Depending on your perspective, (pheasant or fox) I guess that that could be a sad or a happy ending.What happens when a society loses its ability to self-regulate, and insists on sacrificing its long-term interest for short-term rewards? How does the story end?
... a true story, which might be called the parable of the pheasant. Last spring, on sabbatical from the University of Oxford, he was surprised to discover that he was able to rent an apartment inside Blenheim Palace, the Churchill family home.
The previous winter at Blenheim had been harsh, and the pheasant hunters had been efficient; as a result, just a single pheasant had survived in the palace gardens.
This bird had gained total control of a newly seeded field. Its intake of food, normally regulated by its environment, was now entirely unregulated: it could eat all it wanted, and it did.
The pheasant grew so large that, when other birds challenged it for seed, it would simply frighten them away. The fat pheasant became a tourist attraction and even acquired a name: Henry.
“Henry was the biggest pheasant anyone had ever seen,” says Whybrow. “Even after he got fat, he just ate and ate.” It didn’t take long before Henry was obese. He could still eat as much as he wanted, but he could no longer fly.
Then one day he was gone: a fox ate him.
The feds bail them out. Kinda like the EU and Greece. California got lucky because of the rich getting huge profits off their investments. Since CA gets the majority of it's funding from the 'rich', once the economy tanks again, the budget will inevitably crash again.
didn't france try that and raise taxes HIGH on the rich?
it worked the 1st year and the influx of $ balanced the budget. but france didn't learn and kept spending.
the rich just left the country.
france repealed the high tax law because when all you have is the poor left in the country, the country is doomed.
did CA cut spending after they raised state taxes to 10% for the rich living in the state?
is it still 10% or did they repeal it?
didn't france try that and raise taxes HIGH on the rich?
it worked the 1st year and the influx of $ balanced the budget. but france didn't learn and kept spending.
the rich just left the country.
france repealed the high tax law because when all you have is the poor left in the country, the country is doomed.
did CA cut spending after they raised state taxes to 10% for the rich living in the state?
is it still 10% or did they repeal it?
Well, Puerto Rico is completely broke and can't pay it's debts. Might be an interesting case.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/29/b...s-debts-are-not-payable.html?smid=tw-bna&_r=1
didn't france try that and raise taxes HIGH on the rich?
it worked the 1st year and the influx of $ balanced the budget. but france didn't learn and kept spending.
the rich just left the country.
france repealed the high tax law because when all you have is the poor left in the country, the country is doomed.
did CA cut spending after they raised state taxes to 10% for the rich living in the state?
is it still 10% or did they repeal it?
I live in NJ and teacher's pension is bankrupt.
IMO, we have a few options.
1) Raise taxes across the board. Property, sin, road, gas, etc... Raise it all so we can get the pension fiasco under control. The only thing is most people aren't going to like this idea. I have buddies who pay $12,000 in property taxes. I doubt they are going to want to pay anymore.
2) Major reform. This is the true alternative, but the unions are going to resist this till the end of times. A cop retires at 50. He lives for the next 30 years on the taxpayer dime. What makes it worse is they usually leave NJ and live in another state. The people who continue to live in NJ have to foot the bill. Times this by thousands of retires. It's a recipe for disaster.
I love how you people rely on the government. The government will fix it! The government will fix it! Stop relying on the government for everything. There is going to be a time when our government will not be able to pay for it. What are you going to do then?
is the Fed govt obligated to cover them?
or will the state just default like Greece?
(ie: NJ's massively underfunded pension problems that will bite them next decade)
Haaayyyyy you're from NJ no surprises there. I would have packed up my shit and moved out of NJ when I was 18. I would have bicycled to a different state if I had to.