Archive

Author Archive

Charting a Course to Vastly Improved Education

March 16th, 2010 Dan No comments

CHARTER SCHOOLS AND STUDENT PERFORMANCE

To uncover what is wrong with American public schools one has to consider the following: The impact of restrictive collective bargaining agreements that prevent rewarding good teachers and removing ineffective ones, intrusive court interventions and useless teacher certification laws.  Charter schools were invented to address these problems, says Paul E. Peterson, a professor of government at Harvard University and a senior fellow with the Hoover Institution. 

Compared to district schools, they have numerous advantages, says Peterson: 

  • They are funded by governments, but they operate independently.
  • This means that charters must persuade parents to select them instead of a neighborhood district school.
  • That has happened with such regularity that today there are 350,000 families on charter-school waiting lists, enough to fill over 1,000 additional charter schools.  

According to a 2009 Education Next survey, the public approves of steady charter growth: 

  • Though a sizeable portion of Americans remain undecided, charter supporters outnumber opponents two to one.
  • Among African Americans, those who favor charters outnumber opponents four to one.
  • Even among public-school teachers, the percentage that favors charters is 37 percent, while the percentage that opposes them is 31 percent.  

To identify the long-term benefits of school choice, Harvard’s Martin West and German economist Ludger Woessmann examined the impact of school choice on the performance of 15-year-old students in 29 industrialized countries: 

  • They discovered that the greater the competition between the public and private sector, the better all students do in math, science and reading.
  • Their findings imply that expanding charters to include 50 percent of all students would eventually raise American students’ math scores to be competitive with the highest-scoring countries in the world.

What makes charters important today is less their current performance than their potential to innovate.  Educational opportunity is about to be revolutionized by powerful notebook computers, broadband and the open-source development of curricular materials (a la Wikipedia).  Curriculum can be tailored to the level of accomplishment each student has reached, an enormous step forward. 

If American education remains stagnant, such innovations will spread slowly, if at all.  If the charter world continues to expand, the competition between them and district schools could prove to be transformative, says Peterson. 

Source: Paul E. Peterson, “Charter Schools and Student Performance,” Wall Street Journal, March 16, 2010. 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Entitlements Demoralize the “Entitled” (& Taxpayers Who Support Them)

March 16th, 2010 Dan No comments

“The 10 Cannots” 

You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong. 
You cannot help small men by tearing down big men. 
You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich. 
You cannot lift the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer. 
You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than your income. 
You cannot further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatreds. 
You cannot establish security on borrowed money. 
You cannot build character and courage by taking away a man’s initiative and independence. 
You cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they could and should do for themselves. 
~William J. H. Boetcker, 1916 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

What Was That Again???

March 15th, 2010 Dan No comments

(Editor’s Note: If there has been a more absurd, preposterous and absolutely anti-Constitutional statement ever made by a Speaker of the House, you’d be hard-pressed to produce one: Last week, our illustrious Madame Speaker said: “We have to pass this bill so we can see what’s in it.”   What??  Do these people think that “We The People” are total idiots?   She is leading the charge to shred the Constitution and by-pass Congressional protocol– as set forth by said Constitution–altogether.)

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

A Spending Limit Amendment? Yes!

March 13th, 2010 Dan No comments

Time for a Spending Cap With Teeth

Jeb Hensarling and Mike Pence
E-mail Print

pence.jpgFiscal storm clouds are upon us. In five years, federal spending has skyrocketed to 24.7% from 19.9% of our economy. That’s the highest level since World War II. Borrowing has ballooned the national debt to $11.9 trillion from $7.3 trillion, a five-year increase equal to the accumulation of debt between President George Washington and President Bill Clinton.

hensarling.jpgUnfortunately, the long-term fiscal picture is worse. As the Baby Boom generation retires and the cost of health care continues to escalate, entitlement programs will cause federal spending to rise to 40% of our economy, double its post-World War II average. This is assuming that spending does not increase even further, an assumption that the trillion-dollar “stimulus” bill and the 84% increase in nondefense discretionary spending President Obama signed into law argues against.

The situation is dire, but don’t take our word for it. “U.S. fiscal policy is on an unsustainable path to an extent that cannot be solved by minor tinkering,” Congressional Budget Office Director Doug Elmendorf said recently. Former Comptroller General David Walker called the rising costs of government entitlements a “fiscal cancer” that threaten “catastrophic consequences for our country.”

Can we tax our way out of this problem? No.

“In order to pay for what we are on track to spend under current law, taxes would have to double. This would crush our economy and condemn future generations to a far lower standard of living.”

In order to pay for what we are on track to spend under current law, taxes would have to double. This would crush our economy and condemn future generations to a far lower standard of living. That is not an option.

Can we grow our way out? Unfortunately, no. Although pro-growth policies like simplifying the tax code and lowering rates are critical components of any solution, they alone are insufficient. Mr. Walker estimated it would take double-digit economic growth every year for the next 75 years in order to close the fiscal gap.

Can we continue to borrow our way out of the problem? Borrowing of that magnitude would drive up interest rates to unimaginable levels, crowding out borrowing opportunities for families and businesses. As Greece and other European countries like Spain and Portugal face default for their excess spending, and China lectures us on our fiscal irresponsibility, the idea of borrowing at still higher levels seems inconceivable.

Without spending discipline only one option remains: monetizing the debt, also known as inflation. Although Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has repeatedly said that this will not happen on his watch, many think it’s inevitable. If we do monetize the debt, inflation could be so high we may look back upon the Carter era with nostalgia.

“Winston Churchill once said that “Americans can always be trusted to do the right thing, once all other possibilities have been exhausted.” We’ve exhausted the possibilities. Now it’s time to do the right thing.”

Winston Churchill once said that “Americans can always be trusted to do the right thing, once all other possibilities have been exhausted.” We’ve exhausted the possibilities. Now it’s time to do the right thing.

That is why we are proposing a Spending Limit Amendment to the Constitution. This amendment would limit spending to one-fifth of the economy (our historical spending average since World War II). The limit could only be waived by a declaration of war or by a two-thirds congressional vote.

As with other constitutional amendments, Congress would be given the authority to enforce and implement it. But for the first time, the federal government would have a limit on its size and scope. The Spending Limit Amendment does not promise a particular spending plan about what programs to restrain and by how much. Rather, it puts a legal constraint on lawmakers present and future.

Some will say it should not be done now. But if not now, when?

Our spending problems are tantamount to generational theft and fundamentally alter the American ethic. We cannot have both unlimited government and unlimited opportunity.

This amendment is an effort to allow “We the People” the opportunity to fundamentally define the size of our government. Passing it would save future generations from lives of fewer opportunities and less freedom.

Mr. Hensarling, a Republican, is a congressman from Texas. Mr. Pence, a Republican, is a congressman from Indiana.

This piece first appeared in The Wall Street Journal

(Editor’s Note: This would be a huge step in the right direction on the way to requiring our elected representatives to approve only a balanced budget each fiscal year.   I applaud Reps. Hensarling and Pence for proposing this bold, common-sense step.)

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

A Tale of Two States: CA vs. TX

March 10th, 2010 Dan No comments

LOW-TAX TEXAS BEATS BIG-GOVERNMENT CALIFORNIA

Despite similarities in their histories and demographic makeup, Texas and California differ greatly in terms of their respective approaches to public policy.  With its low taxes and “hands-off” economic policies, Texas’ economy is booming and the state is experiencing a population inflow.  Meanwhile, California’s recent experience has been quite the opposite, thanks to its expensive and increasingly incompetent government, says Michael Barone, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). 

California has gone in for big government in a big way, says Barone: 

  • Democrats hold big margins in the legislature largely because affluent voters in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area favor their liberal positions on cultural issues.
  • Those Democratic majorities have obediently done the bidding of public employee unions to the point that state government faces huge budget deficits.
  • Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s attempt to reduce the power of the Democratic-union combine with referenda was defeated in 2005 when public employee unions poured $100 million — all originally extracted from taxpayers — into effective TV ads. 

Texas differs vividly from California, says Barone: 

  • Texas has low taxes — and no state income taxes — and a much smaller government.
  • Its legislature meets for only 90 days every two years, compared with California’s year-round legislature.
  • Its fiscal condition is sound and public employee unions are weak or nonexistent. 

In the meantime, Texas’ economy has been booming.  Unemployment rates have been below the national average for more than a decade, as companies small and large generate new jobs, says Barone. 

And Americans have been voting for Texas with their feet, says Barone: 

  • From 2000 to 2009, some 848,000 people moved from other parts of the United States to Texas, about the same number as moved in from abroad.
  • That inflow continued in 2008-09, when 143,000 Americans moved into Texas, more than double the number in any other state; at the same time 98,000 were moving out of California.
  • Texas is on the way to gain four additional House seats and electoral votes in the 2010 reapportionment. 

Source: Michael Barone, “Low-Tax Texas Beats Big-Government California,” Washington Examiner, March 7, 2010. 

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Can We Not Learn from Universal Health Care Elsewhere?

March 4th, 2010 Dan No comments

ALICE IN HEALTHCARE LAND

What is most like Alice in Wonderland is discussing medical care reform in the abstract, as if there are not already government-run medical care systems in this country and elsewhere.

Yet there seems to be remarkably little interest in examining how government-run medical care actually turns out– medically and financially– whether in Medicare, Medicaid, Veterans Administration hospitals in this country, or in government-run medical systems in other countries.

By all means look at other countries, but not just to see what to imitate. See how it actually turns out. Yet there seems to be an amazing lack of interest in examining what government-controlled medical care produces.

While our so-called health care “summit” last week was going on, British newspapers were carrying exposes of terrible, and often deadly, conditions in British hospitals under that country’s National Health Service. But this has not become part of our debate on what to expect from government-controlled medical care.

Such scandals are an old story under the National Health Service in Britain, one repeatedly producing fresh scandals that their newspapers carry, but ours ignore.

In addition to a whole series of National Health Service scandals in Britain over the years, the government-run medical system in Britain has far less high-tech medical equipment than there is in the United States. Neither in Britain, Canada, nor in other countries with government-run medical care systems can people get to see doctors, especially surgeons, in as short a time as in the United States.

It is not uncommon for patients in those countries to have to wait for months before getting operations that Americans get within weeks, or even days, after being diagnosed with a condition that requires surgery. You can always “bring down the cost of medical care” by having a lower level of quality or availability.

Editor’s Note:  This is an excerpt of an essay by Thomas Sowell from Tuesday, March 3, 2010.

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

A White House on 10 Million Acres?

March 4th, 2010 Dan No comments

WHITE HOUSE LAND GRAB

An unofficial memo from the White House has revealed plans for the federal government to seize more than 10 million acres from Montana to New Mexico, halting job creating activities like ranching, forestry, mining and energy development.  This land grab would dry up tax revenue that is essential for funding schools, firehouses and community centers, says Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.). 

The 21-page document marked “Internal Draft-NOT FOR RELEASE,” names 14 different lands President Obama could completely close for development by unilaterally designating them as “monuments” under the 1906 Antiquities Act.  Rep. Robert Bishop (R-Utah) made the memo public because he did not want another unilateral land grab by the White House, like what happened under former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, says DeMint: 

  • Using the Antiquities Act, President Carter locked up more land than any other president had before him, taking more than 50 million acres in Alaska despite strong opposition from the state.
  • President Clinton used the authority 22 times to prohibit hunting, recreational vehicles, mining, forestry and even grazing in 5.9 million acres scattered around the country (the law allowed him to single-handedly create 19 new national monuments and expand three others without consulting anyone).
  • In Nevada, the Obama Administration might make another monument in the Heart of the Great Basin because it supposedly is a “center of climate change scientific research.”
  • In Colorado, the government is considering designating the Vermillion Basin as a monument because it is “currently under the threat of oil and gas development.”  

