Live Like Obama Never Happened

As Shout Bits completes its second year of commentary, some readers have justly criticized it for becoming more negative in the face of Washington’s vigorous assault on freedom and prosperity. Shout Bits can only plead that it had no idea how radical and high-handed Pres. Obama would be. A leftist, certainly, but Obama has also shredded property rights (e.g. the Chrysler theft and BP shakedown) and any semblance of ethics (the various blatant payoffs to lawmakers to enact socialized medicine). It is hard to remain optimistic even in the greatest nation. Still, here are some words of hope: everything Obama has done will be undone eventually, and the best advice is to live like Obama never happened.

Of course Obama and his Democrat lieutenants have dealt a serious blow to the US with their regulation, spending, and socialist takeovers, but their excesses are nothing new. Countries like Russia already tried the collectivist route and failed. Other countries like Greece and much of Old Europe tried socialism-light, and are only now failing. Obama’s socialist experiment comes very late to the party, with the US emulating Europe just as Europe is ready to give in and admit failure. While it has taken 60 to 70 years for Europe’s socialist experiment to fail, Obama’s experiment will not last nearly as long. Europe socialized long before its debts became un-payable, but the US enacted the final piece of socialist paradise when its debts were already clearly out of hand. The bill for Washington excess will likely come due before Obamacare even fully takes effect.

Reality will force the failure and repeal of everything Obama has done, along with the creeping socialist agenda of nearly every modern President before him. If not, the US itself will fail like Greece. Either way Obama’s theft or destruction of the US system of freedom and prosperity will not stand even to the end of the new decade. As an absolute certainty, something will change, and that is good news.

Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged tells the story of a capitalist who gave up on a world eerily like Obama’s US. Galt, Shrugged’s hero, built a new liberal paradise of capitalism and property rights. Galt’s hidden mountain paradise, however, is as impractical as Rand’s book is tedious. Outside of idealized fiction there is simply no choice but to carry on.

Obama’s policies, every one, will fail and be abandoned. Whether Obama is replaced with a return to a rule of law, individual rights, and a capitalist system or anarchy is the choice of businesspeople and libertarians. Even though Obamacare ironically encourages people to drop their health care, pay for it anyway. Even though Obama will double the taxes on investments next year, invest in the US’s future. Even though Obama’s spending squeezes the profit out of employing people, look for talent among the unemployed. Even though Obama has claimed the lion’s prize of the wealth of this nation, for now accept what little Washington has yet to claim. If only for show, keep the capitalist engine running because someday soon the US will abandon socialism and today’s optimists will be best poised to prosper.

In other words, keep living like Obama never happened because collectivist experiments always fail and someone always emerges from the wreckage to restore prosperity. Accepting Washington as the new guardian of our lives will only extend Obama’s lost years.

Colorado Is Broke

Whenever someone says “you know I am good for it,” or “I am going to pay you back really soon,” or “I am just a little short right now,” it is safe to conclude that you are not going to be paid and that the person to whom you foolishly lent money is broke. When companies have a ‘temporary cash shortage,’ even for a day or two, they go bankrupt.  No matter how the mainstream media wants to spin it, this week the State Government of Colorado went broke.

On Thursday, the Denver Post reported that Colorado was “temporarily short of money” and was suspending Medicaid payments. Colorado would “begin catching up on payments” next month. Try that with a cable TV bill. Further some taxpayers are still waiting on their income tax refunds which should have been paid by mid-May. This replay of California’s fiscal mismanagement is outrageous and will have consequences.

Among the many questions the Post failed to ask when it parroted the State’s official line is why did Gov. Ritter decide to cripple Medicaid providers? Why didn’t Ritter withhold the union dues the State collects from its employees’ paychecks? Why didn’t Ritter withhold payment on the various union construction projects around the state? Why didn’t Ritter withhold the paychecks of CU professors? How did Ritter decide to place the entire burden of Colorado’s illiquidity on the shoulders of small businesses that provide healthcare to the poor? Considering the State’s $18 billion budget, those small businesses must wonder how they got singled out at the bottom of the political slag heap.

The small businesses, which have payrolls and rent, yet must wait at least an extra month to get paid, just got the message: the State is no more reliable a customer than any other deadbeat. Worse still, the delayed payments came with little notice; even some deadbeats let their creditors know the check is not in the mail. The State has sent the same message to every business: don’t count on timely payments. When dealing with unreliable customers, businesses do one thing: raise prices. One of the advantages of government contracting used to be reliable payment terms, a factor that worked to the advantage of taxpayers. By punishing small businesses instead of his union cronies, Ritter has driven up the cost to run the Government for years to come. Look for Colorado’s already lower range investment grade ‘AA’ credit rating to be reviewed.

A properly run $18 billion enterprise like Colorado’s public budget should never run out of cash, and to do so is illegal. The Colorado Constitution forbids the budget deficits and debt that Ritter has illegally enacted by riding his payable accounts. Someone should lose his job and possibly be criminally punished. Ritter is simply not permitted to run a deficit and finance it by illegally withholding payments to a politically unpopular body. Despite this, the Post moved on with no further questions.

Taxpayers who are still waiting on their state refunds have also been sent a message: don’t pay estimated taxes throughout the year. If Colorado can’t pay its debts and arbitrarily decides to withhold tax refunds, the clear strategy is to never extend credit to the Government in the first place. The penalty for underpaying estimated state income taxes is less onerous than the prospect of an indefinitely delayed refund. Ritter, by singling out taxpayers and small businesses for his malfeasance, has probably reduced the quarterly float of cash Colorado used to enjoy when it was responsibly managed.

How is it that Colorado went broke? The sole reason is the repeal of TABOR, the law that requires Colorado to grow its budget no faster than inflation and population put together. Once these spending restrictions were lifted, the Democrats running the State went wild with new excessive spending on ‘green’ initiatives, union mandates, and public employee growth. When the recession hit, the same Democrats resorted to illegal tax increases and budget cuts. The State went on a bender right up to the recession, yet when reality forced Ritter back to earth, the adjustments were called cuts instead of a return to common sense. The reality is that Colorado’s politicians of both parties irresponsibly assumed that they could spend as if there would never be another recession, and when the bill came due Thursday, it was small businesses that were left stuck with the tab. Colorado politicians need to learn their place and stop ruining the good name of the people they serve.

A Shockingly Ill Conceived Idea pt. II

As ShoutBits reported nine months ago, some Congressmen want to unleash an unaccountable tyrant on investors in the form an autonomous SEC. Today the New York Times has reported that, surprise, a bunch of trial lawyers are pushing this idea as hard as they can. This bill must not become law if the US is to continue to be the place where people raise capital and grow commerce.

The lawyers argue that SEC is under the capricious power of Congress to set its budget, and therefore it cannot perform its duties. If the SEC were to self-fund with the fines and fees it collects, it would better police the financial markets, implying that Congress is corrupt and too cozy with Wall Street. As officers of the law, these lawyers should know that it is Congress’s Constitutional duty to decide how public money is spent and that creating unaccountable bulldogs is not legal.

Why do a bunch of securities lawyers want the new law, and why is the NYT blog sympathizing with them? A renegade SEC that sues everyone in sight to pay its bills is the perfect partner for trial lawyers. These trial lawyers would end up doing much of the SECs work – researching and suing every security broker that makes even the slightest mistake – and earning big fees for doing so. With the SEC incented to prosecute every minor case that now is settled through cooperation, trial lawyer’s billable hours will skyrocket.

Lawyers corrupting the Federal Government to weasel more damages from business? That is business as usual. After all, Obamacare does nothing to reign in frivolous lawsuits, not even one page out of 2,600. Sarbanes-Oxley did nothing to prevent the destructive excesses of Fannie Mae, but it created a legion of new lawyers and CPAs devoted to the new regulations. Nearly every new law is an employment bill for the trial lawyers who own the Democratic Party, and Sen. Schumer’s autonomous SEC bill is no different.