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Thursday, January 11, 2007
Larry Elder :: Townhall.com Columnist
Dems to tackle "income inequality"
by Larry Elder
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


You make too much money! And you make too little!

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., put it somewhat differently. But the new chairman of the House Financial Services Committee vowed to tackle the growing, festering problem of "income inequality." "Government doesn't have to interfere with the free enterprise system," says Frank, "but we can work along with it to reduce inequality."

Railing against Home Depot's $210 million severance package for its fired CEO, Frank called it "further confirmation of the need to deal with the pattern of CEO pay that appears to be out of control."

What does Frank propose to do about the "income inequality" in, say, baseball? New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez several years ago signed a contract for a quarter-billion dollars. That's "b" as in "bodacious." Pity the teammate who toils at the league minimum of $380,000 a year. Will Smith reportedly gets $20 million per picture. Most members of the Screen Actors Guild work at other non-acting jobs just to make ends meet.

What exactly is the appropriate gap? How wide should it be? Presumably Mr. Frank possesses the divine wisdom to know when the gap is jus-s-s-st right.

Understanding Frank requires understanding the deep recesses of the Democrats' psyche about wealth and its creation. Recall former House Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt of Missouri, who once said people of wealth in America are "the people who have won the lottery of life." Obviously, Messrs. Frank and Gephardt consider the old hard-work formula dated and dysfunctional.

A friend told me a story of an executive, "Bob," who works with her at an insurance company. During a golf outing, Bob told her his life story. His dad abandoned him shortly after his mom gave birth. When he was 3, his mother, in a fit of anger, broke his arm. Social services investigated, but found no wrongdoing. Shortly after he turned 8, his ever-angry mother broke his jaw. This time, social services removed him from her custody, and he lived in a series of foster homes and group houses. In school he constantly caused trouble, made poor grades, and grew angrier and angrier as he found himself shuttled from one temporary custodial place to another. Continued...

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About The Author
Larry Elder is host of the Larry Elder Show on talk radio and author of Showdown : Confronting Bias, Lies, and the Special Interests That Divide America .
 
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Subject: reply to partsmom
The whole idea of "affordable" housing should be rejected by conservatives. A conservative needs to recognize that the free market solves this problem easily; people who can't afford to pay market prices don't get houses. What could be simpler than that?

affordable housing
There are real problems with the way "affordable housing" works out in the real world. Section 8, the assisted rental housing program, puts major restrictions and hassles on the property owner, and isn't often available where appropriate tenants need them. The regulations requiring that a certain percentage of residential project units be "affordable" sometimes makes the whole project unfeasible and unaffordable for builders, and even when it is built it can ironically be difficult to sell. Most of the people who qualify as poor enough to need it don't qualify for even the lowered mortgage amounts, and the regulations require that the house cannot be resold at a profit. Ever. And many of these developments require cars to get anywhere or do anything, which makes it hard on families that can't afford several cars, or only clunkers that the neighbors are going to sneer at. How does a lower income family get along with higher income neighbors without feeling patronized? What about maintenance? The idea sounds good, but those units are difficult to sell. (My daughter works for a broker that sells new homes.)
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