David Weigel | April 5, 2006
Jacob Sullum ponders whether pork-loving senators use the same Constitution as the rest of us.
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The framers of the Constitution clearly stated that
Congress...should allocate funding for the various functions of
government.
Where is it clearly stated that Congress shall grease up 98% of its
constituents, buttfuck us, then send the Santorum to the remaining
2% who play the game? Is there anything in there that says that
building bridges in Alaska is a function of the federal
government?
Ending the practice of earmarking would transfer massive
funding authority to the President and the federal agencies in
defiance of the Constitution.
That is one way of looking at it. A remarkably disgusting way, but
one perspective no doubt. One other way would be to consider that
the Constitution empowers neither of them to spend $2.7 trillion
and that they have an oath to leave it in the pockets of the people
who earn it.
Swillfredo asks: Where is it clearly stated that Congress
shall grease up 98% of its constituents, buttfuck us, then send the
Santorum to the remaining 2% who play the game?
That would be the bit that say, "We, the People..." In the
Constitution as anywhere else, anyone who can turn the mob from
"they" to "we" gets a free license to screw anybody. It's only a
question of how long they take to get around to it.
Why the obsession with pork? It is such a tiny part of the
budget.
If you want to reduce the government, focus on reducing defense,
Social Security, Medicare and Interest payments.
Keep in mind that empirical evidence suggests that Social Security
and government health care are more efficient than their private
sector alternatives.
Moving earmarking into a coherent funding process makes sense, but
there is, especially on libertarian sites, an oversized concern
given the scope.
Coach-
Tacking on pork to a bill is often used to get it to pass. Pork
greases the wheels for a lot of other things.
"But the two self-described "fiscal conservatives" defend
what they call "earnest earmarks" that direct federal dollars to
legislators� states and districts. They proudly cite earmarks they
obtained that "built new wastewater infrastructure in Bonners
Ferry, supported jobs at the Idaho National Laboratory, improved
housing for families at Mountain Home Air Force Base, and expanded
course offerings at Boise State University."
"Earnest"? Please. If they were at all serious about fiscal
conservatism and "earnesty", they would propose a law that would
eliminate earmarks, and lower the federal taxes congruently (for
example, if the total amount of state-destined earmarks was $25
billion, then lower federal taxes by that much). Then, the
president wouldn't have any extra money to spend on the states
without cutting federal programs. As a result, to reach some sort
of equilibrium, the states would be able to raise state taxes. This
would result in money from state residents directly paying for the
stuff that they want. More accountability. More direct connection
to the money. No more of my money going to pay for expanded courses
at Boise State.
Does anyone think this is feasible?
"Keep in mind that empirical evidence suggests that Social
Security and government health care are more efficient than their
private sector alternatives."
What "empirical evidence" suggests that nationalized government
healthcare would be more efficient than private? Take a look at the
places where nationalized healthcare is already in place. You have
to wait weeks to see a doctor, and you have no choice in which
doctor to see, so there's no real incentive for them to treat their
patients with extra care.
Maybe on paper, abstractly, it might look more "efficient"...but,
personally, I don't see Canadia's stupid system as being very
"efficient" at all. Requiring private health insurance might be a
way to meet in the middle, given the problems with ER
nonpayers.
Ending the practice of earmarking would transfer massive
funding authority to the President and the federal agencies in
defiance of the Constitution.
Actually, what it might do is reduce pork. If the legislators can't
guarantee that their little slice of pork will make it home because
the President might redirect it, they might not vote for it.
And what we are actually talking about here is which branch
controls spending that neither branch has the Constitutional
authority to engage in in the first place. Which branch abuses
extra-Constitutional spending is less interesting to me than
stopping it altogether.
RC Dean:
Exactly. If we can prohibit Congress from spending federal money on
pet crap for the states, then we can certainly prohibit the
president from doing so as well.
Keep in mind that empirical evidence suggests that Social
Security and government health care are more efficient than their
private sector alternatives.
Source(s) please? I just got my Social Security statement the other
day and I categorically reject that supposition. Counting my
employer's contributions (which I do), and earning a prevailing
equity market return were I to have been allowed to keep and invest
my "contributions", I would already have more than I would need to
purchase the full suite of Social Security benefits (death benefit,
survivors benefit, a comparable annuity and a disability policy) in
the private market. There is only one little problem: I have
another 26 years to continue contributing, with no guarantee that
my premium does not go up, that my benefits do not go down, that I
get to collect at 67, and that I am not means tested. As for
Medicaid, it is even worse.
Swillfredo:
I think, implicit in Coach's assertion that it is more "efficient"
(and, implicit in his definition of "efficient" as well) is the
fact that the results are supposedly better for society as a whole.
In other words, wealth redistribution. Yes, someone like you and
me, who make enough money to afford to purchase private social
security insurance, would be better off in the free market---but,
again, implicit in his assertion is the fact that to those who make
barely enough money to get by, the extra few hundred bucks a year
they'd get back if social security & medicare weren't deducted
from their paychecks would not be enough to purchase anything
comparable to what they get from the gubmint. When you redistribute
the wealth, the lowest earners are always better off.
I'm not saying I support this wealth residtribution scheme, just
telling you what I think he's referring to when he says
"efficient".
This reminds me of a newsletter I got the other day from
Congressman Charles Rangel. In it, he stated that his belief was
that the purpose of government was to "aid the less fortunate".
(Probably not his exact words.) In one sense I'm glad that he has
some idea of what government is for (other than keeping himself in
office forever), but I wonder if he's even aware that his
philosophy runs directly counter to the one expressed in the
Constitution, our other founding documents, and the beliefs of the
Founding Fathers.
Rangel is just an odious, disgusting person, anyway. He's the ass
who suggested that we reinstate
the draft for people up to 42 years old and then voted against
his own bill, and he's never had a negative thing to say about
Fidel Castro.
Evan, I'll buy that is what he means, although by no stretch are transfer payments "efficient". More to the point, if Social Security really is welfare then stop selling it as otherwise. It is supposed to be an earned benefit. Why the fuck attach my SOCIAL SECURITY number to the accrual if it is knowingly going to be redistributed to others?
I think, implicit in Coach's assertion that it is more
"efficient" (and, implicit in his definition of "efficient" as
well) is the fact that the results are supposedly better for
society as a whole. In other words, wealth
redistribution.
In other words, not "efficiency" at all, but "equity."
What I love is that 'earmarking' (very animal husbandry sounding
term), pork and lobbying go well together even at the State
level.
From http://www.ktva.com/local/ci_3669072
Alaska Senate Keeps ANWR Lobbying Money in Bill
Associated Press April 3, 2006
A legislative conference committee Monday kept 3.7 million dollars in a spending bill for lobbying to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling.
The appropriation includes three million dollars for an Oregon public relations company called Pac/West Communications. The firm would use the money for marketing campaigns in individual congressional districts and put pressure on lawmakers who are against drilling in the refuge.
The other 750-thousand dollars would go to Arctic Power, the state's ANWR lobbyist since 1992, to work within Washington's Beltway and try to persuade ANWR holdouts to vote for the measure this year.
Now if this isn't the penultimate of wealth re-distribution. The
Feds forceably take my money via the IRS, give it to the State via
earmarks and pork, the State then spends it on a private company
who's job, if done correctly, will result in further money being
forceably removed from my pocket.
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