Posted on 08/30/2014 1:10:26 PM PDT by Kaslin
In April of 2013, I introduced a Moocher Hall of Fame to celebrate some very odious examples of welfare dependency.
Since that time, I keep thinking that its time to do something similar for government bureaucrats. This compilation from last December would be a good place to start, though Id have to figure out whether to have group memberships so that we could include the bureaucrats at the Patent and Trademark Office who get paid to watch TV, as well as the paper pushers at the Department of Veterans Affairs who got big bonuses after creating secret waiting lists that led to the death of former soldiers.
But if were creating a Bureaucrat Hall of Fame, I wont want to discriminate against foreigners.
The U.K.-based Telegraph reports, for instance, that an unnamed doctor from Italy is a very worthy candidate for this award.
The notorious inefficiencies of Italys state sector were laid bare on Thursday as news emerged of a Sicilian doctor who has done just 15 days work in the past nine years.
How has he achieved this degree of non-work?
…the doctor disappeared off on a university training course, reportedly paid for by taxpayers money, when he started work in 2005. Returning to work on October 31, 2008, the doctor immediately asked for, and obtained, paid family leave until May the following year. Then he worked 15 days at the hospital before calling off sick until July 2009. Recovered from illness, the doctor obtained a place on another university training course, once again reportedly swapping his wage for payment from the state university, which lasted until June this year, said wire agency ANSA. The doctor is now allegedly planning more time off to obtain a doctorate which will finish in December 2016.
By the way, our lazy doctor has lots of company. Indeed, Sicily sounds like the California of Italy.
The problem is pronounced in Sicily, where an army of around 144,000 regional staff both permanent and temporary includes 26,000 forestry workers, more than in British Columbia in Canada. Around 7,000 Sicilians have been given government jobs teaching work skills to Sicilians without jobs.
With that amount of waste and featherbedding, no wonder Italian taxpayers are beginning to revolt.
Heres a specific example that boggles the mind.
Red tape on the island has also created surreal working weeks for those employed by the local government. In March, a vet in Trapani complained that the work he was contracted to carry out for the local authority had been spread over a such a long period he was required to do just one minutes work every week. Once a week I go to the office and stamp my pass, said Manuel Bongiorno. I walk in, wait for a minute to go by, then stamp the pass again. Its been going on for months, he added.
I dont know if vet means hes an animal doctor or a former soldier, but he doesnt qualify for membership in the Bureaucrat Hall of Fame because he apparently wants to do some work.
Thats preposterous, but what would you expect in a nation where government is so incompetent that the wrong people are appointed to high-level jobs that shouldnt even exist.
So you can see why I dont really care which party rules Italy. The names may change at the top, but government always comes out ahead.
Though a New York Times columnist actually wrote that America should become more like Italy. And he wasnt being satirical. At least not on purpose.
P.S. The U.K. government has raised its terror threat level from substantial to severe. I realize this is a serious issue, but I couldnt help but think about thehumorous version of European threat levels.
These reported situations just cry for a societal collapse to clear out the dead wood.
The way I’ve heard it is that the virtually all the industry is in the northern cities like Turin, Milan, and Venice. They are heavily taxed by a legendary bureaucracy that constitutes the middle third of the country. After they take their cut they send the rest to the south, where it ends up in the pockets of the Mafia.
Italy Ping
Pizza e pasta!!!
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