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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: free lunch, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. The Free Lunch Campaign: A Lost Opportunity


By Edward Zelinsky


The United States is in the midst of a “free lunch” campaign in which Republicans and Democrats alike promise painless resolution of our budgetary problems. As a result, neither party will have an electoral mandate for the hard choices necessary to tackle our fiscal quandaries. Both parties are squandering an important opportunity to mold public opinion and set the stage for meaningful budgetary discipline.

In a recent survey of the U.S. economy, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) concluded, with considerable understatement, that “the United States faces challenging budgetary prospects.”

This conclusion should surprise no one. The history and current reality are there for all to see: In 2001 and 2003, the Bush Administration and Congress reduced federal income taxes significantly. Instead of decreasing federal spending to pay for these tax reductions, the Bush Administration presided over significant increases of military and domestic outlays as well as unrestrained growth of so-called “entitlement” spending – Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. The Obama Administration has continued and exacerbated this trend. At the state and local levels of government, budgetary prospects often even worse as unfunded pension obligations and unfinanced retiree health benefits balloon.

To be sure, there is much contemporary political rhetoric about the need for fiscal discipline. President Obama has appointed a National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform. Tea Party candidates successfully exploit growing public anxiety about budgetary deficits.

However, none of this should be taken too seriously. President Obama’s deficit commission is scheduled to report only after this November’s elections. We have become inured to public images of Tea Party activists denouncing federal spending – except for their own Social Security and Medicare payments. The House Republicans’ “Pledge to America” promises fiscal responsibility while also refusing to reduce defense spending or spending which affects seniors.

The net result has been a free lunch campaign in which Democrats and Republicans alike promise budgetary discipline but refuse to specify how they will achieve it. The bi-partisan message to the electorate is that public deficits can be controlled without pain.

This, of course, is untrue.

Undoubtedly, it is considered wise politics to promise tax reductions and vague spending restraints while ignoring the tough choices necessary to put our budgetary house in order. However, in the long run, the promise of a free lunch will prove to be poor politics.

Empty, anodyne campaigns result in elections without mandates. Postponing the real discussion until after the election forfeits the opportunity to establish an electoral basis for the painful actions necessary to eliminate federal and state budget deficits.

In ordinary times, off-year elections are low key affairs in which the President’s party typically loses some or all of the congressional seats it gained in the prior presidential election. Conventionally, such off-year elections are preceded by locally-oriented campaigns.

However, these are not ordinary times. We are barely recovering from the worst economic contraction since the Great Depression of the 1930s and confront current and projected budgetary deficits of unprecedented magnitude. In this historically unique setting, the 2010 campaign is an opportunity for the two parties to form electoral mandates by specifying how they wil

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2. Mystery package

Last night I got home to a voicemail from my apartment complex manager saying I had a FedEx package. This puzzled me all evening, as I got home after the office had closed and couldn't go down to get the package until this morning. I didn't order anything, and no one told me that they were sending me anything. My imagination started going wild. Was it a lovely surprise from a secret admirer? Was it a court summons from a collector from a bill I'd never known about? You hear stories of crazy stuff like that happening. Though usually with people who don't pay their bills, but you just never know!

I go to the office this morning and the manager hands me a small black box emblazoned with



 

What in the world?

And there's a logo emblazoned on a number of places. I turn it over and I don't recognize the return address, from somewhere in New York.

So, I open the box. 


You see correctly. That's five bags of pita chips. Seeing as how I never really buy chips--and would never have ordered anything, my reaction is definitely "completely mystified."

Having lived in Boston, where the brand is popular, I knew of it a little, though I can't say I ever picked any of them up. I'm just not big on buying chips--I have more of a sweet tooth--though I'll eat them if they're in front of me. 

Inside, there's a little pamphlet that explains it all:



Yup, her name's Stacy, and so is mine. Therefore, I get free chips! Inside the pamphlet, she says:

Hi, I'm Stacy.

Ever since I started making pita chips, I had a dream: to share them with everybody across America.

Well, we couldn't give them to everybody. So we're sending them to every person named Stacy we could find in America!

Turns out, yes, that's exactly what they're doing, just in time for the Super Bowl. Well, for 133,000 Stacys, at least. I'm not even in a "Stacy hot zone," and I got them!

And actually, they're quite yummy. They're just pita bread baked into a chip and seasoning added, so they're definitely more healthy than your average potato chip.



Oh, I also got inside some coupons:






an "I *heart* Stacy" sticker (I love it! finding stickers like this when I was a kid that spelled my name right was SO hard!) 



and a card that I can fill out and send back to them to send a free gift box to anyone of my choosing. How about that? 


Now, who to send it to. I shall have to think on that. There's always my sister, a natural choice. Or any of my numerous old friends and roommates living elsewhere. But who would reeeeally appreciate a gift of snacks that I paid absolutely nothing for? I'm thinking, my friend who is the Grand Lord High Poobah of Ninja Monkeys, that's who. Eric, if you're reading this, you want some chips? :D I'm off to scan some examples for my talk for LTUE. Talk-preparation weekend. Except that I'm babysitting tomorrow night.

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