Friday, December 17, 2021

2021 Pork Report: 12 Recipes for Government Waste, Fraud, and Abuse

The Beacon Center, December 15, 2021 - The Beacon Center is proud to release its “recipe book”
themed Tennessee Pork Report, revealing hundreds of millions of dollars in government waste, fraud, and abuse.

This year’s infamous Pork of the Year “winner” was Metro Nashville Public Schools (MNPS). MNPS entered into an $18 million no-bid contract with Meharry Medical College Ventures which produced a $1.8 million website with all the visual appeal and functionality of AskJeeves.com. Experts say this website should have cost no more than $75,000. 

As if the no-bid contract and lighting tax dollars on fire weren’t bad enough, at the same time the city of Nashville decided to shut down schools because in-person learning was too dangerous due to COVID, MNPS partnered with the YMCA to have…in-person learning for children of Metro School employees and students from K-5th grade.

Other 2021 Pork Report entries included:

  • $702 million government-owned broadband plan in Knoxville, despite 98% of Knoxville residents having multiple choices in broadband internet.
  • A $20 million (and counting) taxpayer gift to build a waterpark in Jackson.
  • Davidson’s County continued “emissions testing” tax grab that was deemed unnecessary by both the state legislature and the EPA.
  • Hamilton County’s $16 million purchase of nearly 2,200 acres to turn into a manufacturing hub, yet only about one-third of the land is ready for development.

The 2021 Pork Report comes from state and local budgets, media reports, state audits, and independent research conducted by Beacon Center staff and scholars. You can read the full report here.

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Pork of the Year: Over-Stuffed Baked Apples. Metro Nashville Public School's COVID Favoritism and $18 Million No-Bid Contract with Meharry Medical Ventures

 








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Rick Perry Pitched Meadows On Plan To Steal Election Even Before Results Were In

by Rod Williams, Dec. 17, 2021 - Shame, shame, and embarrassment. The evidence is overwhelming and continues to mount that there was an attempt by and on behalf of Donald Trump to steal the Nov. 2020 election.  I don't know that there is enough evidence of treason to convict anyone of the crime, but the conspirators should go down in history as traitors who attempted a coup, and they should not be welcome in polite society. Their names should be removed from buildings and if they have highways or bridges named after them, those structures should be renamed.  They should be shunned and treated as shameful embarrassments. 

I was not surprised that there was a coup attempt following the 2020 election. I had a bad feeling that we would see violence and maybe a coup attempt following the election, but I badly missed how it would play out.  I thought President Trump would win the election and there would be a coup attempt from the left.  Liberals hated Trump with such a passion and many thought of him as the next Hitler.  If one is stopping the next Hitler then a coup is justified.

I always thought that if there ever was a coup, or attempted coup, in America it would come from the left.  Liberals, I reasoned, do not really love America the way conservatives do.  They scoff at patriotism and they see the Constitution as not much more than an impediment to the enactment of the general will.  Conservatives, on the other hand, are patriots and they revere our republican form of government, liberty and order, and the constitution. 

As it turned out, conservatives (Republicans or those who have co-opted the label "conservative,") are willing to defile the constitution and illegally seize power.  What is labeled as "conservatives" today consists of people who are no better than progressives.  Trumpinistas, including former Governor Rick Perry, assuming the allegation is true, are traitors who plotted to betray their country. 

Please see the following excerpted article. There is always the possibility that this article is untrue or that Perry was framed.  I hope that is the case, but I don't expect that to be the case.  Click on the title below to read the full article.

CNN: Rick Perry Pitched Meadows On Plan To Steal Election Even Before Results Were In

By Josh Kovensky, December 17, 2021-  Investigators on the Jan. 6 Committee believe that former Energy Secretary Rick Perry authored a Nov. 4 text to Mark Meadows suggesting that three state legislatures overrule their voters and cast electoral votes for Trump, CNN reports.

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) presented the text on Tuesday night, which reads: “HERE’s an AGRESSIVE (sic) STRATEGY: Why can t (sic) the states of GA NC PENN and other R controlled state houses declare this is BS (where conflicts and election not called that night) and just send their own electors to vote and have it go to the SCOTUS.”

Perry sent the text on Nov. 4, one day after the election was held and as votes in key states were still being counted.

... the plan resembles what Trump would partly spend the following two months doing: trying to pressure state legislatures into sending Trump, and not Biden, electors to Congress, regardless of their vote counts. 

