QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd Somehow, some way, Illinois and Chicago manage to fund METRA, CTA and schools that don't rank 49th in the nation. In GA, there is NO state funding for transit - only roads. And the schools.... They are not corrupt down here so much as inept, stubborn and sometimes downright stupid.
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit You could definitely use commuter rail in Atlanta to connect all of the suburbs with the business center. I thought we had bad traffic here in Chicago -- until I experienced the traffic on the loop and thru town down there. What a mess, and at all hours of the day and night, to boot. State and local politics here are as bad as the traffic......
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit You could definitely use commuter rail in Atlanta to connect all of the suburbs with the business center. I thought we had bad traffic here in Chicago -- until I experienced the traffic on the loop and thru town down there. What a mess, and at all hours of the day and night, to boot.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit First you rip Amtrak by stating numerous times that it lacks a "misson statement." One -- rather easily found -- is presented to you. Suddenly, you now change tactics and instead decide to judge how often Amtrak fulfilled that mission statement through recent regimes.You also claim Amtrak lacks "goals." You really don't seem to be willing to discuss the topic, especially after your claims are disallowed. Your agenda seems to be to diss Amtrak, period, and use facts selectively toward that end. What you need to consider is that without a CLEAR mandate from Congress, Amtrak cannot realistically plan for the future. Why waste time and resources on a long-range plan while struggling to survive the present? THAT is its current goal, and anything beyond would be folly. An analogy for attempting to plan far ahead now, in Amtrak's current situation, is like trying to sell a retirement plan to an unemployed person who has no money, has maxxed out his credit cards and is just scraping to get through each day. I'd say there is a superb chance things would be much different at Amtrak if Congress would, say, earmark proper funding -- say $30-40 billion, three or four billion a year for the next ten years -- so that a salient, long-range plan could be designed. But that would first have to happen before anyone begins to speculate on it, and I doubt it would in the current climate.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton Mission statements are great... for those who are too dense to grasp the obvious. By the way, the host of initiatives were begun quite some time before David Hughes became Amtrak's acting president. Yeah. I didn't think it was a big deal either, because to me there aren't any missions for Amtrak other than the obvious. I guess having it stated for the record makes some people feel more secure. Actually, speaking as an Amtrak pasesenger and taxpayer, I thought David Gunn was doing just fine. His running Amtrak without proper funding is like putting handcuffs on a person and then telling them to play the piano. It can be done, but not very well.
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton Mission statements are great... for those who are too dense to grasp the obvious. By the way, the host of initiatives were begun quite some time before David Hughes became Amtrak's acting president.
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton The Board asked Gunn to resign, he refused and said if they wanted him out they would have to fire him. They did, and then paid $40,000 to the outside PR firm which used the return "released". With a chuckle, Gunn will say that "released" does sound better than "fired".
QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd I was talking about the problem of an agency not having a mission and goals. Wasteful spending is a problem in any large organization. Now, what other gov't agency can't tell you rather explicitly why they exist? Here is the IRS's, for example: The IRS mission is to "provide America's taxpayers top quality service by helping them understand and meet their tax responsibilities and by applying the tax law with integrity and fairness to all."
QUOTE: I lived in Chicago and suburban Cook for about 10 years and saw it from that side, Downers Grove for 10 years and saw it there to, Unincorporated DuPage for about 15 now and it's almost as bad as Chicago. One party rule so strong that the Dems don't even bother to slate candidates. A major difference is there's not a very active press when it comes to investigating corruption. True, there was the DuPage County 7 case, but the main player in that is currently running for Lt Governor.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: If you can't state rather explicitly and in mostly quantifiable terms, why you're spending money, you probably shouldn't be spending it. It's the whole "problem" of Amtrak. No mission statement. No real goals. Just status quo. Great thoughts there. But why limit it to Amtrak? How about applying it to ALL government-supported programs, which seem to operate pretty much the same way. I can't think of any examples, except maybe the USPS. Most gov't agencies I can think of seem to have well defined missions. Which ones are you thinking about? I decided to save on some typing. But how are these for starters? (Click link for complete details) http://www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/bg1840.cfm The Top 10 List of Egregious Waste. 1. The Missing $25 Billion 2. Unused Flight Tickets Totaling $100 Million 3. Embezzled Funds at the Department of Agriculture 4. Credit Card Abuse at the Department of Defense 5. Medicare Overspending 6. Funding Fictitious Colleges and Students 7. Manipulating Data to Encourage Spending 8. State Abuse of Medicaid Funding Formulas 9. Earned Income Tax Credit Overpayments 10. Redundancy Piled on Redundancy
QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: If you can't state rather explicitly and in mostly quantifiable terms, why you're spending money, you probably shouldn't be spending it. It's the whole "problem" of Amtrak. No mission statement. No real goals. Just status quo. Great thoughts there. But why limit it to Amtrak? How about applying it to ALL government-supported programs, which seem to operate pretty much the same way. I can't think of any examples, except maybe the USPS. Most gov't agencies I can think of seem to have well defined missions. Which ones are you thinking about?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: If you can't state rather explicitly and in mostly quantifiable terms, why you're spending money, you probably shouldn't be spending it. It's the whole "problem" of Amtrak. No mission statement. No real goals. Just status quo. Great thoughts there. But why limit it to Amtrak? How about applying it to ALL government-supported programs, which seem to operate pretty much the same way.
