Role of Government

Thanksgiving Proclamation, 3 October 1789 | Thanksgiving Episode 2020

Thanksgiving Proclamation, 3 October 1789 | Thanksgiving Episode 2020

11/26/20 by Matt Brechwald

Episode: https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/offincome/Thanksgiving_Proclamation_3_October_1789___Thanksgiving_Episode_2020.mp3

Happy Thanksgiving to all of you this year. 2020 has been unbelievable between the pandemic, the politics and the polarization of our society. I thought that it might do us all a little good to hear the original proclamation of thanksgiving by President George Washington to remind us where our priorities should be. I hope this strikes you the same way that it did me, and that you have peace at your table for this great, American, holiday.

While I am posting this about a week after Thanksgiving, I really like Matt Brechwald’s podcast and his observations as a farmer and small town police officer and landlord piecing together a life on his rural land.

One of my hope with the Biden administration is… smaller government, smaller deficits βš” 🚨 ⬇️

One of my hope with the Biden administration is… smaller government, lower deficits βš” 🚨 ⬇️

I have observed over the years that Democratic presidents tend to be much better at cutting the deficit and reducing government spending then Republican presidents.

While the GOP is quite happy to flood the military, defense contractors and the police with unneeded new funding when they are in charge of the White House they don’t like funding social or community programs and will make the deficit spending a major issue in the Biden presidency.

A strong post pandemic economy might even mean the federal government is running in the black and could lead to significant investments in infrastructure and climate resilience which is going to be all the more important in coming years.

And I think that’s a good thing because it will lead to a more affordable and better government.

Planet Money : NPR

Are There Too Many Political Appointees? : Planet Money : NPR

The transition to the Biden administration may be going, let us say, a bit slower than transitions have in the past. But the rumbles of the age-old, post-election shift in Washington can still be heard. Thousands of victorious campaign staffers, donors, glory seekers, and hangers-ons will soon be swarming the capital in search of jobs in the new administration. And, in a few weeks, there will be a convenient guidebook published for them.

The book is officially called United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions, but it's better known as the Plum Book because of its purple cover — and also probably because it's filled with plum jobs, many of which are appointed by the winning presidential candidate. The book is published every four years after presidential elections. It's a long list of positions around the federal government, typically providing information on who last held them and what their salary was.

America’s Most Generous Presidents – WorldAtlas

America’s Most Generous Presidents – WorldAtlas

Often a more genuine measure of the philanthropic side of politicians is their work following terms in a major office. Three US presidents stand out among their peers for their charitable work both during and after their presidencies: Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama. While there are certainly other presidents and politicians who are generous in their philanthropic work, these three offer an interesting array of causes, socio-economic climates, and timelines.

NPR

We Asked Americans How They Feel About The U.S. Flag. It Got Interesting. : NPR

Like Hurley, she voiced impatience with people who see the flag as a symbol burdened by racism: "The United States is still pretty much the most equal place you could have for people of different backgrounds. For people to compare the U.S. to an ideal is unfair."

But many of the roughly 1,800 people who responded to NPR's call out, especially people of color and those who lean more liberal, said it's not that simple. They told us the American flag comes with baggage that can't be ignored.

Why Do Such Elderly People Run America? – The Atlantic

Why Do Such Elderly People Run America? – The Atlantic

he most obvious reason America’s presidential candidates are so old might be that Americans are getting older. Voters over 65 routinely go to the polls more often than young voters do, and political-science research has found that voters typically prefer candidates “who are closest to themselves in age.” This sounds like a universal formula: Older countries produce older politicians.

But since the 1980s, almost every European country has gotten older, while the typical European Union leader has actually gotten younger. In the United Kingdom, although people over 55 outvote people under 30 by one of the widest margins in the world, the current prime minister, Boris Johnson, is “only” 55. Biden, Sanders, and Trump are all older right now than the U.K.’s five previous prime ministers, going back to Tony Blair.

So the preference for very old candidates seems to be weirdly, specifically American. What’s that about?

Maybe it’s about decades of youth disengagement from politics. According to The Economist, older Americans have outvoted younger Americans by a wider margin than in the typical OECD country. This is particularly true at the local level. As Timothy Noah writes in Politico, studies have found that the median voter age in America’s municipal elections is 57—“nearly a generation older than the median age of eligible voters.”