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Waste & Government Reform Archive

Monday

9

March 2009

0

COMMENTS

All Government Decisions Are Political

Written by , Posted in Waste & Government Reform

President Obama has, to much liberal fanfare, undone the Bush era decision not to prohibit federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.  He then, with a straight face, attacked Bush for putting politics ahead of science.

It’s laughable that someone could seriously claim that politics has no place in science when he just finished using a political act to influence science.  Yes, Bush made a political decision regarding science when he decided not to fund embryonic stem cell research (and he also made a moral decision – an issue which Obama and the left wants to pretend doesn’t exist).  But Obama is just as political when he decides to fund it as Bush was when he decided not to.

Government is inherently political.  If politicians are deciding what scientific endeavours deserve funds, those decisions will inevitably be political.  Federal funding is what brings politics into science. The only way to truly remove politics from science would be to remove government from science.  Every indication is that Obama wants to do the opposite.  He has all kinds of pet projects that he – based on his ideology – thinks are worthy, from embryonic stem cells to “green energy” and global warming research.  He wants to take more money from the private sector, thus diminishing the capital it has to allocate to research, and decide himself where it should go.   That won’t remove the influence of politics from science, it will enhance it.

Sunday

15

February 2009

0

COMMENTS

That’s Not How To Measure It

Written by , Posted in The Nanny State & A Regulated Society, Waste & Government Reform

A Weekly Standard blog, “Measuring Success in the Drug War,” describes a paradox in the war on drugs as the author sees it.  Specifically, that successfully removing drug leaders results in a temporary increase in violence as the small fish fight to fill the void left by the loss of their big fish.  Thus, he says, the successful prosecution of the drug war creates a falsely troubling perception.

He just assumes, without logical explanation, that removing these kingpins is itself a success – that it is moving toward the end goal of the drug war (which presumably is to win).  But this is not true.  The movement itself is also illusory.  The very fact that the underlings are fighting to take over should make this point self-evident.  No matter how many big fish you remove, there will always be more to take their place. You cannot “win” by pursuing a strategy of removing an infinitely replaceable resource.

So long as the little fish have so much incentive to try and become big fish, attacking the drug lords is a massive waste of time and resources.  A better strategy is to remove the power and economic opportunity presented by being a drug lord, but that would require revisiting our draconian prohibition policies.

Friday

13

February 2009

0

COMMENTS

Saturday

31

January 2009

1

COMMENTS

Obama's Patriotism Deficient Cabinet

Written by , Posted in Taxes, Waste & Government Reform

“It’s time to be patriotic, time to jump in, time to be part of the deal, time to help get America out of the rut [by paying more taxes]”
– Vice President Joe Biden

Obama Appointments:

Tim Geithner – Secretary of the Treasury – owed $34,000 in back taxes.
Tom Daschle – Secretary of Health and Human Services – owed $128,203 in back taxes.

More to come?  How many other Obama nominees will be found out to lack patriotism, by Joe Biden’s standards?

Tuesday

9

December 2008

0

COMMENTS

Shocker: Gov. Blagojevich(D) Arrested

Written by , Posted in Waste & Government Reform

No one familiar with Chicago politics will be surprised:

Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was arrested at his North Side home Tuesday morning. His chief of staff John Harris was taken into federal custody as well.

The criminal complaint by the FBI agents said the two had been arrested on federal corruption charges. Each were arrested on two charges of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and solicitation of bribery.

Blagojevich and Harris will have an initial appearance in U.S. District Court Tuesday.

The arrest is the latest step in a three-year probe of “pay-to-play politics” in the governor’s administration. A statement by U.S. attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said Blagojevich and Harris “allegedly conspired to sell U.S. Senate appointment, engaged in pay-to-play schemes and threatened to withhold state assistance to Tribune Company for Wrigley Field to induce purge of newspaper editorial writers.”

Federal authorities were permitted by a judge to record the governor secretly before the November election after raising concerns that a replacement for President-elect Barack Obama would be tainted.

Fitzgerald’s office said the 76-page FBI affidavit alleges that Blagojevich was taped conspiring to sell or trade Obama’s vacated U.S. Senate seat for financial and other personal benefits for himself and his wife.

According to the affidavit, Blagojevich floated the idea of “a substantial salary for himself at a either a nonprofit foundation or an organization affiliated with labor unions;” a corporate board seat for his wife worth as much as $150,000 a year; promises of campaign funds, including cash up front; and a Cabinet post or ambassadorship for himself.

