Thursday, November 19, 2015

Residential Waste Burning

“The word on the street” is that Supervisor Lynn Morgan wants to regulate yard waste burning.  Any additional costs and prohibitions would unfairly fall on lower income people. Many feel that this represents the importation of city style into rural Amador County, and also assaults the reality and tradition of self reliance.

Lynn seems honestly concerned about the negative health effects for a limited number of people. And while undoubtedly some others will complaint about additional trash trucks rumbling down their quiet rural roads, there is nothing inherently wrong with a system of trash bins. She has the Air District Director involved. Certainly there are incremental costs already, plus the opportunity cost of not devoting time to something that helps more people. What percent of Upcountry residents really want to inhibit residential burn piles?

Even if the consumer doesn’t pay directly for the bins, someone has to. If the need or demand is sufficient, then the private sector would provide this service. Yard waste and slash can become salable compost, mulch, wood pellets and biomass electricity. A facility such as this has the perfect site, as many have suggested, at the former Pioneer cedar mill. The investment in high tension lines is lost, given its intended and prior use. The prior use as an organic tomato greenhouse came about not because there was a critical shortage of organic tomatoes, but because the grower got three government guaranteed loans each patching up the failure of the previous loan. They could not borrow themselves out of debt any more than we can directly or indirectly not pay a price for abandoning the high tension line investment. Wasted investment, however small, accumulates over time and contributes to economic decline and increased debt.

I see the broader picture here, and laugh to myself thinking that, undoubtedly, some progressives see the lack of a yard waste/slash facility as a “market failure”. But the opposite is true. Government involvement sealed the destiny of the cedar mill site. Are we creating or solving problems here? Will the approach of more government that probably hindered solving the problem once before solve it now?  Is there now no other way to look at a problem, real or imagined, than government involvement? I would bet that a businessperson risking their own money and doing a market study for unmet demand could tell rather quickly if this is an economic or subsidy endeavor.

And if nothing changes what is the cost? None of us are perfect, and we all define our activities thus. If a few people have to stay indoors a few days of the year, how horrendous is that? How important is efficient, low cost yard waste/slash destruction for fire safety? How important is local tradition that’s the smell of fall to many? What was once an individual response and perhaps adaption is now a public demand. What does this change in attitude signify for today and for tomorrow?

Copyright 2015, Mark L. Bennett

Monday, November 9, 2015

Free Puerto Rico!

Puerto Rico is bankrupt. The machinations currently underway in Washington and on Wall Street will be the subject of many books over the next few decades. Because Puerto Rican bonds are the best deal, both tax and income wise, large numbers of middle and upper middle class Americans, especially retirees, depend on them for income. But that income is in for severe reductions given the likely outcome of a Chapter 9/Detroit style bankruptcy. This all conveniently fits into the globalist elite/George Soros plan to destroy the American middle class. Not surprisingly, Jeb Bush, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama support this alternative. Given the uncertainty on the island, many Puerto Ricans have fled to Florida with the assistance of the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration. This may tip Florida’s electoral votes to the Democrat party.

Since the late 1960’s, when a friend of a friend of mine was injured by a terrorist bomb while shopping in a “bourgeois” department store, I have followed events in Puerto Rico. These terrorists, the FALN (Armed Forces for National Liberation), killed five people in well over a 100 bombings including the historic Fraunces Tavern where George Washington delivered his Farewell Address. They were eventually caught and given long prison sentences. But the Clinton crime family came to power and Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder granted clemency to what he called Puerto Rican Nationalists. They overruled everyone else in the Justice Department, all other concerned Federal agencies and Congress. The vote was 95 to 2 against in the Senate and 311 to 41 against in the House. The entire process was irregular, but President Bill Clinton claimed executive privilege when questioned. This travesty was intended to gain the Puerto Rican vote for Hillary’s Senate campaign.
Puerto Rico was acquired from Spain in 1898 and in 1917 Puerto Ricans were granted American citizenship. They could have easily become the Hong Kong or Singapore of the Caribbean, but Roosevelt’s Washington had a different idea. Following a junket at Joseph Stalin’s invitation and extolling the new soviet economy, and after running several failed early New Deal experiments Rexford Tugwell became governor of Puerto Rico. The welfare state he helped created is so “benign” that today a Puerto Rican can collect disability for the disability of not knowing English as a US citizen in a Spanish speaking semi autonomous Commonwealth.

Partly financed by the Government Development Bank, entities such as the Electric Power Authority, the Highway and Transportation Authority and the Aqueduct and Sewer Authority underpin the Puerto Rican economy. When these authorities borrowed money from the development bank they recorded the loan proceeds as revenue. Their books look good and they then borrowed more money usually by issuing bonds. Losses and inefficiencies were covered by more borrowing. The inevitable collapse finally came.  But Obama sees the solution by issuing a new “super bond”.

One has to admire the fulfillment of Tugwell’s utopian vision. Today in Puerto Rico the poverty rate is 45%, unemployment is over 12%, Medicaid is available to 46% of the population, 27% of the population is on welfare and just 60% of Puerto Ricans over age 25 have graduated high school. Only 32% of Puerto Ricans are employed with about 25% of those working for the government.  Despite all of this, a tax incentive package from Washington helped to hold things together before its termination. This attracted mostly pharmaceutical companies and helped lay the basis for the new growth industry of medical tourism.  The supply of organs for transplant is plentiful given the island’s murder rate 400% higher than the United States.

Free Puerto Rico! and an end to US colonial rule declares the Party for Socialism & Liberation in Puerto Rico. I agree, and know they are right about some existing and historic colonial trade regulations. In the world of real politics, some bailout/subsidy deal would probably be passed by Congress. But if it’s a once-only deal I would support it and find it far better than the Democrat movement of make Puerto Rico the 51st state. How many welfare monsters do we hard working taxpayers need support? I hope this experiment in dependency doomed to fail doesn’t foreshadow possible outcomes on the Mainland.

Copyright 2015, Mark L. Bennett

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

The Loyal Opposition Is Degenerating

She is a liberal feminist suing for “…assault, battery, false imprisonment…"because she"…went through channels…to block a hate speaker. Most of the involved faculty agreed with her. But two, perhaps only three faculty members who wanted Peled to speak bypassed all appropriate channels, and used their own faculty ‘turf’ to pay him $2,500. Now that the left has control of our universities, they have suspended democratic process and substituted physical violence. Violence only begets violence. Part one:


Here is part two: “I… found myself in the middle of my four opponents in a yelling match, and one of the men grabbed my arm. I tried to yank my arm free, could not, screamed 'TAKE YOUR HANDS OFF ME!!!' I tried to yank my arm free, could not, and screamed 'LET GO OF MY ARM!!!' I finally yanked free, though he never loosened his grip. At least 100 people were in the room… … but no one came forward… (the) assault left a very large and ugly bruise.” The professor who yanked her arm was also noted for treating his female students “… in misogynistic ways and … was scornful of feminist ideas.” 

So we have a left-wing professor who won awards for her diversity training and who is pro Israel subject to mob violence on a “free inquiry” college campus. The Muslims have moved in and trained the left to their techniques. So-called liberal professors now cover up for misogyny. To paraphrase our national anthem: We must be brave today if we want to remain free.