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Junk Food Junkie?
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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As far as unions are concerned almost everything they support I am against. When Davis was Governor they passed laws that did not allow Silicon Valley companys to have a four day work week (with ten hour days). They pushed through a bill that would not allow Costco to sell food (luckily even Davis couldn't stomach that one), and they are always trying to limit the state governments ability to do competitive bidding for contracts. In addition, on a national scale the biggest road blocks to free trade deals (NAFTA, WTO and not the Central American Free Trade act) are the Unions. Unions don't care about creating new jobs, they just care about holding on to the ones that exist - no matter what the cost. Privatising Social Secuirty is the biggest free market issue of the day. And we know which side the Democrats are on in that. Deficit spending's effects on interest rates The effects of rising oil prices Health care costs Pension regulation (or the lack thereof) On the above issues I don't see how the Dems are any better than the Republicans. |
Junk Food Junkie?
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This just in.............
Well I am off the hook. It passed. That prior email was from late last night. I guess Bonnie wanted me to talk to the Assembly members early this morning (clearly she is not familiar with my hours). See if I had not procrastinated I would have wasted my time calling Assembly members, when my lobbying was not needed for passing. And I wouldn't have been able to share all my wisdom with you guys (no snickering).
Children of California Get Much Needed Assistance AB 569 Passes Assembly Floor SACRAMENTO—AB 569, authored by Assemblywoman Bonnie Garcia, to address school nutrition received bipartisan support in the Assembly today. The bill would attack the epidemic of childhood obesity head on by requiring foods sold during breakfast and lunch periods to be sold as full meals. It would also restrict the sale of junk foods such as chips, candies and soft drinks and encourage the sale of fresh fruits and vegetables instead. "The statistics are frightening and action is needed now to reduce the incidence of childhood obesity, diabetes and heart disease," stated Garcia. "The action taken by the California State Assembly sends a message that we will make children's health a priority over profits gained from fatty, greasy foods." Health experts claim since the early 1970’s, childhood obesity rates has more than doubled for preschoolers aged 2-5 and tripled for teenagers aged 12 to 19 years. According to the California Center for Public Health Advocacy, 26.5% of children in grades 5, 7 and 9 in California are overweight. The consequences for these children are many, including low self-esteem, poor body image, discrimination and poor health. The bill will now move to the Senate Education Committee for a hearing before moving to the Senate Floor for a vote. # # # |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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I have a hard time faulting the GOP for rising oil prices, but would not that both prongs of the Admininstration's energy policy vis-a-vis oil -- invading Iraq and drilling in ANWR -- are terrible policy. On health-care, please go back and compare the GOP drug benefit to the (cheaper, and more effective) alternative the Dems were pushing. The GOP plan was all about subsidizing big pharma -- exactly the sort of corporate giveaway that your party is now all about. Meanwhile, they have no plan to do anything about health care costs. And the next time we meet, I'll see if you can tell me with a straight face that Republicans are just as interested as Democrats in forcing companies to properly fund pension plans. |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Mmmmm, chocolate cake. |
Withering Heights (of HypocrAsy)
Am I the only one who finds it vomitizing that the same bunch of pseudo-faux-intellectual numnutted left-winged euro-american pussies that are up in arms about the toilet flushing of the vile Koran are the same idiots that thought "Piss Christ" was art?
