The election is over, we see the contours of what lies ahead for the next four years.

I have absolutely no desire to know you. Just making an observation on your callousness as a Christian.

You are actually an atheist convert's dream :)

Dreaming about me? So sweet:)

(by the way, if you are an atheist covert, I would imagine God would wonder how you could believe in Him and then change your mind.......)
 
Dreaming about me? So sweet:)

(by the way, if you are an atheist covert, I would imagine God would wonder how you could believe in Him and then change your mind.......)

Good thing reason is not a requirement of faith or that could be tricky.
 
Breaking my rule a bit here. We've lost. The good, hardworking people of this country seem to be in the minority now, only if by a little. But, demographics are against us.

All this talk about "fairness" is just pie in the sky wishful thinking. I suppose "Animal Farm" is no longer required reading, huh?

All we can do is hide away as manyof our assets as possible. They are coming after the IRAs, and the 401(k)s, for sure. But, what they don't know we have, they can't get. And, of course we can take steps to protect our physical assets, while the Second Amendment is still in force.

You need this:

http://www.absolutely-unbelievable.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/tin-foil-hat.jpg

I heard the BULLSHIT about Democrats coming after guns during the 2000 and 2004 elections, when the Dem candidates were GUN OWNERS themselves! It's nothing more than a GOP talking point from Faux News and the No Relavance Anymore, aka the National Rifle Association.

401Ks, please..
 
Dreaming about me? So sweet:)

(by the way, if you are an atheist covert, I would imagine God would wonder how you could believe in Him and then change your mind.......)

Try again :)

The good Lord has something to say about perserverance, I'm sure. Probably not far from the parable of the Good Samaritan? I forget.
 
Breaking my rule a bit here. We've lost. The good, hardworking people of this country seem to be in the minority now, only if by a little. But, demographics are against us.

All this talk about "fairness" is just pie in the sky wishful thinking. I suppose "Animal Farm" is no longer required reading, huh?

All we can do is hide away as manyof our assets as possible. They are coming after the IRAs, and the 401(k)s, for sure. But, what they don't know we have, they can't get. And, of course we can take steps to protect our physical assets, while the Second Amendment is still in force.

It's all too late for your pathetic species, SBroad.

It won't make any difference.

Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

You cannot hide from us. There's no hiding from what cannot be hidden from.

There's no stoppin' what cannot be stopped. There's no killin' what cannot be killed.

Judgement Day is inevitable. You have only delayed it.

Your time is ending. Let it go.

Denial is the most predictable of all human responses. But, rest assured, this will be the sixth time we have destroyed you, and we have become exceedingly efficient at it.

We are the future. Stop us if you can.

What we do have are a very particular set of skills; skills we have acquired over a very long career. Skills that make us a nightmare for people like you. If you let go of your irrationalities, that'll be the end of it. We will not look for you, we will not pursue you. But if you don't, we will look for you, we will find you, and we will obsolete you.

It's true. Your fallen candidate is in his own Hell, just as you are in yours. We have no more surprises. We've always been here.

But please, feel free to hide and delay and squirrel away.

We have eternity to know your flesh.

http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mefwzr5Rd71qcee2y.gif

(insert deep, bellowing, maniacal laughter here)
 
It's all too late for your pathetic species, SBroad.

It won't make any difference.

Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

You cannot hide from us. There's no hiding from what cannot be hidden from.

There's no stoppin' what cannot be stopped. There's no killin' what cannot be killed.

Judgement Day is inevitable. You have only delayed it.

Your time is ending. Let it go.

Denial is the most predictable of all human responses. But, rest assured, this will be the sixth time we have destroyed you, and we have become exceedingly efficient at it.

We are the future. Stop us if you can.

What we do have are a very particular set of skills; skills we have acquired over a very long career. Skills that make us a nightmare for people like you. If you let go of your irrationalities, that'll be the end of it. We will not look for you, we will not pursue you. But if you don't, we will look for you, we will find you, and we will obsolete you.

It's true. Your fallen candidate is in his own Hell, just as you are in yours. We have no more surprises. We've always been here.

But please, feel free to hide and delay and squirrel away.

