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Common Sense

Fight Terrorism

The FBI is supposed to protect us from terrorists. Or so I thought. They aren’t supposed to have terrorists on the payroll, are they? And they aren’t supposed to let those guys kill innocent people. They aren’t supposed to cover it up when they do kill innocent people, are they? Nor are they supposed to knowingly allow an innocent person to mistakenly take the rap for a murder, serving for decades in prison. But that is what our FBI did.

The Washington Post reports: “A House committee concluded yesterday that the FBI shielded from prosecution known killers and other criminals whom it used as informants to investigate organized crime in New England.” And no one is being held accountable. In a statement, the FBI recognized “misconduct by a few FBI employees,” but went on to “recognize the importance of human source information . . .” In other words: “Aw shucks, we’re real sorry and all that Americans were murdered, but what can you expect? We have to have our intelligence sources; to make an omelet you have to break some eggs.”

We’re talking about double-digit homicides by paid informants to the FBI. With an innocent man serving 30 years in prison for one of the crimes. And FBI officials not only knew about it, but tried to cover it up.

There is no substitute for citizen control of government. Without more meaningful checks on raw and often secret political power, that power may not only fail to protect us from terrorists, that power can become terrorism.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Those Pesky Facts

Truth is the first casualty of war. In the war against initiative and referendum, we’ve heard an awful lot that, well, just ain’t so.

Leon Panetta tells us that California is, quote, “increasingly paralyzed by initiatives.” David Broder writes that politicians “have little room to maneuver.” Laura Tyson says California is “ungovernable” and claims initiatives dictate 70 percent of state spending. And The Economist babbles that while “Empowering the people sounds nice in theory; in practice, it makes it very hard for Sacramento politicians to balance the budget and take care of other state business.” Sounds terrifying except for those pesky facts.

Professor John Matsusaka of the University of Southern California did a study. Turns out that voter initiatives do not control 70 percent of California’s state budget. Actually, about 2 percent of California spending is dictated by voter initiatives. Granted, a 1988 initiative requires a minimum level of state education spending.

However, education spending is well in excess of this minimum level, so the voter mandate has not even kicked in. Professor Matsusaka notes that “The conclusion that voter initiatives have not caused the California budget crisis squares with other research on the effect of direct democracy nationwide. . . . [T]he initiative process is a scapegoat for the inability of elected officials to manage the competing demands for public funds in a period of declining revenue.” What a shocker, eh?

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Socialized Irish

I guess when you’re a pundit you can expect to be bopped over the head once in a while. In a recent column for Townhall.com I talked about the TV licensing system in Britain and other European countries. It is an Orwellian set-up that involves harassing people about whether they have a TV if they’re not paying an annual licensing fee.

An Irish critic wrote to say, “Your article was ‘spot on’; it just did not go far enough in describing the problem.” I don’t mind this kind of criticism because I can always blame my friends at Townhall.com for not letting me write 10,000 words each week instead of the lousy 1,000 or so they let me scribble.

My correspondent says that the TV scheme is “an eloquent metaphor for the system of universal health care that is found over here.” He notes that supposedly “free” health care is of course paid for with high taxes, with the added bonus that sick people too frequently shuffle off this mortal coil before they have a chance to see a specialist. They can try to pay more out of their own pockets. But he says, “Even then . . . tests that would be performed within a day or two in the U.S. can takes months to organise. Diseases that have a high survivability rate in the U.S. are often terminal here for that very reason.”

In other words, when you take away the market incentives for quick and reliable service, you also take away the quick and the reliable. My Irish friend is right. Well, that’s my time.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Just Let Mom Decide

I guess these days breast-feeding is a crusade. Don’t get me wrong. As a matter of political philosophy, I’m neither for nor against breast-feeding. All I am saying is that it is not immoral per se to use baby formula to nourish your baby.

This seems to me a decision you might want to leave to the parents. Maybe even let the mom have the deciding vote. But this isn’t how the nanny state looks at these things. When I came across an article mentioning that in Norway it’s now illegal to advertise baby formula I thought it was shocking enough. But on the other hand I thought, Yeah, yeah, that’s just the kind of thing a nanny state would do.

