Fighting Poverty with Crocodile Tears

This post is animated by the letter received from two separate individuals which appears at the end of this post:

I think both of the individuals who sent this letter ( it is a form letter provided by NETWORK, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby) are well meaning and clueless.

We have been in a war on poverty for the last 40+ years.  So far, poverty is winning.  Those who think we can end poverty simply disbelieve the Lord when he said the poor will always be with you.  The war on poverty has been a failure for good reason.

There are only two known tools that combat poverty.  They are education and opportunity.  How strange that the government programs emphasize neither.  The two are related in that those who see opportunity are usually willing to sacrifice themselves to get the education to grasp those opportunities.  I want higher education to be seen as a right, and am having difficulty to square that with government lending schemes.  The greatest tragedy in america is that students graduate from institutions of higher learning in crushing debt – slaves of the economic system.  I prefer my education inexpensive and politically incorrect.  I will listen to plans to create such an environment, but to date I have nothing more than a vague idea.

The other key to ending poverty is opportunity.  We must create an opportunity state.  Government regulation is not for the purpose of consumer safety.  Government regulation has as its purpose to create barriers to competition to favor the already successful.

It is amazing how little money most folks need to meet their dreams:  a nice paid for home, new vehicles, decent furnishings, and money to send the kids to college.  For most folks we are talking well below five hundred thousand dollars.  Most folks see that as an impossible goal.  That is because the government regulates business to keep down competition and thus their opportunity to get ahead, and then steals the savings of the successful by currency manipulation.  

Like the parable of the talents in the bible, money must be put to work.  Investing in the government is bad stewardship, secure and safe like hiding the money in the ground.  It does not go to work making more money.  Money invested in business does that.

We need to review the hundreds of feet that constitute the code of federal regulation and get the government out of the regulation business creating a business environment filled with vast new opportunities.  We need to end corporate welfare and encourage small business.

Finally we need to return the control of wealth to the american people by preventing currency manipulation.  No one who can not plan and save for the future can expect to have a future.  Under our present system if the government miscalculates the buying power of your dollar falls.  Currency manipulation can only be stopped by a currency redeemable in precious metals whose value is set by the free market.

These steps will create a society where people, can plan, save, innovate and take risks.  In that society there is opportunity.  In that society education is a tool to advance.

The changes I propose are not easy.  I do not cry crocodile tears, and beg for government bailouts.  I want a society where free men and women can see that hard work and virtue will be rewarded.  

A society based on government programs and equalizing taxation only brings more poverty, less freedom, more taxes, and social slavery.  How those who would enslave us cry their tears, but they are montebanks, liars, and enemies of free men and women, and just like their crocodile tears, their fake concern masks viscous predators waiting to eat your children.

DAVEBROWNING

 

 

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Dear Mr. Browning:

 

During the remaining weeks of your campaign, I urge you to publicly 

address the issue of poverty in our nation and the steps you propose to 

take to cut poverty significantly in the next five to ten years.  

 

The urgency of the need to reduce poverty escalates with the increase in 

unemployment rates and due to the devastation of multiple hurricanes. 

 

As you campaign for election in November, I will be watching ads and 

listening to what you say about reducing poverty.  I believe that as a 

nation we have the potential reduce poverty significantly. I’d like to 

know what plans you have to reduce poverty, and I ask  you to share your 

ideas with your constituents in the weeks ahead.

 

The Preamble to the United States Constitution raises the “general 

welfare” as one of the responsibilities of the federal government.  The 

general welfare is suffering, as attested to by the Census Bureau poverty 

report for 2007, released the last week of August.  Although the number of 

families living below the poverty threshold held from 2006 to 2007, those 

below fifty-percent of the poverty level fell deeper into poverty; and 

more households joined that group.  The only income group with any gain in 

income was the top 10 percent.  

 

The number of persons without health insurance in 2007 was significantly 

higher than the number in 2006.   The good news is a decrease in the 

number of children without health insurance, due to Medicaid and the SCHIP 

program.  However over three million children remain without regular 

access to regular health care.  It is frightening to think of the loss of 

potential among children who lack consistent health monitoring, many of 

whom are also under-nourished.   Health and nutrition are integrally 

related to a child’s ability to grow and develop to meet their potential.  

It is critical that future generations are capable of solving national and 

global problems as they continue to escalate.

 

I urge you to speak out, let all of us, your constituents know what you 

plan to do about poverty when you are elected.

Published in: on September 21, 2008 at 3:43 am Leave a Comment

Montebanks

 

I just spent one of the most unbelievable afternoons of my life at  the September 20 Candidate Forum in Kansas City put on by efect.org.  There, I heard Missouri Democratic State Representatives Beth Low and Paul LeVota advocate the adoption of the failed French Socialist Medical Policies of Jaques Mitterand as their program for Missouri.  I would have gone after them right there but it is impolite to call some one a montebank without the hosts prior permission. 

 

These two Democrats have lived through the failure of European Socialism, and learned, it would appear, exactly nothing.  The state has a small monetary surplus, and so they wish to expand programs that will take long term financing.  Mr. LeVota went so far as to say that they would just  ” find  the money “ – meaning tax the people of Missouri Blind.  It was maddening.

 

Want to make real change?  Learn what your elected officials really believe.

Published in: on at 2:44 am Comments (1)
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Education is Our Greatest Weapon

Education is Our Greatest Weapon

Pillars of Liberty

Declaration of Independence

US Constitution

Federalist Papers

Anti-Federalist Papers

Thomas Paine’s Common Sense

The Jefferson Letters

Patrick Henry – Give Me Liberty Speech

John Locke – Second Treatise of Civil Government

Adam Smith – The Wealth of Nations

For those that find Wealth of Nations to be a bit thick and difficult, I strongly recommend P.J. O’Rourke’s wonderful primer, On The Wealth of Nations – Books That Changed the World.

As long as I am pitching P.J., there are two books that set me on the road to understanding, O’Rourke’s All the Trouble in the World – The Lighter Side of Overpopulation, Famine, Ecological Disaster, Ethnic Hatred, Plague, and Poverty and Milton and Rose Friedman’s Free to Choose. Free to Choose was also made into a TV series, the videos are here.

Published in: on September 15, 2008 at 9:35 am Leave a Comment
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