Blagojevich also tried to get critical columnists fired from the Chicago Tribune.

In addition, the charges allege that Blagojevich tried to influence the composition of The Chicago Tribune editorial board in exchange for state aid to the Tribune Company, which owns the newspaper.

Fitzgerald said Blagojevich was recorded in wiretaps as saying, “Fire all those bleeping people, get them the bleep out of there and get us some support.”

Sadly, the larger lesson from this aspect of the story will likely be ignored.  Government involvement in business is dangerous and prone to corruption.  When a political body supplies funds, it inevitably attaches strings.  This is true whether it’s the federal government giving money to the states, or government giving money to business.   It becomes particularly problematic in the latter case, as government has the force of law behind it to create a further uneven playing field.  Politicians seem incapable of restraining themselves from exploiting this kind of arrangement.

But many of the same people in the media who will likely, and rightfully, condemn this attack on their freedom to criticize government without fear or coercive reprisals are, at this very moment, cheerleading the democrats’ efforts to gain controlling stakes in automotive and other industries.  Does anyone really think Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Barney Frank will be any better at keeping their grubby hands of private enterprise than Gov. Blagojevich?

Friday

28

November 2008

0

COMMENTS

Treat The Illness

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government, Waste & Government Reform

I recently sent the following letter to the New York Times:

To the Editor:

As “NASA’s Black Hole Budgets” (editorial, Nov. 24) noted, NASA has a “culture that has lost control of spending.” As a former employee, Alan Stern has seen this problem first hand. Unfortunately, the solution he offers is little more than a call to just try harder. Politicians can’t be counted on to “turn from the self-serving protection of local NASA jobs.” Moreover, the problems he describes in NASA are not unique to the space agency; they are the results of systemic flaws in the bureaucratic system.

We should be treating the illness rather than the symptoms. This requires a fundamental rethinking of how we approach space exploration. A good start would be to rely less on government bureaucracies and more on private endeavors, which can be promoted through tax breaks and prize offerings. But so long as bureaucrats are encouraged to feed on the public trough, we shouldn’t be surprised when they pig out.

Sincerely,

Brian Garst

Friday

14

November 2008

0

COMMENTS

Lobbying Cont.

Written by , Posted in Waste & Government Reform

A few days ago I predicted, “We’ll see more money and influence peddling around Washington under Obama for one very simple reason: government will be involved in more aspects of our economy and our lives.”

Now the Washington Post has noticed that, “Democrats Benefiting From Post-Election Lobby Boom:”

Barack Obama spent much of his presidential campaign decrying the influence of Washington lobbyists. In the 10 days since he was elected, he already has had an impact: He has touched off a mini-boom on K Street.

Top lobbying firms are gearing up to handle increased demand from corporate clients who fear that the Obama administration will expand its regulatory reach and target them for tax increases. Some firms, such as Patton Boggs, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, and Alston & Bird, are also preparing for new business resulting from the ongoing effort to stabilize the economy.

And who is cashing in on this boom? Democrats who supported Obama, such as Jaime R. Harrison.

Lobbyists are attracted by government activity like moths to a flame.   And Obama is promising one hell of a government flame – enough to burn the house down.

Monday

10

November 2008

0

COMMENTS

The Lobbyists Aren't Going Anywhere

Written by , Posted in Liberty & Limited Government, Waste & Government Reform

CQ Politics thinks lobbyists are going to do just fine under an Obama administration:

“Folks like us have been constructive participants in good public policy making,” said Dutko CEO Mark Irion. “I do not believe this administration is not going to work with the community here that does the kind of things that we do.”

To the contrary, Irion said the Democratic party’s “predisposition to believing that government is part of the solution” is likely to generate “a lot more activity” for policy makers and lobbyists, alike.

Michael S. Ferrell, head of the legislative practice at Venable, agreed, saying the new administration’s desire to shift the country in a new direction is bound to create winners and losers. “And anytime there is a game of winners and losers people pick a side and they need a team,” Ferrell said.” That’s where the lobbying industry comes in, he added.

Bingo.  This idea that Obama is somehow going to end special interest politics is absurd.  We’ll see more money and influence peddling around Washington under Obama for one very simple reason: government will be involved in more aspects of our economy and our lives.  To quote David Boaz of the Cato Institute, “When you spread food out on a picnic table, you can expect ants. When you put $3 trillion on the table, you can expect special interests, lobbyists and pork-barrel politicians.”

The only sure way to reduce lobbying and special interest politics is to reduce the scope and power of the federal government.  Obama has not demonstrated an inclination to do either.

Wednesday

24

September 2008

5

COMMENTS

What Really Happened In The Financial Market

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government, Waste & Government Reform

The False Explanation

You’re going to hear a lot of stories in the coming days, and probably have heard a few already. Following the high profile collapse of the giants in the financial sector, there are going to be a number of groups jumping to advance their agenda by telling you falsehoods about who is to blame. Socialists, statists, anti-capitalists and all manner of other market and freedom haters are already jumping to lay blame at the feet of capitalism. Yet many of these people have themselves played a part in this mess. The Obama campaign is already out to make “deregulation” a dirty word, and has released an ad making two false claims: first, that deregulation had anything to do with the financial crises and, second, that allowing competition in health care would create a similar situation. Even the New York Times, criticizing the ad for its falsehoods, acknowledged that “[deregulatory changes] were viewed by many as having benefited consumers by encouraging competition, and those changes have not been linked to the current crisis.” But in order to advance the socialist regulatory agenda, it is constantly necessary to demonize the free market.

The most hypocritical market-basher, by far, is long-time Democratic Party embarrassment Barney Frank. Frank has been making the rounds dispensing his distorted account of what has happened. For instance, he attributed AIG’s troubles to “lack of regulation,” and self-righteously declared, “the private market screwed itself up and they need the government to come help them unscrew it.” On the overall financial meltdown he says, “Some private-sector people made irresponsible decisions because there wasn’t adequate regulation.” Not quite. There was inadequate regulation, but of government, not the private-sector. It is government policy and government sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that are the drivers of this meltdown. And when it came to regulating their behavior, Barney Frank was a chief roadblock.

Freddie and Fannie became a half-way house for democrats heading out of government.

In 2003 President Bush attempted to address the problem created by Fannie and Freddie’s insulation from market incentives. The President proposed an agency to oversee the quasi-governmental companies. Democrats, bought and paid for by F&F, were strongly opposed.

Granted, I would have preferred that President Bush had chosen market incentives over regulation by cutting Fannie and Freddie loose from government altogether. But, and this is a big but, if government is going to insist on socializing risk, it’s better that it also provide even a crude form of accountability (and crude is all the accountability government can muster compared to markets), to make up for it. Leaving F&F roaming free as part-private and part-governmental, with the dueling and often contradictory missions it implies, without either market or government forms of accountability, was the worst possible solution. It’s also the one Barney Frank demanded when he opposed Bush’s effort and declared that, “[Fannie and Freddie] are not facing any kind of financial crisis,” before also concluding, “The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing.” And that is exactly what led us to this mess: the government’s reckless demands for “affordable housing.”

A Government Created Mess

In 1977 a Democratic Congress, working with a Democratic President, produced the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The CRA forced banks to make unsound loans to poor, uncreditworthy borrowers, all in the name of liberal fairness. Required to keep extensive records of their minority lending practices, banks became targets of racial shakedown artists. If they weren’t satisfied with a bank’s submission to their extortionist demands, they could have them denied the right to expand or merge with other banks.

In 1994 Clinton revamped the CRA and kicked off a new wave of reckless lending. This is where Freddie and Fannie jumped in to corner the market on bad loans, loans which wouldn’t have ever been made if rules requiring money down and sufficient sources of income hadn’t been thrown out the window in the name of racial equality.

Another contributing government factor was the loose monetary policy pursued by the Fed. By keeping interest rates too low, the Fed contributed to an influx of dollars into the market. When money is created faster than productivity warrants, it results in a misallocation of resources in certain assets, creating “booms.” Former vice president and economic advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas, Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr., blames the Fed for not properly weighing the costs of their inflation targeting methods:

In a vibrant market economy with technological innovation and ever new profit opportunities, the monetary policy that maintains price stability in consumer goods (or zero price inflation) requires substantial monetary stimulus. That stimulus will have a number of real consequences, including asset bubbles. These asset bubbles have real costs and involve misallocations of capital. For example, by the peak of the tech and telecom boom in March 2000, too much capital had been invested in high-tech companies and too little in “old economy firms.” Too much fiber optic cable and too few miles of railroad track were laid.

