Showing posts with label regulatory agencies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label regulatory agencies. Show all posts

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Our Non-Democratic Bureaucratic Government

George Washington Univ. Law Prof. Johnathan Turley, writing at the Wapo, has had an epiphany:

[Our federal government] is dangerously off kilter. Our carefully constructed system of checks and balances is being negated by the rise of a fourth branch, an administrative state of sprawling departments and agencies that govern with increasing autonomy and decreasing transparency. . . .

This exponential growth has led to increasing power and independence for agencies. The shift of authority has been staggering. The fourth branch now has a larger practical impact on the lives of citizens than all the other branches combined.

The rise of the fourth branch has been at the expense of Congress’s lawmaking authority. In fact, the vast majority of “laws” governing the United States are not passed by Congress but are issued as regulations, crafted largely by thousands of unnamed, unreachable bureaucrats. One study found that in 2007, Congress enacted 138 public laws, while federal agencies finalized 2,926 rules, including 61 major regulations.

This rulemaking comes with little accountability. It’s often impossible to know, absent a major scandal, whom to blame for rules that are abusive or nonsensical. . . .

Welcome to the party Prof. Turley. Or as Stephen Heyward srites at Powerline of the professor, In Praise Of Slow Learners. As I wrote last year in a detailed post, End The Tyranny - Stop Regulation Without Representation, this as the single greatest systemic threat to our form of government.

To his credit, Prof. Turley concludes likewise:

In the new regulatory age, presidents and Congress can still change the government’s priorities, but the agencies effectively run the show based on their interpretations and discretion. The rise of this fourth branch represents perhaps the single greatest change in our system of government since the founding.

We cannot long protect liberty if our leaders continue to act like mere bystanders to the work of government.

The problem is that this is completely off the radar screen in our national discourse.







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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Regulations Without Representation

The single greatest systemic threat to our nation comes from regulatory agencies operating outside of our Constitutional safeguards of checks and balances. The Constitution, Art. I Sec. 8, provides that ALL legislative power resides in Congress. In other words, not a single law or regulation should pass into effect without an affirmative vote of Congress. Yet in practice, regulatory agencies are now the primary source of acts with the force of law. The acts of these agencies pass into law without any vote of Congress. It is a complete bastardization of our Constitutional scheme. And the worst abuser of this system since FDR put it into its current extra-constitutional framework has been Obama.

This from the Weekly Standard on what we can look forward to in Obama's second term:

. . . the tone of the president’s second term is unlikely to improve upon the president’s own words, a year ago: “Where Congress is not willing to act, we’re going to go ahead and do it ourselves.” It would be “nice” to work with Congress, he conceded, but he and his regulators were ready to act unilaterally.

That threat echoed the White House press secretary’s own warning, just weeks earlier, that although Congress ought to act to improve the economy, the president “can also act independently—or, rather, administratively, and exercise his executive authority to benefit the American people in other ways. And he will continue to do that.” The White House called this the “We Can’t Wait” initiative.

Today, looking ahead at Barack Obama’s second term, many of his supporters still can’t wait. The New Republic’s Timothy Noah is among them. “With the election over,” he wrote last month, “the president can now take bolder action on a host of issues that don’t require cooperation—or even input—from Congress.” True, “some of these actions might be controversial,” but “that concern matters less now that Obama has faced voters for the last time.”

Noah needn’t fret. In his second term, the president will have every incentive to pursue an agenda predominantly, perhaps even exclusively, through unilateral executive branch action. Some call this the “regulatory cliff”; others, a regulatory “flood” or “tsunami” . . . Call it what you will, but for the next four years, the Obama administration will govern primarily through the regulatory agencies. And Congress and the courts, having tied their own hands, can do little to stop it.

This long offering from the Weekly Standard goes on to discuss at length both how Obama has already abused the regulatory process and the tsunami of new regulations expected to come down in his second term. This is not a republican form of government, it is a socialist bureaucracy with no relation to the Constitution as drafted by our Founders.





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Friday, January 4, 2013

Court Slaps Down A Vast EPA Overreach

Q: When can unpolluted rainwater be considered a pollutant?

A: When the EPA calls it storm water run off in a vastly expanded interpretation of the Clean Water Act. Or at least they could until the other day, when a Federal judge in Virginia ruled against them.

