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BOSS - Letter to Employees

 
We had two comments regarding this article. I appologize for not having traced down the original author(s) as a friend of mine just emailed this to me without any reference, in a hurry to pass this great article along I simply put down "anonymous" - I am sorry if it looks like plagiarism - my fault entirely. Looks like it's from Dr.Peter who wrote it and published it Jan 06.09
My friend of many decades emailed this to me lacking the author,  because of the uncanny resemblance with my own experience. In our case we simply moved our business offshore, back in 2004. Turned out to be our best decision of a lifetime.

To All My Valued Employees,  (Anonymous)

>
>     There have been some rumblings around the office about the future
> of this company, and more specifically, your job. As you know, the
> economy has changed for the worse and presents many challenges.
> However, the good news is this: The economy doesn't pose a threat to
> your job. What does threaten your job however, is the changing
> political landscape in this country.
>
> However, let me tell you some little tidbits of fact which might help
> you decide what is in your best interests.
>
> First, while it is easy to spew rhetoric that casts employers against
> employees, you have to understand that for every business owner there
> is a back story. This back story is often neglected and overshadowed by
> what you see and hear. Sure, you see me park my Mercedes outside.
> You've seen my big home at last year's Christmas party. I'm sure; all
> these flashy icons of luxury conjure up some idealized thoughts about
> my life.
>
> However, what you don't see is the back story.
>
> I started this company 28 years ago. At that time, I lived in a 300
> square foot studio apartment for 3 years. My entire living apartment
> was converted into an office so I could put forth 100% effort into
> building a company,=2
> 0which by the way, would eventually employ you.
>
> My diet consisted of Ramen Pride noodles because every dollar I spent
> went back into this company. I drove a rusty Toyota Corolla with a
> defective transmission. I didn't have time to date. Often times, I
> stayed home on weekends, while my friends went out drinking and
> partying. In fact, I was married to my business -- hard work,
> discipline, and sacrifice.
>
> Meanwhile, my friends got jobs. They worked 40 hours a week and made a
> modest $50K a year and spent every dime they earned. They drove flashy
> cars and lived in expensive homes and wore fancy designer clothes.
> Instead of hitting the Nordstrom's for the latest hot fashion item, I
> was trolling through the Goodwill store extracting any clothing item
> that didn't look like it was birthed in the 70's. My friends refinanced
> their mortgages and lived a life of luxury. I, however, did not. I put
> my time, my money, and my life into a business with a vision that
> eventually, some day, I too, will be able to afford these luxuries my
> friends supposedly had.
>
> So, while you physically arrive at the office at 9am, mentally check in
> at about noon, and then leave at 5pm, I don't. There is no "off" button
> for me. When you leave the office, you are done and you have a weekend
> all to yourself. I unfortunately do not have the freedom. I eat, and
> breathe this company every minute of the day. There is no rest.20There
> is no weekend. There is no happy hour. Every day this business is
> attached to my hip like a 1 year old special-needs child. You, of
> course, only see the fruits of that garden -- the nice house, the
> Mercedes, the vacations... You never realize the back story and the
> sacrifices I've made.
>
> Now, the economy is falling apart and I, the guy that made all the
> right decisions and saved his money, have to bail-out all the people
> who didn't. The people that overspent their paychecks suddenly feel
> entitled to the same luxuries that I earned and sacrificed a decade of
> my life for.
>
> Yes, business ownership has is benefits but the price I've paid is
> steep and not without wounds.
>
> Unfortunately, the cost of running this business, and employing you, is
> starting to eclipse the threshold of marginal benefit and let me tell
> you why:
>
> I am being taxed to death and the government thinks I don't pay enough.
> I have state taxes. Federal taxes. Property taxes. Sales and use taxes.
> Payroll taxes. Workers compensation taxes. Unemployment taxes. Taxes on
> taxes. I have to hire a tax man to manage all these taxes and then
> guess what? I have to pay taxes for employing him. Government mandates
> and regulations and all the accounting that goes with it, now occupy
> most of my time. On Oct 15th, I wrote a check to the US Treasury for
> $288,000 for quarterly taxes. You know what my "stimulus" check was?
>
>
> Zero. Nada. Zilch.
>
> The question I have is this: Who is stimulating the economy? Me, the
> guy who has provided 14 people good paying jobs and serves over
> 2,200,000 people per year with a flourishing business? Or, the single
> mother sitting at home pregnant with her fourth child waiting for her
> next welfare check? Obviously, government feels the latter is the
> economic stimulus of this country.
>
> The fact is, if I deducted (Read: Stole) 50% of your paycheck you'd
> quit and you wouldn't work here. I mean, why should you? That's nuts.
> Who wants to get rewarded only 50% of their hard work? Well, I agree
> which is why your job is in jeopardy.
>
> Here is what many of you don't understand ... to stimulate the economy
> you need to stimulate what runs the economy. Had suddenly government
> mandated to me that I didn't need to pay taxes, guess what? Instead of
> depositing that $288,000 into the Washington black-hole, I would have
> spent it, hired more employees, and generated substantial economic
> growth. My employees would have enjoyed the wealth of that tax cut in
> the form of promotions and better salaries. But you can forget it now.
>
> When you have a comatose man on the verge of death, you don't
> defibrillate and shock his thumb thinking that will bring him back to
> life, do you? Or, do you defibrillate his heart? Business is at the
> heart of America and always has been. To restart it, you must stimulate
> it,=2
> 0not kill it. Suddenly, the power brokers in Washington believe the
> poor of America are the essential drivers of the American economic
> engine. Nothing could be further from the truth and this is the type of
> change you can keep.
>
> So where am I going with all this?
>
> It's quite simple.
>
> If any new taxes are levied on me, or my company, my reaction will be
> swift and simple. I fire you. I fire your co-workers. You can then
> plead with the government to pay for your mortgage, your SUV, and your
> child's future. Frankly, it isn't my problem anymore.
>
> Then, I will close this company down, move to another country, and
> retire. You see, I'm done. I'm done with a country that penalizes the
> productive and gives to the unproductive. My motivation to work and to
> provide jobs will be destroyed, and with it, will be my citizenship.
>
> If you lose your job, it won't be at the hands of the economy; it will
> be at the hands of a political hurricane that swept through this
> country, steamrolled the constitution, and will have changed its
> landscape forever. If that happens, you can find me sitting on a beach,
> retired, and with no employees to worry about....
>
> Signed,
> Your boss

