Following is a set of
sample issues. These were written by Todd Andrew Barnett, Chair of the
BTPMI. They are so well written that I had to post them here (without
permission)...
I. U.S. Foreign Policy and
Iraq:
As the Vice President of
the United States, I will be the presiding officer of the U.S. Senate.
I will work with the Senate and the Congress to pass pro-liberty legislation
to radically (if not, incrementally) reduce the cost, size, power, and
scope of government. In the case of the United States' foreign policy
of interventionism and Iraq, if my presidential running mate and I are
elected, I will work with our Boston Tea president to move the troops
out of Iraq as soon as possible. We will, with the advice and recommendations
of our Joints Chief of Staff and military advisors, push to move the
troops out of the Middle East, including, but not limited to, Iraq,
Iran, Palestine, Israel, and a number of troops from over 178 countries
around the world. We will neither send more troops to those regions
nor send any foreign aid to that region and many other countries that
we have throughout the world. It's time to return our entire military
forces from all over the world to our own soil. It's time to bring them
home.
II. The Economy
As the Vice President of
the United States, I will work with the President, the Senate, and the
Congress to abolish the Federal Income Tax and replace it with nothing.
The first priority is repeal as many regulations as possible, phase
out the Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid programs as soon as
possible (along with liquidating their assets and marketizing them ASAP),
and end unconstitutional spending, including spending on the war. The
other part of my plan with the economy is to repeal as many laws that
make it unattractive for businesses to compete in the marketplace and
force them to offshore their operations overseas due to the unfair tax,
spending, and regulatory climates. Thus, repealing the federal minimum
wage law and the unfair tax and regulatory burdens that companies are
coerced to absorb would enable the marketplace to work and end the recession.
Also, a repeal of the payroll and withholding taxes at the federal level
would boost wages for all workers in the private sector. People with
more money in their pockets would be free to spend their money as they
think best. People with more money would donate more money to charities
as they see fit. Ending the government's hold on the economy would allow
the market to produce unprecedented wealth. After all, you the middle-class
worker (and this goes for the lower-class employees) get up at the crack
of dawn and work 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12-hour-a-day shifts. Whose money
does that belong to, you or the government?
III. The Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve is destroying
the value of the dollar. It prints money out of thin air, creating fiat
currency that is not even backed by any resource of intrinsic value.
When the Fed cuts the subprime and interest rates and saturates the
economy with more unwanted U.S. dollars, bonds, and other forms of currencies,
it slashes away the value of your money. Right now your money is worth
4 cents on the dollar (that means 96 cents of your dollar is gone).
Because of this, as a result of inflated money supply, prices and costs
of everything you buy at the store go through the roof. That reduces
your paychecks, and it leaves less money for you to spend. Because of
this, it becomes harder to start a business, save money for a rainy
day, or even put a down payment on a house. It's time to put the Federal
Reserve out to pasture. It's time for return to the days of a commodities-based
currency, whether it's gold, silver, bronze, or whatever metal the market
will bear. A free market-based currency, not one codified by the federal
government, will restore your purchasing power and bring back monetary
sanity to this country. More positions to follow later.
IV. Education
The cost of education has
gone through the roof due to the federal government's incessant involvement
in it, and educational standards have plummeted as a result of the state's
tinkering. The government schools, by and large, are nothing but political
and ideological warehouses of propaganda aimed to create the perfect,
obedient citizen who will never question authority or any wrongdoing
by the state. SAT, ACT, and MEAP scores and other testing examination
systems for scholastic progress and entry into colleges have been on
a significant decline. Education is too important to be left in the
hands of federal bureaucrats on Capital Hill. It should be left in the
hands of parents, students, schools, thus effectively establishing a
true free market. A real free market in education would ensure that
our children's future would be protected and never mortgaged by the
teacher unions (like the National Education Association). Democrats
want to propagandize your kids and use the teacher unions to leverage
more power to themselves, demanding "better health benefits" and saying
that they are "underpaid." It may seem to the average voter that teachers
are paid less than other established professions. Yet, on average, they
do, compared to other career fields (professional sports do not count),
get three months off and get nice perks on the side. Republicans, on
the other hand, want to propagandize your kids and use religious rhetoric
and other boondoggles to leverage more power to themselves as well,
demanding that prayer be returned or that the Ten Commandments be posted
in the classrooms. However, many of them also support the use of state-approved,
state-subsidized vouchers that will only be used by schools eligible
for these programs and effectively transforming what's left of the private
education industry into carbon copies of the government schools. Government
(and even private) teachers do pay income, payroll, and withholding
taxes, and their tax burden should be lifted the same as any other taxpayer.
Therefore, I believe that teachers should get bigger and more solid
cuts in their income, payroll, and withholding taxes and should be free
to keep their money like everyone else. They are unfairly burdened by
the tax system as many taxpayers are and their burden (at least a portion
of it) should be pared down as much as possible. In recent years, the
Bush administration, with the help of Congress and many federal education
bureaucrats, pushed for the No Child Left Behind law, which delved Washington
more into our schools and demanded insane testing standards by which
no school in every state can abide. This law has established a one-size-fits-all
policy, which has created a bureuacratic nightmare of its own making.
The law must be repealed at all costs, and, if elected, I will work
with the Congress, the Senate, and our President to see to it that it
becomes repealed as soon as possible. Years ago, Republicans say that
they would get rid of the Department of Education (a plan that was originally
stated in their party's platform). After the Republican Revolution of
1994, that never materialized. The Democrats have supported the Department
of Ed as much as the GOP has and it has been a bane to education all
the way. It has proliferated the decline of educational and testing
standards and issued more bureaucratic regulations, which are and have
been the heart of the entire government school industry. Therefore,
if elected, I will get rid of the Department of Ed. Education must be
left to parents, communities, students, and the free market. Let parents
and students decide how they want their kids educated. Bureaucrats only
stand in the way.
