As
approached by many throughout the years, here is my little "things that
I'd fix if it was up to me" list for Congress - inspired by
Daddybear's recent version, Tam, and P.J. O'Rourke amongst others.
No, not
all ideas are my own. And they're posted in the meticulous order of "as I
thought of them while typing." Not an all inclusive list, but bound to
spin a few heads.
Of course they're not all logical or easily done. Welcome to my soapbox, deal!
-
#1, absolutely - term limits. Whether it's your local sheriff or
Washington "insiders," the career politician has done more damage to
this country in the past two centuries than anything else. So - 3 terms
in public, elected office maximum in your life - whether dogcatcher,
state governor, or president. Once you had your bite at the apple move
on. This solves the issue of people camping out in office for one, and
returns politics to a duty spread amongst a wide majority of citizens
over time.
- Just to piss off Chicago and New York, we'll
deal with nepotism too. Once you've held an office no member of your
immediate family (parents/children/siblings/spouses) can hold the same
office, ever. Get the Daley's and the like out of politics and back to
running junkyards or something.
- Congress/The
President/etc will be paid a stipend set at the median wage for D.C.
during the time of their office. No sitting up there soaking up money
from the taxpayer. Oh, and no retirement or other benefits - serving in
office is a privilege, not a ticket to entitlement.
-
After leaving office no working as a lobbyist, or you (or family
members) benefiting from ANY federal contract for a minimum of five
years. We'll go ahead and include military retirees in that as well, to
cut down on the problems with flag officers padding their retirement
portfolios with pet projects.
- There are about
4400 words in the U.S. Constitution. No law, statute, regulation or
other guiding legislation is allowed to be longer than this. If you
can't explain it in the same or fewer words than how to run a country
start trimming.
- No law, regulation, etc will be passed
that does not apply equally to every member of the legislature,
administration, judiciary, their families, staffs etc - if it's good
enough for us it's good enough for them.
- Similarly, any
new legislation must be able to specifically cite the article of the
Constitution giving the Federales such authority - if not, it's kicked
back down to the States.
- No more Congress policing
itself - we need oversight on the system as a whole, and not some
appointed body or fact finding commission. Whether the so-called "House
Ethics Committee" of recent years, or the laughable farce of attempting
to hold the current head of Justice accountable for anything beyond his
name, if the people can't trust that wrongdoing at every level will be
punished than faith in the system is absent.
-
Budget, budget, budget - always room for some fun here. #1, no more
deficit spending. Make the books balance, if you can't then start
cutting programs. In fact, we'll start with an immediate 10% budget cut
across the board - actual budget, not shuffling numbers, and no
exceptions for pet programs, benefits, entitlements or whatever.
-
Flat income tax and corporate tax. No deductions or breaks, no
loopholes. This addresses both the fact of half the nation not paying
taxes, as well as ensuring everyone "pays their share" - since it's
equal across the board. Plus, it doesn't remove incentives for success -
make more, keep more.
- If we can start putting caps and cuts on military benefits we can do the same for Social Security, welfare, and the like.
-
Speaking of - a radical welfare reform. No more long-term unemployment
without job seeking or retraining, no multi-generation welfare families
and the like.
- Similarly, let's cut down on benefit
abuse. Found selling your benefits, letting 47 people live in your
subsidized housing, or otherwise gaming the system (oh, that goes for
disability too) - you're off the program forever.
-
Drugs. Always a touchy subject. While I personally don't approve of them
and have seen the damage, the Drug War has done more damage to the
rights and safety of our citizens than drugs ever did. So - I guess we
can treat them like alcohol or other adult behaviors. But we can also
include the same kinds of penalties - you commit crimes on/because of
dope, you get harsher sentences. You want to work in certain jobs or get
your public benefits, then drug testing is on your agenda too. You want
to get clean then we'll help as a nation, but if you want to abuse then
you deal with the consequences.
- While
we're on crime let's return to real prison sentences for real crimes. No
more slaps on the wrist and then everyone wonders why this went so bad
eventually... but also no more of this life sentence for a pound of weed
crap that is clogging our jails. Repeat offenders? Hammer em.
-
Let's not leave the police out of this. Return to ideals like the 4th
amendment. Corrupt cops? Throw the book at them. SWAT entries on all
these warrants? Film them all, subject to review at any time by the
citizenry. If we can't defend what we're doing in the light of day than
we need to rethink our actions. And let's return to worrying about actual crimes, not an EPA SWAT team investigating the possible overwork of a gold mine by two hours on the third Friday in spring during a glacial runoff...
