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![]() "Steve" wrote ... Epidemiologists also warned consumers last week to stay away from some bottled carrot juice after a Florida woman was paralyzed and three people in Georgia experienced respiratory failure, apparently due to botulism poisoning. Also on Friday, an Iowa company announced that it was recalling 5,200 pounds of ground beef suspected of having E. coli. The government said no illnesses have been reported from consumption of the beef. The outbreaks have sparked demands to create a new federal agency in charge of food safety. Sens. Charles Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton, both New York Democrats, are sponsoring legislation authored by Sen. Richard Durbin D-Ill., to create the unified Food Safety Agency. "This recent outbreak must be a wake-up call to get our food safety house in order, because right now it's in pure disarray," Schumer said at his Manhattan office. "We need to have one agency take charge to ensure the next outbreak isn't far worse." What they are calling for, and what is described in your own post, is a single agency that will be responsible for food safety. Have a look at http://www.foodsafety.gov/~fsg/fsggov.html for a list of the myriad agencies currently in "control" of food safety in this country. So, contrary to what your post's subject line indicates, this would *reduce* the number of agencies involved at the federal level from approximately 15 to one. I know trhe "new math" has been repuidated of late, but that still seems like a reduction to me. My feeling is that like the DHS, this will put responsibility at the feet of one individual agency. To me, this is not a bad thing. And... this is *not* in response to any recent outbreak. The bill Durbin introduced is called the Safe Food Act of 2005. Note that 2005 is generally accepted to be *prior* to 2006, when the e.coli outbreaks have occured. Dan ....by the way, where'd you cut-n-paste that from? |
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![]() "Steve" wrote in message ... On Mon, 09 Oct 2006 02:14:05 GMT, "Daniel-San" (Rot13) wrote: ...by the way, where'd you cut-n-paste that from? Yer probably right, the government always does eliminate redundant agencies upon the creation of a new "overseerer", as your link proves. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061008/...ted_lettuce_13 Um, no. My link points out the current situation, proving precisely nothing with regards to the elimination of "redundant agencies." However, doing a little more than cut-n-paste research (just a little, by the way) shows that all food safety inspection agencies would, in fact transfer those food safety functions to this new agency, eliminating those parts of the previous agency "that relate to administration or enforcement of the food safety law, as determined by the President." It would not create an "overseer." It would *eliminate* the parts of the various federal agencies in charge of food safety today. So, I guess, if the act passes (a big "if" as it contains the GOP-dreaded "whistleblower protection" section,) and unless the President creates another signing statement effectively saying he will not enforce the law, it would, as I stated earlier, *reduce* the number of agencies responsible for food safety inspections. Really. It's true. I swear. Read the [proposed] act he http://www.theorator.com/bills109/s729.html It's exciting stuff, legislative action. Much more fun than arguing from a cut-n-paste blurb. Dan |
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On Mon, 09 Oct 2006 02:14:05 GMT, "Daniel-San"
(Rot13) wrote: "Steve" wrote ... Epidemiologists also warned consumers last week to stay away from some bottled carrot juice after a Florida woman was paralyzed and three people in Georgia experienced respiratory failure, apparently due to botulism poisoning. Also on Friday, an Iowa company announced that it was recalling 5,200 pounds of ground beef suspected of having E. coli. The government said no illnesses have been reported from consumption of the beef. The outbreaks have sparked demands to create a new federal agency in charge of food safety. Sens. Charles Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton, both New York Democrats, are sponsoring legislation authored by Sen. Richard Durbin D-Ill., to create the unified Food Safety Agency. "This recent outbreak must be a wake-up call to get our food safety house in order, because right now it's in pure disarray," Schumer said at his Manhattan office. "We need to have one agency take charge to ensure the next outbreak isn't far worse." What they are calling for, and what is described in your own post, is a single agency that will be responsible for food safety. Naw, what