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	<title>Vermont Libertarian Party Blog &#187; cal thomas</title>
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		<title>April 2006 Newsletter</title>
		<link>http://www.vtlp.org/blog/134/april-2006-newsletter/</link>
		<comments>http://www.vtlp.org/blog/134/april-2006-newsletter/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Apr 2006 09:59:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Newsletter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ben todd]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob Wolffe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cal thomas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[convention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[david atkinson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[death with dignity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hardy Machia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeff Manney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kevin volz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[strong third party]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taxes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vermont]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vermont libertarian party candidates]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://vtlp2.org/?p=134</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[April 2006 Newsletter]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>******************************************************</p>
<p>
<center><br />
            VERMONT LIBERTARIAN NEWS<br />
                April 3, 2006</p>
<p>
     Sponsored by The Vermont Libertarian Party</p>
<p>http://www.vtlp.org</p>
<p></center></p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
TABLE OF CONTENTS</p>
<p>
1. From the Chair<br />
	$73, Blog, Convention Speakers<br />
2. Convention Schedule <br />
3. Libertarians call on the Legislature to act on Death with Dignity bill<br />
4. Vermont has Highest State Tax Burden in Country <br />
5. Columnist Cal Thomas says &#8220;it&#8217;s time strong third party&#8221;<br />
6. Calendar of Events<br />
       Apr 22, 10 M: State Committee Mtg, City Hall, Montpelier<br />
       Apr 29, 9:30AM-4PM: State Convention, Montpelier<br />
7. Donate, Volunteer, Run for Office<br />
8. Unsubscribe</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
1. FROM THE CHAIR</p>
<p>
Thanks to many generous supporters our 10/10/10 fund raiser is wrapping<br />
up on April 15th. We raised another $1000 last month &#8211; putting us within<br />
$73 of reaching our goal of $10,000. If all our readers could donate a<br />
dollar, it would put us easily over the top. You can use PayPal to donate -<br />
in the right hand column at http://www.vtlp.org/ </p>
<p>
When you visit http://www.vtlp.org, you will notice that we now have a<br />
blog. Just under Upcoming Events is the Recent News section. Here you<br />
will find something new just about every day. (If you know about RSS<br />
feeds, then you can watch our blog at feed://www.vtlp.org/feeds/.)</p>
<p>
Later this month:</p>
<p>
Come celebrate with like minded Vermonters on April 29 at the Capital<br />
Plaza in Montpelier at the Vermont Libertarian Party state convention.<br />
We have a great line up of speakers. </p>
<ul>
<li> Ethan Allen travels through time to add some revolutionary gusto to<br />
the party.</p>
<li>Rob Williams, editor of &#8220;Vermont Commons&#8221;, a monthly newspaper<br />
and multimedia forum championing Vermont independence ? political, economic,<br />
social, and spiritual.</p>
<li>Martin Harris of Vermont Citizens for Property Rights
<li>James Dwinell, publisher of the weekly e-mail Dwinell Report.
<li>Professor Frank Bryan is one of Vermont best known political writers<br />
and humorists. Author of Real Democracy, The Vermont Papers, Real Vermonters<br />
Don&#8217;t Milk Goats, Vermont Quiz Book, and many others.
</ul>
<p>
Register for the convention online at</p>
<p>http://www.vtlp.org/main/vtlp-convention.asp</p>
<p>
		Hardy Machia</p>
<p>
		Chair, Vermont Libertarian Party</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
2. CONVENTION SCHEDULE</p>
<p>
        Vermont Libertarian Party Convention 2006</p>
<p>
         Capitol Plaza Hotel &#038; Conference Center</p>
<p>
          100 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont</p>
<p>
         Saturday, April 29, 8:30 a.m. ? 4 p.m.</p>
<p>
FOR RESERVATIONS OR MORE CONVENTION INFORMATION CONTACT:<br />
SCOTT BERKEY AT 802-728-6211 OR BERKEYSCOTT@HOTMAIL.COM<br />
                Online Reservation Form<br />
     (http://www.vtlp.org/main/vtlp-convention.asp)</p>
<p>
MORNING SESSION<br />
	8:30 a.m. Registration Opens<br />
	9:30 a.m. Chair?s Welcome, Recognition of VIP?s<br />
	10:00 a.m. Introduction of Attending Vendors<br />
	10:15 a.m. Nomination of Delegates to the National Convention<br />
	10:30 a.m. Adoption of Campaign 2006 Platform<br />
	12:00 p.m. Break</p>
<p>
AFTERNOON SESSION<br />
	12:30 p.m. Luncheon (Reservations Required)<br />
		Ethan Allen travels through time to speak<br />
	2:00 p.m. Guest Speakers (Tickets Required $10)<br />
	Rob Williams, Vermont Commons/Second Vermont Republic<br />
	Martin Harris, Citizens for Property Rights<br />
	James Dwinell, Dwinell Political Report<br />
	3:00 p.m. Keynote Speaker: ?Frank Bryan<br />
