americans elect responses

Upload: michael-d-ballantine

Post on 05-Apr-2018

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    1/8

    AMERICANS ELECT

    Response to questions

    Economy, Healthcare, Education, Energy, andForeign Policy

    Mike Ballantine

    4/11/2012

    These are the responses to 15 questions posed by Americans Elect. A youtube video will be issued to

    respond to them as well in the very near future.

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    2/8

    What do you think are the most important steps government can take to promote job creation?

    Paul Krugman and other noted economists from the PERI Institute indicate that for every $100,000 in

    government spending, we create 1 job. They show that spending in education creates the most jobs and

    spending in defense creates the fewest. I propose that we begin construction of a nationwide high-

    speed rail system, begin the mining of rare-earth minerals on the moon, rebuild our decrepit roads andbridges, and begin construction of 5 new ultra-modern urban centers to house the more than 100

    million new Americans that will come to our nation over the next 40 years. By borrowing funds through

    an infrastructure bank and issuing loan guarantees for new clean-energy power plants we can create 20

    million jobs over a three-year period. These jobs will not be in competition with the Chinese or Indians

    and will pay a real-living wage. Job creation is not only critical to getting our economy turned around, it

    provides the motivation for our youth to work hard and stay in school. Many pundits and political

    leaders believe that only the private sector can create jobs, that is, simply not true. When the private-

    sector fails to create the jobs America needs, then it is incumbent on the government to step-in and

    take the necessary steps to create jobs. I cannot accept the notion that American workers should be

    abandoned and forgotten because political ideologues are not willing to compromise.

    How would you reform the Federal Tax System?

    For the past 30 years beginning with President Reagan, America has steadily cut taxes for the wealthy.

    This was done because some believe lower taxes boost growth and that by boosting growth, everybody

    wins. The truth is that the only winners have been the wealthy; whereas, the rest of America has gone

    in reverse. Middle-class incomes have stagnated and despite the rhetoric, income for most people

    continues to fall. The biggest consequence of this march to lower taxes has been an explosion in the

    deficit. Congress has been unable to control its addiction to spending and we need to bite the bulletand reverse this thirty-year trend. The first step we need to do is reverse the Bush Tax cuts. The second

    step is to eliminate all deductions and simplify the tax code. By eliminating deductions, we stop the

    distortion that exists in the tax code. When we make this change, we will need to reduce the tax rates

    and we propose 7 brackets eliminating taxes for people earning less than $20,000 and increasing the tax

    rate progressively up to $500,000 in income per year. To help solve the current deficit issue until our

    economy regains its legs, we propose a surtax on income of 10% for all earned income above $500,000

    for a period of 5 years. Finally, we propose a corporate flat tax of 15% and the elimination of industry

    specific deductions like the oil and gas industry currently enjoy.

    Do you believe corporations should be more heavily regulated, even if it means higher compliance

    costs?

    More regulation does not mean that corporations will become better citizens and less regulation does

    not mean that our economy will improve. With the deregulation of the banking industry, America

    experienced its worst economic downturn since the great depression. I believe we need to reinstate a

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    3/8

    modern version of Glass-Steagall that encompasses the Internet, derivatives, CDOs and hedge funds.

    We need to eliminate the possibility that banks are too big to fail reversing the stranglehold that the

    financial industry has upon our economy. Additionally, we need to implement balanced regulations for

    the natural gas industry to protect the environment and ensure clean water for residents in the fracking

    zones. As we transition from a fossil fuel based economy to one based on renewables, we will need to

    implement appropriate regulations to encourage a speedy transition. Obviously, common sense has to

    enter into the discussion and all regulations should have sunset provisions to allow periodic reviews to

    modernize them. Where we need to reduce regulations is when they impact small businesses and I

    think we need to exempt family farms from most regulations and accept the occasional problem as

    being just a part of life. The current effort by the Federal government to shut-down family farms

    through regulation in favor of big agricultural concerns flies in the face of what it means to be an

    American.

    How do you propose we reduce the national debt, and how should the national debt be considered in

    economic recovery plans?