they are doing is trying to find anything at all to get in front of the camera and microphones...anyhoo... Have a look at http://www.foodsafety.gov/~fsg/fsggov.html for a list of the myriad agencies currently in "control" of food safety in this country. So, contrary to what your post's subject line indicates, this would *reduce* the number of agencies involved at the federal level from approximately 15 to one. Oh, you poor naive child...let's look at some other, past, um "reductions" or other instruments of governmental efficiency... You had the FSLIC, but things got FU'ed, so it was replaced by RTC, whose sole job was to put itself out of business, but instead, it transformed into the SAIF, and made a part of FDIC... FEMA, which was once generally its own thang, was folded. along with all sorts of other stuff, into the DHS, where instead of doing a fair job while only wasting millions, it became a bog of bureaucracy, where it could do nothing, all the while wasting billions...(and no, Bush and his administration is not to blame, but neither are Dems) And one of the biggies...ladies and gentlemen, children or all ages, Dingaling brothers and P.T. Barnum are proud to present the one, the only...drum roll, please....TA-DA!!!! The Social Security Act, ch. 531, 49 Stat. 620, 1935, supposedly meant to prevent the truly elderly, the truly disabled, children, and a few others from starving during the depression...now, 62-year-old retired millionaires and "disabled" folks cash SS checks on their way to the golf and tennis club...and best of all, this safety net does all of this wonderful stuff and only needs some 65,000 employees to do it... By-the-by, in its first year, 1936, $250,000USD was the admin budget...run that through a historic or relative value calculation... Here's a pop quiz...don't panic, it's easy... Question 1. List all the involuntarily unemployed bureaucrats that you know. See, wasn't that easy? HTH, R |
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On 9 Oct 2006 14:08:30 -0700, "
wrote: wrote: And one of the biggies...ladies and gentlemen, children or all ages, Dingaling brothers and P.T. Barnum are proud to present the one, the only...drum roll, please....TA-DA!!!! The Social Security Act, ch. 531, 49 Stat. 620, 1935, supposedly meant to prevent the truly elderly, the truly disabled, children, and a few others from starving during the depression...now, 62-year-old retired millionaires and "disabled" folks cash SS checks on their way to the golf and tennis club...and best of all, this safety net does all of this wonderful stuff and only needs some 65,000 employees to do it... The SS system has always been a welfare system disguised as a retirement system in order to make it acceptable. But most folks with a lot of amount of money naturally never have enough, so the fantasy was forced into a highly warped reality in which the former is used to justify the latter. I think it is simply yet another bureaucracy run amok, and since most folks (or those that vote, anyway) either do or think they will get something out of it, there is much more momentum carrying it forward than attempting to stop it from lurching along like a hippopotamus, on four too many Martinis and all dolled up in some Paris-Hilton-does-Tokyo goofball getup...or blotzed on mango-and-squid-ink half-vodka, half-ouzo Rob Roys, if one prefers... By-the-by, in its first year, 1936, $250,000USD was the admin budget...run that through a historic or relative value calculation... Congratulations, that's a fine example of "neocon"-style "history." It may be that, but it's a much finer example of someone simply glancing through the Act and noticing the beginning admin budget... It really doesn't matter what the hell the budget was in 1936 because the hiring to support year 1 operations - year 1 to begin in January of `37 - wasn't started until November 1936. At the end of 1936 there were 2,500 employees, the majority of whom had been at work for well under a month at that point. I'll take your word for it. I don't care enough to research it - see above drunken hippos...or if one prefers, Paris Hilton... TC, R |
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#8
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On 10 Oct 2006 17:21:37 -0700, "
