Archive for May, 2008

Win this fight for our parks

Hi Brian,
Thanks to the more than 1,500 people who raised their voices to keep all of our state parks open and the more than 50 people who sent us their personal stories about their state park memories, we’ve come a long way since the governor’s announcement on April Fool’s Day.

Now, with Memorial Day just past, it is time for the governor to level with us — and let us know if his plans will make sure we can continue to camp and swim in our state parks this summer.

I am proud of the strong response of people like you; we’ve generated over 7,000 e-mails to our elected leaders, and shown that the public can fight back.

But we’re not there yet. The DEP is still exploring all of the options on how to make our state parks “self-supporting.” And just ahead of us is a big fight to get permanent dedicated funding for open space preservation — an issue Gov. Corzine has consistently ducked.

We know we can win this fight for our parks and campgrounds — and eventually for our other open spaces, but it’s not going to be easy. It’s going to take hard work — and money, to keep the fire burning, and really put pressure on our elected leaders to solve our current state parks and open space crisis.

Can you chip in with $35, $50, $75 or more?

https://www.environmentnewjersey.org/action/preservation/donate-today?id4=ES

I’ve really been blown away by how many of you are passionate about standing up for our environmental treasures across the state. We created quite the buzz around this issue, and we’ve come too far to stop now.

Keeping all of our state parks — and our campgrounds and swimming areas — open would be a great victory, but ensuring permanent open space funding for generations to come — now that would put the icing on the cake. Please chip in whatever you can afford:

https://www.environmentnewjersey.org/action/preservation/donate-today?id4=ES

And as we’ve fought Gov. Corzine to keep all state parks open, we’ve also reminded state leaders that the stop-gap funding for open space preservation is dwindling.

These are big challenges for the environment, and we need public support and financial resources to continue these fights for our parks and open space.

Can you chip in $35 or more to help us win on these campaigns and help fund the work of Environment New Jersey?

https://www.environmentnewjersey.org/action/preservation/donate-today?id4=ES

More than ever, we need your help to protect our parks. Please send this along to as many of your friends as possible.

Sincerely,

Dena Mottola
Environment New Jersey Executive Director
DenaM@EnvironmentNewJersey.org
http://www.environmentnewjersey.org

P.S. Thanks again for your support. Please feel free to share this e-mail with your family and friends.

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Hey Corzine, how about cutting no show jobs instead?

A statewide program that dispenses free help and advice to entrepreneurs and small businesses stands to lose its entire $1 million funding under Gov. Jon Corzine’s proposed state budget — and that cut will trigger an additional loss of more than $800,000 in matching federal funds.

Last year, the New Jersey Small Business Development Centers provided 22,000 businesses with courses, workshops and individual counseling, and those efforts would likely be cut in half if the legislature affirms Corzine’s cuts, said Deborah Smarth, associate state director of the SBDC.

The Legislature must approve a budget before the new fiscal year begins on July 1. Lawmaker are now wrestling with a Corzine budget that’s $500 million less than the current year’s and slashes outlays for municipalities, schools, hospital charity care, college scholarships, Medicaid, state parks and government jobs, said Jim Gardner, a spokesman for Corzine.

“The governor has expressed a willingness to be flexible regarding the allocation of budget resources, but the restoration of funds in one area is going to require offsetting cuts in another area to keep the budget in balance,” Gardner said.

If the SBDC loses the $1 million in state funds, the U.S. Small Business Administration, under its matching-fund rules, will cut is funding $831,000, to $1.74 million, from $2.58 million.

In a letter last month to Corzine urging the $1 million be restored, James Kocsi, SBA’s district director for New Jersey, said the SBDC provides education and technical assistance that supports SBA loans, which totaled $585.5 million last year. Kocsi said the 11 SBDC counseling centers, mostly located on college campuses across the state, “have a direct relationship to the SBA’s ability to help small businesses to obtain loans and to win federal contracts.”

Smarth said the SBDC helps small businesses expand and create jobs, “and it doesn’t make sense to cut back on this at a time when we may be in a national recession and job growth is faltering.”

She said SBDC clients range from entrepreneurs hiring their first employee, to companies with scores of workers and millions of dollars in revenue. In the past three years, the legislature has doubled its funding of the SBDC, to $1 million, from $500,000, “so we were shocked to be cut out of the budget,” Smarth said. “We return more than our budget to the state in job creation, retention and taxes.”