    As things stand, the national debt is unpayable. If one were to amortize a debt of $16 trillion over 30

    years at 5% interest, the payments would run in the neighborhood of $1 trillion per year. That would

    require us to nearly double the personal tax rates. When a business borrows money, it must pay the

    debt back with profits. When a government borrows money, it must pay it back with future tax

    revenues. If one were crazy enough to double taxes, it would severely impact our economy resulting in

    a serious downturn and possibly even a new great depression. While I am sympathetic with those that

    demand fiscal probity, we have to find another way. Instead, I propose a National Energy company to

    exploit the proven oil reserves in Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah currently existing on public lands. We

    can process the oil shale in an environmentally friendly manner producing 10 million barrels a day to

    replace much of the oil we import. The anticipated production costs are somewhere between $45 and

    $47 a barrel. I propose we place a $25/barrel tax on this oil and over a 20 year period, we could reduce

    the national debt by 50%. Paying off the debt this way will require cooperation among environmental

    groups, the oil industry, and Congress but it can be done if we have the will. Given the alternative of

    doubling the personal income tax, I think we should consider this option.

    What role should the federal government play in the healthcare industry? Is healthcare a right?

    According to the Kaiser Foundation, the government already pays over 63% of healthcare costs. We

    have approximately 50 million out of 155 million working adults currently uninsured. With the number

    of working adults currently stagnant and the population continuing to grow, the burden of healthcare

    falls on a smaller number of workers. Further, as the burden grows heavier so do the premiums paid by

    private companies. These expenses directly impact the competitiveness of American companies and

    hamper their ability to market American products overseas. We can solve these problems by doing two

    things: first, we extend Medicare to all Americans; second, we stop paying for it through payroll

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    4/8

    deductions and we pay for it with a national sales tax of 10%. This way, everybody benefits and

    everybody pays. Once we move to a single payer program, we can begin to attack the inflated costs by

    comparing procedures performed in the United States to procedures performed in other countries and

    begin to rationalize costs. Continuing to apply short-term fixes to an out of control system is much like a

    mechanic using duct tape and bailing wire. Whereas, many decry the potential for slower service, our

    nation has become a two-class system, those with healthcare and those without. The Affordable

    Healthcare Act is neither affordable nor does it solve the cost problems, we need to move toward a

    system that provides affordable healthcare to all Americans not just the privileged few with high-paying

    jobs.

    What do you think is driving the rapid growth of health care costs, and how would you slow it down?

    Would you support putting some kind of cap on what the government spends on Medicare?

    The problem with ever increasing health care costs stems from the fact that the one paying the bill is not

    the one consuming the service. A second critical point is that many people are not paying for healthcare

    so the cost to cover them is born by an increasingly shrinking pool. When people lack health insurance,

    they push-off seeking care until it is too late and this drives costs higher. The ill-thought attempt to

    force people to buy insurance is one way to combat this problem; however, that only considers the

    revenue side of the issue. Instead, the cost side is the biggest problem facing us. If one compares

    healthcare costs to other countries, one finds America spends three to four times as much per person.

    Obviously, we have structural problem and while some claim that we have the best healthcare in the

    world, we are only ranked number 10. We need to compare procedure by procedure to what is being

    done in Canada, the UK and France with what we do in America and then demand doctors and hospitals

    justify their expenses. Cutting the duplicative costs and excess testing will dramatically lower costs and

    avoid the need to impose spending caps on Medicare. A second way to reduce costs is to eliminate the

    for-profit insurance companies that add an administrative burden to the system raising costs for

    everyone.

    Should the government require that all citizens have healthcare insurance? If so, what is your thought

    about a premium support model similar to the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program?

    In short, no I do not think the government should require all citizens to have healthcare insurance. I

    believe that violates an individuals constitutional rights and doing so takes away the individuals ability

    to negotiate what is best for the individual. Instead, I think all citizens should be enrolled in basic

    Medicare with the option to purchase additional insurance to provide specialized requirements. Right

    now, I do not have health insurance because my pre-existing conditions make it unaffordable. If I were

    to purchase healthcare insurance at my age, it would take my entire paycheck and it still would not be

    enough. The current system we have makes no common sense. Until we attack the cost side of

    healthcare and provide sufficient revenues, premium support models are just more subsidies that our

    nation cannot afford. I reiterate, we need to extend Medicare to all Americans and pay for it with a

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    5/8

    National Sales tax of 10%, and rationalize the cost of delivery. In my experience, the KISS rule is

    appropriate for our current situation, keep it simple stupid because the more complex the system, the

    higher the final costs.

    Why arent our K-12 schools preparing graduates to compete in the global economy, and what would

    you do as president to lift their performance?

    Our graduates cannot compete in the global economy because they are not willing to work for $3/day.

