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7 Undisputable Economic Truths

5/14/2012

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I stumbled across a posting on Facebook called “7 Biggest Economic Lie” by Robert Reich. (See the picture to the right. To read his actual words go here). As I read through them I could not help but think that this was once again pure propaganda by the liberal left. I am a bit familiar with Robert Reich. He was Bill Clinton’s Secretary of Labor and Harvard educated in Politics and Economics. In short he should know better. At best these are all half truths and misrepresentations. At worse, to someone completely unfamiliar with these issues, they are lies. In subsequent blogs I might more directly rebut what Mr. Reich has to say. But for now, how about a list of “Seven Undisputable Economic Truths”

1) Someone has to first create wealth before it can be taxed.

You would think that there is no reason to explain this one, but for the liberal left, which Reich is a card carrying member, there is. It is impossible to tax good intentions. In order for there to be money to pay for anything government provides, someone, like the stigmatized “rich” must
created a good or service. Producing that good or service creates jobs. The jobs created income. The income is taxed. There is no other way. Anything that government pays for; be it the Army, a teacher’s salary, to build a road, or the National Endowment for the Arts is done so with money from the wealth created by others. Period.

2)  A Tax Rate Cut is not the same as a Tax Cut

A Tax Rate is the level at which a dollar of income is taxed. The tax is the amount of money collected. These are not the same thing. You can tell when a politician is either ignorant or lying to you when he or she says “tax cuts for the rich” When Reagan and Bush II cut the tax RATES, the amount of money that the federal government collected went up. Again, the amount of money collected, the tax, went up. This is because “the rich” are not stupid. When tax RATES are too high, they find a way to not expose that income to be taxed. When the RATES are lower, it is not worth the effort. This relation ship is expressed in the Laffer curve. Learn about it here.

3)   Government jobs are overhead.

Every single government job is funded by taking money from someone else. I am not saying that government jobs are not needed. Soldiers, police, firemen, and many more are vital to society, and needed to be funded by the public. But, that does not alter the fact that all of those jobs are overhead. Every government job, and the overpaying of a government job (caused by public sector labor unions) takes money away from the public. That is money that the public could be spending to produce a reason for private sector jobs to exist. Private sector jobs actually add to the treasury, instead of subtracting from it. Private sector jobs are good. Public sector jobs are a drain on the economy and need to be held to a minimum.

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Baseball is Magic

5/6/2012

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I genuinely pity those who don’t ‘get’ baseball. It is so much more than just a game with a ball. I have friends who both understand what I am talking about and those that think baseball is only marginally more interesting that watching paint dry. It is hard to reach those who don’t get it. But, baseball is magic.

I, like so many, was introduced to baseball by my father. It is only recently that I began to wonder who introduced him. My grandfather died in a mine accident in 1935. My dad was born in 1933. The only hint I have is when I was young I once asked him if he had ever watched Babe Ruth play. That question should give you an idea of how young I was. The Babe played his last game in 1935. The first pro game wasn’t televised until 1939, and I doubt my Dad’s family even had a TV until the 1950s. But, he ignored all of that and just answered.

“No, but you should ask your Uncle Johnny”

Uncle Johnny was Dad’s older brother. I never did ask. But, someone must have shown him how to handle a bat and glove, so he could teach me. Magic, maybe?

My fondest memories of my time in Georgia, when I was between the ages of 5 -10, was of my dad and baseball. I would drag him out to the back yard each day after work, even before dinner, and we would play catch or he would drill me on grounders and fly balls. “Use two hands” and “Get down on it” were frequent pieces of advice. Or were those the incantations of a conjuror? 

I collected baseball cards and I asked him to try and name a team that I didn’t have a representative player. He went through probably every team and of course I had at least one card with a player with that team. Probably tiring of the game he said “St. Louis Browns” I had never heard of the St Louis Browns. But, soon I had a library book about Dizzy Dean, who played one game for the perennial losers in 1947, after a Hall of Fame career with the Cardinals. I learned all about Dizzy and The Gashouse Gang, and who the Browns were. It kindled a desire to learn the history of baseball and another reason to read. Magic. (The Browns moved to Baltimore in 1954 and became the Orioles.)

Little League Baseball was a magical rite of passage. If your Dad did not pound the basics of teamwork and fundamentals into you, your Little League coach did. Playing with a group of 15 other boys, all pulling for a common goal, taught me life lessons that are still pertinent today. Things like your role on a team, backing each other up, winning gracefully, losing with dignity, and realizing there is there is always someone better, so you had better work hard. Teaching these lessons to a pre-teen? Magic.

Baseball’s magic reveals itself even with it’s season. Baseball wakes you up with the spring. It let’s you ignore it, like your loyal dog, during the summer. Then it welcomes you home in the fall when things on the diamond begin to heat up. It dies just in time for the holidays. Then greets you again when the grass greens, asking you to believe that this is the year. Baseball is both eternal and finite. Magic

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    I'm 60, conservative and sincerely hope that my blog can make a difference. I think the Democrat Party has been taken over by America haters, career victims, and those who believe that the federal government should be your daddy. I'm looking to give those who vote for the "D" no matter what, something to think about.

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