The EPA reinterpreted its authority under the Clean Water Act some months ago to claim authority over storm water run off. They did so under the theory that storm water run off would eventually pick up pollutants and deliver them to a water source covered by the Clean Water Act. This reinterpretation would potentially have expanded EPA authority to every creek, flood plain, and water drainage path in the U.S., and then from there to include all the land up to the covered water source. It would make of the EPA the final arbiter on acceptable land use and development over a massive portion of our nation's land. It would also have given the EPA authority to order plans of remediation on such land - and if you don't know how onerous and draconian such orders can be, here is but one example.

The Clean Water Act itself proffers EPA jurisdiction over bodies of water with a "significant nexus" to "navigable waters." This has been subject to a great deal of interpretation over the years, but none has come close to interpreting this to mean mere creeks and drainage sites. More importantly, Congress considered giving the EPA authority to regulate storm water run off during the 1986 amendments to the CWA and opted not to grant the EPA such authority. No problem for the today's EPA - they just unilaterally claimed the authority. (As I have written here, the out of control regulatory bureaucracy, operating extra-constitutionally as a super legislature outside of direct Congressional control, is the single greatest systemic threat to our nation today.)

This from Fox News:

Virginia officials scored a key victory Thursday in their battle with the Environmental Protection Agency over what EPA critics describe as a land takeover.

U.S. District Judge Liam O'Grady in Alexandria ruled late Thursday that the EPA exceeded its authority by attempting to regulate stormwater runoff into a Fairfax County creek as a pollutant. O'Grady sided with the Virginia Department of Transportation and the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, which challenged EPA's stormwater restrictions.

"Stormwater runoff is not a pollutant, so EPA is not authorized to regulate it," O'Grady said. . . .

See, not all judges need to tarred and feathered. That said, all bets are off as to how the Circuit Court or Supreme Court will rule on this issue. If the Obamacare mandate can be considered a valid tax, you can bet that John Roberts and four other activists on the Supreme Court can find that storm water run off is a pollutant, irrespective of Congressional refusal to grant EPA that authority.





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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Who Voted For The End To Coal?

The Obama EPA's war on coal is nearly complete. On Tuesday, the EPA issued it's first proposed rule for green house gases that will effectively prevent any new coal plant from being built, at least beyond the 20 or so in the pipeline today. This from the CS Monitor:

The Obama administration on Tuesday proposed the nation’s first-ever restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions from US power plants. If approved, the restrictions are expected to sharply curb construction of new coal-fired power plants nationwide.

The proposed restrictions, unveiled by officials at the Environmental Protection Agency, would apply only to new fossil-fuel-burning power plants – limiting them to no more than 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions per megawatt generated.

A typical coal-fired plant produces more than 1,700 pounds of carbon dioxide per megawatt. Most natural-gas fired plants – the majority of power plants under construction today – emit less than the new standard, around 800 pounds per megawatt.

The Obama EPA's other recently issued rules, the Cross State Air Pollution Rule, Boiler MACT, and Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, all attack existing coal fired power plants. Coal provides nearly 50% of our electrical generating capacity today.

We may be lucky. Obama, when he started the war on coal, sold the fantasy of replacing coal with solar and wind - yet neither are any closer to being cost effective at scale today than they were in 2009. That said, natural gas, which has exploded in recent years, may provide a replacement. Still, the overhead costs of building new LNG plants to replace working coal plants prior to the end of their natural period of operation will be significant. Then there is the question of how much the price of natural gas will rise as demand increases exponentially to replace coal. So whatever happens, electric costs are going to rise, the only questions are by how much and whether we will experience significant disruptions of electric service as part of this top down forced replacement of coal.

All of that said, the question that we should be asking is this, did any of our elected representatives vote into law a bill driving coal from our energy marketplace? No, quite the opposite, when the President's energy plan was presented two years ago, it couldn't make it out of the Senate. So why is it that something so fundamental to our nation is being decided based on regulations made without the approval of our elected representatives and in contravention of Article I, Section I of our Constitution (all legislative power is vested in Congress). This out of control, extra constitutional regulatory bureaucracy is the single greatest systemic problem our nation faces. As I wrote in a prior post, End The Tyranny - No Regulation Without Representation.







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Friday, March 16, 2012

End The Tyranny - No Regulation Without Representation (Updated)

Update: The House has proposed passage of the REINS Act. After reviewing the entire text, I am satisfied that it is the solution needed to restore the Constitutional balance between Congress and the Executive on this most critical issue.

