Gov't Is Paying For It - So It's Free, Right?
Think the bailout numbers are big? We ain't seen nothing yet...
Senator Phil Gramm was right once again - and for a price.
When he said we have become a nation of whiners, the media jumped all over that quote because he was working on the McCain campaign. The news outlets tossed it out to a media-stirred public in fear of a crumbling economy. Like ravenous hounds pouncing on red meat, the whiners themselves went into a frenzy. At least the guilty were easy to identify, eh?
The point Gramm was making, is that we have become a nation of lemmings, and the media uses fear and emotionally baiting tactics to help the Liberal Left's Agenda Of Doom continue to devour common sense and tax dollars at an ever-increasing rate.
Nearly 60 million Americans voted for B. Hussein Obama, and he won the popular vote as a result.
Fair and square? Not by a long shot, that's not his style.
Still, he had a decisive majority and the blame lies on the shoulders of the American voter.
Look around you, and even in the mirror, and tell me if you see the whining voter that Phil Gramm was talking about.
Here's a little light on the subject to aid clarity.
In the United States of America, we have what's known as the middle class.
Nowhere in history has such a class existed, and to this day the US is the only place it can be found in such size and abundance.
Think about that for a minute....
Outside the US to this very day, and back in time, the world and its various societies were divided into one of three camps;
The FIRST GROUP has the money and power. They always have, and they always will.
Either privately held or the treasure of the State, those with control of fortune, land, trade and commerce will always devise ways to increase their holdings and leverage over others. For a government, taxation is the tool. Of course, corruption can aid the effort.
If you had no wealth, you're in the SECOND GROUP working for those with wealth to provide the labor to meet their needs.
Remember the Golden Rule? Forget the one your Mommy told you and learn the REAL one - He who has the gold makes the rules.
To avoid working for the wealthy, you had to learn how to survive on subsistence, and live far enough from BOTH of the first two groups to remain unnoticed. This is still the trick today if you want to keep what's yours and avoid taxation, theft, or both.
Welcome to the THIRD GROUP, the Middle Class.
Of those first two groups of people, their relationship has varied over time to some degree but remains fundamentally unchanged.
Whether living in slavery, indentured servitude, or some variation of a caste society, those on the bottom will remain there.
Escape is possible through upward mobility, it is dreamed of and preached as a possibility, but rarely occurs - even with Obama here.
The sad result in our modern US is exhibited daily by the poorest who will resort to monetary stupididty, deception or theft to obtain the definitive trinkets of their notion of wealth. I think the latest slang for these items is "bling" or "bling-bling" to belabor the point.
In their pursuit of the most pathetic icons of status, millions of poor make themselves still poorer as a result - and soon loose what they sought to begin with to irresponsibility, abuse, neglect or theft. They can slip no further down and simply exist for us to support.
Insert your favorite ethnic or class stereotype here, as it's deserved by many who perpetuate it - political correctness be damned.
If you went about your business honestly and quietly, raised your family on your own, and ate whatever you could forage, grow or kill then you stood a chance of living in peace, liberty and prosperity. This was NEVER an easy thing to do, with whims of Mother Nature and the grace of God your sole benefactors.
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Bailouts and Bankruptcies
I realized that Congress had long ago established a procedure for bailouts. In fact it stems from laws originally enacted in the 16th century in England. That procedure, which should be well-known to all of our astute legislators is called, are you ready, Bankruptcy! Yes, that's it.
The lack of uniformity in bankruptcy and debt enforcement laws hindered business and commerce between the states. During the ratification of the United States Constitution it was said that "the power of establishing uniform laws of bankruptcy is so intimately connected with the regulation of commerce, and will prevent so many frauds where the parties or their property may lie or be removed into different states, that the expediency of it seems not likely to be drawn into question." (James Madison in Federalist No. 42). The United States Constitution as adopted in 1789 provides in Article I, Section 8, Clause 4 that the states granted to Congress the power "to establish . . . uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States."However, until 1898 there was no bankruptcy law in continuous effect in the United States. The Congress enacted temporary bankruptcy statutes in 1800, 1841 and 1867 to deal with economic downturns. However, those laws were temporary measures and were repealed as soon as economic conditions stabilized. The Act of 1800 was repealed in 1803. The Act of 1841 was repealed in 1843 and the Act of 1867 only lasted until 1878.These early laws only permitted merchants, traders, bankers and factors to be placed in bankruptcy proceedings. The Acts of 1800 and 1841 vested jurisdiction in the federal district courts. The district court judges were given the power to appoint commissioners or assignees to take charge of and liquidate a debtor’s property.A permanent bankruptcy statute was not enacted until 1898.
Why reinvent the wheel? Don't fix it if it isn't broken.
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Our Bailout Culture and the Beauty of Bankruptcy
Selwyn Duke
The story of the Prodigal Son teaches a beautiful lesson about repentance and forgiveness. As you may know, it involves a lazy, irresponsible young man who insists upon taking his share of the family inheritance immediately and striking out on his own. He then proceeds to squander it on a dissolute lifestyle and ends up destitute, living like an animal. Duly chastened and humbled and purged of his spirit of entitlement, he approaches his father in contrition and asks for aid, saying that he would be satisfied to just be treated as a servant. The father, overwhelmed with joy, forgives his son, proclaims him "found" and holds a celebration commemorating his return. Of course, the idea is that he was "found" spiritually; he had developed wisdom, the capacity to not just manage money, but life.
Now, after 2000 years, we have gone from Prodigal Son to prodigal sin, and I imagine that today the story might unfold quite differently. The son's problem would probably be related via cell phone, be chalked up to a matter of money, and remedied not with character formation but cash flow.
We have all seen this new story, these parents who will bail their children out of trouble -- financial and otherwise -- time and again, never allowing them to learn through suffering the consequences of bad decisions. I can think of one case in particular wherein a couple I know of spent a lot of money to ensure that their teenage son wouldn't temporarily lose his driving privileges after a traffic infraction. When I mentioned to the mother that her bailout didn't teach responsibility, she sheepishly said something to the effect of how she couldn't help herself.
Yet the truth is that many of us, with children and without -- and most notably right now those in government -- can't help ourselves. We seem to have forgotten that not allowing people to suffer consequences has consequences. The reason for this was perhaps expressed best by English philosopher Herbert Spencer, who said, "The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools."
Given what figures most prominently in media and minds right now, it's not hard to know what I'm referring to. Main Street wants to bail on Wall Street and Detroit, not bail them out, and more sympathetic I could not be. We may very well be throwing good money after bad, and, regardless, the people doing the throwing aren't throwing away their own cash. But they sure pitch like Roger Clemens; it's stimulus this, 700 billion that, here a bailout, there a bailout, everywhere a bailout-bailout. Old McDonald had a country . . . and we're having a cow.
Really, though, if we want to know the reason for these government bailouts, most of us need look no further than the mirror. Sure, people may say they oppose bailouts, but it's not usually true.
Most Americans have no problem with them at all, as long as they're the ones getting bailed out.
This isn't really surprising, as people tend to refuse money like politicians refuse votes, which is why votes are so often bought with money. Yet the problem goes far deeper than the financial; it stems from the philosophical. As I indicated earlier, we have become a bailout culture. Parents bail out children lest the little snowflakes have their feelings hurt. Schools then follow suit, bailing out students through social promotion and an overall lack of accountability. Emily Friedman wrote about some examples of this, such as a policy known as "Zeros Aren't Permitted" (except when embodied in school administrators) at one Boston area middle school, which gives lazy students the opportunity to do unfinished homework in school, which I guess makes it schoolwork. The title of Friedman's piece asks, "Are Children Coddled?" but such a question is anachronistic. We long ago passed the coddling stage and transitioned into the "exaltation of stupidity and shiftlessness" stage.
