Sunday, March 23, 2014

Dan Rutherford Will Be Back

Despite desperate false allegations thrown against him, make no doubt about it: Dan Rutherford will be back.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Unintimidated: A Governor’s Story and a Nation’s Challenge

From the audiobook of Scott Walker’s Unintimidated: A Governor’s Story and a Nation’s Challenge, Chapter 1: This is what Democracy Looks Like. 



*NOTE: I do not own the rights to the material in this video, just used them as parts of this video project.

Mike Rowe on CNN: "We get the kind of behavior we reward . . . we confuse causes and symptoms. A lot."

Mike Rowe spot on once again


Equality of Results vs. Equality of Opportunity

Thomas Sowell debates Francis Fox Piven in Free to Choose by Milton Friedman
 

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Education and the Skills Gap: Glenn Beck & Bill Maher Agree

A few weeks ago, I posted about changing the conversation about higher education, vocational school, and the skills gap HERE

The post included a clip from "Real Time with Bill Maher" where "Dirty Jobs" Host Mike Rowe said:

“A trillion dollars in student loan debt right now.  A trillion dollars.  We are lending money that we don’t have to kids that will never be able to pay it back to educate them for jobs that no longer exist.”

We don’t have a lack of jobs available in this country.  We have a workforce that lacks the technical skills it needs to fill the millions of vacant jobs that are currently being offered.

The Progressive Bill Maher seemed to agree.  This last week, the Conservative Glenn Beck also seemed to agree in an interview he did with Mike Rowe.  This is a bipartisan issue. It can easily have bipartisan solutions if we only realize the problem at hand, and figure out a way to change this conversation.

"If you want to be successful, you need to go to college," we are told.  However, college graduates today are graduating with degrees expecting a job to be there waiting.  Meanwhile, he explains, there are over three million jobs that are going unfilled because they require a vocational degree rather than a four-year degree.
He explains that the idea that "everyone needs to go to a four year university" is the result of a 70's PR Campaign that has sunk well into the minds of Americans today. Vocational school has become "alternative education" or something you only do if you can't handle a four-year college.  This is an artificial image, and leads to a huge amount of unfilled jobs in the industry that can best grow our economy - production.  These aren't bad jobs, these are good jobs that have been made to look bad by the artificial image produced around them.

It looks like there's at least one leader out there who's found a solution to this problem: Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Savings & Production vs Spending & Consumption: What is real growth?


What constitutes real economic growth?  Many say that spending and consumption are good for the economy, and they are right.  Consumption and spending are absolutely necessary for an economy to do well.  However, in order to spend and consume money, there must be products to spend it on, those things you consume. This is why production is so important.  An economy that relies on consumption for growth loses its ability to produce. 

While consumption refers to the money you spend on goods that you will "use up." In other words, you don't buy these goods in the hopes of gaining money off of them. You buy them because they are something that gives value to you in and of itself.  You don't buy food, for instance, with the hopes of making money off of it. You buy it to eat it.  And then its gone.  Or even a boat, which you use for recreation and unless resold at a higher price (unlikely), you consume that too.

The misleading thing about consumption is that while it is statistically a component of GDP growth (Gross Domestic Product = Consumption + Investment + Government Spending + Exports - Imports), it does not provide for future growth.

This is where production comes in.  Production refers to the amount of goods and services being produced by an economy.  Consumption relies on production because a good must be produced before it is consumed.  Production relies on consumption because consumers give money to producers and thus incentive to produce goods.

In order to sustain growth, an economy must produce more than it consumes.  When an economy does so, it provides for its participants and exports the rest for more wealth.  When an economy consumes more than it produces, it must import the difference from other country, bringing wealth out of the economy and sending it to another.

This is where the United States is today.  We continue to borrow money and spend it on consumption, so we don't realize a problem since we're getting everything we need.  But borrowed money is only supposed to be used on investment because investment assumes that over time, the project being invested in will produce more wealth than the initial loan was worth (so it assumes a way to pay it back).  The only way it makes sense to borrow money is if you hope to gain even more money by doing so.  When we borrow money, then consume the money we borrow, we are simply increasing the need to borrow more, digging ourselves into deeper and deeper debt, accumulating into what is now $17 Trillion in National Debt ($17,000,000,000,000.00).

As Americans, we need to realize the problem is there without having to feel the effects of it being there because by the time we feel the problem, it will be too late.  We will have spent all our money consuming goods instead of saving and investing it, we will have lost the ability to produce goods, and we will have no one else there to give us another loan.

There is a way to fix this mess we're heading towards.  And its not the government's job to do (the government has already shown that it cannot fix it).  We need to change our way of thinking from one of consuming every dollar we make to one of saving and investing the money we make.  The reason is, when we invest our money in the bank, it is lent to entrepreneurs and small businesses to start a businesses and begin production. When we invest in the stock market, the money is used by large corporations to acquire capital and mass-produce.  Once we can start being the nation of production that we once were, we can have a truly sustainable economy where the producers produce and the consumers consume our goods. And even you make money because your savings and investments are paid back in full plus interest.

While quick-fixes and instant gratification are characteristic of our culture today, we need to realize the path down which we are heading before we are left with nothing and have to start over.

The consumption bubble is coming, and it's going to be worse than 2008.



Federal Reserve's Artificially Low Interest Rates Led to Risky Investments & Crash of 2008


The Federal Reserve's failure to allow for the free market to determine interest rates by keeping them artificially low led to the economic collapse of 2008.  People love to blame "banks" because they were the provider of those risky investments.  What people fail to understand is that the banks only made those risky investments because the Federal Reserve kept interest rates artificially low, which made it easier to make risky investments than the free market would have allowed.

This very concept was argued by Peter Schiff, CEO of EuroPacific Capital in 2006-2007 before the Great Recession in 2008, when the Federal Reserve set artificially low interest rates which led to the risky investments in the housing market.  Of course, nobody took these claims seriously, and we ended up in the mess we did in 2008.



Austrian Economics Explained


Can you name one person who knows what's best for you better than you do?

Why Increasing Corporate Taxes would only Hurt the Worker


Milton Friedman takes apart the "Free Lunch" Myth that somehow or other government can spend money at nobody's expense.  People who believe in this myth see a simple solution to our economic problems: Tax the corporations!  Fair enough - if the businesses and corporations are the ones bearing the cost, then we, the people, don't have to bear that cost, right?

False.

People tend to think of businesses as inanimate objects by which wealth is generated.  But while a business may require inanimate objects (such as factories or machines) to operate, the business itself is made of people. The factories and machines of a business cannot pay taxes because (even if they could write checks) they do not have the ability to own anything from which taxes can be taken (like wealth).

Therefore, taxes on corporate profits are necessarily paid by people. "Fair enough," people say, "but at least taxing the corporate profit will only affect the greedy, wealthy business owners that exploit the workers, right?"

False. Again.

Friedman explains  that taxes on corporate profit come from one of 3 sources: the stockholder, the customer, or the employee. Let's look at how each group is affected by corporate taxes:

1. Stockholder: The owners of a corporation, or stockholders, are responsible for the company's growth.  All they can do is add to a corporation's ability to grow by contributing their own money to the corporation's capital in return for a share in its ownership and shared liability.  The stockholders already contributed their own money to the growth of the corporation, and  therefore will not lose more than they already contributed to it.  However, while they may be the people writing the check, they do not bear the cost of corporate taxes.  In order to pay the cost of corporate taxes, the stockholders must decide to either increase the corporation's income or decrease the corporation's expenses. This can either be done by increasing the price of their product or decreasing the cost of labor (since capital such as machines and factories are not easily sold off as liquid resources).  Let's look at both options.

2. Customers:  This one may seem simple.  A business owner might deal with the cost of a tax increase by increasing the price of their product in the hopes that customers will pay the higher price for it.  The customers, therefore, bear part of the cost of the corporate tax by accepting the cost imposed on them through increased prices. If we are to assume that workers pay for the goods corporations produce (such as food, cars, basic amenities), then these workers are paying the corporate tax by paying the new price.  However, stockholders aren't likely to increase the price of their product because it will likely lead to decreased consumption of their product, and thus a loss in income - the opposite of what it was meant to do.

3. Employees: Since the stockholders cannot simply make more money to pay the tax through high prices and hold their bottom line (if they could they probably would have already been doing it), the burden of the tax must be paid by cutting expenses.  While a company can cut capital and land expenses by selling off their machines, factories and property (or agreeing not to buy more), they probably won't because all this can do is ruin their ability to produce (and make money).  So, they are finally left with the option of decreasing the cost of labor in order to hold their bottom line and pay the corporate tax. If a corporation is imposed with a tax, they have less money with which to pay their employees. So they are left with only a two options: pay the employees less, reduce the number of employees.  Either way, the employees (or the unemployed people looking for work) end up being the ones who have to pay the corporate tax through salary reductions or loss completely.

So for all those who think corporate taxes are good for the worker, I urge you to think again.



Sunday, November 10, 2013

What do you suppose these millionaires do with the money they earn?


The woman in this video uses the "there's only so much a person needs in life" argument against Economist Milton Friedman to explain why redistribution is the right path to take over free-market capitalism.

However, when pressed as to whether or not she thinks they hide their money under their pillows, she admits that they "invest it."

Friedman explains the very simple fact that investments enable companies to acquire capital.  For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term, capital refers to the factories, machinery and equipment owned by a business and used in production.

Free-market capitalism provides a system in which those greedy millionaires (selfishly seeking their own interest through a return on investment) invest their savings in companies, who use that money to buy equipment and factories, which necessarily requires they hire more workers to operate the equipment and run the factories, which gives those "impoverished people who try to get up in the world" she refers to the wages and skills they need to do exactly that.

Those millionaires everyone tends to blame for the poverty in this world are the very people that are providing companies the ability (and need) to offer a way up in the world to those who need it the most.

It happens in 7 simple steps:

1. An individual thinks of a way in which they can provide a good or service at a better quality and for a more affordable price than what is currently available, and begins to produce it.

2. People see this more affordable, higher quality product and begin buying it from that individual instead of from their inefficient former providers.  The individual is happy because he can make money off his product and the consumers are happy because this individual provided them a way to get a product at a higher quality and a lower price than what they were getting before.

3. The individual understands that in order to provide his superior product to everyone in society that can benefit from it, he needs to increase his "capital", or means of production, such as machines, raw material and factories so he can produce more of his product to sell to the increasing amount of people who want to buy it

4. In order to pay for this capital, the individual sells part-ownership (or shares) of his company to people who can afford the expensive capital necessary to increase production in return for their personal contributions to acquiring such capital for the company. They share the risk in doing so and form a "corporation," which has enough money between all the part-owners (or "shareholders") to buy the capital necessary to produce the amount of the good that society demands, and they do so.

6. Realizing that the relatively small number of investors have neither the skill nor the time to operate the capital they just produced, they decide to hire people that do.  So the investors offer jobs to people who will do so for money those people wouldn't otherwise have had in return for the labor these potential workers are able to provide to the corporation.

7. The corporation is now able to provide the low-cost, high-quality product to the entire society while providing wages to the people who agreed to trade their labor for them and providing profits to the people who took the risk of investing their money and time in an uncertain enterprise. (Not to mention the taxes they provide to society and the costs of governmental regulation imposed on their product and organization)

As this corporation sells more and more of their product to those who want it, the corporation is able to generate a profit, which makes the enterprise beneficial to everyone involved.

The consumers are better off because they are able to buy a product they need at a lower cost and a higher quality than they previously could have.

The hired workers are better off because the investors gave them the wages/salary they wouldn't otherwise have had otherwise in return for their work.  They also learned skills they would not have otherwise learned with which they might be promoted within their current corporation, be hired by another, or decide to use both the money and the skills they earned from this corporation to begin their own.

The individual who began the entire enterprise is better off because as a part owner in this company, they made enough money that they are now able to invest it in other companies, providing for more machines, factories, jobs and workers' wages in the companies they invest in.

