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Media Update

For those interested, I co-host the Thursday morning edition of Hofstra's Morning Wake-up Call from 7 to 9 on 88.7FM in Nassau, Queens, Brooklyn, parts of Manhattan, Bronx, Westchester, and Suffolk and online at WRHU.org.

Is Centralization Good For The Country?

As the internet has played an important role in how the country communicates, it has made it easier to connect to people and businesses across the nation. But is this good? Is it good that we are stepping outside of our proverbial bubble and into the national landscape, personally? There are many arguments that can be made on both sides of the idea, however I find that there is one that simply makes more sense than the other.

Our nationalization has been a growing trend since the 1930s and the Great Depression. My adversaries would say that it is because the government is growing. I argue, however, that it is a redistribution of power, where power that had been in the cities, counties, and states and is now in the federal government. The internet has helped perpetuate this, as had the automobile and airplanes, because it has caused the federal government to handle the overlap in business practices across state lines. When we shop online, especially in an area like Keene, we are actually shopping outside of state lines. When you log onto Walmart.com, you are shopping from warehouses across the country. On Ebay, you are shopping from individual people or businesses that dot the country and even the world. It makes sense that the federal government would need to step in to make sure that one state isn't being hurt more than another because of the internet.

However, this causes the need for the federal government to do everything. It causes people to pin all of their hopes and dreams on one person [President Obama]. But why are people putting all of this hope and desire in the president when they could do the same for their governors, mayors, and legislators? Why do I not see people who are supporting someone like a Rick Lazio in New York saying that if he is elected that they don't need to pay their mortgage or that everything will be resolved in one year? We have become so centralized that we expect the top to have a trickle down effect through the rest of the nation, a lot like the idea of Reaganomics where the immense of wealth at the top will trickle down to the bottom. It doesn't work effectively. There are people at the top who have their own ambitions about where resources go and there are people on the bottom who demand something from the top because they have relied too heavily on the top to support themselves. This is not how a country should be when it is the national government's job to bail out companies. If Indiana banks are failing, then the state of Indiana should try to help its people. If Connecticut's insurance companies are failing, then the state of Connecticut should be working to help them.

When projects need to be funded, like highways, the federal government tantalizes the state governments by only offering funding if the state maintains certain legislation. Isn't that the definition of a "puppet government?" The federal government controls what happens in the lower level governments to the point that they are practically running them. What happened to the principles that the original colonies were founded upon, the idea that each state (at the time, colony) had it's own way of governing and its own belief system? If there were no differences in opinion, would there be both a Connecticut and a Massachusetts or one large Massachusetts? Since the 1910s when the Senate began to be popularly elected, the states have lost a direct impact on the federal government. Rather it is the people of these states that have a direct impact on the government. Although it sounds good, we look at some of the intellect of the voting population, it is worrisome. People complain that they don't like what Congress is doing (the Congress has maintained an approval rating in the 30% range for a while) but there is little turnover in the House of Representatives, the house that is to be a representation of the people. Despite the low approval rating, the low turnover must mean that Americans really love their representatives and the polls are wrong. The people have been electing and supporting people who are generally just pretty people (i.e. Scott Brown, etc.), although in some cases it is clearing understandable when the other option is not a great one, or are supporting a word: Change. As I mentioned in a previous post, change is a great motivator. But, when there is too much change, or change isn't happening fast enough, it makes government difficult to conduct when the voting population is consistently switching parties because they say "change." With the election of President Obama, people put their hopes and dreams at the top and expected it to trickle down.

Because voters only focus on the President and their Senators, they don't bother to research who Rick Lazio is or who David Paterson is. They may only know Andrew Cuomo from his father, former New York Governor Mario Cuomo. They don't pin their hopes and dreams on every elected position and that is how bad politicians get into office. They follow the word of change, Glenn Beck, or whoever is influencing the population. But by following these influences, is America getting everything it can? I say no. This centralization has caused our local governments to become helpless and useless. They see that something is wrong in their community, go to the polls, and expect a new president and senator to fix everything when it is the state senator and the city council that is screwing up. Centralization has also brought forward progression that may be in the best interest for the nation in general, but may not be for many parts of the country. Let's use healthcare reform as an example. Currently, the Democrats in Washington want to pass a law that requires citizens to have health insurance, but possibly not offer a public option. My opinion on this bill is that if you require people to have insurance, the government must offer a cheap, basic option so every can make this requirement. However, this legislation does not favor those in states like Massachusetts that already have a policy in place. So, passing the healthcare bill in Congress would hurt Massachusetts residents more than help them. Congress is trying to create a blanket legislation rather than having states handle the problem from within the states. My suggestion would be to rather than have the bill be about requiring citizens to have insurance (I have not heard many people who have said that they did not want insurance) it should be more about making it more accessible. The federal government should allow people to purchase insurance from outside of the state, hence creating more competition. I also suggest that the federal government encourage states that want to initiate their own public option program to do so and allow residents from other states to buy into it. This creates a much smaller program that is much easier to handle and would be less expensive to operate than the current legislation. And not only that, but it would be a good revenue boost for states that may need it, as they may charge a higher rate to out of state customers due to the fact that they are not contributing tax money to the enterprise. That way, you maintain both accessibility and excellence through competition and government assistance.

In short, blanket policies are not as effective as localized ones. The people of our nation need to direct their attention to where it should really be: at the local level, because if the federal government is not doing the jobs it should, then the states should be picking up the gaps and exceeding the expectations of its citizenry.




Until Next Time,

Dennis J. Foley
Announcement will be postponed one week.

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The Status of The Keene Observer

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Government and People... and them again...

Free Staters think that government is bad, corrupt, and controlling. Now, with that said, I must question that statement: do Free Staters think that government itself is bad or the people within that government is bad? Based on their postings, literature, broadcasts, etc., I would have to assume that they believe in the former. They feel that getting rid of the structure will resolve issues... and of course I must differ.

If you were to eliminate the structure of government and create a society that had no formal leader, no public collaboration, and no one employed by that system, the Free Staters would say that the problem is solved, there is no one controlling anyone's life. But, there is an issue with that. Let's say that there is a corrupt government official like Boss Tweed, for example. If there were no formal government, that doesn't mean that a figure like Tweed would be eliminated, he would just play a different role in society, most likely business. If people like Tweed were out of government and into business, then the businesses would all be corrupt with all of these people. Or these people may become doctors and keep charging people over and over for operations they did not receive so that they can get their hefty paycheck. Or even make "mistakes." Life would become corrupt and would be Mafia-esque.

However, if you were to eliminate the people from those public offices and elect people who are not corrupt rather than eliminating the offices, qualified people can make society stronger. And, those corrupt members of our society will face the punishments of being corrupt by a well oiled society. People fail to realize that people run our government and not some oversized robot that does not have feelings and is out of touch with society.

The people who are like the Free Staters feel that government has failed us because they did not get what they wanted from our society and feel that it is the "power figures" fault for it not going their way. Newsflash, sometimes you must compromise to achieve a common goal as a society, which is the purpose of government. These vague and cliché phrases like "liberty", "freedom", and "rights" are meant to pull heartstrings and get people to support them even though these words have no substance behind them. These people are a crying shame to investigative journalists and devalue the power of the press. When it comes to reporting and interviewing others, they have lost the reputation as a real news group because of their handling of interviewees. When they go to ask the mayor or other people questions, they get no response. Why? Because the Free Staters don't treat government officials like PEOPLE!!! They make these officials seem like people who run on gasoline and are only programed to screw the Free State syndicate. When people are treated like that and are only asked accusatory questions, they will not give you the light of day, no matter what your rights are because they have rights, too. What the Free Staters fail to understand, amongst other things, is the idea of everyone having rights, liberties, and freedoms. They feel that in theory everyone should have these rights, but in practice, feel that only they deserve these rights. Look at the videos on their website. All you will see is them complaining how they get arrested for everything and that government isn't held accountable for anything. They even went as far as telling the city manager to just fire people. Just fire people? What if I went to their place of work, walked up to the manager, and told the manager that I wanted Johnny on the griddle fired because he "purposefully" undercooked my hamburger? How different would it be for the government? They can't just fire someone because some loonie walks in and says so because they have rights, too. They have the right, along with every other citizen, to be innocent until proven guilty, and just saying someone is guilty is like claiming the said person is a witch. Is that what we want from our society? People just walking around calling for a witch hunt of the government because they got caught smoking a doobie one night and got arrested for it? Or for actually imposing on the rights of others? The Free Staters have easily proven that they have tunnel vision and show little regard to an alternative opinion. They have also shown little regard of the people of the government.

Also, their little network thingy (or whatever it is) has a very fitting name: the "Obscured Truth Network." I think it is very accurate, especially with the content they put up. Talk, talk, talk, clip, talk, clip, talk, talk, clip, talk, clip. How are viewers supposed to think of these people legitimately as being muckrakers if they don't even know if they are seeing the truth? You see, they may think that they are unveiling things that "mainstream media" and the "bureaucrats" are trying to hide, but from the aspect of the viewer, it looks like they have something to hide themselves, or felt that certain clips were "more worthy" than others to make it to air. Everyone has a word for that and it is censorship. The Free Staters have seemed to have made it a priority to make it look like the government is censoring everything they do. But by looking at their own content, it would lead me to believe that the Free Staters are strong believers in censorship. At times I wish I was in Keene right now because I would be having so much fun asking the Free Staters on camera, "What is liberty? What is liberty? [Get a response] But that's not what I asked. Did you know that it is not your right to impede on the progress of emergency officials? [Get a response] That's not what I asked. I asked if your Constitution says anything along the lines 'All citizens have the right to impede emergency officials from doing their job?' It doesn't? Oh, also, if I asked everyone in Central Square at 4:20 what 'the power to tax is the power to destroy' means and where it originated from, would they be able to answer it correctly?" However, luckily for the Free Staters, I am receiving a quality education from my suburban sanctuary a couple hundred miles away where I am enlightened to the truth from actual historians, political scientists and journalists, amongst many others.






Until next time,


Dennis J. Foley
EiC