Read the IJ article on President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address here.

For the complete text of Obama’s State of the Union speech click here.

Read the Small Government Times article by Jeffrey A. Miron here.

Read the Marin IJ article here.

Ron Paul: Government is too big to succeed
Posted By Ron Paul On January 20, 2010 (7:55 am) In Featured, Voices and Choices

Last week, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission kicked off their first round of hearings on the causes of the economic meltdown on Wall Street. The commission is being compared to the the Pecora Commission launched in 1932 to investigate the causes of the Great Depression. The Pecora commission is beloved by those who believe the solution to every problem is more laws because it was used to justify a number of new laws, including Glass-Steagall.

Of course, none of those laws addressed the real causes of the Great Depression. It was the introduction of unsound monetary policy and central economic planning pursued by the Federal Reserve that really threw everything off balance. The Fed was founded in 1913 to stabilize the economy and prevent a recurrence of the short-lived Panic of 1907, but instead it promptly produced the Great Depression which lasted more than 15 years.

The Pecora Commission was stacked with big government sympathizers who blamed the free market and the gold standard without question, and without any consideration of government interference in the economy. This panel is no different. Never will they contemplate how government steered us into this crisis, and what perverse incentives can be removed or repealed so that the market will function more smoothly. Never will they discuss how investment should come from savings, not debt. Never will it occur to them that fiat money, artificially low interest rates and the whole Federal Reserve System might be unwise and unstable, not to mention unconstitutional. The answer will always be more government regulation and oversight. It is predictable that this government panel will eventually come to the firm conclusion that government needs to be bigger, and that the market is just too free.

How sad is this when exactly the opposite is true?

It is big government that gives out tax breaks to engineer behavior, often creating large pockets of malinvestments. It is government that created the FDIC and the Fed as lender of last resort which all encourages moral hazard. It is big government that gives bureaucrats the ability to bail out cronies with taxpayer dollars while screaming that the economic sky is falling if they don’t. It is big government that every year adds new layers to the already labyrinthine regulatory code that smaller businesses can’t keep up with while simultaneously preventing new businesses from emerging. It is big government that misdirects economic productivity into bankrupt businesses that they consider to be too big to fail.

If this panel was serious about understanding the root of the problem, as they claim to be, they would have people testify who understand the crisis and saw it coming. To my knowledge, none of them have received a phone call. The problem is those people would say too many things the government panel would find inconvenient. They would point fingers at too many of the state’s anointed. They would recommend getting government out of the way of the free market and getting back to simply protecting contracts and punishing fraud. But the biggest fraud is perpetrated by the Federal Reserve. No one on this panel takes that viewpoint seriously. Instead, they will be asking people who are still scratching their heads at how they could have missed the housing bubble what new regulations they can put in place to prevent future bubbles. Thus, I don’t expect much real wisdom to come out of this current investigation.

Read the Pacific Sun article here.

Libertarian Party wants open health care negotiations Posted By Libertarian Party On January 9, 2010 (8:22 am) In Libertarian News WASHINGTON – The Libertarian Party (LP) calls on President Obama to not break yet another campaign promise by directing Congress to have an open, televised format for all future negotiations on the health care overhaul bills under consideration in Congress. In 2008, then-Senator Obama promised at least eight times on the campaign trail to have open, transparent negotiations regarding a health care overhaul bill. That promise has been broken. Most substantive negotiations have occurred behind closed doors, not “on C-SPAN” as the President repeatedly promised. The LP urges President Obama and Congressional leaders to hold all future negotiations in an open, televised format, as the President promised. William Redpath, LP National Chairman, commented, “The President has no power to force Congress to hold televised negotiations, but he is clearly the driving force behind the health care legislation being considered by the Congress. Unfortunately, the President doesn’t want to keep his promise. And, we all know why. Public approval of health care overhaul is down to about 40% and is sure to plummet further once a little sunshine is inserted into the legislative process.” Redpath continued, “Open negotiations would let Americans see how esthetically pleasing sausage making is when compared to Congress’ negotiation process and the details of the health care legislation. The public would gain a much better understanding of how horrible this legislation is. President Obama and Democratic Party leaders probably think open negotiations would create a public groundswell that would effectively kill their ill-considered remake of one-sixth of the American economy that would likely bring the day of our next financial crisis that much closer.” Redpath concluded, “Government has an enormous cost estimate credibility problem. When Medicare Part A started in 1965, the projected cost in 1990 was $9 billion. It turned out to be $67 billion. When Medicaid’s special hospitals subsidy was added in 1987, it was only supposed to cost $100 million per year, but, by 1992, it cost 110 times that amount. If the government is wrong by a factor of 7.5 or more this time, the result will truly be catastrophic for the US economy.” The LP opposes both the House and Senate versions of the current health care overhaul bill. On the subject of health care, the LP Platform states: We favor restoring and reviving a free market health care system. We recognize the freedom of individuals to determine the level of health insurance they want, the level of health care they want, the care providers they want, the medicines and treatments they will use and all other aspects of their medical care, including end-of-life decisions.

Obama flunks his first year as president
Posted By Gene Healy On January 5, 2010 (8:57 pm) In Top Page News, Voices and Choices

We’re coming up on the anniversary of Barack Obama’s first year in office. How’s he doing so far?  ”A good, solid B-plus” — that’s the grade 44 gave himself when Oprah asked him in December. That must be a relief to anyone out there still worried about this president’s self-esteem.