In a dictatorship, laws are passed by unelected government bureaucrats without reference to the will of the people, nor subject to review by elected representatives. So what's the difference between that and our form of government? Today, not so much.

Our Founding fathers created by the Constitution a republic. In Art. I, Sec. I of the Constitution, they vested all legislative powers of our republic in Congress. The Founders further provided a framework that allowed Congress to, at any time, review prior law and, if appropriate, vote to repeal it. And most importantly, the Founding Fathers provided that each Congressman voting for or against the laws was directly subject to the ballot box. We no longer live in that world.

Today, Congress does not solely wield the legislative power of our nation. Indeed, Congress is very far from even being the most important source of our legislation.   Our nation now most clearly resembles the socialist regulatory bureaucracy of the EU, where mountains of regulations with the full force and effect of law are passed by unelected bureacrats.  In our nation today, individuals, businesses, and private and public organizations can be fined, sanctioned, forced to close, and jailed for violating federal regulations that have never been subject to a vote by our elected representatives, nor signed into law by the President. The genius of our Constitutional system of checks and balances is wholly obliterated in the tyranny of our modern the regulatory bureaucracy.

This is a grave issue under Obama, but it is also much bigger than just his wholesale abuse of the regulatory bureaucracy. The growth and dictatorial power of the regulatory bureaucracy is a systemic toxin overlaid upon our government by FDR, and its substantial growth now threatens to wholly undermine our form of government, taking our most important legislation completely outside the purview of our elected representatives.

This has reached crisis proportions under Obama and his administration, who have utterly run amok, passing mountains of regulations drastically effecting our nation, all of which have bypassed Congress.



Under Obama, the size of the Federal Register, wherein all new regulations and modifications to existing regulations are published, grew from 68,000 pages in 2009 to over 82,000 pages in 2011. And Obama is just warming up. A tsunami of new regulations wait in the wings from Obamacare, Dodd-Frank, the FCC and the EPA, none of which will ever be voted upon by a single elected representative. This from Heritage:

During the first three years of the Obama Administration, 106 new major federal regulations added more than $46 billion per year in new costs for Americans. This is almost four times the number—and more than five times the cost—of the major regulations issued by George W. Bush during his first three years. Hundreds more regulations are winding through the rulemaking pipeline as a consequence of the Dodd–Frank financial-regulation law, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and the Environmental Protection Agency’s global warming crusade, threatening to further weaken an anemic economy and job creation.

The most important consideration as regards these regulations is that, almost to a virtual certainty, none of the major regulations promulgated under Obama could ever have passed Congress to become law - even during the first two years of Obama's administration when Democrats controlled Congress. A partial list of the extra-constitutional regulations and executive actions of Obama's regulatory agencies includes:

- The EPA's decision to regulate carbon dioxide as a pollutant, despite lack of any Congressional authority and in the face of Congress's refusal to pass the proposed energy bill which would in fact have authorized such regulation.

- The EPA's promulgation of the Boiler MACT rules that will cost our nation an estimated $20 billion to reduce certain pollutants emitted from boilers. The regulation was made without reference to health risk thresholds for the pollutants.

- The EPA's promulgation of the Cross State Air Pollution rule requiring 27 states "to cut their sulfur dioxide emissions from 8.8 million tons per year to 2.4 million tons per year (73 percent) and their nitrogen oxides emissions from 2.6 million tons per year to 1.2 million tons per year (54 percent)," at an estimated cost of "up to $120 billion by 2015" and a reduction in the nation’s power supply by more than 55 gigawatts (almost 4 percent), according to the Brattle Group, an economic consulting firm."

- The EPA's promulgation of Mercury and Air Toxics Standards "which could cost an estimated $100 billion by 2017," require modification of over 700 electrical generating plants, and because "it will not be technically possible for some coal-fired power plants to comply, roughly 1 percent of U.S. net electrical capacity will be shuttered."  These new standards were not made in reference to health risk thresholds.

- The EPA, in what can only be described as a war on coal (which provides roughly 50% of our nation's electricity) has through its permitting process, virtually - and unlawfully - shut down all applications for new coal mines. In one particularly egregious case, the EPA cancelled a permit issued in 2007 after it reinterpreted its own regulations.

- The EPA has made yet another power grab, assuming the authority to unilaterally issue fuel standards for vehicles, providing that in 2025, vehicles must get an average of 54.5 mpg.

