Friday, January 31, 2014

THATCHER: Common sense for restaurant-menu labeling - Washington Times

THATCHER: Common sense for restaurant-menu labeling - Washington Times




Let me get this straight.  If there are more than 20 restaurants operating in a chain, there food is inherently more harmful for human consumption than if there are 19 or fewer restaurants?  And this is somehow related to healthcare, or why else would it be in the PPACA under section 4205 of that piece of legislation?




"The law’s Section 4205 requires restaurants with 20 or more locations to list calorie-content information for each menu item on a board at every establishment."




I really can't imagine just how the federal government regulators and/or legislators think this should be something they are responsible for controlling.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Obamacare Legal Challenge

Attorneys General Letter to HHS Secretary

The Obama administration has arbitrarily changed the law as passed in 2010 on numerous occasions.   The attorneys general from several states are challenging those changes in a letter, to be followed by a law suit.  They claim the president has no authority to change a law without going back to congress.

Imagine if the following occurred at a basketball game.  Before the opening tip of the game the officials told both teams that they were not going to call  fouls on the home team until the second half, but all fouls by the visitors would still be called.  Or imagine the plate umpire telling coaches during ground rules that all pitches thrown by the home team pitcher through the first 4 innings would be called strikes.

That is the same as what is currently happening with changes to the law for business exemptions to mandates, congressional subsidies, and many other changes to the law made by the Obama administration.

The constitution is still the document authority for all things involving the US government, including the president.  Laws are passed by congress, signed or vetoed by the president, and subsequently enforced by the executive branch.  The oath of office mandates the president faithfully execute the laws, which means he has no authority to arbitrarily change law, make exemptions or exceptions, or ignore those laws.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Playoff Game Tickets

I am somewhat troubled by the complaining about greed of the NFL over playoff tickets.  The NFL is a product, and they can charge whatever they want for tickets to their events.  Fans have the choice of paying or not.  It is not your right to be able to view the games on TV.

Many people are claiming the NFL is greedy by charging the supposedly high price for tickets.  All season long those tickets were bought up, and all home games for the Bengals were sold out.  No one I heard of complained then.  But now!

I do find the TV black out rules illogical.  If I want to watch the game on TV then many people need to buy tickets to see the game in the stadium.  Or I need to buy a ticket to see the game in person so others can watch it on TV.  This makes no sense to me.

But economics should prevail.  There re roughly 66,000 tickets for each game at Paul Brown Stadium (PBS).  If the price is too high, not all will be sold.  If the price is too low, then many who want tickets won't be able to buy them before they sell out.  The optimal price is one that sells exactly the number of ticket available for sale.

The point being, the price should be set where demand equals supply.  If you want to see the game badly enough, go buy a ticket.  Otherwise stop complaining.