The Look on Scott Jennings' Face When a Guest Discussed Susie Wiles' Vanity...
These Four Traitors in the House GOP Screwed Over Mike Johnson. They Have...
Kamala Harris Got Something Right for a Change
Defunding Planned Parenthood – ACLJ Files 7th Brief to Defund Abortion
Jack Smith Just Made the Most Ridiculous Claim About His Investigation Into Trump
This Is How Democrats Feel About Jasmine Crockett's Run for Senate
Tennessee Democrat Reminds Us His Party Objects to Enforcing Immigration Laws
Fani Willis Plays the Race Card During Georgia Senate Hearing
Four More Years: Miriam Adelson Jokingly Tells Trump She’ll Back Another Term
Trump’s Push to End Filibuster Gains Traction Among Senate Republicans
A Wave of Antisemitic Attacks Rocks New York City
Appeals Court Hands Trump a Victory Over National Guard Deployment in DC
The Dumbest Assumption in All of Politics
Four Texas Family Members Convicted in $8.5 Million Tax Refund Fraud Scheme
Terror in Australia on Hanukkah: Why People of Faith Must Bring Light—Together
OPINION

Obama Might Not, But Russia Wants to be Rich

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

The first round of the French elections is on Sunday, and it's going to be close. What we will witness is how a country that has been in slow decline and even longer denial decides if it wants to wake up or die in its sleep. I say that because there is no way France can survive the presidency of socialist candidate Francois Hollande.

Advertisement

He is making populist promises that resonate but just cannot be done in a nation with a mountain of debt and slipping economy. Still, Hollande says he will hire 60,000 more teachers, hike taxes, hike the minimum wage, and lower the retirement age.

The problems, however, scream for lower taxes, lower minimum wage and a much older retirement age. The nation's public debt to GDP is 90% and its unemployment as of the last quarter of 2011 stood at 9.8%. French unemployment averaged 9.54% from 1983 to 2010 and has been above 7.0% for the past 30 years. France's share of global GDP has tumbled 25% in the last 15 years.

For all its bragging of open-mindedness and forward thinking, its MPs are on average ten years older than counterparts in Germany and the UK and 15 year older than the average French citizen. The country has serious problems with opportunities for its non-white citizens, and there isn't a woman CEO at any of the country's top 120 companies.

Yet, the French still take pride in not wanting to be rich. They consider it vulgar and believe bone-crushing taxes are the right medicine to punish the rich.

That mindset is why gobs of French money have found a home in Switzerland and Belgium and only 30% of the country's billionaires are self-made compared to 80% in the U.K. The French take pride in their anti-globalization stance, but the fact is they can't compete on the world stage because of costs associated with running its gigantic welfare state. That same welfare state that attracted people from all over the Middle East who now find themselves stuck with no upside hope and seething resentment.

France is in a ton of trouble, and yet, the candidate looking to implement the Buffett Rule on steroids is leading going into the weekend. Heck, the candidate looking to hike minimum wage 30%, hire an army of civil servants and implement a 100% tax on income above $300,000 is polling 15% of the vote.

European Society and Vulgarity

Advertisement

The European Social Survey made the statement: It's important to be rich, have money and expensive things," and asked if it's "like me" or "somewhat like me" or "not like me."







I find it interesting that those nations that have wallowed in economic misery for generations are the ones most eager to be rich. Like ships passing in the night those that ate dirt under communism want a bite at that capitalistic apple while those old and enlightened nations that spent centuries on a quest for unlimited riches are now content to not be rich. I think part of the survey is a lie in the sense that those same nations like the good life, but I think they would like to be able to enjoy it without sweating so much.


Of course, France has the largest reading on "not me" replies to being rich, a whopping 62% say they don't want to be rich.

The good news for those folks is that they won't be rich, but they will be hypocrites as the best jobs go to those with kin positioned to give them a shot while everyone else slips further into the welfare state that will eventually buckle to economic realities and riots for more. In fact take a look at the table and what you will see is that those arrogant nations that think being rich is vulgar are experiencing very slow economic growth.

On the other hand, those that want to be rich are on their way. Be careful what you ask for, you just might get it. But, those that are hungry are going to one day eat your lunch.




The World is On Fire
I'm flipping the channel last night and see Bill Maher with the most bogus chart ever. It showed fourth quarter GDP for America and a few other nations. America was 3.0% and all the others were much lower, some were negative. Bull!!!
Advertisement


All those countries were old stodgy European countries that have already wrecked themselves with the very policies Obama and Maher claim are the cure. In the meantime, that table somehow missed these countries (and their GDP growth) Angola (3.4), Argentina (7.3), Chile (4.5), China (8.9), Columbia (6.1), India (6.1), Indonesia (6.5), Israel (3.7), Kazakhstan (8.7), Latvia (5.7), Lithuania (4.3), Malaysia (5.2), Mexico (3.7), Mongolia (14.9), Namibia (3.80), Paraguay (3.4), Peru (5.5), Saudi Arabia (6.8), Singapore (3.6), South Korea (3.3) and Sri Lanka (8.43).

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement