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Common Sense

Caught Stealing

Yankee Stadium in New York is called “the house that Ruth built.”

Babe Ruth became a legend in his own time, selling enough tickets to make the Yankees a very successful team, not only in the record books, but also on the team’s bank statement. Ruth brought the fans, fans bought tickets and the Yankees built a great stadium. Those were the days.

Today it’s different. Oh, the games are as fun as ever, but when it comes to building stadiums, a political rip-​off is taking place. You see wealthy owners today don’t build stadiums. Increasingly, you build them. That’s right, it’s your money that’s taken in taxes to pay for most of the new stadiums whether you like sports or not. Now, I love sports, but I hate political rip-offs.

It happened in Milwaukee. Voters said no for a publicly financed stadium, but the legislature stiff-​armed voters, raising the sales tax to pay for it.

Pittsburgh voters turned down a plan for a new park, but the politicians are still subsidizing it.

In Seattle, voters said no to forking over $285 million for a new stadium, but the state legislature is clipping them with higher taxes and doing it anyway.

People love sports, which generate a lot of money. But when sports teams raking in millions of dollars get in bed with politicians to rip-​off the taxpayers for huge subsidies it’s just flat wrong.

We don’t need an instant replay to make the call. “They’re out! Caught stealing.”

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

The 13th Month

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If you think we have only 12 months in a year and January comes after December, you must live outside Washington.

Politicians bristle at the notion that they don’t live in the real world. But when it comes to controlling the spending of our tax dollars and staying within a budget, the politicians in Washington prove they’re from a completely ‘nother planet.

Looking for some scheme to spend more tax money without breaking their own promised budget caps, the career politicians will try almost anything.

Almost anything, except keeping their promise, that is.

Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, in Congress for 20 years, admits the obvious, “We all know we engage in a lot of smoke and mirrors.” The latest scheme they’re offering: a 13-​month yearly budget! 13 months. That’s right. 13.

Not 12. 13.

Now, to us common folk it seems there are only 12 months in a year. But the congressional leadership refuses to trim the increases in their spending so the calendar has to bend a little. And there ain’t no ‘controlling legal authority’ out there to tell ’em, “Hey, only 12 months in a year, bubba.”

That’s another full 30 days of spending for the Martians in Washington. Let’s put the new congressionally fabricated month right after December and before January. Since it’s a creation of career politicians in Washington designed to get around reality; perhaps we should call the new 13th month “Deceptuary.”

“Deception” plus “January” “Deceptuary.” What else would you expect from Planet Washington?

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

It’s Not Society’s Fault

Another shooting spree leaves more people dead, this time in a church in Ft. Worth, Texas. What can we do to stop these acts of violence?

Darn good question. First, though, let’s stop blaming ourselves. A headline in my paper screams, “America the Violent.” These acts are not the fault of society at large. You and I are part of society. I’m not to blame for these shootings. Are you?

Stop blaming guns. My state representative sent me a letter saying, “I voted for no guns at school.” Idiotic. Did anybody vote to put guns in schools?

Stop blaming the media and video games and movies. Some of this is offensive, but it doesn’t put a gun in someone’s hand and pull the trigger for him.

When it comes to politicians I admit it’s tempting to blame them. Politicians do their darnedest to screw up an awful lot of things. But these shootings are not the fault of politicians. In fact, most agree that none of the gun laws or other measures being emotionally debated in Congress would have prevented any of these killings.

Who is to blame? The killers. That’s where moral responsibility lies. They’re the ones that did it.

The hallmark of a civilized society is individual responsibility. When we blame others for what criminals do, we send the wrong signal. It’s not society’s fault. Let’s teach our kids that everyone is responsible for his or her own actions, good actions or bad.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Discrimination Please

The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. hated prejudice. He said, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”

It’s wrong to prejudge people because of their race or creed or nationality. But is discrimination wrong in and of itself?

Every day we discriminate for and against people because of what they say, how they act in short, because of their character. And well we should. Martin Luther King thought we should all be judged on the basis of the content of our character.

The Miss America Pageant is changing its standards to allow women who have been divorced or had abortions to compete for their title. The story is a troubling one. It doesn’t have to do with where you stand on abortion or divorce. It has to do with the freedom of any private organization to promote what it believes in.

The Miss America organization says it changed its rules to avoid being sued under New Jersey’s discrimination law. As a private organization, Miss America has a right to set the standards for character that they deem important. And to do so without being harassed by the New Jersey legislature.

While it’s profoundly wrong to prejudge others by their race, sex or religion, it is every bit as wrong not to reward people of high character. Our country’s very future depends on rewarding good behavior. When it comes to character, let’s discriminate.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Throwing Money at It

Throwing money at a problem doesn’t always solve it.

Take the areas of education, health care, and transportation. The government has been spending more and more money on these areas, but the problems just get worse.

Every year, we spend more educating each student. Almost twice as much as we did 20 years ago. But test scores keep dropping, and most educators admit we’re losing ground.

The cost of health care is going through the roof at the very same time that complaints about the quality of care are also going through the roof. Thanks to government subsidies, government regulation and government mismanagement, a lot of that money goes down the drain.

Meanwhile, if you’ve flown this summer, you won’t be surprised to learn that flight delays have reached an all-​time high, 70 percent more than last year. Why is that? The FAA, a government agency, uses equipment that is outdated and unreliable even though better equipment has been available for years. According to the Department of Transportation, preventable flight delays cost airlines and travelers $5 billion a year.

What all these problem areas have in common is that bureaucracies either totally or partially created by government stand between consumers and the services they need. Politicians must stop throwing our money at the problems. They need to get out of the way.

Let those who teach, fly and heal do their jobs. And let the rest of us pay them directly so they know who they work for.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Making the Grade

As the kids go back to school, they have to think about getting good grades.

Now congressmen have to worry about grades, too. The National Taxpayers Union plugged 146 spending votes from 1998 into its calculator to come up with grades for each and every congressman.

The taxpayer group learned that citizen legislators, those who term-​limit their time in Congress, are much more reluctant than their careerist colleagues to dip into the pockets of the taxpayer.

After reviewing every roll call vote affecting fiscal policy, NTU assigns a “Taxpayer Score” to each congressman, gauging his commitment to reducing or controlling federal spending, taxes, debt, and regulation. The most fiscally prudent member of the House turns out to be Mark Sanford of South Carolina who earned a Taxpayer Score of 90 percent. Then comes Matt Salmon of Arizona, Bob Schaffer of Colorado and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma.

What do these A‑plus representatives have in common? All have voluntarily limited their terms. But Congress as a whole didn’t do nearly so well. The overall congressional score dropped 4 points from 1997 to a pathetic 39 percent. Averages also declined by 12 points in the Senate, to only 41 percent.

In other words: Congress got a big fat F. If we want more A’s from our congresspeople, we citizens need to do our homework, too. That means learning who has signed the Term Limits Pledge and who hasn’t. Because those who take the Term Limits Pledge are the ones who bring home the A’s.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.