Saturday, July 23, 2011

Tax Policy as Social Control and the Fallacy of Finite Wealth....














Too often tax policy is sold to people as, “a means to benevolent social control.” So called “sin-taxes,” are said to be deigned to limit people’s exposure to harmful vices, like smoking, excessive drinking, even sweet snacks.

Others are designed to do things like “make driving more expensive and inconvenient,” so people pollute less.

All of those ideas are too simple-minded because they (1) misunderstand the problems they intend to try to solve and (2) don’t take into account nearly enough variables.

Some even argue that “tax breaks” and “tax abatements” are “social programs” in the form of “pay offs that benefit the well-connected” and that they actually harm others who don’t get them.
That’s as short-sighted and simplistic as the idea that “there is only so much wealth to go around, so a wealthy individual creates many poor people by hoarding so much of that finite resource for themselves.” THAT could ONLY be true IF an economy was static, with a fixed amount of wealth within a closed system. BUT no economy is a closed system, every economy is an open, dynamic system, in which the more wealth one accrues, the more wealth is produced, thereby expanding the economy AND the amount of wealth available to all.

Of course tax breaks are neither social benefits (legalized bribes) nor “social programs” UNLESS government or “the people” have a right to all the proceeds produced in their communities.

They DO NOT.

There is no such “chicken or egg” argument when it comes to commerce and government.

Commerce is not only the sole purpose government came into being, but the sole purpose language was developed, as humans sought a way to communicate in order to make exchanges. Likewise, math, in fact numbers themselves were developed solely as a medium of exchange.

Governments arose out of the necessity to protect commerce from both foreign invasion and domestic strife. Certainly well-off merchants COULD provide their own security/protection, but that often led to armed conflicts over business locations and prime trading routes. Governments arose out of the desire to make commerce more orderly and less violent.

Moreover, WHAT are taxes on businesses other than de fact sales taxes?

That is indeed what they are.

Every levy heaped upon business raises the costs of production and thus the price consumers pay for those goods.

Business PAYS NO TAXES, they simply pass along ALL their costs onto their consumers, as they MUST and as they SHOULD. So, in the end, piling on taxes on businesses amounts to taxing ourselves!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Jacob Riis and the Failure of Good Intentions and Social Engineering...

















Pete Hamill, one of New York’s many working class liberal pundits from two generations ago, once said, “New York’s, or then, New Amsterdam’s good fortune was that it was started by a company, the Dutch East India Company, not run by a religious sect, not a king, but by a company.”

What set New Amsterdam/New York from aristocratic Virginia and Puritan New England was that it’s sole purpose for being was the boundless pursuit of money.

That founding ethos brought forward a number of noble virtues, primarily and specifically the willingness to take in anyone that was good for business.

Within a few short years of its founding, no less than 18 languages were spoken on the streets of that city.

It was the pursuit of wealth, not human nature, nor government decree that ALLOWED such a tolerance, just it allowed the slave trade to flourish there, while also allowing masters, seeking a better return on their investments to train slaves as skilled craftsmen and to offer them freedom, in return for cheap labor and hard work.

This ethos flourished past Dutch rule, through the Colonial times and very much into the dawn of the modern day.

New York took in immigrants by the millions, Chinese, Jews, Russians, blacks from the south and the West Indies, Italians, Turks, Irish and Poles. By the late 19th Century new York was the world’s largest and greatest economic engine.

Today, Russia and India are utilizing cheap labor free-for-all economics to create the same kind of dynamic economic growth. China has been able to move 100 MILLION Chinese out of poverty EVERY YEAR through its market-based economic reforms.

At the start of the 20th Century one reporter observed, “Every four years, new York adds to itself a city the size of Boston or St. Louis. It is the largest Jewish city in the world, the largest Irish city in the world, one of the largest German cities. More than 700,000 Russians call it home and it houses more Italians than Rome. New York is the great whirlpool of the races.”

Generations of poor people flooded into New York to provide the cheap labor it needed, often working in appalling conditions, to give their children better opportunities. Milton Friedman’s mother was a seamstress in a Lower East Side sweatshop and she toiled so that Milton would never see the inside of one.

