Over the past couple weeks in my school we've had the nice opportunity to have a small class on personal accounting, budgets, banking, taxes, etc. Everyone made a rough budget estimate for necessities they would have to provide for themselves once they were out on their own in the real world. Basics like rent, food, utilities, clothes, and so forth were all covered.

Then our guest teacher (who is a local accountant) got into taxes. And goodness gracious, that really made an impact on all the students. Now, I am lucky enough to go to a very small private school where the students are well informed on current events and have a very realistic and balanced approach to life. I think for all of us in the class, though, taxes for that one instant didn't make any sense at all. The IRS never made sense to me, but this really hit it home. Now, for the people reading this, I'm sure it isn't anything new. I've had more experience and exposure to taxes than most of my friends, but still this class managed to smack us all in the face with reality a little bit. The amount set aside for taxes in our de facto budget outdid any of the other categories.

I've said it before and I'll say it again, basic common sense is something that is lacking right now, especially when it comes to government, but even with individuals and businesses as well. This will be the first year that I have to file taxes, and even though what I pay (roughly 12%) is a relatively small amount, it doesn't keep me from already getting frustrated in this system we're forced to tolerate and comply with. Most of my taxes go to Social Security, a flawed government program that will most likely be bankrupt within 15-20 years. (That and probably many other areas of our government.) Just the rules that people come up with for this sort of stuff is pretty funny. Everyone in the class started cracking up when our teacher started to explain 401(k)'s, because none of us could see how such absurd rules and regulations could be justified. And our teacher was explaining it in all seriousness; the whole philosophy of taxes and the rules that come with them are what really got to the students. Taxes make saving and investing so much more difficult than they should be; any exchange of money is basically penalized. Basic common sense says this is not a system the Founding Fathers would have appreciated. 

I think young people, both teens and young adults, are picking up on the ideas that it would be nice to just live their own lives without so much intrusion from the government. I've been constantly discussing politics and policies from the perspective of Austrian economics for more than a year, and the ideas simply make sense to them. Education is the number one way to spread the ideas of liberty, personal responsibility, and a non-intrusive government. I think all of us in the class started to realize that the IRS gives the notion that the government owns your labor and your property. This is not a good way to motivate young people to go out and get a job. Heck, it's already hard enough to get a consistent job with the strict labor laws in the U.S. Now that we get a chance to go out and get a real job, we have a relatively massive tax burden to deal with. 

When you analyze the IRS and Federal Reserve, both of which were created in 1913, you start to realize that this country is a lot less free than politicians would have you believe. The way I see it, the U.S. is becoming hostage to a huge national debt, over regulation, and central power. I honestly don't think the young people of this country will want to sit back as they start to feel the accelerated impacts from these socialist, centrist policies. There is no way that our current policies are paving the way for a more prosperous future. Debt, inflation, regulation have all been tried countless times throughout history in many different shapes and forms, and they never work. Logic says they can't and won't work, and as much as politicians in Washington might hope they can, the market cannot be suppressed forever. Luckily, more and more people are picking up on this across the country and starting to ask questions. The movement for liberty, responsibility, and a simple return to the Constitution can only go up from here. 

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Do politicians understand economics?

5 May 9:38am
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An article today over at Seeking Alpha takes a look into Rep. Paul Kanjorski's idea to take profits from oil companies to "reasonably price" energy. If we have politicians like this in Washington who don't have the slightest idea of how economics work, in the long run this is not a good thing for the economy. More and more this country has relied on the government for support in various areas of the economy, and little by little this is coming back to haunt us. The Federal Reserve maintains an enormous power to print money whenever it feels to and as a result we have a falling dollar and continuing inflation. The Fed isn't even audited, and as some say it's more secretive than the CIA.

Socialism may sound like a good idea (just like how communism sounded like a decent idea back in the 1800's), but it is nothing else than a short-term solution to things that won't go away. Just look at how the education system here in the U.S. is working. The quality consistently decreases, every year there are more and more dropouts, and politicians seem to believe that more money will solve the problem. Well, the Department of Education has doubled over the past six years yet nothing has improved to the point that even gets close to justifying that amount of money.

Normally I don't like to get political on this blog, but people have given politicians so much power these days that it's suddenly become a reality that government may soon step in and decide which industries and companies they like and will and won't tax. This game of pick and choose, like socialism, is doomed to fail. A true free market economy with sound money where the individual has the liberty and responsibility is what drives prices down and promotes efficiency. This chart from the article mentioned above shows that the oil industry actually doesn't have that high of a profit margin compared to many other industries.


More government intervention will not solve any economic problems over the long run. We have people who don't have a clue how economics work trying to solve problems that were created by government intervention in the economy in the first place. It's time that people wake up and realize where this country is headed if we continue on this path.

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