Granted, to a degree that is true.
That's something.
But a lot of the money taken in taxes is figuratively burned.
Now we get into the unnecessary, tedious, unhelpful splitting of hairs about 'burned'.
The point is, the government doesn't burn the money, it uses it for things that have some return on investment - some small, some that generate more than they cost.
You can get into how this worker does this and that, just as you can in the private sector.
Soda companies 'burn' money on advertising to try to beat each other for market share that doesn't improve the taste or cost of the cola one bit.
(Indeed, their whole industry, while counting as 'economic productivity', is arguably a negative on the economy considering it's selling a harmful product diverting money).
There's a reason why there are as many workers in the Department of Agriculture as there are full-time farmers, and it's NOT the blinding efficiency of government.
Actually, the government is 'blindingly efficient' far more than you suggest, contrary to popular myth.
Look at its biggest departments - social security last I heard is administered for less than a 1% overhead by the government - a figure that Bush's own organization estimated would be over five times hire if run by the private sector, other estimates are higher. Medicare/VA are run for a fraction of the cost of private insurance healthcare systems. with higher patient satisfaction rates as I've heard.
On and on - function after function - I see the government being pretty 'efficient' compared to its private counterparts in a lot of ways.
They may not make a better iPod - they're not supposed to.
No, you are just being an ideologue who can rant all day about the topic, but doesn't make it so. You hate government - that's emotional, not rational.
I hate a lot of government too, just about everyone does, and I view it as often a 'necessary evil' - the difference being you see evil more and I see necessary more.
Take for example jails. Definitely evil. They hurt people badly and cost us a fortune. But what's the alternative? I might have some suggestions, but let's keep it simple: crime.
What a waste. If people would just not commit crimes, we wouldn't have to pay so many people to walk up and down halls counting heads. But not doing to is expensive.
I really shouldn't include the things I called ranting against government, but they're such a textbook example of ideological blather, let's use them to show that I mean:
Money isn't abstract; every dollar taken in taxes represents a portion of someone's life, some number of minutes of someone's labor - literally a part of someone's life. That money is taken in trade for their labor, and in return they trade it for the goods and services they want. When government takes in tax money and disburses it in programs, a huge portion of that money (two-thirds is not unusual) is actually spent in overhead, on all the people I mentioned and in the materials things (buildings, computers, automobiles, etc.) that they need to do their jobs. That is the cost to society for government to take that money and spend it on, or increasingly just give it to, someone other than he who earned it. That portion of the GDP that would have been spent on goods and services is instead spent on goods and services that no one wants, but are necessary to administer the program. Even though the money itself doesn't disappear, a big portion of the wealth it represents is wasted in overhead.
The funny thing is, that some of the government spending that is the most 'efficient' at helping the citizens is the most hated by the right.
They seem to have a bottomless appetite for an improved fighter jet or bigger nuclear carrier that produces nothing and takes people out of the more productive areas, apparently in the name of some mythical pursuit of 'power' that will apparently let us limit the choices of others to exploit them more than we can now, but increase education, provide for the elderly, offer medical care, and they're furious.
If the circulation of money was all that mattered, then North Korea, where the government owns all real property, would be the richest nation on Earth, as North Korea has an ability unmatched in the world to tax and spend. Wealth production is what is important in determining standard of living, and the amount of overhead (government, as well as the private sector's overhead like accounting) directly reduces society's standard of living. Every dollar spent on a government worker is a dollar the private sector can't spend on the goods and services it wants, be it caviar or a new milling station to increase widget production.
If the concentration of money - the top result of the right's policies - was all that mattered then countries like the nations of Africa would be the richest nations on Earth.
You are in hate with (similar but opposite, if that makes sense, to love with) government versus private spending, as I noted.
Selling more chia pets is wonderful for you, while the government researching a cure to cancer is a moral crime.
I don't say that as a general comment on the economy - the private sector is the engine of our wealth and provides most good goods and services, relatively efficiently.
I say it to highlight the delusional level of ideology you have on the matter.
You have an ideology. It's flawed, and harmful, but like other flawed and harrmful ideologies (communism, fascism, etc.) there's enough to it to keep you happy.
Unfortunately, it blinds you to the actual issues in the economy, what works and what doesn't.
You have an endless spiel on the horrible faceless government worker counting other government workers, that is a waste of time.
You seem to base your political views on the hate of that faceless government workers, always pushing for 'less government' with no real rational views on issues.
You are not able to pick out a 'less evil', you have a fixation on one evil.
I understand it - the word 'government' is a sort of cooties, and if you are like some others, the very idea of that 'government worker' fills you with rising bile and a red face. The ideological part is why you rush so much to the 'extreme' versions - the 'government owns everything', Stalinist Russia type stuff, instead of rational. It's a bit like the 'new John Birch Society', who felt about communism about like you do about government.
Here's where I'd set you right if I knew how, but I can no more convince you of any of your ideology being bad than I convince Al Queda their ideology is flawed.
I'm not saying it can't be done - I've seen classes where Al Queda recruits are deprogrammed over time - but I haven't seen it in a message board post.
So, all this will go off you like water off a duck's back, water you did not drink after being led to since the segue to that second metaphor is so convenient, and all this really does is help show why you and I are not going to get anywhere discussing the issue. No hard feelings about that.
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