Over Labor Day weekend, I decided to take a drive down to Connecticut to do some much needed clothes shopping. It precipitated out of finally getting a bedroom set, which then led to the purchase of a full length mirror as my set didn’t come with any mirror. The mirror was eye opening. My 3 years of super thrift had taken a real toll on my wardrobe. Looking in the full length mirror was proof that I looked like a real raggamuffin in most of my casual clothes. If you saw me outside of work, I’m sure you’d have no idea I was a professional anything…professional hobo maybe.
Motorcycle Helmet Law
Since it was a beautiful weekend, there were tons of motorcycle groups cruising the rolling hills of New England. I live in MA where there is a mandatory helmet law for all motorcyclists. Once you cross over into CT however, wearing a helmet on a motorcycle is optional. In CT, I saw about 30 motorcyclists. Do you know how many were wearing a helmet? Only one person cruising out of all those people chose to wear a helmet. If you know any bikers you also know that it’s only a matter of time before someone doesn’t see you and you get into an accident. I know 2 people who have died in motorcycle accidents and countless others who have had a serious injury and were in the hospital for months. The seriously injured people would have been dead for sure without a helmet.
Now despite the fact that helmets save lives and most people are well aware of that fact, if given the option, the great majority of riders opt out of wearing them…even on a nice day when it wasn’t super humid or hot. I’m certainly not one to try to ban things that are dangerous, but if there’s a small bit of law that someone can write to protect the public safety, then I’m all for it. I also like the seatbelt law for that same reason.
Personal Finance Protection Laws
This got me thinking that this is why I don’t really agree with many libertarian views. Although I think that there are people out there that are smart enough to make their own decisions to protect themselves and their future, there are even a bigger percentage of people who don’t make the right choices for one reason or another.
It makes me realize that I’m okay with paying taxes for things like Social Security, Unemployment, the EPA, the FDA, law enforcement, educators, and the other agencies that help protect tomorrow’s future as well as our public safety today. I’m glad that Congress passed new credit laws last year, because I think the easy credit is a big part of what caused much of the bankruptcy issues during this last downturn. People were living on the edge and all it took was one false move to lose everything. Heck, anyone with a pulse and a social security number could qualify for thousands of dollars of unsecured credit. It just amazed me how cavalier the banks got towards the end.
Although in the past I’ve written about entitlement programs getting too big and being too cushy and convenient of a safety net for some to resist, I still think we need some government to keep us from harming ourselves. I also wonder how much higher the crime rate would be if unemployed people didn’t have access to food stamps and housing assistance. I really didn’t think watching a bunch of guys riding around without their helmets would lead to such a change of heart but it did. Now figuring out how to do this efficiently is the real challenge. Part of me would love to take a government job and clean house. (I used to be referred to as “the cleaner” at work back when I worked in Quality). I’m sure there is plenty of low hanging fruit all over the place.
A Jobs Program I’d Really Like
What about you. What parts of government do you think is expendable or can be vastly cut. What parts do you think we shouldn’t touch or grow? My 2 cents, when my husband and I were talking about Obama’s job’s speech (both of us not having seen it and both of us agreeing that we didn’t miss anything of substance), we started chatting about gaps. What we landed on is this. There is a huge shortage of engineers right now. Every company I talk to who has technical openings says it takes forever to fill open positions. I’d like to see an incentive to forgive a portion of loans to get more people trained in the fields that they are needed most. Technology is where the “good jobs” are at. You think we can make another Google or Apple without engineers? This country needs more innovators. We have the universities to create them, we just need to plant the seed to students to go after those careers through programs like STEM, and then help make it possible to get an education once the interest is piqued. Coincidentally STEM funding has been drastically cut in recent years which just boggles my mind. The one place where there are jobs but no people to fill them and they cut the funding to the program that can help fill the gap. Wow. I didn’t think this would turn into a bit of a political rant as I’m not that political in general, but there you go.
What do you think? If you’re in a technical career, do you agree with my assessment? Are there openings people are having a hard time to fill? I know in my little world, there is not an unemployment problem, there is a recruiting problem.
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