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21 year old B-17 pilot Jesse Jacobs |
Swickard: The no longer grateful nation
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, August 21, 2016
© 2016 Michael Swickard, Ph.D. New Mexico born World War II
cartoonist Bill Mauldin died more than ten years ago. To some people he is of
no use any longer, therefore he is forgotten. To those who were home or in
combat during the second world war Bill Mauldin and his cartoon characters
Willie and Joe were some of the most important people ever.
That was long ago. It is not even
taught to young people today. Being forgotten is happening not only to those
who die but also those who get old. When I was young old people were revered.
Today there seems a backlash against
elderly citizens. Even when we talk of the “Greatest Generation,” those who
fought in World War II, there is little acknowledgment by young people today.
This last weekend was the 93rd
birthday of my friend Colonel Jesse Jacob USAF retired. He flew B-17s in World
War II and F-80 fighters in Korea. After that he had a long aviation career
that would take several books to document. Unlike most of his fellow flyers in
Europe and Korea, Jesse is still alive. He is one of my favorite people of all
time.
Cartoonist Bill Mauldin died in 2003
and was born 95 years ago near Alamogordo at Mountain Park. He enlisted in the
Army in 1940 as a rifleman and gradually people realized that while a fine
rifleman he was a fantastic cartoonist. What many people don’t realize is he was
also a great writer.
His 1946 book Back Home details how poorly combat troops were treated when they
returned to our country after the end of the war. But that premise is rejected
today because people just don’t want to believe it. The ink on my book was put
there in 1946 by this Pulitzer Prize winner and no revisionist can change that.
As a senior citizen I see this often
and I am offended.
How do they campaign twenty hours every day?
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, August 14, 2016

Lately I have been thinking about
the presidential contenders. While I don’t care about their biffy use, I wonder:
how can they campaign twenty hours a day, seven days a week, and do so for
months and months?
Speaking for myself, I work ten-hour
days usually five or six times a week, and get plenty tired. The presidential
contenders could be tougher than me, or, as some people suspect, they enhance
their stamina pharmacologically.
There is no chance the current
presidential candidates will disclose what drugs they take to campaign
relentlessly. I wonder about the side effects?
Maybe none of them take drugs. A few
years ago I remember watching New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson
spend much of six years running for president while he was also the governor of
New Mexico.
Sometimes in debates he was sharp
and collected. Other times he was sweaty and off target. Could it have been too
much caffeine? He has the Guinness handshaking record for an eight-hour span. He
shook one hand every 2.15 seconds for eight hours. How much energy does that
take?
The 38th Vice President of the
United States, Hubert Humphrey, was elected vice president in 1964. He was
known as the Happy Warrior because he could campaign around the clock. Interestingly,
he was a licensed pharmacist. Perhaps there was a connection.
This presidential election cycle we
are getting some very odd statements from both major candidates. In 1972, Ed Muskie
broke down weeping uncontrollably at one campaign stop while reportedly taking
drugs to keep his energy up. This kind of behavior on a slow news day spelled
the end of his candidacy.
Writer Hunter S. Thompson
wrote in a 1972 edition of Rolling Stone
Magazine: “It was not until his campaign collapsed and ex-staffers felt
free to talk that I learned working for Big Ed was like being locked in a
rolling boxcar with a vicious 200-pound water rat. Some of his staff considered
him dangerously unstable. He had several identities, they said, and there was
no way to be sure on any given day if they would have to deal with Abe Lincoln,
Hamlet, Captain Queeg, or Bobo the Simpleminded…”
Thompson captured the antics of politicians
in the extreme on the campaign trail. Some stand for hours at fish sliming
plants shaking hands with workers before they wash their hands at the end of their
shift. Mechanically they say, “Shake hands with the next president, shake hands
with the next president...”
As I watch this presidential race I wonder:
is this the best we, as a nation, can do to select our leaders? Further, will
this process produce the best leaders? After they have spent many a disgraceful
year pandering to the voters, will they be able to step into the White House
prepared to be presidential?
This election is not about how many
hot dogs they can eat or a parking ticket or if a friend of a friend heard
someone say they didn’t leave a tip one day. They are asked “Gotcha” questions
which are routinely misreported by media sources who are pushing a candidate.
