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wildcard
30th May 2010, 06:04 PM
Can Chris Christie Fix New Jersey? Christie Confronts Union Parasite


At a New Jersey town meeting, Gov. Chris Christie, the newest YouTube star for the limited government set, was reproached by an unhappy teacher. The governor, facing a budget shortfall of $11 billion, has proposed, among other economies, a one-year salary freeze for New Jersey teachers. Her voice raised in anger (that's a normal speaking voice in my home state), Rita Wilson protested that she should be paid $83,000, the only reasonable compensation in light of her "education and experience." Christie's reply got an ovation: "Well, you know what? Then you don't have to do it."

Meet the newest conservative hero: The Trenton Truth-Teller!

First, the problem: How can smaller-government Republicans win elections when more and more Americans are receiving government benefits while fewer and fewer are paying taxes? In 2010, 47 percent of Americans paid no income taxes at all. Among those who do pay taxes, most pay comparatively little.

But as Christie is demonstrating, voters are open to a new fairness argument. Whereas Barack Obama and his party invoke "fairness" as a license to take property from productive people and transfer it to the unproductive, Christie is inviting voters to consider the unfairness of our current arrangement in which government employees enjoy better salaries and benefits than private-sector employees.

Christie spelled it out:

A retired teacher paid $62,000 towards her pension and nothing -- yes, nothing -- for full family medical, dental, and vision coverage over her entire career. What will we pay her? $1.4 million in pension benefits and another $215,000 in health care benefit premiums over her lifetime. Is it 'fair' for all of us and our children to have to pay for this excess? (Is it) fair to have New Jersey taxpayers foot the bill for 100 percent of the health insurance costs of teachers and their families from the day they are hired until the day they die? Is it fair that teachers have a better, richer health plan than even state workers and pay absolutely nothing for it?

Christie's proposed economies -- in addition to the one-year salary freeze, he wants teachers and administrators to contribute 1.5 percent of their salaries to the cost of their medical coverage -- have provoked thousands of teachers to take to the streets, Athens style. They've started a Facebook page that excoriates the governor to the delight of its 68,000 fans. And the NJEA has spent $1.8 million on an anti-Christie ad campaign since January.

Still, when the question was submitted to voters in April, 60 percent backed Christie's reforms. His popularity ratings are in dispute (Rasmussen pegs him at 53 percent approval, whereas a Fairleigh Dickenson University poll has him at 43 percent), but he is gaining traction in a state with a 700,000 Democratic registration advantage.

This is one to watch.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aw0aBkt8CPA&feature=player_embedded

Apparition
30th May 2010, 06:15 PM
Bravo, Governor Christie.

It's too bad that the self-entitled welfarist leeches just feel guaranteed to more and more regardless of how financially indebted the state economy is and will continue to be.

I'm sure that there already plenty groups organized/organizing to have him recalled so that they can elect a career politician who'll just tell them what they want to hear.

Terry853
30th May 2010, 06:30 PM
Bravo, Governor Christie.

It's too bad that the self-entitled welfarist leeches just feel guaranteed to more and more regardless of how financially indebted the state economy is and will continue to be.

I'm sure that there already plenty groups organized/organizing to have him recalled so that they can elect a career politician who'll just tell them what they want to hear.
And spend yours and your kids money doing it. What happens when the welfare checks stop going out and the real taxpayers and producers in America come to their senses....interesting times folks..interesting times indeed.

cigarlover
30th May 2010, 06:42 PM
Bravo is right. I like the way he takes no shit and has a common sense approach to the problem..

hahahah, when he says she doesnt have to do the job she comes back with I do it because I love it.. LOL.. Great if you love it then forget about the money cause it doesnt exist.

Then we have the woman crying about library funding being cut when the state is facing an 11 billion dollar shortfall LOL..

Have a bake sale sweety


Ahhh, I love it when reality hits home.

Dave Thomas
30th May 2010, 06:48 PM
83,000 bucks a year for being a teacher? LOL. That's only 9 months of work. Pretty awesome.

New Jersey is toast. Not only do they have the highest property taxes in the country, on top of that they have 6.5% income tax, on top of sales taxes as well.

If you are a new family there is just no way you'll ever be able to buy a decent house in Jersey. The other question is, why would anyone want to?

LOL here is the way the biggest teachers union works:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-piPkgAUo0w

They just come right out and SAY IT. LOL.

WE'RE GONNA BEAT THE SHIT OUT OF YOU.

RJB
30th May 2010, 06:49 PM
A teaching degree is one of the easiest degrees to acquire. Also in many places, especially rural areas, teachers are the highest paid workers in town.

Horn
30th May 2010, 07:03 PM
Just cut to the chase and get rid of public schooling all together, along with the pensions.

cigarlover
30th May 2010, 07:30 PM
Public service of any kind should be kept at a minimum and only done by people who truly want to serve the community. If your in it for the money then you should find another profession. Sadly, in my short lifetime this whole things has turned around. Used to be you got decent benies in the public sector but the pay was shit. Once they got the benies locked down they went after higher pay. Now they have it all. How long can a broke private sector pay inflated wages and benies to the public sector through taxation? I think we are seeing the beginning of the end of it here and now.

skidmark
31st May 2010, 04:24 AM
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_J8L-e47yFE0/S82ti96KNWI/AAAAAAAAAZc/275ycm5YMtI/S1600-R/TEST1.jpg

RJB
31st May 2010, 05:08 AM
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_J8L-e47yFE0/S82ti96KNWI/AAAAAAAAAZc/275ycm5YMtI/S1600-R/TEST1.jpg
Then again, unions don't make anywhere near as much as usurers... They are the pigs. Unions are healthily fed people, the taxpayer will be skin and bones in another year or so.

jaybone
31st May 2010, 06:50 AM
There is credible rumor that the former scumbag governor, Corswine, was doinking the public employee union president WHILE they were negotiating the last contract, in which he basically gave the State to the unions.
There was an attempt to subpoena emails between them that was blocked by the NJ supreme court.

If they were both playing for the same team, I say it it fraud, and that contract is null and void.
I have a suspicion that Christie has those emails, and that is his ace in the hole.
He could void the current contract, and renegotiate, if the childish unions force him to do so.

Christie is a student of Sun Tzu, watch what he does through that lens, it is very interesting.
He has balls and patience, with those traits he cannot fail.

SeekYeFirst
31st May 2010, 09:36 AM
Excellent post and replies. Push, people, push! Public employee unions should not exist.