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2021 Pork Report: Beale Street Irish Car Bombs. Billion Dollar Handout for Ford to Move to West Tennessee Megasite

 





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2021 Pork Report: Exhaust Smoked Ham with Nashville-Hot Honey Glaze. A Tax Dollar Grab through Outdated Emissions Testing

 


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2021 Pork Report: On-Your-Pillow Chocolate Mint. Shelby County Commission's Emergency-Fund Grant to Workers they Sidelined During COVID.

 


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2021 Pork Report: Garlic and Wild Leek Park-Boiled Potatoes. A Taxpayer-Funded Gift to the Construction of a Waterpark in Jackson

 



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2021 Pork Report: Air-Fryer Roasted Chestnuts. Shelby County Schools' $25 million Contract to Improve Air Quality.

 


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2021 Pork Report: Grab the Money and Go Snack Mix. Governor Lee's Program that Paid for Tourists to Visit Select Tennessee Cities

 


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2021 Pork Report: Nutty Theater Popcorn Balls. Clarksville's Decision to Pay for a Performing Arts Center and then Raise Property Taxes

 



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2021 Pork Report: Field Greens with Lemony Breadcrumbs. Hamilton County's $16 Million Purchase of Mostly Unusable Land

 


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2021 Pork Report: Utility-Charred Knoxellini. A Needless Government-Run Broadband Plan from the Knoxville Utility Board

 



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2021 Pork Report: Game-Day Chicken Wings with Caviar. The Nashville Event Marketing Fund Committee's Continued Funding of Events that Only Benefit the Rich


 

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2021 Pork Report: Cranberry-Orange Ballpaark Pretzels. Debt-Funded Baseball Fields and Taxpayer Waste in Johnson City


 

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Thursday, December 16, 2021

Tennessee has collected $1.2B more than estimated in revenue this fiscal year

By Jon Styf | The Center Square,  Dec 13, 2021 - Tennessee has collected nearly $1.2 billion more than budgeted in revenue so far this fiscal year, according to numbers released Monday from Department of Finance and Administration Commissioner Butch Eley.

The revenue collections mainly come from state taxes, such as sales and corporate tax, along with fees.

Tennessee collected $1.4 billion in revenue in November; nearly 22% higher than what was collected in November 2020.

The Tennessee State Funding Board determines revenue estimates and can adjust the estimates during the fiscal year. Additional funds brought in by the state can be appropriated to state projects, which is what happened with the recent special session to approve $884 million in incentives for Ford’s $5.6 billion electric truck development in west Tennessee.

Tennessee beat its initial budgeted estimates by $3.1 billion last fiscal year and beat its revised estimates by $2.1 billion, according to Sycamore Institute.

September has represented the largest overage of tax collections compared with estimates this year at $378 million more than estimated.

“We continue to be encouraged by the strong sales and corporate tax growth exhibited in the month of November,” Eley said. “Sales tax receipt growth, which represents taxable sales activity in October, remained elevated for the month even as the state begins to compare similar collections that were higher in the past year due to recently enacted internet and remote sales tax laws. All other taxes, taken as a group, exceeded the November estimate as well.

“While the economic progress and revenue growth the state has experienced year-to-date has been remarkable, we remain concerned over the sustainability of such high growth rates and will continue to monitor economic activity and revenue trends to ensure fiscal stability.”

Tennessee collected $182.3 million more than estimated in sales taxes during November, while the general fund collected $266.4 million more than estimated.

The state has collected $1.189 billion more than estimated through four months on the fiscal year, on an accrual basis, with $1.112 billion more in the general fund and $77 million more than estimated in four other funds that receive sales taxes.

Franchise and excise taxes were $81.8 million more than estimated for the month and are $401.4 million more than estimated for the fiscal year.

Gasoline and motor fuel taxes were $4 million more than the budgeted estimate of $101.1 million and are $14.1 million more than estimated for the year.

Other totals collected that beat estimates were: tobacco tax ($1.8 million above), privilege tax ($10.7 million above), business tax ($900,000 above) and mixed drink, or liquor-by-the-drink, taxes ($7 million above).

Vehicle registration fees ($900,000 less) were below estimates.