The shareholder is better off because the risky investment they took provided the company with what it needed to become profitable (and thus they were paid for taking the risk that others were unwilling to take)

As you can probably see, nobody is at a disadvantage in the free market.
  • The consumer benefits because they are offered a more affordable, yet higher quality product in return for the price they are willing to pay for it.
  • The impoverished and unemployed benefit because they are given a job, wages and potential skills (necessary for a "step up" in the world) in return for their labor.  
  • The inspired and motivated entrepreneurs benefit because they are given a chance at achieving the American Dream through profit in return for taking a risk and working hard to provide for a societal need.  
  • The risk-taking investors benefit because by investing in the entrepreneur's company, they give it the resources it needs to succeed and thus are able to share in the profits it generates.
This is free-market capitalism at work, my friends. And it's a wonderful thing.

Why Government Should Not Be Subsidizing Tuition


There seems to be a popular sentiment that everyone deserves to go to college because it is a "right" and in order to protect that right, the government needs to intervene in order to make college more affordable.  However, while government intervention in the student loan business has done nothing but allow colleges to increase the price that colleges charge for tuition, it also has lowered the value of the degree students earn.

Why is Higher Education so Expensive?


Economist Daniel Lin explains how better job prospects and government subsidization for tuition is making college more expensive.

Economist Milton Friedman Tackles 3 Common Misconceptions about Government's Role in Society


Saturday, November 9, 2013

Why "Equal Pay for Equal Work" Laws are Counterproductive to Women in the Workplace


Nobel Prize winning Economist Milton Friedman on "Equal Pay for Equal Work" Laws: "I'm on your side, but you're not"

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Ashton Kutcher Explains his Speech at the Teen Choice Awards


“There’s an entitlement that is starting to emerge that I think is unhealthy for people and unhealthy for our country.”

"I think that so much of what we see in the world today is this sort of propaganda machine around fame and around celebrity — and I actually think that there are some kids in the world that grow up today that think, ‘When I grow up I want to be famous’ instead of, ‘When I grow up I want to do something, I want to build something, I want to create something.”

The actor took particular aim at a number of societal phenomena, including a push for fame just for the sake of fame and an influx of people who are entitled and simply don’t want to work hard.

Noting that some of his own friends don’t want to work at Starbucks, because they believe it is beneath them, Kutcher said, ”The only thing that can be below you is to not have a job.”

via TheBlaze.com

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Some people actually think we should ban (or cap) corporate profit.


But why would anyone go through the work of starting a business, hiring people and producing goods if they had nothing to gain from doing so?

Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?

 



Is increasing the power of the state the best way to reduce exploitation of those under-represented or vulnerable in society? After all, the only entity that has the force of law behind their ability to extract money from the citizens is the government.  Private companies and corporations only have the ability to present an offer that is mutually beneficial to both the worker and the company as a whole.  If both conditions are not met, no deal will take place and neither party will reap the benefits they have to offer one another because both sides have the freedom to choose what they do given the opportunity to make such a deal.  However, if a government institutes a law restricting either party of that freedom, one is left to wonder who is actually exploiting either side of the deal.

The Transformation of the American Idea of Success


While I hate to post political ads of any sort, I do believe this particular ad says a lot to the way the conversation in America has shifted from the question of how one might achieve the success others have to the question of how one might articulate the ways in which some people achieve success at the expense of others.

People lose sight of the fact that in a perfect capitalist society, trades and contracts are only made on the condition that both parties benefit more from making the trade than they do from choosing any other available option.  The worker benefits because he believes his work is worth more than the salary a company gives him, a company believes the laborer’s work is worth at least the value of the laborer’s salary, and a consumer decides that one particular company sells a better product at a cheaper price than any other company does. This is a free society.  We only receive what we agree to pay for and we only pay for things at a price we are willing to pay.  Its a simple concept that is constantly criticized by people that can’t understand how something as complex as an economic system can be understood through such a simple concept as two sides agreeing to something that makes them both better off.

