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All opinions are those of The Republican Gazette and its editor, Gary Abernathy, except letters or commentary signed by others, and do not reflect the views of anyone else, including clients of Abernathy Strategies.
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Friday, February 9, 2007
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Elephant Wars
While Mojo figures out how to do a poll, let's get started
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West Virginia welcome signs should  say:
Almost Heaven
The Mountain State
Open for Business
Wild & Wonderful

Demonstrating an embarrassingly stubborn refusal to just admit he was wrong, Gov. Joe Manchin and his Democrat henchmen are doing everything they can to delay changing the state's silly "Open for Business" welcome sign slogan.
Democrats, at Manchin's behest, have derailed GOP efforts to pass a resolution demanding a change back to Wild & Wonderful. Now, Manchin officials say they want to conduct an online poll on the subject, but the
results won't be revealed until the end of the year.
Why the delay? Because, as The Charleston Gazette's Tom Searls reported Thursday, "The long amount of time before results will be shown is because it takes a while to establish such an online poll," according to Manchin's legislative director, Jim Pitrolo.
While Mojo's impressive brain trust attempts to figure out how to do an online poll, let's get started.

Above is a poll containing the possible welcome slogans suggested by Pitrolo in the Gazette story. We'll leave the poll up at least until the Manchin administration can get started.
Healthy dose of capitalism
is needed in West Virginia
By Gary Howell
Location, location, location are the three most important things for any business.  Looking at the state as a business, we have one of the best locations of any state.  We are located in the center of 2/3rds of the US population, so why do we rank 47th real GDP growth?1 The simple reason is we no longer practice capitalism in West Virginia, we practice mercantilism.  For those that forget their history, mercantilism imposed by the British crown was one of the primary reasons for the Revolution, but we did this to ourselves.
In order for West Virginia to take advantage of our location we need to reduce government’s interventionism in the economy.   Businesses large and small must be free to make decisions based on profit and loss.  Currently they are held hostage to the state by policies not conceived in sound economic principles, but by political prejudice and special interest.
A proposed increase in the minimum wage law is a good example of government interference causing more harm than good.  During the 2006 session I had a conversation with Senator Jon Hunter about the proposed increase.  Jon thought this would be good for the states lowest paid worker giving them a pay increase, but that is not the reality.  The reality is many of the state lowest paid workers will loose their jobs.  Simple economics is the reason.  As wages are artificially increased without a corresponding increase business growth or productivity, then the simple solution for any business is to compensate by cutting the work force.  This creates additional unemployment.  Instead of getting a pay increase, the lowest paid workers loose their jobs. These jobs will be gone until market forces come back into balance which is when the economy can actually support the new minimum wage.
I believe the answer to bringing capitalism back to the state is through education.  I have known Jon for a long time, and he is a smart individual, but you only know what you have been taught.  I doubt Jon was ever taught how capitalism works.  I, myself, am a product of the West Virginia school system, and at no time can I ever remember being taught capitalism.  Even in college, the focus was on business law, corporate responsibility, preparing a balance sheet, etc. I learned capitalism on my own.  In the different systems of the world this is unusual. In the days of the Soviet Union, and in modern Cuba communism is taught in their schools, France a socialist county, socialism is taught, but we live in the most successful capitalistic nation and capitalism is not taught in our school system.  By 8th Grade Cuban students can tell you who Karl Marx and Lenin are, can a West Virginia 8th grader tell you who John Locke and Adam Smith are?
The key to a thriving future West Virginia economy is education in our own capitalistic system.  A populous with a working knowledge of free market capitalism, and sound economic principles will see that government interventionism is a bad thing.  Through the process of education we will create a class of entrepreneur that will use our resources to create jobs and grow the economy from within the state.
1. Bureau of Economic Analysis, US Department of Commerce, 1997-2004
News and notes...
It will be interesting to see who Gov. Joe Manchin appoints to fill Delegate Ron Thompson's seat now that the Legislature has finally tossed out the long absent lawmaker. Early betting months ago focused on former Delegate Sally Susman or ex-Senator Bill Wooton, but it's anyone's guess...
...A rare display of common sense reared its head this week when the Transportation Committee halted, at least for now, the misguided bill aimed at criminalizing smoking by adults in cars with minors. Between anti-smoking laws, cameras on every street corner, mandatory HPV vaccines for 6th grade girls, and countless other intrusive governmental actions, a free America is quickly becoming a distant memory, with the silent cooperation of a comatose public...
...Anna Nicole Smith has passed away, there's an astronaut love triangle, Lindsay Lohan is in and out of rehab, Britney Spears is in a custody fight, and how does any of that affect most of us? Quite a bit, apparently, if the amount of news time devoted to it all is any gauge.