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Great Posts!

Mick O CA - MerryColin AZ - Formerrep A - Rosemary RI - DC NJ - Truly spot on posts! Thank you!

We should start focusing on producing true wealth again.

The predominance of "Service" industries today don't produce real wealth. Selling hamburgers to each other, healthcare, retail, financial services etc. just shuffle wealth around, do not create it.

The production of tangible goods create wealth. We have created an ever growing hostile environment for industries and they have, rightly so, emmigrated to friendlier ones.
Of the two major industries left, Housing which is flat on it's face and will take a decade or more to stand up again and Agriculture, excessively taxesd and over regulated to a point where many are calling it quits (especially the labor intensive sector) or moving offshore like we did several years ago.

The production of tangible goods like automobiles, TV sets, computers, aircraft, food and, yes, energy is what we can call "creating wealth".

We must urgently reverse the trend of over taxing and over regulating our economy or, pretty soon, we will also depend on imports for most of our food.

Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are looming huge in the not so distant future. To the tune of 50+ Trillion Dollars!

The way our weak and incompetent politicians are behaving, we can expect that "bubble" to burst in a scant 10 or 15 years from now and it will make today's financial market woes seem like "petty cash".

We have had a pretty good ride with foreign investors' trusting us by investing their savings over here and allowing our banks to handle their money. These practices have now come to a screeching halt. Our credibility, strictly based on our past glory, is no more. Foreigners will think hard before investing in this country again or using our banking system to handle their funds.

The concentration of Global banking in New York is being diluted now between several markets like London, Luxembourg, Tokyo, Hong Kong and others.
The only solution for us in the not so long term is to aggressively get government off the backs of private enterprise in a big way to lure productive business back to America and grow our economy to where we can prosper again and meet most of our obligations down the road.

The elimination of corporate income taxes, capital gains taxes and curtailment of at least 70% of our frivolous regulations (mostly meant to justify bureaucracies) would go a long way towards prosperity and bring back 10 or more Trillion Dollars for productive capital investments in five years or less.