Both Hillary Clinton and Donald
Trump have stumbled on the stump. Perhaps they took just one too many of the
energy drinks or whatever they take to keep going. Wondering is not proof but
both have had some bad moments on the campaign trail.
The over-hyped media makes each day
on the campaign trail sound like the Hindenburg has just crashed: “Trump is one
point up in Indiana today. We will have twenty-four non-stop hours of analysis
to know what the people of Indiana are thinking just one hundred forty-two days
before the election.”
Going back to Kennedy/Nixon, I’ve
watched each presidential election, somewhat in awe and often in horror. This presidential
cycle is worse than any other I have experienced. If they are like this
normally and not taking dangerous drugs - it will be a long four years.
How do they campaign twenty hours every day?
Swickard: Budget problems then and now
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, August 7, 2016

What the administration of NMSU
wanted was to make no cuts and force the students to cover the budget shortfall
by another tuition increase even though enrollment is dropping. That’s because
of the tuition increases over twenty years which increased tuition and fees
from $600 a semester to over $4,000 a semester.
The NMSU Regents would not go for
another increase so the budget axe has fallen on several programs with the
resultant howls of outrage. Budget problems have been a continuing problem at
NMSU starting with the institution’s first classes in January 1890 clear up to
today. Often something was done to shrink the budget.
In June 1997 here is part of what I
wrote in my column:
There is a
battle going on at New Mexico State University - not a noisy battle with clanking
swords, it is a battle of wills. As with most battles there’s winners and
losers. Some employees will gain, some will lose. It was started by a June 18,
1997 report from the NMSU Strategic Planning Academic Programs subcommittee which
rated academic programs and recommended some academic programs be eliminated.
What
effect will this have on the citizens of New Mexico? I don’t know but this
scuffling is good for NMSU and New Mexico. It forces the NMSU leaders to accept
they cannot be all things to all people. A priority must be established for the
NMSU core programs.
Three perceptions:
First, it’s good someone started the process of aligning the academic programs
to NMSU’s mission; secondly, the committee members are going to be flamed
vigorously by employees who stand to lose; and this is just a report, the NMSU
Administration and Regents will make the decisions.
The
mission of NMSU is to benefit the citizens of New Mexico. The output of NMSU is
graduates, research done and the service that NMSU’s faculty, staff and
students provide New Mexico’s citizens.
One of the
recommendations was that the Philosophy Department be eliminated. Those
professors did not take that recommendation philosophically. There was a call to
eliminate the Engineering Technology Department. The people in these
departments will be injured by these decisions, if they are made.
Still,
there comes a time when the injury to a few must be accepted. NMSU is not some employment
agency that seeks to employ the most people possible regardless of need - even
if that is what it seems.
NMSU has a
job to do in this time of declining budgets. They must insure NMSU is of
benefit to the citizens of New Mexico above any personal interests of NMSU’s
employees.
It is a
battle of priorities - personal and professional. There will be winners and
losers. Hopefully, the losers won’t be the citizens of New Mexico.
Amazingly the issues today in August
2016 are much the same as in 1997 while the NMSU Philosophy Department remains
with seven professors. Nineteen years after they were identified as not a priority
they remain nor were they cut this time.
The University of New Mexico has
thirteen faculty members in their Philosophy Department. In good financial
times both NMSU and UNM can duplicate each other’s programs to no harm. But
when money is tight, as was noted in 1997, this is one place to cut.
The notion is once a program is
started using public money, once the first person is hired by the government in
some form or another, there can be no shrinkage of the size of government. In
fact, there is a notion that all government must cost more every year, even
with money becoming tight.
Having worked at both UNM and NMSU
at different times over the last forty years I have experienced the budget
crunch syndrome at both institutions. In every case I have said, “Guess now we
will see what our core priorities are at this institution.”
Often the priorities are the
employees rather than the citizens of New Mexico. We should change that.
Swickard: Budget problems then and now
Veronica and Nguyen’s children and their children
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, July 31, 2016

It was the first day of classes.
Veronica walked in, looked around and said plaintively, “God, is it boring in
here.” Every ten minutes for a whole year Veronica announced that class was
boring. Nguyen, another student in that same class never seemed to be bored.
Every time Veronica said, “God, is
it boring in here,” I flinched and kept thinking that if I tried a little
harder she would come around. She never did. She graduated and I never saw her
again nor do I know what happened to Nguyen. I lost track of both after they
graduated.