Is it accurate, though? How should we grade presidents, anyway?

U.S. President Barack ObamaPundits and historians typically ask questions like: Is he popular? Has he worked his will on Congress? And, does he aspire to be a “transformational” president — dreaming big and daring great things?

Those metrics reek of value-free power worship. We shouldn’t judge presidents based on whether they please the crowd or “transform” the country. What if the country doesn’t need to be transformed?

When Obama gave himself a high B, former George W. Bush consigliere Karl Rove pounced, pointing out that 44 had “the worst [popularity] ratings of any president at the end of his first year.”

But what’s popular isn’t always good, and vice versa. If transient public favor is the true measure of success, then Lady Gaga is the singular artistic genius of our age.

Nor should we grade presidents on whether they manage to ram their agenda through. If that merits high grades, then Bush’s first term was an A-plus: He got Congress to authorize a disastrous war in Iraq and pass a prescription drug entitlement that’s going to help bankrupt the country. Teacher, give that kid a smiley-face sticker!

Historians usually try to let events cool before they bring out the red pen. But their standards are just as warped as pundits’ — which is why the perennial presidential ranking polls reward nation builders and war leaders, while demoting presidents content to preside over peace and prosperity.

U.S. President Barack Obama

In a recent Washington Post retrospective, historian David Kennedy downgrades Obama for his “Clintonesque” record of legislative success, while scholar Robert Dallek laments the fact that Obama lacks the “advantage” FDR had of using the Great Depression to whip the opposition into line.

Our Constitution spells out a very different benchmark for presidential success: fidelity to the oath of office.

As constitutional scholar Gary Lawson notes, the Constitution prescribes the specific words the president has to affirm before assuming power (as it does for no other office). It requires him to “faithfully execute the Office” and “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution.”

The implications of that standard are quite radical, in Lawson’s view: “[T]he new President’s first obligation is to veto pretty much every bill sent to him and recommend the repeal of pretty much everything in the United States Code.”

Maybe you’re not willing to go that far. But surely “first do no harm” is a minimum requirement for fidelity to the constitutional oath. A president who takes the oath seriously shouldn’t add new constitutional violations to those committed by his predecessors.

So does Obama’s leading criminal justice initiative, expanded hate crime laws, which flirt with thought crime and ignore the fact that, as Chief Justice John Marshall put it in 1821, “Congress cannot punish felonies generally.”

Meanwhile, the president runs the ongoing bailout as if the Constitution makes him commander in chief of the U.S. economy, while his Justice Department defends the unconstitutional proposition that the federal government can ban union- or corporate-funded ads and movies that mention federal candidates by name.

All in all, a miserable first-year record.

True, other recent presidents have violated the Constitution just as flagrantly. But give Obama time: He’s just getting started.

It’s true too that the standard advanced here — fidelity to the oath — is one that few presidents have lived up to over the last 100 years. But again, so what? It’s a standard that should at least be part of the debate.

Besides, expecting less of our chief executives reflects what Bush, in another context, once called “the soft bigotry of low expectations.” Who says we have to grade presidents on a curve?

Read the Fox News article here.

THIS IS HOW YOU FIX CONGRESS!!!!!

A friend sent this along to me. I can’t think of a reason to disagree. 
  
I am sending this to virtually everybody on my e-mail list and that includes conservatives, liberals, and everybody in between. Even though we disagree on a number of issues, I count all of you as friends.  My friend and neighbor wants to promote a “Congressional Reform Act of 2009″. It would contain eight provisions, all of which would probably be strongly endorsed by those who drafted the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.


I know many of you will say, “this is impossible”.  Let me remind you, Congress has the lowest approval of any entity in Government, now is the time when Americans will join together to reform Congress – the entity that represents us.  

We need to get a Senator to introduce this bill in the US Senate and a Representative to introduce a similar bill in the US House.  These people will become American hero’s…


Thanks,

A Fellow American

*********************************** 
   
 
Congressional Reform Act of 2010


1. Term Limits: 12 years only, one of the possible options below.

A. Two Six year Senate terms
B. Six Two year House terms
C. One Six year Senate term and three Two Year House terms

        Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work.
  

2.  No Tenure / No Pension: 

    A congressman collects a salary while in office and receives no pay when they are out of office.  

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work.
 

3.  Congress (past, present & future) participates in Social Security:

    All funds in the Congressional retirement fund moves to the Social Security system immediately.  All future funds flow into the Social Security system, Congress participates with the American people. 

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned citizen legislators, server your term(s), then go home and back to work.
  

4. Congress can purchase their own retirement plan just as all Americans.

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work.
  

5. Congress will no longer vote themselves a pay raise.  Congressional pay will rise by the lower of CPI or 3%.

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned  citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work.
  

6. Congress looses their current health care system and participates in the same health care system as the American people.

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work.
 

7. Congress must equally abide in all laws they impose on the American people.

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work.
 

8. All contracts with past and present congressmen are void effective 1/1/11 .  

    The American people did not make this contract with congressmen, congressmen made all these contracts for themselves.

    Serving in Congress is an honor, not a career.  The Founding Fathers envisioned  citizen legislators, serve your term(s), then go home and back to work. 
  
  
  
  
  
If you agree with the above, pass it on to all in your address list.   If not, just delete.

 

Special thanks to A Fellow American

« Previous Page

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.