- Immigration -
while this country was built on immigrants it was built on legal
immigration mostly. And there are far too many talented people worldwide
working their butts off to get here the right way. So, here's the
Captain's amnesty program. You have sixty days, we'll even help you get
to the border. Once you leave all your immigration related offenses are
forgiven and you get a clean slate in that department (though not any
other criminal acts). Following that you can enter legally like everyone
else. Heck, we'll encourage your entry - to become a member of this
country, to learn the language, and to partake of our society. I'm all
for respecting your heritage, but if your goal isn't to become an
American first before any other identity than find someplace else.
-
I like Heinlein's idea, but think we can make it even more workable for
"citizenship." From age 18-20 EVERYONE does national service, whether
it be the military, peace corps type work (domestically we need it for
the infrastructure and inner cities desperately), or just helping clean
your city. This will help get an even playing field back for those of
the privileged who have forgotten what the real world is like, as well
as at least some discipline and training for everyone. Plus, let's face
it, most kids that age aren't ready for college beyond as a party time
anyway, and this gives them some focus. THEN, if you want the privilege
of citizenship and voting or running for office, you do an extra two
years in national service, to show at least some modicum of public
responsibility.
- Restructure the military. Get rid of our
top-heavy officer corps and too gorram many flag officers. We have the
most professional military in history possibly, but it is led by the
most panty-waisted, self-promoting, risk-adverse leadership possible.
Fix it.
- Speaking of, we're done being the world's
policeman for free. Strict isolationism is unrealistic in this global
age, but if we have to step in then someone is helping foot the bill -
be it multinational, the aggressor nation, or the ones asking for help.
No, this doesn't make us mercenaries - this means we're not spending
trillions of dollars to protect nations like Saudi Arabia from their
neighbors while they rape us in oil costs.
- While we're
on foreign policy, a ten year cap on foreign aid to any nation. If you
can't get your crap together by then it's beyond our problem. Free trade
and help that way? Absolutely - but we're done giving handouts when we
can't pay our own bills.
- Attack the nation and
there won't be any of this "Oh, we'll declare war on a noun" crap.
Immediate, overwhelming response is what defeats bullies. We won't pick
on anyone, but don't mistake that for weakness.
-
I most heartily approve of DB's example regarding no more subsidies for
industry. There is no business "too big to fail" - if you can't make it
work than find a new plan or call it quits. This also ties in with
above issues of political/military cronyism in industry, and corruption
as a whole.
- Social issues are fun too. Guess what -
marriage is a civil/religious deal between consenting adults - no
business of the government. Similarly, that means you don't get
benefits, tax breaks, or the like just for being married. Want to marry
three women and two guys, and your church approves it? Knock yourself
out & have fun figuring out those living arrangements.
- Similarly for your lifestyle choices.
As long as all involved are consenting adults and you're not harming
anyone else, whatever. But that also means you don't get to flaunt it in
the faces of everyone anymore than anyone else does. Live and let live
people.
- Finally, and probably equally important
with the first - secession. You know what - this country was founded on
freedom and such the ability to separate when needed from a government
you don't agree with. Why don't we return to that? You don't like my
ideas (New York and California, I'm talking to you) - feel free. Declare
your independence, we won't fight it, and we'll open diplomatic
relations as soon as you're willing. Hack it as a nation under your own
rules and it's not our place to judge.
I could probably come up with twenty others easily. But I'll start with that bit just for laughs and commentary.
7 comments:
Amen! Amen! Amen!
I can't like this enough!
Very well done Capt ;) And very well thought out.
I would subscribe you your newsletter sir...
Though I think my budget cuts would be deeper then yours. :) But thats something we can quibble about - the rest I can get behind completely.
So, where can I donate to your campaign?
Agree with all... And Happy New Year to you and yours!
I like almost all of it. One comment to think about. You said "... Flat income tax and corporate tax. No deductions or breaks, no loopholes..."
You can't tax a corporation. It cannot be done. Corporations see taxes like any other expense of doing business. They always include business related expenses in the cost of their products. In essence, any tax levied on a corporation makes the corporation a middle-man, collecting taxes for the government from their customers in the form of a higher product cost.
You got my vote for Emperor!
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