Smarth argued small businesses are a significant job-creation engine, and figures from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics support that view.

Nationwide, employment at firms with fewer than 5 employees grew by 786,954 workers between 2001 and 2007, an 11.4 percent increase. Firms with more than 1,000 workers lost 1.2 million jobs during that time, a decline of 8.9 percent.

New Jersey’s middle class takes it in the neck one more time.

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The Economics of a Free Society

This article is excerpted from Part I of Pillars of Prosperity. An MP3 version of this article, read by Dr. Floy Lilley, is available for free download.

These selections lay out my views of the proper role of government, namely that it should serve only to protect the life and property of its citizens.

I respect the Constitution not because of a nostalgic attachment to an anachronistic document, but because the Founders knew the danger in allowing government to overstep its legitimate functions. It is unfortunate that many Americans today don’t understand the Founders’ wisdom in framing our government on the principles of federalism and republicanism — as opposed to “democracy.”

A free society can only work when its members agree that there are certain things left to the discretion of individuals — no matter what a temporary majority might think. In practice this means the government must respect private property and the rule of law, or what is also called free-market capitalism.

Current Political Philosophies’ Errors to Result in Political and Economic Crisis

Congressional Record — US House of Representatives September 20, 1984

Mr. Speaker, I have a deep concern for the direction in which our country is going. I have expressed this concern by pointing out the political and economic contradictions that surround us and have suggested that these contradictions merely are manifestations of philosophic errors made by our intellectual leaders.

Although the country currently is more or less in a euphoric mood, I am convinced the errors we are making today will eventually result in a severe political and economic crisis.

I don’t believe anyone precisely knows the future, yet we all make projections as to our expectations. It’s impossible to know exact events and their timing but trends are known to us and certain policies do have specific consequences. Economically definable laws do exist and cannot be repealed. For what it’s worth, I would like to make a few comments about what we can expect if our current beliefs about government’s role are not changed. The odds of a significant change in attitude occurring in Washington in the near future are utterly remote. Repealing the welfare-warfare state may be popular with a growing number of frustrated American citizens, but that attitude is not yet reflected in Washington. The constituency for the monolithic state is alive and well in the US Congress. When disagreement exists in areas such as welfare versus warfare, the poor versus the rich, labor versus business, compromise is always reached and both sides receive an increase in funding. This is a policy of utter folly and is tragically locked in place.

Government is literally out of control. Spending, taxes, regulations, monetary inflation, invasion of our privacy, welfarism to both the rich and the poor, military spending, and foreign adventurism around the world will one day precipitate a crisis that will truly test our will to live in a free society. If government were not so much out of control, would not the most conservative president of the last 50 years be able to do something about the runaway deficits? The deficits have tragically only gotten very much worse under Reagan. All the problems we face, high interest rates, inflation, deficits, vicious business cycles with accelerating unemployment are serious problems indeed, but the real threat under the conditions to come will be the potential loss of our personal liberty. Without liberty, prosperity is lost and equality of poverty prevails.

We have a cancer in the land — the malignant growth of big government — and we can ignore it, treating only the symptoms, hoping they are not reliable signs that a horrible disease has struck our nation. But if we do, we are treating our problems as some foolishly deny the early signs of cancer, by taking aspirin and hoping the pain to be only that of inconvenience and that the symptoms will go away in the morning. Instead, the pain gets worse requiring more and more narcotics to numb the pain. Magic cures are sought and tried. Although big government is the disease, attempts to solve all the problems by making government even bigger and more intrusive in our lives are continually tried. This will soon end. We cannot forever ignore the root causes. It’s highly unlikely that we’ll reach the 1990s without a convulsion of our economic or political system.

Although nothing goes up or down in a straight line, we can be sure the long term will bring us ever-increasing interest rates — higher with each cycle and over 20 percent before this cycle completes itself in 1986 or 1987. Without the introduction of a commodity money, one with quality — as well as limitation on its quantity — we will never see the return of long-term fixed low interest rates. The reform will come eventually, if we’re to continue to have even a relatively free society. I just hope we don’t wait too long.