QUOTE: If you can't state rather explicitly and in mostly quantifiable terms, why you're spending money, you probably shouldn't be spending it. It's the whole "problem" of Amtrak. No mission statement. No real goals. Just status quo.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: Originally posted by up829 QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: Private enterprise is not much better. I've seen plenty of department managers in large corporations spend like crazy at year end because there's money left over in the budget and they don't want next years budget cut. You are correct, but private enterprise isn't wasting MY money. THAT'S the difference here. It costs you every time you go to the store. Almost every large bureaucratic organization has internal politics and waste. A major difference is it's largely hidden from public scrutiny until something really big like Enron or Worldcom occurs. How much are banks loosing on credit card fraud, why are they unwilling to talk about it, and what does it cost the public in higher interest rates and fees? And corporations aren't involved in bribery and kickbacks, especially to foreign interests???? QUOTE: Plus I don't think we can dismiss the health care companies and defense contractors role in government waste. Correct again, but why are you trying to put the blame on private business? It ultimately is the government's responsibility -- and fault. Don't blame government contractors for not being closely monitored by those doling out our money. That's ludicrous.. QUOTE: The 'problem' with Amtrak and the USPS might be not enough lobbying $$$ coming back to DC. If Amtrak were privatized, would it be any different than Haliburton? Who really ends up getting the money from those earmarks? Maybe. Maybe not. This scenario is pure speculation based on speculation. Not salient to this discussion. One ethics reform measure that received brief coverage on CNBC before it quietly died was a ban on a form of insider trading by elected representatives and their staff(trading on knowledge of pending legislation). This can't happen with public agencies like Amtrak, but when a contractor is involved our elected reps can and do make a lot of money. According to the CNBC story, the Senate as a whole got a 12% better return than the S&P 500, beating most mutual fund managers. Quite a number of Congressional staffers, based on their IP addresses, are active online traders. Another huge loophole for abuse is attorney client privledge. Want to bribe a politician who has a law firm or get a zoning change passed? Hire the 'right' firm and have them do some 'legal work' and send the bill. The problem with most corruption investigations is we only see the small time players who are stupid enough to get caught, the others have their behinds well covered. But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either. Interesting opinion, but again more unbased speculation. You seem to believe there is some sort of complex conspiracy here, but there isn't even any hearsay to back that up. I live in the western suburbs of Chicago. I wonder where you live, based on your interesting theories. I ask this because when I lived Downstate for four years, nearly every native I met was convinced that all of their tax dollars were being hijacked and sent straight to Chicago. And even if I showed them documentation to the contrary, they went on to insist that the conspirators also were cooking the books, and therefore my state reports were falsified to cover up the hijacking. That is where I learned you cannot use reason and facts to change some people's minds, which is one of the ultimate goals of any debate/discussion. Generally if you asked the same question of DuPage county residents you'd get the same answer, until they want a new Metra station or expanded PACE service. Likewise for Chicago when it comes to school funding. The relationships between the various factions over RTA funding and service are extremely complex, but I'm not suggesting a massive conspiracy, just politics as usual in an election year where everyone has to get something. I lived in Chicago and suburban Cook for about 10 years and saw it from that side, Downers Grove for 10 years and saw it there to, Unincorporated DuPage for about 15 now and it's almost as bad as Chicago. One party rule so strong that the Dems don't even bother to slate candidates. A major difference is there's not a very active press when it comes to investigating corruption. True, there was the DuPage County 7 case, but the main player in that is currently running for Lt Governor. IMO Ryan went way over the line with voters over selling CDLs and indrectly getting people killed. He hasn't been prosecuted for that, and I don't know what legal charge would even be appropriate, but I won't be a bit surprised if politics as usual prevails and he doesn't spend a day in jail. Maybe we should just skip these corruption trials and plea bargain these guys to 1 month in the presidential suite of the Drake hotel[:)] Reply Edit daveklepper Member sinceJune 2002 20,096 posts Posted by daveklepper on Monday, May 22, 2006 4:53 AM All democracies the world over have some share of corruption. Possibly the Swiss live in the most clean political environment but maybe we don't hear about their scandals. But I think all of us would prefer the democracy we have to the alternative systems that exist now or have existed in the past. Moussolini may have made the trains run on time, but I would not want to live under a Fascist dictatorship or, for that matter, be part of one either! Reply Poppa_Zit Member sinceSeptember 2002 From: West end of Chicago's Famous Racetrack 2,239 posts Posted by Poppa_Zit on Sunday, May 21, 2006 11:04 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by Tharmeni Hey, RR Redneck... Let me know when the price of gasoline goes down and stays down for more than 60 days. I used to work in Saudi Arabia and let me tell you, it isn't going to happen. It's also why I own two hybrids. Of course, you know RR Redneck isn't old enough to drive yet.