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we really have very little to show for post Dwight Eisenhower BIG GOVERNMENT.
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But financial dictates have made the decision for us.
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Therefore, if we are going to fix the problems which we have a need to fix -- we are going to have to depend on solutions led by the private sector.
Starting near the end of your post. You assert: “Financial dictates have made the decision for us.” Bullshit. We have made the decisions for us. Some of us (you, for instance) then pretend that it all fell from the sky because The Guiding Hand of The Market Can Only Act in This Way (you know, the way Saint Ronald would have wanted). You assert “we are going to have to depend on solutions led by the private sector” and so on. But you mention the Eisenhower years, for cryin out loud, with not the faintest hint of irony! Effective tax rates on top earners were north of 70% in the 1950s, and they were boom years driven to some real extent by the fact that the US government had flattened much of the international competition for American products (and yes, the governments whose people got flattened had asked for it), and the government was hunting down gay people and harassing civil rights workers as part of the McCarthy witch hunts. That’s the decade you quote as the good old days when the government knew its place? I usually lean very much in the direction of letting private sector carry as much of the load as possible, but you’re being silly here.
As for the particular points you made earlier in your post. Yes, of course I was talking about using tax dollars to assist some businesses, and of course those tax dollars come from other taxpayers. Next you can explain to me that water is wet. But I was proposing such spending precisely because I was talking about using governmental action to try to leverage one act of beneficial private development to spur another beneficial act of private development, and I was recognizing that in the second one I might be causing harm to existing businesses. Perhaps I should describe this not as a subsidy but as a takings relief. Prompting a business relocation in the way I was proposing doesn’t quite fit into the concept of an eminent domain taking, but gets close. And if the idea worked, the boosted tax revenue could hopefully cover the relocation expense. The public good being served is to minimize disruption to community; an admittedly unusual way to define “public good”.
You also suggested zoning relief in certain areas. An idea! Sounds really interesting! I’m potentially all for it! That might be a way to get things done! But how the hell do you square it with the rest of your post, which is all about “can’t let the government do this, must let the private sector lead”? How does government provide zoning relief without having first done the zoning? According to every libertarian I’ve ever met, zoning is pure evil government interference in the private sector and ought never to be allowed. Zoning is done by and for taxpayers’ elected representatives, so you can’t pat yourself on the back for having not gotten the taxpayer involved, if zoning relief is your answer. Having said that, if areas like this got upzoned to spur TOD, I’d be up for that. So maybe we half agree on something.