Reagan reading The Freeman Price inflation, although difficult to predict on a month-to-month or even year-to-year basis, will reach unbelievable heights in this decade. Currency destruction, through the insatiable desire to create massive new fiat monetary units, eventually brings higher prices. Wage and price controls will return regardless of whether a Republican or a Democrat occupies the White House. Free-market rhetoric will do nothing to protect us from the pressure the administration will receive to “do something,” even if it’s the wrong thing. Nixonian Keynesianism will continue to dominate, and abusive people-control in the form of wage, price, currency and credit controls will return, more vicious than ever before.

There will come a day that the world financiers will rush from dollars just as they have recently rushed into dollars, causing even worse chaos in the international financial markets. Without a stable monetary unit, the speculation will continue and worsen. Overreaction is now becoming more commonplace, but this is a predictable consequence of a world gone mad with fiat currencies, debt creation, and overspending.

Massive debt liquidation will come. The early stages have already started. It will occur with old-fashioned defaults, threats of deflation, and further currency destruction through monetary inflation and liquidation of debt with a depreciating dollar. Whether or not the liquidating debt collapse will be dominated by deflation or inflation of the money supply is yet to be determined since that will depend on government actions and many market forces. An inflationary collapse is a more likely scenario — knowing the special interests, the Congress, the administration, and the central bankers’ unwillingness to face up to the reality of cutting spending, balancing the budget, and curtailing the supply of money. So in spite of all the tough talk, we can expect the Fed to accommodate and reverse any trend toward deflation.

Without a significant change in attitude by the American people and Congress as to the purpose of government, the choices are horrible; an inflationary collapse or a deflationary one. The form and timing of the collapse is yet to be determined; the event itself is certain. This crisis will come, as others have, because we refuse to face up to reality and live within our means.

The people’s insatiable appetite for the goods of life without providing a commensurate amount of work and effort needed to produce them (while demanding that politicians deliver the loot) guarantees the process will continue. But a penalty will have to be paid. That penalty — a major banking, currency, economic, and political crisis — will hit this nation and the western world, most likely before the 1990s.

The economic hardship, of which we had a taste in 1981 and 1982, will be much worse. That in itself is bad enough news, but historically, when a nation debauches its currency international trade breaks down — today 40 percent of international trade is carried out through barter — protectionist sentiments rise — as they have in Congress already — eliciting hostile feelings with our friends. Free-trade alliances break down, breeding strong feelings of nationalism — all conditions that traditionally lead to war; a likely scenario for the 1990s, unless our economic policies and attitudes regarding government are quickly changed.

Many who concede we are moving in this direction of war, carelessly believe that the lack of military spending is the problem and insist on new massive military spending as the solution. This only serves the inflationists, the internationalists, the banking elite, and industrialists who benefit from the massive manufacture of military weapons. It ignores the important fact that most military conflicts throughout history have been the consequence of economic events. Economic events, when combined with a foreign policy void of wisdom and fraught with folly, sets the stage for needless war.

Conservatives are quick to correctly point out that guns don’t cause crime, criminals do, but fail to see that weapons, or the lack of massive weapons, don’t cause war, politicians’ bad policies do. This is a good reason why the current conservative administration should have stopped subsidizing trade and foreign assistance to the Soviet bloc nations and to Red China, which includes nuclear and military technology, instead of increasing it. This is sheer madness.

Massive military spending to stop the spread of communism, which our own taxpayers are also required to finance, contributes to the economic problem of deficits, inflation, and high interest rates. In addition it justifies, in the political world of compromise, increased domestic spending, higher deficits, accelerating inflation and higher interest rates — all compounding the economic problems that started the trouble in the first place.

Depression and war are the needless consequences of politicians’ folly. They are prevented by limiting government power, not by expanding it. Today, campaign rhetoric is frequently heard about balanced budgets and reducing the size of the government; witness the success of conservatives in 1980; yet nothing ever happens. The spending, the regulations, the taxing, and the deficits continue. Time is running short, the frustration running high. Hiding from reality won’t help; kidding ourselves won’t do. The sooner we admit, “you can’t get blood from a turnip,” the better off we’ll be.

Solution

What is the solution?

Most importantly, a new attitude about the role of government is necessary if we expect to solve our problems. As long as we, as a nation, accept the notion that government is the ultimate provider and world policeman, implementing the elusive concept of liberty will be impossible. The degree to which governments are permitted to exert force over the people determines the extent to which individuals retain their liberty as well as the chances for peace and prosperity. Historically, governments have always initiated force against the people with disastrous results. America is the best example of what can happen if that force is restrained, thus maximizing individual freedom and prosperity. Yet today, that wonderful experiment is all but abandoned. We must once again clearly reject the idea that government force and threat of force can be carelessly administered.

