SPOKES WOMAN
Re: Pete Beston's Tour
de Pain:
Moreover, the Tour has Kirsten Gum.
-- Doug Welty
INCOMPREHENSIBLE FRITZ
Re: The Washington Prowler's Senate
Goes South:
Fritz Hollings "practically unintelligible"? So, what's new?
Even Southerners like me, who can blow gnats and say "howdy" at
the same time, have not been able to make head ner tail of what
Fritz has said for years. (And it isn't just that his accent is
thick, even by South Carolina standards. I have no trouble, for
example, understanding what Shelby Foote says. And his accent is at
least as thick. No, Fritz's problem is that his thoughts are
unordered, nearly random -- they come out as little intellectual
dust devils, blown aimlessly about by Fritz's considerable ego and
whim, and by his loopy understanding of the world.) His retirement
bodes well for faith, hope, and clarity.
-- Larry Thornberry
Tampa, FL
CAPERS
Re: James Bowman's Reform
Uniformity:
I noticed a funny passage in James Bowman's piece on the NY
Times ideological predispositions. In its fawning article on
Howard Dean, the Times said "...he also has had
conventional fundraisers in Provincetown, Mass., and on Cape Cod."
And on Cape Cod? Where do the Times reporters think
Provincetown is? Rhode Island? Of course, those of us who live in
the more conservative areas of the Cape (i.e., everywhere that's
not P-town) don't really consider Provincetown to be "of" Cape Cod.
Thank God for that.
--Steve Tefft
Forestdale (part of Sandwich), Cape Cod, MA
STATE YOUR BUSINESS
Re: Jeremy Lott's Locke
Box:
"The normal way of things in Washington is that politicians work hard to raise fees and taxes and pass irksome regulations, and then citizens sign petitions and vote for initiatives, pulling the rug out from under said pols at the ballot box." -- Jeremy Lott, "Locke Box," 7/30.
The "normal way"? There hasn't been a general fund tax increase in Washington state since 1993, and nearly all of that was repealed by the Legislature in subsequent years. So what is Mr. Lott talking about? Anyone with a passing acquaintance with the fiscal history of the state in the last ten years would know that it has been marked by tax cuts, not tax increases. The Legislature, under Republican majorities for a good deal of that time, effected significant reductions in the gross receipts tax on business (the business & occupation tax), the motor vehicle excise tax, the sales tax and the property tax. The state of Washington faced a budget gap this year of about $2.4 billion, and it solved its budget problem without tax increases --one of the few states that can say that this year.
Yes, the Legislature raised the gas tax by a nickel a gallon this year, and with bipartisan support. The state has a severely deficient transportation infrastructure that is, by wide agreement, hurting the state's economy. As hard as it may be for some to accept, sometimes it does take new revenue to meet the primary responsibilities of state government. If Mr. Lott knows of a way to pay for the work that must be done on our transportation network without an increase in the gas tax, I invite him to share it with TAS readers.
If there is anything more tedious these days than the faux
populist worship of the initiative process by ostensibly
conservative writers, I truly don't know what it would be.
Somewhere amid his recitation of clichés, Mr. Lott might
have wanted to let TAS readers know that among those "citizen"
initiatives he admires so much was one, I-773, that raised the
cigarette tax to the then-highest level in the country and vastly
expanded state-subsidized health care, two pushed by the teachers'
union, I-728 and I-732, that committed the state to enormous new
spending for public schools, and one, I-775, that enabled one of
the most left-wing public sector unions in the country, the Service
Employees International Union, to organize about 20,000 private
providers of long-term care services. If not for the "pols," who
amended all four of these this year to spare taxpayers their
outrageous costs, it would have been impossible for Washington to
have balanced its budget without a tax increase. So thank God for
the "pols." They've been a better friend to the taxpayers of late
than the initiative writers have been.
-- John Archer
Olympia, WA
Style note: "Washington State" is a land-grant university in Pullman. Washington state is a U.S. state located between Oregon, Idaho and British Columbia.
Jeremy Lott replies: John Archer's analysis is misleading. Recent legislation upped the gas tax to the eighth highest in the nation, increased the sales tax for new vehicles, and also raised trucker fees. That may not have been a general fund tax hike, but it was a tax hike nonetheless. Also, most of the tax cuts enacted by the legislature (e.g., the repeal of the sky high car taxes) came only after the voters had voted to repeal said taxes and the state supreme court had overturned it on a technicality.
REAL SMART GUYS
Re: Jed Babbin's Betting
on the RSG: