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Nancy Pelosi - leading the sellout of America
an AP
Photo - Yahoo - unattributed |
New Jersey heroes fighting Corzine.
Photo
by Matt Rainey - The
Star-Ledger |
Of
what should I write exactly....in this hour of infinite sadness....when
America
has
been sold. The America
I knew, or thought I knew, is gone. The President and his minions
have
sold it to the corporations. That his minions now seem to include
the Democratic
Party hurts me deeply. Pelosi has been sold. Lautenberg has
been
sold. A Majority of the U.S. Senate has been sold.
Seven
hundred billion dollars. Does anyone even know what that means
anymore? One million is a thousand thousands. One billion
is a
thousand millions. Our legislators, without even bothering to ask
what
its constituencies may think, they don't want to know, have been
chomping at
the bit to give away seven hundred thousand thousand thousand dollars.
To our friends,
the multi-national corporations. The money-changers in the temple
had
nothing on these guys.
I
am angry to my core.
Let
me give you another example. I am in the process of repairing my
side
patio. It consists of two by fours and two by sixes and four by
fours for
lumber. There is a roof consisting of about 4 4x8 sheets of
plywood. There are four bundles of shingles. There are two or
three tubes
of a tar-like goop and a roll of felt paper. There are nails of
many
varieties. Total material cost for this delightful addition is
less than
500 dollars. If I were to add the cost of concrete and some
stones for
the floor, which were in place and not in need of repair, the material
cost for
one patio would be about one thousand dollars.
That
means I could build 700 million patios for 700 billion dollars.
There are
less than 300 million people living in the entire United States.
Let's assume
there are four people per household. That would make just 75
million
houses in the United
States.
So I would have 625 million patios left over. I would have to go
to
Europe and probably half of Asia to
build the
remaining 625 million patios.
But wait, let me give you another
example. Everybody
worries about employment. Let's assume that a family of four can
live
comfortably on 100,000 dollars per year. Ten people could be
employed for
just one million dollars. Ten thousand people could be employed
for just
one billion dollars. Seven million people could be employed for
one year
for seven hundred billion dollars.
There are about 8 million people living in New Jersey. Of that number,
there are
probably about two million heads of household, that could live on that
$100,000
per year. That means the entire state of New Jersey could live quite
comfortably for
FOUR YEARS with 700 billion dollars.
Enough already. You get the idea. It's a ridiculous amount
of
money. We are told by our money-changers and crooked false
representatives that our economy will fold if we don't do this.
The bill
will amount to six thousand dollars per person in the United States,
but that would be approaching 25 thousand dollars per household.
How much
do you, kind reader, make, after taxes?
And that's just the federal bite. Living in New Jersey under the crooked
Corzine, we are
now told we need to keep the construction people working. It
doesn't
matter that you may not have a job, or if you DO have a job, it may be
at some
menial job paying no more than 20 to 50 thousand dollars per
year. It
doesn't matter, Corzine and his minions, or is he THEIR minion,
think we
should DOUBLE the tolls on our Garden State Parkway and New
Jersey Turnpike to help
these construction workers.
I feel sorry for anybody without a job. Why should I particularly
care
about construction workers? They've made a LOT of money for a LOT of years. They should have saved some
of
it. I've tried to save all my life. I'm building my patio
because I
can't afford a construction worker. But the State of New Jersey
thinks IT can support the entire
construction industry.
I
care for the financial industry too. But
who was responsible for making all those ridiculous loans? Who wrote millions of mortgages at hundreds of
thousands of dollars each to families making less than $100,000 per
year? Banks will fail?
Good! Whose fault is it
that so many thousands of houses
are in foreclosure? Whose fault is it
exactly that the FDIC can’t
cover more than about 500 billion dollars for a liability that may be a
trillion or more?
Whose
fault is it that nobody can even figure out what these financial giants
really
may owe, that scientists and mathematicians have to be hired to figure
it out? I have a feeling it’s our
legislators, our
legislators who have been sold over and over for so many years now.
Am
I watching the Red Sox beat the Angels? Yes. Am
I sad that the Mets couldn’t hit their way out of a paper bag in the
latter
part of September? Absolutely. And I’ll soon probably return to my coverage
of the lovable Yankees too, and the Giants and the Jets.
But
they’re in our pockets too. Higher
ticket prices isn’t even the end of it. We
now have to pay thousands of dollars for
the opportunity to buy a ticket. They
are all rotten to the core, maybe not as rotten as our President and
Senators,
but rotten enough. Rotten enough to hide
the steroids in their sports for about ten years, rotten enough to cast
dirt on
Jose Canseco forever, to arrange a “Mitchell report” headed by an
executive for
the Red Sox, and now to try to hide the fact that they’re notifying
minor
league clubs in advance of drug tests.
My heart’s
not really in this sportswriting anymore. I’m
very sorry. I love the games. But isn’t it time to be more vigilant? Isn’t it time to start fighting back? Isn’t it time to start calling your so-called
representatives? They’re giving our very
lives away.