Voluntary contracts must be permitted. The trend toward government dominance, interference, and altering of voluntary contracts is prevalent and a most dangerous sign. Responsibility to care for one’s self is necessary for a free society to function, and trust that individuals will look out for their own self-interest, even if imperfectly, is required and should be achieved through contractual arrangements. Government interference in voluntary agreements between two parties must be strictly prohibited. Enforcement of those contracts in event of a violation invites the government’s participation in settlement of the dispute. This limited involvement of government in voluntary contracts is necessary in a free society.

The strict limitation of government power imposed by the Constitution must be respected. We must accept the principle that government’s function is not to regulate and plan the economy, protect us from ourselves, arbitrarily attempt to make us better people, or police the world by interfering in the internal affairs of other nations. Its proper function in a free society is to protect liberty and provide for a common defense. When that proper role is assumed, our problems will vanish.

To bring about real changes, we first need to recognize that the politician, per se, is a lot less important than he appears. He is basically a puppet of public opinion that reflects the prevailing ideas of the intellectual and thought leaders. John Maynard Keynes, in one of his more lucid moments, said:

Practical men who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.

Media opinion is critical in establishing popular views just as that same media may support or destroy certain political careers. Having accepted the philosophy of economic interventionism and political pragmatism, our society grants political knighthood to the highly paid lobbyists who represent the powerful special interests. But we must remember the lobbyists are the result, not the cause, of our problems. The politician is the puppet of the opinion makers.

Political success is the single goal that drives participants in our political system. No invitations to participants are sent to men of principle, upholders of equal rights, and defenders of the Constitution. Determined political aspirations under today’s circumstances are key to achieving a successful political career — the career being an end in itself. We must be aware that this system of politics is not conducive to bringing about changes necessary to solve our problems. The legislative and political intrigues that control the system for the benefit of the special interests must one day come to an end if personal liberty is to be restored.

The resort to power to control people and the economy must be rejected. Also violence to bring changes beneficial to liberty serves no purpose (unless exerted in true defense under reprehensible conditions). The illicit use of power, even with noble intentions, has created history’s dung heap of human misery. True change will come through persuasive intellectual influence. If the people refuse to listen, mere recording of significant movements in history will be the limited result of the effort. Yet, not making the effort to persuade the thought leaders to accept freedom and total nonviolence of the state, guarantees that the perpetuation of organized force — the tyranny of the state — will flourish and the suffering will continue for all of us.

Ideas do count; all government action is a result of ideas. It’s incorrect to suggest that freedom ideas must be rejected because they are idealistic — the planned economy is also a result of an idea. It’s only a choice between good and bad ideas. The job of the true believer in liberty is to convince the majority of our leaders that freedom ideas are superior to the ideas of government coercion. Never can we relax by hoping that the good intentions of the big government proponents will protect us from the evils of government power that intimidate us all. All politicians, from total statists — Marxists and Fascists — to average conservatives and liberals of today’s Congress, devoutly promise that all their actions are based on good intentions. But it doesn’t matter: bad ideas regarding the nature and role of government breed bad results and suffering occurs nevertheless. Twisted logic, Machiavellian justifications, excuse making, and short-run benefits can never justify the removal of one iota of liberty from any one person if we intend to live in a free society.

Once the role of government is agreed upon, and government initiation of force is rejected as a legitimate function, the consequences will quickly occur — all positive.

Individuals will reclaim their moral and natural right to their lives and liberty as granted to them by the Creator. The state will be put in its proper place as the protector of equal rights, not the usurper. That in itself should be enough reason to institute a system of limited government, but the benefits go far beyond the moral justification of true liberty. Prosperity will abound and the chance for war will be greatly reduced.

If this is done, the welfare-warfare state is repealed and spending by the federal government reduced by 80 percent. Special interest politicians will not be served and will vanish. Lobbyists will become mere petitioners for liberty. The budget will be immediately balanced and the debt repaid. No more wealth will be transferred to the poor, the rich, the foreigner, the bankers, or arms manufacturers. Military spending will once again be used for defense and not for the domination of an unofficial American empire.

