21 January 2012

How our crazy talk about money is endangering our economic future

Obama is pushing more change on the public despite public opinion. I'm torn on the pipeline issue, but the administration is standing in the way for no real valid reason. I'd like to see government simple step aside and stop undermining the free markets. 

Government subsidies only go so far before green energy must be viable enough to actually thrive on its own. They should be little more than a temporary helping hand. 

Three events this week have clearly illustrated that candidate Barack Obama's promise to "fundamentally change" America may be coming true. All of them deal with how President Obama and many of his followers choose to talk about money. This is a huge problem because if we let them get away with it without challenge, America may lose one of its greatest strengths, the dynamism of our free enterprise system.

The first was President Obama's latest rejection of the Keystone Pipeline project. The project itself would add less than 1% of the pipeline capacity of the United States according to Steven Hayward of the Pacific Research Institute. Environmental groups essentially signed off on the pipeline's safety in 2010. But President Obama, despite talking about wanting to produce jobs, put a halt to Keystone. Why? Because he is committed to "fundamentally transform" America's energy output toward "green energy."

There are two problems with this. First, despite government subsidies, green energy has proven too expensive and less available than coal, oil and gas. Secondly, shale technology and other modern techniques have opened up vast underground reserves that not only show great energy promise but are destined to produce hundreds of thousands of new jobs. America's energy future is a battle between a top down, government knows best elite who claim to know what is best, and the rest of us who understand what makes the actual world work. Economist Robert Samuelson has called Obama's decision on Keystone "insanity." So far the elites are winning. But those who want cheaper abundant energy and good-paying jobs might not let them get away with this for long.   

Secondly, we have the insane discussion of whether Mitt Romney or other rich Americans are "paying enough in taxes." Time was in America that one's tax return was private and that the only issue was whether the public official or candidate had filed them legally. Not any more. We live now in a world where wealth is evil and candidates must somehow morally justify their tax rates.

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The problem now is that we are mired in a flat-lined economy. Too many people are using this to declare the system broken. It isn't. Not by a long shot. But we ourselves can break it by abandoning it and replacing it with something guaranteed to fail, a government run economy, not subject to creative destruction, that picks winners and losers and has never run a single program with high efficiency and productivity. This is the great temptation at hand. It is being stoked by President Obama, his surrogates and the Occupy Wall Streeters. They must be answered loudly and clearly in debate and at the ballot box in November 2012.

It is time for average Americans to stand up and reject these crazy ideas about money, jobs, taxes and economic growth. The free enterprise system still works and will someday create jobs and prosperity again for the vast majority of Americans, unless we abandon what made us a great nation and can make us great again. 

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Original Page: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/01/how_our_crazy_talk_about_money_is_endangering_our_economic_future.html

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