{"id":18122,"date":"2011-09-09T17:02:45","date_gmt":"2011-09-09T17:02:45","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2011-09-09T17:02:45","modified_gmt":"2011-09-09T17:02:45","slug":"a_short_history_of_us_pensions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rushlimbaugh.com\/daily\/2011\/09\/09\/a_short_history_of_us_pensions\/","title":{"rendered":"A Short History of US Pensions"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>RUSH: I think what\u2019s called for, ladies and gentlemen, is a brief history of pensions. It was General Motors and the United Auto Workers who started the first pension plan in the US. There were some railroad workers who had them prior to that. But the main concept, the big-time pension concept started with UAW and General Motors. Why? Very simple reason. Before World War II there were very few pensions. As I say, mostly railroads. But pensions, like health care, were offered by companies like General Motors during World War II to attract better employees, and this happened because of FDR\u2019s wage freeze. So there was a freeze on wages, which meant by definition you couldn\u2019t pay people more than X, but yet you needed to attract good employees.<\/p>\n<p><BR\/>So a way was devised to exceed FDR\u2019s wage freeze, and that was health care benefits and pensions. They had no other way to compete. Now, the reason wage controls and <\/line><img decoding=\"async\" id=\"eZObject_53929\" class=\"alignright\" align=\"right\" src=\"https:\/\/live-rush-limbaugh.pantheonsite.io\/wp-content\/uploads\/pension-1.jpg\"\/><BR\/>price controls never work &#8212; and I love this example &#8212; back in 1972, Richard Nixon, when we had I think 3% inflation, or 3% unemployment, it was not bad at all but we were in the middle of a faux oil embargo, instituted wage and price controls. Yet when you went to the grocery store, things still seemed to cost more and the way that happened was very simple. The butcher would simply devise at the meat counter a new cut that came into existence after the price control was placed on beef, and he could price it whatever he wanted. It was new and not subject to the price control until the price was established.<\/line><\/p>\n<p>So just to pick one, the bone-in rib eye, I have no idea if that existed before Nixon or not, but say it had not existed, the bone-in rib eye, all of a sudden the butcher makes a new cut, the bone-in rib eye and charges X for it, and that is how the butcher in a meat market or the supermarket got around the price controls. Similarly when it came to wages, hello stock options, hello pension plans, health care health care benefits, hello all of that stuff, government attempting to control always runs up against creative entrepreneurs who will find ways around it. So FDR institutes a wage freeze, and in World War II, companies that need qualified workers start to offer attractive employment packages to get good qualified people, and so they started to attract pensions and health care benefits.<\/p>\n<p>And I think, folks, that the pension General Motors history is a good point to reiterate because most people don\u2019t realize what a new idea public pensions are. It\u2019s just since World War II, when the country and US businesses were flush. They had very little competition. Now, in 1980 there were approximately 250,000 qualified, defined benefit pension plans covered by the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation. By 2005 there are now less than 80,000 qualified plans. So in 25 years we\u2019ve gone from 250,000 qualified, defined benefit pension plans to less than 80,000 qualified, defined pension plans. God knows how many there are now. It\u2019s gonna be less than 80,000 now because 2005 is six years ago, and probably most of them are union or public sector union pension plans. That\u2019s how all this got started, price controls and wage controls, pure and simple.<\/p>\n<p>BREAK TRANSCRIPT<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Health care benefits came out of price controls. It\u2019s a perfect example of unintended consequences. Health care benefits and pensions coming out of price controls and wage controls is a great example of unintended consequences. And then they just caught on, and then, once they caught on, it became clear what they were, money laundering schemes. Simply a way for the Democrat Party to engineer money circuitously ending up back under it\u2019s control. The way that works is quite simple. Let\u2019s go back to Wisconsin. Citizen A pays taxes from work he does in the private sector. Some of those taxes are state taxes. Those taxes combined with the taxes of other citizens in Wisconsin pay the salaries of state workers in Wisconsin. Those state workers are members of unions, as such, they pay dues. So tax revenue from citizens in Wisconsin ends up as union dues, which end up in the Democrat Party. Money laundering operation, pure and simple.<\/p>\n<p>I mean how much money do you think union dues goes to the Republicans? And that takes us to the first Obama stimulus. Who got the money? Obama is now even laughing about the fact that there weren\u2019t that many private sector shovel-ready jobs. The people that got the money in the stimulus plan were primarily women who worked for state and local governments. That\u2019s who got the money, so that they would not be laid off during the recession, and the reason it was important they not be laid off is because they paid dues. They\u2019re union members. So the stimulus plan was a slush fund whose ultimate purpose was to see that the $787 billion that was spent was largely returned to the Democrat Party and then spread out among various candidates from Obama on down to whoever qualified for it based on their ranking within the Democrat Party.<\/p>\n<p>There wasn\u2019t any private sector job creation with Obama\u2019s stimulus. There was simply saving state jobs. Now, that stimulus money\u2019s gone, it\u2019s been spent, and there have now been layoffs. You see what happened in Wisconsin. The stimulus money ran out, and look what happened, a new Republican governor had to go and say, &#8220;You know, we don\u2019t have any money here and we\u2019re gonna have to make some changes here in collective bargaining.