Federal pay ahead of private industry – USATODAY.com

March 12, 2010

While Main Street continues to suffer, the government boys are doing OK.  The government is hiring  in order to fill its expansionary needs, and while salaries are stagnant in the private sector, government salaries are on the rise.  And its all on our dime, folks.

Government is by its very nature  parasitic.   It utilizes resources, and creates nothing.   A leech on the body politic, it will enlarge itself on the vitality of the public sector until that vitality is sapped.

Jefferson, Madison, Adams all knew this  and sought to create a government limited in scope, where with natural talent, and  in an environment of personal and economic liberty, a person might prosper.

We’ve come a long way baby.

Federal pay ahead of private industry – USATODAY.com.


Reflections on the 17th Amendment: State Sovereignty, a Necessary Adjunct to Liberty

February 6, 2010

When this nation was founded under the document that we call our Constitution, much debate surrounded the place of the central government in the lives of the people.    The Anti-federalists (true federalists, mind you, that wanted a severely limited central government)  had the notion that small was better, and that local government, i.e. State government,  would be more responsive to the needs, wants and values of the people.  They had intimate experience with a government “far away,” and feared the potential of tyranny  in such government.

Yet as much as the founders feared tyranny, they feared also a “too democratic government.”  Much was made of the potential for  “mobocracy,” and the resulting possibility of  violent swings of temper within a necessarily factionalized electorate.

The states, some already having over 150 years experience in the minding of their own affairs, feared a loss of their own sovereignty should the new and national constitution be ratified.  After all, who could possibly be a better arbiter of the people’s wishes, and who could more completely recognize the needs of the people than the states themselves?

Thus the idea of a bicameral legislature was born.  The Congress, representing the interests of the people or “mob”, and the Senate, representing the interests of the state within the legislative framework.   Two provisions of the Senate’s body helped fully realize the State’s interest: First, there would be equal representation of each state within the body by the election of two senators from each of the several states.  Second, the Senators would be elected not by the people, but by the legislatures of the several states themselves.

As The Farmer remarked in The Philadelphia Independent Gazeteer, on 4/15/88:

…advocates of the new system, take as their strong ground the election of senators by the state legislatures, and the special representation of the states in the federal senate, to prove that internal sovereignty still remains with the States.

It must be remarked here that The Farmer did not believe the truth of this argument,  but is stating that this argument was proffered by the Federalists that favored  ratification of the constitution.  The argument of the Senate as a protector of state sovereignty was, however accepted by many anti-federalists.

Robert Yates another Anti-Federalist  writing under the pseudonym Brutus in Anti-Federalist # 63 remarks about  Senators in the proposed constitution:

The Senators represent the states, as bodies politic, sovereign to certain purposes. The states being sovereign and independent, are all considered equal, each with the other in the senate. In this we are governed solely by the ideal equalities of sovereignties; the federal and state governments forming one whole, and the state governments an essential part, which ought always to be kept distinctly in view, and preserved. I feel more disposed, on reflection, to acquiesce in making them the basis of the senate, and thereby to make it the interest and duty of the senators to preserve distinct, and to perpetuate the respective, sovereignties they shall represent. . . .

Regardless of whether or not the Senate could or could not protect the sovereignty of the states within the federal framework, it is clear from just these two citations, that within the clockwork of the proposed Constitution, the Sovereignty of the States was thought by all a necessary adjunct to liberty.


Tea Parties, Third Parties and the Republican Party

December 23, 2009

I have read that over 50 percent of the people in this country today are registered as independents.  The reasons for this are many.  The Tea Party crowd, made up primarily of conservative Americans will be an important part of the electoral equation come 2012.  Will the Republicans be able to garner their support?  This article suggests that they may not.

Big Government » Blog Archive » Tea Parties, Third Parties and the Republican Party.