TAX ON THE STUPID

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Posted on 30th April 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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John Crisp is a liberal leaning college professor from Texas that writes a regular Op-Ed published by my local paper. I rarely agree with him. Even when I agree with his conclusion, I don’t always agree with his logic. He was shocked to be in agreement with a Tea Party Republican in doing away with the state sponsored lottery in Texas. As a libertarian minded person, I have a different view on the subject.

I do not object to gambling. If that is how people want to waste their money, more power to them. Other people waste their money on other vices like gluttony and pride. Feel free to gamble yourself into the poor house, eat yourself to death, or go into debt buying McMansions and BMWs.

I object to a government that lures the stupid into gambling their limited resources away in false hope of a big payoff. State run lotteries are a tax on the stupid. Dumb people gamble. Smart people do not. Politicians and government bureaucrats know that poor people can be lured into gambling with slick TV propaganda designed by Edward Bernays taught advertising maggots. I’m constantly bombarded with TV ads, paid for with my tax dollars, showing average schmucks hitting the jackpot and living the good life. They don’t publicize the odds being 500 million to 1 of you actually winning the jackpot.

Lotteries, payroll taxes, gasoline taxes, property taxes, etc. are all regressive. The poor will always be screwed by the rich because the rich know that most of the poor are too stupid to know they are getting screwed.

The best part of the story below is how the noble, principled legislators reversed their votes when they were faced with a loss of $2 billion from the tax on the stupid. What would we do without the stupid people. There wouldn’t be any reality TV.

 

Lotteries are really a tax on the poor

Monday, April 29,2013

A strange event occurred last week here in Texas: I found myself agreeing with a Tea Partier.

Republican Scott Sanford, a CPA and Baptist pastor, was elected to the Texas House in November. He appears to be a wholesome family man whose politics place him solidly in Tea Party country. He’s emphatically pro-Second Amendment, anti-tax and anti-Obamacare. He firmly asserts that life begins at the instant of conception.

Sanford and other Tea Party Republicans turned heads in the Texas House last week when they raised objections to a routine bill that would re-authorize the Texas Lottery Commission until 2025.

Sanford pointed out that Texans without high school diplomas — that is, those with the least money — spend around $600 a year on the lottery, while those with graduate degrees spend around a quarter of that amount.

Sanford was opposing the re-authorization on “the moral grounds that the lottery is a tax on poor people … It is therefore immoral and wrong.”

Good for you, Mr. Sanford, for professing an easily verifiable principle: poor people play the lottery much more than rich people.

I suspect that this principle is universal, that it applies to the ancient lotteries of the Romans, to the many lotteries of colonial America and to the lotteries of the 43 states that currently have them.

It makes sense. To be anywhere close to the poverty line in America these days means to be increasingly desperate. Over the last several decades wealth in our country has shifted exponentially from the poor and the middle class in the direction of the already wealthy, and the shift shows little sign of reversing itself.

In the meantime, the income gap continues to widen and upward mobility is down. Good blue-collar work isn’t as plentiful as it once was and college is becoming more and more costly.

In the course of this enormous shift of wealth, the wealthy have somehow managed to keep our collective cultural anger pointed away from themselves and at the poor — the lazy, the addicted, the welfare-cheater — who, according to the wealthy and many in what’s left of the middle class, could pull themselves up by their own bootstraps if only they weren’t so shiftless.

Of course, nobody makes the poor play the lottery. Yet, if poor people manage to scrape together enough to afford a television, they observe constantly the good life in America, the one that’s tantalizingly beyond their reach.

And if that’s not enough enticement, the Texas Lottery Commission spends millions for commercials that promise the poor that for only a few dollars and with just a little luck, this Saturday night’s drawing could be the one that gives them a life they’re unlikely to reach any other way.

Others joined Sanford in his objections to the re-authorization of the lottery and, with the support of several liberal Democrats, the House voted to abandon the lottery, 82-64.

Then the House recessed for a “hastily called lunch break,” as the Associated Press put it, during which reality set in. Lottery supporters noted that the $2 billion that the lottery provides for school funding had already been built into the budget. That gap and the unwillingness to raise taxes to fill it — along with a few twisted arms — resulted in a vote to re-authorize the lottery, 91-53.

So, when I walk over to the convenience store a couple of blocks from where I live — why do there appear to be more lottery outlets in less-than-elegant neighborhoods like mine? — getting through the checkout line with my newspaper and taco will take a little longer.