Still, I remember his ready smile as
he absorbed lessons. Nguyen was one of the Vietnam Boat People who left ahead
of the Communists. Over the semester I got to know him better. His parents were
farmers in Vietnam. Neither could read or write but were related to a
politician in Saigon so they had to flee.
Until five years earlier Nguyen
could not read since he had never attended school. When he arrived in America,
he was put in an inner-city school in Los Angeles and then moved to Albuquerque
the year before I had him in class. He quickly learned to where he was an
on-track junior.
Veronica was born in Albuquerque . Both parents
worked and were high school graduates.
Nguyen played on my after-school
table tennis team so I saw more of him than just in class. One day I gave
Nguyen a ride home after table tennis practice and met his parents. They spoke little
English but wanted to talk to me. Nguyen translated, which centered on Nguyen’s
school work. I said, “He’s one of the best students in my class.” They beamed.
Later I asked Nguyen what would
happen if he got a bad grade. His reply surprised me. “Dad would beat me until
his arms gave out. Then Mom would take over until he could continue.”
I immediately asked, “Do they beat
you often?”
“No,” he said, “They don’t have to
beat me, I work hard to make them proud of me. They don’t understand math and
English, but know if I’ve been working. They know I should get an A in each
class.”
A few days later I scheduled
parent-teacher conferences. Over two weeks I called Veronica’s parents five
times. Each time I got the brush off. Her mother said, “You’re the teacher, teach
Veronica and leave us alone.”
I never met Veronica’s parents. I
asked Veronica, “What would your parents do if you got a bad grade?” She smiled
slightly, “They don’t even look at my grades.” Veronica got a C and graduated.
I asked her if she was going to college. “No, college is boring.”
Nguyen, on the other hand, got a
college scholarship. The last I heard he was in the field of biology.
Now I did my very best for both
students and never quit. In both cases it didn’t matter. Nguyen was going to be
excellent regardless and Veronica was going to be bored.
I learned that the most important
component to student learning is not the teacher, it is the family. Having a
good teacher helps, but having parents who care and demand effort is far more
important.
It would make a nice ending to this
story to say that Veronica is a cashier in a store making minimum wage and
Nguyen is a Ph.D. Researcher making big bucks. But as I have said, I lost track
of them many years ago. Still, that is the way I would bet - Nguyen has
prospered and Veronica is now paying her dues for not working hard in school.
But what of their children? Assuming
both got married and have children, I suspect Nguyen will take an active role
in the education of his children and Veronica will not. Nguyen’s children will
do well in school while Veronica’s do not. And what about their children’s
children?
Veronica and Nguyen’s children and their children
Swickard: New Mexico’s Oops moment with water
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, July 24, 2016

Race car driver A. J. Foyt was
leading a race as the laps wound down before electronic communications. A board
was held up showing the laps remaining.
Foyt misinterpreted the board and
thought he had won when in fact there was one lap to go. He slowed down and
four drivers passed him. At the press conference, “Sometimes you blow a tire or
an engine, I blew a brain.”
Then there are times in New Mexico like
the controlled burn in 2000 at Cerro Grande done in high winds. That wildfire
burned for a month, destroying almost 50,000 acres and torching 400 homes.
Oops. A few years later two fires were allowed to burn that burned out of
control and scorched lots of the Gila and the Ruidoso areas.
In 1999 a Mars obiter was
constructed with one team of engineers using the English system of measurement while
other teams used the metric system. It cost NASA $100 million and a lot of ridicule.
Captain Joe Hazelwood put an
underling in charge of piloting the Exxon Valdez as it left Alaska March 24,
1989. He was drinking and therefore wasn’t available to keep the ship off a
reef where it poured 11 million gallons of oil. It cost about $8 Billion and
ruined Exxon’s reputation.
Or the makers of booster seals on
the Space Shuttle Challenger who said don’t take off when it is below a certain
temperature. But didn’t speak up forcefully when NASA got “Launch fever” while
the temperature was too low and the Challenger blew up killing seven crew and
costing $11 Billion. Oops.
Look at the Fukushima nuclear plant
that built the emergency pumps on the ocean side of the building so they were
swamped when the tsunami hit and didn’t work. Oops. But that is small potatoes
to the Soviet party official who overruled the engineers and wanted to do a
very unsafe test at Chernobyl.
That cost him his life and many
others along with more than $400 Billion in damages. Double Oops.
We have oops like the twelve
publishing houses that rejected J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter book. They lost a billion dollars. In 1999 Google
founders were trying to sell their search engine for one million dollars and even
lowered the price to $750,000 but no one bought. It is worth about $350 Billion
today.
Record label Decca holds a special
place in the hearts of record label EMI. Decca signed Brian Poole and the Tremeloes
and passed on the Beatles. Oops. That is almost as bad as Russia in 1867 selling
Alaska to the United States for a couple cents an acre because it was not valuable.
One of the biggest oops over the
years is the way New Mexico thinks it can conserve its way to plenty of water. That
is not possible. The state of New Mexico either has to pipe water into the
state or it has to make unusable water into water that can be used for people
and agriculture.
But there is no movement by the
state officials to do something useful. Instead they stand mute and dumb on the
crisis of New Mexico not having enough water. New Mexico has never had enough
water and it gets worse with the needs of more people and agriculture.
The best they can do is hope that it
will rain. Or those who think the answer is to quit having agriculture. That
works as soon as we all stop eating. Idiots.
The best time to plant a shade tree
was twenty years ago. Next best time was ten years ago. But you will never get
shade if you do not plant a shade tree. Likewise, real action needs to be taken
on securing a supply of water for the coming generations. Or I guess years from
now as it gets worse and worse we can say, Oops.
Swickard: New Mexico’s Oops moment with water
Swickard: Promise to spend wisely next time
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, July 17, 2016

The total budget for NMSU is around
$620 million so $12 million is 1.9 percent. In an institution as large as NMSU,
with all of their fund-raising programs and hold-back funds, it is a small sum.
But it’s a cut and that’s the problem.
In our current political climate many
people think that every government program must be continued or something is
seriously wrong. It is inconceivable in the media that budgets can be chopped,
in fact, programs can be eliminated in hard times.
Over the last two decades the state
of New Mexico has gone from a very rosy financial status to the budget crisis
of today. Who knew the oil and gas business was going to tank?
The issue is: in the recent years when
times were good, what did the people who guide our state do? They spent
everything they could. Did they save anything for hard times? Not recent
leaders.
Former Governor Gary Johnson was a fiscal
conservative. He constantly vetoed spending bills when he thought they were not
wise. It was seven hundred times in eight years ending in 2002. Not all of his
vetoes were spending, but many were and the money piled up.
In January 2003 Bill Richardson took
office. There were hundreds of millions of dollars in rainy day funds that he
spent immediately on political issues. The eight years of savings were gone in
days. Bill Richardson was running for President of the United States. So he
spent and spent and spent.
The last budget of Gary Johnson in
2002 was $3.9 Billion. That number went all the way to $6.8 Billion in Bill
Richardson’s quest for the presidency. He was named the nation’s Education
Governor for his spending on education, which had no effect on the outcomes for
New Mexico students but looked good in the headlines.
Fast forward to today since there
are serious budget problems at $6.2 Billion. The problem is that there has been
a large downturn in the oil and gas revenues. The budget is no longer viable
and must be amended.
When talking about reducing spending
some people act like there has always been over six billion dollars in the
budget. But New Mexico’s budget was under $4 Billion just a few years ago.
The last time there was an oil and
gas bust was 1981. At that time, I remember seeing bumper stickers that
proclaimed, “Please God, give me one more oil boom… this time I promise not to
piss it away.” Do we have anyone saying that prayer today?
New Mexico was one of only five
states who were not having budget problems in the late 1990s. Then in 2003 the
spenders got their hands on our state. Some politicians want taxes to now rise
as compensation for falling oil and gas revenues.
That would be wrong because it gives
the impression that government budgets cannot be seriously cut. Not one percent
or two percent. Rather, ten percent. New Mexicans will be fine.
The media will find those people who
lose out. But for the two million citizens in New Mexico being fiscally
responsible is essential for our future and the future of our children. NMSU is
gravely wringing their hands over less than two percent. Seriously.
Here’s a solution: NMSU and the
University of New Mexico have many similar programs. Retrench to one or the
other a couple of the programs currently at both universities. Know this: you
should not touch the core of NMSU’s Land-Grant mission or the core of the
University of New Mexico’s metropolitan university.
It is time to bring sense back into
the spending of the people’s money by government entities. No more spending so
that people can be elected with promises. The oil and gas will come back; will
we be careful with the money next time?
Only if the voters elect those who
are responsible and prepare for the next coming hard times.
Swickard: Promise to spend wisely next time
Swickard: Never ending elections for personal gain of the elected
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, July 10, 2016

Worse, our society has descended
into a “Thumb in the eye” society so that every action in politics is meant to
divide the people, not bring anyone together. Every issue is calculated by both
parties as to how much money the political operatives can raise because people
are upset.
For many years I took care of an
uncle who was a staunch Republican. One day while doing talk radio I was
talking to a staunch Democrat about the mailers coming to my uncle. He said
that he gets the same volume of mailers and their message is similar: to stop
the other side just send lots of money.
Perhaps what bothers me the most is
that we have professional legislators who will stay in office until they are
recalled by their maker. In some offices there are term limits but the
professional office-holders just move to another elected position and continue
feeding on the carcass of New Mexico and America.
Even worse are those professional
office holders who work for professional entities that are effected by the
legislature. These elected ones turn into a lobbying representative for the
people who write their paychecks instead of representing the voters.
Be it public education, environmental
organizations or those attorneys who gain immense wealth once elected to an
office that pays no money, they represent their own interests rather than the
voters. It is why some people think New Mexico is the capital of crony corruption
in our country.
Corruption is intertwined with all
of this political activity since it rewards those who will break the rules and
laws. Even more stupid are those who think that the crony corruptors will
self-report their transgressions. If someone with a bribe gives it to someone
who wants to trade influence for that bribe, neither will report this fact.
The only way to see even the shadow
requires noting the rise in wealth of these people when the reason for the rise
is not apparent. Mexico’s President, Enrique Peña Nieto observed, “Whenever
there are some who have more opportunities than others, this feed corruption.”
It goes on all of the time. The
person elected stands at the buffet of corruption and no one reports on their meteoritic
rise in wealth. The media gives them a pass.
Bess Myerson wrote, “The accomplice
to the crime of corruption is frequently our own indifference.” We are
partially responsible because year after year the crony corruption continues and
more often than not the crony corrupt legislators are returned to office
because the citizens do not care or often even vote.
At the coffee shop the other day
someone said that they could not wait for the November election to be over. Me
too, but I understand that there will be no pause. The 2018 election is upon us
as is 2020. We cannot think about governing because we are in the never ending
election cycle.
We are bombarded with Thumb in the
eye political actions. The elected are not stupid, they do so intentionally to
rally the base to give more money. Normal citizens are made nauseous by their
actions and they do not care as long as they feast at the money buffet.
The number one problem in our
country is that the media has changed sides from protecting the citizens to protecting
the crony corruption agents. Perhaps they are also on the take or they
understand that if they do not take the side of the elected ones, they will be
cut off from contact.
The only time corruptors cannot avoid
scrutiny is the Internet but canceling the First Amendment rights of citizens
is very attractive to those dealing with corruption. When the First Amendment
ends, which it will end, given the power of the corruptors, the nation goes
over the cliff.
At the very least let us stop
allowing companies and organizations to have paid lobbyists in elected office.
We have to start somewhere in cleaning up our government.
Swickard: Never ending elections for personal gain of the elected
Swickard: Tough times ahead for New Mexico
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, July 3, 2016

Increasingly the political dialog is
about complete and absolute transparency for those elected people making
decisions. The notion is that the public should know everything about the legislative
process including everything that happens during the deliberation phase.
We are not talking about the
outcomes, how people voted, rather, how they reached their decision to vote.
Some people think the public should be eyewitness to the deliberations. This
sounds good but will not work. H. L. Mencken wrote: For every complex problem
there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong.
Consider if jury deliberations were
in public. Jurors would be watched as they deliberated the case. Everyone could
see how they reasoned and voted. Would that scrutiny change their actions? You
bet.
An example is our Constitutional
Convention held in Philadelphia from May to September 1787. The delegates
decided first that they could not revise adequately the Articles of
Confederation which was their announced task so instead they negotiated a new
form of government.
They did so without any transparency
as they worked. The doors to their hall were locked and members pledged to not
talk to journalists. The newspapers of the time had no idea what was happening.
