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Thanksgiving and Capitalism

By Ted Klumb
Monday, Nov 24 2008, 04:42 PM

Thanksgiving and Capitalism

 

Here is a little known story about William Bradford, leader of the Pilgrims, and Capitalism. Please enjoy and be thankful for all of God’s blessings.

 

 

http://www.latimes.com/features/kids/readingroom/la-et-story23-2008nov23,0,7094177.story

 

..."At last the Pilgrims began to prosper. Governor William Bradford wrote in his book 'Of Plimoth Plantation,' 'This had very good success, for it made all hands industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been.' "

"Shoot! If you can keep everything you make, of course you're going to work harder. Everybody knows that."

Grandpa answered, "The first seed had been planted for the American Revolution. People were free to practice their religions as they saw fit and were free to keep the fruits of their labor. This had never happened before in the history of mankind. In the words of William Bradford, 'As one small candle may light a thousand, so the light here kindled hath shone unto many, yea in some sort to our whole nation.' "...


 

Feds Bail Out Teddy MAC

By Ted Klumb
Saturday, Sep 13 2008, 02:32 PM
In a move with way too much precedent, the Federal Government came to the rescue of Teddy Mac, or “T-Mac” as he is known to his creditors, to help him make his Lamborghini, Italian sports car payments.        

   

Sadly, Teddy Mac is a victim, as is a growing number of people, who bought massive or expensive vehicles and are getting caught by high gas prices and other realities that existed long before he actually bought the car.         

    

"Well it is about time someone got around to helping me out,” T-Mac said while dining at a steak house called “Eddie Martinis” and munching on the seafood appetizer. “I was just about ready to move into a FEMA trailer.” Asked if he was worried about the impact on taxpayers, he dismissed the idea as foolish, because he didn’t pay much in taxes anyway.               

    

   “I had to have that car for work,” T-Mac said. “In my line of work, (which he declined to describe) you have to look good, and the Lamborghini did the trick.” Now what am I supposed to do? Ride the bus? Buy a Mazda? That will hurt my image and business.”  T-Mac knows there are lots of people out there he can sue. The car salesman should have told him that insurance, gas prices, and other expenses are all part of buying a car. When asked about maintenance costs, T-Mac bemoaned, “nobody told me how much it would cost to fix a clutch!” This is a $300,000 Italian sports car, so what could possibly go wrong on the mechanical end? For that price it shouldn’t need a tune up or oil change for at least 10 years.

        

Preditory insurance companies are adding to his pain. “My premiums were over $18,000 a year, before the cops hasseled me for going 122 MPH on Good Hope Road, and didn’t give me a warning. Now I have another unexpected premium increase.” Still, he notes, with glee, that he had lots of pedal left and wasn’t even up to 4th gear. He will probably drop the insurance anyway because he feels he is a very safe driver and goes to church every Christmas.

 

T-Mac has saved most of his bitterness for the exploitative Bank, who forced the loan on him, and is now expecting him to pay 6 months in delinquent payments. “They should have verified my income better. Now that I can’t pay, it is their problem.” T-Mac added, They made the loan, and they have to live with it. Whatever happened to personal responsibility!”

 

Bye-Bye, by Buy American

By Ted Klumb
Thursday, Aug 14 2008, 10:29 PM

The Presidential candidates are trying to impress voters as to who loves Harley Davidson more.

  

McCain would rather hear the roar of Harleys than having cheering fans in Berlin. Obama thinks McCain stabbed Harley in the back for not supporting a “Buy American” bill that would mandate government entities to buy products produced in the U.S.

  

“Buy American” sounds wonderful, and hey, who wouldn’t want to buy our own products if they best meet our needs and budget? The problem is this: If you mandate what, or how, to buy, it takes control away from the entity buying what they want or need. Governments have a hard enough time making good buying decisions and/or saving money without the help of those in Congress who never ran a business.

   

During the peak of the 1980s auto crisis, every Detroit motorcycle cop was riding a Honda. Buy American? Yea, right. Thanks a lot Detroit. The fact of the matter was Harley Davidson was not producing a quality product back then, according to their dealers. (By the way, neither was Detroit.)  They would tell me of all the innovative ways they would keep new Harleys from leaking oil onto their showroom floor. Not drips but “Exxon Valdez” type leaks where customers were slipping and hurting themselves.

    

H-D nearly became extinct. Instead of writing their own epitaph, they remade themselves. They became fanatical on quality and cost cutting. They invested heavily in their brand. They made a market for their product and then they sold all they produced. They got a government bailout but it was really more of a commuted death sentence and a swift kick in their behind.

    

When bidding for the High School renovation, we wanted to give our local businesses every opportunity to bid, work, or supply the project without compromising cost savings or quality. We could not have restricted non Menomonee Falls’ companies even if we wanted to because competing for the business is always in the taxpayers’ best interest. If we restricted non Menomonee Falls’ companies, Menomonee Falls’ companies could rightly be restricted from working on projects around the state.

   

When governments mandate buying their own products it is called protectionism. Protectionism starts trade wars that affect all sorts of businesses, violates trade treaties, and fuels a global trade rift. For example, if we mandated that all U.S. airlines bought from Boeing, Airbus would demand the same from the EU. With pure capitalism the buyer is the winner, along with the company with the superior product at the best price.

   

The only way to get people, world wide, to “Buy American” is to make a superior product at the right price.

   

The most effective way to ship jobs overseas is to not understand basic capitalism and vote for laws that will deteriorate the market.


 
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