The Democrats’ Revolving Door

While government policy was meddling with the financial markets, government officials made themselves quite comfortable in the financial sector. Freddie and Fannie became a half-way house for democrats heading out of government. Franklin Raines, currently Barack Obama’s financial advisor and former Clinton era budget director, spearheaded Fannie Mae into countless Enron-style accounting manipulations and scandals. Foreshadowing the left’s current strategy to peg their failures on advocates of free markets, Raines derided those who pointed out his companies risky and shady practices as “ideologues” trying to “undermine” Fannie Mae.

Jim Johnson, also a former Fannie CEO and a board member of Goldman Sachs, is a policy advisor who was chosen by Obama to lead his vice-presidential selection team. Johnson was forced to fall on his sword when it was revealed he and several other prominent democrats received special perk loans from Countrywide Financial’s CEO Angelo Mozilo. With no banking or financial experience whatsoever, Jamie Gorelick, former Deputy Attorney General under Clinton, was appointed Vice Chairman of Fannie Mae in 1997, and got fat off of Raines’ accounting scandals. Rahm Emanual, the 4th highest ranking democrat in the House, was similarly shuffled onto Freddie’s board after leaving the Clinton White House.

Meanwhile, their Democratic colleagues who remained in government were assured their part of the take. Chris Dodd, now Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, raked in the most from Freddie and Fannie, at $165,000. Perhaps these donations are what Dodd had in mind when, in July, he referred to Fannie and Freddie as “fundamentally sound and strong.” Number 2 on the graft list is Barack Obama, who took in over $125,000 in his short tenure in the Senate. The government’s pet mortgage lenders further feathered their nests by opening “partnership offices” in the district of key members of Congress, where they could funnel millions of dollars to their supporters. The bribes paid off. Compared to IndyMac, which didn’t offer democrats any protection money and was thrown to the wolves by Chuck Schumer, Fannie and Freddie are now looking at billions in taxpayer support.

It’s not hard to see why, when President Bush sought to counter Fannie and Freddie’s government created incentives for recklessness, he was fought by Democrats at every turn. According to the White House, 17 attempts at reform were blocked by democrats. Government’s inability, thanks to Democratic cronyism, to replace the market checks which it destroyed by demanding reckless behavior on the one hand, and subsidizing risk with an implied guarantee on the other, provided the perfect financial storm for disaster.

One would think it would be difficult for those on the left to so easily absolve themselves of any responsibility, while simultaneously blaming those who attempted to stop them from creating this disaster, but that is exactly what they’ve done. Phil Gramm, who sought to relax the Democratic created requirements that banks issue risky subprime loans, has been tagged a “deregulator,” which is, in their view, automatic proof of guilt. Barack Obama blames the problem, as he does everything, on “Bush-McCain,” even as he found room in his campaign for those actually responsible and belongs to a party which protected Fannie and Freddie from reform. In short, the left is trying to rewrite history even as it’s being made. The ink hasn’t yet dried on the reporting of their government sponsored mess, and already they are blaming those who believe in freedom and oppose their interventionist programs. They think the failures of government should justify yet more government. They are wrong and their lies shouldn’t be allowed to disguise this fact.

Sunday

24

August 2008

0

COMMENTS

Medicare Fraud: Even Worse Than Thought

Written by , Posted in Waste & Government Reform

For those who understands how government works, stories like this are no big surprise:

Erroneous and fraudulent Medicare payments for medical equipment could make up almost a third of the number of disbursements by the program, according to a draft report from the Health and Human Services Department’s inspector general.

According to an executive summary of the draft report obtained by Congressional Quarterly, Medicare officials massively underestimated the payment error rate in the durable medical equipment program, or DME, which reimburses Medicare beneficiaries for items like wheelchairs and oxygen tanks.

The draft report summary says that in 2006, 31.5 percent of the payments made under the program were in error. That is much higher than the 7.5 percent error rate that the CMS had originally reported through its own fraud-finding Comprehensive Error Rate Testing program (CERT).

This kind of failure would be completely unacceptable in a free market. Government is a different story. Most likely this will be swept under the rug. If some pretense of corrective action is attempted, it will likely result in an even bigger and more incompetent government program.