Without a doubt, we continually bail out those devoid of brains, ambition and/or industriousness, whether they be rich or poor, domestic or foreign. For instance, there are people -- and many of them are Daddy Warbucks -- who insist on building homes in areas prone to floods, hurricanes and earthquakes and who do not or cannot get insurance to cover their dangerous living. Yet they don't have to fear an act of God because they can count on an act of government, meaning, they will get money that often comes from people of far more modest means.
A bailout is really a handout, and the aforementioned variety is branded "disaster relief," but it takes many forms and masquerades under many titles. We bail out illegal aliens when they cross our border for medical care, and many Americans want to offer them another bailout known as amnesty. We bail out the lazy as well as the needy with welfare, food stamps and other programs. Then consider that some politicians want to bail out the intellectually lazy (and corrupt) as well. Yes, believe it or not, they want to give our money to the ailing newspaper industry.
Now, don't misunderstand me, because I firmly believe in charity. When a private entity bails out someone who through no fault of his own is in dire straits, it's a beautiful example of man's humanity to man. Moreover, even a correct understanding of our Constitution -- which is as rare as accountability today -- allows state and local governments to establish a social safety net. (In keeping with the principle of subsidiarity, however, the private sector should be the first line of defense here.)
But our bailout culture is a perversion of charity -- and one that touches everything. Putting our heads together, we could probably fill 10,000 more lines with something to the effect of, "We bail out so-and-so when we _____," but the point has been made. Far more often than not nowadays, we don't teach people how to fish; we give fish to those who could cast a line but would rather fish for others' funds. We tend to not practice healthy charity but facilitate irresponsibility.
In light of this, why would we be surprised that irresponsible politicians elected by irresponsible people want to lavish money on irresponsible businesses? Our problem isn't isolated to finances; it is part of a deep cultural malaise permeating every national pore. To think otherwise is like looking at the Prodigal Son and thinking the problem was just one of finances. In both cases, it reflects a moral defect, an irresponsibility that is only corrected through exposure to consequences.
Of all our bailout babies, perhaps the best example of a bad example is the Prodigal State, California. It now may be out of cash in February, and some have floated the idea that it should receive a federal bailout along with everyone else who isn't you or me. But I say let Ca and every other profligate entity collapse under its own weight. There is beauty in bankruptcy.
People are people, be they in the Bible, business, government or grammar school; they all operate by the same principles. Politicians may dress smartly and know how to tie a fine Windsor knot, but money burns a hole in their pockets just as it does with a toy-craving ten-year-old. And this is the problem in Ca; its government has descended into the immorality of über-statism, as it vainly tries to play the paternal role with a juvenile sense of responsibility. A bailout would only perpetuate the foolishness and postpone the day of reckoning.
Bankruptcy, on the other hand, is one of the best ways to bring big government to heel. For just as a compulsive gambler will continue playing the casinos until his well runs dry -- and giving him money just delays the inevitable -- statist politicians will keep spending until there is nothing left to spend. So let state and local governments shut down and suspend services. Let them twist in their own ill wind. Let them languish in a self-created debtors' prison. In the same way the bankruptcy of a corporation can lead to a sale of assets that will allow more prudent heads to take the helm, government collapse can lead to necessary restructuring. Failure can shrink the big government of profligate statists just as it does the big heads of profligate young men.
Today we have many prodigal sons but precious little repentance. They don't need to be bailed out but bawled out -- by life -- because irresponsible people rarely change their ways unless forced to do so. And if allowing them to be disciplined by circumstances they created themselves is beyond us, then we are simply a Prodigal Nation, and such a place cannot long exist. After all, in just the way that failure to remove a gangrenous limb results in the death of the body, the body of a nation suffers the same fate when it doesn't allowed defective parts to be reformed or replaced.
Remember, to gravitate toward a system that seeks to bail everyone out is to move toward the standard of ". . . to each according to his needs." This didn't work very well in the Soviet Union, and I don't know how much better we will look once our wall -- that ever-growing one between responsibility and state -- finally falls.
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