Money will be honest, the unit precisely defined, and its integrity guaranteed by government or by voluntary contracts. Counterfeiting privileges of the Fed will be abolished and relegated to notorious underground figures. Honest money will allow credit to be freely created in the market and not by the privileged banking cartel, yet controlled by the integrity of the market and the convertibility of the dollar. The economic benefits of low long-term fixed interest rates will be welcomed by all, since credit can then fuel true long-term economic growth.

This scenario sounds utopian, yet it’s more practical than the ill effects of the planned society financed by fiat money and debt creation. It’s difficult to understand the persistence in following the impractical ideas of runaway government coercion.

The philosophy of the free market, sound money, private property ownership, and equal rights, offers the only real “compromise” to the impasse existing in Washington where only token attempts are made to cut the deficit. A truly practical approach to this dilemma can be immediately implemented. I suggest six points:

First, instead of debating forever over whether or not the cuts should be made in domestic welfare or military spending, the answer is simple: cut both, and quit arguing — that is, if anyone is serious about his declared hostility toward massive deficits.

Second, all votes on spending should be tradeoffs. Welfare to the poor versus welfare to the rich; domestic aid versus foreign aid; aid to friends versus aid to Communists; water projects in the United States versus water projects in Africa; subsidized loans for steel plants in the United States versus those in South America. Sure, many projects will still exist inconsistent with a truly free market but these projects would only be financed by dropping expenditures elsewhere.

Third, centralized planning fails everywhere else so we can expect it to fail with centralized control over bank credit. Sound money, and breaking up the credit/bank cartel, will solve the problem of high interest rates and long-term financing.

Fifth, equal rights must be guaranteed and enforced regardless of circumstances of race, color, or creed. Equal rights cannot, however, be defined vaguely to include demands on another’s life or property. The goal of freedom must surpass our obsession with material wealth and its forced redistribution.

Sixth, prosperity with freedom for the individual is the only humanitarian system ever offered that prevented mass starvation and suffering. Refusal to accept the free market based on a natural-rights philosophy is the most impractical thing we can do. A system that provides sound money, low interest rates, the removal of the bankers’ monopoly over credit, and peace and prosperity will restore trust in the politicians, the money, the future, and in ourselves.

More government cannot possibly offer the solution to the problems we face. Big government is the cause; freedom is the answer.

[VIEW THIS ARTICLE ONLINE]

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Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas and a 2008 US presidential candidate. Send him mail. Comment on the blog.

This article is excerpted from Part I of Pillars of Prosperity. An MP3 version of this article, read by Dr. Floy Lilley, is available for free download.

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The way it could be in New Jersey

FOR 190 YEARS, New Jersey had no income tax and no sales tax. As recently as 1966, it had only the third-highest property taxes in the nation.

Through home rule, local governments delivered efficient and inexpensive services. New Jersey’s small towns powered the state to become an economic powerhouse, capable of turning on a dime to meet economic challenges as local governments capitalized on geographic strengths.

One of three states in 1966 with no sales or income tax, New Jersey boasted the strongest economy in the country. This was the place to live to start a business, raise a family and prosper. That is until the left marched in to make New Jersey progressive.

Like the other isms — socialism, communism, Marxism — progressivism is more than a doctrinaire approach to government: It is a religion that worships the common good while sacrificing individual liberty and prosperity.

The seeds for liberal change were planted in the 1950s when teachers unions began promoting a broader base of taxes to fund education. Even farmers were told they would benefit from broad-based taxes, never realizing this funding source would finance the most anti-business bureaucracy the farm industry would ever encounter — the Department of Environmental Protection.

Local officials trusted these new taxes would provide tax relief, never anticipating radical Council on Affordable Housing regulations that would force tens of thousands of taxpayer-subsidized low-income housing units into every municipality in the state or the never-ending flow of unfunded state mandates from Trenton’s growing bureaucracy.

Rising trend

The progress to high taxes continued into the 1960s when on April 24, 1966, the Legislature passed a 3 percent “temporary” sales tax. Legislators claimed the tax would go away after four years. It did go away — it progressed to a permanent 5 percent tax.

On April 24, 1966, hundreds of suburban school students filled the State House wearing campaign buttons reading “Better Education through Taxation.” This propaganda proved false. The 3 percent sales tax has grown to 7 percent. And New Jersey’s property taxes, once the third-highest in the country, are now No. 1.

