Friday, November 30, 2007

Thanksgiving in WV tells the Economic story

Last week in my travels I ran into a lot of friends in for the holiday's. It was good to see old friends, but at the same time it was kind of sad. The reason I only see these old friends on the holidays is because they had to leave the area for work.

Driving last week I saw a lot of out of state tags. For the most part those tags tell the story of West Virginia's economy. Each one of those tags represent the failure of the states economy to provide for our own. Since 1950 the West Virgina population has dropped from 1.3% of the US population to 0.6%. That represents the state being cut in half.

For over 60 years the state has been making the wrong economic decisions. It is time for a change. We can no longer afford to make the same choices. We need to get away from government intervention in the economy and more to the free market. How bad does it have to get before we make the necessary changes?

Thursday, November 29, 2007

CNN Admits they didn't do their pre-debate homework

Proof Is In The Record

Is your Democrat Delegate Really Pro-Life?


By Lisa Peana, WVRC President
http://www.wvrepublicanclub.org/

Many legislative Democrats claim to be pro-life. They run pro-life ads and send out mail pieces promising to protect the unborn.

But for some reason, once they enter the Capitol building, they have a sudden change of heart — until the next campaign.

What actually takes place in the Capitol is what really counts, not campaign ads. Roll call votes are how we know where legislators really stand on the issues.

By looking at the one of the most recent pro-life bills to go through this process: the Parental Notification Bill (SB-519), we can learn the truth about these so-called pro-life House Democrats.

The passage of SB-519 would have closed a gaping loophole in state law that allows a doctor to waive the parental notification requirement before a minor undergoes an abortion. Under current law, at least one parent or legal guardian is supposed to be notified in advance, but the law can be easily circumvented by using the doctor’s waiver loophole.

If parental notification truly needed to be waived, SB-519 would have required that decision to be made by a judge.

SB-519 would have helped place child rapists behind bars, and helped detect pregnancies due to incest as parents would be notified before evidence of the abuse was aborted.

If only a parent in these instances would have known that their young daughters had been violated, it would have helped bring more pedophiles to justice.

When the parental notification bill previously failed in 2005 due to a closed-door House Democrat caucus vote, pro-life legislators promised to bring it back in 2006.

As in the past, when House Democrats went back home, they preached a pro-life message, and when they got their questionnaire from the WV Family Foundation, they vowed to fight for parental notification in writing.

However, on March 7th, 2006, House Democrats abandoned their pro-life promises in favor of their liberal base. Pro-life House members brought a discharge motion to the floor to force consideration of SB-519 as pro-abortion committee chairman Jon Amores and his allies had once again kept it from being considered in the Judiciary Committee.

Sadly, only five of the 68 House Democrats elected at the time (Eustace Frederick, Tom Louisos, Tim Miley, Kenneth Tucker, and Sally Susman) voted to bring SB-519 to the floor for consideration and true parental notification was killed once again.

Of those five Democrats who fought for SB-519, two are no longer in office, as the liberal base that control the Democrat Primaries made sure that Sally Susman lost her bid for the State Senate and longtime Delegate Tom Louisos lost his re-election bid.

Even more outrageous, twelve House Democrats who claimed to support parental notification in their WVFF questionnaire voted to keep SB-519 off the floor.

After the 2006 election, pro-abortion activists and the trial lawyers helped Rick Thompson win the Speaker’s race over pro-life Democrat Scott Varner.

Why? Because Thompson would appoint Carrie Webster to chair the Judiciary Committee, and with Webster holding the gavel, pro-life legislation will never see the light of day.

As with Kiss and company, we once again have a House Speaker and Democrat caucus that profess to be pro-life in their districts, but allow the abortion supporters to always have their way in the House chamber.

Pro-abortion ideologues like Webster and Virginia Mahan (HD-27, Summers) are in positions of leadership, because at the end of the day: Democrats are the party of abortion on demand.

So which one is it? How much longer can we allow the ruling party to campaign on a pro-life platform only to have their minds changed by their leadership once they get in the Capitol building?

Pro-life rhetoric from Democrat Delegates doesn't save one single unborn child. Voting to kill pro-life bills is what aids in the continuation of their death.

If your Democrat Delegate is really pro-life, then it is way past time to work with like minded Republicans to make true parental notification for underage abortions the law of the land.

The following Democrat Delegates claimed to support Parental Notification legislation in the 2006 Family Foundation Candidate Questionnaire and then voted to block consideration of SB 519 (Roll Call # 343 – 03/07/06)

- Bob Beach, Monongalia, H-D 44
- JD Beane, Wood, H-D 10 (No Longer Serving)
- Brent Boggs, Braxton, H-D 34
- Kevin Craig, Cabell, H-D 15
- Richard Iaquinta, Harrison , H-D 41
- Marshall Long, Mercer, H-D 25
- David Perry, Fayette, H-D 29
- John Pino, Fayette, H-D 29
- Dale Stephens, Cabell, H-D 16
- Speaker Rick Thompson, Wayne , H-D 17
- Ron Thompson, Raleigh , H-D 27 (No Longer Serving)
- Jack Yost, Brook, H-D 02

WV Family Foundation 2006 Candidate Questionnaire: http://www.wvfamily.org/pdf/2006_House_FVQ_Results.pdf

Roll Call:
http://wvrepublicanclub.org/documents/Parential%20Notification%20Rollcall%20-%20SB519-RC343.pdf

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

How laws and sausages are made

Laws are like sausages, it is better not to see them being made. Prince Otto von Bismarck

Over the past several months I have had the pleasure of working on the Mineral Coutny Clean Up Committee. The purpose of the committee lay in trying to formulate a law to address abandoned and unsafe buildings. Many on the committee had ideal responses to this issue formulated in their heads before getting to work.

Include me among them. Private property counts as one of the most sacred rights granted to man. Not the right to have it, but the right to work to earn it, then enjoy the rewards of that work. Interference with property rights ought to only occur after careful consideration. Property gives a man, or a woman, or a family a sense of stability and permanence. It is their rock against the slings and arrows fired by life in the real world. I saw no purpose in the ordinance myself (on that point I agreed with Gary Howell and many others), but felt that working with the committee might help create a law with less problems for average owners.

The real world often intervenes with how we view the world ideally. The county commission had a strong interest in seeing an ordinance established. Governor Manchin pushed these actions at the county level by threatening to withold funds. An ordinance would occur in some form or another. The key lay in getting a law that would be as fair as possible to property owners.

Regardless of how the press covered these meetings, they were at times contentious. Gary Howell and his supporters fought hard for a law that would limit government authority, strictly define its actions, and provide maximum protections for property owners, especially the poor and middle class. Others wanted a law that granted more robust powers and a more loosely defined authority to the county. Verbal battles raged over these issues and others. Like almost any heated discussion, the real fight lay over what fundamental principles would serve as the foundation for this law. It was agreed at one point to use a similar ordinance created by Raleigh County as a template and change it to fit Mineral County.

At the end of the day both sides got some of what they wanted. Many irrelevant terms such as "blighted area" and "junked vehicles" were expunged from the ordinance. Otherwise they might have opened a slight crack in the legal door for laws that could affect people's rights in other areas. The most obnoxious parts of the Raleigh County law lay in extremely oppressive fines, but these were mitigated somewhat. However Howell and his supporters were unable to secure a specific sliding scale of fines and time needed to complete repairs based upon income. Proposals to grant special grace periods to the disabled and those in federal poverty programs were also rejected.

Serving on a committee such as this one was a rewarding experience. Everyone who has the time, patience, and the concern for their community ought to participate in something like this at least once. Like Chancellor von Bismarck tried to explain, this was not always a pretty sight. However raised voices, argument, and dissention mean that at least two people care about their community and the people in it. Bismarck said it is better not to see laws being made, but on the other hand he did not govern a country that valued democratic republican government as we do.

I can't speak for sausage making, but take the opportunity to watch a law being made. Whether or not you like the experience, you will definitely learn a lot.




Monday, November 26, 2007

Chinese Toy problem and WV can't take advantage


It hasn't been that long ago that West Virginia was a major player in the toy manufacturing market. Louis Marx toy company was the largest in the world and at one time had its largest plant located in Glen Dale, WV.

If your 30 or older most likely you had a Marx toy as a kid growing up. I had a Big Wheel like the one in the picture.

All of that is gone now like much of West Virginia's manufacturing. Now many will say that Marx being sold and cheap Chinese imports played a part in the demise of the company. For the most part they would be right, but West Virginia's poor business climate played a part as well.

If West Virginia had a good business climate we could take advantage of the problems in the current toy industry. Right now the consumers are demanding US made toys for the safety of their children.

Toys are a business opportunity for a company in the United States, but West Virginia is the last place you would want to start a business. West Virginia has everything going for it to start a business the best people and workers in the nation, the best location for shipping, and abundant natural resources. The reason West Virginia is the last place in the US is because of the business climate. The following things need fixed to help our economy.

  • Tax Reform - West Virginia's tax structure runs off business and prevents new business from locating here. Since 1950 WV has fallen from 1.3% of the US to 0.6% of the US population because nobody wants to run a business here.
  • Worker Comp Reform - West Virginia has the highest workers comp rates in the nation, double the second worse (California). Those rates prevent businesses from locating here. Cost are simply to high.
  • Tort Reform - West Virginia has been identified as the Judicial Hell Hole of the US by the US Chamber of Commerce. That is not a dig on WV, that is a respected organization telling the people of this state what needs fixed. Foxnews on Thanksgiving Day made a comment about how bad the legal system was in WV.
It is not a secret what we need to fix. To most people around the US is obvious. The only ones that can't seem to see it are those in control of the state legislature. Those in control of the state legislature should listen to Winston Churchill when he said, "Some see private enterprise as a predatory target to be shot, others as a cow to be milked, but few are those who see it as a sturdy horse pulling the wagon." Let's trough off the restraints on the states businesses and let them pull the economic wagon forward.