Posted on 03/31/2010 7:33:40 AM PDT by GraceG
When one person really thinks about how many laws does one break everyday just waking up and going to work? How many tax code violations does one break without even knowing it? How many state laws and loacl laws are broken each day without even realizing that you are breaking the law? How many times have you been pulled over for something that was a non-issue but was something classified as a minor offense just so you could be pulled over and examined by law enforcement? If one were to fill a room with pages of laws that affect you, how many stacks of papers would be required to describe all of the laws that apply to you in a day? What if you own your own small business?
The problem we seem to be having today is what I like to term "Legal Bloatware". One ends up with so many laws and regulations that apply to someone that givene enough time they can trump up any charges on anyone to put them away for several years if they wanted to. Also whole professions are supported by these bloated laws int he form of lawyers, judges, enforcement agencies and the like it is almost a whole monopolized system onto itself.
Just look at the laws governing taxes, whole industies are supported and enabled to ensure people's compliance with over complicated tax laws. Tax attourneys, Tax Planners, Tax free Investment firms all exist to ensure our compliance with the tax laws. The Dirty little secret about the tax code as written is simply this, If you are a small to medium sized business you are essentially in an unwinnable battle, how many small to medium sized businesses can affrod to hire a team of Tax compliance specialists to ensure they are not crushed by the tax code? Not very many and if it costs a small to medium sized business $100,000 to hire a tax planner and finacial planner to re-coup $90,000 of lost revenue through tax loopholes, how feasible is that model. Now your Large Multinational Businesses like G.E. and Government Motors, they can afford to spend 10 million or more a year to pay Tax Attourneys and Finanacial Investors because their return on investment is much greater. So they can spend 10 million because it will save them 1 billion in taxes and fees. They can afford to hire creative Financial Planners to shuffle money offshore and to and from capital accounts because it makes sense. The problem with this is that then the left seizes upon this practice and says "We need more regulation to stop this sort of thing." So they create more Rules and Regulations to "Punish the Big Bad Businesses", but the big business people just have to hire a couple more Tax Attrouneys and Finanacial Advisors and they are not nearly proportionally affected as the Small/Medium businesses are. I don't hold it against Big Businesses as they are also trying to survive, but the whole mentality of trying to punish the large busineses is inadvertantly punishing the smaller ones. The "law of unintended consequences" is a law that cannot be ignored, though many in D.C. are ignorant of it.
I liken the whole mess to computer bloatware, which is software that as new versions are released seems to get slower and slower to the point where you have to keep buying new hardware each year to "keep up". The laws of the federal government cane be liked to Windows Vista, and while Larger Businesses can afford to buy a brand spanking new multi-core system, small business owners are trying to run Windows Vista on the same machine they were running Windows 98 on 12 years ago. And you wonder why small and medium businesses are "Blue-Screening" these days.
It will eventually get to the point where people will just get so fed up with the multitude of laws they will throw their arms up in the air and start ignoring the laws and anarchy will break out like what is starting to happen in Europe. In this case it is paradoxical because too many laws will lead to anarchy. I think there should be a set number of laws, and if you want to add a new law you must take away another law. Doing this is the only way to avoid anarchy and the occasional Blue Screen of Death.
In legal terms, this is referred to as malum in se, as opposed to Malum Prohibitum.
I’ve reached that age where I don’t care that much about “me” being oppressed — I’ve run much of the race in freedom — but I care so much about my child.
Any parent and child in this country should be outraged over the mountain of debt that is being thrust upon them to be paid. Vote the bums out in November!
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