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Three Chair Shoe-Shine Parlor

The recent crash in our markets with the DOW Industrials below 9.000 is at least, in a significant way, anticipation of socialism in America by an overwhelming number of investors, both American and foreign. Including us.
Should Oblahma get elected, between Nov 05 and Jan 20 you will see the worlds all time record numbers in capital flight.
We cashed in all our stocks and sold properties during the past 4 years and moved our farming operations to Brazil, we also let go over 1.500 seasonal jobs and over 120 year round jobs over here.
We are doing extremely well in Central America and Brazil, especially.
We saw the writing on the wall a little sooner than most, but now the cat is our of the bag and everyone can see it.
America has the world's second highest business taxes and, by far, the highest rates of government meddling with mostly frivolous and untennable regulations. In other words, the business environment in America is almost hostile to business. So, business goes away to friendlier environments like those in Brazil, India, China, Singapore and other countries.
You think it's bad to be dependent on foreign oil ? Wait until America is dependent on foreign food! And that's going to happen very quickly, especially with an Oblahma-Bin-Biden "Peoples Democratic Amerika"
We haven't been producing wealth in decades. Selling hamburgers and stocks to each other don't promote wealth. Neither does our beleaguered healthcare system nor what passes for "education" these days.
Solid goods, not services promote true wealth and that's why Brazil has no debt and relatively large foreign reserves, in cash.
Agriculture is experiencing a sharp decline and housing will take 20 years to recuperate, if ever. These were the last two major real goods producers in America.
Oblahma-Bin-Biden can't be trusted to manage a three chair shoe-shine parlor!
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Sad Outlook

Our main problem is that we don't produce wealth anymore. Brazil, India and China plus assorted smaller countries like Singapore do.
These countries have been capitalizing on our lazyness by promoting friendlier business environments while we have been promoting hostile business environments.
We have taxed our businesses way beyond reasonable and added insult to injury by excessive overregulation in phony "environmental", fiscal, "safety" and a myriad of other petty bureaucratic meddling which is extremely costly. Most of the bureaucratic meddling in fact, has more to do to justify bureaucrat's jobs or expanding them.
There are more Government employees today than actually tax paying productive people.
Of course this couldn't last. We have been living off of past credibility and glory.
The poor uneducated virtual idiots are so great in number that they might actually vote for a charlatan-pink-thug like Obama, an opportunistic evil man.
The numnuts media who are so enamored of him will soon discover that they are the first to be discarded in a Marxist controled state.
In fact, he'd be the last straw as most of our institutions are socialist to some degree.
When the Chinese are really mad at you they wish that you live in "interesting times"...well, we will, for sure.
So, while countries like Brazil, India and China will be experiencing continued prosperity, we will be living through major political and economical upheaval during the next few years, perhaps a decade even or more.
States like California, after years of liberal management, is bankrupt financially, economically, morally and spiritually, with a credit rating akin to that of Bolivia. Yet people still vote for even more of the poison that destroyed them. They deserve what is coming to them.
With an Obama administration you will see price controls, resulting in goods disappearing from the shelves and runaway inflation. We will even have to import most of our food (if they will take our money for it) from places like Brazil and Central America.
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Is Big Government the Solution ?

Is big government the answer?

As presidential candidates call for a "bipartisan" effort to rescue the economy and as Congress debates a deal on a $700 billion bailout for Wall Street, Heritage Foundation President Ed Feulner reminds us that free enterprise, not ever-bigger government, is the real long-term solution.

"As a rule, Congress is good at two things: (1) Doing nothing at all. (2) Overreacting," Feulner writes in the Washington Times.

The government already intervenes heavily in the economy, he explains, and every step toward free enterprise is a step in the right direction. In fact, "Washington could encourage growth on the Street just by getting out of the way."

"The long-term answer isn't more federal control, it's a return to free-market principles," Feulner argues. The bailout needs to be small—both to minimize taxpayer liability and to ensure company managers and stockholders "suffer the consequences of their bad investments."

Furthermore, the bailout legislation should not be "loaded up with goodies for special interests" like a bailout for homeowners who made bad investments. "It shouldn't be a federal concern whether or not someone owns a home."

Congress should repeal the heavy-handed regulation they passed after the Enron scandal, Feulner continues. These counterproductive rules not only failed to prevent the current crisis, but they continue to drive investors overseas just when the economy needs them most.

Feulner also encourages businesses to voluntarily change the way they pay their managers to reward long-term performance instead of risky deals that prop up the bottom line in the short run. "This, of course, should be done by management, not by federal regulation," explained Feulner.

Meanwhile, Heritage's Conn Carroll reports that the left continues to play political games with the bailout, insisting on support from conservatives while "pushing for expanded government power to rewrite mortgage contracts and diverting taxpayer revenue from the sale of distressed assets into a housing slush fund."

—David Talbot

Keeping the bailout constitutional

The draft bailout legislation is deeply troubling from a constitutional perspective, Heritage legal scholars Todd Gaziano and Andrew Grossman write.

They outline four principal constitutional concerns:

Tags: Bailout  
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