Term limits for government bureaucrats.
What’s Legal............ (( IS ))...... What “we” say is legal..
As it should be. State judges also swear oaths to defend the constitution.
ABOLISH THE IRS
REPEAL THE 16th AMENDMENT
here is the best answer: get about 50 Trey Gowdys and put them in the highest offices in the land, President, A G., all the cabinet members , leader of the house and the senate. etc. etc. thing would change overnight.
Post number 11 would work fine for me.
As I’ve written for years - “it’s the bureaucrats, stupid” .more than taxes, more than corruption per se we are being swallowed by nameless faceless unaccountable bureaucrats at every level of government.
Mostly the problem as I saw it was deadwood and people assigned to jobs they barely qualified for. The workflow and amount should have been streamlined for efficienty and fewer employees.
They would get the funds so fill slots to keep getting funds, make work kind of thing. Then there were some who did very critical serious work and I do not want to paint them all with the same brush.
History shows that government bureaucrats understand a gun in their face. And despite the multiple hand-wringers, various surrender monkeys and white flag-wavers on this website who think that federal bureaucrats are 10-ft tall Rambos, a gun in the face works.
Do me a favor and don’t be sending me stupid and incoherent missives of how brave and tough federal fascists are.
Hello, 2ndDivisionVet. Hope all is going well, FRiend..
Um,, 'untouchables' when speaking of 'caste' are a group with ZERO power. Our bureaucrats are the opposite - liberal elites who think they're dukes and duchesses in some mythical royal court.
Put them in jail. That will stop this nonsense.
At a cocktail party back in the late 80’s, I struck up a chat with a fellow — his name was Joe M. — whom I’d met on one or two previous occasions. After my first encounter, Joe’s neighbor and my boss at the time told me that Joe was an alcoholic who had just retired from 25 years with the IRS. Needless to say, I was guarded in expressing my political views to Joe as the IRS had helped my dad into an early grave in 1977 — at age 59 over an estate matter. Joe was pretty deep into his cups at the function in question and began telling IRS “war stories.”
Most had to do with clear cases of criminal conduct by not very nice people. Joe — who was a few years short of 60 — sounded to me like someone who enjoyed helping getting really bad people off the street and I asked why he’d retired early. He told me that what he called “the service” had changed for the worse. Then I asked him about the new people coming in. He shook his head, actually teared up and said that many of them were “really bad.” I pressed. “Really bad” meant incompetent? “No — DANGEROUS,” he responded, “they like to hurt people.”
It was then that I understood why Joe drank.