[;)] "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. They are not entitled, however, to their own facts." No we can't. Charter Member J-CASS (Jaded Cynical Ascerbic Sarcastic Skeptics) Notary Sojac & Retired Foo Fighter "Where there's foo, there's fire." Reply Poppa_Zit Member sinceSeptember 2002 From: West end of Chicago's Famous Racetrack 2,239 posts Posted by Poppa_Zit on Sunday, May 21, 2006 11:03 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by up829 QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit Giving this topic more thought, I think the one well-defined mission common to all government programs is to spend every penny in this year's budget -- whether necessary/wasteful or not -- so they don't cut next year's budget. Or even better, get more money allocated next year, thanks to a granted request for an increase. QUOTE: Private enterprise is not much better. I've seen plenty of department managers in large corporations spend like crazy at year end because there's money left over in the budget and they don't want next years budget cut. You are correct, but private enterprise isn't wasting MY money. THAT'S the difference here. QUOTE: Plus I don't think we can dismiss the health care companies and defense contractors role in government waste. Correct again, but why are you trying to put the blame on private business? It ultimately is the government's responsibility -- and fault. Don't blame government contractors for not being closely monitored by those doling out our money. That's ludicrous.. QUOTE: The 'problem' with Amtrak and the USPS might be not enough lobbying $$$ coming back to DC. If Amtrak were privatized, would it be any different than Haliburton? Who really ends up getting the money from those earmarks? Maybe. Maybe not. This scenario is pure speculation based on speculation. Not salient to this discussion. QUOTE: But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either. Interesting opinion, but again more unbased speculation. You seem to believe there is some sort of complex conspiracy here, but there isn't even any hearsay to back that up. I live in the western suburbs of Chicago. I wonder where you live, based on your interesting theories. I ask this because when I lived Downstate for four years, nearly every native I met was convinced that all of their tax dollars were being hijacked and sent straight to Chicago. And even if I showed them documentation to the contrary, they went on to insist that the conspirators also were cooking the books, and therefore my state reports were falsified to cover up the hijacking. That is where I learned you cannot use reason and facts to change some people's minds, which is one of the ultimate goals of any debate/discussion. "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. They are not entitled, however, to their own facts." No we can't. Charter Member J-CASS (Jaded Cynical Ascerbic Sarcastic Skeptics) Notary Sojac & Retired Foo Fighter "Where there's foo, there's fire." Reply Poppa_Zit Member sinceSeptember 2002 From: West end of Chicago's Famous Racetrack 2,239 posts Posted by Poppa_Zit on Sunday, May 21, 2006 10:45 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH Being a lifelong Chicagoan, I have come to the conclusion regarding honesty in government that what people say and what they do are rarely the same thing. People claim they want good government but will go to their precinct captain or alderman rather than deal with bureaucracy, even if said bureaucratic requirements are minimal, such as filling out a form for a fence permit. They will then vote for the village officeholder (assuming that they bother to vote at that level) who helped them out. The public gets the degree of honesty in government that they really want, regardless of what they say. I couldn't agree more. We do not live in a democracy. We live in a bureaucracy, where ostensibly we elect officials who will make decisions based on what is best for the majority. But it don't always work out that way in Illinois. One hand doesn't only wa***he other, it hands over cash and jobs to friends, relatives and political sponsors. The ability to perform these functions is what's known as "clout." I saw this operate with extreme hubris when as a reporter I covered the political beat. I came away with the conclusion that the Illinois State Motto is: "Where's mine?" And while the City of Chicago and Cook County are guilty of more than their share of corruption, the suburbs aren't immune. It's everywhere, in varying degrees, and unfortunately in