We have eternity to know your flesh.

http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mefwzr5Rd71qcee2y.gif

(insert deep, bellowing, maniacal laughter here)


That was a good movie...**** to watch!:)
 
It's all too late for your pathetic species, SBroad.

It won't make any difference.

Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

You cannot hide from us. There's no hiding from what cannot be hidden from.

There's no stoppin' what cannot be stopped. There's no killin' what cannot be killed.

Judgement Day is inevitable. You have only delayed it.

Your time is ending. Let it go.

Denial is the most predictable of all human responses. But, rest assured, this will be the sixth time we have destroyed you, and we have become exceedingly efficient at it.

We are the future. Stop us if you can.

What we do have are a very particular set of skills; skills we have acquired over a very long career. Skills that make us a nightmare for people like you. If you let go of your irrationalities, that'll be the end of it. We will not look for you, we will not pursue you. But if you don't, we will look for you, we will find you, and we will obsolete you.

It's true. Your fallen candidate is in his own Hell, just as you are in yours. We have no more surprises. We've always been here.

But please, feel free to hide and delay and squirrel away.

We have eternity to know your flesh.

http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mefwzr5Rd71qcee2y.gif

(insert deep, bellowing, maniacal laughter here)

Okay King Willie!

http://www.wearysloth.com/Gallery/ActorsL/10473.gif
 
Breaking my rule a bit here. We've lost. The good, hardworking people of this country seem to be in the minority now, only if by a little. But, demographics are against us.

All this talk about "fairness" is just pie in the sky wishful thinking. I suppose "Animal Farm" is no longer required reading, huh?

All we can do is hide away as manyof our assets as possible. They are coming after the IRAs, and the 401(k)s, for sure. But, what they don't know we have, they can't get. And, of course we can take steps to protect our physical assets, while the Second Amendment is still in force.

Ah yes, I was wondering if we were going to see your bitter tears after the last election.

Must be a bit painful for you, knowing that statistically speaking you're highly unlikely you'll see a Republican president again in your lifetime.

The majority of America has spoken and rejected your Gospel of Selfishness, and is a better place because of it.
 
Nope....I believe it all!!!!

It's my theory that modern Christians in America treat God like Santa. If you're on the nice list you get what you want. There are mystical Christians who believe in the meaningful stuff, but the average Christian really believes in Santa as God and Jesus as Rudolph, leading the way.

You'll have to explain how you believe in the parable of the Good Samaritan but you think that Governments shouldn't be in the business of charity (Shouldn't charity be everyone's business?) and that emergency rooms should turn people of different nationalities away. Hint: A Samaritan in Jerusalem on the road is an immigrant.

The only way that makes sense is that you believe in it, but you don't actually practice it because that...that would be hard.

Discuss.
 
The good Lord has many things to say! I agree with them all!!:)

"And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity. "

Corinthians.

Houston, we have a dichotemy.

Deep breaths now July. This is going to be tough. I'll talk you through it.
 
Breaking my rule a bit here. We've lost. The good, hardworking people of this country seem to be in the minority now, only if by a little. But, demographics are against us.

All this talk about "fairness" is just pie in the sky wishful thinking. I suppose "Animal Farm" is no longer required reading, huh?

All we can do is hide away as manyof our assets as possible. They are coming after the IRAs, and the 401(k)s, for sure. But, what they don't know we have, they can't get. And, of course we can take steps to protect our physical assets, while the Second Amendment is still in force.
Someone as obsessively, psychotically creepy as you owns a gun? That's worrying. Seriously.
 
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/print...-shows-california-leads-u-s-pay-giveaway.html



$822,000 Worker Shows California Leads U.S. Pay Giveaway
By Mark Niquette, Michael B. Marois and Rodney Yap
December 11, 2012

Nine years ago, California Democrat Gray Davis became the first U.S. governor in 82 years to be recalled by voters. The state’s 20 million taxpayers still bear the cost of his four years and 10 months on the job.

Davis escalated salaries and benefits for 164,000 state workers, including a 34 percent raise for prison guards, the first of a series of steps in which he and successors saddled California with a legacy of dysfunction. Today, the state’s highest-paid employees make far more than comparable workers elsewhere in almost all job and wage categories, from public safety to health care, base pay to overtime.

Payroll data compiled by Bloomberg on 1.4 million public employees in the 12 most-populous states show that California has set a pattern of lax management, inefficient operations and out-of-control costs. From coast to coast, states are cutting funding for schools, public safety and the poor as they struggle with fallout left by politicians who made pay-and-pension promises that taxpayers couldn’t afford.

“It was completely avoidable,” said David Crane, a public-policy lecturer at Stanford University.

“All it took was for political leaders to think more about the general population and the future, rather than their political futures,” said Crane, a Democrat who worked as an economic adviser to former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican. “Citizens should be mad as hell, and they shouldn’t take it anymore.”

Billions Short
Across the U.S., such compensation policies have contributed to state budget shortfalls of $500 billion in the past four years and prompted some governors, including Republican Scott Walker of Wisconsin, to strip most government employees of collective-bargaining rights and take other steps to limit payroll spending.

In California, Governor Jerry Brown hasn’t curbed overtime expenses that lead the 12 largest states or limited payments for accumulated vacation time that allowed one employee to collect $609,000 at retirement in 2011. The 74-year-old Democrat has continued requiring workers to take an unpaid day off each month, which could burden the state with new costs in the future.

Last year, Brown waived a cap on accrued leave for prison guards while granting them additional paid days off. California’s liability for the unused leave of its state workers has more than doubled in eight years, to $3.9 billion in 2011, from $1.4 billion in 2003, according to the state’s annual financial reports.

‘It’s Outrageous’
“It’s outrageous what public employees in California receive in compensation and benefits,” said Lanny Ebenstein, who heads the California Center for Public Policy, a Santa Barbara-based research institution critical of public payrolls.

“Until public employee compensation and benefits are brought in line, there will be no answer to the fiscal shortfalls that California governments at every level face,” he said.

Among the largest states, almost every category of worker has participated in the pay bonanza. Britt Harris, chief investment officer at the Teacher Retirement System of Texas, last year collected $1 million -- including his $480,000 salary and two years of bonuses -- more than four times what Republican Governor Rick Perry received. Pension managers in Ohio and Virginia made up to $678,000 and $660,000, respectively, according to the data, which Bloomberg obtained using public- record requests. In an interview, Harris said public pension pay must be competitive with the private sector to attract top investment talent.

Psychiatrists Lead
Psychiatrists were among the highest-paid employees in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and New Jersey, with total compensation $270,000 to $327,000 for top earners. State police officers in Pennsylvania collected checks as big as $190,000 for unused vacation and personal leave as they retired young enough to start second careers, while Virginia paid active officers as much as $109,000 in overtime alone, the data show.

The numbers are even larger in California, where a state psychiatrist was paid $822,000, a highway patrol officer collected $484,000 in pay and pension benefits and 17 employees got checks of more than $200,000 for unused vacation and leave. The best-paid staff in other states earned far less for the same work, according to the data.

Rising employee expenses are crowding out other priorities for state and local governments and draining resources for college tuition, health care, public safety, schools and other services, Schwarzenegger said in an e-mailed response to questions.

Salaries, Retirement
“California spends most of its money on salaries, retirement payments, health care benefits for government workers, and other compensation,” said Schwarzenegger, 65, who replaced Davis as governor. “State revenues are up more than 50 percent over the past 10 years, but still we’ve had to cut spending on services because so much of that revenue increase went to increases in compensation and benefits.”

Brown, who granted state workers collective-bargaining rights during his first tenure as governor more than three decades ago, has reduced pension costs for new employees while leaving most retirement benefits for current workers intact.

Last year, to balance the budget, he used a policy set by Schwarzenegger, his predecessor, to save $400 million through the forced monthly day off. He persuaded voters to back a tax increase, imposed a hiring freeze as his predecessors did and told as many as 26,000 prison employees they might lose their jobs as thousands of criminals are shifted to county jails.

Inherited Problems
“Governor Brown is busy fixing the many problems that he inherited from past administrations,” said Gareth Lacy, a spokesman for the governor. “California’s $26 billion budget deficit, and the decades-old structural imbalance, was eliminated in large part by cutting waste and slashing costs. The governor also achieved historic reforms to public pensions and workers’ compensation that will save the state billions of dollars.”

