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Posts Tagged ‘Teachers Unions’

No Recovery From The Housing Bubble Until ALL Public Sector Unions Are GONE

by 1389AD ( 56 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Economy, Elections 2012, Tea Parties, Unions at November 2nd, 2011 - 2:00 pm

Property taxation forms a huge part of the reason why we cannot recover from the collapse of the housing bubble. We are in this predicament because we have allowed local and State governments to cave in to the confiscatory demands of public sector unions.

Government employees should never have been permitted to unionize in the first place.

Spengler: The Economics of Polarization, or Why the Tea Party is Magnificently Right

A hard look at the data explains the polarization of American politics: state and local governments are increasing property taxes even while the housing market crashes, and this is killing the middle class. In many parts of the country prospective homebuyers will pay almost as much in property taxes as in mortgage interest! No wonder the residential real estate market can’t come up for air, and why the American middle class feels that it is fighting for its existence. The only solution will be the kind pioneered by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, one of the real heroes of our time: renegotiate the whole relationship between the government and the government unions. But that would mean the end of the Democratic Party as we know it. That’s why the upcoming presidential election will be the nastiest in living memory.

Crunching the numbers, I was gobsmacked by the way in which the tax burden has trickled down to the state and local level and crushed the middle class. [emphasis added] The charts and graphs are available in my “Spengler” essay at Asia Times Online this morning

America is engaged in class war, but not of the sort one reads about in the mainstream press. The truly indigent — young African-American men, for example, most of whom are now unemployed — have little to do in this war. Large corporations for the most part are bystanders as well; they will make their peace with the victor. This is a war of survival between the productive middle class on one hand, and the dependents of the state on the other. [emphasis added]
[…]
State and local governments, though, have exhausted their tax base, and the continuous rise in property taxes through the crash in property prices has kept the real estate market more depressed than economic conditions otherwise might indicate. A further increase in tax rates would yield less revenue. In effect, the government would have to proceed from taxing private capital to expropriating it, de facto or de jure — for example, nationalizing banks and directing them to make loans to politically-favored projects, after the fashion of Latin American banana republics.

The alternative is to renegotiate pension and health benefits already promised to public sector unions…

Or, preferably, ban public sector unions entirely, at all levels of government.

…The crisis has called into being a political movement of the exasperated middle class, namely the Tea Party. It has erased the image of the government unions as champions of progressive causes, and exposed them as an “aristocracy of labor” (in Marx’s phrase) parasitizing the public revenue.

The outcome inherently favors the Republicans. Debt — the catchall name for the crushing tax burden — has become a hot button issue even for many Democrats. But this election will be fought more desperately, and nastily, than any other that comes to mind during the past century. This is an existential struggle, a political war of survival for the American middle class. If the government unions go down in the fight, the Democratic Party of Barack Obama will cease to exist in its present form – and that would be a beneficial outcome for the United States.

That explains why the debt issue raises emotions. Republican consultants report that in focus groups, TV commercials about out-of-control debt prompt strongly positive responses even from Democrats. Even Democrats have to live somewhere and a lot of them own homes. And there are a lot more Democratic taxpayers and homeowners than there are government workers. This is a wedge issue for Republicans that won’t quit.

Here’s one result that I found remarkable: It shows the aggregate property taxes paid to state and local governments, against aggregate mortgage payments (the outstanding volume of mortgage debt multiplied by the current mortgage rate). The result is somewhat exaggerated, because about a third of property tax collections are commercial rather than residential, but it’s still compelling: the property tax burden on homeowners is now roughly equivalent to the interest burden on their mortgages!

Property taxes vs home mortgage interest (mortgage debt outstanding multiplied by current mortgage rate), in $US billions

Mortgage interest/property tax squeeze

Source: Census Bureau, Federal Reserve

Read it all.

Property taxes add to the expense of owning a home. Prospective home buyers can’t and won’t buy houses in areas where the property tax pushes the homes out of their range of affordability. So if you need to move to find work, but you’re stuck in a good house in a good neighborhood that you cannot sell, you can put a major part of the blame on your local public sector unions.

Property taxes support the public school system, along with other government agencies with unionized employees on their payrolls. Via the automatic union dues deduction from the salaries of teachers and other unionized public employees, the money feeds directly into public employee union coffers and the Democrat party.

This is why Tea Party groups are putting as much focus on local property taxes and other state and local taxes as they do on federal taxation, and well they should! So join your local Tea Party group and do everything you can to help them to starve this governmental beast that threatens to leave us all destitute.


Bill Would Free Tennessee Children From Teachers’ Unions

by 1389AD ( 201 Comments › )
Filed under Diary of Daedalus, Education, LGF, Republican Party at February 3rd, 2011 - 6:30 pm

Legislators in the State of Tennessee are taking the first steps to free their taxpayers, and more importantly, their children, from being held hostage to the teachers’ unions. I, for one, hope that all fifty States will follow, and the sooner the better!

If you agree, please contact your own State legislators!

Tennessee State Flag

As an aside, I can’t wait to see how the infamous libelblogger Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs will react to this attempt to roll back the progressive assault on our liberties. I am still laughing about his Tennessee Boer delusional moment, in which CJ thought he saw a neo-Nazi flag at a Tea Party rally – which turned out to be the flag of the State of Tennessee. CJ apparently mistook it for the flag of the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging. Yes, that’s mighty farfetched, but then, malignant narcissists see only what they want to see, not what the rest of us see.

Bill would put taxpayers back in charge of public education

(h/t: Iron Fist)

It looks like the leaders of the Tennessee Education Association are in for some sleepless nights.

But education reformers, taxpayers, parents and many dedicated teachers are celebrating the news that two Tennessee lawmakers have filed the initial paperwork to introduce a bill that would effectively eliminate teacher unions in the Volunteer State.

Even though Tennessee is a “right to work” state, state law gives public school teachers the right to collectively bargain with their local school board over issues such as working conditions, salaries and fringe benefits. No other public sector employees (such as firemen or police officers) have that privilege.

House Bill 130, sponsored by Rep. Debra Maggart, a Republican who represents Hendersonville, Gallatin and portions of Goodlettsville, and Rep. Glen Casada, Republican from College Grove, would prohibit “any local board of education from negotiating with a professional employees’ organization or teachers’ union concerning the terms or conditions of professional service on or after the effective date of this bill.”
In plain English, the bill would put the taxpayers back in charge of public education. Cash-strapped local school boards would be able to make spending decisions based on what’s best for children, instead of what will keep adult employees happy.
[…]
It would also give individual teachers the ability to negotiate directly with their administrators and school board. Teacher unions say that unionization is necessary for educators to be treated as professionals. The exact opposite is true. True professionals want to be rewarded for their individual performance, whereas the union’s fixation on tenure protection and seniority rules have the effect of treating teachers as interchangeable workers, no better and no worse than any other.

It terms of serious education reform, it appears that HB 130 is the tip of a very large iceberg. This group of state legislators also wants to end the practice of withholding union dues from teacher paychecks, and loosen the union’s power to appoint members to state boards.

Read it all.


US falling behind others in education

by Phantom Ace ( 172 Comments › )
Filed under China, Education, Liberal Fascism, Multiculturalism, Political Correctness, Progressives, Socialism at December 8th, 2010 - 8:30 am

The United States education system is nothing more than Progressive propaganda. Rather than focus on skills that students need to succeed in a globalized economy, we emphasize indoctrination and historical lies. The Teachers’ Unions have a stranglehold on our system and block any kind of reform. Students in minority urban areas are not taught skills because the Progressives want to keep them oppressed. We don’t have an education system, we have a tax eating bureaucratic system that has political goals, not academic goals.

A new study showing America in 25th place and China surging ahead should come as no shocker.

fifteen-year-olds in the U.S. ranked 25th among peers from 34 countries on a math test and scored in the middle in science and reading, while China’s Shanghai topped the charts, raising concern that the U.S. isn’t prepared to succeed in the global economy.

The Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development, which represents 34 countries, today released the 2009 Program for International Student Assessment. For the first time, the test broke out the performance of China’s Shanghai region, which topped every country in all academic categories. The U.S. government considers the test one of the most comprehensive measures of international achievement.

[…]

China’s success in Shanghai results from the government’s abandonment of a system of “key schools” for elites and the institution of “a more inclusive system in which all students are expected to perform at high levels,” the OECD said in the report.

China also raised teacher pay and standards and reduced rote learning, while giving students and local authorities more choice in curriculum.

Read the rest: U.S. Teens Lag as China Soars on International Test

China is doing it correctly. They are emphasizing results and achievements. They are forcing all students to learn at the same level. In America, we have a racist system where those deemed non-white are not educated at the same level as whites. I saw this with my own eyes in the New York City public school system. This is designed by Progressives on purpose. Outright lies are taught in school. In fact, it has become an industry that is designed to suck up money and the Unions get a cut.

America needs massive education reform, not more spending. We need to force all Americans to learn up to the same standards regardless of race or class. We need to de-emphasize college as a solution for all and invest in trade schools so those who don’t want to go to college can learn skills that will benefit them in life. We should do what China is doing and create a real education system. If we don’t America will continue its decline and continue to be the sick man of the global economy.

Then again, maybe that is the goal of the elites.