Sunday, May 01, 2011

Deficits Being Used by Politicians to Chip Away at Democracy

Our country has many financial meltdown induced problems that are greatly changing our lives. The meltdown was created by mismanagement and greed in the financial private sector and the failure of our elected national government to exert obvious controls. It was not caused by workers, their unions, or our retired citizens. In a sad and cruel action, the elected governments in several states are passing drastic laws that require these innocent people to pay the price. This is an in-your-face violation of the “establish justice, promote the domestic tranquility, promote the general welfare and blessings of liberty” provisions of the preamble to the Constitution.


Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan are active in this area. In these states large numbers of public workers, such as teachers, firemen, and police are being terminated. Drastic changes to the school system are made. Public owned property is going up for sale. Every issue that binds citizens to their local government is up for destruction.

Michigan goes even further by giving the governor the authority to displace mayors, councilmen, and other elected officials with what can only be described as a finance dictator. Originally discussed in our March 31 post the May 2 issue of Business Week updates the effects of the Michigan law. The governor can force the citizens to trade democracy for the mythical “benevolent dictator”. He has done just that in Benton Harbor. As in all actions against democracy claims are made that it will be more efficient. This is a very dangerous precedent.

It is a strange feeling to see states take such aggressive behavior toward American middle class citizens rather that those who caused the problem. Especially so because many of the actions are directed at goals other than the deficit. For example, taxes are lowered for the wealthy and corporations, creating a larger deficit, while working citizens must absorb these costs also.

There are other ways to handle the financial sector induced shortfall that would place more of the burden on those that caused the problem. This article gives a true cost of the recession and those institutions and people who were major players.

These actions by the new state governments have lead to serious cases of buyers’ remorse by voters. Opponents claim there was no mention of implementing these drastic actions during the campaigns. The sponsoring governments have dropped sharply in the polls. Recall campaigns have been filed against six state senators in Wisconsin. The Wisconsin law is now held up in court. But the fact remains that legislators and governors who are sponsoring these actions were legally elected. The only correction for deceit in a campaign is through a complicated and expensive process ---  recalls that have requirements that vary between states.

This is a real life experience showing how carefully we must protect our votes against power grabs by the governing elite, either in the states or federal systems. The fact that four states came out with similar programs is probably not a coincidence.

No comments: