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Marketing executive, Steve Hartkopf shares all in this informative yet personable blog.

Is this Any Way to Run a Country?

Steve Hartkopf - Wednesday, March 10, 2010
I'm not going to right directly about business, communication, social media or any of that today. Instead I'm going to write about what everyone seems to be talking about, ObamaCare.


Everywhere I go it seems people are talking about ObamaCare. Most of the people I talk to (older white guys like me) see it as a government takeover of healthcare, the old "16% of the economy" statement. They believe such a step is highly intrusive on our personal freedom and too expensive, a huge risk. Most add that if you want healthcare then you need to get a job. Government you see can't fix anything, it's inefficient as heck (think DMV) and, oh by the way, if they wanted to fix healthcare they should start by fixing Medicare and Medicaid, both of which are basically bankrupt. The enemies are the trial lawyers, who drive up malpractice insurance through frivolous claims and record awards, and tax-and-spend liberals who never saw a government program they didn't like because so few of them actually pay for them.

A second group, which is generally led by my more liberal Democratic friends, believe it is a great idea. Healthcare is something everyone needs, is basically a human right, and since the uninsured end up in Emergency Rooms anyway, the highest cost healthcare service available, which, by the way, only treats symptoms, any solution is less expensive than the current system. The problem with the current system is it's a patchwork of rules and laws created by our true enemies - a corrupt system ran lobbyist, insurance companies and heartless Republicans who only care about the most capable and the most blessed amongst us. If the government could just manage the whole thing it would work for everyone.

The truth from my perspective is both Democratics and Republicans are corrupt. They're both for sale, they both lie and, for the most part, are only interested in power, re-election and themselves. There are no statesmen taking the high ground in this debate.  It's partisan. Manipulating the people is more a means to an end. My view is a little cynical but then i did graduate at the top of my class.

In the end I think the Democrats will get their way and we'll have national healthcare. At some point we're going to realize we can't afford our entitlement programs and our large military. So, like France and Japan and many other countries, we'll cut back on our military spending. We will survive and still be great, we'll just won't be the same. Is that good or bad? I

'm not sure. I think we are a little too aggressive militarily but if we're not there to stop the bad-guys who will?

One possibility is the country is so enraged by this "take-over" that they will throw the Democratics (yes, it's actually the Democratic Party) out in November. A wave of Republicans will arrive, slow down this process, that will give business more confidence to hire and invest, and the economy will pick up more steam.

Before you stand up and cheer, realize that this apparent good news does not solve the healthcare issue and the Republicans, as we've seen in the past, are fully capable of the same level or stupidity. Is this any way to run a country?

Steve
800-707-9150

We need a Tough-Guy, Greed is Back

Steve Hartkopf - Friday, January 22, 2010
The practices on Wall Street are not easy to defend but neither are they surprising. The U.S. Government took the cost of capital, the raw material banks use to make loans, down to zero and, at the same time, poured an avalanche of money into their coffers. That may have been necessary but random acts have random consequences and, in a panic, the last two administrations acted randomly.

From what I can tell the bailouts were done with little oversight. The banks are the new bad guys because they didn’t do what the current administration thought they should do. Metaphorically, we gave a teenager the car keys and said do your thing. Please. What the heck did we expect?

The
banks acted in their own self-interest. How shocking? And now they are being slapped with the greed label. An old enemy returns and by-golly we’re gonna get ‘im. We’ve got new weapons too, more regulation, punitive laws and more outside interference. Wait, aren’t those are the old weapons? How well will that work? Wall Street might know. The Dow plunged 213 points (2%!) yesterday.

"Never again will the American taxpayer be held hostage by a bank that is too big to fail," Mr. Obama proclaimed Thursday. I feel better already.

Republican Senator Jon Kyl said, "Let's not be finding (sic) a bogeyman so that we can turn public attention away from what they're doing wrong in the administration." Good for you, Senator, waggle that finger.

Peter Drucker said that laws brought forth from "scandal" (real or concocted) are usually bad laws. He reasoned scandal driven laws “punish 99 innocents to foil one miscreant. They penalize good practice, yet rarely prevent malpractice. They express emotion rather than reason."


Ginning up scandal and public outcry to produce regulation will create more confusion, add cost and is unproductive. The American people need private sector jobs that sustain the economy, not hobgoblins and speeches, from either side.

Mr. President, if you’re listening, which you said you were going to do, seriously this time, like now, after the Massachusetts’s election, trim government spending so that you can lower taxes on businesses and individuals. You see, some greed really is bad. Greedy politicians who keep raising taxes are the worst.

If I were a tough-guy I’d tell all the politicians to just shut up, give us back our money and don’t let me catch you nosing around here again, but I’m not.

Octomom's lips

Steve Hartkopf - Friday, June 05, 2009
What would you do with a trillion dollars?

Personally, I’d do exactly what the current administration has done: I’d buy the country.

Why not! We’re the greatest country in the history of countries and a trillion (plus/minus) dollars is a sensational price. You throw in 100% owner financing and you've just closed the deal of the millennium.

The end-strategy is brilliant too: Give 51% of the electorate more in benefits than they pay in taxes and never lose another election.

They began by assembling the tribes. The unions, the gays and lesbians, the Latinos, etc., bought in first. When that failed to deliver a permanent majority they needed new pander-tribes. But who was left (pun intended)?

Politicians are smart, especially at pandering. They can see value where others can’t. Most people would not invest vast sums of money in bankrupt companies, with poor management teams, unpopular products and failed business models. But the politicians knew that the breakup value of GM, for example, was enormous. I’m not talking about buying plants and real estate for pennies on the dollar,  and reselling the pieces for a higher price. I'm talking about votes.

Votes may now be purchased by the industry or the company and they go where (else) the money is. With Financial Services and Automotive almost complete they now have Health Care and Pharmaceutical in their sites. “You want to keep your job? You need money? Here you go, just don’t forget where you got it come election time…”

It wasn't enough that the tribes had already stepped up big-time in their contributions. The unions were in for about a half billion. The exact number is hard to confirm but it's a big number. One person was clear. "We spent a fortune to elect Barack Obama -- $60.7 million to be exact -- and we're proud of it," boasted Andy Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union, to the Las Vegas Sun last month.

What about all those pesky people who aren’t getting bailed out, like the 401K crowd? That's a good question. My guess is they won’t be contacted unless more votes are needed and that may not be for a very, very, long time.

Is it just me or does all this seem as unnatural as Octomom’s lips?

                                     

Steve


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