But like a drug addict needing another fix, Trenton’s greedy progressives were hungry for more. In 1976, they told voters an income tax would “end the property tax crisis.” That tax was passed with a top rate of 2.5 percent. Under former Gov. James Florio, the top rate would progress to 7 percent; under former Gov. James E. McGreevey, it would become 8.97 percent.

Today, we have the nation’s worst income tax. We’re tied for the highest state sales tax and have progressed to the highest property taxes in the nation. What happened to “Better Education through Taxation?”

Students in the Abbott districts, the most expensive school districts in the country, continue to receive a mediocre education as the teachers union uses faulty Special Review Assessment tests to conjure up phony graduation rates. Suburban property owners pay the highest taxes in the country and through the sales and income tax are paying property taxes for the Abbott districts as well.

‘Metaphysicians’

Trenton’s central government, the spawn of the progressive central planners gorging on broad-based taxes, has an insatiable appetite. The burden progressives have placed on taxpayers has taken New Jersey from the nation’s greatest economy to one in decline.

The time is now to end the phony “progress” that is sapping our prosperity. It is time to dismantle Trenton’s destructive bureaucracy and return New Jersey to its former grandeur — a destination state for those seeking opportunity, not entitlements, a magnet state for job producers, not welfare recipients and free from the manipulation of social engineers, the progressive ideologues who would manipulate every aspect of our lives from cradle to grave.

These abstract metaphysicians have had their way with us, taking us down a road to fiscal disaster and economic decline. New Jersey is fortunate. The problems we face were not brought upon us by a natural disaster like Hurricane Katrina. We are not engaged in a war like Iraq, nor are we suffering from an economic collapse outside our control. The problem is traced to one cause: the doctrine of progressivism. Trenton’s central planners have wrought havoc on our once-prosperous state.

It’s time to return to a system of home rule, individual opportunity and responsibility and its consequence — true prosperity.

Steve Lonegan was Mayor of Bogota, NJ, and is Executive Director of Americans for Prosperity - New Jersey. Americans for Prosperity (AFP) and Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFP Foundation) are committed to educating citizens about economic policy and mobilizing those citizens as advocates in the public policy process. He is a prolific writer, having been published in newspapers and blogs. He just published a book, Putting Taxpayers First: A Blueprint for Victory in the Garden State, that discusses the impact of the Trenton government on the well being of the taxpayers of the state. He offers solid and workable solutions. Learn more at lonegan.com.

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Gas and War - the Connection

What’s it got to do with the price of gas? Would some reporter with access to the Republican presidential candidate please ask John McCain why he wants to continue President Bush’s Mideast policy when it has proved so ruinous for American taxpayers? Because McCain is determined to ignore our economic meltdown and shift the debate to foreign policy, shouldn’t he have to explain why an open-ended military presence in the Mideast will make us economically and militarily more secure when the opposite is clearly the case?

Let’s not waste too much time on the military side of the equation. The argument that troops on the ground have made us militarily more secure is absurd on its face. American resources and lives have been squandered in an inane effort that McCain aptly criticized before becoming a presidential candidate. As a Senate watchdog, he distinguished himself by sharply denouncing one defense contractor boondoggle after another in cases involving hundreds of billions for modern weapons that had nothing to do with fighting cave-based terrorists. But as a presidential candidate, McCain now unabashedly apologizes for every twist of the downwind spiral of the Bush administration foreign policy, from wasteful weapons to inhuman torture.

McCain’s strategy is clearly that of distracting attention from the calamitous economy by sounding the demagogue’s alarm about enemies at the gate. This week, McCain again blasted Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on the grounds that he underestimated the threat from Iran while ignoring the vast increase in Iran’s power — an increase actually resulting from Bush eliminating Iran’s only effective enemy, Saddam Hussein. The other winners in this folly have been the oil kingdoms that Hussein periodically threatened, led by the Saudi royal family. Seizing upon the opportunity presented by the 9/11 attacks, Bush knocked off not the Saudis, who had produced Osama bin Laden and 15 of his hijacker minions, but rather the royal family’s sworn enemy in Iraq, who had absolutely nothing do with 9/11.

And how did the Saudis thank us? Just check the price of oil, which has increased more than sixfold since 9/11. On Friday, Bush went to dine at Saudi King Abdullah’s bizarrely opulent horse farm and pleaded for an increase in oil production, but to no avail. Bush received the same rebuff in April 2005, when oil was selling for $54 a barrel. On Tuesday, it sold for $129, and the price rise is a good measure of Saudi gratitude for the Bush family’s unwavering support over past decades. Saudi Arabia’s oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, couldn’t have been more condescending when he turned down Bush’s request with the observation that “presidents and kings have every right, every privilege, to comment or ask or say whatever they want.” He added at a press conference, “How much does Saudi Arabia need to do to satisfy people who are questioning our oil practices and policies?”

Enough to get the price back down to where it was when we saved your sorry oil-well excuse for a country, you ingrate, Bush might have retorted. But our bold leader was too polite for anything like that. “He didn’t punch any tables or shout at anybody,” said Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal. “I think he was satisfied.” Why? Instead of pointing out that the Saudis could easily open their spigots in gratitude for our keeping them in power, the president threatened the Saudi king not with an invasion but with a U.S. recession. “My point to His Majesty,” Bush warned in an interview with The New York Times before encountering the great man himself, “is going to be, when consumers have less purchasing power because of high prices of gasoline — in other words, when it affects their families, it could cause this economy to slow down. If the economy slows down, there will be less barrels of oil purchased.”

He’ll show them — we’ll have a recession, our families will suffer and, boy, will the Saudis be sorry. A regular Teddy Roosevelt. There is no better measure of the failure of Bush’s foreign policy than that, five years after we conquered the second-most important pool of oil in the world, the American taxpayers who paid for this grand imperial adventure are rewarded with skyrocketing prices at the pump.

At least when Bush first hyped his Iraq invasion plan, he had Paul Wolfowitz telling Congress that Iraqi oil would more than pay for it all. Not so McCain, who is so charged with imperial hubris that he is willing to commit to a 100-year lease on Iraq without expecting a penny in oil revenue in return.

Robert Scheer’s new book, “The Pornography of Power: How Defense Hawks Hijacked 9/11 and Weakened America,” will be released June 9 by Twelve.

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The Beginning of a Deep Recession

Remember stagflation? Prices go up, money is inflated but wages are stagnant.

Bureaucracy : An administrative system in which the need or inclination to follow rigid or complex procedures impedes effective action: innovative ideas that get bogged down in red tape and bureaucracy.
We need leadership in Trenton, not bureaucracy! 

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With the economy in a tailspin, more people are finding they must choose among necessities. For many, that means going without electricity.

The number of utility shutoffs in New Jersey due to lack of payment rose by 15 percent last year, jumping to 175,581 from 143,300 in 2006, according to the state Board of Public Utilities. An additional 20,316 households had gas service terminated in 2007, about the same number as the year before.

“Electric bills have shot through the roof,” said Jim Dierterle, state director for AARP, the senior-advocacy group. “The double-digit increases for the past three years has pushed lower-income folks to the point where they can no longer pay their bill in full.”

And with customers facing yet another sharp increase in electric bills next month, consumer advocates said it is likely the volume of shutoffs will jump once again.

“The crisis is going to worsen as some folks will have to make difficult choices between keeping their lights on and buying food,” said Jim Jacob, executive director of NJ Shares, an organization that helps people in need pay their heating and electric bills.

Theresa Bell, a 40-year-old part-time consultant who lives in Hasbrouck Heights, said she struggles to pay her electric bill, which ranges between $100 and $200 per month, even though she lives in a small studio apartment.

“It’s extremely hard,” she said. “I try to shut things off when I’m not home, but it still adds up.”

Bell was able to avoid having her power shut off only by taking advantage of a state program that provides one-time assistance to customers who previously had a good payment record.

The rise in utility shutoffs comes at a time when energy costs have been on a record run, leading to historic gasoline prices, increasing food prices because of higher transportation and production costs and spikes in the cost of heating and powering homes and apartments.

Since 2002, the cost of electric power in the state has more than doubled for residential customers, going from 5.06 cents per kilowatt hour to 11.3 cents, effective June 1.

Under state law, customers who fail to pay their electric bill must be given a written notice of termination 10 days before shutoff. Certain elderly and low-income customers cannot have their service shut off during the winter months, from Nov. 15 to March 15, and that provision also applies during extreme heat waves.

Beyond that, utilities vary in how quickly they shut off power to delinquent customers. Public Service Electric & Gas, the state’s largest utility, typically does not shut off service unless payments are more than two months late.