The Seen vs. the Unseen

Guest Post by John Stossel

The Seen vs. the Unseen

Sunday is the Super Bowl.

I look forward to playing poker and watching. It’s easy to do both because in a three-hour-plus NFL game there are just 11 minutes of actual football action.

So we’ll have plenty of time to watch Atlanta politicians take credit for the stadium that will host the game. Atlanta’s former mayor calls it “simply the best facility in the world.”

But politicians aren’t likely to talk about what I explain in my latest video — how taxpayers were forced to donate more than $700 million to the owner of Atlanta’s football team, billionaire Arthur Blank, to get him to build the stadium.

In addition to the subsidies, the Falcons get all the money from parking, restaurants and merchandise sales. Sweet deal.

But not an unusual one. Some NFL teams collect even more in government subsidies than it cost to build their stadiums.

So taxpayers, most of whom never attend a game, subsidize billionaires.

Seems like a scam.

I don’t fault Blank for grabbing the money. I like the guy. He made our lives better by founding Home Depot. We’re both stutterers who donate money to AIS, a stuttering treatment program.

Since politicians give money away, Blank’s shareholders would consider him irresponsible not to take it.

The problem is that politicians give away your money in the first place.

I understand why they do it.

They like going to games and telling voters, “I brought the team to our town!”

Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman and her cronies recently funneled $750 million of taxpayer money to the owners of the Oakland Raiders to get them to move the team to Vegas.

Reporter Jon Ralston asked her, “Why should there be one cent of public money when you have two guys who could pay for this themselves?”

The mayor replied lamely, “I think it really is a benefit to us that really could spill over into something.”

Spill over into … something. Politicians always claim giving taxpayer money to team owners will “spill over” to the whole community.

They call their handouts investments — a “terrific investment,” as the mayor of Atlanta put it.

But it’s not a good investment. It’s a bad one.

Politicians point to that extra business activity that occurs when the football team plays at home, but the Atlanta Falcons, like most NFL teams, play just 10 home games. The stadium is used for some concerts and soccer games, but most days little or nothing happens there.

That’s why economists who study stadium subsidies call them a bad deal for taxpayers.

The problem is the seen vs. the unseen, as economist Frederic Bastiat put it. All of us see the people at the games buying beer and hotdogs.

But we don’t see the larger number of citizens, who had their money taken from them to spend on the stadium, not buying things.

We don’t see two fewer customers in a restaurant or the home remodeling that never got done. Those humbler projects lack the political clout and don’t get the media attention that politicians and the stadium-builders get.

So this Sunday, when Atlanta politicians brag about their beautiful stadium, and clueless media claim that it created lots of jobs, let’s also remember the jobs the subsidies destroyed — and the tax money that was given to rich people.

The problem isn’t just Atlanta, and it isn’t just sports.

Most every time government presumes to tell us where and how our money should be spent rather than leaving it up to free individuals, it creates a loss.

Politicians announce whatever project they fund with great fanfare, implying you should be thankful to them — as if football, or the arts, or whatever is unveiled in the latest ribbon-cutting ceremony, couldn’t exist without politicians moving money from your pocket to the pockets of their cronies.

But really, government shrinks your ability to make choices every time it steers money away from what you might choose to spend it on.

Football is popular enough to thrive without politicians subsidizing it.

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21 Comments
BK-Get right, or get left. Behind.....
BK-Get right, or get left. Behind.....
January 30, 2019 6:44 am

BWAHAHAHA. (((John Stoessel))) whines about tax $ diverted from goyim pockets going to boofer ball stadiums, or whatever. (((He’s))) really only complaining because it didn’t go to something that would support (((their))) causes. Every. Single. Time. Then he would be praising how it was a good investment, blah blah blah. It’s all so tiresome.

Prof. Mandelbrot
Prof. Mandelbrot
January 30, 2019 7:10 am

I am in Atlanta all week and so far 2 different hotels and both were complaining they were not fully booked for the superbowlmmseems there is problems. Maybe they shouldnt have kneeled…..

