Saturday, March 5, 2011

Governmentalism-4: Governance vs. Business Club


'Half of a Coconut,
Swept to the Shore'
Galveston, Texas, 2002.

An Original Photographic
Copyright,
mkrause381@gmail.com
or mkrause54@yahoo.com



Governmentalism is not an ideology. It is a method of taking control of money, resources, people, existing forms of government to achieve the goals of a person or a group of people.

The younger George W. Bush popularized the phrase 'the business of government' during his administrations (2000-2008). Many Americans voted for Republican Party George W. Bush, hoping he would return government to the public sector and business to the private sector.

But the damage done by the record number of personal and business bankruptcies during the Democratic Party William J. Clinton administrations (1992-2000) could not be undone. Clinton used the 'race card', colored race lawsuits, to bring wealth to the courthouse crowd; trial attorney associations were among Clinton's strongest financial and political supporters.

Clinton changed the role of government by telling US citizens he and his party 'would think and do what is best' for them. Then Clinton bankrupted the country cleverly using colored race issues as a 'social justice'-type lawsuit strategy.

The myth that Clinton balanced the budget will be a topic for American history books. Clinton used inflation, particularly of real estate values, a favorite of Hillary Clinton, known as a real estate speculator from Arkansas in the "RoseWater" scandal, to rewrite government debt amounts. Phenomenal increases in property tax accompanied increased property values and were used to bankrupt individuals and companies.

The Clinton IRS, fueled by colored racial bias against whites, wrote exorbitant, unfair, and ultimately uncollectable personal income taxes, employment taxes, and other taxes against US citizens. White Americans, especially those attending (non-Harvard, non-Yale) colleges, universities, medical and professional schools, and young professionals were targeted by US and foreign coloreds and their proponents as 'sources of wealth' through aggressive, false, and malicious bill collecting.

Like a popular business plan, governmentalist bill collecting activities sky-rocketed. Projected, but uncollectable, sources of 'wealth' were used to increase governmentalist budgets, wages and salaries, social welfare programs and benefits.

In Atlantic City, New Jersey, City and County, in the early 2000s, colored and colored-connected gangs gained access to politics and government jobs. Governmentalists there created lists of unpaid property taxes on ocean storm-damaged and vandalized properties, many long ago bull-dozed to their foundations, in previously white seaside neighborhoods. Members of these gangs spoke openly in local newspapers, saying they believed they were rival, and equal, gangs with federal, state, and other 'gangs', and demanded the 'wealth' in the area, present or past, once real, now imagined. The trail of 'bad paper' has created anger and hardship that may never be resolved.

In a new development area to the west of Atlantic City, governmentalists were at work. Buyers in new housing developments were meeting to discuss water and sewage. Governmentalists, describing themselves as directors of these projects, were busy writing paperwork to create a government structure for themselves, including a regional tax code to collect money for their salaries and fees for involvement in the water and sewage project.

Some of the most egregious, and obvious, examples of the use of government as a tool for personal business and profit occur in small towns. In January, 2011, Boulder City, Nevada, made the news. A small city of 17,000 residents near Las Vegas, Nevada, Boulder City was built in 1931 by the US government to house Hoover Dam construction workers.

The city council approved $125 million of public (city) debt to build a second public golf course in Boulder City. When the second golf course opened in 2003, the first golf course lost money. Estimated revenues fell from $600,000 to $40,000. Voters organized to object to city council debt funding for more than 1 city golf course of more than 18 holes.

Residents objected to the tax levy against local citizens. The city attorney, who felt each local citizen was responsible for $7,000 of total golf course levy, sued local residents who objected.

Some of these residents became part of Voter Initiative Petition which has become a constitutional issue in Nevada.

The Petition sought to change the job of city attorney from appointee to an elected official job. The Petition also sought to require any City Council debt obligation over $1 million to be approved by the voters. Voters also sought a 12-year term limit on appointees to city committees, boards, or commissions.

The city attorney tactic has been labeled 'Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation' or 'SLAPP'. Other local attorney-politicians now are involved in 'anti-SLAPP' lawsuits to prevent loss of local voter rights to control local taxation and governmentalist 'big spenders'.

The general problem of bullying in America undoubtedly is related to the incredible arrogance of governmentalists. Governmentalists are those who seek government 'jobs' as a route to personal wealth and power by seeking to control people, their money and property, and business.

As Clinton Administration staff bankrupted American individuals and corporations, it parasitized the American economy. Many seek money and power through governmentalism. Social welfare workers and recipients, those who lost in business, industry or employment seek government jobs and contracts as guaranteed income for themselves. Governmentalists are financial bullies who demand other people pay the governmentalist's way in life and use the power of existing government and courts to take money, property, and power from US citizens.

Revolutions against greedy and tyrannical kings and queens, military dictators in Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere, are easier to understand, to find support for, and to win. In the US governmentalists seek to take money, property, power and control from their peers by creating an illusion of legitimate power and authority.

The use of governmentalist bureaucrats and business cards and, in more extreme examples, police power by governmentalists in the current US is frightening. In the past, it was easier to 'vote out' and remove the city, county, state, or federal politician who called his or her old friend the Sheriff or Sheriff's Deputies to 'shake-down' those who would not contribute money, property, or agree with his or her policies.

Since Clinton, the rage of not only US but foreign coloreds has been used to 'take wealth' by force from US citizens. Black racist politics, socialist/communist agends, now threaten the basis of the American Democracy: the right of each US ciizen, particularly each taxpaying citizen, to vote and to decide.

If legislators now are so influenced by special interest causes or their own impulse to wealth through governent, US citizens should institute mechanisms to protect their civil rights. National referendums to vote on issues and expenditures and the Canadian or European style 'no confidence" vote to remove governmental power and authority from those who deny the citizens their right to control their governmental representatives and expenditures must be considered before the American Democracy is furthered damaged.


Email mkrause381@gmail.com or mkrause54@yahoo.com to comment or request a copy of this or other blogs posted by mary for monthlynotesstaff on http://monthlynotes21.blogspot.com. See http://monthlynotes18.blogspot.com for monthlynotes blog lists of titles and URLs for blogs posted on http://monthlynotes.blogspot.com through http://monthlynotes21.blogspot.com.

Graphic: An Original Photographic of 'Half of a Coconut, Swept to the Shore', Galveston, Texas, 2002, copyright, mkrause381@gmail.com or mkrause54@yahoo.com.

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