wrote: wrote: ...................... I think it is simply yet another bureaucracy run amok, and since most folks (or those that vote, anyway) either do or think they will get something out of it, there is much more momentum carrying it forward than attempting to stop it from lurching along like a hippopotamus, on four too many Martinis and all dolled up in some Paris-Hilton-does-Tokyo goofball getup...or blotzed on mango-and-squid-ink half-vodka, half-ouzo Rob Roys, if one prefers... A heck of a lot of large human organizations are bureaucracies run amok, including General Motors, Enron, the US military, the Catholic church (at least when it came to shuffling priests around so that they'd have fresh supplies of young boys to bugger), the UAW, and various gov't agencies at all levels of gov't. I'm not sure, though, to what extent the SSA falls into that category or the one, shared with the IRS, of responding to congressional mandates driven by various interests. On the other hand, SS is the biggest accounting scam of all time by a very wide margin. Er, no - you are confusing at least three different type of entities. General Motors, the Catholic Church (buggery or otherwise), and the UAW are for-profit organizations (regardless of US taxation status - meaning that they expect, even demand, that the purse, regardless of "the books," show more at the end of year than at the start). Enron ain't anything. And any military is arguably, by definition, "run amok" because you really can't politely or cheaply kill people and break their **** according to nice little formulas - the budget is subject to wild swings (and no, I'm not defending _all_ expenditures). The aforementioned, with the exception of militaries, might have or have had bureaucracies, but at the end of the day, there has got to be some semblance of making money. OTOH, neither the IRS or the SSA really has to even pretend to answer the same questions or the same produce "profit" such as public corporations or a military force. As to the IRS compared to the SSA, it makes the SSA look like a bunch of pickpockets in a diamond mine. TC, R |
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#10
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On 11 Oct 2006 19:33:18 -0700, "
wrote: wrote: ..... Er, no - you are confusing at least three different type of entities. General Motors, the Catholic Church (buggery or otherwise), and the UAW are for-profit organizations (regardless of US taxation status - meaning that they expect, even demand, that the purse, regardless of "the books," show more at the end of year than at the start). Enron ain't anything. And any military is arguably, by definition, "run amok" because you really can't politely or cheaply kill people and break their **** according to nice little formulas - the budget is subject to wild swings (and no, I'm not defending _all_ expenditures). The aforementioned, with the exception of militaries, might have or have had bureaucracies, but at the end of the day, there has got to be some semblance of making money. OTOH, neither the IRS or the SSA really has to even pretend to answer the same questions or the same produce "profit" such as public corporations or a military force. As to the IRS compared to the SSA, it makes the SSA look like a bunch of pickpockets in a diamond mine. I believe that for the majority of the folks steamrollered by one or more of these, the distinctions you draw are largely moot. Anyone who gets or got "steamrollered" by GM, Enron, or any other equity investment got what they set themselves up for - good, bad, or neutral. They went in by choice, and if they got hammered, they knew the risk. Although IMO, "military" is a category unto itself, if it is the military you accuse of "steamroller(ing)" anyone, unless they were an innocent bystander with "clean hands," again, they went in knowing it was possible. OTOH, Social Security and the IRS allow those subject to them no (practical) choice in the matter - the can and will put yer ass in jail if you cross them. GM can't do a flockin' thing to anyone who simply chooses not to be a stockholder, and really, doesn't care if this or that person chooses to or not to be a stockholder. And all of them share an overriding similarity: their primary motive is self-preservation and perpetuation. All else is secondary. Not really. A corporation's primary motive is (and should be) profit - look to many corporations that are willingly, if the profit motive is satisfied, taken over/bought/merged into others. Again OTOH, the IRS and SSA are extremely concerned with self-preservation (and as such, perpetuation) and have no concern for "profit" as it traditionally thought of. They are primarily concerned with being supported by, rather than answerable to, the "investors," and in fact, have legal power over the people they are supposed to serve. And if you're not just trolling, you seem to have a real persecution complex. Corporations and militaries, unlike the IRA and SSA, really don't have any "self-interest" or "feeling" one way or the other for any particular individual and as such, really don't have any interest whether any particular individual "participates" or not. TC, R |
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