Wanderings

The Life and Times of Joe Suttle

Stimulas Ripoff!

Having watched my 401(k) drift off the side of the money cliff, I had hopes that our new President and his Democrat friends would try to make some difference. Not going to happen!

Got a report on what is in the new $1.7 trillion (with interest) Stimulus Package, and we all need to be worried. Search for it on the web so you can see for yourself, but here are some of the "don't make any sense" items:
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<li>$400 million for research on global warming. What happened to the regular federal budget, and how many "regular people" will that put back to work?
<li>$2.4 billion for projects to demonstrate how carbon greenhouse gas can be safely removed from the atmosphere. Again, how many "regular people" (blue collar) will that put back to work?[more]
<li>$650 million for coupons to help consumers convert their TV sets from analog to digital, part of the digital TV conversion. If you are working, you can afford to get your own $40 coupon (already funded), or if not, keep sitting on your backside while those other people get your jobs – after all, you were not an environmental scientist, so you definitely can't take one of those jobs.
<li>$75 million to fund programs to help people quit smoking. This is a little ridiculous, given that many states have health care programs for children that use the taxes from the sale of tobacco products. If we fund "stop smoking programs", where will the money come from for the health care?
<li>$21 million to re-sod the National Mall, which suffered heavy use during the Inauguration. My guess is that if you got 10 people to work for 2 months (8 weeks) at $1000 a week, that would be $80,000, then double it for benefits and Social Security. You are now at $160,000. Throw in $100,000 for rental of equipment to dig up the old lawn and $100,000 for seed. Give them 3 weeks to dig up the old lawn, roto-till it and reseed. Since the sprinklers are already there, just reuse the existing watering system. Throw in another $100,000 for "just in case", and you have a total of $460,000. Round it off to $500,000, and we just saved ourselves $20.5 million. Better yet, let the prisoners from Gitmo come up and do the work while they eat everyday in the Congressional Cafeteria and sleep in mobile homes set up on the streets around the Mall.
<li>$4.19 billion to stave off foreclosures via the Neighborhood Stabilization Program. This section allows nonprofits to compete with cities and states for parts of the money. Why should anyone have to compete? Let's just tell the banks to not foreclose, and then figure out how to spend the money. Why make it so bureaucratic? Besides, what non-profits are in the mortgage lending business, and if they are going to help, why not have a working program going first?
<li>$600 million to buy a new fleet of cars for federal employees and government departments. Sure fire way to give a boost to the auto industry, but this will only get cars off the dealer's lots. Course, that's helping them to pay their bills and keep their employees busy getting the cars delivered. How about something about letting car dealers service those government vehicles – now that's recurring income.
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There is some mention that this package will require 32 new government departments, and based on at least 4 regional offices and 50 employees per office, you have over $600 million a year in pay and benefits (at $1000 per week). Knowing the way government works, there will probably be more offices and more employees. So…$300 million back into the economy. Maybe that's how they will make it work.

Peter, Paul and Echo

Reading what Peter has to say about how the church (believers) should respond to the government in First Peter chapter 2. What struck me was how similar he sounded to Paul in Romans 13. Sure enough, it was like an echo. Here were two of the biggest men in early Christiandom, and they were echoing one another.

Remember, Peter was the guy who thought Paul should not be trusted. And Paul was the guy who, early on, wanted to eliminate those pesky followers of Jesus, like Peter. Yet, here they are sounding like twin brothers – each with the same vision for how the believers were to treat government officials.

I found though that they are both consistent – "live your life so that they may see your goodness (the way you live) and by doing that silence the ignorance of foolish men."

It's how you live that speaks, not your words! It's "doing right" that says it all!

A Stone, A Wall and A Life

Kind of skipped over this in my reading of First Peter, but went back this morning to the first verses of chapter two. Here was something to which I could easily relate in two ways.

Firstly, my memories of building a retaining wall of cement blocks started with the lowest spot, where I placed the corner stone. People thought I had lost my marbles when they saw how far down I dug the hole for the footing and then dug a much deepet hole in which to place the reinforcing rods that would be surrounded by cement. Then we placed the first block. That block was below the sidewalk – everybody else just dug a little trench and laid down some cement and started building their walls. But I did not want my wall to be moved by the earth it was going to hold back.[more]

Looking back all those years, and returning to the scene of my labors has found the wall "rock solid." Once the foundation was secured, the wall held firm.

Peter in verses 4 through 8 lays out a construction scene not unlike that. Lives – our lives need to have a "sure" corner upon which the rest of the life gets built. If we were to build our walls or homes like we build our lives, what would they be like. Slipping and sliding, moving with the mud or sand.

The second thing about corner stones is that they were what all measurements for the house, barn, temple were based on. Nowadays, we hire a surveyor to mark the boundaries of the property and where things should be, but check with any builder – they still start in one corner and work from there following the plans of the architect.

Who is my architect, and who or what is my corner stone? Will my life be built to stand the trials of living?