And these sweatshops created unheralded opportunities for these poor. People who would’ve been peasants, serfs, veritable slaves and “human garbage” under Monarchs and dictators, were free people, able to leverage their own labors into a better life for their children.

Entire generations went from peasant-class to property owners in a generation, thanks to the “miracle that was New York.”

But that same success also spawned the impetus for the move from unfettered freedom and toward a more regulated, more government controlled economy. Ironically enough, the trigger for this shift came in the form of New York’s cheap housing – it’s slums.

Jacob Riis (pictured above) came to New York a penniless Danish immigrant, but given that he had a working understanding of English, along with some marketable skills, including familiarity with the new flash-powder photography, he was able to land a job as a police photographer and move out of the slums after a few years here.

In 1890 Riis put together a pictorial of New York’s slums in all their horrors and penned some compelling stories that outlined the magnitude of the issue, not merely a few malnourished or diseased kids on Delancey Street, or some hardened thugs around what was then called but “Bandit’s Roost,” but a population spread over 37,316 tenements that housed over one and quarter MILLION (1,250,000) New Yorkers.

This book, “How The Other Half Lives,” catapulted Jacob Riis into national and eventually international acclaim.

New York City’s leading social reformer at the time was Teddy Roosevelt, then U.S. Civil Service Commissioner and he devoured Riis’ book with fascination. When Teddy Roosevelt became New York’s Police Commissioner a few years later, Jacob Riis implored him to shutter the brutal police department-run lodging houses, where Riis himself had sought shelter upon his arrival.

In fact, Riis began working with many upper class housing reformers, who ultimately were able to convince the city to engage in some of the nation’s first active “slum clearance movements.”

Riis, with Teddy Roosevelt’s assistance was able to get some of the country’s first tenement regulations passed through Albany.

Across New York City, slum housing, rookeries (old, dilapidated mansions and warehouses, illegally set up for lodgings) and the police department’s lodging houses were closed down and cleared away and the lands were either sold off to developers (mostly from among that same group of upper class social reformers) or turned into parks.

The SINGLE “modern” (more human) lodging house that Commissioner Roosevelt built was unable to house more than a small fraction of the hordes of the now homeless and dispossessed poor. This created what’s been called, “A veritable refugee crisis on the Lower East Side of Manhattan,” as slum clearance forced many onto the streets, as those slums had housed those who simply couldn’t afford a better place to stay.

As this drove a teeming throng into the already overcrowded tenements that were left and into Bowery flop houses, usually situated above bars, Riis blamed saloonkeepers “for plying the poor with cheap drink and shelter”. . .BUT, they’d been doing that for eons. It was, ironically enough, Jacob Riis and TR’s misguided plan to improve housing conditions that actually drove the crisis.

When the Columbus park project was completed and some 10,000 homes were converted into a lush, green park, Riis called it, “Little less than a revolution,” a slum housing was razed and “in its place come trees and grass and flowers, for its dark hovels, light and sunshine and air.”

An improvement for the middle and upper classes who enjoyed the park, and reveled in the eradication of that urban blight, but a disaster for the displaced poor.

Like many misguided social reformers, the reforms proposed by Riis and Roosevelt transformed the LAND itself, but did nothing to help and much to harm the poor whose name these reforms were done.

Around the same time that Progressive housing reform (“slum clearance”) was underway, the same “Progressive forces” took aim at the jobs those poor people relied on. The Triangle Shirtwaist fire, which occurred on March 25th, 1911 created the impetus for massive workplace reforms.

By the time Woodrow Wilson took office as President, not only had the homes of the poor in new York city transformed for the worse by the patronizing pity of the rich, so were their livelihoods.

A part of the issue wealthy, well educated people have in understanding and really sympathizing with poverty is that even those who’ve experienced briefly never possessed any of the internal or intrinsic causes of poverty – physical or mental infirmity, a lack of marketable skills or a language barrier. In the case of Jacob Riis, he came to New York a young, well-educated, middle class, Protestant Danish immigrant, who spoke at least some English when he arrived here. For Riis and those like him, simply removing the trappings of poverty, gaining employment and finding better lodgings was all they had to do to put the external effects of poverty behind them.