Illinois we have the longstanding concept that once elected, our officials (they even call themselves "public servants" -- ha, ha, ha!) can do whatever they please -- and whatever pleases those who financed their campaign. It's that simple. All you have to do is follow the money. For years, those with "clout" were able to operate at will because the entire system was corrupt, with no one willing to investigate and prosecute because those entrusted with that duty were involved themselves. The deeper you were in, the more "clout" you had. Which adds up to a lot of wasted taxpayer money, but why worry? They could always raise taxes on us dummies. The corruption rose to a level where some of it was in the open, for everyone to see. Our officials got so arrogant, some got careless and didn't bother covering their tracks. Now the piper is being paid. Makes me smile that the Feds are involved and that local and state politicians who deserve it are going to prison. It will continue. Can the system you refer to ever be totally cleaned up? I doubt it, but it's still fun for us tax-paying grunts to watch those arrogant slobs who gorged themselves at the public trough get one last gift from us taxpayers, courtesy of Federal Prosector Patrick Fitzgerald -- three hots and a flop, plus an orange jumpsuit. "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. They are not entitled, however, to their own facts." No we can't. Charter Member J-CASS (Jaded Cynical Ascerbic Sarcastic Skeptics) Notary Sojac & Retired Foo Fighter "Where there's foo, there's fire." Reply Tharmeni Member sinceJuly 2003 From: Southwestern Florida 501 posts Posted by Tharmeni on Sunday, May 21, 2006 9:15 AM Hey, RR Redneck... Let me know when the price of gasoline goes down and stays down for more than 60 days. I used to work in Saudi Arabia and let me tell you, it isn't going to happen. It's also why I own two hybrids. Reply Tharmeni Member sinceJuly 2003 From: Southwestern Florida 501 posts Posted by Tharmeni on Sunday, May 21, 2006 9:13 AM Nice going, Illinois! Now, would someone like to shake the governor of Indiana to wake him up????? Reply 123 Join our Community! Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account. Login » Register » Search the Community Newsletter Sign-Up By signing up you may also receive occasional reader surveys and special offers from Trains magazine.Please view our privacy policy More great sites from Kalmbach Media Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Copyright Policy
QUOTE: Originally posted by up829 QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: Private enterprise is not much better. I've seen plenty of department managers in large corporations spend like crazy at year end because there's money left over in the budget and they don't want next years budget cut. You are correct, but private enterprise isn't wasting MY money. THAT'S the difference here. It costs you every time you go to the store. Almost every large bureaucratic organization has internal politics and waste. A major difference is it's largely hidden from public scrutiny until something really big like Enron or Worldcom occurs. How much are banks loosing on credit card fraud, why are they unwilling to talk about it, and what does it cost the public in higher interest rates and fees? And corporations aren't involved in bribery and kickbacks, especially to foreign interests???? QUOTE: Plus I don't think we can dismiss the health care companies and defense contractors role in government waste. Correct again, but why are you trying to put the blame on private business? It ultimately is the government's responsibility -- and fault. Don't blame government contractors for not being closely monitored by those doling out our money. That's ludicrous.. QUOTE: The 'problem' with Amtrak and the USPS might be not enough lobbying $$$ coming back to DC. If Amtrak were privatized, would it be any different than Haliburton? Who really ends up getting the money from those earmarks? Maybe. Maybe not. This scenario is pure speculation based on speculation. Not salient to this discussion. One ethics reform measure that received brief coverage on CNBC before it quietly died was a ban on a form of insider trading by elected representatives and their staff(trading on knowledge of pending legislation). This can't happen with public agencies like Amtrak, but when a contractor is involved our elected reps can and do make a lot of money. According to the CNBC story, the Senate as a whole got a 12% better return than the S&P 500, beating most mutual fund managers. Quite a number of Congressional staffers, based on their IP addresses, are active online traders. Another huge loophole for abuse is attorney client privledge. Want to bribe a politician who has a law firm or get a zoning change passed? Hire the 'right' firm and have them do some 'legal work' and send the bill. The problem with most corruption investigations is we only see the small time players who are stupid enough to get caught, the others have their behinds well covered. But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either. Interesting opinion, but again more unbased speculation. You seem to believe there is some sort of complex conspiracy here, but there isn't even any hearsay to back that up. I live in the western suburbs of