Note: No link since the PD (who, of course, put this on their front page this morning) hasn't posted this yet.Seriously. The homegrown comedian creates a series of documentaries offering ideas and solutions for getting the city back on track.
(Too bad most of these ideas have proven to be miserable failures for 28 years solid. But hey, never let facts get in the way of fantasy . . .)
Cleveland's woes - population loss, failing schools, lack of economic spark - are no joke to comedian and native son Drew Carey, who advocates less government, more competition and lower taxes to bring the city back.
Carey took time off from his gig as host of TV's "The Price is Right" to help produce and star in a series of Web reports detailing Cleveland's woes and a number of proposed fixes that will be launched next week on reason.tv, the Internet arm of the non-partisan, libertarian-leaning Reason Foundation, on whose board Carey serves.
Did y'all catch that? "Non-Partisan"? Whenever ANYthing says that . . . THEY'RE
NOT!
Oh, you'll love this one . . .
The series, reported and produced by reason.tv's editor Nick Gillespie, explores problems in Cleveland and other Rust Belt cities and offers solutions using examples from other cities - such as Houston - that are enjoying success and population growth.
Bottom line? As the web site's motto reads, "Free minds and free markets." In other words, move out of the way, government. In a town like Cleveland, with big government bureaucracies, cumbersome regulations and old-school unions, the series argues, it's no wonder times are tough.
Uh, times are tough because quarterly-profit-happy corporatists gutted this city and moved all industry south or overseas. 28 years of Reagan Laissez-fail turned this country into a boarded-up ramshackle heap. The wealthy currently enjoy the lowest top marginal tax rate in 75 YEARS and rewarded ("Trickled Down", if you will) the people with ZERO NET JOB CREATION IN A DECADE and stagnant real-dollar wages.
Republican solutions cannot CURE Republican problems. When was the last time this was tried? Oh yeah,
The Great Depression.
The straw that breaks:
"My only experience in running a city is SimCity, the computer game," Carey says in one of the episodes. "I know that when you raise taxes, all the Sims leave the city."
:eyes: :eyes: :eyes: Yes, because the example of fantasy city-buildin' could absolutely apply to real life planning! Why didn't I see that?
This guy should be in a sitcom starring him, Victoria Jackson, Chuck Norris and Patricia Heaton.