&#8221; The Ponzi scheme had finally dried up, and it\u2019s going to happen in other states in time, hence Obama\u2019s jobs speech Thursday requesting another stimulus, which will be another money laundering operation intended for Democrat reelection campaign funds. It will not be about private sector job creation because, ladies and gentlemen, it is not possible for the government to take a dollar out of the private sector and grow it at the same time. The math simply doesn\u2019t work.<\/p>\n<p><BR\/>Let\u2019s use some numbers. Let\u2019s say the private sector in this country is &#8212; let\u2019s make it easy &#8212; $10,000. That\u2019s the total amount of money in the private sector. Obama comes along<\/line><img decoding=\"async\" id=\"eZObject_53930\" class=\"alignright\" align=\"right\" src=\"https:\/\/live-rush-limbaugh.pantheonsite.io\/wp-content\/uploads\/pension-2.jpg\"\/><BR\/> and says, &#8220;We need to create jobs. We need more jobs in the private sector. So we\u2019re going to spend $2,000. We\u2019re gonna inject $2,000 in the private sector.&#8221; Okay, where are they going to get the $2,000? The government doesn\u2019t produce anything, the government doesn\u2019t have any money. In order to get the $2,000 to put to the private sector they have to take it from the private sector, or they have to print it, or they have to borrow it, all of which takes money out of the private sector. I don\u2019t care how they get their money, it comes out of the private sector.<\/line><\/p>\n<p>Government ends up growing, the private sector shrinks, unemployment goes up, the $10,000 that was the private sector now becomes eight. And they want to redistribute that, claim they redistribute it to the people who are more deserving of it than others. It is one giant scam. You simply cannot, even in redistribution, whose goal is to be fair, you can\u2019t take one dollar out of the private sector, and after you\u2019ve taken it, then give it to somebody else in the private sector and say that you\u2019ve grown the economy. Nothing\u2019s changed, \u2019til somebody else has the dollar you took out. And if you give that dollar to somebody that\u2019s not working, then you are subsidizing unproductivity, and you are shrinking economic growth where people exist and want jobs, while at the same time expanding the size of government and its power. All the while, you claim to be creating jobs and caring about the little guy, when in fact all you\u2019re doing is shafting the little guy by taking opportunity away from him.<\/p>\n<p>You want to raise taxes on the rich, be fair, fine, raise taxes on the rich, what does that do? Takes money away from them, and where does it go? It goes to government. A lot of people think if you raise taxes on the rich somehow it\u2019s gonna end up with the poor, but the poor are still poor after taxes go up on the rich. It just never happens. You take money out of the private sector, private sector gets smaller, it doesn\u2019t grow, and therefore there are no jobs. This is essentially what Barack Obama has done on purpose, and that\u2019s what he\u2019s gonna propose on Thursday, is more of it on the theory that they just haven\u2019t spent enough yet. But government spending, creating jobs is a mathematical and actual metaphysical, or physical, whichever, impossibility. It cannot happen. The government doesn\u2019t start small businesses; it obstructs the creation of them. And once they start up, it taxes them and makes it even harder for them to grow.<\/p>\n<p>That is Barack Obama, that\u2019s Keynesian, that\u2019s leftism, socialism, whatever you want to call it. Doesn\u2019t work. And all the while Obama is gonna speak, make you think that what his desire is is for your economic circumstances in your community, throughout the private sector to improve, while he is actually shrinking it. As our buddy at Reuters, James Pethokoukis points out, if the payroll numbers were the same today as they were when Obama took office, the unemployment number would be 11.2%, meaning the universe of jobs in the private sector has actually shrunk, by design. When you take money out of the private sector, that\u2019s all that can happen. There just are fewer jobs to be had. They\u2019ve been destroyed.<\/p>\n<p>Now, on top of that you throw all these pensions and lifetime health care benefits in, and you get total destruction, which is where we are. Maybe Obama does not want to end this recession. Some say that FDR purposefully prolonged the Great Depression to get his socialist agenda pushed through. I would not doubt Obama is doing the same thing. We don\u2019t have a guy who loves this country the way you and I do. He has a chip on his shoulder about this country. He needs a continued crisis. He needs a never-ending crisis to be able to push through these bits of legislation, otherwise very unpopular.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>RUSH: I think what\u2019s called for, ladies and gentlemen, is a brief history of pensions. It was General Motors and the United Auto Workers who started the first pension plan in the US. There were some railroad workers who had them prior to that. But the main concept, the big-time pension concept started with UAW [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":23,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-18122","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.0 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>A Short History of US Pensions - The Rush Limbaugh Show<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/admin.rushlimbaugh.com\/daily\/2011\/09\/09\/a_short_history_of_us_pensions\/\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:title\" content=\"A Short History of US Pensions - The Rush Limbaugh Show\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:description\" content=\"RUSH: I think what\u2019s called for, ladies and gentlemen, is a brief history of pensions. 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