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The prospects for revolt in 2010
Washington Times ^ | 1/1/2010 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 01/01/2010 4:20:05 PM PST by ricks_place

Americans finally getting fed up with big-government foul-ups

TEMECULA, Calif. - Where is Nelson Mandela when we need him? In the fine new film "Invictus," South Africa's first black president inspects his first official paycheck. "This is terrible," Mr. Mandela says. He decides he earns too much and subsequently donates a third of his salary to charity.

Mr. Mandela's humility and fiscal restraint would be as exotic in the nation's capital as a giraffe atop the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Washington's lavish self-aggrandizement and relentless march toward bankruptcy cruelly mock Mr. Mandela's sacrifice.

Today's thoughtless and corrosive spend-o-rama began under a Republican Congress and the feckless Bush-Rove administration. Alas, a Democratic White House and Congress briskly outspend their predecessors.

In stunning contrast to Mr. Mandela's example, Congress carpet-bombs taxpayer dollars on greedy federal bureaucrats - even as Americans struggle, and often fail, to pay their mortgages and rents.

Between December 2007 and June 2009, USA Today reported on Dec. 10, federal employees earning more than $100,000 annually increased 46 percent to 382,758. Those making more than $150,000 rose 119 percent to 66,538. Only one Transportation Department employee scored more than $170,000 as the recession began. By last June, that number had soared to 1,690.

Federal indulgence and incompetence are too vast to catalogue. But these illustrations are sufficiently maddening.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 2010; 2010midterms; angrymob; deroymurdock; teaparty
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• Cash-for-clunkers gloriously shipped $3 billion chiefly to Tokyo- and Seoul-based automakers
• Omnibus spending $447 billion bill ballooned federal spending 12 percent
• House misallocated $154 billion in repayments by TARP-funded banks breaking the law.
• Political favoritism in stimulus spending a 23.7 percent bonus for Democrat districts while a 35.6 percent penalty for Republican districts.
• Obama pledged $100 billion annually for 10 years at the Copenhagen climate conference, $1 trillion in carbon-coated foreign aid.
• Democratic caucus advanced a $2.5 trillion health "reform" that 61 percent of Americans oppose.
• Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac get up to $400 billion.
1 posted on 01/01/2010 4:20:06 PM PST by ricks_place
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To: ExTexasRedhead

More proof that you’re right. If your predictions come true this year, you should buy a crystal ball and charge top dollar!

; )


2 posted on 01/01/2010 4:24:14 PM PST by Clintonfatigued (Liberal sacred cows make great hamburger)
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To: ricks_place

That’s the short list. There is much, much more that can be added.


3 posted on 01/01/2010 4:26:35 PM PST by randomhero97 ("First you want to kill me, now you want to kiss me. Blow!" - Ash)
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To: Clintonfatigued; ExTexasRedhead

LOL Go Red.....


4 posted on 01/01/2010 4:27:33 PM PST by freekitty (Give me back my conservative vote; then find me a real conservative to vote for)
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To: ricks_place

I’m trying to get my hands around the fact that “public servants” are earning 2 to 3 times the median HOUSEHOLD income of US citizens!

Something is horribly wrong with our government.


5 posted on 01/01/2010 4:27:42 PM PST by Kandy Atz ("Were we directed from Washington when to sow and when to reap, we should soon want for bread.")
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To: Kandy Atz

public service is more appropriately described as public gouging. The suggestion that congress and other gov’t employees are serving anyone but themselves is preposterous


6 posted on 01/01/2010 4:32:40 PM PST by paul51 (11 September 2001 - Never forget)
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To: ricks_place

Dont forget the Congressional BRIBES to Louisiana and Nebraska for their healthcare votes.


7 posted on 01/01/2010 4:33:56 PM PST by Mister Muggles (.Seattle: A city full of Liberal men with vaginas.)
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To: ricks_place

There won’t be a “revolt”, but there will be an event.

The government needs one now more than ever. This transcends the two-party system facade.

A conventional war would be “perfect” right now.

That, or they will wreck this country completely to raise up a one-world communist government.

It is one, or the other at this point—either way, many will die.


8 posted on 01/01/2010 4:34:42 PM PST by Boucheau
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To: Kandy Atz
Something is horribly wrong with our government.

This is a serious understatement. If the founding fathers were still around the revolution would already be over and the trash in Washington would have already been taken out.

9 posted on 01/01/2010 4:36:59 PM PST by politicianslie
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To: ricks_place
One of 2010's most intriguing questions will be whether the American people's aggregated nausea by the November election triggers the peaceful overthrow of the United States government.

The elections will provide little or no relief. Most of those responsible for gov't outrages will still be in office after the elections and the majority of those replacing incumbents will turn out to be at least as inept or corrupt.

10 posted on 01/01/2010 4:37:32 PM PST by paul51 (11 September 2001 - Never forget)
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To: ricks_place

I was revolted long before we got to 2010.


11 posted on 01/01/2010 4:41:42 PM PST by sionnsar (IranAzadi|5yst3m 0wn3d-it's N0t Y0ur5:SONY|Remember Neda Agha-Soltan|TV--it's NOT news you can trust)
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To: ricks_place

The collapse is coming. The states will declare DC null and void.


