Tuesday, July 30, 2013

DO YOU HAVE AN EXTRA MILLION WHO CAN SPARE UNCLE SAM?


Watching coming attractions in Washington? The next biggie will be the congressional fight over the national debt.
Since May 17, 2013, the Daily Treasury Statement of the debt has not moved from $16,695,396,000.000, which is a mere $25 million below the legal limit, according to a link on the Drudge Report to CNSNews.
Meanwhile, go to the Web and look at U.S. Debt Clock.org and the clock is still running. The total as this is written is $16.8 trillion. Treasury Secretary Lew said on television recently that the limit had already been passed.
No secret exists that the national debt represents an amount nearly beyond comprehension by folks having even a good-sized middle class income of less than $100,000. But that same Debt Clock, where the numbers grow more with each tick of the clock and go up and up while watching the computer screen, shows even more.
When last viewed for this piece, the clock showed that the national debt approaching $17 trillion amounted to $55,367 for each citizen or $148,025 for each taxpayer. Call up the site now, and those numbers will have grown.
More disturbing are figures at the bottom of the Debt Clock computer page.
Total national assets composed of $8.25 trillion in small business assets, $18 trillion in corporation assets and $74.3 trillion in household assets add up to $100.6 trillion. Statistically, that’s $318,276 per citizen --- not actually, but a figure that helps one get a handle on the size of what the country is worth.
But, those total assets fall short of the federal government’s liabilities: $16.5 trillion for social security, $21.8 trillion for prescription drugs, and $86.7 trillion that total $125 trillion. For each taxpayer, the liability amounts to $1,096,398.
So, the government’s long term liabilities add up to $24.4 trillion more than private assets – the value of what all businesses and individuals own.
From the above figures, only a mathematician could estimate how much the average citizen would have to find to pay his or her share of the long-term debt. But obviously, since only about half of the population pays federal income taxes, even if every person within the boundaries of the United States could be taxed, there just is not enough money to pay for the spending Congress and presidents over recent years have authorized. Sure, taxes come in shapes other than those on incomes, but people and business are not worth enough to pay the enormous amount owed.
One does not have to be a political junkie to know that whatever our politicians come up with in the coming months to boost the country’s debt limit they will fail when it comes to simple arithmetic. The bill or resolution that eventually be signed by the president will be only stopgap.
U.S. debt is so tremendous that words can hardly be coined to describe it. Paying it off becomes even more complex.
Annual budgets need to pay off the debt  gradually. Two problems: The government has not had a budget for several years; when budgets or continuing resolutions are passed, they call for deficits.
Deficits increase the national debt.
Thus, deficits must be turned into actual surpluses before the debt can begin to be cut.

The odds of our politically oriented officials solving the country’s financial conundrum are longer – much longer – than winning Power Ball. But, that lottery is actually won from time to time.  

Monday, July 29, 2013

LIBERALS CONTRADICT HISTORY



Liberal or Progressive disdain for the Founding Fathers of the United States as witnessed by reduced respect for the Constitution would appear to be contradictory.
Our Constitution is a living document and must change with the times, urge the Progressives.
Our Constitution is the fundamental outline for the world’s first and longest lasting democratic-republic that should be interpreted as a guide and changed with trepidation, Conservatives counsel.
But the government of the United States of America grounded on the Constitution after the failure of the Articles of Confederation grew out of the Founding Founders reliance on European writers’ ideas associated with the Enlightenment or the Age of Reason. Historians of various persuasions apparently agree on that to a great extent.
Some of those writer-philosophers were, in no particular order, Thomas Hobbes, Rousseau, John Locke, Montesquieu. Hobbes said government should be patterned on the needs of the governed. Rousseau held the people should influence government. Locke agreed with both of those views. Montesquieu believed governmental powers should be exercised separately.
At the time of the founding of the United States, following revolution, the world was governed by kings, emperors and tyrants. To make government authorized by the governed with the consent of the governed was – and remains – bold, brave, intrepid, forward.
Today’s Conservatives, you might say, wish to retain that then fresh approach to running society by relying on the good sense of the people.
Modern Liberals, on the other hand, believe that the educated elite – the enlightened ones – alone are capable of discerning what is best for the people.
Are not those two encapsulations of philosophies of government opposite of what occurred historically?


Monday, July 22, 2013

PIP,PIP!


So it’s a boy!
Born hours before this is written, the heir to the throne of the British Empire – third in line – was identified as a male upon his birth.
How old fashioned.
How appropriate in these days when early identification of a fetus as boy or girl can be the reason for abortion.
The Brits may be as secular as society can now be, with attendance at Church of England services pretty small, smaller than the dwindling Catholic congregations. But with sonic tests that reveal the sex of a child within the womb it is common in the United States to learn of the sex of an unborn child and even name it; that, or – horribly – deciding to take its life because it does not move the parents’ happiness meter.
Of course, British laws covering succession had been changed to allow either prince or princess to ascend to the throne. So regardless of the royal baby’s sex, it would be welcomed as the successor to the queen, or the current Prince of Wales in any case.
Yet, it seems, William and Kate were willing, as were parents of old, to await the birth to learn whether the child would be the Royal Prince or the Royal Princess.

Pip, pip for them.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

WOULD MR. OBAMA REALLY WANT LOWER EMPLOYMENT?

Let’s be fair: The president and Democrats in Congress before the 2010 elections did not intend for the Affordable Care Act to reduce jobs and workers’ incomes.
Appears, however, such  reductions are true.
Aggregate figures may not yet be available, but evidence mounts that small businesses are reducing hours or refraining from new hires to avoid paying for health insurance for employees or fines for not buying coverage.
A columnist online wrote about a restaurant worker who was cut to 30 hours, losing $400 a month, leaving him with $27 to live on after expenses. Others arguing the case against Obamacare offer similar evidence.
So how many people might possibly be affected by this part of the legislation being put off for a year?
A little rudimentary research shows that in 2008 some 6 million firms had payrolls. (But there were 21.7 million with no payrolls, meaning those self-employed or people operating unincorporated businesses.) Those figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau.
The bureau does not keep statistics for businesses with fewer than 50 employees.  For employers of 1-4, 5-9 and 10-19 the total was 21.6 million paid employees. For 20-99 the figure was 20.9 million. Therefore, the 1-49 total might conservatively be estimated at 21.6 plus something less than half of the 20.9. A good guess is about 30 million employees in firms paying up to 50 employees.
Say 10 million bosses decided to cut hours to 30 a week and our example for lost wages is reasonable on average, the economy would lose some $4 billion a month. Total: $48 billion a year.
That’s pretty rough as estimates go, yet reasonable.
Unreasonable would be an assumption that the administration and Congress wished the economy to take a hit from mandating that uninsured Americans be covered for health expenses through insurance. What is reasonable is some thought given to fixing the problem.
Interestingly, the Teamsters have asked Democratic leaders to do something about Obamacare, claiming the law will create an incentive to keep work weeks below 30 hours when the middle class is founded on the 40-hour work week. Also, the union wants relief for non­-profit health plans established under Teamster contracts with employers.


Wednesday, July 3, 2013

THAT WHICH CANNOT BE MEASURED CAN BE WORTHWHILE


THAT WHICH CANNOT BE MEASURED CAN BE WORTHWHILE

American culture is all about stuff.
Call us materialistic and you’d be right.
Most people living in the U.S. of A. spend a lot of time, not to mention money, on things, on fun, on goodies. Life is about stuff that can be measured, whether in length, weight, volume, temperature, or time. If those things are marked with a swoosh or some other fashionable trademark, so much the better. Some young guys have been known to be slaughtered for their Air Jordans. Lovely young matrons measure their success by the Vuitton bags they sling over their shoulders. Guys and dolls must wear the latest jeans, even if that means buying ones with worn knees.
Agree or disagree, many would have other examples.
Unfortunately, whether the latest cellphone, pad or appliance with ear-plugs or vintage wine or car is the object to be coveted, it may not be made in America by Americans. But that is another lament.
There is a flip-side to culture, any culture. That is about reality that cannot be measured. A question of what cannot be measured when posed to a search engine brought some interesting yet somehow materialistic answers: love, laughing with friends, walking the dog, helping others. Good, yes, but not ethereal, not spiritual, except for love. And love can be several things, thus different words in other languages normally unused in English.
These non-material things are essential. Politicians rarely deal with them. Just ordinary folks appreciate them. Naming them in bunches isn’t done very often, save perhaps by religious people. Leaving religion aside – for the time being – among those valued by most people might be these, in no particular order or worthiness.
Courage, wisdom, courtesy, humor, mathematics,philosophy, insight, generosity, patriotism, agility, health.
Such a list could go on and on. So might the listing of their opposites, also non-material: Desirable versus undesirable. Good versus bad. Virtue versus evil.
Instances of meaningful opposing ideas -- tangible-intangible, concrete-abstract, material-spiritual – are numberless. We run across them every day. Some have major consequences. A recent example.
A Supreme Court justice recently made an abstract judgment that could change the American culture in ways that now can only be guessed. He decided, along with four others concurring, that the Congress of the United States in 1996 displayed animus and bigotry in confirming by law an institution accepted in time beyond memory, namely marriage between one man and one woman.
Tolerance is another immeasurable. It works both ways. It means respect for other’s beliefs. Respect and belief, two more abstractions. So it must be difficult to tolerate something that is bad or has no long-lasting benefits for society, although the doer can be tolerated. But, something that is good ordinarily is not the subject of tolerance. Animus and bigotry are abstracts that more often than not are aimed at things that are unacceptable to society. But, obviously, in the Supreme Court’s opinion even something for eons considered good can be wiped from federal law because its supporters can considered something worse than intolerant.
Things that cannot be measured are important. Most important. Fundamentally important.
Morality is one of those fundamentals of human relations.
So many “pleasures” (another intangible) of this life can be moral and, when misused, immoral. Correct, use and misuse involve the immeasurable. Morality springs from religion, which also is in its essence spiritual and which cannot be measured. God and morality go together.

God cannot be measured, but he made all that can and cannot be measured. He is wise. He is wisdom.

Monday, July 1, 2013

PIPELINES FROM CANADA NOT NEW



With the Obama administration’s opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline, one might think that the project is something new under the sun. Another might believe oil and natural gas pipelines are novel. Someone else might claim these buried lines are dangerous and injurious to the environment.
Just as with railroads, highways, airways, waterways, pipelines over the years have experienced accidents. Yet, statistics supplied by their regulatory agency, the U.S. Department of Transportation, show pipelines are safest.
But, the reason for this espousal of Keystone and pipelines in general stems from an accidental discovery. A Time magazine piece about the pipeline industry dated November 20, 1964, showed in a centerfold map the major lines then crisscrossing the United States, plus entries from Canada. Labeled, “Invisible Network, A Million Miles of Pipeline,” the spread also included a box that noted 710,000 miles of natural gas pipelines, a 148,000 mile-system for crude oil and another 57,000 miles for delivery of various products.
Time’s article celebrated the system and its growth.
Department of Transportation statistics for 2011, the latest that could be found readily, showed about the same for oil, 149,571 miles, but double for gas at 1,557,606 miles.
“Pipelines Are Safest for Transportation of Oil and Gas,” was the title of an exhaustive article published by the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research in June 2012. The publication was filled with statistical tables from the Department of Transportation. [Available at manhattan-institute.org/html/17.htm]
For some 75 years pipelines have carried crude from Canada to the United States.
Time, which backed the map with two full-page color photos of pipeline laying in its then familiar small-type, three-column, small-column black and white photos, wrote of the economic value of the lines. It spoke of the competition between railroads and the pipeline companies. It reported that some rail companies were laying pipelines along their right of ways. It told of 1,600,000 tons of improved pipe being bought from steel companies in 1964.

Oh yes, Lyndon B. Johnson was president.