The poor and near poor on their way to work will continue to spend a few extra bucks — or $10 or $20 — on the lotto. They’re not going to win but we’ve spent a lot of money to convince them otherwise. And, as other opportunities diminish, why not take a chance?

John M. Crisp teaches in the English Department at Del Mar College in Corpus Christi, Texas.

CONCEALED CARRY IN TEXAS

14 comments

Posted on 22nd January 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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 Another level headed Op-Ed in my paper. I really need to move to Texas.

Guns were where he least expected them

Sunday, January 20,2013

There’s a critical moment in the acclaimed literary work, “Ren & Stimpy: Space Madness,” in which Ren the irritable Chihuahua orders Stimpy the overgrown, not very intelligent cat to guard a red button that, if pushed, will erase all of history. This assignment vexes Stimpy.

What happens, asks Stimpy, if the button is pushed? Ren’s answer: Ma-a-a-a-ybe something good, ma-a-a-ybe something bad, but we’ll never know, will we? Because you’re not going to push it, ar-r-r-r-e you?

Stimpy, predictably, finds the temptation to push the button unbearable.

Many people familiar with “Ren & Stimpy” mistake it for a mere cartoon. It’s much more. This episode, for example, is an animated allegory for why I don’t carry a concealed handgun.

I am not opposed to the concealed-carry rights of those who exercise those rights safely and competently. Actually, I’m more than not opposed. I’m in favor, which, at the risk of stereotyping, probably classifies me as a minority among people who do what I do for a living.

Those who carry a concealed handgun have accepted a huge responsibility not unlike Stimpy’s. The presence of people who have made that choice — those I know are armed and those I don’t — makes me feel safer.

A lot of columnists and commentators, in the aftermath of Newtown, Conn., have claimed that an armed citizen confronted with a similar situation would make it worse. Their fount of expertise is a mystery to me. I have no idea whether an armed citizen in a crowd accosted by a shooting madman would make the situation better or worse. I suppose the outcome would vary from armed citizen to armed citizen. But the risk that a law-abiding someone in a crowd might be armed is, I suspect, more deterrent than accelerant.

I’ve avoided the responsibility to be one of those people. Too many times, I’ve been in situations that, afterward, I was glad I didn’t have a gun — especially when I was a bicycle commuter. Many friends and acquaintances urged me to carry a gun while bicycling, for my safety. But after that egg incident, I thought otherwise. Ditto the beer-bottle incident. I was sideswiped on purpose 20 years ago by a speeding driver. I still feel a rage that I would describe as murderous, and a desire to settle accounts. Of course, I know enough about myself to know that if I became a licensed gun carrier, I’d exercise better judgment than I do unarmed. The presence of the gun would be sobering. I’d avoid disagreements, be less disagreeable, forgo shouted critiques of reckless drivers while walking the dog.

A couple of years ago, I discovered that most of my friends and acquaintances carry concealed guns. This came as a shock — that these responsible members of society regularly hid deadly force on their persons and were willing to use it, and that I was surrounded by them. Their adeptness at concealing was part of the surprise — no jackets outdoors in July. They all wore shorts no baggier than mine.

All believed strongly in not only their right but their duty to take personal responsibility to protect themselves and their friends and families. All were willing to fill the crucial, unforeseeable gap in police response time. And I sensed among them a hint of reproach that I didn’t also accept this responsibility.

On one level, it was kind of scary, being surrounded by guns I couldn’t see. But everyone I know who conceals and carries is someone whose good judgment I trust. The people I wouldn’t trust, or should fear, don’t bother with the license, or aren’t eligible.

My gun-carrying friends and acquaintances are nurses, lawyers, owners and operators of small businesses — people the rest of us wouldn’t suspect. One of them, a prominent physician whose liberal political views would offend opponents of “Obamacare,” told me the other day that he’s always armed and that no one — NO ONE — will take his AR-15 rifle from him.

That’s what a lot of people would call crazy talk. And that’s the problem with the current discourse about gun rights and gun control — people on either side dismiss each other as crazy. The good doctor is a respected member of the community and there is nothing crazy about him. He deserves to be heard with all the dignity and respect that the initials after his name imply.

My world is more full of guns than I once thought. Most of them belong to people like the good doctor, who make our world safer.

Tom Whitehurst Jr. is Viewpoints-Opinion Page Editor of the Corpus Christi Caller-Times.

IS SECESSION POSSIBLE?

