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Socialism's Army of Occupation
Right Side News ^ | 6/3/2011 | Daniel Greenfield

Posted on 06/04/2011 5:31:35 AM PDT by IbJensen

The Postal Service doesn't exist to deliver mail. 80 percent of its budget goes to the salaries and benefits of its 500,000+ union members.

The most pervasive myth of the welfare state is the altruism of the public sector. In this mythology, the private sector is run by a bunch of greedy businessmen who get rich by making money off people's misery. While the public sector is run by altruists who want nothing except to help those left behind by the private sector. Capitalists meet the Anti-Capitalists.

But actually it's the public sector that does a much better job of making money off people's misery. Some parts of the private sector do deliberately seek out ways to feed off poverty and keep their victims poor, most notably in the lending and financial services industry, but for the most part the private sector makes money off willing customers. How do you sell products and services to people who can't afford them? Unless you trap them into a cycle of obligation, you can't. And such cycles are finite. Eventually the people you're feeding off have nothing more to give you. That's not an ideal business model for corporations who generally look for ways to build life-long relationships. To make money selling products and services, you need repeat customers who can afford what you're offering.

For the private sector to succeed, it needs a prosperous customer base. The public sector doesn't. It just needs a collective 'Them' to pay the bills. The public sector makes its money from failure. Human suffering creates more demand for its services. The more people are out of work, can't pay their bills and need help-- the more the public sector grows.

The PayDay loan industry and Fannie Mae both preyed on minorities and the poor. But the latter's business model was completely unsustainable and its greed was completely irresponsible. Yet all this was concealed under the veneer of altruism.

The public sector altruism myth is just that, a myth. It's a destructive myth because of the basic conflict between its inner and outer goals.

The outer goal of a car company might be to sell more cars. Its inner goal is to sell enough cars that it can hire more workers and its executives can go to the Bahamas next month. There's no major conflict between these two goals. Not unless everyone there decides to make bad cars and misrepresent them, and then use the money to expand the assembly line and go to the Bahamas anyway. There are businesses that work that way, but they don't have much of a future. Sell people bad cars and you'll lose customers. And then the only way you can stay in business is if the public sector begins subsidizing your company. A bad company is either a rolling scam that depends on luring in gullible new customers or a public sector charity case.

The outer goal of a welfare program might be to help its clients. But its inner goal is to get more funding so as to add jobs and so whoever is at the top can go to the Bahamas next month for a conference on global poverty. If a client stops needing its services, then the program loses funding. The welfare state needs more 'clients' signing up for more services so that they can get more funding. The best clients are the neediest. A client who is upwardly mobile is a bad risk, because losing their name on the rolls means a net loss for the program which endangers its funding. People in a state of failure make the best clients. Welfare programs maintain outer goals of helping their clients be more independent, these conflict with their inner goals, which is to maintain their client lists.

The myth of public sector altruism rarely takes stock of the conflict between inner and outer goals. Even when teachers' and nurses' unions hold angry protests over benefits during an economic depression, this conflict rarely gets addressed. The myth that they are public servants who want nothing more than what's best for their charges lives on. But like everyone else they are human beings. Their interests are their own. Some are idealistic enough to make sacrifices or to want what is best for the people under their care, even when it's to their own detriment. But this is not the case for the majority in any field. Moments of heroism aside.

The public sector's inner goal is to bring in more funding and create more jobs. Not out of any altruistic impulse, but because it expands the power and wealth of its own administrators and bosses, whether in an agency or a union. A bigger agency has more sway in funding battles. Its incestuous relationships with unions and clients means that it is better positioned to demand more money and hold off any cuts. The agencies and unions boast their own private armies which bring in money. The money is given by politicians in exchange for support and used as currency to expand the ranks of that army. The army is there to support the politicians during elections. And to combat any attempts to cut the money coming into its coffers.