V. Social Security
The Social Security system
is going bankrupt. There is no trust fund. When the system was established
by the Social Security Act of 1935, the American people were told by
the Roosevelt administration that it was an insurance program and that
people had the right to their SS benefits when they retired. However,
in subsequent Supreme Court rulings, the program is not "insurance"
by any means and that you have no contractual right to your SS benefits,
meaning that Congress can change the rules anytime and you wouldn't
even know it. The SS tax has been raised over 40 times in the last 50
years, the program's benefits have been cut many times, and the retirement
age has been raised a good number of times as well. The system is currently
insolvent. In order to keep it going, we will have to either: *raise
the current tax rate; *lower the benefits for future retirees, including
the Baby Boomer generation; and *raise the retirement age A majority
of Americans today think that Social Security will not be there for
them by the time they retire, even though most don't want to admit it.
The trouble is that today's generation of working Americans are paying
into a Ponzi-scheme system, in which the monies they pay are automatically
redistributed to our grandparents. The young are, in a nutshell, subsidizing
the old. As a result, there is a great deal of hostility between the
young and the old, with many of the elderly thinking that they deserve
their SS benefits, even if it's taken from the young, and the young
resenting their grandparents for it. Even those elderly who are well
off and very affluent think that they deserve a piece of the SS pie.
President Bush's "ownership society" program partly advocated "partial
privatization" of Social Security, except that it wasn't true privatization
to begin with, or even a part of it. The plan entailed the government
telling you what portion of your money you can invest into the state's
approved and chosen retirement account for you. You have no control
of that money, considering that it would have transformed the financial
services sector into a carbon copy of the SS program.* (*Note: the financial
sector is already subsidized by the state, and this action would have
made the sector into more of a government sector than it already has
become.) The only way to solve the SS crisis is to abolish the program,
but it must be phased out in transition with its assets being liquidated
while upon delivering a lump sum payment to seniors who should receive
their benefits. There are many government-owned properties, including
the buildings of the Social Security Administration, so those properties
can be marketized and the sales of those properties can be diverted
to a multitude of newly-established true private retirement funds for
the elderly. Once the tax is repealed and those sales are finalized,
individuals can be free to choose any retirement money that they can
invest out of their pocket. If elected to the Office of the Vice President,
I will work with Congress, the Senate, and our President to see to it
that the young are freed from the clutches of the Social Security tax
and the Social Security administration and that the elderly are taken
care of via the above-proposed private means.
VI. Health Care
The government's involvement
in health care has been a disaster. After the creation of the Food and
Drug Administration, Medicare, Medicaid, and the odious and onerous
federal regulations that regulate prescription drugs, the insurance
companies, and the entire medical profession, the health care industry's
costs of providing care to the sick, poor, elderly, and needy have skyrocketed.
Over 80 percent of the costs of prescription drugs continue to rise
because of excessive regulations by the government, thanks to the 1962
Kefauver Harris amendments to the Food and Drug Act. These amendments
have increased the requirements for new pharmaceutical developments
by tripling the time from getting the drug from the laboratory to the
market from 4.5 years to 14.5 years. Because of this, patients are dying
after being denied new drugs that could have saved their lives. 5 million
people have died as a result, since 1962 because of the additional 10-year
wait that prevents them from procuring lifesaving medications on their
pharmacies' shelves. Barack Obama (and recently Hillary Clinton) renewed
calls for moving the U.S. from the already-half-socialized medicine
that we have to their version of a full-blown socialized medicine, which
is now touted as "universal health care." It is true that many Americans
cannot simply afford health care, but that's because the goverment has
mandated that 50 percent of the tax monies go into the system (subsidizing
the care via the insurance industry). Thanks to the HMO Act of 1973
(which was eventually repealed anyway), it led to the federal government
and many states mandating "one-size-fits-all" health care policies that
are contributing to the out-of-control costs and the decline of quality
at the hospitals and clinics. Remember, when the government provides
a service, its costs double and continue to rise. We pay those costs
via taxation or inflation (whichever comes first), when the government
expands the money supply (printing more money out of thin air) via inflation
(thanks to the Fed) to cover them. Socialized medicine, as it is accurately
called, will only increase the cost of health care further, not solve
the problem as its supporters believe. All it will do is to ration care
in order to prevent the entire system from crumbling. Rationing care
means that some people will be denied care and others will be forced
to be put on waiting periods of six months, maybe longer. That means
people literally die before they even see a physician or a specialist,
especially when it's important for those patients to receive that care.
Think about it. In Britain, kidney dialysis patients, who are mainly
seniors, are routinely denied by the government-run hospitals in order
to conserve resources for the young. Canadian seniors come through the
U.S.-Canadian border and flood our hospitals to get treatments for serious
health threats like cancer, cardiac bypass surgery, and hip replacements
that they cannot get in their own health care system because they are
routinely put on a two-year queue. There are not enough resources in
their homeland to provide for the care they so desperately need. As
bad as the current health care system is, universal health care, or
more accurately "socialized medicine," isn't the answer. The answer
is a true free market in health care, which has been in non-existence
for decades. It's time to repeal all laws and regulations that govern
the industry. It's also time to put the Medicare and Medicaid programs
to pasture. The same must be for the Medicare Drug Prescription Benefit
that was passed in recent years, widely touted to cost $400 billion
but ended up actually costing north of a trillion dollars. It's time
to return health care to the free market once and for all. That's it
on my entire campaign platform. Yours in Liberty, Todd Andrew Barnett
Candidate for Vice President 2008