Chicago. I wonder where you live, based on your interesting theories. I ask this because when I lived Downstate for four years, nearly every native I met was convinced that all of their tax dollars were being hijacked and sent straight to Chicago. And even if I showed them documentation to the contrary, they went on to insist that the conspirators also were cooking the books, and therefore my state reports were falsified to cover up the hijacking. That is where I learned you cannot use reason and facts to change some people's minds, which is one of the ultimate goals of any debate/discussion. Generally if you asked the same question of DuPage county residents you'd get the same answer, until they want a new Metra station or expanded PACE service. Likewise for Chicago when it comes to school funding. The relationships between the various factions over RTA funding and service are extremely complex, but I'm not suggesting a massive conspiracy, just politics as usual in an election year where everyone has to get something. I lived in Chicago and suburban Cook for about 10 years and saw it from that side, Downers Grove for 10 years and saw it there to, Unincorporated DuPage for about 15 now and it's almost as bad as Chicago. One party rule so strong that the Dems don't even bother to slate candidates. A major difference is there's not a very active press when it comes to investigating corruption. True, there was the DuPage County 7 case, but the main player in that is currently running for Lt Governor. IMO Ryan went way over the line with voters over selling CDLs and indrectly getting people killed. He hasn't been prosecuted for that, and I don't know what legal charge would even be appropriate, but I won't be a bit surprised if politics as usual prevails and he doesn't spend a day in jail. Maybe we should just skip these corruption trials and plea bargain these guys to 1 month in the presidential suite of the Drake hotel[:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit QUOTE: Private enterprise is not much better. I've seen plenty of department managers in large corporations spend like crazy at year end because there's money left over in the budget and they don't want next years budget cut. You are correct, but private enterprise isn't wasting MY money. THAT'S the difference here. It costs you every time you go to the store. Almost every large bureaucratic organization has internal politics and waste. A major difference is it's largely hidden from public scrutiny until something really big like Enron or Worldcom occurs. How much are banks loosing on credit card fraud, why are they unwilling to talk about it, and what does it cost the public in higher interest rates and fees? And corporations aren't involved in bribery and kickbacks, especially to foreign interests???? QUOTE: Plus I don't think we can dismiss the health care companies and defense contractors role in government waste. Correct again, but why are you trying to put the blame on private business? It ultimately is the government's responsibility -- and fault. Don't blame government contractors for not being closely monitored by those doling out our money. That's ludicrous.. QUOTE: The 'problem' with Amtrak and the USPS might be not enough lobbying $$$ coming back to DC. If Amtrak were privatized, would it be any different than Haliburton? Who really ends up getting the money from those earmarks? Maybe. Maybe not. This scenario is pure speculation based on speculation. Not salient to this discussion. One ethics reform measure that received brief coverage on CNBC before it quietly died was a ban on a form of insider trading by elected representatives and their staff(trading on knowledge of pending legislation). This can't happen with public agencies like Amtrak, but when a contractor is involved our elected reps can and do make a lot of money. According to the CNBC story, the Senate as a whole got a 12% better return than the S&P 500, beating most mutual fund managers. Quite a number of Congressional staffers, based on their IP addresses, are active online traders. Another huge loophole for abuse is attorney client privledge. Want to bribe a politician who has a law firm or get a zoning change passed? Hire the 'right' firm and have them do some 'legal work' and send the bill. The problem with most corruption investigations is we only see the small time players who are stupid enough to get caught, the others have their behinds well covered. But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either. Interesting opinion, but again more unbased speculation. You seem to believe there is some sort of complex conspiracy here, but there isn't even any hearsay to back that up. I live in the western suburbs of Chicago. I wonder where you live, based on your interesting theories. I ask this because when I lived Downstate for four years, nearly every native I met was convinced that all of their tax dollars were being hijacked and sent straight to Chicago. And even if I showed them documentation to the contrary, they went on to insist that the conspirators also were cooking the books, and therefore my state reports were falsified to cover up the hijacking. That is where I learned you cannot use reason and facts to change some people's minds, which is one of the ultimate goals of any debate/discussion.
