Friday, March 19, 2010

Bread and circuses in NJ continues

The government, especially the Republicans, have done a wonderful job over the last decade of championing the uneducated and uninterested over the highly qualified. Questioning is bad, following what the conservatives want is good. Al Gore is a boring policy wonk who should not be President because he is too dull and knowledgeable. Sarah Palin is qualified as President because she knows the common person. What a bunch of horse hockey! I don't want my equal to run the country. The world is a dangerous place. I want someone better then me.

The other thing to congratulate NJ government on is the shifting of the public's ire from their own corrupt friends to people who actually do work. Granted the teachers' unions haven't helped themselves by rejecting 4% raises out of hand as too little when professionals, as equally qualified and educated in their own fields as teachers, are happy to get a 2.5% raise in this economy. Still, I want teachers to be adequately compensated. The world and the economy are more knowledge intensive. Our survival as a nation will depend on our children being able to compete and surpass our competitors.

So, going back to my previous point, congratulations to the government for changing the public's ire. Now those friends of friends at all levels can continue to hide their high school graduate children in $75,000 patronage jobs at town halls that would pay, maybe $25,000 on the open market. All those 6 figure patronage jobs in Trenton will also be safe. But woe be the one who actually does something useful and tries to do the same.

Yes NJ is in a bad financial situation as we reap the "rewards" of past choices. Yes change needs to be done. And I generally support the governor for tackling the state's long term financial problems. However, until I hear the governor announce he is cutting state patronage jobs by 20%, which should include getting local party bosses to reduce their patronage levels (which probably won't happen as that would reduce their influence), all I hear from him is that he is shifting tax burdens to the local levels, as towns scramble to cover lost aid, while doing nothing to get rid of the silent state corruption our taxes pay for.

So don't worry high school secretary whose father knows the right person to let you make more money then many more qualified persons in various fields, you're safe. But if you fill our potholes, check out our library books, process my lawsuit against the contractor who took my money and ran or, worst of all, teach our children to be productive citizens -- look out! You're in the crosshairs.

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