Why did they take such an unusual
action? Because the daily pressure as they debated issues would have ultimately
killed the convention if the issues under debate were known. As they day by day
debated these issues they would have had too much pressure to continue if what
they were debating was known to the public.
It looks like a special session of
the New Mexico Legislature will be required. And the forces of transparency will
want to watch everything from the first Frito-Pie made to the last coffee pot put
away… along with everything said and done during the special session.
Transparency of the final actions of
our elected is essential but perhaps not the deliberations. As the politicians figure
what they can and cannot support they must not have literally thousands of
people bombarding them with instant reactions.
Deals cannot be made in front of
everyone. That is a truth transparency activists do not accept. Like with jury
deliberations and the designing of our Constitution, deliberation scrutiny is
detrimental to the outcome.
New Mexico has vastly less money
than budgeted. So New Mexico will have to do something about it but this is an
election year. Politicians would rather not act but must since our Constitution
requires New Mexico financially to be in the black. New Mexico cannot deficient
spend, even in election years.
U. S. Senator from Oregon Jeff
Merkley wrote, “Budgets are nothing if not statements of priorities.” The
priorities are going to be called into account shortly in New Mexico and the
political leaders will not be able to punt the financial football to the next
session.
They will meet in special session
and do things that will lose each of them votes. The New Mexico budget will be
cut. There will be winners and losers. The only thing worse is to lose the
representative form of government by allowing extreme daily intrusions to the
point that the representatives can no longer function.
Fixing this financial problem will
be hard since the budget was already cut in many ways in the last session. Some
things cannot be cut and so one answer is to raise taxes.
With the increase of taxes being
dynamic the raises may not bring in the needed revenue because businesses and
people move out of state. The state may go into a financial death spiral of
taxpayers leaving and the people needing services not being funded adequately.
There are people who want complete
transparency but it is the kiss of death to most complex negotiations. Careful
what you wish for as it could make this problem much worse.
Some tough decisions will have to be
made. The lobbyists and activists will endeavor to protect their clients
through information, advocacy and political threats. Give our elected a fair chance
to fix the budget. It is important to watch how they vote for a solution, not their
deliberations.
Swickard: Tough times ahead for New Mexico
Swickard: Energy industry under attack as is our economy
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, June 26, 2016

Despite claims otherwise, many elected
leaders are the very reason our economy is faltering. They campaign promising
to improve our economy yet they support the very government actions which cause
critical harm to the economy. These politicians campaign to solve the problems
which were caused by them.
Currently there is a political controversy
about flaring (burning) some of the gas from New Mexico oil producing wells. The
talking points are that petroleum producers should sell that gas rather than just
burn it.
Activists claim petroleum producers intentionally
throw money away. But people in business do not throw money away and stay in
business. Some people understand the oil and gas industry while others do not.
Former New Mexico Land Commissioner
Ray Powell wrote in a recent Op-Ed: “The San Juan Basin is one of the most
heavily developed energy fields in the Intermountain West. While the downturn
in oil and natural gas prices has hit hard, there is a simple way we can boost
energy and tax revenue – cut natural gas waste at existing oil and gas well
sites.”
Ray Powell’s statement has nothing
to do with petroleum engineering. If there was money to be made, the petroleum
producers would, especially now when prices have dropped.
Why are these wells flared? Simply,
there is no economical way to bring those products to market. There isn’t the infrastructure
nor is it economical.
The activists know this. It’s really
an attempt to cripple the petroleum industry in New Mexico. Consider: this push
follows a long list of industry killing events. The introduction of wolves in
cattle country is strangling the New Mexico cattle industry in those areas. That
is along with the Jumping Mouse rules which are designed to keep cattle from
water.
If new rules require the gas to be
captured and sold or the well must be capped, all but the most productive wells
will be capped. There is not the infrastructure to capture that low volume gas
which also has Hydrogen Sulfide, (H2S) in
it. This colorless gas with
a rotten eggs
smell is poisonous, corrosive, flammable, and explosive. No one is buying this
substance so it is flared for safety.
What is the political value in
making New Mexico producers cap their wells? The progressive push is to end
oil, gas and coal so that the economy goes on the wind and solar standard. The
federal government has targeted coal which is used in about half of the national
electricity generation. The coal industry is dying.
The problem is wind and solar are
not a good source for power generation other than for off-grid homes. For
traditional energy uses solar and wind must be backed up by traditional generating
stations. So we pay for the generation twice. The price is prohibitive, especially
if the energy is used in manufacturing where competing products are produced
with low-cost energy-dense power.
