Job Growth! Oh no!

Here’s an excerpt from January 2, 2010 World Magazine:

…at least one sector of the job market has been thriving during the past 18 months-the one your tax dollars pay for.

The paper analyzed the 2 million federal workers tracked by the database of the Office of Personnel Management, which exclude the White House, Congress, the postal service, intelligence agencies and uniformed military personnel.  Its finding: 19 percent of federal workers make more than $100,000 per year (before overtime and bonuses), compared to 14 percent when the recession began.  The average federal worker’s pay is now $71,206 must higher than the average private sector worker’s pay of $40,331.

Don’t miss the salient points:

1. 380,000 federal workers make more than $100,000 per year.  That’s a lot of money for a lot of people.  If the average American worker across the country makes 45% less, then the cost of living nationwide mustn’t require 100 G’s a year.  Maybe the nature of the job requires it?  That ‘s a tough sell.

2. That number of six-figure people is a 5% increase since our economy tanked – since it tanked.  It’s not so much the amount that’s egregious but the timing.  Think about that: when many folks in many sectors of our economy were getting laid off, many federal workers were getting pay raises.

[PAUSE]

If there are fewer workers to pay taxes since they’ve gotten laid off, where did the pay raise money for the federal employees come from?  The tax payers of tomorrow: deficit spending.  At a time when things should be getting leaner and more efficient, Congress authorized more debt.  How irresponsible is that?

[UN-PAUSE]

Do you remember all the screaming and hollering about corporate pay?  No one seemed to squeak about public employee pay.  There’s no automatic pay-raise machine that’s in some basement somewhere in D.C.  No, people in Congress authorized this: a Congress dominated by a party that has always claimed to be for the little people.  Must be the little government employee people…

3. Federal employees make 44% more on average than private sector employees.  44% more.  These aren’t the ones in war-torn Iraq or Afghanistan, on the Hill or delivering our mail day-in and day-out, remember.

4.  Where’s this money coming from?  Taxpayers of today and taxpayer of tomorrow (deficit-spending).  What if this number of six-figure people continues to rise, where is that money going to come from?  Will Uncle Sam increase taxes on federal employees in order to pay them more?  Hardly.  Everyone will be taxed at higher levels to benefit just a few.  Sounds like how health care legislation in the Senate was passed (just ask states how excited they are to subsidize health care costs in Nebraska and Louisiana and Connecticut).

It is really attractive to work for the federal government – that’s a big problem.  If people want to work for the government more than for a private company, then eventually it will be harder to hire qualified employees for companies.  (Technically trained workers might still work for private companies at lower pay – maybe.)  But that wouldn’t be necessary if the government got into more private sector jobs like banking or automotive (oops, they already have).  With fewer private employees, our ability to compete in the world will gradually diminish because skilled people will work for Uncle Sam since it pays so well.  But what does Uncle Sam make?  Nothing.  Not yet anyway (banks and GM notwithstanding).

If more people work for Uncle Sam, then health care costs will go up because the pool of employees for plans will decrease.  Isn’t that a premise behind “affordable health insurance” that there would be more people in more pools?  So, if I continue to stay off the public dole, then my health care costs will go nowhere but up since there will eventually be fewer folks in my pool.  Unless of course that every single American is in the pool, right?  Sound familiar?

Make a quick comparison between heavily unionized companies and our federal government.  Those unionized companies gradually became far less competitive in every industry (worldwide and here at home vs. non-unionized companies in the same markets).  Their employee benefits (pay, pensions and insurance) often amounted to more than companies made in selling their products.  (How many unionized companies have filed for bankruptcy?)  Was the basis of their bankruptcy more to do with employees’ fat benefits or the lack of need for their product?  Companies that made less money had to borrow more (sound familiar: Senate, House?) to pay their obligations.  Eventually they didn’t make enough money to pay their operating expenses or their debt.  So, they defaulted.  What if our government (that has no income stream from any product but from us) increased in size or employee pay went through the roof and there weren’t enough tax payers to support it and no one will lend money to cover it?

  • Can you imagine what would happen to our country?

The Warehouse Grows

Here are links to more stories that stick in the gut.  You know how after someone special in the house makes Christmas cookie dough and presses it into those shapes and then leaves the “presser” in the sink to clean?  Well, pick one of those up, unscrew the lid and put that cookie dough in your belly.  You know what you get?  A gut-bomb. You know it’s there and you can’t do anything about it except hope that the raw egg in it doesn’t make you puke.