http://www.signusa.com/images/stickers/vinyl/1812.gifhttp://www.skally.net/stuff/dog.gif http://www.eretzyisroel.org/~jkatz/koran.gif |
Another reason why I support Republicans and not Democrats. From Assemblyman Mark Wyland - Republican
SCORE THIS ONE: UNIONS 1, EVERYBODY ELSE 0 A funny thing happened in the Labor & Employment Committee on April 20, 2005. I presented a bill to the committee which says simply that every regulation and posting required to be posted in the workplace or at the jobsite pursuant to state law shall be written in plain language so that the content is easily understandable by both the employer and every employee. You’d think that a labor union would want their workers to understand their rights, but when a compromise was proposed in committee by the labor-friendly chairman, the idea got vetoed. No, the common sense reform was not vetoed by the Governor, but by a representative of a public employee union who stood up in the back of the committee room--off camera--and made gestures to liberal committee members to ensure that all discussion of compromise was quashed. Everybody in the room saw what she did. And the majority quickly killed discussion and the bill died 2-5 on a strict party-line vote. This is what I mean by Special Interests controlling your government in Sacramento. AND THIS ONE: LAWYERS 246 BILLION, TAXPAYER 0 According to a recent study, the U.S. tort system cost taxpayers $246 billion in 2003, which translates to an $845 per person tax, plus billions more in indirect costs. The sum is based on benefits paid or expected to be paid to third parties, defense costs, and administrative expenses and is passed on to consumers through increased costs for good and services. U.S. consumers pay directly for the high cost of going to court in higher liability insurance premiums because liability insurance rates reflect what insurance companies pay out for their policyholders’ legal defense and any judgments against them. And they pay indirectly in higher prices for goods and services since businesses pass on to consumers the expenses they incur in protecting themselves against lawsuits, including the cost of commercial liability insurance. I think the following facts speak for themselves: California’s legal system was ranked the 5th worst in the country in a recent survey by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform. [Source: Harris Interactive Inc. 2004 State Liability Rankings Study, March, 2004] At current levels, U.S. tort costs are equivalent to a 5% tax on wages. [Source: Tillinghast-Towers Perrin U.S. Tort Costs: 2003 Update. Trends and Findings on the U.S. Tort System, December, 2003] 1.5 million lawsuits were filed in California in 2002. [Source: 2003 Court Statistics Report by the Judicial Council of California] California school districts spend $80 million annually to defend, inure, and pay for tort and other liability claims. [Source: Cal-Tax Digest, "Local Government Liability: A Major Cost and Exposure," February 1999] California has dropped from 39th to 44th on the list of small-business friendly states due in part to its litigation environment according to a study compiled by the Small Business Survival Committee [Source: Orange County Register, August 13, 2001] If the earnings of trial lawyers were combined, they would amass 50% more than Microsoft or Intel and twice that of Coca-Cola [Source: Trial Lawyers, Inc., A Report on the Lawsuit Industry in America, 2003] *source: Insurance Information Institute; Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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"YAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!" |
Yeah, I know no one will read this through.
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On the defined benefit side, the largest plans are on the whole quite well funded. I don't have data on smaller plans (from smaller employers), but the largest plans cover the majority of people who have a defined benefit pension anyway -- smaller employers with smaller plans tend to terminate the plans if they move from defined benefit to defined contribution. I'm not sure the system right now has the right balance between letting employers fund more heavily in good years to protect them against the lean years, when the value of investments in the pension fund will fall, leading to underfunding, but the company is dealing with a bad economy and is not in the best position to put money there. On the other hand, when the funding rules were looser, companies would use their pension plans as a tax shelter -- funds they put in were deductible. I have to say that while I question some of the things IBM did with their pension plan, the uninformed witch-hunt on cash balance plans in Congress led to them taking the rather extreme step of stopping future accruals under the defined benefit plan altogether, and putting everone in a (richer) defined contribution plan. This is effectively doing to their employees what Bush wants to do to SS -- making their retirements dependent on their own investment abilities and the whims of the market. Nonetheless, Medicare and corporate retiree health coverage and, by extension, healthcare in general are by far the more pressing problems. I wish people would fucking stop focusing so exclusively on SS and pensions. Yes, Ty, I know you mentioned healthcare. I meant in general. |
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No, because -- like the rest of the GOP -- you see no need to consider policy, since you've got a nice ideology to turn to.[/QUOTE] Yes that irrational ideology that says that it is a bad idea to have health care run by the same group that runs the DMV and the Post Office. Quote:
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Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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[/QUOTE] People would be able to count on Social Security if it was invested properly. And how does Bush's plan only benefit the fat cats? You are the one reading talking points now. [QUOTE] People can count on Social Security because the government guarantees it. If you privitize things, there are no guarantees. Fat cats would not be harmed by this, because they have other resources to fall back on if SS isn't there. But most people want the insurance SS provides. You cannot run the numbers in a way that makes what Bush wants to do to SS look attractive to most people. That is why the more Bush talks, the fewer people support him on this. The only people who are solidly with him are those who -- like you, apparently -- have an ideological problem with Social Security itself. Average Americans are not with you on this. (Which Bush knows, which is why he barely talked about this issue until after the election.) Quote:
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I don't want get fringey going again (no mas, fringey, you win), so I will simply repeat my understanding that federal regulators have permitted companies to get away with underfunding their pensions, which will leave lots of workers (and the federal government) holding the bag. To the extent that the federal government is letting companies walk away from their obligations to these workers, there's a real problem. Quote:
That said, if you want to prove that something like workers comp is a problem for the economy, you're going to have to come up with something more than "they say it's a problem." Where there's smoke, sometimes there's a smoke machine. |
Breaking economic principles down to a level so basic that they are meaningless.
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