The government currently owns 650 million acres, or 29 percent of the nation’s total land.  Federal bureaucrats should not be wasting time thinking up ways to acquire more, especially in the middle of a recession, says DeMint. 

Taking the nation’s resources offline will stifle job creation and dry up tax revenues.  If anything, the government should be selling land off, not locking more up, says DeMint. 

Source: Jim DeMint, “White House Land Grab,” Washington Times, March 2, 2010. 

For text:

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/mar/02/white-house-land-grab/

Categories: Media Coverage Tags:

Bunning Under Attack for $trong $tand

March 2nd, 2010 Dan No comments

Senator Jim Bunning (R), the 2nd term junior Senator from Kentucky, has been roundly criticized by the Democratic candidate for the Senate, Daniel Mongiardo, for blocking additional deficit spending.   What the main stream media does not point out is that Bunning has suggested the use of Stimulus Funds to cover the extension of benefits rather than reaching into tax-payers’ pockets for an additional $10 billion.  Other candidates have weighed in on this issue:

  • “I support Senator Jim Bunning.  Frankly, unemployment benefits are currently 99 weeks or almost two years. While I support extending the benefits for a short period of time longer, we must find a way to pay for those benefits.  I do not support extending unemployment benefits beyond two years.  Even Germany limits unemployment benefits to one year.  Benefits here in America are exceeding those offered in the most liberal countries of Europe.  Two years of government support is not a safety net. It is an entitlement program. I am tired of paying for entitlement programs that continue well beyond a compassionate need.”  (Bill Johnson, Press Release, 3.2.10)
  • “Jim Bunning is being unfairly attacked for saying we should spend money already set aside for benefits rather than borrowing more.   He deserves our support and he is going to get it.” (Rand Paul)
  • “I would proudly stand up to ensure that programs are paid for and think that this is further evidence of mismanagement of the Senate by Harry Reid.  If we had not wasted time debating and passing a pet bill for Reid, we would not have been in the situation that led to the delay.  I agree with Senators Bunning and McConnell that the government has a responsibility to pay for its programs and a good place to start would be to cut funding from the stimulus in order to pay for the extension of unemployment benefits.  If the stimulus had created jobs as promised, then we would not need more unemployment insurance.” (Trey Grayson)

Editor’s note:  Thanks to these candidates for swiftly stepping out and supporting Senator Bunning in what has been a career-long quest to support fiscal responsibility.

Categories: Media Coverage Tags:

Alternatives to Government Healthcare Takeover

March 2nd, 2010 Dan No comments

(Editor’s Note:  As has been well-pointed out, so much of the healthcare reform debate has revolved around HOW government should accomplish it, very few people are asking IF it is the government’s role at all.   It is not.   This is yet another usurpation of state’s rights by the federal government to intrude and commandeer an industry it has no right to take over.)

“We think it’s critical that power shifts to the American consumer and away from government, employers and insurers, as evidence shows medical care prices come down when patients pay directly. Government should offer tax relief, such as refundable tax credits, to encourage private health insurance purchasing — especially for low-income families. Similar ideas, like those in the Patients’ Choice Act … are important for Americans to consider. We would do well also to consider creative ideas such as changing federal payments to state-based medicaid plans to individual vouchers or expanding health savings accounts, as has been done in South Carolina.”  (Dr. Scott W. Atlas, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and a professor at Stanford University Medical Center, and South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford).

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

How’s The TEA Party in Kentucky Doing?

March 1st, 2010 Dan 1 comment

Among likely Republican primary voters, 67% have a favorable opinion of the Tea Party movement and 9% have an unfavorable opinion. When voters were asked if they agree with the movement’s core values of fiscal responsibility, constitutionally limited government and free markets, 73% agreed and only 7% disagreed. Support for the core values of the Tea Party movement is slightly stronger among men than women, 76% to 70%. Regionally, the Tea Party movement is especially strong in the 3rd and 6th Congressional districts with 87% and 85% of voters agreeing with the core values of the movement respectively. Among voters that have a favorable image of the Tea Party movement, Paul leads Grayson 53% to 20%.

 

Categories: Media Coverage Tags: