What's new
Forums
Members
Resources
Whopper Club
Politics
Pics
Videos
Fishing Reports
Classifieds
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Members
Resources
Whopper Club
Politics
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
General
General Discussion
Direct Payments to farmers/ranchers
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Fritz the Cat" data-source="post: 180680" data-attributes="member: 605"><p>It opened for me. Here you go:</p><p></p><p><strong>GUIDELINE #4: Terminate failed, outdated, and irrelevant programs.</strong>President Ronald Reagan once pointed out that "a government bureau is the closest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on earth." A large portion of the current federal bureaucracy was created during the 1900s, 1930s, and 1960s in attempts to solve the unique problems of those eras.</p><p>Instead of replacing the outdated programs of the past, however, each period of government activism has built new programs on top of them. Ford Motor Company would not waste money today by building outdated Model T's alongside their current Mustangs and Explorers. However, in 2004, the federal government still refuses to close down old agencies such as the Rural Utilities Service (designed to bring phones to rural America) and the U.S. Geological Survey (created to explore and detail the nation's geography).</p><p>Government must be made light and flexible, adaptable to the new challenges the country will face in the 21st century. Weeding out the failed and outdated bureaucracies of the past will free resources to modernize the government.</p><p><strong>Status Quo Bias.</strong> Lawmakers often acknowledge that certain programs show no positive effects. Regrettably, they also refuse to terminate even the most irrelevant programs. The most obvious reason for this timidity is an aversion to fighting the special interests that refuse to let their pet programs end without a bloody fight.</p><p>A less obvious reason is that eliminating government programs seems reckless and bold to legislators who have never known a federal government without them. Although thousands of programs have come and gone in the nation's 228-year history, virtually all current programs were created before most lawmakers came to Washington. For legislators who are charged with budgeting and implementing the same familiar programs year after year, a sense of permanency sets in, and termination seems unfathomable.<a href="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077458" target="_blank">7</a> No one even remembers when a non-government entity addressed the problems.</p><p>The Department of Energy, for example, has existed for just one-tenth of the country's history, yet closing it down seems ridiculous to those who cannot remember the federal government before 1977 and for whom appropriating and overseeing the department has been an annual ritual for years. Lawmakers need a long-term perspective to assure them the sky does not fall when a program is terminated. For example, the Bureau of Mines and the U.S. Travel and Tourism Administration, both closed in 1996, are barely remembered today.<a href="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077462" target="_blank">8</a></p><p>Instead of just assuming that whoever created the programs decades ago must have been filling some important need that probably exists today, lawmakers should focus on the future by asking themselves the following question: If this program did not exist, would I vote to create it? Because the answer for scores of programs would likely be "no," Congress should:</p><p></p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><strong>Close down failed or outdated agencies, programs, and facilities, including:</strong></li> </ul><p></p><ol> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The U.S. Geological Survey<a href="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077467" target="_blank">9</a> (2004 spending: $841 million, discretionary);<a href="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077470" target="_blank">10</a></li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The Maritime Administration ($633 million, discretionary);</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The International Trade Commission ($61 million, discretionary);</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The Economic Development Administration ($417 million, discretionary);</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program ($1,892 million, discretionary);</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The Technology Opportunities Program ($12 million, discretionary);</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Obsolete military bases;</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The Appalachian Regional Commission ($94 million, discretionary);</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Obsolete Veterans Affairs facilities;</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">The Rural Utilities Service (-$1,493 million,<a href="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077482" target="_blank">11</a> mandatory); and</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Repeal Public Law 480's non-emergency international food programs ($127 million, discretionary).</li> </ol></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fritz the Cat, post: 180680, member: 605"] It opened for me. Here you go: [B]GUIDELINE #4: Terminate failed, outdated, and irrelevant programs.