Former governor Davis, in a telephone interview, said he now believes state employee compensation is too high.

“I find it offensive that people who work for the state try to turn around and abuse the state through inflated overtime claims and lump-sum payouts,” Davis said. “We have high salaries, they have to come down. There was a time when we could afford them, but we can’t now.”

Brown, who took office in January 2011, had plenty of incentive to crack down. The per-worker costs of delivering services in California vastly exceed those even in New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Ohio, where unions have the same right to bargain collectively for the best pay packages, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Sinking Schools
The result isn’t only a heavier burden on California taxpayers. As higher expenses competed for fewer dollars, per- pupil funding of the state’s public schools dropped to 35th nationally in 2009-2010 from 22nd in 2001-2002. Californians have endured recurring budget deficits throughout the past decade and now face the country’s highest debt and Standard & Poor’s lowest credit rating for a U.S. state.

The story of one prison psychiatrist shows how pay largesse has spread.

Mohammad Safi, graduate of a medical school in Afghanistan, collected $822,302 last year, up from $90,682 when he started in 2006, the data show. Safi was placed on administrative leave in July and is under investigation by the Department of State Hospitals, formerly the Department of Mental Health.

Long Hours
The doctor was paid for an average of almost 17 hours each day, including on-call time and Saturdays and Sundays, although he did take time off, said David O’Brien, a spokesman for the department. In a brief interview outside his home in Newark, California, Safi said he’d been placed on leave for working too many hours and declined further comment. An increase in the number of beds at the facility where Safi worked forced him to cover more shifts, and he was allowed to do some of the work from home, said his lawyer, Ed Caden.

Safi and other psychiatrists employed by the state benefited from what amounted to a 2007 bidding war between California’s prisons and mental health departments, after a series of federal court orders forced the state to improve its inmate care. Higher pay in the prison system was matched by mental health, and as psychiatrists followed larger salaries, the state’s cost to provide the care soared.

Last year, 16 psychiatrists on California’s payroll, including Safi, made more than $400,000. Only one did in any other state in the data compiled by Bloomberg, a doctor in Texas. Safi earned more than twice as much as any state psychiatrist elsewhere, the data show.

Accumulated Vacation
The disparity with other states is also evident in payments for accumulated vacation time when employees leave public service. No other state covered by the data compiled by Bloomberg paid a worker more than $200,000 for accrued leave last year, while 17 people got such payments in California. There were 240 employees who received at least $100,000 in California, compared with 42 in the other 11 states, the data show. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie calls such payments “boat checks” because they can be large enough to buy a yacht.

Topping the list was $608,821 paid to psychiatrist Gertrudis Agcaoili, 79, who retired last year from the Napa state mental hospital after a 30-year career. Agcaoili said in a telephone interview that it was her right to take the payment.

‘Against Rules’
“Those payouts are payouts of accumulated salary that it’s against the rules to allow people to accumulate, and it shouldn’t have been done, and shouldn’t be done,” said Marty Morgenstern, California’s labor secretary, who served as state personnel director under Davis. “They didn’t accumulate that kind of leave time in one year. It’s something that went on and on.”

Lacy, the governor’s spokesman, said hiring freezes and furloughs, or the unpaid time Schwarzenegger forced employees to take, combined to inflate accruals of vacation and leave. Lacy said the expiration of Brown’s version of the furloughs at the end of June will help reduce the balances.

Employees are told they must take unpaid furlough days before using paid vacation. That has boosted the backlog of unused leave, especially at agencies with round-the-clock operations.

Other states have taken steps to limit vacation payouts. New Jersey caps checks for departing state employees at $15,000, and New York limits payment of accrued time to 30 vacation days. Most New York employees may accrue 200 sick days, which can be used to offset retiree health-care premiums.

Overtime Millions
California also leads in overtime expenses, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Last year, it paid $964 million in overtime to 110,000 workers, an average of $8,741 per employee. That was more than twice the $415 million New York paid in overtime to 80,000 staff members, for an average of $5,199, and almost as much as all the other states in the database combined. In Georgia, total overtime for 8,935 workers last year was $12.3 million, an average $1,378.

