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Why should we give politicians unlimited oppurtunities to destroy our country? Some politicians are becoming Senile in office and yet they are reelected. A six year term would allow the voters the chance to have control of our country. Govt by the people and for the people instead of by the politician and for the highest bidder.

2006-10-27 12:51:18 · 9 answers · asked by daydoom 5 in Politics & Government Politics

9 answers

Damn good point.

Might make for the commitment to public service really mean something.

2006-10-27 12:59:37 · answer #1 · answered by navymom 5 · 0 0

I am against term limits and believe they will cause more problems than solve. There are some good politicians and bad ones. It is up to the people to vote out the bad ones, it isnt hard.

2006-10-27 12:55:55 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

we've been attempting for an prolonged term, and that i very lots help it, the area is the persons we assume to pass the regulation are additionally people who ought to be effected via ability of it, style of a catch 22.

2016-11-26 00:01:43 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Exactly!

Only, they will fight tooth and nail with that just as they do for their raises!

Guest Opinion: Congress values own paychecks more than American workers
By HOLLY SKLAR

Members of Congress like to talk about values. They sure don't mean the Golden Rule: "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you."

While more and more hardworking Americans struggle to make ends meet, Congress showed what it really values -- the rising value of congressional pay.

The House refused to block the $3,300 "cost-of-living adjustment" that will raise congressional pay on Jan. 1 to $168,500 -- not counting great health benefits, pensions and perks.

Congressional pay raises between 1997 and 2007 will add up to $34,900. That's more than average workers make in a year.

It would take more than three workers to make $34,900 at the minimum wage stuck at $5.15 an hour -- just $10,712 a year -- since Sept. 1, 1997.

Full-time workers at minimum-wage make less than $900 a month to pay rent, food, health care, gas and everything else. No wonder the U.S. Conference of Mayors Hunger and Homelessness Survey found that 40 percent of adults requesting emergency food assistance were employed, as were 15 percent of the homeless.

Child-care workers and security guards struggle to care for their own children. EMTs and health care aides can't afford to take sick days.

Yet Congress has given itself raise after raise, while giving none to minimum-wage workers.


No equity here
As Adam Smith himself wrote in "The Wealth of Nations," "It is but equity ... that those who feed, clothe and lodge the whole body of the people, should have such a share of the produce of their own labor as to be themselves tolerably well fed, clothed, and lodged."

Today's minimum wage workers have less buying power than minimum wage workers did back in 1950 when Harry Truman was president. The 1950 minimum wage is $6.30 in 2006 dollars, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Inflation Calculator.

It would take $9.31 today to match the value of the minimum wage of 1968. It takes nearly two minimum wage workers to make what one worker made four decades ago.

The minimum wage has become a poverty wage instead of an anti-poverty wage. This has ripple effects far beyond minimum wage workers and their families.

The minimum wage sets the wage floor. When the minimum wage sinks, it drags down wages for workers up the pay scale as well. Between 1968 and 2005, worker productivity rose 111 percent, but the average hourly wage fell 5 percent, adjusting for inflation, and the minimum wage fell 43 percent.

The inflation-adjusted earnings of college-educated workers have fallen since 2000. Poverty rates are higher now than in the 1970s and we have an increasingly low-wage workforce instead of a growing middle class.


Economic booster
Contrary to myth, raising the minimum wage helps business and boosts the economy. We had high economic growth, low inflation, low unemployment and declining poverty rates after the last minimum wage hikes in 1996 and 1997. States that have raised their minimum wages above the increasingly inadequate $5.15 federal level have had better employment trends than the other states, including for retail businesses and small businesses.

Higher wages increase consumer purchasing power, reduce costly employee turnover, and improve productivity and the quality of products and services.

Small-business owner Malcolm Davis wrote in a letter to the editor, "My lowest-paid employee makes $8 per hour. ... If I can find a way to be fair with my employees in rural Eastern North Carolina, why can't our government?"

A recent survey by the National Consumers League and Fleishman-Hillard Communications found that 76 percent of American consumers believe "how well a company treats/pays employees influences what they buy." Consumers said "commitment to employees" is the strongest proof of corporate responsibility and it is important for companies to ensure that workers "are paid a living wage."

A job should keep you out of poverty, not keep you in it. It's time for Congress to stop their luxury raises, and raise the minimum wage to a living wage.

2006-10-27 13:49:44 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

One year term limits,
with no pay!
It should not be a career!

2006-10-27 12:56:50 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

we're the ones who are idiots for re-electing them...if they are senile then they don't know what the heck is going on lol

2006-10-27 12:53:26 · answer #6 · answered by Ruth Less RN 5 · 1 0

Tradition is very hard to discard easily

2006-10-27 12:52:20 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Here here, I agree with you completely.

2006-10-27 12:56:55 · answer #8 · answered by 51ain'tbad 3 · 0 0

Do not know when it will happen but it should take place soon.

2006-10-27 12:53:53 · answer #9 · answered by lollylou 3 · 0 1

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