Pequiste
Pequiste
January 30, 2019 7:35 am

“Seems like a scam.” JS

After explaining why it is a scam he should have validated his observation because it IS a SCAM and for all the reasons he mentioned.

The Evil Fuckers will have you paying for your own Panen et Circensum whether you like it or not – jokes on us.

Ned
Ned
January 30, 2019 7:44 am

This is one of several forms of corporate welfare. The type of welfare that is ‘seen’ is the low level type that individuals collect on the government dole. The type of welfare ‘unseen’ is this kind, corporate welfare in the form of subsidies.

Examples:

-NY taxpayers to pay $48,000 per Amazon HQ job

-$750 million in subsidies paid by taxpayers for Tesla

-Long before any 40% corporate tax cut came along 26 top American corporations paid no federal income tax

If you as a wage slave individual taxpayer fail to pay your taxes the government will hunt you down deep within the Amazon rain forest, bring you back and make an example out of you. Meanwhile corporations get a free pass.
And many many more examples but you get the picture. The reason why the U.S. government puts corporations over the will of the people is because the U.S. is a corporation.

THE US IS NOT A COUNTRY. IT IS A CORPORATION.

This is known as a “corporatocracy”. The United States of America changed it’s constitution in 1871 from a de-facto method from “A government for the people, by the people” to a government for the corporations by the corporations, “. This was known as the Act of 1871.

So this begs the question, who makes the laws? Everyone will answer that it is the congress with 535 members of congress commonly referred to as “lawmakers”. This is untrue. The corporations are the ones who make the laws. The corporations have agents referred to as “corporate lobbyists” that lobby, i.e. bribe the members of congress to pass the laws that increase said corporations. The U.S. is the best democracy money can buy.

None of the members of government or congress give a damn about John Q. Public citizen they answer to their masters, their corporate sponsors. So the reason the U.S. government staged the coup in Venezuela is so that U.S. corporations and their partner in crime, the corporation that is the U.S.A., can plunder the resources of that sovereign nation. Now you know!

It’s Time to Get Billionaires Off of Welfare

Pequiste
Pequiste
  Ned
January 30, 2019 8:22 am

Jolly good show Ned!
“Billionaires off welfare” – would be a damn good start.

CCRider
CCRider
January 30, 2019 7:56 am

The game of football might be the perfect metaphor for the societal rot that has become the u.s. It’s a game built on violence described as only the Irish St Paul, George Carlin, could with his comparison to baseball.

It started at the beginning of the most war ravaged century in history. It was so violent it had to be legislated somewhat safer by the insane, war loving T roosevelt. It has thus poisoned the souls of its adherents.

It’s ranks are filled by ‘college athletes’ many of which are functional illerates:

And, like the demands of the free shit army, pampered overweight slobs who play the game feel put upon by their benefactors:

Violence this game’s sole reason to be. The rules are hard to understand and capricious. The game’s outcomes are often determined by a coin toss and/or a blown call.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z–m55G_GZU

And, yes as this author explains, the 1% get’s the loot at the expense of the rabble seated in the cheap seats.

They all deserve CTE.

The good news. Pitchers and catchers are only weeks away from spring training.

goofyfoot
goofyfoot
January 30, 2019 8:05 am

Football players play 11 minutes of ball pretending to b hurt. Rugby athletes play 80 minutes of ball pretending not to b hurt.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
January 30, 2019 8:17 am

Greed

overthecliff
overthecliff
January 30, 2019 9:10 am

Ain’t crony capitalism great?

Dutchman
Dutchman
January 30, 2019 9:56 am

Minneapolis – and the $BILLION$ dollar Vikings Stadium:

The bill to pay for a Vikings stadium, released on Friday afternoon, bypasses a Minneapolis referendum requirement by asserting that the city’s $300 million contribution is not actually an expenditure of the city.

