Cash Strapped IG’s

The “no tax increases ever, for anything, shrink government” forces, epitomized by Grover Norquist of Americans For Tax Reform and its “Taxpayer Protection Pledge,” are getting what they wished for — debilitated, declining government. Witness the inspector general function, where less money to investigate means more problems festering for anti-government types to decry.  Or cut the state motor vehicle registry to the bone, as I just saw first hand in Massachusetts, to produce three to four hour waits for the simplest transaction causing angry motorists to glare non-stop, mutter epithets and game the clerks who, in response to this perpetual onslaught, work even slower and deploy an arsenal of stock retorts and blank stares to fend off livid customers. This only provides more fodder for government critics, calls for more tax and budget cuts and a greater likelihood of a performance death spiral that further alienates the public and delegitimizes government. As a result, fewer care when bankruptcy comes to cities such as Detroit, major counties such as Jefferson in Alabama, with even states, such as Illinois, find themselves in the fiscal ICU, a trend nicely chronicled last year in the Daily Kos. Defund schools, demoralize teachers, diminish education. Go after public safety pensions so police who feel their pockets being picked compensate by backing off our protection. The tax scolds are happily sowing what they have reaped and, as doctrinaire true believers, don’t see the mess being created for everyone, including them.

Pinstriped Wall Update–New Orleans

A few items ago I blogged about prosecutorial misconduct sinking convictions as angry judges freed, or ordered new trials for, the defendants involved.  Well, what’s been sunk so far are rowboats compared to this: In the Costa Concordia of reversals a federal judge has ordered new trials for the New Orleans cops implicated in covering up the police massacre of unarmed civilians on the Danziger Bridge in the chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.  The judge called the prosecutors conduct “grotesque,” much as the headline in the accompanying article characterizes the police shootings as “notorious.”  What a day for the criminal justice system.

Sandy? Not By My House

Building dunes protects barrier beach communities as a whole but some homeowners don’t care, fighting to keep man-made dunes away from their houses.  This creates a ready breach for storm waters to rush through, flooding adjacent properties whether or not dunes front those houses to hold off the ocean or bay. The end of the story details the status of lawsuits by dune-resistant homeowners, on 5th Amendment grounds, to recover the value allegedly stripped from their homes by recently erected dunes.

Nullification? Ask Civil War Dead

So Missouri wants to nullify all federal gun legislation. Apparently the whole idea of nullification has a lot of folks excited. This is neither a new nor a good idea.  Look up John Calhoun, and see where nullification led back in the day–namely the Civil War and over one million casualties out of 30 million U.S. citizens.  That would be 10 million casualties today.  Nullification!  What an idea!

Stop and Frisk

The “stop and frisk” policing tactic is currently very high profile, and a double-edged sword organizationally, since crime gets driven down, community resentment gets driven up and a fine 4th amendment line gets walked and, as recent court rulings regarding the NYPD have held, are sometimes crossed,  (Posting this article is also a test of whether a public URL from this particular publication persists, so the answer is no if you  click above and nothing happens.)

Pinstriped Wall of Silence!

So, now a pinstriped (prosecutors) wall of silence joins the “blue” (cops), “white” (doctors) and “black” (priests) wall of silence. Time to recognize these walls as a generic feature of organizations dominated by members of a primary occupational group who “understand” why corners may be cut, may themselves do it and, therefore, reflexively defend colleagues who do get caught.  Viewpoints.

Gold Parachutes for Public Servants

Pension spiking is an apt term.  The average public servant’s salary trends upwards unremarkably over the years until retirement or other separation from service looms on the horizon.  Then, some workers, or in this case executives, manage to double and even triple their last two or three years pay, which dramatically boosts their pension payouts. The techniques vary jurisdiction to jurisdiction but who pays for all those golden parachutes does not – ordinary taxpayers who pay more and deserving recipients of public programs who get less.