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Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Christie’s proposal is half way to education freedom

22 Jun

Governor Christie’s public school aid funding proposal would treat each child “equally,” that is, the state would send every school district the same amount for each child in its school district.  Most school districts would get a huge increase in state aid so that should mean substantially property tax relief for suburban taxpayers, assuming of course the school districts pass along the new aid in the form of lower property taxes.  The criticism from the usual suspects is disingenuous.  Instead of applauding the fact that many of their constituents would finally get property tax relief,  which was the goal of the 1976 income tax, suburban legislators are voicing their objections, because urban districts would be “shortchanged.”  

Despite what the state constitution regarding education funding and a series of state Supreme Court rulings, there is no reason education should be provided by the government.  In fact, education should be provided by teachers, parents and others, without the need for taxpayers to shell out an obscene amount of money for an education monopoly.  The case for delinking government and education has been made by several analysts such as Sheldon Richman, John Taylor Gatto, and Samuel Blumenfeld, among others.

Education  socialism is expensive and has failed to educate urban students effectively.  It is time for education freedom.  Christie gets us one step closer.

 

 Seeking to bypass the state Supreme Court, upend three decades of education funding and lower property tax  bills, Governor Christie will spend the summer campaigning for a sweeping new plan to spend the same  amount of money on every student in the state — regardless of where they live.

Source: School aid: Christie proposes equal funding statewide – News – NorthJersey.com

 
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Posted in Democrats, Education, Income taxes, New Jersey, Politics, Property taxes, State government

 

Clinton money machine and politics

22 Jun

Hillary and Bill Clinton  are the ultimate political entrepreneurs.  In other words, they have used their political positions to enrich themselves.  The hackers have all the goods on them.    

 

Moments ago the newswires lit up with news that the Clinton Foundation was among the organizations breached by suspected Russian hackers (who in reality is just one hacker, and he is Romanian). Among the numerous documents leaked is a file titled

Source: Clinton Foundation “Hacked By Russians”, “Foundation Vulnerabilities” Document Leaked | Zero Hedge

 
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Posted in Crime, Democrats, Federal Government, Foreign policy, Military-industrial complex, Politics, Presidential campaign

 

Elizabeth Warren

17 Jun

Never in doubt, but mostly always wrong.  The champion of the poor would make them poorer with her policies.

 
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Posted in Federal Government, Politics, Welfare state

 

The battle over taxes in Trenton

16 Jun

A bipartisan group of New Jersey lawmakers are balking raising the “gas tax” and eliminating the estate tax. (There are additional tax cutting provisions in the gas tax bill, which would reduce taxes on average families by more than $1000 per year.) It is understandable why Republican legislators do not want to raise the “gas tax”; it would shatter the myth they are paragons of fiscal conservatism. Democrats, on the other, hand not want to eliminate the estate tax claiming it is a giveaway to the state’s wealthiest residents.

Sen. Raymond Lesniak, who may run for the Democratic nomination for governor next year, said the compromise proposal on the table is an example of “tax injustice.” All taxes are unjust because they are coercive. Taxes are an involuntary exchanges (legalized theft), hence they violate a fundamental principle that supposedly we all supposedly embrace, theft is wrong. Yet when it comes to taxes the notion of justice is thrown out the window and replaced with “needs” of the people, but more accurately the “needs” of the government.

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Posted in estate tax, Gas tax, New Jersey, Politics

 

Hillary’s emails matter

14 Jun

A historian puts Hillary’s emails in perspective.

 
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Posted in Politics, Presidential campaign

 

Will it be Trump vs. Biden?

14 Jun

Christoper Manion says yes.  

 
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Posted in Politics, Presidential campaign

 

Abolish political parties

12 Jun

In her column today Montclair State University political science and law professor Brigid Callahan Harrison calls for New Jersey state GOP to disavow Donald Trump’s presidential run. Prof. Harrison asserts that Trump’s intemperate remarks about Judge  Gonzalo Curiel, who was presiding over a lawsuit against Trump University, is enough reason for Republicans to abandon the Donald’s unorthodox campaign for the president.

At the end of her column Harrison quotes House Speaker Paul Ryan who states that the presidential campaign should be about ideas, not personal attacks. I totally agree.  Presidential candidates should offer their “vision” for the Nation and let the voters decide who should occupy the Oval Office.  So instead of two major political parties dominating the presidential campaign, let’s abolish political parties and have individuals run for the presidency on the vision thing.  Let’s eliminate presidential party primaries and have candidates go directly to the people in a general election campaign.

In this year’s race for the White House we would have several Democrats and more than a dozen Republicans trying to win the hearts and minds of the American people.   As far as how this will play out of  in the electoral college is anyone’s guess. However, shortening the political campaign would be a great relief to the American people.  And presidential candidates would be forced not to rely on the party bosses to grab their respective parties nomination but go directly to the American people for support.

With a substantial number of Americans unhappy with the presumptive choices who will be the Democratic and Republican nominees,  abolishing political parties would create a more level playing field in the presidential campaign.

 
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Posted in New Jersey, Political parties, Politics, Presidential campaign

 

The Clinton cash machine

10 Jun

Hillary and Bill Clinton have parlayed their “government service” into a veritable money stream river.  This essay highlights the machinations of Clinton, Inc.

 

 
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Posted in Politics, Presidential campaign

 

Hillary wants to run our lives

10 Jun

In a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee said the  following about  Donal Trump:  “While he may have some catchy soundbites, his statements on the economy are dangerously incoherent.  They are deeply misguided, and they reflect an individual who is temperamentally unfit to manage the American economy.” (emphasis added)

In one sentence Hillary reveals her economic illiteracy.   The POTUS cannot “manage” the U.S. economy.  No one in the world can manage any economy, let alone our $19 trillion economy.  Imagine if someone said “I can manage your town’s economy.  Just give me the power and I will create a vibrant downtown with great boutiques, restaurants,and other shops.”  An economy thrives when entrepreneurs have the freedom to produce, distribute and sell and what consumers want.  This is called free enterprise. Politicians cannot create wealth.  Government cannot create wealth.  Murray Rothbard pointed this out decades ago. Free people are the engine of the economy.  

Throughout the primary campaign, I did not hear Hillary articulate any  statement that indicates she knows how an economy really works.  She should read Kel Kelly’s essay.  So should Bernie and Donald. After they read the essay, they would not make foolish remarks about the economy, interest rates, banking, etc.

As the general  election unfolds, I will continue to highlight Hillary’s economic illiteracy.  Yesterday, President Obama stated  in his endorsement of her candidacy, she is the most qualified individual ever to run for president.  That is a true statement, if economic illiteracy is the criteria by which to measure a “qualified” presidential candidates.

 

 

 
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Posted in Federal Government, Politics, Presidential campaign

 

Liberty transcends race and ethnicity

06 Jun

A letter in today’s Record (Bergen County, NJ) sets the record straight, libertarianism is not a philosophy for only white people.

Libertarians appeal to all

Regarding “Libertarians could hurt candidate, but whom?” (Other Views, June 1):

The Op-Ed article by Bloomberg News Columnist Albert Hunt stated “there probably wouldn’t be much support for Libertarians among Latinos and African-Americans…”

What a patronizing and misguided statement. Is Hunt suggesting that individual liberty has no appeal to minority voters? Racial and ethnic minorities have to deal with government interference in their lives on a daily basis just like everyone else and perhaps more so.

Racial profiling of minorities is a direct outgrowth of the “war on drugs” which we Libertarians would end. Your life and body belong to you, not the state. That idea is the basis of what our country is supposed to be all about.