That is the same legal argument that stadium backers made at a press conference last week, though it was unclear whether they would explicitly state it in legislation. It’s intended to bypass a Minneapolis charter provision requiring a vote when more than $10 million in “city resources” is spent on a sports facility.

Mayor R.T. Rybak has proposed redirecting existing hospitality taxes to pay for the city’s share of the stadium. Those taxes currently pay for operations and debt related to the city’s convention center. Rybak and other stadium backers argue that since the taxes are authorized by the state, the state is merely reclaiming them.

“These are state dollars,” Rybak said last week. “And the state imposes them on the city, and the state has control over them in the city.”

The requirement to hold a referendum has proved to be one of the most vexing problems for stadium backers, who are still trying to convince a majority of the City Council to move foward without a citywide vote.

Council member Gary Schiff, a co-author of the charter amendment, has called Rybak’s argument “absurd.”

We got ass raped in Minneapolis for the new Vikings stadium, and the Twin ballpark. No matter that there’s a law.

Pequiste
Pequiste
  Dutchman
January 30, 2019 11:00 am

The horde of recently arrived Minnesotans shall soon demand they be properly recognized and the name of the taxpayer-funded venue will become New Somalia Stadium.

anarchyst
anarchyst
January 30, 2019 10:49 am

Not only does the “Negro Felon League” scam taxpayers with their demands that taxpayers fund their “playpens”, any time there is a half-time show put on by the military, the Department of Defense must PAY the NFL for the “privilege” of hosting a half-time show. In addition, the NFL parent organizations pays NO taxes. Only the teams pay taxes.
Such a good deal…

TC
TC
January 30, 2019 11:25 am

We won’t be watching in our house, and we won’t miss it. AT ALL. Turn that shit off.

tsquared
tsquared
January 30, 2019 11:33 am

The stadium that has the retractable dome that will not close without the help of an engineering team working on it for hours.

BB
BB
  tsquared
January 30, 2019 12:02 pm

It’s been years since I watched football and I feel better just knowing it.I hate that negros worshipping , political correct shit. Will never again waste my time.

subwo
subwo
January 30, 2019 3:35 pm

Same as it ever was.

It’s one thing when local taxpayers pay for stadiums in their hometowns. Front Range residents in 2002 assumed about $300 million of the $400 million cost to build the Broncos’ new stadium in the parking lot of the old Mile High Stadium. The tax-free municipal bonds that funded the new stadium were paid off in 2012.
Study shows Broncos’ Mile High stadium cost federal …

http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/09/broncos-mile-high-stadium-cost-federal-taxpayers-54-million/

Hollow man
Hollow man
January 30, 2019 5:34 pm

Tax payers help grown men play a game for millions. Property taxes tthrough the roof. The people eat it up too. Pay 10 bucks a beer. Sometimes 1500.00 for a ticket. Not this kid. If they get no taxpayer help then their pay would come closer to reflecting their worth.

We are Screwed
We are Screwed
January 30, 2019 6:35 pm

Reporter Jon Ralston asked her, “Why should there be one cent of public money when you have two guys who could pay for this .

The mayor replied lamely, “I think it really is a benefit to us that really could spill over into something.”

Spill over into … something. Politicians always claim giving taxpayer money to team owners will “spill over” to the whole community.

Yeah a few million dollars spills over imto the mayors swiss bank account. THats what spills over. Bitch.

Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
January 30, 2019 9:07 pm

I plan to be at camp. Snomobiling. Being outdoors. No network tv. No cel reception. Good times.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
January 31, 2019 1:17 am

Public schools and colleges waste public money for the minority promoting and money making sports programs also. The Low IQ crowd must have their bread and circus; and in our Crony Democracy, neither the Rich nor the Poor pay the bills.

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
March 11, 2019 10:13 am

Therein is the explanation of why I refuse to watch any sports on television.