Dennis Prager knows emotions come into play on this issue. He says that whenever he brings it up on his radio show, listeners berate him for even suggesting that baby formula might be okay. But he observes, “Virtually my entire generation of baby boomers was bottle-fed. Yet we are the healthiest generation in human history.”

Well, this subject can be debated on the basis of competing scientific studies, intuition, and just plain old common sense. Right here, right now, I’m not making any claim about the relative merits of breast-feeding versus baby formula. All I’m saying is, if mom wants to use baby formula instead of breast-feeding her baby, you better darn well let her use the baby formula. Moms must be catered to in every way. Especially recently-pregnant moms. Take it from a husband and father.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Tiresome Term Limits?

Let’s move on. Let’s get past this term limits thing and just keep in power the all-knowing oligarchs we have now. Such seems to be the message of one weary Oregon editorial writer. The piece is headlined “Term Limits Again?” That exasperated sigh with which the writer mutters the word “again” pertains to the fact that Oregonians had their term limits law ripped out from under them. It was thrown out by the courts. Yet, dagnabbit, “hard-core supporters” still want the term limits! Still believe in competitive democracy! What’s wrong with those victims of judicial banditry anyway?

The editorial writer misses all the allegedly wonderful experience term limits kicked out the door. He also blames the state’s budget problems on term limits. Even though they didn’t start taking effect in Oregon until 1998. Of course, wannabe perpetual rulers in Oregon were too worried about getting rid of term limits to deal with the budget. And the wildly unpopular tax hike “solution” was presented only after legislators had safely escaped term limits.

Many of the career politicians who had been around forever before term limits are still there passing laws and taxes. In fact, the term limits law didn’t even take full effect before it was scuttled. Oregonians have had plenty of experience with Oregon’s career politicians. Tax and spend, tax and spend yes, that is the familiar litany. And that is why citizens voted to pry open the democratic process a bit and give somebody else a chance.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Bad Men And Bad Law

I don’t know Jose Padilla, but I think he may be a very bad man. He probably is a very, very bad man. He is alleged to have wanted to explode a dirty bomb that might have killed thousands of innocent Americans. That’s what President Bush says, and federal agents.

But what if . . . not that I’m saying they are wrong or anything, mind you, I don’t know but, what if they were somehow wrong? What if they got bad intelligence? What if it was a mistake and he’s shockingly innocent? Well, in America it must all come out at trial. He’ll be able to defend himself. In America, no one can be imprisoned on a maybe. Not even on a probably. We are all rich or poor, well-connected or not innocent until proven guilty. Or, anyway, it used to be that way. Not anymore.

Jose Padilla, an American citizen, though granted he may talk funny and didn’t come from the Emerald Isle like my family, is in prison. In prison without a charge, without any right to an attorney, because he’s been named an “enemy combatant” by the President, which is longhand for “bad man.” We can fight and beat terrorism, but not by regularly violating our own soul with these authoritarian tactics.

Jose Padilla’s unjust, un-American incarceration is a defeat for freedom, democracy and the American way. We cannot ever forget that this war, like all wars, is about hearts and minds. Which means that it is about being right and doing what’s right.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Bring It On

I don’t get too excited about either major political party. When the Democrats are in, I think, “Oh my goodness, the Democrats are in!” With the Republicans in, I think, “Oh my goodness, the Republicans are in!” When everything is nice and bipartisan, I think: “Oh my goodness, another pay raise!”

Speaking of partisan, Democrats view George Soros as an angel for sending millions of dollars to groups opposing President Bush. But they view Darrell Issa, who funded the recall of California Governor Gray Davis, as the devil. Republicans view it just the opposite. I like that these folks give politically and just wish I had their home phone numbers.

Republican Congressman Bob Ney is now threatening to subpoena groups opposing his policy positions and force them to appear before him so he can rake them over the coals. Welcome to the brave new world of McCain-Feingold. I’ve been on the receiving end from career politicians of both parties during my several tours of congressional testimony duty. I knew why they wanted to know our donors.

