—
Kudos for the Aug. 31 headline “Businesses pay dearly for layoffs.” A splendid example of the legislation passed by our legislative bodies containing fine print almost completely clouded by the much ballyhooed and misleading title of said bills.
An employer paying into a so-called insurance program for 20 years, only to discover what he thought he was paying for was not, and he must foot the bill again. Business becomes accustomed to this type of trust and one would expect our politicians to operate in a similar manner. Not so.
This is an example of, what I believe to be, a major cause of our current economic problems. Namely, politicians and we, as a people, are our own worst enemy by believing we can send money to our state or nation’s capital and expect to get it back in the form of security.
We are asking business to carry too large a load to finance our “social programs.” By necessity, business must pass added taxes, cost of manufacturing and cost of manufacturing restrictions on to us, the consumer, in the form of increased product prices in order to show a profit. Profit, a word completely abhorred by our socialistic friends, is what makes the wheels go around.
Much of our manufacturing business has discovered they can profit by moving to foreign lands where environmental and other requirements are not as restrictive and expensive.
Have we reached the point, as has Greece, where we can become a so-called “Third World Country” caused by our own desires to “have it all” by driving business out of our country and spending future generations’ money?
Your View
Your View: We ask businesses to carry too large a load
- Your View
-
- In Response: Teacher seniority bill about cutting, not learning
- Your View: Legislators, worry about bills, not ballots
-
My View: Plenty of doubt exists on warming
Rudy Boschwitz was a U.S. senator from Minnesota from 1978-1991, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission (Geneva Switzerland) in 2005 and President G.H.W. Bush’s Emissary to Ethiopia in 1991.
- Your View: Whig Party's approach supports vets, families
- Your View: Law enforcement will protect its own
- Your View: Let's remember Blue Earth County settlers
-
My View: Romney didn't build companies, he made money for investors
Recent opinion polls show that less than one-third of Americans have a favorable opinion of Mitt Romney, and almost half, 49 percent, have an unfavorable opinion — a number that skyrocketed 15 percentage points in one month, according to a January ABC News/Washington Post poll.
- Your View: Stoplight should be closer to West entrance
- Your View: Voting ‘no’ on amendment the Minnesota thing to do
-
In Response - Don’t blame Legislature for property taxes
Rep. Tony Cornish
R- Good Thunder
- More Your View Headlines





