Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Get Rid of Sales Taxes on Groceries

I'd like to weigh in on the proposal to take sales taxes off of groceries in Oklahoma.

You betcha.

Not only does the tax on groceries hit the poorest the hardest, but the case for keeping the tax automatically assumes that the money saved by anyone, rich or poor, will not be spent.

That's a stupid argument. Sooner or later the state will get its cut of the revenues, and if the money helps the economy, the likelihood is that tax revenues will grow, later if not sooner.

It's the moral thing to do.

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Oklahoma Lawmakers Wasting Time?

The NRO-based blog "Bench Memos" has a post by Matthew J. Franck mildly taking Oklahoma legislators to task for House Joint Resolution 1003 which asserts, he says, that the federal government is passing laws in violation of the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

That's the amendment that says that all powers not reserved to the federal government or prohibited to the states, are reserved to the people and to the states.

Franck says the Oklahomans are right but ... so what?
But this resolution isn't much more useful than a handful of angry letters to the Tulsa newspaper. Once upon a time a state's legislature could go into high dudgeon and really affect politics in the nation's capital—as with the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, in response to the Alien and Sedition Acts (though it's widely forgotten that more states publicly disagreed with these two than agreed with them). But those were the days when state legislators chose U.S. senators, when legislatures still controlled or strongly influenced the choice of presidential electors, and when state governments in general were in a position to give national politics a hard shove just by announcing where they stood. Not so any longer. In D.C., this will hardly even be noticed.

That fact may be a result of exactly the federal depredations that Oklahoma rightly but bootlessly complains about. But the energy expended on thumping the table about the Tenth Amendment might be better spent on recruiting small-government conservatives, in Oklahoma and nationwide, to run for Congress and change things where change is possible. You say both of Oklahoma's senators and four out of its five representatives are Republicans who voted against the stimulus? That's a good start.

Actually, Matthew, conceded that you are right in every other respect, sending angry letters to the Tulsa daily newspaper is the greatest of all exercises in futility. I'm just sayin' ... At least the legislature can be reasonably sure their resolution will appear in print as they actually pass it.


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Monday, January 12, 2009

Apparition Reported in Oklahoma City

As reported by KOKC-AM radio in Oklahoma City:
An Oklahoma City man's reported encounter with the Virgin Mary recently drew more than 150 people to a local flea market to hear him tell his tale. Thirty-nine-year-old Abraham Rodriguez says he was told by the Virgin Mary quote, "The mother of God wants us to be united." He also says she wants humans to put aside differences and accept each other as we are."
No doubt the Church will withhold judgment on this one, although I think it can safely be said that the message thus far offers no contradiction of Scriptures or Church teaching on salvation, faith and morals.

Let's start the clock, however, to see how long it takes someone to suggest that Mary wants us to repeal HB 1804 and tear down the border fence with Mexico (or whatever portion has actually been built).

There's a piece of dialogue in "Jesus of Nazareth," the epic 1977 mini-series, that applies here. One of the apostles repeats a teaching of John the Baptist, "Hearts must change before kingdoms can change." It is spiritual unity that we need to seek. All other changes will flow from that.

(Hat Tip: Spirit Daily)

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