From Pine View Farm

February, 2010 archive

Prosecutors Run Wild 0

Sending 12-year olds to the Big House for acting like 12-year olds.

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So, Does This Mean I Can Cancel My Auto Insurance? 0

Or maybe I should get uninsured microbes protection. Shadow boxing reality in Virginia:

The Virginia Senate took a stand against a key provision of a proposed federal health care overhaul Monday, passing legislation declaring that Virginia residents cannot be forced to buy health insurance.

The legislation targets the so-called “individual mandate” provision that could be part of a federal health care reform package being negotiated by congressional leaders. The Senate passed three identical bills by votes of 23-17, with five Democrats joining the chamber’s 18 Republicans in support of the measures.

(Not that I’m a fan of the individual mandate. It’s not single payer.)

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Colorado Spring Sprang Sprung (Updated) 1

Colorado Springs is in shut down mode as the Town Fathers discover that living in civilized society has a price tag and that the Laughable Curve just doesn’t work.

More than a third of the streetlights in Colorado Springs will go dark Monday. The police helicopters are for sale on the Internet. The city is dumping firefighting jobs, a vice team, burglary investigators, beat cops — dozens of police and fire positions will go unfilled.

The parks department removed trash cans last week, replacing them with signs urging users to pack out their own litter.

Neighbors are encouraged to bring their own lawn mowers to local green spaces, because parks workers will mow them only once every two weeks. If that.

Water cutbacks mean most parks will be dead, brown turf by July; the flower and fertilizer budget is zero.

Via the Inverse Square blog, where Tom editorializes so I don’t have to.

(Later on in the story, a local plutocrat is quoted as wondering “why the city spends $89,000 per employee, when his enterprise has a similar number of workers and spends only $24,000 on each.” Bet his enterprise offers great health care and retirement.)

Addendum:

Tom Publishes an follow-up, in which he discusses Megan McArdle’s statement that she is not against government “in its place.” A nugget:

So no, I don’t think, nor did I ever say, that McArdle wants to fire every cop in Colorado.

What I do think, and say, is that there are recognizable consequences to arguments consistently made…and Ms.McArdle’s position leads in practice, if not in the theory that lights the spotless sunshine of her mind, to local disaster and, unchecked, the long term erosion of American power and (relative) wealth.

As Tom points out, words have consequences.

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Twits on Twitter 0

From ye olde country.

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Of Mice and Men 0

El Reg:

A Swedish man was arrested yesterday on “suspicion of unlawful threats and animal welfare offences”, after shoving 19 mice through the letterbox of his musophobic ex-missus’s Stockholm flat.

The unnamed 59-year-old decided to “wreak cruel revenge” on his 37-year-old former other half, who woke up yesterday to find the flat full of “scampering murines”, as The Local puts it.

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Brendan Writes a Column 0

On Pennsylvania’s on favorite promoter of gambling halls.

I wonder how much of Ed Rendell’s support for casino gambling comes from his notion that it is a painless cure for ailing tax revenues (it’s not–think how much money gamblers have to lose so that casinos and racetracks can pay those taxes governments want so much) and how much comes from his love of a bet?

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Shoe. Other Foot. 0

Dean Baker, writing at the Guardian, speculates on what might happen if homeowners who are under water on their mortgage’s did the work of Goldman-Sachs’s god:

In Blankfein’s assessment, by aggressively taking advantages of profit-making opportunities given to them by the government and the market, Goldman Sachs is accomplishing great good here on earth. That’s a questionable view, especially given the extent to which Goldman has been able to use its political power to tilt the playing field to its advantage, but walking away from an underwater mortgage is one way in which normal homeowners may be able to both help themselves and the economy.

(snip)

In short, homeowners who are seriously underwater in their mortgages should check the numbers. Walking away from a home may well be the best economic choice, and in such cases, it is also likely to be the best choice from the standpoint of the economy as a whole. This may not be advancing God’s work, but if millions of people walked away it might educate Goldman Sachs and the rest of Wall Street bankers about what happens when everyone plays by their rules.

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