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Friday

24

February 2012

0

COMMENTS

The (Opportunity) Cost of Occupying

Written by , Posted in General/Misc.

As if the direct toll of the Occupy movement wasn’t enough, even the opportunity costs are proving deadly. As it turns out, forcing scarce police resources to deal withviolent, petulant outbursts means there are fewer such resources available for protection of law abiding, tax paying citizens.

67-year-old man who called police about an intruder on his property was beaten to death in front of his wife 13 minutes later because authorities were too busy with Occupy Oakland to respond to the request.

Peter Cukor, from Berkeley, was allegedly murdered by Daniel Jordan Dewitt, 23, a local man known to have mental health problems, around 9pm on Saturday night.

Mr Cukor initially called a non-emergency line after seeing Dewitt lurking on his property.

A source close to the case said an officer noticed the call on his computer and offered to check it out but was told not to as officers were being dispatched only to high-priority calls.

The 67-year-old then walked to a nearby fire station for help but no one was there. It was upon his return he was confronted by the intruder.

Shortly after, Mr Cukor’s wife heard him shouting for help and called 911 after seeing the suspect hitting her husband again and again over the head with a ceramic plant pot.

Tuesday

21

February 2012

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COMMENTS

The Moocher Class

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements

There’s a rash of mental and physical disabilities sweeping the nation, but we don’t need to turn to the CDC for a diagnosis:

With their unemployment-insurance checks running out, some of the country’s long-term jobless are scrambling to fill the gap by filing claims for mental illness and other disabilities with Social Security — a surge that hobbles taxpayers and making the employment rate look healthier than it should as these people drop out of the job statistics.

“It could be because their health really is getting worse from the stress of being out of work,” says Matthew Rutledge, a research economist at Boston College. “Or it could just be desperation — people trying to make ends meet when other safety nets just aren’t there.”

As of January, the federal government was mailing out disability checks to more than 10.5 million individuals, including 2 million to spouses and children of disabled workers, at a cost of record $200 billion a year, recent research from JPMorgan Chase shows.

The sputtering economy has fueled those ranks. Around 5.3 percent of the population between the ages of 25 and 64 is currently collecting federal disability payments, a jump from 4.5 percent since the economy slid into a recession.

Are these people suddenly getting hurt? Are they getting stressed out or desperate from unemployment, as research economist at Boston College Matthew Rutledge suggests? I say not. What we are seeing is the moochiness factor.

Not all people on unemployment insurance are moochers by any stretch of the imagination. These folks understand they need something as a bridge to their next job and future paychecks, and they treat it as such. If I were suddenly unemployed I would similarly have no qualms accepting the payments, since I’ve already been forced to fork over my tax dollars for it. But make no mistake about it, there is a subset of recipients for whom UI is not merely a bridge, but a destination.

Recent academic research has unsurprisingly shown subsidizing unemployment increases joblessness:

This paper uses multiple regression analysis to estimate the impact of extended UI benefits on the unemployment rate after controlling for the severity of the recent recession. The extension of UI is found to have a positive and significant impact on the national unemployment rate… The UI benefit extensions that have occurred between the summer of 2008 and the end of 2010 are estimated to have had a cumulative effect of raising the unemployment rate by .77 to 1.54 percentage points.

I’m going to go out and a limb and guess that there is a good bit of overlap between the .77 to 1.54 percent of the population which decides not to work and instead mooch off of taxpayers for as long as possible, and the .8 percentage point increase in the number of “disabled” since the start of the recession. This overlap represents the moocher class.

Thursday

16

February 2012

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COMMENTS

The Shockingly Dishonest "Contraception" Debate

Written by , Posted in Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements

I’ve been in DC area now for a few years, so political dishonesty comes as no surprised to me. But the sheer audacity of the lies surrounding the current “contraception” brouhaha is above and beyond even what’s expected.

I keep putting “contraception” in quotes, because the issue really has nothing to do with contraception. To say that the uproar of the Obama administration’s mandate is in any way an objection to contraception is to say that opposing farm subsidies is an objection to eating. It’s stupid on its face.

Yet somehow the point still needs making, so I will add my voice to the chorus: Health insurance is not the same thing as access! More importantly, insurance is not offered because some government bureaucrat ordered it to be; things get insured because people don’t want to take the risk of being unable to afford something at the time they really need it. But no one is going to go bankrupt buying contraception. Confusing insurance for medical prepayment is the same fatal flaw that has made insurance so unnecessarily expensive in the first place (well, one of the flaws anyway), and that prevented the debate two years ago from looking at real solutions for our unacceptably flawed health care and insurance sectors.

Tuesday

14

February 2012

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COMMENTS

24 Million Voter Registrations Have Significant Errors

Written by , Posted in General/Misc.

1 in 8. That’s the likelihood that any given voter registration is inaccurate, according to a report by The Pew Center on the States. 1.8 million dead people are registered to vote (how many in Chicago, it doesn’t say), 2.75 million have registrations in multiple states, and another 12 million have incorrect addresses.

Much or all of this is due to government incompetence, as opposed to anything nefarious. But despite the researchers being quick to point out that “they don’t see it as an indicator of widespread fraud,” the inaccuracies are proof of vulnerability to fraud, if not actual or “widespread fraud.” And it’s not like evidence of fraud itself is hard to come by.

Tuesday

7

February 2012

1

COMMENTS

DC’s Unjustified Optimism

Written by , Posted in Big Government, Economics & the Economy

According to Gallup, D.C. has the highest amount of economic confidence in the country…and it’s not even close.

It would be easy to say that Gallup over-sampled White House staffers wearing Keynesian blinders, but the truth is far more depressing. It would be nice if we could chalk up these results to a simple bubble mentality, as just another indication that folks inside-the-beltway are out of touch, but unfortunately the results are an accurate reflection of economic conditions.

Washington D.C. and the surrounding areas have weathered the recession like no other region. Whether it be politicians, federal bureaucrats, or lobbyists, the denizens of our nation’s Capitol have lived off a federal government sucking up all the wealth they could from the productive sectors of the economy. Simply put, while the rest of America has suffered, beltway insiders have continued to stuff themselves with the fruits of everyone else’s labor.

So of course they are more optimistic than the rest of the country. It’s easy to be confident in the economy, and take the long view, when you’re standing on the backs of hard working Americans.

Monday

6

February 2012

9

COMMENTS

Gun-Grabbing Nannies Invade Super Bowl XLVI

Written by , Posted in Gun Rights

In case you weren’t watching the game, here’s the commercial in question:

The two mayoral gun-grabbers start off by claiming that both support the 2nd Amendment, proof once again that the easiest way to tell when a politician is lying is to notice when their lips are moving. But the idea that Bloomberg, perhaps the single biggest nanny in the country, is a supporter of the Second Amendment is laughably absurd.

Just recently I highlighted a story so egregious – a shop owner being fined $30,000 for stocking six obviously fake toy guns – that I simply declared the entire state to be hoplophobic. This might have been hyperbole, but it’s certainly true of Bloomberg and his city. New York City has a track record of gun hysterics, and recently threw the book at a marine and Iraq War veteran who attempted to check his legally owned gun at the Empire State Building . Nanny-in-Chief Bloomberg’s prosecutors think he deserves 3 years in jail for the horrible offense of bringing a legally purchased and owned gun into the People’s Republic of New York. The man has an irrational, nonsensical fear of guns, and will stop at nothing to eliminate our Constitutional right to posses them.

Update: According to DHS, this post makes me a “militia extremist.”

Thursday

2

February 2012

1

COMMENTS

Indiana Joins Ranks of Free States

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Labor Unions

It’s rather remarkable that the US still has states, more than half even, where people are forced into association with others against their will – and even required to fork over money for the privilege, money which is then used to support politicians peddling big government policies. Yet that is precisely what happens under forced unionization regimes. Indiana is now joining the ranks of the enlightened and has become a right-to-work state, putting an end to this corrupt racket.

Freedom to associate, or not associate, at one’s pleasure is an important end in itself, but it also comes with economic benefit. States with right-to-work laws are much better off than states without. Right-to-work states have lower unemployment, for instance. But most importantly, they have more freedom.

Still, an astonishing 27 states continue to support indentured servitude through forced unionization.

The fight continues.

Wednesday

1

February 2012

0

COMMENTS

Another Reason to Support Walker

Written by , Posted in Education, Labor Unions

Gov. Scott Walker’s reforms in Wisconsin aren’t just important for their fiscal impact. Keeping teacher’s unions from getting too strong also prevents nonsense like this:

They’ve slapped around students, ripped off taxpayers and boozed it up in the classroom — and they’re all still employed as city public-school teachers.

A review of nearly 100 disciplinary hearings from 2011, obtained by a Post Freedom of Information Law request, shows the city had to fight tooth and nail to remove lawbreaking, abusive teachers — terminating a paltry 31 percent of the 70 charged with misconduct.

And the city could dismiss only 12 of 26 teachers who were brought up on charges of incompetence — which is driving a push by Gov. Cuomo and Mayor Bloomberg for new teacher evaluations.

Or how about this guy:

Alan Rosenfeld — a 66-year-old disgraced typing teacher — hasn’t taught since he was accused of making  inappropriate comments and leering at 8th grade girls in 2001, but still collects $100,049 a year from the city, the New York Post reports.

This is what teacher’s unions are really fighting for: the power to be unaccountable. They are never, as they claim, in it for the children.

Monday

30

January 2012

0

COMMENTS

Lasting Economies Are Not Built

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Free Markets

During his State of the Union speech, President Obama expressed his desire for an “economy built to last,” an oxymoron emblematic of the President’s embrace of Keynesianism and other failed economic philosophies. Simply put, strong economies are not built; they emerge.

To be built implies that there be a builder. Naturally, Obama envisions himself in this role. But it doesn’t matter who the builder is, they will necessarily be incapable of processing all the information required for managing something so complex as a national economy. No individual or group of individuals can succeed in such a task.

Rather than being built, strong economies emerge through the aggregate actions of free individuals advancing their interests, and works best within a system of basic political and legal infrastructure designed to foster economic liberty. In contrast to Obama’s vision for an activist government picking and choosing industries to support, high tax rates and political motivated government spending, this infrastructure limits itself to neutral provision of legal services, property rights and free trade.

This is, in other words, the typical battle between freedom and collectivism. In his State of the Union Speech, President Obama reaffirmed his support for the side of collectivism, economic stagnation, and misery, rather than for freedom and prosperity.

Saturday

28

January 2012

1

COMMENTS

The Kiss of Death

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Energy and the Environment

Note to self: If you ever start an energy company, don’t take government funds and then let Obama talk about it in the State of the Union…

Andrew Restuccia of The Hill is reporting that Ener1, a battery company that President Obama referenced in his State of The Union Speech on Tuesday as an example of successful energy investments, has just filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy.

That’s just two days after the speech.

…In the 2010 State of the Union address, Obama mentioned Solyndra as another successful investment by the government in private-sector green-energy companies.

…It’s obviously hugely embarrassing for the president to give another green-energy company a shout-out in his prime-time speech only to have it declare bankruptcy two days later.

But worry not, because Obama is here to ensure the economy is “built to last.”