I heard President Obama today say that the problem is that business owners are showing their nature- squeezing employees for greater productivity and adopting a culture of cost cutting to make more profits instead of hiring more workers. In one breath he acknowledges that only the private sector can get things going; in the next he is stoking the fires of class envy.
Like Steve and many other Americans, I have curtailed my golf, postponed replacing my 11 year-old vehicles, and have yet to buy a house. I wouldn't care that much about the President's view of the world or his deep-seated need to apologize for America's shortcomings as he perceives them, except that his policies are consistent with that perspective and inimical to a sustainable healthy economy and a safe, stable world. So, the little I can do as a prudent person is to store my nuts and hope that they last the hard times that even the Left on this site see coming.
Jeff- I don't play Ridgeview Ranch much, but I hear that it is full all day long. Personally, I think it is a better course than Indian Creek and probably Castle Hills, and the gf is lower. I hear that TangleRidge is up as well and will do 35,000 rounds this year.
Lou,
I have always wondered why Ridgeview doesn't get more raves amongst the DMN panel and even Avid Golfer. It has housing where Tangleridge doesn't, but its just as good a golf course, IMHO. I don't play there much because its just too crowded.
Don't get me started. When Clinton came in and said many of the same things, I felt insulted. Here I was, a small businessman who had somehow created at least six jobs that paid over the national wage average, and I was told I was evil and needed to be taxed to the hilt. One year, I made less than the year before, and the IRS saw fit to tax me more as a "highly compensated employee" than the year before. I think Kennedy gave back his salary, but what other politicians who tell us we ought to not keep as much money as we can do? Do they donate their salary or sign themselves up for the public option health benefit? Of course not.
In a conversation with a contractor yesterday, I heard that some new environmental laws were passed the first month of Congress in a package that Al Gore would love. I knew it was under consideration, but somehow missed its passage. In what cannot be good news for the golf construction or any construction industry, these new environmental restrictions and costs have to be passed on to the owner, like downstream water testing. Actually, some or most of the reggies make some sense and are a continuation of a long progression of being more environmentally friendly. My complaint is whether trying to stimulate the construction industry with tax dollars on one hand and stop it with regulations on the other hand makes any sense.
This contractor was debating just how many millions of dollars to add to a current big project bid to satisfy what are really unknown reggies. Besides the cost of hiring new environmental inspectors, test labs, etc. they are faced with a substantial fines structure. All they know is that the environmental fines are "at the discretion" of the govt, with no upper limit. While I am pretty sure that there will eventually be some precedence and stabilization, for the short term, they fear that a vindictive inspector (or cash strapped dept) may levy ungodly fines in the mean time. And what do you want to bet that private sector developers will get the heaviest fines and govt jobs will get a pass, just like govt projects seem to have an easier time working around wetland regulations?
Short term, it will stifle a lot of private new construction given how scared contractors seem to be (based on just a few conversations I have had). I am not arguing against better environmental regulations, but perhaps just their timing. How can Obama not see the correlation between instilling fear in small and medium size businesses and them pulling in the reins until they see what will happen legislatively with this and health care? I mean he has tossed about a dozen game changing programs in the air, yet passed none to date. To me, it seems like the most natural thing in the world to set on the sidelines and hunker down, no?
Oh yeah, and to keep it on topic, I hear Obama isn't that good a golfer and doesn't care a hoot about preserving our classic courses. The nerve!