As a result, Riis and others felt it HAD TO BE the same for all the other poor, even though it wasn’t, which is why his view that “If you get rid of the slum, you get rid of poverty” was so disastrous when translated into public policy.

The Progressive ideal first championed wholesale by Teddy Roosevelt came out of the desire of the established wealthy patricians to maintain their positions.

In social and economic cauldrons like New York’s they saw a furnace that forged “sharks,” with new ideas and ruthless determination and the ability, IF left unfettered, to displace the established order of things. . .to replace the established businesses and industries with newer ones.

That AND New York’s upper classes saw that the wretched poor, the factories and sweatshops that supported them and the tenement slums that housed them took up would could and SHOULD be valuable real estate.

As much as anything the Progressive movement was motivated by greed in the form of a land grab by some of its more prominent constituents. The Morgan and Vanderbilt controlled New York Central Railroad, which owned the industrial land along Manhattan’s Hudson River side, sought to transform that industrial landscape into more high-value office space that could be built higher than industrial spaces could, thus generating much higher rents.

These patricians formed what was then called the Regional Plan Association or RPA and they immediately gravitated to the idea of planned communities, or “Urban Planning.” FDR’s uncle, Frederic Delano was the RPA’s first chairman.

Their plan at the start was to move New York’s industry and its teeming mass of lower class, working poor across the Hudson. The only thing that kept the RPA from moving those things immediately was the pesky fact all that “teeming confusion” was the basis of the city’s economy. It would have to be done over time, as New York would transition to a newer, less industrialized economy.

Robert Moses (NYC’s “Master Builder”) became an integral part of that plan that continued after WW II. Robert Moses benefitted from a number of pieces of national housing legislation. The first was the 1937 United States Housing Act, which was the nation’s first public housing law. It sprang directly from New York City’s housing reform movement and was often called “the Wagner Act,” after its primary patron, NY State Senator and Tammany Hall legend, Robert F. Wagner Sr. Within a few decades public housing projects were strewn across cities throughout America. Those concrete slab housing projects housed over 500,000 people in New York City alone!

However, Moses came to rely on the 1949 Housing Act even more than its predecessor. That law allowed him to use federal funds to condemn and clear “slums” and sell off the land to private developers on the cheap.

Robert Moses developed the system of highways and bridges that crisscrossed New York City connecting it with Long Island to the East, the upstate mainland to the north and New jersey and points west, while in the process, the man who would never drive a car himself created that highway system by tearing apart and separating once tight knit neighborhoods, in effect, dismantling the last of the pre-FIRE takeover of New York city.

By the mid-1960s, the FIRE (Finance, Insurance and Real Estate) economy was in place and pretty much dominated New York. The Rockefellers (owners of Chase Manhattan Bank) led a consortium of FIRE business leaders. One of their major projects completed much of what the RPA wanted done. The World Trade Center complex eradicated lower Manhattan’s famed “Radio Row,” which housed scores of small factories, electronic appliance dealers and repair shops and quickly moved them and all those jobs out of the city.

By the late 1960s New York had ceased being a major commercial port, as the FIRE industries DID NOT rely on large quantities of goods brought into the city daily, so thousands of Long Shoreman and Teamster jobs were eradicated.

The “Progressive agenda,” as played out in New York eliminated the unheralded opportunities for upward mobility among the teeming throng of working poor who’d poured into that city for generations, eradicated their cheap lodgings, the factories that employed them and replaced New York’s once bustling, dynamic economy with a staid and static FIRE economy, one which oddly true to its name would play a part in the coming “fire storm” that cleansed new York of the last vestiges of what was before.

The primary impetus for the “progressive agenda” was self-protection for the upper classes and the chance to rake in windfall profits from the clearing of slums and factories and the conversion of those lands into vehicles that better benefitted New York’s patrician class.

That’s why Progressivism and the Keynesian economics that was its hallmark is a Country Club Republican ideology, endorsed by the likes of J. P Morgan, Bernard Baruch and the Rockefellers.

Progressivism transformed dynamic old New York with its teeming factories and myriad industries and commercial hodge podges into the well coifed and more exclusive and far less dynamic FIRE economy of today.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Assessing the Obama Administration’s First Thirty Months...