    That being said, the performance in our inner-city schools is scandalous and needs to be repaired. Some

    believe charter schools are the answer but their performance is only marginally better than public

    schools. The problem stems from the culture of poverty in our inner-cities. In many instances toddlers

    are left in front of the TV or alone with other children and lack the interpersonal communication

    between adults and children. For children coming from middle and upper-income classes, they

    experience 3 to 4 times as much interpersonal communication preparing them for the literacy

    requirements of school. Unfortunately, this handicap is impossible to repair later in life and no amount

    of spending can build the neural network in the brain after a child reaches a certain age. We need to

    provide enhanced day-care for all toddlers that provides the necessary auditory feedback to develop

    literacy in our children so that once they enter school full-time, they can perform as well as their peers

    from middle and upper-income classes. As President, I would push legislation to expand the head-start

    program to incorporate ideas to solve this problem by employing seniors and other care-givers to talk to

    our infants and toddlers. I also propose eliminating the NCLB Act and moving towards a local-based

    curriculum model that considers the cultural issues of each community as well as the standards needed

    to enter higher-education.

    Why do you think college costs keep rising? Are students getting their moneys worth, and what

    would you do to slow down cost growth?

    A primary issue driving costs is that there is no relationship between the cost of education and the

    eventual salary that a graduate will derive. Colleges and universities offer a plethora of programs to

    attract more students necessitating the employment of greater numbers of staff. Instead, I propose that

    college-aid be determined by the average salary earned by graduates instead of the costs of the

    university. Doing this would force universities to rationalize programs and price them more

    competitively.

    When faced with the question whether students are getting their moneys worth, the answer has to be

    unequivocally, no. On one side of the issue are those that claim that for-profit schools provide the

    opportunities to minorities that have been left out of the system. The problem is that we are burdening

    our students with an unpayable debt load just at the time in their life when they need to begin

    accumulating assets. Solving the problems in our public schools would go a long way to solving the

    problems in higher education. A solution for one cannot be successful without a solution for the other.

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    6/8

    Further, unless we create jobs for our graduates, what will be the point of higher education. We cannot

    solve the education problem without solving the job creation issue first.

    What would you do to improve the workforce development and job training opportunities for US

    workers?

    Workforce development begins in first-grade, not after high school. Other nations put more emphasis

    on vocational and technical development in secondary schools. I propose that we return to a model

    where students are taught in high school through work-placement and apprenticeship programs the

    skills they will need for future employment. To provide immediate relief to inner-cities, I propose that

    we provide scholarships for two-year programs that provide the training and education necessary to

    enter the workforce along with the investment to create the companies that will employ these workers.

    Without a vigorous job creation program, all the training in the world is useless if there are no jobs. This

    requires a public-private partnership to create new factories and industries in blighted communities like

    Detroit instead of abandoning them to the vagaries of the market. This means we will need to negotiate

    fair-trade policies with our partners instead of continuing unsustainable free-trade policies that destroy

    our communities. By providing tax credits and wage subsidies, we can encourage local employers to

    hire apprentices for a two-year period providing them with skills they will need to be successful.

    Is US energy independence a feasible goal and, if so, how would you achieve it? How would you

    reduce our reliance on foreign oil?

    In the business world, the lowest cost producer gets all the business. Hence, the middle-east with some

    of the lowest cost oil enjoys the lion share of the oil market. However, the US has over 1.5 trillion

    proven reserves locked in oil shale and we can develop it. One acre in Colorado can provide 2.5 million

    barrels of oil according to a Rand study performed in 2005. By moving more of our energy production to

    renewables, we can limit the growth of oil consumption. By building a high-speed railway network over

    10 years, we can avoid the need to expand our airports. These two measures help limit the need to

    produce greater quantities of oil. Over a period of 5 years, I propose that we direct a National Oil

    company to develop the oil shale basins in Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah producing 10 million barrels of

    oil a day. At this production rate, there is enough oil to last 150 years and it would offset the majority of

    our oil imports. Given the acceleration of technological change, we should be able to find renewable

    replacements for many of our transportation needs including coal gasification, hydrogen power, and

    conversion to electric vehicles. Only a national oil company can take on a project of this magnitude and

    prevent the local environment from being ravaged by profit-oriented companies. Other nations have

    national oil companies, its time we developed our resources for the benefit of Americans instead of a

    few well-heeled Wall Street executives.

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    7/8

    What steps will you take to make this nations growing energy demand more sustainable?

    The first step is that I will push legislation to create an infrastructure bank to finance new renewable

    based power generation. This will provide the financial incentive to invest in alternative energy. The

    second step is that we will finance and construct two goal-gasification facilities to provide work for coal

    miners displaced by the closing of aging coal-powered generators. The third step is to begin theinfrastructure development necessary to exploit the oil-shale in Colorado. To do this, we must build a

    water pipeline to supply process water, a nuclear energy plant to provide the power to process the

    shale, and a water-treatment plant to clean the process water before releasing it back into the Colorado

    River. Finally, we will provide tax incentives to support the construction of 1 million electric cars each

    year.