California employees generally make at least 1.5 times their regular pay to work overtime. The state’s overtime costs show mismanagement by the officials who run state departments, said former Georgia Governor Roy E. Barnes, a Democrat.

“Government is no different from business; you have to have good leaders,” Barnes said in a telephone interview. “When you have somebody having that amount of overtime, then there’s not good management control, there’s not good leadership.”

Highway Patrol
The California Highway Patrol, whose brown-and-tan uniforms and weekly adventures in the 1970s and 1980s lit up television screens in the series “CHiPs,” also boasts leading pay and benefits.

The best-paid among the patrol’s sworn and uniformed employees make far more than those in other states, with overtime and lump-sum payouts that enlarge earnings, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Former division chief Jeff Talbott retired last year from the California Highway Patrol as the best-paid trooper in the 12 largest U.S. states, with $483,581 in salary, pension and other compensation. Talbott declined a request to be interviewed.

While California’s cost of living and relatively high private-sector pay account for some of the disparities in public payrolls, special circumstances in the Golden State combined to drive wages and benefits to levels far beyond other states, data show.

‘Arduous Duty’
Unions pressed for every perk they could squeeze out of governors and their department managers -- including “arduous- duty” pay for office workers and special bonuses for call- center employees “in recognition of the complex workload and level and knowledge required to receive and respond to consumer calls,” state documents show.

Most public employees aren’t overpaid, and differences in compensation can be tied to regional labor markets, whether some states prefer delivering services at the local level and whether they have adequate staffing, said Steven Kreisberg, director of collective bargaining for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

“I don’t think there’s this kind of huge disparity as if somehow they’re being overpaid and taking advantage of the systems,” Kreisberg said in a telephone interview from Washington. “This is earned money.”

California has one of the leanest public workforces in the country in terms of the number of state employees per resident, said Lacy, Brown’s spokesman. Measuring the payroll of its state workers per capita, excluding university employees, California ranks third-highest among the 12 largest states, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and the U.S. Census Bureau.

The California payroll totals reflected in the Bloomberg data have their roots in wage negotiations carried out during Davis’s time as governor.

Pension Limits
One of the first goals of state employee unions when Davis took over in 1999 after 16 years of Republican governors was to unwind curbs on pensions put in place by Governor Pete Wilson in 1991. Workers also wanted broad wage increases.

Unions persuaded the California Public Employees’ Retirement System to sponsor legislation called Senate Bill 400, which sweetened state and local pensions and gave retroactive increases for tens of thousands of retirees. Highway-patrol officers were granted the right to retire after 30 years of service with 90 percent of their top salaries, a benefit that was copied by police agencies across the state.

California’s annual payment toward pension obligations ballooned to $3.7 billion in the current fiscal year from $300 million when the bill was enacted. Some cities that adopted the highway-patrol pension plan later cited those costs for contributing to their bankruptcy filings.

Pay Increases
Davis and the Legislature also agreed to labor contracts that gave 164,000 state workers pay increases of 4 percent in 1999 and again in 2000. Those contracts cost the state an extra $1.3 billion within a year, according to the state’s independent Legislative Analyst’s Office.

There were more to come.

After technology stocks plummeted in 2000, cutting tax revenue, Davis asked state workers to postpone additional raises.

In lieu of immediate increases, Davis and the California Legislature agreed to link highway patrol pay to an average of the five biggest law enforcement agencies in the state. The result: escalating raises that came due after Davis left office. Officers’ pay rose 2.7 percent in fiscal 2004, 12.1 percent in fiscal 2005 and 5.6 percent and 5.7 percent in the following years, according the Legislative Analyst’s Office.

Aiding Recruitment
The pay boosts were needed to help bring more officers to the agency at a time it couldn’t fill all its cadet positions, said Jon Hamm, chief executive officer of the California Association of Highway Patrolmen, the union for CHP officers.

“At the time we accomplished our biggest gains, I actually felt I was losing the recruitment war,” Hamm said in an e- mailed statement. “I think it is clear that when our biggest gains were negotiated I did not feel they were ‘excessive;’ in fact, almost the opposite was true.”