- The EPA, as part of its rules on biofuels has provided that oil refiners must pay a significant penalty if they fail to mix cellulosic biofuels with their gas.  Cellulosic biofuels, while mandated, are not being produced commercially, thus rendering compliance impossible.  

- The Interior Dept.'s Gulf oil drilling unlawful permatorium in the Gulf after their falsification of a report to justify imposing the permatorium.

- The Interior Dept.'s decision to unilaterally put the eastern Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic coast, and the Pacific coast off limits for development, effectively banning drilling in those areas for the next seven years.

- The Interior Dept.'s decision to unilaterally cancel 77 leases for oil and gas drilling in Utah.

- The Interior Dept.'s decision to break an agreement with Utah done in settlement of a lawsuit and reinstate an ambitious nationwide plan to unilaterally take more land and ocean territory under federal government control, putting the land off limits for development.

- The FCC power grab, without any grant of authority by Congress, to assume the right to regulate the internet.

- The FCC decision to order the the big wireless providers to sign ‘data-roaming’ agreements with smaller carriers, thus allowing smaller carriers to free-ride on the mammoth investments by the big carriers. "In addition, the FCC made it clear that it is willing to set the price for each data roaming agreement if it doesn’t like what the big carriers are offering–effectively reinstituting price regulation for the most dynamic sector of the economy."

- The DOE's war on Yucca Mountain as a nuclear waste repository that is still continuing. "In 2009, Administration arbitrarily broke federal law and derailed the most studied energy project in American history when DOE announced intent to withdraw 8,000 page Yucca Mountain licensing application with prejudice. American people have paid more than $31 billion (including interest) through percentages of electric rate fees towards the project and taxpayers have footed an addition $200 million in legal fees and over $2 billion in judgments against the DOE for breaking contracts associated with Yucca Mountain."  Note as an aside that Obama's NRC appointee, Gregory Jaczko, did all in his power to thwart the Yucca Mountain project, including quashing an NRC staff report, altering a scientific staff report on the safety of the Yucca site, and withholding critical information from fellow commissioners.  Jaczko, like Holder, still inexplicably retains his position.

- An EEOC letter stating that businesses may be violating a job applicant's rights under the ADA if they require that the applicant have graduated from high school.  

- New DOJ regulations that require, at significant cost, every public pool in America be fitted with a permanent lift for disabled individuals or face stiff fines.

- The NLRB decision to file a frivolous complaint against Boeing for making the decision to open up a plant in right to work South Carolina, thus strong-arming Boeing into a sweetheart deal with the closed union shop plant in Washington.

- The NLRB decision to institute Card Check via the back door, thus dispensing with the right of employees to demand a secret ballot on whether to organize and thus making the union organizing system ripe for coercion and corruption.

- The NLRB, in what poses to be a particularly insidious decision, has approved micro-union organizing of workers holding the same job title in a businesses, regardless whether the majority of employees in the business reject the union.

- The NLRB, in cases where unionizing elections are held, has now provided for "snap elections" by shortening the time frame for such elections to 10 to 21 days after notice to the employers demanding a vote.  This severely prejudices the ability of employers to make the case against unionization among their employees.

- The decision of the National Mediation Board to to make it easier for unions to organize the railroad and airline industries.  "The law, as written by Congress, clearly requires a support of a majority of a group of employees before their employer can be forced to bargain with their union. For 75 years, the NMB interpreted it the same way.  At the AFL-CIO’s request, the NMB changed the rule. There is now no requirement that a union ever demonstrate that it has the majority support of all the employees it will represent.

- The decision of the Dept. of Education to circumvent Congress and make unilateral changes to the No Child Left Behind Law.

- The HHS Mandate that will require religious individuals and institutions who are employers to fully fund free contraception and abortion plan B pills for female employees, irrespective of whether it violates their 1st Amendment rights of conscience.

- An IRS power grab to require that all tax preparers be licensed by the IRS. "The IRS wasn't granted the authority to do this by Congress, they just decided to go for it."

This is out of control and tyrannical.  It is near the polar opposite of what our Founding Fathers envisioned when they drafted our Constitution.  It must end or it will destroy our nation.

How we got here is the story of FDR and a Supreme Court that has utterly failed to defend the plain language of our Constitution. As one Cato Institute expert, Jerry Taylor, pointed out in testimony before Congress in 1996:

Before the New Deal, wholesale delegation of legislative authority to the executive was largely unknown in the United States, at least during peacetime. With the coming of the Great Depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt sought sweeping authority to manage the U.S. economy. With the passage of the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933, he got it. The NIRA authorized industrial and trade associations to draw up codes designed to raise prices and restrict production; if the president found the codes acceptable, he was empowered to immediately issue and enforce them. Upon hearing of the NIRA, Benito Mussolini exclaimed, "Ecco un ditatore!" ("Behold a dictator!")

In 1935 the Supreme Court emphatically rejected the industrial code provisions of the NIRA in A.L.A. Schecter Poultry Corp. v. United States. The Court, led by Chief Justice Hughes, argued that "Congress is not permitted. to abdicate or to transfer to others the essential legislative functions with which it is thus vested." In his concurring opinion, Justice Cardozo famously characterized the industrial code provisions as "delegation running riot." But after Roosevelt's 1937 attempt to subvert the judiciary's independence by enlarging the Court, the Court never again struck down a New Deal statute on delegation grounds. Fear of Court-packing concentrated the mind wonderfully, and the judiciary chose not to stand in the path of the administrative state.

And so it has been ever since. In the 1944 case Yakus v. U.S., the Supreme Court put the final imprimatur on their Constitutional retreat, holding that "Congress could delegate to an executive agent the power to set maximum prices for virtually all goods throughout the economy." They rendered Art. I Sec. I of our Constitution a nullity.

But there was more to come. The final nail in our coffin came with the 1983 Supreme Court decision in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council. In that case, the Court granted "extraordinary deference to administrative agencies interpretations of their own authority." The Court held that "when a statute is silent on a particular issue, Congress can be understood to have delegated the power to make the law to the agency." That decision grants deeply non-democratic regulatory agencies vast power - and we can see its effect today in the many power grabs enumerated above in this post.

As Mr. Taylor summed up in his testimony before Congress:

With the judiciary's abdication of its constitutional role, we are left with a legal status quo that effectively centralizes all governing functions in the executive branch agency: Congress passes a statute endorsing a high-minded goal--accommodation of the handicapped, safe drinking water, protection of wildlife--the executive branch agency then issues and enforces the rules governing individual behavior; the judicial branch, for its part, grants "controlling weight" to the agency's interpretations of its own authority. In this way, the modern administrative state comes perilously close to realizing the Framers' definition of despotic government, articulated by James Madison in the Federalist 47: "The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self- appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."

Newt Gingrich oversaw passage of the Congressional Review Act during his term as Speaker. It is a law meant to give Congress the authority to quickly stop burdensome regulations. Unfortunately, it has not proven effective. Under the Act, Congress can raise an objection to a regulation within 60 days of its passage. Only a majority in the House and in the Senate are required to quash the regulation - but only if their joint resolution to quash is signed by the President. That makes the Congressional Review Act virtually useless.

The whole problem is a President governing our nation like a dictatorship through the regulatory agencies that are directly, or in some case indirectly, under his control. Thus the Cong. Review Act must be amended to remove the role of the President, requiring only an act of the elected body with "all legislative powers" to decide whether a regulation is to be approved or quashed.

Further, all regulations should be treated precisely as laws. As it stands today, regulations enjoy what amounts to a presumption of treatment as if they were a duly enacted law by Congress. In other words, it will remain in place unless repealed by an act of Congress that passes the House and a super-majority in the Senate.

Regulations should not be easier for government to create and leave in place than the laws of Congress itself. If an objection to a regulation is raised by a member of Congress, then that regulation should only pass into force - or remain in force - if Congress votes to approve it subject to the same standards as any law. That means it must be approved by a majority in both Houses, and as to the Senate, by a super majority if a filibuster is invoked.

Lastly, the time frame of 60 days to object to a regulation must be removed. Just as all laws are subject to being withdrawn by Congress at any time, so must all regulations be forever subject to Congressional review under the framework above.

The above recommendations would do nothing more than put regulations on the same footing as all other laws in our Constitutional system. Let there be no regulation without representation. Our nation's fate hangs on it.








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Saturday, February 4, 2012

What Is Romney's Vision & What Does It Mean For Our Country?

"I'm not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there."