    By exploiting our national resources like geothermal, wave, and solar energy over a twenty-year period, I

    believe we can replace all of our coal-powered generators and reduce our demand for fossil fuels by

    50%. Building high-speed rail, converting much of our transportation to electric cars and changing the

    way we work will do more to make energy demand sustainable than new regulations. With the

    introduction of virtual reality into the workplace, the number of regular commuters should drop

    substantially. Designing our workplaces and schools around this technology would cut oil consumption

    in half. America currently uses three times as much oil per capita as other nations, we can reduce this

    through changing our work habits.

    How important is reducing carbon emissions, and how would you go about it? In addition to

    renewable fuels, do you believe natural gas and nuclear energy should play a larger role in Americas

    energy mix?

    One of the big problems with reducing carbon emissions is the tendency for the emissions production to

    move offshore. Simple regulation is not enough, we need to actually make substantive efforts here at

    home. As carbon accumulates in our atmosphere, it accumulates in the ocean causing acidification,

    killing fish and coral reefs. Unless we can reduce and reverse the accumulation of carbon in our

    atmosphere, we will find destroy most of our marine life. To combat carbon accumulation, we need to

    begin reforesting much of our nation and other nations. Certainly, through the employment of

    renewables we can slow down carbon accumulation but unless we engage in carbon removal from our

    atmosphere, it will continue to accumulate.

    Using natural gas is better than burning coal but it still produces carbon and is not a renewable energy

    source. We need to invest in more solar and geothermal energy sources to replace our need for fossil

    fuels. Moving to electric vehicles in our urban centers would also help reduce the production of carbon.

    Nuclear energy has the advantage of producing energy without producing carbon but the tradeoff is the

    production of a waste product that we cannot handle. We need nuclear energy but it is not the

    solution. Solar energy costs continue to fall and within the next decade will become competitive with

  • 8/2/2019 Americans Elect Responses

    8/8

    other energy sources. There are proposals to convert our roadways into solar power generators,

    construct large solar farms in the deserts, and even solar arrays in space.

    What circumstances justify US military intervention? Do you think America should continue to play a

    leading role in world affairs, or lay down some of those responsibilities?

    When a nation attacks or is on the verge of attacking the United States or its possessions, then I believe

    military intervention is justified. Otherwise, America should play a supportive role but not an active role

    in supporting regional groups to resolve disputes. Our history of intervention is plagued with missteps,

    poor planning, and frankly bad execution. America can play a leading role in world affairs through

    diplomacy without the constant demand to intervene militarily every time another dictator starts doing

    something stupid. Currently, we are spending $660 billion a year on defense to prepare to fight an

    unknown enemy in an unknown place for an unknown reason. That is an absurd amount of money for

    effectively marginal increase in security. We need to cut our defense budget in half and limit spending

    to 2% of GDP unless Congress declares war, implements a war tax, and the nation is committed to the

    intervention. Whereas, no one wants to see the innocent suffer or be massacred, our moral obligation

    is just as important to the people of Los Angeles as it is to the people of some far away land. I propose

    that we close 90% of our foreign bases and keep open only the bases that we need to provide

    humanitarian aid.

    Is Americas enormous trade deficit with China a problem? How would you boost US exports and

    encourage China and other countries to buy more from us?

    The current trade deficit with China is caused by a misguided policy of blindly implementing free-trade

    knowing that free-trade only flows in one direction. Chinas refusal to revalue its currency and allow the

    dollar to float is causing the entire global economy to be distorted and preventing our manufacturers

    from competing on a level-playing field. As the primary global reserve currency, America becomes the

    buyer of last resort for developing countries intent on acquiring hard currency to finance development.

    It is ludicrous to think that other countries will buy more from us when the global pie is fixed and

    everyone is trying to export their way out of financial difficulties. Instead, we need to renegotiate the

    WTO treaties to include minimum wage issues, carbon emissions issues, work safety, and pollution

    regulation. Further, we need to put an import tax of 40% on all Chinese imports until they renegotiate

    the treaty or abandon our participation in the WTO in 2015. The simplest way to boost exports is to

    create a new export market, the Moon. I would invest in our space industry providing a lunar base to

    support private mining concessions and development. Without the 50,000 factories that have closed

    over the past decade, America lacks the manufacturing capability to boost exports. We need a new

    industry to drive our export growth and I believe a vigorous space program will do that.