QUOTE: Private enterprise is not much better. I've seen plenty of department managers in large corporations spend like crazy at year end because there's money left over in the budget and they don't want next years budget cut.
QUOTE: Plus I don't think we can dismiss the health care companies and defense contractors role in government waste.
QUOTE: The 'problem' with Amtrak and the USPS might be not enough lobbying $$$ coming back to DC. If Amtrak were privatized, would it be any different than Haliburton? Who really ends up getting the money from those earmarks?
But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tharmeni Hey, RR Redneck... Let me know when the price of gasoline goes down and stays down for more than 60 days. I used to work in Saudi Arabia and let me tell you, it isn't going to happen. It's also why I own two hybrids.
QUOTE: Originally posted by up829 QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit Giving this topic more thought, I think the one well-defined mission common to all government programs is to spend every penny in this year's budget -- whether necessary/wasteful or not -- so they don't cut next year's budget. Or even better, get more money allocated next year, thanks to a granted request for an increase. QUOTE: Private enterprise is not much better. I've seen plenty of department managers in large corporations spend like crazy at year end because there's money left over in the budget and they don't want next years budget cut. You are correct, but private enterprise isn't wasting MY money. THAT'S the difference here. QUOTE: Plus I don't think we can dismiss the health care companies and defense contractors role in government waste. Correct again, but why are you trying to put the blame on private business? It ultimately is the government's responsibility -- and fault. Don't blame government contractors for not being closely monitored by those doling out our money. That's ludicrous.. QUOTE: The 'problem' with Amtrak and the USPS might be not enough lobbying $$$ coming back to DC. If Amtrak were privatized, would it be any different than Haliburton? Who really ends up getting the money from those earmarks? Maybe. Maybe not. This scenario is pure speculation based on speculation. Not salient to this discussion. QUOTE: But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either. Interesting opinion, but again more unbased speculation. You seem to believe there is some sort of complex conspiracy here, but there isn't even any hearsay to back that up. I live in the western suburbs of Chicago. I wonder where you live, based on your interesting theories. I ask this because when I lived Downstate for four years, nearly every native I met was convinced that all of their tax dollars were being hijacked and sent straight to Chicago. And even if I showed them documentation to the contrary, they went on to insist that the conspirators also were cooking the books, and therefore my state reports were falsified to cover up the hijacking. That is where I learned you cannot use reason and facts to change some people's minds, which is one of the ultimate goals of any debate/discussion.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit Giving this topic more thought, I think the one well-defined mission common to all government programs is to spend every penny in this year's budget -- whether necessary/wasteful or not -- so they don't cut next year's budget. Or even better, get more money allocated next year, thanks to a granted request for an increase.
QUOTE: But since the topic is Illinois, IMO it's entirely likely that increased Amtrak service to Springfield is a bone to downstate in order to increase metro area funding. Illinois is a lot like DC, with 3 principle players who don't trust each other but do shift alliances as it suits them. The 3rd player is the collar county moderate pro-business Republicans. Both the CTA and Metra are looking for more funding, so the collar couties would ally with Chicago for funding. Adding something for downstate gets the downstate conservative Republicans onboard and doesn't hurt the Democratic governor either.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH Being a lifelong Chicagoan, I have come to the conclusion regarding honesty in government that what people say and what they do are rarely the same thing. People claim they want good government but will go to their precinct captain or alderman rather than deal with bureaucracy, even if said bureaucratic requirements are minimal, such as filling out a form for a fence permit. They will then vote for the village officeholder (assuming that they bother to vote at that level) who helped them out. The public gets the degree of honesty in government that they really want, regardless of what they say.
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