Posts Tagged ‘limited government’

Save the taxpayers money. Go on welfare.

October 31, 2009

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091031/ap_on_bi_ge/us_stimulus_jobs_40

So let me get this straight:

650,000 jobs were “saved or created” in the stimulus package. Even if you assume those numbers are accurate (ha… stop laughing). The stimulus bill was $787 billion.

I wasn’t a math major, but 787,000,000,000 divided by 650,000 is about $1,210,769 per job “saved or created.” So if the average wage in America is around $40,000 (45K for men, 35K for women), the annual cost for the those 650,000 people would be about $26 billion.

So why didn’t we just let them get fired, and put them all on welfare for the next 30 years (yes, that’s 787 billion divided by the annual 26 billion)? I know. I know. That doesn’t include the interest savings of paying that out over 30 years, but let’s assume we provide a COLA (cost of living adjustment) that balances that out. I know. I know. COLAs aren’t guaranteed anymore. Of course, if you don’t get a COLA, you’ll get a $250 check instead. Because, gee, we wouldn’t want you to have to go without a raise now would we?

If we were to ask those 650,000 people which they would have preferred, which do you think they would want? Their job? Or early retirement with full pay for the next 30 years?

Once again, the government does things so inefficiently.

A government big enough to help you is big enough to hurt you even worse…

August 29, 2008

As we reflect on the historic campaign speech given by Senator Obama last night, let us consider the inevitable conclusions on what it all means to the size of our government.  Let us examine the control it will be required to assert over our lives to accomplish almost any of it.  And let us also reflect on how our already large government, right now, asserts control over our lives: http://thisiscommonsense.com/2008/08/29/big-brother-vs-burger-and-fries/

Please, someone wake me.  I’m having an authoritarian nightmare where the Federalists won and the Anti-Federalists were all discounted as kooks and chicken-littles with quiet mumbles of “I’m going to have to say ‘I told you so’ in about 200 years”.

In these sentiments, Sir, I agree to this Constitution with all its faults, if they are such; because I think a general Government necessary for us, and there is no form of Government but what may be a blessing to the people if well administered, and believe farther that this is likely to be well administered for a course of years, and can only end in Despotism, as other forms have done before it, when the people shall become so corrupted as to need despotic Government, being incapable of any other.

-Benjamin Franklin

Eminent domain abuse

April 11, 2008

This is a topic that evokes the worst fears of someone who believes the government only exists to secure the rights of it’s people: Eminent domain.  Yes, our Founding Fathers did believe in eminent domain but they attempted to limit the power by ascribing that it could only be done “for public use” and with “just compensation”.  And by now we all know what the KELO decision has done to that ideal.

I suppose it’s reasonable, that in the interest of a society as a whole, the government should have the ability to designate land that is necessary for public services; utilities such as sewer and power, transit such as trains and roadways, and national parks or wildlife preserves.  But the whole ability runs counter to the rather libertarian idealism that we were Founded with.  It says that ultimately the government has control over your property because it’s not really yours.  The government is just renting it to you (see property tax) and can revoke it at any time according to it’s pleasure.  It sticks in my limited government craw, but it is what it is.

The law is written in such a way that it’s just screaming for Court interpretation on every single case; rightly so as there is no overall right and wrong–if you will accept that it’s the abuse of eminent domain (as opposed to the idea of whether there should be eminent domain).  And it’s a law that is ripe for abuse. Many state governments have redefined their eminent domain abilities in the wake of KELO and many more should be doing so (I urge you to check your own state’s reaction accordingly).  The Court system–unless you like activist judges who write laws from the bench–is supposed to be incapable of doing anything more that interpreting hundreds of years of case law, and a lot of that has sided with the government’s virtually unlimited ability to take away (until KELO which effectively rewrote the 5th Amendment’s “public use”).  The state legislators need to step in to clarify law so new case law can be established.  We must make sure that they do so as their employers.

And I’m generally all for the wisdom of the sitting judges on a supreme court; whether state or federal, but there’s something to be said about a jury of your peers helping to decide if the government has overstepped itself.  That’s notably absent at the highest levels in these cases.  It makes me wonder what the Supreme Court was thinking on KELO as most of them are likely well-off property owners.  My rule of thumb for any good law is whether you would like it to apply to yourself.

So what is “just compensation”?  In an ideal system the government and the property owners work together for a mutually amicable solution.  In the system we actually have, it would be nice if the parties involved started off with that thought.  I suspect the first notice a property owner gets from the government about the issue is an eviction notice.  That’s always a great conversation starter.  It would also be nice if the public servants in the government realize that they are just that.  No one should enter into the situation with the attitude “I’m going to take away your property and there’s nothing you can do about it”.  Even if it might be largely true, it’s still a bad start.  I would like to see an honest effort to treat the property owner as a partner in the endeavor.  Cut him in for a piece of the action, if you will, and I bet you’ll see a lot of cooperation.  It’s just unreasonable to tell a person who brought a property for $100,000 and could sell it for $200,000 on the open market that you’re going to force him to sell it to you for $175,000 and then you’re going to turn around and make $1,000,000 in taxes annually.  Give him .5% a year of the tax take.  Talk about redistributing wealth!

Government is instituted to protect property of every sort; as well that which lies in the various rights of individuals, as that which the term particularly expresses. This being the end of government, that alone is a just government, which impartially secures to every man, whatever is his own.
–James Madison