Money does not pay for anything, never has, never will. It is an economic axiom as old as the hills that goods and services can be paid for only with goods and services.
October 12, Columbus, Macintosh, iCloud
On October 12, 1492, Christopher Columbus landed in the Bahamas, thinking he had reached India.
Exactly two hundred years later, a letter from Massachusetts Governor William Phips ended the Salem Witch Trials.
On October 12, 1823, Charles Macintosh of Scotland sold his first raincoat.
This weekend on Townhall.com? The Common Sense of a broken stalemate in Virginia. Click on over. Then come back here, for more information.
- Washington Post: Virginia Republicans snatched control of the state Senate, ended budget-Medicaid impasse
- Richmond Times-Dispatch: U.S. probing circumstances around Puckett’s resignation
- Washington Post: McAuliffe aide suggested job for senator’s daughter if he remained in his seat
- WTVR CBS-Richmond: ‘No formal offer made’ McAuliffe says about voice mail left on out-going Senator’s phone
- Washington Post: McAuliffe aide apologizes for ‘overzealous’ suggestion of job for Va. senator’s daughter
- Washington Post: Warner discussed job for Puckett’s daughter
- Washington Post: Horse-trading in Richmond
- Washington Post: Was GOP control of the state Senate in Virginia “purchased” with a quid pro quo?
- Washington Post: Virginia’s low-income population needs GOP obstruction on health coverage to end
Video: The Long Con in Arkansas
A video about three legislature-referred ballot measures in Arkansas, one of which, Issue 3, is NOT like the others. Video courtesy of Paul Jacob.
October 11, the Juliana, DAR, and Pershing
On October 11, 1811, the Juliana began its maiden voyage on its regular route, between New York City, New York, and Hoboken, New Jersey. It was the world’s first steam-powered ferry, invented by John Stevens (pictured). His earlier steam-powered boat, the Phoenix, marked the pages of history as the first steam-powered boat to navigate the open ocean, two years earlier.
October 11, 1890 marks the founding of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
On the same date in 1976, President Gerald R. Ford approved a congressional joint resolution Public Law 94-479 to appoint, posthumously, George Washington to the grade of General of the Armies of the United States, as part of the bicentennial celebrations. John J. Pershing is the only other American to attain this high title, and the only one to achieve it while alive.
October 10, 2 dead economists
On October 10, 1714, the French economist Pierre le Pesant, sieur de Boisguilbert or Boisguillebert (pictured) died. On the same date in 1973, Austrian-born American economist, Ludwig von Mises died. Both economists were known for their defenses of freer markets: le Pesant for pioneering the critique of mercantilism; Mises for systematizing economic theory and advancing the critique of both socialism and latter-day mercantalism (what he called “interventionism”).
Two incredible activists in Grand Rapids, Michigan, have achieved the impossible. Through their hard work in gathering over 10,000 voter signatures on a petition, Rina Baker and Bonnie Burke have united big business and big labor in perfect harmony.
Union bosses and the bigs of biz are now funding a united campaign.
Their ubiquitous mailers speak against the “hijacking of our local democratic process” and sinister forces trying to “change our city charter, erode local control and silence your voice,” warning Grand Rapids residents: “Don’t let your vote be shredded.”
Shredded votes? What specific issue are they talking about?
Well, this well-funded business/labor campaign has purposely left out two words that, if uttered, would obliterate their entire effort.
Those two little words? Term limits.
The law that Rina Baker and Bonnie Burke have petitioned onto the ballot, for a public vote? An eight-year limit for mayor and council members.
Nothing brings powerful special interests together like fear of term limits.
The president of the United States is limited to eight years, but Andy Johnston, the Chamber of Commerce’s vice president of government affairs, argues that, “Particularly at the local level, it takes time to learn the ins and outs of city government.”
“In politics you develop relationships with different people,” explains Kent-Ionia Labor Council President Sean Egan. “When you continually replace good politicians for the sake of having new people, you lose the wisdom and experience and you end up with policy created by other groups.”
You mean policy supported by folks “other” than big business and big labor?
Oh, my!
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
Roger Williams
Men’s consciences ought in no sort to be violated, urged, or constrained. And whenever men have attempted any thing by this violent course, whether openly or by secret means, the issue has been pernicious, and the cause of great and wonderful innovations in the principallest and mightiest kingdoms and countries…
Did Viking raiders hire attorneys to stipulate, before each raid, that plundering English monasteries and churches would be hunky-dory?
No. The Vikings just raided and looted. They didn’t also assure their victims, “Hey, we talked to the lawyer and he said it was fine.”
Thanks at least for that, Scandinavian marauders. Because why add insult to injury?
Yet U.S. Senator Kay Hagan hired some high-priced barrister to bleat that looking the other way while her husband scooped up hundreds of thousands of our tax dollars is “appropriate.” Yep. According to senatorial spokesman Sadie Weiner: “Kay . . . had no part in helping [her husband’s company JDC] receive these grants. Her only involvement was when she made sure that a respected ethics attorney was consulted to ensure that it was appropriate. . . .”
No part! Nobody involved in distributing the boodle knew he was married to a U.S. Senator! Had no way to know!
Ugh.
Per investigative work done by Politico and others:
In August 2010, Senator Kay Hagan’s husband Chip and their son founded a solar energy company, Solardyne.
Weeks later, in September, JDC Manufacturing — a company part-owned by Chip Hagan, the senator’s husband — paid $250,000 in federal “stimulus” dollars to Solardyne to install solar panels at a JDC building. Short version of preceding sentence: Mr. Hagan paid himself $250,000 with money taken from us (you, me, your neighbor, my neighbor).
Did I say “ugh”?
Two suggestions:
- end all “stimulus” taxing and “stimulus” spending;
- eject Senator Hagan from the U.S. Senate.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
October 9, Roger Williams
On October 9, 1635, Protestant theologian Roger Williams was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony as a religious dissident after he spoke out against punishments for religious offenses and giving away Native American land. He moved south, founding Providence Plantations, where he fought for separation of church and state, the rights of aboriginal Americans, and against slavery.