Steve Parkhurst on The Price of Business, September 7, 2012

Steve Parkhurst was again on the radio with Kevin Price on The Price of Business on the final day of the DNC in Charlotte. We discussed impeached president Bill Clinton’s speech the night before. We also discussed my feature called Across The Pond at USDailyReview.com.

 

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Steve Parkhurst Interviewed on The Price of Business, April 2, 2012

On April 2nd, I was a repeat guest with Kevin Price on The Price Of Business where we discussed US Daily Review and the Across The Pond feature, developments in London with Prime Minister David Cameron’s Great Society and the recent US Supreme Court ObamaCare hearings.

Segment 1

Segment 2

Balance The Budget, If Not Now, When?

This feature originally appeared at US Daily Review.

The House Republicans Thursday released a pretty interesting graphic depicting a few reasons why Congress should support a Balanced Budget Amendment.

As can be seen in the image below, even if the Balanced Budget Amendment does not become law, there are still enormous problems within the federal government that need to be fundamentally transformed. One of the most appalling figures to me is that 40 cents of every 1 dollar this country spends in borrowed money. How does a county dig out from that kind of debt? How would an individual do it?

You don’t have to be a partisan, one way or the other, to see that we have major problems at the federal level. This starts at the local level though. The people of every community must start taking back their country. This isn’t done the way the parasites of Occupy Wall Street have done it. It is done by getting down to your city hall, your county government offices and even the school boards. Start forcing all governments to justify their spending. Run for office yourself if you have to. The federal government is doing too many things that can be handled at the local level, and when the federal government gets involved, costs go up while efficiency and effectiveness go down.

Seriously. 40 cents for every one dollar. When does it stop? Will we eventually be borrowing $1.25 for every $1.00?