Ben Nelson – Vote for Sale: SOLD

Chris Dodd – Vote for Sale: SOLD

Mary Landreaux – Vote for Sale: SOLD

The way to pass health care, I guess

It’s probably a good thing that I’m not a mathematician or I’d press into just how much money this health care bill is going to cost and when.  I do know this, that once it is signed, taxes will go up.  Once it is signed, Medicare benefits will go down and premiums will go up:

The Proof in the Pudding

I’ve tried to pinpoint just what it is about all of this that is so unnerving.  Maybe foremost is the secrecy and bribery.  Next would be absent-mindedness of spending so much money.  Also, the way it seems as if the folks in D.C. don’t realize that we have to cash the checks they write.  Funny thing about that is they increase the debt limit, spend more than ever before and still raise our taxes.  It’s almost as if the SOP up there is “spend it now, when the punishing effects kick in I’ll be dead or out of office.”

Who is thinking about the future?

What about those Socks?!

We like to dress them up and call them “stockings” – oooooo – but they’re really just decorated socks large enough to stuff things in.

Reality check:

We hang them up (weird).

We hang them up over a fireplace off a mantle so everyone can see them (weird).

We do this with the expectation that they will be filled with something other than feet (weird).

Filled by a clean, fat man (despite having come down a very thin and nasty chimney) who will ascend back to a sleigh parked on a steep slope hitched to flying venison steaks (scary weird).

The other day, I was looking at our stockings.  My mom and grandmother made all of ours and they are exquisite and fun and festive.  But (as usual) I asked myself, “what are they doing up there?”  I thought about what my kids might expect to happen as a result of them being hung up over the fireplace.  Of course, they expect them to be filled!

Santa (the aforementioned fat man) keeps a list of who’s naughty and nice, right?

We still hang up the stockings.

Ask any kid around Christmastime whether he’s been nice or naughty and you know his first response would be “nice.”  Do an obvious double take and he’d likely make a modification, “not so nice” or “naughty.’

We still hang up the stockings.

Why do Christians hang up the stockings?  Well, we all want them filled with good stuff.  But what about the symbolism?  Any contemplative Christian when asked whether he’s been naughty (“sinful”) or nice (“holy”) would respond with the former.

We still hang up the stockings.

Had you ever considered that stockings are tokens of grace?  When you think about the Christmas tradition of Santa filling them whether we’ve been naughty or nice, our expectation in that case is, “C’mon, Santa, fill mine anyway!”  Don’t we always expect the same from our Heavenly Father?

What about them, anyway?

They are large! I’ve seen some enormous stockings.  I’ve seen some decent sized ones made of stretchy material (like Glad “Force Flex” trash bags that stretch so much you could fit a Volkswagen in them).  These huge stockings mean we want a lot of good stuff crammed into them.

They symbolize that we want a lot of God’s grace in our lives.  After all, He is the only One who only gives good gifts:

Luke 11:13,”If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!”

James 1:16-17, “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of Lights with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.”

We hang the stockings knowing that we really don’t deserve for them to be filled or if filled, only with coal.  We have nothing to offer God except that we:

Lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord!

Hang ’em!

They are hung in prominent display.  For some reason, we don’t hang them in the bathroom or the garage.  Surely, if the fat man can do the impossible and come down a skinny, dirty chimney, he could more easily navigate a window or a garage door!

We hang them out in front of everyone’s eyes. It’s like we want people to see, “I want God to fill my life with grace.  I’m even making it plain and ‘easy’ for Him by making my desire obvious.”  We don’t want Santa to have to traipse all over the house looking for stockings.  We want to make sure he gets it!  That large stocking in the middle of the house symbolizes our urgent plea with God that He fill us with His grace.

Hang ’em!

They are festive and fun. The only time people hang ugly or plain stockings over the fireplace is when they’ve forgotten to get one!  I think about the ones my mom made for my family and I think the woman must’ve spent weeks on each one!  Glitter and quilting and stitching and colors and figures!

Grace is festive and fun.  Do we forget that grace isn’t just about giving us what we don’t deserve but that gift is excellent and fun and exciting?  Our playground is heaven!  All of what we know in our lives as good – places, relationships, food, activities – these are “good” because they are from God!  He doesn’t give boring gifts!  Have we forgotten?  Paul said it convincingly:

If God is for us, who can be against us?  He who did not spare His own Son but gave Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him graciously give us all things?

The question is rhetorical – of course He will!  He has!  Look at your life and for a moment don’t focus on the clouds in your life’s sky.  Look at the stockings you’ve hung: see what He has done?  When you awake on Christmas morning to a full (undeserved) stocking, see what He has done?

Those stretchy socks that you and I hang aren’t the greatest symbol: for a time, they hang empty.  In the life of one who loves Jesus Christ, the socks bursts – all the time – even when it looks empty.

Hang ’em!