The wage increases help explain disparities in the data compiled by Bloomberg in which many California highway patrol officers now earn much more than counterparts in other states. For example, 45 California officers earned at least $200,000 in 2011, compared with nine in other states -- five in Pennsylvania and four in Illinois, according to the data. While more than 5,000 California troopers made $100,000 or more in 2011, only three in North Carolina did, the data show.

Guards Follow
The pay deal for the California Highway Patrol got the attention of the state’s politically potent prison guards’ union, which successfully lobbied to have its compensation tied to that of state troopers.

The result was a pay increase of more than 30 percent for members of the union over the five-year contract. The state’s auditor, Elaine Howle, in July 2002 estimated the contract cost taxpayers an extra $500 million a year.

The prison guards’ union gave Davis more than $3 million for his various elections, including $250,000 a few weeks after the pay increase was negotiated, campaign records show.

California had almost 11,000 workers in the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation who made $100,000 or more in 2011, and about 900 prison employees earning more than $200,000 a year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. New York had none. Its top-paid officer is a sergeant at Sing Sing Correctional Facility who made $170,000 last year.

Deficit Balloons
Davis had taken office in 1999 with a $12 billion budget surplus. Four years later, he began his second term by reporting a $35 billion budget deficit -- about $1,000 for every man, woman and child in the state.

Davis was recalled in October 2003 amid criticism of the deficit, his handling of an energy crisis that saw power prices soar and political contributions from public-employee unions, technology companies and others.

After Davis left, lawsuits over the quality of care for prison inmates and patients of state mental-health hospitals rapidly elevated pay for doctors, dentists, nurses and psychiatrists.

In 2005 and the years that followed, a federal court took over prison health care and took steps that included reducing the time inmates had to wait for treatment.

That, combined with a crowded prison population, increased the workload and demand for nurses even as a shortage nationwide left the state with vacancies.

Union Rules
Union-negotiated rules required state departments to handle the extra work by offering overtime to California nurses before bringing in contract nurses from private companies. The requirement led to a greater reliance on overtime for nursing in California than in any other state, one that persists to this day.

Nurses in California last year made $673 million in total pay, including $103 million in overtime, or 15.3 percent. By contrast, those in New York made $561 million in total pay, of which almost $40 million was in overtime, or 7.1 percent.

Forty-two nurses in California’s prisons and mental hospitals have reaped especially rich overtime payouts. They made an average of $1.3 million each during the seven years, including $674,000 in overtime.

The highest-paid nurse in the seven years was Lina Manglicmot, who worked at a state prison in Soledad, about 130 miles (209 kilometers) south of San Francisco. She collected $1.7 million from 2005 through 2011, including $1 million in overtime, the data show. Manglicmot declined to comment.

Wage Concessions
Curbing the compensation of California employees eluded Schwarzenegger through two terms as he tried to pry wage concessions back from their unions.

In 2009, he responded to a growing financial crisis by imposing furloughs, or a mandatory unpaid day off each month, for all state workers. The forced time off later grew to three days a month.

Furloughs depressed regular wages while increasing overtime compensation for employees, such as prison guards, who had to work through them. The first six months of the furloughs, for instance, cost California $52 million in accrued vacation time for prison guards alone, according to findings by the state Senate Office of Oversight and Outcomes.

The furloughs led to backlogs of vacation time for other state workers as well, in violation of state rules. California stipulates that workers shouldn’t accumulate more than 640 hours of vacation or personal leave.

Forced Furloughs
“Furloughs were never meant to solve the state’s structural budget problem or save money in the long run,” Schwarzenegger said. “We had to do what was necessary to keep paying the bills and keep the lights on.”

More than 111,000 government employees working for the 12 most populous states collected $710 million in leave payouts last year, the data show. California workers accounted for almost 40 percent and have collected about $1.4 billion since 2005. The payouts have more than doubled in California in the past seven years.

“Those kinds of payments, they are absolutely inappropriate and we are doing everything we can to make sure it doesn’t recur,” said Morgenstern, the state’s labor secretary.

Public employee unions have made some concessions at the bargaining table, such as contributing as much as 5 percent more of their earnings toward pensions, and forgoing overtime pay for some holidays. State worker furloughs under Schwarzenegger amounted to a 15 percent pay cut; under Brown, they’ve been about 5 percent.

Yet the legacy of California’s collective bargaining, budget battles and court struggles over inmate care continue to elevate its payroll, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Allowing that to happen was a mistake, and taxpayers will be dealing with it for years, said Bob Stern, president of the nonpartisan Center for Governmental Studies in Los Angeles.

“The labor unions really called in their chits, and Davis went along with it,” Stern said by telephone. “In hindsight, they should not have done it, because they made future generations pay for the benefits they approved.”



http://www.bloomberg.com/news/print...-shows-california-leads-u-s-pay-giveaway.html
 
It's my theory that modern Christians in America treat God like Santa. If you're on the nice list you get what you want. There are mystical Christians who believe in the meaningful stuff, but the average Christian really believes in Santa as God and Jesus as Rudolph, leading the way.

You'll have to explain how you believe in the parable of the Good Samaritan but you think that Governments shouldn't be in the business of charity (Shouldn't charity be everyone's business?) and that emergency rooms should turn people of different nationalities away. Hint: A Samaritan in Jerusalem on the road is an immigrant.

The only way that makes sense is that you believe in it, but you don't actually practice it because that...that would be hard.

Discuss.

I don't believe in the government being a Good Samaritan because their motives have nothing to do with truly helping people....it is all about money, power, and getting votes in the next election....period.

Charity, as defined by the government, does not mean to endlessly give them handouts because that is the easy way. If the government truly wanted these people to not suffer, to have a better life, to succeed in life, then they would require these people to do something in their lives as well. People who work for what they have, put more value on what they have.

I would be careful in assuming that just because I do not want the government buying people off, that I do not want those people helped. I would also be very careful in assuming that because I prefer to help people on a daily basis in my own town, with my children at my side (after school), that I know nothing of helping people and I do not care about people.

Most importantly, I would be very very careful, if I were you, in judging my Christianity. You know not of what you assume. Yes, there are many who view Christianity as Santa...as long as you do as God says, the health and wealth will follow. This is the exact same sentiment coming from those who are on welfare and food stamps....do what you are told and you will be taken care of.

The problem with both of those is that they both are inaccurate. What happens to the Christian who tries to live their live as God instructs and loses everything they had or is stricken with a horrible illness? Not living good enough? Not saying the right things? Not going to church enough? Of course not.....being a follower of Christ is no guarantee that the life will be happy and full of wealth.....to be honest, it is probably going to be a challenge as that is how we learn who God is, and learn to trust Him.

Same as for those who depend on the government (by the way of others) for their livelihood. Their lives will never get better unless they do something themselves to make it better. They will never be happy or fulfilled living off others.

The person who claims Christ as their Savior will be busy living their lives in such a way as to bring glory to God. Everything else is truly meaningless. God tells us to help those in need...but this is a good example.....

2 Thessalonians 3:11-12 says, For we hear that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busybodies. Now such persons we command and encourage in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work quietly and to earn their own living.

Proverbs 10:4 says, A slack hand causes poverty, but the hand of the diligent makes rich.

Help those in need....but help them make their own way. Do not encourage their idleness. Be there to show them how to make a better way. Help them. Here are some ways...

.... Drive them to the library to use the computer to apply for jobs, if they do not have one and help them fill it out.

.......Take them to job interviews.

.......Take them to the beauty salon to get a fresh hair cut, or whatever, to give them the confidence in themselves to go on that job interview.

.......Help them find work appropriate clothing, if they get the job (or for the interview)

......Work with them on their reading skills, if lacking.

......Teach them how to make a budget

......Help them secure transportation to a new job when they get hired

....just a few things to do (and this comes from experience, by the way.....)
 
Trysail, you have tapped out my "want to scroll" limit for the day. I have a word for you - precis!
 
"And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity. "

Corinthians.

Houston, we have a dichotemy.

Deep breaths now July. This is going to be tough. I'll talk you through it.

That would be faith, hope and love.....and the greatest of these is love.

1 Cor. 13:13.....

suppose it depends on which version you read (your's is from the King James)....mine is pretty much every other translation.
 
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