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Posted on 12th November 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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This certainly came out of the blue. The liberal media is in full ridicule mode today about the secession petitions being circulated in 20 states. Liberal pundits never see change coming. They are “progressives” who think the world moves forward in a straight line. Fourth Turnings are a complete surprise to these nitwits. Even though the recent examples of the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia have happened within the last 20 years, they are blind to the possibility. Thomas Jefferson saw it clearly in 1816. When the ruling elite abscond with all the riches and leave the people to fight wars and die a slow death caused by man made inflation and debt, the end of the grand experiment is near.

Former President of the United States Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to William H. Crawford, Secretary of War under President James Madison, on June 20, 1816: “In your letter to Fisk, you have fairly stated the alternatives between which we are to choose : 1, licentious commerce and gambling speculations for a few, with eternal war for the many ; or, 2, restricted commerce, peace, and steady occupations for all. If any State in the Union will declare that it prefers separation with the first alternative, to a continuance in union without it, I have no hesitation in saying, ‘let us separate’. I would rather the States should withdraw, which are for unlimited commerce and war, and confederate with those alone which are for peace and agriculture.”

 

Secession petitions flood White House website

President Obama’s reelection last week has prompted a slew of requests to secede from the United States.

Using the Obama administration’s own We the People website, nearly two dozen petitions have sprung up asking the Obama administration for permission to withdraw from the Union.

The two most popular petitions, Texas and Louisiana, have both drawn more than 10,000 signatures each as of Monday morning. The Texas petition needs only 7,000 more signatures to trigger an official White House response.

None of the petitions explicitly cite Obama’s reelection as a reason for independence, but all were created after last week’s elections.

“The citizens of the US suffer from blatant abuses of their rights such as the [National Defense Authorization Act], the [Transportation Security Administration], etc,” the Texas petition charges. “Given that the state of Texas maintains a balanced budget and is the 15th largest economy in the world, it is practically feasible for Texas to withdraw from the union, and to do so would protect it’s citizens’ standard of living and re-secure their rights and liberties in accordance with the original ideas and beliefs of our founding fathers which are no longer being reflected by the federal government.”

Others are more vague for in their reasons for wanting to leave the country.

“just like in 1860 the south secede from the union. 2012 the state of georgia would like to withdraw from the USA,” one of the Georgia petitions states.

Most of the petitions simply quote the Declaration of Independence in their request to depart the country.

As of Monday, residents of Kentucky, Oregon, Montana, North Dakota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Florida, Georgia, New York, New Jersey, Colorado, Arkansas, South Carolina, and Missouri have all expressed interest in dissolving their relationship with the United States.

Nightmare on Main Street

15 comments

Posted on 1st October 2012 by PlatoPlubius in Economy

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Well, Ross Perot is in the news (I thought this guy was dead) today with his comments that suggest due to our economy’s weakness and fragility that we could be “taken over”…according to the article below he didn’t mention who or how the take over would occur…I’m sure TBPers have many ideas on this.  BTW check out Perot’s duds in this pic

I’m not sure if he was going for the Freddy Krueger look, you decide

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America could be ‘taken over,’ warns Ross Perot

 

Former presidential contender and billionaire Ross Perot is worried that America is a sitting duck for an unnamed foreign invader. In an interview for his new autobiography, Perot said the nation’s weak economy has left us open for a hostile takeover—and neither presidential candidate is the man to save the country.

Citing an impending fiscal cliff,  Perot warned of disaster. “If we are that weak, just think of who wants to come here first and take us over,” the former CEO of info-tech company Perot Systems told USA Today on Monday.

“The last thing I ever want to see is our country taken over because we’re so financially weak, we can’t do anything,” Perot says.

When asked for his take on the presidential race, Perot added, “Nobody that’s running really talks about it, about what we have to do and why we have to do it. They would prefer not to have it discussed.”

However cryptic he may be, this is the first political reckoning by Perot in years, ever since he withdrew from the political landscape after the fall of his Reform Party in the 2000 election. The man who ran the most successful third-party campaigns in contemporary American politics also expressed optimism about the current tea party activism and its efforts to “wake up” both Washington and the electorate.

Still, he thinks that even the fresh voices in the populist, small-government tea party movement aren’t focusing on the real doomsday issue: the deficit. Comparing the Washington establishment to a bunch of fiscal drunks, Perot is still waiting for America to undergo an intervention, before it finds itself owned by a new global power. “It’s like the guy who’s drinking—sooner or later, he’s got to put a cork on the bottle, right?”

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/america-could-taken-over-warns-ross-perot-152428497.html

IMAGINE

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Posted on 12th December 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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