government can manage any company that benefits from bailout money then look at your own business or place of employment. Boudreaux points to how far it might go:

... Which ... firms ... feasted on Washington's bailout bounty? This question is not as easy to answer as you might think. Sure, it's clear that, say, Chrysler got bailout funds. But what about Chrysler's suppliers that, while none received any direct handout of taxpayer funds, enjoyed higher profits as a result of Chrysler remaining in operation?

Indeed, what about every firm in America? After all, the financial and auto-producer bailouts, and the more general "stimulus" packages, are meant to assist the entire economy. Funds spent on the bailouts and on the stimuli eventually wend their way throughout the whole economy, benefiting everyone. That's government's stated goal.

Because (the presumption is) without these bailouts and stimuli the U.S. economy would have collapsed into ruins, it stands to reason that every firm -- every American, even -- received government largess. And because this largess was bestowed, either directly or indirectly, upon every firm, no firm deserves to be excused from having to follow detailed marching orders from Washington.

I hope I'm wrong. But I genuinely fear that the extensive and massive "economic rescue" spending pouring today from Washington will combine with the newfound enthusiasm for hyperactive government to quickly create a culture of government direction of the economy as this country has never before known.

The correct answer is to never allow the federal government to get into the bailout business. If any reader would suggest that a state government should, then there could be a discussion. But that is not the role for the federal government.

Comments, suggestions, and questions can be directed to test.veeschay@gmail.com

Society: Some Questions on Abortion

I first saw this video on the blog "On Life and Lybberty," see the post here.


Also, an article on the subject can be found here. It is found at LDS.org.

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