The Public Sector has become an army of occupation. The battles in Wisconsin, the crisis in California and the ObamaCare clashes with SEIU goons are a wake up call to what that army really is. It's not armed, but it doesn't need to be. It's the vanguard of an alternative economy that depends on extracting as much public money as possible. And that alternative economy is in a basic conflict with the people paying for it. When the economy is good, the army can skim off the cream without anyone noticing. But in a bad economy, a conflict explodes over limited resources.

The occupation means that huge amounts of money are being funneled into a public sector to provide services. But these services are not the goal of that sector.

The Postal Service doesn't exist to deliver mail. 80 percent of its budget goes to the salaries and benefits of its 500,000+ union members. It is a union employment plan subsidized by the public through a stream of pension and benefits bailouts. Its business model is based on delivering junk mail. Not on providing useful public services. The Postal Service does not exist so you can buy stamps and mail letters. It exists so some of the country's largest unions can retire at 55.

Public schools don't exist to teach kids, they exist to create jobs for teacher's unions, positions for administrators, contractors for school construction programs, and a thousand ways to get federal, state and local funding. That's why we spend more money on education than most of the world, with less to show for it. The spending is not pupil driven. The children are mostly irrelevant except as mannequins for new educational gimmicks.

Keeping students below average turns them into a 'profit center' for new solutions. If we actually had a successful education system, a huge chunk of the consultants and other feeder fish would be out of business. The educational bureaucracy does not profit from teaching kids. It profits from kids who are not learning. Who need special education, more programs and a crisis mode of new approaches. "Are our kids learning?" No?" "That's because we aren't spending enough money." "Why do we pay our schoolteachers less than NBA players?" "Why does the military get more money than the educational bureaucracy?"

It's all the same down the line. Hospitals don't add nurses to treat patients. They add nurses because union regulations require them to. Mortgages are approved that can't be paid off, because that way the agency can boast how many new minority home buyers it has created. And when foreclosure comes, then another agency takes over providing for them. Job training is given for jobs that don't exist. Then job creation programs for those jobs are funded-- and still the jobs don't exist. And then the cycle begins all over again. Nothing in this cynical trillion dollar farce has anything to do with helping people. If any people get helped, it's an unintentional side effect of a system that exists to feed on human misery..

The public sector thrives on anxiety. It feeds on failure. The public sector is in freefall, but the private sector is adding jobs like crazy.

The crazy quilt marriage of political machines, radical unions and liberal sociologists has created an unstoppable monster intent on devouring everything. Some inside the beast understand that this is the goal. They want private enterprise to vanish and the state to be the provider of all services. Most however don't realize this. They have just been taught to protect their privileges.

The public sector is ruthlessly competitive in its own way. Not on merit, but on position. Maintaining your position in the system is crucial. Doing your job well is absolutely meaningless. In some cases it's even dangerous. Staying in line is what counts. Having the right background and the right opinions. Inertia through seniority is the biggest signifier of success. And inter-departmental and inter-agency rivalries are routine. It's a Darwinian economic ecosystem and everyone is trying to grab funding for your programs. Exploiting a crisis, knowing the right political buzzwords and being able to summon a mob of clients or union members to agitate for your program are the keys to success.

Such a system does not encourage the long view. Nothing exists except your program, your crisis and your department. The ability to recite "Without funding for ____________ we all are doomed" on cue is the only thing that matters. Your real assets are your benefits. To protect them, you have to protect your programs. And lash out at anything that threatens funding for them, whether it's charter schools or the taxpayers running out of money. Reform is dangerous. Protect the status quo at all costs. Violent tunnel vision is the only kind the system breeds. The few visionaries are left wing radicals who think that everything would work if only they had complete control of the economy. And to make that happen, they have to destroy the conventional economy first.

Here's where we are now. Trapped funding the ever-expanding fiefdoms of the public sector, its office warrens, its ghettos and housing projects, its consultations and studies and research projects, its tidal flood of gimmicks and appropriations.

All the money being spent vanishes into the recesses of those fiefdoms. It doesn't remotely provide value per dollar spent, because most of that dollar doesn't go to providing services. It goes to the vast infrastructure of employees, office buildings, consultants and overseers of the entire mess. The services are a side project of a vast bureaucracy which is concerned with its own power and prestige.