12 posted on 01/01/2010 4:47:05 PM PST by VRWC For Truth (Throw the bums out who vote yes on the bail out)
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To: Kandy Atz
Not only that, the federal employee unions make it damn near impossible for these parasites to get fired, no matter how poor their performance. They'd have to get a lengthy prison sentence to lose their place at the gummint trough. I spent ten years as federal contractor, and I saw ineptitude, laziness, and grab-assery that would get you a security escort to the front door in the private sector, and yeah, toward the end I had a big chip on my shoulder for having to carry the freight of people who were only half as talented, but making twice as much. It reminds me of a cartoon I saw in the back of one of my American Legion magazines last year - a guy was sitting in a shoe store, with his feet propped up on a table and his hands behind his head, and he was telling the shoe clerk, "I just got a government job - I need a pair of shoes that will look good up on my desk." Disgusting. That's not to say every last one of them are like that - a good friend of mine - a retired gunny from the Marines - spent 22 years with the Infernal Revenue Service, and ran circles around most of the others in the IT department we worked in. But he was an exception, not the rule. Having a career in the military can make you twice the man from the discipline alone.


13 posted on 01/01/2010 4:52:18 PM PST by Viking2002 (Old fishermen never die. They just smell that way.)
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To: Kandy Atz

Nothing horribly went wrong, it reflects changing times in the private sector due to globalism and free trade. The proper comparison is majority of fed workers are technical and office workers. Compare that pay ratio to its equivalent counterpart in private sector the pay ratio drops to below 2 to 1. Add the fact more than 2/3 of the fed workforce is over 50 years old or on the job for 20+ years, the pay increases and COLA will add up. Compatible comparisons and the ratio is about even. The numbers get tricky with senior management. Consider the number of workers, number of facilities and budgets they are responsible for the senior management of many agencies are equivalent to corporate America. There are no multi million dollar salaries execs in the government. If you factor this into the comparison, the fed pay is below private sector.
Private industry is mainly young and in their 30’s, people do not work in the same place to accrue larger salaries because private industry will fire anyone who stays too long and replace them with lower cost college grads. Now add offshoring jobs and H-1B worker to the mix, and suddenly the higher paying private sector is now lagging and falling behind the public sector because no one can stay in the same job long enough.
Government jobs were always available to college grads and private workers to apply, but during booming times no one wanted it because they could make more in the private sector. Fast foward 20 years, the government entry level worker is like the turtle in the rabbit and hare fable. Time in job is what allows the fed to attain a higher salary while the private sector worker goes thru a saber tooth salary pattern. What I mean is there are events in the private sector that is beyond the control of the private sector worker. Example merger and acquisitions can force layoffs, the worker laid off must find another job and many times he/she must start slightly lower to prove themselves in the new company before they recover the salary loss of the last job, and before that person can stay long enough, another crisis occurs and the company will layoff workers and the person will start the whole process all over, loss salary, reprove worth in new company, recover salary, start to progress and then another crisis hits and the process starts all over again. This is why it is call a saber tooth career and salary pattern. This will end when the worker approaches late 40’s and age discrimination kicks in as companies want a young and vibrant image, and a college kid with the latest knowledge and lower salary can displace the older workers. Now the older tech/office worker, if lucky can find a job to finish his career, and such job is usually in a smaller company that pays about 1/3 less with little or no benefits.
The only way a private sector worker can avoid this fate is to make it into management, especially in the executive inner management and staff where your CEO patron can screw up and everyone still gets a bonus and be shielded from layoffs.


14 posted on 01/01/2010 4:59:08 PM PST by Fee (Peace, prosperity, jobs and common sense)
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To: VRWC For Truth
'The collapse is coming. The states will declare DC null and void.'

That's what I keep saying to all the Secessionists on this board - it'd be infinitely easier for the individual states to just kick the sonsofbitches out of the Union. Barricade 'em inside the Beltway, and take a can of bug spray to anything that tries to slither back out.


15 posted on 01/01/2010 5:00:02 PM PST by Viking2002 (Old fishermen never die. They just smell that way.)
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To: Viking2002
Barricade 'em inside the Beltway, and take a can of bug spray to anything that tries to slither back out.

A nice long siege. They let Terry Shiavo starve. Ya reap what you sow. The message will get sent.

16 posted on 01/01/2010 5:09:28 PM PST by VRWC For Truth (Throw the bums out who vote yes on the bail out)
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To: ricks_place

Always remember the DEMS took Congress in 2006, When discussing the recession and spending increases. Don’t let them blame 2006 through 2008 spending on Bush.


17 posted on 01/01/2010 5:13:13 PM PST by ez ("Abashed the Devil stood and felt how awful goodness is..." - Milton)
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To: VRWC For Truth
The states will declare DC null and void

The states have enormous latent power.

But the average state legislator is WORSE, not better, than the average Member of Congress, and the chances that elected state officials will act against Federal authority are, at present, near zero.

18 posted on 01/01/2010 5:16:07 PM PST by Jim Noble (Hu's the communist?)
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To: ricks_place
• Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac get up to $400 billion

No longer capped at $400 billion. Treasury removed the limit on Christmas Eve.
19 posted on 01/01/2010 5:19:48 PM PST by javachip (TARP - proof there is no situation so bad that government can't make it worse.)
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To: ricks_place
Seems like he could come up with a better role model than the "former" terrorist Nelson Mandella.

http://plaintruthmagazine.blogspot.com/2008/06/stop-terrorist-nelson-mandela.html

20 posted on 01/01/2010 5:24:12 PM PST by McGruff (We're Going Rogue Baby!)
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