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You Have No Right to My Property
· Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ky.) is the most unpopular man in the Senate, according to his colleagues. "Today we have a clear-cut example to show the American people just what's wrong with Washington, D.C.," said Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash). "He's hurting the American people," spat Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine).
What is Bunning doing that deserves such reproof? He has the audacity to stall a 30-day extension of unemployment and COBRA health care benefits on the grounds that the extension would add $10 billion to the federal deficit, which is already expected to hit $1.6 trillion this year. Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) wants to pass that extension unanimously in order to expedite the process; Bunning has refused, correctly pointing out that the Democrats passed a "pay as you go" policy that was supposed to make spending deficit neutral, and that now they're tossing that policy out the window for political convenience. Bunning has even suggested a way to make the extension deficit neutral: Take money out of the unspent chunk of the Obama stimulus package and use it to fund the extension. Democrats have refused.
Here's the truth: Bunning is a hero and his senatorial critics are villains. That goes for Republicans as well as Democrats. Bunning's opponents are liars and hypocrites of the highest order. The Democrats have no intention of lowering the deficit or abiding by "pay-go," and this only proves it. President Obama set up a joke commission supposedly designed to restore fiscal responsibility (he appointed noted spendthrift and Service Employees International Union President Andy Stern), but at the same time, Obama's mouthpiece, Robert Gibbs, is informing the American public that "This is an emergency situation. Hundreds of thousands have been left in the lurch … I don't know how you negotiate the irrational."
The Democrats and Republicans who oppose Bunning want fiscal responsibility, unless it actually requires them to act fiscally responsible. Unless it's an "emergency." Here's the question: If we can't trust legislators to be fiscally responsible during economic emergencies, how can we trust them to be fiscally responsible during economic swells?
But there's something even more insidious going on here than simple political gamesmanship. Too many Americans now believe that the checks they receive every month from the unemployment office -- like the checks they get from the welfare office, from Medicare, from Social Security -- are inalienable rights. They are not.
Our politicians and our press have become too loose with "rights talk." Everything is now a "right." The "right" to work. The "right" to health care. The "right" to a own a home. Each and every one of these "rights" is actually a restriction on liberty.
Our Constitution provides for liberty because it focuses on true rights -- negative rights. Negative rights are rights created by restraining others from treating you in a certain way. The right to free speech exists because we restrict the government from encroaching upon free speech. The right to bear arms exists because we restrict the government from taking away guns (or should, in any case). The right to life exists because we restrict citizens from murder.
Positive rights are something else entirely: They are rights created by forcing others to engage in certain behavior. The right to work, for example, requires someone else to give you a job. The right to health care requires someone else to provide health care for you. These are not true rights, but tyrannical impositions, taking from Party A and giving to Party B.
No country that focuses more on positive rights than negative rights can remain truly free for long. Negative rights provide a space in which individuals can pursue happiness; positive rights impose crushing burdens on some for the benefit of others.
Sen. Bunning is standing up for negative rights -- the same underlying rights that provide the framework for our system of government. His opponents are standing up for positive rights, suggesting that some of us, the employed, owe something to the unemployed -- or worse, that future generations owe something to today's unemployed.
Everyone sympathizes with the unemployed, of course. But many of those who are living off the unemployment program affected by Bunning's stand have been on the unemployment lines for over a year at this point -- at minimum, everyone affected has been on unemployment for at least six months. We simply cannot keep extending unemployment benefits indefinitely by calling on imaginary "rights" derived from depriving others. That is not only a betrayal of those who must pay, but a betrayal of our founding principles.
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Ruth Ann Wilson
DO NOT use Social Security and Medicare as examples of "ENTITLEMENT PROGRAMS". The government "MIXED" it altogether AFTER the "FORCED" programs were established. They "FORCED" US, common, God-fearing taxpaying citizens, to pay into this "FORCED SCHEME" and now, we, the "FORCED ONES", are being accused of being involved in an "ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM".
Sorry, it won't work. Pay everybody back with interest, who were "FORCED" into this "SCHEME" and make the program VOLUNTARY.
Anyone who doesn't think this was a "FORCED" program evidently, hasn't tried to "buy and sell" without the SS#.
May God grant America a Divorce and a settlement, from this "FORCED SOCIAL SECURITY SCHEME."
PS - For all those who have "PAID AND TRUSTED" and are now, receiving their "dividends", the government needs to stay good to the "CONTRACT", these folk Trusted their Government to "pay them back". The government for years, had "FORCED" them to PAY.
So, now, we mix "bums with taxpayers" and since the government used the money in the "General Fund", now, the government wants to accuse the "FORCED ONES" who paid into this, into the "Entitlement Crowd." NO WAY, Pay us back with interest and make the Program, VOLUNTARY.
For God & Country
Ruth Ann Wilson
Posted March 3, 2010 at 9:31:53 AM
Bill Meierhofer
I agree with Ruth. Stop SS, pay back the money with interest, then stop every other "entitlement" program and make people fend for themselves instead of making me spend part of the small amount of time I have on this planet working to support others.
Posted March 3, 2010 at 6:50:34 PM
JAC
The problem with Bill's suggestion to "pay back the money with interest" is that there is no money to pay back. SS was supposed to support itself with worker contributions, but the strongbox is empty. For years, Congress treated it as their slushfund to fund other entitlements, so the cupboard is bare. That's one reason why SS is in so much trouble. Paying it back now would result in even more increased deficits which we would again be paying for. We would be paying ourselves back with our own new money. That is another reason new taxes and other money sources to fund Obamacare wouldn't work. Even though the money would be collected immediately to start paying out in future years, by the time the program becomes effective, Congress would have raided the piggybank, and it would be empty. No one seems to bring this up when talking about health care reform.
Posted March 4, 2010 at 3:58:44 PM