The Libertarian Party and movement are both based on the idea that we are all individuals — regardless of race, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender choice or orientation. Our party and movement is open to all and always has been. If you’re for freedom, we’re for you.

Mark Richards

West Milford, June 1

 
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Posted in Civil liberties, Ethnicity, Gender, Politics, Race

 

A reading list for all Americans

06 Jun

Lew Rockwell has put together a list of books which all Americans should read to learn why liberty and free markets are the best way to create a harmonious society.

As he posted on his blog:

“Recently, on the Kate Dalley Show, I promised a list of 10 shorter works for the intelligent layman interested in learning about Austrian economics and libertarianism. After all, our first job—to make resistance possible–is to educate ourselves. Here is a great start:”

PS Many of these titles can be read at www.mises.org for free.  Bernie would be proud—more free stuff!

 
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Posted in Education, Federal Reserve, Human rights, Income taxes, Politics, The Warfare State, Warfare state

 

Obsessing over race, ethnicity and gender

05 Jun

Brigid Harrison, professor of political science and law at Montclair State University, makes several observations in her column (The Record) today, “A look at our Legislature’s make up”. Harrison focuses on a new report issued by Stockton University’s William J. Hughes Center for Public policy comparing the demographic characteristics of New Jersey legislators with those of the general population. The report points out that Legislature is 83% white, 15% African American, 8% Hispanic (of any race) and 2% Asian. New Jersey’s population is 69% white, 14% African-American, 18% Hispanic and nearly 9% Asian.

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Posted in Ethnicity, Gender, New Jersey, Politics, Race

 

A New York-New Jersey presidential race: Trump/Doherty vs. Clinton/Booker

04 Jun

If the American people want even more excitement in the presidential campaign this fall, Donald Trump should pick New Jersey state senator Mike Doherty, who endorsed The Donald way back in October when the pundits gave him no chance of winning the nomination, and Hillary Clinton, presuming she becomes the democratic presidential candidate despite Bernie Sanders’ vow to go to the Philadelphia convention and pull off the upset of all time, and survives the FBI’s investigation of her tenure at the State Department, should pick U.S. Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey as her running mate.

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Posted in Federal Government, New Jersey, Politics, Presidential campaign

 

End-of-Year Update

24 Dec

New Jersey:

Bridgegate: I live one mile south of the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee where the notorious three-tollbooth lanes designated for local traffic were restricted to only one for a few days in early September.   Traffic in Fort Lee was horrendous.  Gov. Christie asserted that these three tollbooths were used only for Fort Lee residents. This is a gross mischaracterization of the traffic going to the bridge during rush hour.  Motorists from Fort Lee, Cliffside Park, Fairview, Edgewater, Guttenberg and probably other communities use that particular entrance to the GW.

What were Port Authority officials thinking when they restricted access to the bridge claiming they were conducting a traffic study to see the impact of closing two lanes?

Transportation studies can be conducted using a computer simulation to determine the effects of the lane closures without disrupting the actual traffic of an area being analyzed. In short, there was no need to close two of the lanes. Whatever the motives were of Messrs. Wildstein and Baroni, two smart Christie appointed officials who resigned in the wake of this brouhaha, the fact is politicians should not run key sectors of the economy.  Why? Because their motives and goals are much different than managers of businesses who have to satisfy shareholders or risk their own capital.

The bottom line is very simple government should get out of the transportation businessAt the very least, transportation professionals not political appointees should be making decisions about the use of bridges, tunnels and highways.

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Steve Lonegan again is not ready for prime time

10 Aug

According to Politico, a Lonegan campaign account tweeted “Cory Booker’s foreign policy debate prep notes” showing areas of Newark circled with names of African, Middle Eastern and other nations. Lonegan campaign spokesman, Rick Shaftan, stated that a campaign worker made the unauthorized tweet.  Nonsense.  No communication leaves the Lonegan campaign unless Shaftan wrote it or authorized it.  End of story.

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Posted in New Jersey, Politics