Posted on 09/01/2009 10:21:48 AM PDT by NetRight Nation
One of the most effective ways a President influences public policy and law in a lasting manner is through regulatory actions taken by the federal government. It's not an area that typically garners substantial media attention because regulatory work is generally a highly technical matter performed by policy wonks largely unknown to the public.
Yet, despite their general obscurity, federal regulations have a substantial impact on virtually every facet of society. And the personnel who oversee the regulatory process have far greater influence than most would imagine.
Chief among the personnel who oversee the regulatory process is the administrator of an unheralded office within the White House's Office of Management and Budget called the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). The administrator is also known as the "Regulatory Czar." Earlier this year the President nominated Cass Sunstein to run this office. Sunstein's nomination is now pending before the full Senate. A vote on his nomination is expected next week.
(Excerpt) Read more at netrightnation.com ...
Cass Sunstein on taxes (Wikipedia):
“We should celebrate tax day...In what sense is the money in our pockets and bank accounts fully ours? Did we earn it by our own autonomous efforts? Could we have inherited it without the assistance of probate courts? Do we save it without the support of bank regulators? Could we spend it if there were no public officials to coordinate the efforts and pool the resources of the community in which we live?... Without taxes there would be no liberty. Without taxes there would be no property. Without taxes, few of us would have any assets worth defending. [It is] a dim fiction that some people enjoy and exercise their rights without placing any burden whatsoever on the public fisc. There is no liberty without dependency.”
“There is no liberty without dependency.
Slavery is freedom...
I’ve said it before, and I will say it again: the presence of people like this in positions of authority is the reason I own guns.
Then why deprive the poor of the pleasure of paying taxes?
Amen brother
More dangerously though, perhaps as a consequence of his intellectual remove, Sunstein inverts the role of state and citizen, offering a theoretical rationale not merely for government intervention in private affairs, but for autocracy.
“There is no liberty without dependency”....that is SO “1984”, it’s scary.....
“He is on record supporting rights for animals including giving standing to private persons to sue on behalf of animals under existing laws. He has also stated that he believes there should be more regulation in the area of animal rights.”
The “legal system” in the U.S. has devolved into an instrument for robbery and extortion. Good people fear lawyers and know they can have everything they have worked for taken away from them for no reason. When lawyers have the resources of the government behind them the average citizen doesn’t stand a chance. Get ready to have some lawyer sue you on behalf of some animal and take away everything you have.
A coup d'état (pronounced /ˌkuːdeɪˈtɑː/, us dict: kōō′·dā·tâ′), or coup for short, is the sudden unconstitutional deposition of a legitimate government, usually by a small group of the existing state establishment typically the military to replace the deposed government with another, either civil or military. A coup détat succeeds when the usurpers establish their legitimacy if the attacked government fail to thwart them, by allowing their (strategic, tactical, political) consolidation and then receiving the deposed governments surrender; or the acquiescence of the populace and the non-participant military forces.
Typically, a coup détat uses the extant governments power to assume political control of the country. In Coup d'État: A Practical Handbook, military historian Edward Luttwak says: "A coup consists of the infiltration of a small, but critical, segment of the state apparatus, which is then used to displace the government from its control of the remainder, thus, armed force (either military or paramilitary) is not a defining feature of a coup dÉtat.
Here's Sunstein on health care:
In protecting safety, health, and the environment, government has increasingly relied on cost-benefit analysis. In undertaking cost-benefit analysis, the government has monetized risks of death through the idea of "value of a statistical life" (VSL), currently assessed at about $6.1 million. Many analysts, however, have suggested that the government should rely instead on the "value of a statistical life year" (VSLY), in a way that would likely result in significantly lower benefits calculations for elderly people, and significantly higher benefits calculations for children. I urge that the government should indeed focus on life-years rather than lives. A program that saves young people produces more welfare than one that saves old people. The hard question involves not whether to undertake this shift, but how to monetize life-years, and here willingness to pay (WTP) is generally the place to begin. Nor does a focus on life-years run afoul of ethical limits on cost-benefit analysis. It is relevant in this connection that every old person was once young, and that if all goes well, young people will eventually be old. In fact, a focus on statistical lives is more plausibly a form of illicit discrimination than a focus on life-years, because the idea of statistical lives treats the years of older people as worth far more than the years of younger people. Discussion is also devoted to the uses and limits of the willingness to pay criterion in regulatory policy, with reference to the underlying welfare goal and to the nature of moral and distributional constraints on cost-benefit balancing.
Let us now "monetize life-years." First for the old, then for the very young, then for the handicapped, then for people we'd really like to get rid of...
But it can't happen here, of course. Why, that would be as preposterous as a government takeover of the auto industry. Oh, wait...
Yep, that’s the one.
Gee what will liberal farm state Senators like Tom Harkin do? I would think farm groups would be melting the Senate phones.
“Gee what will liberal farm state Senators like Tom Harkin do? I would think farm groups would be melting the Senate phones.”
California is a farm state, and note the position of abject submission assumed by our two Senators. They are more likely to help this clown than oppose him.
Beat Tom Harkin over the head with this.
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