Mitt Romney, CNN Interview, 1 February 2012

As Mark Levin asked on his show the other day, does Romney have a clue about capitalism? I would add, does he have a clue about the failure of the welfare state, the plight of those caught in generational poverty, or for that matter, the role of Democrats in insuring that nothing is done about it?

My gravest concern about Romney's electability is that the left is going to be able to successfully portray him as a combination Dr. Evil / Gordon Gecko / Robber barron in what is going to be a take no prisoners bout of class warfare. And if they do, Obama may well win. After all, if nothing else, Romney's campaign has taught us how saturation negative ads can indeed work to destroy one's opponent, irrespective of fairness or accuracy.

What Romney said in the quote above is beyond tin ear. It not only plays right into the left's class warfare meme, it just shows almost a complete failure to grasp the plight of America. The left will make a huge deal out of this. The right should also, as we are getting very close to making this man our nominee for President.

What a conservative candidate should have said:

President Obama's economy has driven millions of people into poverty and threatens to drive many more there unless we turn things around. History tells us with 100% certainty that the way to do that is through capitalism and wealth creation.

And yet, President Obama answer to all of this is to punish wealth creation out of "fairness." That language is also found in the history books. It is the language of class warfare, of socialism, and of economic ruin. Obama's appeal to "fairness" falsely appeals to our sense of justice. Inevitably, it will cripple our nation and make life that much harder for our declining middle class.

President Obama thinks he can tax and regulate us to prosperity. He thinks that he can do better than capitalism by pouring billions into creating new markets out of whole cloth with huge government mandates. President Obama's idea of capitalism is crony capitalism, where he, not the marketplace, picks the winners and losers. It is great if you are a crony of the President - but it hurts every other person in this country. No nation on earth has ever succeeded with the economic policies this President embraces.

But even beyond that, the welfare and entitlement society are driving our nation into bankruptcy. As to the welfare state, it has utterly failed the many poor in our society who are caught in generational cycles of poverty. It is a tragedy and a travesty that fifty years on from the start of the welfare state, 25% of the black population is still living below the poverty line. But we know how to stop that cycle. Education is the key. To paraphrase Juan Williams, the most important thing we can do for the perennial poor is to allow their children to receive precisely the same level of quality education that President Obama's children receive.

Sasha and Malia are receiving the very finest education available in a private school in Washinton D.C. Yet one of the first acts of President Obama was to end a program that gave the poor children of Washington, D.C. the opportunity to get that same education as his children. Instead, President Obama consigned the DC's poor to the worst public educational system in America. He did that because the Teacher's Unions - the economic foundation of the Democrat Party and the single biggest impediment to improving education in America - complained.

Unfortunately, if you vote for President Obama, if you are poor or, for that matter, for many in the middle class, your children will never get that opportunity that Sasha and Malia Obama have. There is no excuse for any child born of this country to be forced into a substandard education. Unfortunately, that cycle will never end under President Obama and the Democrats, because they value the dollars they get from the Teachers' unions more than they care about the generational poor in this country.

We really are at an absolutely critical point in our nation's history. Progressivism has built up in our machinery of state to levels that have worked fundamental change to our nation and that threaten to drag us down into bankruptcy and societal failure. Wholesale fundamental changes need to occur to clean out the machinery before it becomes irrevocably broken. Our educational system desperately needs to be overhauled. The out of control regulatory bureaucracies need to be systemically altered to restore democratic control. The EPA should never be able to regulate carbon without an affirmative vote of Congress. HHS should never be able to force Christians to fund acts that directly violate their religion's core beleifs without an affirmative vote of Congress. The FCC should never be able to unilaterally exercise control over the internet without an affirmative vote of Congress. The methods by which the left funnels hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to left wing organizations needs to end. Unions need to be brought to heel. No person in America should be forced to pay dues to a union simply so that they can get a job in a particular industry. The greens' keys to the courthouse, where decisions are made that should only be made by Congress, needs to end. The left's war on our military needs to end before we become so weakened that other nation's are willing to become adventurous. And then there are the entitlement programs that have us on the knife's edge of ruin.

I look at all of the above and ask myself, will Romney make any of those changes? Does he have a vision for America that addresses any of these fundamental issues? I don't think so. At best, I think that he will tinker around the margins for most of them. Villagers With Torches has a very good post up answering the question similarly. But each primary voter really needs to look at it and answer that question for themselves. Romney would be better for America than Obama, true, but is he, at this critical moment, the best choice that Republicans can make?

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