The welfare state can't solve any of the problems that those liberal sociologists thought it could. But the political machines who authorized the spending never wanted the problems solved. It wanted them perpetuated. It wanted plantation voters with no hopes or dreams beyond the next state lottery ticket, who would vote for them to protect their benefits. And that's what they got. The unions can't see beyond their next paycheck. And don't want to. The money has to keep coming because it's theirs. The details don't matter. They often despise the members of the public they interact with. And why shouldn't they. Most of the people they interact with don't want to be where they are. It's a mutually hostile relationship. And that mutually hostile relationship is the paradigm for the larger one they have with the taxpayer.

As the economy declines and the public sector grows, an inevitable showdown is coming. A public sector that grows faster than the private sector is unsustainable. But that just means the public sector will start tossing their clients overboard faster. Classroom sizes will double along with education spending. Welfare rolls will be cut, and more workers will be hired to oversee them. Doctors will get paid less and patients will wait longer to see doctors, but there will be more nurses hired on. Death panels will come disguised in patient friendly language. There will be less of everything, but more public sector employees for all of it.

These measures will make the system seem more sustainable. But all they will really do is maintain the position of socialism's occupying army. And as the public sector begins cannibalizing the people it claims to be serving, we will have a choice between continuing down the same disastrous road as Europe or taking a stand to reclaim the economy from the public sector.


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The central socialist government as well as our bloated state governments must be disassembled useless agency by agency. The millions that have crawled next to the teat on the sow that is today's government need to hit the streets to find a jab.

They produce nothing and this includes Congressional staffers. Further, it includes the lazy civilians who fill DOD jobs that uniformed military personnel should be filling.

1 posted on 06/04/2011 5:31:40 AM PDT by IbJensen
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To: IbJensen
The Postal Service doesn't exist to deliver mail. 80 percent of its budget goes to the salaries and benefits of its 500,000+ union members.

What are they suppose to be spending it on, new trucks?

It is a delivery service, most of it's budget will be spend on the people doing the deliveries.

There is an argument to be made here, but this is not it.

2 posted on 06/04/2011 5:41:49 AM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Yesterday I meditated, today I seek balance. That was Zen, this is Tao.)
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To: IbJensen

Good article, as far as it goes - the author misses, or ignores, the fact that Congress has abdicated much of its Legislative power to the bureaucracies, who can, and do, create and enforce ‘regulations’ which levy taxes and criminal sanctions, without even lip-service to ‘representation’ by the electorate....

A far more dangerous development than the venality of ‘public servants’......


3 posted on 06/04/2011 5:46:20 AM PDT by Uncle Ike (Rope is cheap, and there are lots of trees...)
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To: IbJensen

>> The millions that have crawled next to the teat on the sow that is today’s government need to hit the streets to find a jab.

Because the private sector is creating so many jobs right now???

This article is a case of someone having a good point and then taking it to the point of absurdity.

The Postal Service spends most of its money on people. Wow! What should they spend it on? Speedboats? They deliver mail. By hand. That’s a labor-intensive business.

Nurses are a welfare program? Ever spend a any time in a hospital? They work their butts off. You see nurses constantly and see a doctor for about a minute.

The auto industry sells cars so it can hire more workers and bosses can go to the Bahamas? Well, the current business model has them making less cars, getting government handouts, laying off workers, AND the bosses still go to the Bahamas.


4 posted on 06/04/2011 5:53:43 AM PDT by Bryanw92 (We don't need to win elections. We need to win a revolution.)
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To: Uncle Ike
Good article, as far as it goes - the author misses, or ignores, the fact that Congress has abdicated much of its Legislative power to the bureaucracies, who can, and do, create and enforce ‘regulations’ which levy taxes and criminal sanctions, without even lip-service to ‘representation’ by the electorate....

It is an excellent article. Note that the bureaucracies support the politicians who support them. They have unions that donate millions to get those representatives elected.

The major strength of this article is that it demolishes the myth that government is benevolent. Like it or not, that is the myth that powers socialism and fascism both.

The biggest problem that we have in this country is that a significant minority of the people worship the State as god.

5 posted on 06/04/2011 5:58:12 AM PDT by marktwain
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To: IbJensen
The Postal Service doesn't exist to deliver mail. 80 percent of its budget goes to the salaries and benefits of its 500,000+ union members.

And is GOING BANKRUPT.

So where is the logical place to start cutting...

6 posted on 06/04/2011 6:00:31 AM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: IbJensen

mark


7 posted on 06/04/2011 6:01:40 AM PDT by griswold3 (Character is destiny)
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To: Bryanw92

Sorry your bull was punctured. Keep sorting.


8 posted on 06/04/2011 6:03:59 AM PDT by IbJensen (Welfare: putting a cake under the sink expecting that it wont attract cockroaches.)
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To: IbJensen

It is my opinion that we cannot survive as a nation without outright rejection and repudiation of socialism. It is time we realize that we are at war within our own borders against socialism.

It is high time that we take the gloves off, and start shining a bright and public light on the characteristics of those in our society who think it’s perfectly fine to essentially steal from those who work.

The vast majority of people I know who have more wealth than the average, worked very hard to get it. It’s time to say FU to the leeches in society who don’t want to work, but who use their vote as a weapon to take from those who do.

I truly believe that, left to their own decision making, most Americans that have been fortunate to have good health and have their efforts pay off would voluntarily give charitably to a level that would actually provide more for the truly needy than the government supplies them.

The left, however, hates charity, because it doesn’t fit their theme of making villains out of everyone who is successful. They need a bourgeoisie to incite the masses against.


9 posted on 06/04/2011 6:06:04 AM PDT by pieceofthepuzzle
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To: IbJensen

While some of the examples might not be on point (nurses in particular), he’s got the big picture right. The idea of stated goal versus internal aims of these organization is on the mark.

I’ve noted in the past that Communism is entrepreneurship for the apparatchiks. Instead of competing with each other in the marketplace, they vie to see how much power and wealth they can extract from those who aren’t in the in-crowd.

Our system is less hierarchical than the Party was, but many of the subgroups such as SEIU or the NEA share the same features in terms of their relationship with the normal, non-organized economy. If you’re not in one of these groups, you’re fair game.

The solution? I don’t know if there is one short of collapse and rebirth, but if there is, it involves a much smaller government and legal code. The government’s job is to protect it’s citizens from groups that gang up on it; that’s why we have a military and police. But, over the past century, in the name of fairness, we’ve allowed many groups to organize against the public. To borrow a phrase from the title of Amy Shales’ book, who sticks up for the forgotten man?


10 posted on 06/04/2011 6:07:36 AM PDT by Pearls Before Swine
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To: Pearls Before Swine
I’ve noted in the past that Communism is entrepreneurship for the apparatchiks. Instead of competing with each other in the marketplace, they vie to see how much power and wealth they can extract from those who aren’t in the in-crowd.

And they will go to any lengths to keep people from discovering that when it comes to "workers vs. parasites," they are actually the most pernicious of the latter.

Mr. niteowl77

11 posted on 06/04/2011 6:12:56 AM PDT by niteowl77 ("Born in a well? Let me see that birth certificate again!")
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To: IbJensen

Just the tragedy of the commons writ large. Back in the day there was a small pool of common money to help people who were truly in need and deliver govt. services that really were deemed essential. Sooner or later the pigs got up to the trough and said we need more slop. And more slop was given. And so it went. Now there only pigs and barely anyone to work the farm, to grow the grain, and to look after the pigs. The end result is not going to be pretty.


12 posted on 06/04/2011 6:16:04 AM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten (Welcome to the USA - where every day is Backwards Day!)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

Perhaps for clarity, the facts should have been related to how much is being spent on benefits, and retirement, that are unrelated to the cost of doing “business”.

What remains from the real cost of doing business, would be termed profit, and that figure tells one how much benefit and retirement money is available annually.

I did appreciate that the “business”, seems to be delivering junk mail. Not entirely true but designed to get the attention of those interested in public service issues in a down economy.


13 posted on 06/04/2011 6:16:46 AM PDT by wita
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To: Bryanw92

I suggest that you look a little further than the speedboats. I would strongly suggest that you look at the amount of supervision vs workers that exist in this organization.

There are more supervisors than are required and there is no interest in servicing the customer any more.

As a CPA I have a lot of involvement with this organization because of filing deadlines and clients trying to get returns out in the mail.

THEY DO NOTHING TO FACILITATE the first corporate and individual deadlines closing at 5:00 on Mar 15th and Apr 15th. This is criminal because of how many returns are filed on those two days along. I have seen them lock the doors with people still trying to get in line to mail returns.

They need the taxes to support them but have no responsibility to help them be collected. They only serve their rules and masters, the UNION and not the PUBLIC.

I could go on and tell you more but you obviously would not miss where the speedboats come in so I will bother you no more.


14 posted on 06/04/2011 6:17:46 AM PDT by pcpa
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To: IbJensen
The most pervasive myth of the welfare state is the altruism of the public sector.

That is EXACTLY what I have been saying and what I least understand about the people of this country. This country was founded with the experiences of lack of trust in our government and it is built right into the Constitution.

15 posted on 06/04/2011 6:19:27 AM PDT by RatRipper (I'll ride a turtle to work every day before I buy anything from Government Motors.)
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To: pcpa

>> I could go on and tell you more but you obviously would not miss where the speedboats come in so I will bother you no more.

So, you wait until the last minute to file your clients taxes and the postal service employees are the bad guys for not accomodating your tardiness? I file my taxes before the deadline, so they never get to lock the door in my face.

As a taxpayer and customer, I want them to close and lock those doors at closing time so the employees can go off the clock on-time. Keeping the staff on the clock to assist people who can’t or won’t follow the rules is exactly what is wrong with the welfare state and its Army of Occupation. Your entitlement mentality is disturbing.


16 posted on 06/04/2011 6:30:27 AM PDT by Bryanw92 (We don't need to win elections. We need to win a revolution.)
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To: wita
Perhaps for clarity, the facts should have been related to how much is being spent on benefits, and retirement, that are unrelated to the cost of doing “business”.

Thank you. That is what I meant.

I did appreciate that the “business”, seems to be delivering junk mail. Not entirely true but designed to get the attention of those interested in public service issues in a down economy.

Delivering junk mail pays the bills. The USPS actually does run in the black or it did. I believe that the government just demanded that it pay a rather unreasonable sum into it's pension plan which has sent it into the red.

17 posted on 06/04/2011 6:40:29 AM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Yesterday I meditated, today I seek balance. That was Zen, this is Tao.)
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To: Bryanw92
How much mail does a relatively young and healthy retired postal worker deliver? I believe they can retire at age 55 if they have 30 years of service. I will be lucky to retire at 65. I think that is probably the point. I am not saying that salaries for current postal worker reflect reality or anything like that, but paying the defined benefit retirement plan is probably what is killing them more than anything else. UPS and FedEx also deliver stuff but I am willing to bet that their personnel costs are considerable less than the USPS pays per employee.
18 posted on 06/04/2011 7:08:08 AM PDT by jospehm20
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To: aflaak

Ping


19 posted on 06/04/2011 8:36:42 AM PDT by r-q-tek86 ("It doesn't matter how smart you are if you don't stop and think" - Dr. Sowell)
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To: IbJensen

“Further, it includes the lazy civilians who fill DOD jobs that uniformed military personnel should be filling.”

Uniformed military personnel who must be kept at combat levels of fitness and readiness, get rotated in/out of jobs every few years and - if they stay in that long - can retire after 20 years.


20 posted on 06/04/2011 8:57:59 AM PDT by PLMerite (Shut the Beyotch Down!)
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