Posted on 04/12/2011 6:27:10 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Since everybody seems to be coming up with plans on how to cope with the skyrocketing national debt, let me try my hand at it too.
The liberals easy solution is just to increase taxes on the rich. But, if you do the math, there arent enough of the rich to cover the huge and record-breaking deficit.
Trying to reduce the deficit by cutting spending runs into an old familiar counterattack. There will be all kinds of claims by politicians and sad stories in the media about how these cuts will cause the poor to go hungry, the sick to be left to die, etc.
My plan would start by cutting off all government transfer payments to billionaires. Many, if not most, people are probably unaware that the government is handing out the taxpayers money to billionaires. But agricultural subsidies go to a number of billionaires. Very little goes to the ordinary farmer.
Big corporations also get big bucks from the government, not only in agricultural subsidies but also in the name of green policies, in the name of alternative energy policies, and in the name of whatever else will rationalize shoveling the taxpayers money out the door to whomever the administration designates for its own political reasons.
The usual political counterattacks against spending cuts will not work against this new kind of spending-cut approach. How many heart-rending stories can the media run about billionaires who have lost their handouts from the taxpayers? How many tears will be shed if General Motors gets dumped off the gravy train?
It would also be eye-opening to many people to discover how much government money is going into subsidizing all sorts of things that have nothing to do with helping the poor or protecting the public. This would include government-subsidized insurance for posh and pricey coastal resorts that are located too dangerously close to the ocean for a private insurance company to risk insuring them.
This approach would not only circumvent the sob stories, it would also circumvent the ideological battles over whether to cut off money to Planned Parenthood or National Public Radio.
The money to be saved by cutting off agricultural subsidies to the wealthy and the big corporations is vastly greater than the money to be saved by cutting off Planned Parenthood or National Public Radio, much as they both deserve to be cut off.
If spending cuts are to be done strategically, a good strategy to follow would be that of General Douglas MacArthur in World War II. General MacArthur realized that he didnt have to attack every Pacific island held by the Japanese. He captured the islands that he had to capture, in order to get within striking distance of Japan.
In peace as in war, there is no point wasting time and resources attacking heavily defended enemy positions that you dont have to take.
Social Security and Medicare are supposed to be among the most difficult programs to cut. However, it is not necessary to attack all the spending on these programs in order to make big savings.
Instead of attacking these programs as a whole, what is far more vulnerable is the compulsory aspect of these programs. If Medicare is so great, why is it necessary for the government to force people to be covered by Medicare as a precondition for receiving the money they paid into Social Security?
Many people with private health insurance would rather continue to rely on that, instead of being trapped in Medicare red tape. It is not a question of taking away Medicare but allowing people to opt out, saving the taxpayer from having to subsidize something that many people dont want.
It is not a question of forcing people off Social Security either. But private retirement accounts can offer a better deal.
Even someone who retires when the stock market is down is almost certain to get a bigger pension from a decent mutual fund than from Social Security.
By giving young people the option, while continuing to honor commitments to retirees and those nearing retirement age, the sob-story defense of runaway spending can be nipped in the bud.
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution
I have been through several DCAA audits and in the end breezed through them all. Mainly because of the incompetence of the government auditors, and in part due to the incompetence of our own internal auditors.
You could cut half the “VPs” at these companies and still give the same performance. I am convinced it takes nothing more then a pulse, and sitting around for 10 years at a def contractor to become a VP or SVP, all of whom blow up the OH rate and contribute very little to the actual program, and are quite frankly not that bright either.
There is a reason people stay long term in the government contracting/defense contracting field and that is because they aren’t able to be hired by companies who actually make a product or have a real service and aren’t on the tax payers dole. Seeing this world on the inside the last 5 years, it truly is a fantastic form of welfare, disguised as “contracting”
My last day can’t come soon enough here, as I am tied for a few more months thanks to a bonus recieved last year.
I read once they were still making 6 Cly. Motors for the old duce and a half, twenty years after it was fazed out. Hell they may still be making them to haul the bombs for the mustangs.
Met a guy recently who is a freelance contract consultant. He gets paid very big bucks to go into companies doing government business and showing them how to not only keep straight with all the convoluted government rules but also how to keep them from losing their ass on a contract.
I had experience in the Military contractor field and it is indeed horribly efficient.
Our brave Warriors could easily be paid substantially more if all the inefficient and unneeded bureaucratic structures could be eliminated. It does seem impossible to change.
Which is why (1) term limits and (2) anonymity of donors need to be instituted. Two terms of five years in the senate, two terms of three years in the house, then out. Since subsidies go to big donors as compensation for donations, the source of all political donations should be anonymous. You can't sell influence if you don't know who is buying.
A congressman should represent the interests of the people in his district, and a senator of those in his state, but each should put the overall good of our country first. Only when it stops being a career will genuine public SERVANTS take the offices, instead of the self-serving.
Making a silly suggestion like that will get you ZOTTED faster.
Heeeere, kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty!
Welcome to FR.
Goodbye.
The top 10% pay 90% of the taxes.
You were saying?
You sound like this moron:
http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/by:christusrex/index?tab=articles
[nodding]
Looks like a retread, too.
ZOT!
If you have direct knowledge, you should report it - there’s a 10% finder’s fee for any waste fraud or abuse you report.
Gee, and I thought they all stayed there because they got exhorbitant pay and lucrative benefits that they charged illegally to overhead paid for by the government.
Now you say it’s because they are incompetent?
I never said what they do is illegal. Clearly its not since all of the rates I am talking about are audited by and approved by the federal government.
It is more so IMO absurd the amount of money spent on gov’t contractors, especially when looking at the indirect rates
Must be about Soros? No? How about Hollywood?
Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my Viking Kitty/ZOT ping list!. . . don't be shy.
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