Let's Have a Government Sale
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
The giant scissors of destiny are clicking and
clacking their way to our national credit card. If
we don't raise the debt limit, so we can borrow more
money to pay the interest on the money we borrowed
before, the scissors will snip and snap like
economic armageddon.
And then the big shiny credit card that pays for
everything gets cut up in two pieces. But never
fear. If worst comes to worst, we still have
options.
Our government is big. Really big. So big that
the nearly 3 million government employees should be
their own state.
The population of government employees is already
larger than the populations of Rhode Island,
Wyoming, Delaware, Alaska, Montana, North and South
Dakota, New Hampshire, Maine, Hawaii, Idaho, West
Virginia, Nebraska and New Mexico. It's so big that
if government employees formed their own state, it
would be the 36th largest state in the union.
So why not go for it?
Call it Bureaucratia, its state flag will be a
stapler on a manilla background, its nickname will
be 'The Inaction State', its state bird will be the
Ostrich, its state flower will be made of plastic
and its entire population will spend all their time
in committee meetings to determine a suitably
inoffensive state motto, pending that its motto will
be, "I'm On Break".
Under this arrangement, all government employees
would be folded into a single state with two
senators and the correct number of congressmen, and
no more clout than that. And the other 50 states
will finally have senators and congressmen working
to create jobs for them, instead of jobs for
government workers.
The citizens of Bureaucratia will enjoy Universal
Free Everything with a 10 year waiting list and 100
percent taxation. And the rest of the country will
enjoy keeping their paychecks and living in a place
that isn't bleeding itself dry to subsidize the 36th
unknown state in the union.
Of course that's a long shot. But we still have
options. If the debt limit is too stifling for
Washington --let's do what so many schools,
churches and libraries do when money is tight.
Let's have a government sale.
The federal government may have run up a 16.75
trillion dollar debt, but it also has some mighty
appealing assets. Like
30 percent
of the total territory of the United States.
That's 85 percent of Nevada, 70 percent of Alaska,
60 percent of Utah and 50 percent of Oregon, Idaho,
Arizona and California might be worth something on
the open market. And some of that 70 percent of
Alaska just might have energy reserves that could
lower gas prices, which would do more to raise the
economy than every stimulus package known to man.
And we don't have to stop there. Do we really need
two Air Force One's? The Space Shuttle has been
scrapped and F-35's are being cut-- but there's a
whole new fleet of Air Force One planes being
designed with all the amenities including onboard
pharmacies, soft serve yogurt machines and gyms.
The cost of flying Air Force One, 181,000 dollars an
hour. Jet Blue offers a $499 'All You Can Jet'
pass. For only 500 bucks, the One can fly anywhere
he wants to for a whole month.
What about not just saving money, but raising money?
We can do that too. Yes we can.
They say Obama is a great speaker. It's time to put
him to the test.
Bill Clinton made 10 million dollars delivering
speeches in a single year. If Slick Willy got paid
an average of $187,000 a night to pack them in,
Obama should be able to top him. The country elected
a celebrity and it's time for it to get a cut of the
profits.
We can take out an ad in the back pages of the UN
Observer offering O speeches at a quarter of a
million each. From Berkley to Bangkok, Cairo to
Caracas, and Berlin to Brussels, if you've got a
board meeting, bar mitzvah, 70's themed disco dance
party, memorial, wake or revolution -- he will be
there to say a few words in style. Have your picture
taken with him for only a little extra.
Will it be embarrassing and degrading to the
United States to hire out its elected leader for
children's birthday parties? Yes it will. But less
so than if Obama skips the party to go negotiate a
treaty with Russia or start another war with Libya.
He's much safer pretending to ride the pony while
making scary faces when his teleprompter tells him
to. And while his stock isn't what it used to be, we
stand a good chance of clearing a 100 million in a
year. That won't do much to dent the 10 billion he's
already spending a day. But it's a start.
And there's no reason to stop there. Obama loves to
golf. Let's enter him in a celebrity golf
tournament. What about Biden? He may not have much
gravitas, but he could kill in the right comedy
club. And let's not rule out the occasional drinking
contest. So many other members of the administration
are also going around giving it away for free. Sure
the crowds won't line up around the block to hear
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan juggle pies, but
there's got to be somebody out there who'll pay for
it. And that's exactly what classified ads in the
back of newspapers are for.
Liberals have been complaining that
33 congressmen are sleeping in their offices.
And that's a good start. But when all 535
congressmen and senators are sleeping in their
offices-- then we'll be getting somewhere. And can
someone ask Obama to please turn the thermostat down
below Hawaii level temperatures. We're paying
for him to sleep there, not sunbathe there. And
while we're at it, what about charging him rent?
Liberals say we should squeeze the rich. And the
average Senator is a millionaire. The top 10 richest
Senators (7 out of 10 Democrats) have a combined net
worth of over a billion dollars. Why the hell are we
paying them to be in the Senate? They should be
paying us.
The Romans auctioned off offices. Maybe we should
start doing the same thing. Campaigns already cost
millions of dollars, but the proceeds to go ad
agencies, pollsters and television networks. This
way the proceeds would go directly toward paying off
the national debt. And to forestall the risk of
incompetents in government, every Senator would be
forced to buy a 1 trillion dollar malpractice
insurance policy that would cover such eventualities
as passing bills they haven't read, assaulting other
congressmen and bankrupting the government.
We would end up with the same government we have
now-- but at least the United States would be
insured for the damages.
Every dollar begins with a dime and so does a
government sale. Under the Federal Property and
Service Administration Act of 1949, the Federal
Surplus Property Program gives away items that
federal employees have through some unnatural event
declared surplus to requirements. Items being given
away include jet engines, copy machines and
backhoes. Has anyone ever heard of an auction? And
why stop at auctioning off backhoes, when we can
auction off bills.
Right now if a company or lobby wants a law passed,
they have to go through a complicated process of
exchanging favors. And the government doesn't see a
dime of that money. Why not just put a direct price
tag on laws derived from their cost of enforcement
and total expense.
Want a government grant for your crony capitalist
green energy boondoggle or humanitarian project to
educate tribesmen on how to use dishwashers? Just
pay 110 percent off the cost of the grant and it's
yours. Doesn't sound like such a good deal anymore.
How do you think the taxpayers who funded your
grants used to feel? Welcome to the new Capitalist
America.
For a decade
we've been paying a billion dollars to 250,000
dead people. And that's fine. As a cost saving
measure, from now on you have to be dead to collect
subsidies. To pick them up, just show up at any
government office in beautiful Bureaucratia with
proof of your own death in hand. (Please note that
lack of a conscience, soul or manners does not
equate to being legally dead.) This should be good
news to cowboy poets everywhere, who can rest easy
knowing that they will be able to haunt the living
with their poems from beyond the grave. "I dreamed I
saw Joe Hill last night alive as you or me. Says I,
"But Joe you're ten years dead". "I never died,"
says he, "I've been waiting in a government line."
The government has
fifty-six programs across 20 agencies dealing
with financial literacy. That's all well and good,
but they're woefully misdirected at the general
public. There's an urgent need for financial
literacy programs aimed at Washington D.C. If we
could just teach them how to cut down from 10
billion a day to a piddling 1 billion a day, maybe
the great scissors wouldn't have to cut after all.
Forget the fifty-six programs.
This isn't a problem that can be solved by
bureaucrats. It's up to all of us to adopt a senator
or representative and mentor him or her in financial
literacy. It won't be a rewarding job, but it's
important work that needs doing.
In the meantime, there's pork pies to be baked and
red tape lemonade to serve. There's no need to raise
the debt limit. If we have a really successful
government sale, we might even have enough left over
for a one way ticket to Harry Reid's choice of
cowboy poetry festivals.