[/B]President Ronald Reagan once pointed out that "a government bureau is the closest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on earth." A large portion of the current federal bureaucracy was created during the 1900s, 1930s, and 1960s in attempts to solve the unique problems of those eras. Instead of replacing the outdated programs of the past, however, each period of government activism has built new programs on top of them. Ford Motor Company would not waste money today by building outdated Model T's alongside their current Mustangs and Explorers. However, in 2004, the federal government still refuses to close down old agencies such as the Rural Utilities Service (designed to bring phones to rural America) and the U.S. Geological Survey (created to explore and detail the nation's geography). Government must be made light and flexible, adaptable to the new challenges the country will face in the 21st century. Weeding out the failed and outdated bureaucracies of the past will free resources to modernize the government. [B]Status Quo Bias.[/B] Lawmakers often acknowledge that certain programs show no positive effects. Regrettably, they also refuse to terminate even the most irrelevant programs. The most obvious reason for this timidity is an aversion to fighting the special interests that refuse to let their pet programs end without a bloody fight. A less obvious reason is that eliminating government programs seems reckless and bold to legislators who have never known a federal government without them. Although thousands of programs have come and gone in the nation's 228-year history, virtually all current programs were created before most lawmakers came to Washington. For legislators who are charged with budgeting and implementing the same familiar programs year after year, a sense of permanency sets in, and termination seems unfathomable.[URL="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077458"]7[/URL] No one even remembers when a non-government entity addressed the problems. The Department of Energy, for example, has existed for just one-tenth of the country's history, yet closing it down seems ridiculous to those who cannot remember the federal government before 1977 and for whom appropriating and overseeing the department has been an annual ritual for years. Lawmakers need a long-term perspective to assure them the sky does not fall when a program is terminated. For example, the Bureau of Mines and the U.S. Travel and Tourism Administration, both closed in 1996, are barely remembered today.[URL="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077462"]8[/URL] Instead of just assuming that whoever created the programs decades ago must have been filling some important need that probably exists today, lawmakers should focus on the future by asking themselves the following question: If this program did not exist, would I vote to create it? Because the answer for scores of programs would likely be "no," Congress should: [LIST] [*][B]Close down failed or outdated agencies, programs, and facilities, including:[/B] [/LIST] [LIST=1] [*]The U.S. Geological Survey[URL="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077467"]9[/URL] (2004 spending: $841 million, discretionary);[URL="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077470"]10[/URL] [*]The Maritime Administration ($633 million, discretionary); [*]The International Trade Commission ($61 million, discretionary); [*]The Economic Development Administration ($417 million, discretionary); [*]The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program ($1,892 million, discretionary); [*]The Technology Opportunities Program ($12 million, discretionary); [*]Obsolete military bases; [*]The Appalachian Regional Commission ($94 million, discretionary); [*]Obsolete Veterans Affairs facilities; [*]The Rural Utilities Service (-$1,493 million,[URL="http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spending/report/how-get-federal-spending-under-control#pgfId-1077482"]11[/URL] mandatory); and [*]Repeal Public Law 480's non-emergency international food programs ($127 million, discretionary). [/LIST] [/QUOTE]
Verification
What is the most common fish caught on this site?
Post reply
Recent Posts
Wood Stoves
Latest: KDM
A moment ago
500,000 acre habitat program
Latest: Kurtr
36 minutes ago
T
What are these things?
Latest: Traxion
48 minutes ago
Backyard chickens?
Latest: KDM
Today at 11:10 AM
Newbie here.
Latest: KDM
Today at 11:04 AM
B
Cheaper Lithium for FFS shuttl
Latest: Browneye
Today at 10:30 AM
S
Heated jackets
Latest: snow2
Today at 8:55 AM
NFL News (Vikings)
Latest: Walleye Slayer
Today at 8:19 AM
D
Catfish anyone?
Latest: Downrigger
Today at 8:08 AM
CCI Uppercut JHP ammo?
Latest: Lycanthrope
Today at 7:50 AM
Buying gold and silver.
Latest: Big Iron
Today at 7:46 AM
Seekins rifles
Latest: Jiffy
Yesterday at 3:23 PM
Tire inflator
Latest: 5575
Yesterday at 1:09 PM
A.I. Are you Excited?
Latest: Lycanthrope
Yesterday at 9:33 AM
Polaris Ranger Windshield?
Latest: Allen
Yesterday at 8:34 AM
L
I HATE coyotes!!!!
Latest: LBrandt
Yesterday at 2:37 AM
Wood Planer?
Latest: risingsun
Sunday at 1:51 PM
N
Model 12 Winchester
Latest: NodakBob
Sunday at 9:35 AM
F 150 Owners
Latest: 1lessdog
Sunday at 5:55 AM
The Decline of Devils Lake
Latest: Rut2much
Saturday at 10:21 AM
SnowDog
Latest: lunkerslayer
Saturday at 7:16 AM
Eat steak wear real fur
Latest: lunkerslayer
Saturday at 6:54 AM
P
Anyone see that one coming
Latest: PrairieGhost
Saturday at 6:42 AM
Friends of NDA
Forums
General
General Discussion
Direct Payments to farmers/ranchers
Top
Bottom