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Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Get real about Climate Change. Part 6: There must be a price for Carbon.

by Rod Williams, Dec. 5, 2021- The COP26 summit concluded recently and everyone, except the most pollyannish, would classify it a failure. Based on what countries have done and the projections of what countries have pledged to do, the world will continue to warm and we will miss the goal of limiting the world's temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. That is the limit above which most peer-reviewed scientific analysis says there will be serious, maybe disastrous, consequences to climate change. 

I am not at all surprised that the Paris Accords is failing to achieve its goal.  The Paris approach to addressing climate change had no hope of ever achieving its goal.  It is easy to make promises to do something at some point in the future when you will no longer be around.  And, that is the approach of Paris.  Counties pledge to reach net-zero emissions or a certain reduction in admissions at some point in the future.  In democracies, there will be different leaders when that day arrives and in dictatorships, there are no consequences to failure.  Also, under Paris, even when a pledge is made, it is not the country making the pledge.  It is the ruling regime at that time.  Paris is not even a treaty. No nation commits to doing anything that is enforceable under Paris. 

Another reason that we are making almost no progress on climate change is that the leading advocates for doing something are left-wing social justice warriors, romantics, and alarmists. They may know about climate change feedback loops, but they don't know about markets, supply and demand, and cost-benefit analysis.  Much of what environmentalist policymakers have achieved has actually made climate change worst, such as banning nuclear energy and banning fracking to obtain natural gas. Much else has been costly but ineffective.  Realists have not been at the table.

So, what is needed to address climate change? There are several policies that would be positive developments, but in my estimation, the one thing we need more than any other is a price on carbon.  That is, we need a revenue-neutral carbon tax with border adjustments.   The following primer on a carbon tax is reposted from the republicEn.org, a project of the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University.

What is a carbon tax?

A carbon tax is a fee imposed on carbon pollution, usually increasing at a predictable rate over time. The tax is paid upstream by the producers of fossil fuels (i.e. at the mine, pipeline, or refinery). The goal of a carbon tax is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions using the power of price signals and free enterprise.

Why is a carbon tax needed?

Today’s energy market is broken. Due to subsidies, fossil fuels are artificially cheap, obstructing the market and preventing a level playing field. Industries pollute our skies for free, a massive hidden subsidy in addition to the breaks they received back in the day when the U.S. was trying to promote oil and gas development. Climate damages stemming from carbon dioxide emissions cost the U.S. billions each year and the American public is left to foot the bill. A carbon tax would internalize negative externalities by adding some health and climate damages to the price of fossil fuels. This accountability would shatter the illusion that energy from fossil fuels is cheap. Given the correct price signals, consumers and producers would be incentivized to switch, quickly, to cleaner energy alternatives.

Aren’t taxes bad?

It depends. Just like with any policy, a poorly designed carbon tax can be harmful to the economy. But a well-designed carbon tax will reduce our use of dirty fuels while spurring innovation and economic growth. If something is bad for society, it makes sense to tax it so we have less of it. In contrast to convoluted, big-government regulations, a well-designed carbon tax is a simple, effective, small-government way to address climate change. At republicEn, we favor a carbon tax that is both revenue neutral and border adjustable.

What does “revenue neutral” mean?

With a revenue-neutral carbon tax, the government does not keep the money raised from the tax, which means the government does not grow. Instead, 100% of the tax revenue goes back to the American people. This may be done by offsetting taxes elsewhere (e.g. cutting payroll or income tax) or by sending dividend payments to households.

What does “border adjustable” mean?

A border-adjustable carbon tax imposes a fee on imports from countries that don’t have a comparable price on carbon pollution. That way, American firms are not disadvantaged against countries without a carbon tax or tempted to outsource to these countries. This border adjustment helps keep the U.S. competitive in the global market, as well as entices our trading partners to enact their own carbon tax policy.

How is a carbon tax fiscally conservative?

At its core, a carbon tax is a market-driven solution. Solving climate change requires the innovation, speed, and creativity that only comes from free-enterprise capitalism, and a carbon tax accelerates this process. A carbon tax is transparent and predictable, allowing industry to pivot and plan for the future instead of getting bogged down by ineffective subsidies and regulations. It internalizes negative externalities, and also opens the door to repealing burdensome environmental regulations rendered unnecessary by the pollution fee. A carbon tax is the most conservative solution to climate change: simple, effective, and sensible.

Would a carbon tax actually work?

Yes. In a transparent, accountable energy market, consumers – not regulators, mandates, or fickle tax incentives – would drive demand for clean energy. Entrepreneurs would race to supply that demand, and we’d quickly shift to power our lives with the fuels of the future. Studies show that a carbon tax can reduce U.S. carbon emissions faster and more effectively than regulations.


Source: American Action Forum






 

 

 

 

Would a carbon tax increase energy prices?

Since a carbon tax would raise costs for fossil fuel producers, it would likely lead to higher energy prices for consumers (at least at first, until our economy transitions to clean energy sources). Researchers predict that a $25/ton carbon tax would cause the price of gasoline to go up about $0.21/gallon and the price of electricity to go up about $11/month for the average American household. This price increase is why it’s important for a carbon tax to be revenue neutral, returning the money to households. With money back in their pockets, Americans will be cushioned from the inevitable increase in energy prices.

Who supports carbon tax policy?

There is widespread agreement among economists that a carbon tax is the most cost-effective solution to address climate change. Many large energy companies, such as ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, have also endorsed a carbon tax. A growing number of U.S. politicians on both the sides of the aisle have pushed for carbon pricing legislation.

Notable conservative-led carbon tax proposals in the United States:

Raise Wages, Cut Carbon Act (2009): Introduced in the House by Rep. Bob Inglis (R-SC) and co-sponsored by Rep. Jeff Flake (R-AZ) and Dan Lipinski (D-IL). Would have implemented a revenue-neutral carbon tax in exchange for equivalent cuts in payroll taxes. (Reintroduced by Rep. Lipinski in 2019.)

MARKET CHOICE Act (2018): Introduced in the House by Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R-FL) and co-sponsored by Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) and Francis Rooney (R-FL). Would implement a carbon tax paired with a repeal of the gasoline tax and with revenue designated mainly for infrastructure projects. (Reintroduced by Rep. Fitzpatrick in 2019 and 2021.)

Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act (2019): Introduced in the House by Reps. Francis Rooney (R-FL), Ted Deutch (D-FL), and five more Democratic members. Would implement a revenue-neutral carbon tax with all revenue returned to Americans in the form of dividend checks.

Stemming Warming and Augmenting Pay Act (2019): Introduced by Rep. Francis Rooney (R-FL). Would implement a $30 tax per metric ton of carbon with revenues paid out to individuals through payroll taxes.

Climate Leadership Council Carbon Dividends Plan: Proposed by a coalition of respected conservatives including James Baker and George Shultz. Calls for a revenue-neutral carbon tax with all revenue returned to Americans in the form of dividend checks.

Green Flat Tax: Proposed by economists Art Laffer and Stephen Moore. Calls for a carbon tax in exchange for a flat income tax of 18%.

More carbon tax resources:

What You Need to Know About a Federal Carbon Tax in the United States (Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy)

Carbon Taxes: The Most Efficient Way to Reduce Emissions (Hoover Institution)

Where Carbon is Taxed (Carbon Tax Center)

Climate Leadership Council

Citizens’ Climate Lobby


Get real about Climate Change. Part 4: Admit that the Paris Accords has failed, ditch it, and establish an international mechanism to foster greenhouse reductions. 

Get real about Climate Change. Part 5: It's Time for America to Embrace Carbon Border Adjustments


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Sunday, December 12, 2021

What has happened to Tucker Carlson?

 From Rachael Larimore,Managing editor of The Dispatch:

"From Tucker with Love

On Tuesday, Tucker Carlson aired a segment on his Fox News show in which he defended Vladimir

Putin’s aggression toward Ukraine as a matter of border integrity, blamed NATO for the tension between Russia and Ukraine, and painted Joe Biden as weak and as one taking orders from others. Garry Kasaparov has heard it all before—on Russian state television—and he wonders what Carolson is up to. “Putin is a hostile actor, an enemy who has repeatedly attacked American interests abroad and in the homeland. Russian hackers and disinformation campaigns target everything from racial strife to vaccine effectiveness to US elections. Why would a flag-wrapped nationalist like Tucker Carlson take Putin’s side?”'

Rod's Comment: I agree.  I have not been a fan of Tucker Carlson for a long time.  I still find him interesting and entertaining, and occasionally enjoy watching him expose liberal insanity and make liberals squirm. More and more, however, I realize I do not share many of his values.  It is sad to see so many so-called conservatives show their affection for the enemies of freedom, see them pander to the lowest common denominator,  and see a shallow populism replace what used to be conservatism.  

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