Rmef and mule deer foundation pisses me off the most.
Rmef and mule deer foundation pisses me off the most.
In the short run, there's probably a good case to be made that the country would've been worse off without those forms of assistance. The long run ill effects (more federal debt, increased "moral hazard" due to the reinforced expectation that government will always be there to bail you out) are harder to quantify.Let’s speculate for a moment that everything about this crisis were the same except for the following:
-no federal unemployment boost
-no PPP loans
-no stimulus checks
Basically, the federal government zipped up the purse and said “y’all fend for yourselves.”
Would we all be better or worse off?
In the short run, there's probably a good case to be made that the country would've been worse off without those forms of assistance. The long run ill effects (more federal debt, increased "moral hazard" due to the reinforced expectation that government will always be there to bail you out) are harder to quantify.
In your hypothetical scenario, did the federal government spend the past 100+ years systematically disincentivizing the practice of personal saving by continuously eroding the purchasing power of accumulated wealth? If we had a sound currency, I'd be less sympathetic to the plight of those without enough savings to get them through unexpected crises.
Rmef and mule deer foundation pisses me off the most.
Yes, pervasive consumer credit is symptomatic of an economy built on unsound currency. Striving to save up and pay cash is less appealing if your accumulated cash declines in value by a few percent each year due to inflation and low interest loans are easy to come by. If you're interested in this topic, there's a great book called The Ethics of Money Production by Guido Hulsmann that delves into the far-reaching societal ills caused by unsound money.You mean like the credit system. Instead of being responsible with your money and saving you have to go into debt to buy things to pay them off with interest so the credit companies make money so they can say your trustworthy to be loaned money to that you were already trustworthy enough to yourself and dependents to be able to save...........
It's a tricky subject. I share the OP's general opposition to government handouts, but if the government breaks a guy's leg then offers him a "free" crutch, it's hard to fault the guy for taking it. I don't know how well that analogy truly applies to these companies (i.e., how many were actually forced to shut down), but it's a bit of a black mark against them in my book regardless of the exact circumstances. Government cheese is so ubiquitous though that it's very difficult, if not impossible, to avoid doing business with companies that have in some form or fashion taken a handout/favor/subsidy.
Coincidentally, Seek Outside just today posted on Facebook that their sales numbers are up 200% over last year.
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Nope, but I do believe that open competition amongst private entities free from interference by government would result in higher quality goods/services at lower costs to the consumer in all those arenas you mentioned. The more free and open the market, the better the outcomes will be. The good and services you mentioned are all regulated and/or subsidized to some degree by government, but like I alluded to earlier, it's hard to fault a man for accepting whatever scraps the government he's forced to fund decides to (directly or indirectly) throw him.So for all of you against gov handouts, do you grow your own food, make your own fuel, have your own phone company, shipping better not use usps and what about electricity and roads? Funny most don’t complain until now.
In the short run, there's probably a good case to be made that the country would've been worse off without those forms of assistance. The long run ill effects (more federal debt, increased "moral hazard" due to the reinforced expectation that government will always be there to bail you out) are harder to quantify.
In your hypothetical scenario, did the federal government spend the past 100+ years systematically disincentivizing the practice of personal saving by continuously eroding the purchasing power of accumulated wealth? If we had a sound currency, I'd be less sympathetic to the plight of those without enough savings to get them through unexpected crises.
Nope, but I do believe that open competition amongst private entities free from interference by government would result in higher quality goods/services at lower costs to the consumer in all those arenas you mentioned. The more free and open the market, the better the outcomes will be. The good and services you mentioned are all regulated and/or subsidized to some degree by government, but like I alluded to earlier, it's hard to fault a man for accepting whatever scraps the government he's forced to fund decides to (directly or indirectly) throw him.
RMEF at the top of the list with a $2M-$5M draw. Yet their 2015 990 indicates $81M in assets and $10M in liabilities, for a net of $71M in assets.
Could be legit, could be 'get it if you can', much depends on the liquidity of those assets I guess. RMEF salaries aren't outrageous (generous but not ridiculous as some), although the $178K for picture frames still stinks...