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Edited on Sun Feb-01-09 01:19 PM by Kurt_and_Hunter
We have to transfer money from the federal government to state governments because most state constitutions/laws require a balanced budget...
WTF?
If a state has a set of laws that spell disaster for the state then maybe, just maybe, they should change the laws or amend their constitutions.
Why is it the proper role of the federal government to save states from their own dumb laws? And I say "dumb laws" because those laws put the states on the brink of disaster needing a federal bailout, so the dumbness kind of speaks for itself.
The states are full of American citizens. If they are in distress, by all means help them.
But we are subsidizing these state constitutions. In the real world they obviously don't work but the natural pressure to change them is bled off by federal intervention.
Put another way, I have sympathy for California but that sympathy is tempered by the fact that the people of the state of California have voted for a host of ballot initiatives saying they shouldn't pay taxes, and the needs of the state be damned. Those initiatives are the will of the people (devised and promoted by a generation of the worst sort of wing-nuts), yet the chronic budget shortfalls are attributed to mysterious extrinsic forces. The people of the state of California have voted many times on propositions that boil down to, "Should te state of California be in a perpetual state of fiscal crisis?" And the people voted YES by wide margins.
I don't say "screw 'em." I say let's at least acknowledge that many of these state fiscal crises are not acts of God. And nobody will change the policy if the state is shielded from the inevitable downside of its own laws.
If the states were auto companies we would say, "We'll give you the money but you have to change your antiquated, destructive policies." Goose meet Gander. "Here's some money, but you really need to put your state government on a sound, modern financial footing. This isn't 1850!"
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ON EDIT: as noted in replies, there are plenty of sound reasons for the federal government to assist states. My compliant is with state constitutions' balanced budget provisions being offered as a reason for state budgetary messes as if those constitutions were religious dogma or Newton's laws of gravitation, rather than flexible works of man subject to revision.
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