In New Mexico curtailing oil and gas
production will send the state budget into a financial abyss of epic
proportions. The state of New Mexico is already reeling from the drop in oil
and gas revenue. The current recession in New Mexico would turn into a never
ending depression without oil and gas revenue.
When you see elected leaders talk
about reigning in the lost money in flaring, know that the intention is to end
the oil and gas industry and replace it with wind and solar. They gain
political power in this way but the citizens lose an incredible amount of money
for their schools and lots of jobs.
As Walter Williams wrote, “In
general, presidents and congressmen have very limited power to do good for the
economy and awesome power to do bad. The best good thing that politicians can
do for the economy is to stop doing bad.”
But we keep electing people who spend
their time harming our economy.
Swickard: Energy industry under attack as is our economy
Swickard: Minimum wage laws destroy free markets
Posted by
News New Mexico
on Sunday, June 19, 2016

America’s “free markets” are more
free than markets in some other countries. However, our markets are not really free
because our government controls so much of them. Know this: markets cannot be
controlled and free simultaneously.
Let’s use two terms interchangeably:
free markets and voluntary exchange. Voluntary exchange is when people are free
to trade with each other without government interference. When the government
prevents voluntary exchange between citizens through rules and regulations, there
cannot be free markets.
In Venezuela there are daily riots
because the Socialist Government meddled in their markets until those markets
collapsed. Venezuela has gone from being one of the richest countries in the
world to one of the poorest in just a few years of mismanagement. They have
almost limitless natural resources. Without free markets their citizens get no
benefit from those resources.
The term, “profit” is seen by some
Americans as being bad. Much of our political dialog is about businesses making
too much profit so the government must intervene. Consider: if there is no
profit, then what’s there to tax? Importantly, without profits, what’s there to
continue the business?
In free markets if there are high
profits it inspires competitors who undercut prices to gain market share. So
where do “obscene profits” come from? They come when our government protects
one business over others so that competitors cannot compete. The “obscene
profits” problem is too much government control in the markets.
In Venezuela, with government
control of the markets, the shelves are empty. In our country they are full but
our government is moving towards the Venezuelan controls.
One destroyer of free markets is the
minimum wage. There should never be a minimum wage in a free market. Each person
should trade their labor for an employer’s money as they see fit. How did we
get the minimum wage?
According to economist Dr. Walter E.
Williams (and others) the minimum wage was created to further racism. (http://townhall.com/columnists/walterewilliams/2016/01/13/minimum-wage-dishonesty-n2102804)
In the 1920s, Blacks would work for
less money than Whites. Racist employers had a price to pay for being racists.
If they only hired Whites, it cost them more money. Political leaders passed
the 1931 Davis-Bacon Act to thwart Blacks undercutting Whites. It created the
minimum wage so both Blacks and Whites had to be paid the same. Then there was
no penalty for racism.
For Americans, the ability to
negotiate our own wages should be our right. But the government doesn’t allow
me to work for what I think is right to get a job even though I am a free
emancipated citizen. Many people caught up with progressivism do not believe in
freedom. Also, with the rising minimum wage comes rising unemployment. How is
being unemployed ever better than employed?
If the government doesn’t like what
someone is paid then reinstitute the 1973 Comprehensive Employment and Training
Act where the government paid part of an unskilled person’s wages to get them
job experience.
Requiring employers to pay more than
they think is justified, based on the return on investment in those employees, results
in unskilled labor not getting hired. Those potential employees then do not get
experience to get the next job. It causes discrimination against unskilled
labor, mostly young people.
The most ridiculous thing said is
that some people are not making a living wage. If people can live and continue
then it is a living wage. I have worked for very little money at times. I
learned as much as I could and then stepped up to a better paying job.
The government mandated minimum wage
is neither compassionate nor kind. It leaves the most vulnerable Americans in
perpetual bondage because they don’t get job experience. They need job
experience to prosper.
The government lives to control
people and markets regardless of the damage it does to our people and the
economy. For true prosperity Americans must have free markets. Otherwise our
economy will descend into a Venezuela. To start we must abolish the minimum
wage so young people get needed job experience.
To believe in free markets, we must
first believe in freedom.
Swickard: Minimum wage laws destroy free markets