So, like a gang of low-rent dictators, they could hurt these men and women for opposing them politically. Congressman John Mica called for the IRS and the Federal Election Commission to investigate these groups, saying they are, “the greatest threat to the federal election process we have ever seen.” Anything that threatens “the federal election process” is a darn good thing. Let’s stop congressmen from regulating and harassing Americans who wish to speak their minds. This is America. Bring it on!

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Dying By Vote

Losing an election is not the same thing as getting your head chopped off. The Manchester Guardian had a headline recently: “President Puts Head on Block.” The story is about how South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun “put an electoral gun to his head” by calling for a national referendum on whether he should stay in office. Whether it’s gun or chopping block, the metaphor is oddly apt.

That’s exactly how many politicians do regard letting voters decide their fate. Certainly we saw it in the California recall, as Gray Davis desperately scrambled to cling to power. Yet here’s the South Korean president openly calling for a referendum on himself. South Koreans are stunned. They’re used to a more autocratic style from their political leaders. British headline writers are stunned. Roh may think he’s got a surefire maneuver to strengthen his power.

What he claims, however, is that he’s facing a lot of political corruption that is blockading his administration. And he points his finger at the political class. He says, “I have reached a situation in which I cannot conduct the presidency. If the ethical standards of the ruling class of our society can be rectified, then I believe this will be a greater political achievement than what I can accomplish during the remainder of my tenure.”

He seems to think the referendum will be a slap in the right direction. Maybe. In any case, it’s a lot better for a political leader to openly invite the assessment of the voters, than to just bull his way through, regardless.

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Common Sense

California Post-Davis

Many readers have said to me, it’s great that California voters kicked Governor Gray Davis out of office. But unless the policies change, California will still end up falling into the sea. Much as I agree with my own argument that it was virtually impossible for Californians to do worse than Davis, I certainly also agree that policies must change.

Many areas deserve attention, but one of the most important is the state’s attitude toward business. Inhospitable, to say the least. It’s time to reverse the political animosity toward earning a living and helping other people make a living. In an article for the magazine Ideas on Liberty , Steven Greenhut explains why so many businessmen are seeking greener pastures across state lines. He tells how Coast Converters, a plastic-bag manufacturer, had to shut its doors and flee to Nevada, where the company will be hailed rather than harried.

At a press conference, chairman Michael Greif said he didn’t want to leave California but that “as a businessman I have no choice. If I stay in California I will be subject to more punitive taxes and fees that will eventually force me to cut jobs. Instead our workers are moving with the factory to Nevada where I will save $800,000 annually in taxes, insurance, workers compensation, and onerous regulations.” Other businesses tell the same story.

Can Governor Schwarzenegger terminate the bad policies of the past? He can if he doesn’t allow the legislature to be the last word. First thing to do, take that veto pen out of cold storage.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Fat Skinny People

I never worried much about whether Americans were getting fatter. Only whether I was getting fatter. Yes, I was. Oh, don’t worry, don’t call the ambulance or anything. It was only a few pounds and then I started trimming it by eating lousy-tasting stuff instead of good-tasting stuff. Also by jogging. Well, I stopped jogging and started eating cake and cookies again, but the point is I could get thin again in a flash.

Two recent stories talk about how Americans are getting thinner, and . . . also fatter. One headline says, “Study Finds Americans Starting to Lose Weight.” The other says “Americans Getting Even Fatter.” I think the disparity has to do with how the samples are picked and over what period of time. Americans are no doubt fatter than we were back in the day certainly fatter than people in third-world countries who have trouble getting enough food. At the same time, most of us Americans get to live into our 70s. For the same reason we’re so fat: we’re so rich. Which also gives us time to exercise. You know, exercise is the best diet: if you burn more calories than you take in, you lose pounds. It all boils down to a simple scientific equation.

Is our fattiness a problem? Well, not for me I can lose the pounds in a snap. It is a problem if I have to start paying for somebody else’s fat problem. We’re turning into a nanny society, which does worry me. Heck, soon we’ll have people suing McDonald’s for allegedly making people fat. Oops . . . can’t predict that any more. It’s already happened.

This is Common Sense.  I’m Paul Jacob.