Statement of Principles


Nevada government keeps getting bigger and BIGGER. We deserve minimum, strictly limited, constitutional government in this State.

Forget all this blather about a $3B "shortfall". The budget for the '12/'13 biennium should be no more than $200M.



Friday, May 7, 2010

Protectionism For CCEA Members

Originally posted in a LVRJ Forum

preserve pay increases based on a teacher's academic credentials
Whenever I see a business which gives raises based on acquisition of academic letters I know it's an enterprise which is dominated by the GOVERNMENT. A teacher's worth should be measured by how well she teaches and how many, not by how much idiotic pedagogy she has soaked up in a lecture hall.

Kobe would not make even 10¢/hr more if he held a PhD in Hoops.

I know an in-house trainer for a Fortune 50 firm. He doesn't have a lot of formal education but he gets the job done. For that he's well-paid. Don't know whether he received a raise this year.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Privatize Our Federal Lands

Originally posted in a LVRJ Forum

As sort of a condition of entry into the Union, Nevada pledged to forever respect federal lands within our boundaries. See "Ordinance §3" (NSC) Good luck getting this state behind the federal lands privatization effort!

Actually, Nevada could expedite this by only awarding its electoral votes to presidential candidates who promise to privatize. The way the Southern States ended Reconstruction. Good luck with that. The two BIG Government Parties have rigged state election law to ensure that their respective candidate gets the votes unconditionally.

Cry Me a Rebel River

Originally posted in a LVRJ Forum

[Beuerlein] will graduate this summer

I doubt it. The graduation rate for jocks is *significantly* lower than that of non-jocks.

Beuerlein is majoring in "sport management and physical education". Pre-MLB. Jockology. Not serious. The program is so ridiculous that even Smatrick can't defend it. He's going to discontinue it.

UNLV is not supposed to be a MLB farm team. Why do taxpayers continue to give scholarships to jocks who couldn't care less about education? Why do we continue to fund junk departments which give jocks academic cover? This "triumph over adversity" story must have planted by UNLV's Sport Management faculty as a way to further politicize the department and save their jobs.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Motorcyclist Killed By CCSD Bus

Originally posted in a LVRJ Forum

Another victim of public education.

Don Gustavson (R-Sparks) is the only pro-freedom guy in Carson City. Every session he sponsors a motorcycle helmet choice bill. It never gets out of committee. He can't even get votes from legislators who identify themselves as "pro-choice".

Don is resigning his Assembly seat to run for state Senate. He deserves our support.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Millenium Scholarships: Bad For Nevada

Originally posted in a LVRJ Forum

The [Millenium] program now costs $25 million a year, but that total is increasing by about $1 million per year.

What is this $25M++/yr taxpayer burden to fund Millenium Scholarships? When the UNV was "sold" to a skeptical voting public, that annual expenditure wasn't part of the deal. Neither was the $14M/yr the state gives to fund NCAA sports, nor the hundreds of millions we spend each year on NSHE.

Too Much Nevada Government

Originally posted in a LVRJ forum

Lawyer Polsenberg said It was a clever legislator's trick to pass the spending side ... and then be forced to vote on whether to pass the revenue

It's not "clever". Under NSC Article 9 §2 it's the law.

The crooked politicians allocate the first 115 days of the legislative session to impose upon us as much government as they can think of. More K-12. More football scholarships. More senior, mental health, and employment training programs.

More retirement benefits for state employees.

Pile it on.

When they add it all up .. SURPRSE! Government in the next biennium needs to be 10% larger than it already is. For FY '12/'13 the Republicrats are hinting 20% (~$8.2B)!  A small government legislator would vote NAY on all government spending except that which is absolutely, constitutionally required. The three branches, 18 public schools, three UNR applied science departments, a few other small things, and that's it. ~$200M.

In correct sequence, next starts the acrimonious five day debate over how to pay for it. That typically means higher business and sales taxes, though it would be perfectly legitimate for legislators to fund BIG government through user fees. For instance, $10,000 per K-12 student. $800 per UNLV credit. That sort of thing. A small government legislator would have little problem voting YEA to such "new" taxes. That is, "no" on the spending, "yes" on the taxes.

Seems like every session you get a few "Conservatives" who vote YEA on the spending and NAY on the funding mechanism. As if BIG government will somehow pay for itself. Of course lets them demagogue I SUPPORT public education! and No new taxes!

That's clever like a thief.

Hannibal Sandoval

Originally posted in a LVRJ Forum

Hannibal Sandoval lawyered That is not raising taxes

Let's be fair to the RINO. An AG cannot raise taxes. But it is also true that Sandoval's role in Guinn's tax hike cannot be dismissed as simply a lawyer reresenting his client.

The AG is supposed to provide a legal opinion. Sandoval probably told Guinn "you have a good case".

Strike 1.

The AG must take legal action when the Governor so directs. He can also take legal action INDEPENDENT of the Governor. The NSC is silent about tie-breaks. That is, when the Governor wants to sue and the AG doesn't.

Constutional issues aside, Sandoval could have simply refused to comply. The way that Cortez-Masto has refused to participate in Fibbons' Obamacare lawsuit.

Strike 2.

Sandoval is a close political ally of archetype RINO Raggio. He even works at the same politically connected, BIG government law firm.

STRIKE THREE!