Ashton Kutcher Preaches the Importance of Hard Work at Teen Choice Awards


“When I was 13, I had my first job with dad carrying shingles to the roof, and then I got a job washing dishes at a restaurant, and then I got a job in a grocery-store deli, and then I got a job in a factory sweeping Cheerio dust off the ground,” he recalled.

“And I never had a job in my life that I was better than. I was always just lucky to have a job,” preached Kutcher. “And every job I had was a stepping stone to my next job, and I never quit my job until I had my next job. And so opportunities look a lot like work.”

The Beauty of the Free Market

The Free Market is a beautiful phenomenon.  Market forces voluntarily coming together to make the goods we take for granted every day.

"1%-er" Talks with "Occupy Wall Street" Protesters

"1%er" Talks with "Occupy Wall Street" and they realize that their anger is misdirected.  The problem isn’t "the 1%" nor is it necessarily Wall Street.  It is the economic environment set up by our government that prevents true capitalism from taking place.
For those of you who disagree with capitalism because they think the current system is capitalism and the problems in our society prove that it does not work, realize that our economic system is not true capitalism.  Massive amounts of government involvement and intervention in the market have prevented capitalism from truly taking place, and can be attributed to many of the problems we are seeing in our economy today.

Peter Schiff on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart: We need an economy that grows based on savings, not consumer credit.

John Stewart on the Conservative Message: "If it was presented in this fashion, the conversation would be different"


STEWART: Your politics have shifted from liberal to conservative. Here is my issue with conservative politics as they stand right now. It’s too easy. It doesn’t have any of the responsibility of governance. If your mantra is government cannot help, then any chaos or lethargy that you sow in the government helps to prove your point. You have no incentive to be responsible in creating solutions to many of the problems that face us.

KRAUTHAMMER: That would be true but unfortunately, the assumption is a caricature. The conservative idea is not that government has no role. You might have argued that in the thirties when conservatives opposed the New Deal. There’s no question of accepting the great achievements of liberalism — the achievements of the New Deal, of Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare. The idea that you rescue the elderly and don’t allow the elderly to enter into destitution is a consensual idea that conservatives, at least the mainstream of conservatives —

STEWART: I would say that the rhetoric is the same. If you lock at the rhetoric when conservatives opposed the New Deal, opposed Social Security, opposed Medicare — it is identical. Ted Cruz quotes Ronald Reagan’s Medicare speech in 1960 as he opposed Obamacare.

KRAUTHAMMER: Ted Cruz is not the official spokesman for American conservatism. If you want somebody who has been out there, who has offered an alternative — the person who offered an alternative for example is … Paul Ryan. But, let me start with his assumption. His assumption is not that government doesn’t have a role. His assumption is that the welfare state as established with great success by liberals has now reached a point where it no longer fits. With the new demographics and with the higher technology and medicine, we will simply become insolvent unless we radically reform. I’ll give you one fact. When Social Security was instituted, the age of longevity was 62. Today life expectancy is 80. So what you have is a huge change in the demographics and when you look to Europe, which is the social democratic state where we’re headed which has all the entitlements of the government activities which a liberal would want and — to with which American liberalism is headed — it became insolvent because it never adapted to the change in demographics and the change in technology.  And it has had a rude awakening.

STEWART: If it was ever presented in that fashion, the way you just presented it, I think the conversation we would be having in this country would be very different.

Change the Conversation: Education and the Skills Gap


Dirty Jobs’ Mike Rowe: “A trillion dollars in student loan debt right now.  A trillion dollars.  We are lending money that we don’t have to kids that will never be able to pay it back to educate them for jobs that no longer exist.”

We don’t have a lack of jobs available in this country.  We have a workforce that lacks the technical skills it needs to fill the millions of vacant jobs that are currently being offered.

Read more from Rowe here: http://profoundlydisconnected.com/cnn-viewer-has-questions/

The Concept of Wealth

A fundamental difference between liberals and conservatives is their feelings about the generation of wealth and the means by which people become wealthy. Conservatives tend to believe that an individual’s wealth is the value of the goods and services they provided to society, given voluntarily to them by the people who benefited from it.  Liberals tend to believe it is the money that only greedy people get by exploiting the worker through a corrupt system.