I received an interesting email from Captain (FDNY-retired) Bob Howell the other day and I added to it. This email really shows how far we've fallen!



January 2009
TODAY
% chg
Source
Avg.. Retail price/gallon gas in U.S.
$1.83
$3.44
84%
1
Crude oil, European Brent (barrel)
$43..48
$99..02
127.7%
2
Crude oil, West TX Inter. (barrel)
$38..74
$91..38
135.9%
2
Gold: London (per troy oz.)
$853.25
$1,369.50
60.5%
2
Corn, No.2 yellow, Central IL
$3.56
$6.33
78.1%
2
Soybeans, No. 1 yellow, IL
$9.66
$13..75
42.3%
2
Sugar, cane, raw, world, lb. Fob
$13..37
$35..39
164.7%
2
Unemployment rate, non-farm, overall
7.6%
9.4%
23.7%
3
Unemployment rate, blacks
12.6%
15.8%
25.4%
3
Number of unemployed
11,616,000
14,485,000
24.7%
3
Number of fed. Employees
2,779,000
2,840,000
2.2%
3
Real median household income
$50,112
$49,777
-0.7%
4
Number of food stamp recipients 
31,983,716
43,200,878
35.1%
5
Number of unemployment benefit recipients 
7,526,598
9,193,838
22.2%
6
Number of long-term unemployed
2,600,000
6,400,000
146.2%
3
Poverty rate, individuals
13.2%
14.3%
8.3%
4
People in poverty in U.S.
39,800,000
43,600,000
9.5%
4
U.S.. Rank in Economic Freedom World Rankings
5
9
n/a
10
Present Situation Index
29.9
23.5
-21.4%
11
Failed banks
140
164
17.1%
12
U.S.. Dollar versus Japanese yen exchange rate
89.76
82.03
-8.6%
2
U.S.. Money supply, M1, in billions
1,575.1
1,865.7
18.4%
13
U.S.. Money supply, M2, in billions
8,310.9
8,852.3
6.5%
13
National debt, in trillions
$10..627
$14..052
32.2%
14


Just take this last item: In the last two years we have accumulated national debt at a rate more than 27 times as fast as during the rest of our entire nation's history.

Over 27 times as fast! Metaphorically speaking, if you are driving in the right lane doing 65 MPH and a car rockets past you in the left lane, 27 times faster, it would be doing 1,755 MPH!

Sources:

(1) U.S. Energy Information Administration;
(2) Wall Street Journal;
(3) Bureau of Labor Statistics;
(4) Census Bureau;
(5) USDA;
(6) U.S. Dept. Of Labor;
(7) FHFA;
(8) Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller;
(9) RealtyTrac;
(10) Heritage Foundation and WSJ;
(11) The Conference Board;
(12) FDIC;
(13) Federal Reserve;
(14) U.S. Treasury


Those ARE some very frightening numbers, but we are where we are because the current administration has not only continued to follow the “Pelosi-Reid agenda” (the bulk of G W Bush’s non-military overspending came over his last few years...his “Pelosi/Reid years”) it’s accelerated those failed policies!

Accelerating those poor policies merely accelerated the poor results.

These figures are a good snapshot as to where we are.

AND for all those who’d harken back to Reagan, claiming that, “Reagan didn’t turn the economy around overnight,” au contraire, when the Reagan administration came into office in January of 1981, the Misery Index (merely the INFLATION and UNEMPLOYMENT rates added together) was appx. 21 (20.76)! By the end of 1981 the Misery Index had fallen to 17.97, by 1982 it had fallen further to 15.87 and by the end of 1983, the end of his 3rd year in office, it had fallen even further to 12.82.

The Reagan administration saw the Misery index fall by OVER 30% in its first three years!

When the Obama administration came into office in January of 2009 the Misery Index stood at 8.92. By the end of 2010 it stood at 11.29 and now, midway through his 3rd year (2011) it’s averaging 12.16 for the year 2011 (so far). Find the U.S. Misery Index month to month and from 1948 thru the present at; http://www.miseryindex.us/

The Obama administration has seen the Misery index rise by over 25% midway through its 3rd year!

Look at those two sets of Misery Indexes, Reagan reduced the record-high Misery Index he inherited by over 30%, while Obama has increased the Misery Index he inherited by over 25% during the same time periods of their respective administrations – we’re clearly heading in the WRONG direction!

Sunday, May 22, 2011

There’s ONLY One Question....













There’s only one question that every living human should ask...and that is, “How can I help?”

In America, a corrosive “entitlement culture” has woven the fiction that “there is some intrinsic value/worth in merely being alive.”

Nothing...NOTHING could be further from the truth.

An individual’s value is solely measured by what they produce.

How corrosive is our current, unsustainable entitlement culture? It’s almost perfectly inline with perhaps the most vile sentiments ever expressed by any human at any time, “We are socialists, we are enemies of today's capitalistic economic system for the exploitation of the economically weak, with its unfair salaries, with its unseemly evaluation of a human being according to wealth and property instead of responsibility and performance, and we are all determined to destroy this system under all conditions." (Adolf Hitler, May 1st, 1927)

There are no sentiments that are more repulsive to human decency, more barbaric in their intent than the ones Hitler enumerated above.

The West’s amorphous grid of dependency programs (WIC, SSI, Social Security, etc.) generate dependency at a staggering cost, both in terms of lost productivity, less overall prosperity and fewer people in the workforce – government jobs are net COSTS, NOT productive jobs that add to the nation’s productivity.

Yes, our maze of dependency programs means jobs to legions of otherwise marginally employable Americans, keeping them from doing OTHER work that we that desperately needs getting done – picking fruit, slaughterhouse work, as just a couple examples.

As an example of just how absurd this has gotten, Tom Coburn recently challenged the Social Security Administration to probe into how a 350-pound man (Stanley Thornton Jr), who claims to suffer from “adult infantilism” has managed to qualify for federal disability benefits, despite being both handy enough and resourceful enough to have crafted his own wooden high chair and playpen.

Mr. Thornton can drive a car, use a computer and do basic carpentry and yet welfare administrators treat him as though he were incurably disabled.

When the
Washington Times reached out to Stanley for a response to Senator Coburn, he sent off this e-mail, "You wanna test how damn serious I am about leaving this world, screw with my check that pays for this apartment and food. Try it. See how serious I am...I have no problem killing myself. "

OK, where exactly is the downside in letting Mr. Thornton simply fade to black?

Seriously, he produces nothing, his entire existence is parasitic and his abuse of a system meant to help the blind and severely physically and mentally disabled, lends itself to copying by other parasitic elements.

There are tens of thousands of people on programs like SSI and others that are scamming the system, just as there are legions of former Civil Servants now collecting huge, often tax-exempt “disability pensions” for non-disabling conditions.

ALL of that is unsustainable.

Again, “How can I help,” is the ONLY legitimate question today.

Now able-bodied worker, no matter how tired of work or comfortable of wallet should seek a non-productive retirement, instead they should ask, “HOW CAN I HELP?!”

New York City has already begun what COULD BE a promising beginning by re-evaluating many of the “disability pension” claims in recent years.

Insurance companies can help by redoubling their efforts to root out scammers and law-suit abusers and by lobbying hard for much more severe sentences for such heinous fiscal crimes.

If an esteemed financial maven like Bernie Madoff can be put away for over 400 years for his fiscal crimes (a fair sentence in my view), then why can’t we put insurance fraudsters, welfare cheats and other disability scammers away for 25 years or more?

It CAN and SHOULD BE done and it would merely take the stroke of a pen!

One of the most exciting pledges made during the 2008 campaign was made by Michelle Obama when she said, “Barack will MAKE you work...”

Well, we’re WAITING!

Now no one expects barrack Obama to actually go to the homes of deadbeats and actually force them back to work...BUT he could hire those who could...and what’s more would.

People are living longer and healthier lives and NO ONE can be promised an easy retirement, especially when so much real work remains to be done. There’s no way we can sustain so many dependents in this much more austere age.

Yes, “promises have been made,” BUT, it's also widely said that promises are also “meant to be broken.”

How many auto workers have faced unwanted buy-outs instead of long-term pension and medical benefits. Unsustainable promises cannot be kept.

We can (and MUST) do this.
American Ideas Click Here!