	4:00 p.m. Social Hour</p>
<p>
Lunch: Seating for lunch is by reservation only. Reservation may be<br />
placed with Scott Berkey by calling (802) 728-6211, emailing<br />
berkeyscott@hotmail.com?or through our online reservation form<br />
(http://www.vtlp.org/main/vtlp-convention.asp). The price is $25 per<br />
person if paid in advance and $30 if paid on the day of the convention.<br />
The ticket for the speakers is included in the cost of lunch.<br />
A vegetarian option is available. </p>
<p>
Directions: The Capitol Plaza is located at 100 State Street in<br />
Montpelier. Exit 8 off I-89, merge onto Memorial Drive. At second stop<br />
light take a left onto Bailey Avenue. At intersection take right onto<br />
State Street. Vermont State House is on your left, 1/2 block on the<br />
Right is Capitol Plaza Hotel. The phone number is (802) 223-5252.</p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
3. Libertarians call on the Legislature to act on Death with Dignity<br />
bill</p>
<p>
March 13, Libertarian Party chair Hardy Machia spoke out in support of<br />
death with dignity legislation that would allow people to retain the<br />
right to make their end-of-life decisions themselves.</p>
<p>
Libertarian Party State Chair Hardy Machia said, &#8220;Freedom starts with<br />
the individual, and each individual is the owner of his own mind, body,<br />
and spirit. The Death with Dignity bill respects this fundamental right<br />
by allowing individuals to make decisions about how they want to live<br />
their lives, and how they want to end their lives. We call on the<br />
legislature to act on the death with dignity bill [H.168] this session.&#8221;</p>
<p>
The Libertarian Party looks with approval on Oregon&#8217;s eight-year-old<br />
assisted-suicide law that allows doctors to help terminally ill patients<br />
who wish to end their lives. The Party disagrees with the Bush<br />
administration&#8217;s argument against the Oregon law, that that hastening<br />
death with medication violates federal drug provisions. Libertarians<br />
believe that no federal or state provisions should truncate the<br />
fundamental right of human beings over their own lives and bodies.</p>
<p>
Libertarians agree with the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision rendered<br />
in Gonzales v. Oregon that upheld Oregon&#8217;s Death with Dignity Act by a<br />
vote of 6-3. &#8220;It is time for Vermont to pass similar legislation to take<br />
a more libertarian approach to matters that are so intimate and personal<br />
to our people,&#8221; Machia said.</p>
<p>
The Death with Dignity bill [H.168] is currently in the House Human<br />
Services Committee.</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************<br />
4. Vermont has Highest State Tax Burden in Country</p>
<p>
Burlington, Vermont &#8212; March 31, 2006</p>
<p>
A new report says Vermonters pay more state taxes than people from any<br />
other state.</p>
<p>
According to the federal report released Friday, overall state taxation<br />
rose from $1.8 billion to $2.4 billion in one year. That&#8217;s an increase<br />
of 33%.</p>
<p>
That pushes the per capita tax burden to $3,600, the highest state tax<br />
burden in the country, but the numbers do not paint an entirely accurate<br />
picture.</p>
<p>
The new federal report is misleading. It turns out that Vermonters state<br />
tax burden is not as bad as reported, but then again, as one expert made<br />
very clear, Vermonters are still among the highest taxed in the country.</p>
<p>
&#8220;One of the things that the Census Bureau did was this year was change<br />
its methodology,&#8221; said Art Woolf, University of Vermont Professor of<br />
Economics.</p>
<p>
Woolf says it is the Census Bureau decision to include Vermont property<br />
tax payments that accounts for the misleading impression that Vermonters<br />
are paying the highest state taxes per person.</p>
<p>
&#8220;So Vermont&#8217;s zoomed up in the rankings because it used to be that a lot<br />
of property taxes were seen as a local tax, part of it was a state tax<br />
and now they&#8217;ve just taken the entire property tax and put it in the<br />
state tax which is why we&#8217;re number one in the nation in total state<br />
taxes per capita,&#8221; explained Woolf.</p>
<p>
Woolf points out that while state taxes may not be as burdensome as<br />
indicated in the new report, Vermonters nevertheless remain among the<br />
highest taxed citizens in the nation, especially individuals and<br />
families that make income over 60-thousand dollars.</p>
<p>
&#8220;Well we are highly taxed. We&#8217;re one of the top ten states in the<br />
country in terms of our total taxes as a percent of the income we earn,&#8221;<br />
said Woolf.</p>
<p>
Maine residents pay the highest overall taxes in the nation, while New<br />
Hampshire residents, by far, according to Art Woolf, have the lightest<br />
overall tax burden per person.</p>
<p>
Brian Joyce &#8211; Channel 3 News</p>
<p>http://www.wcax.com/global/story.asp?s=4710624</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
5. Columnist Cal Thomas says &#8220;it&#8217;s time strong third party, or failing<br />
that, another revolution&#8221;</p>
<p>
The following editorial appeared in the Burlington Freepress. Cal Thomas<br />
joins Alan Greenspan and others in calling for a strong third party.</p>
<p>
Spending obscenities</p>
<p>
By Cal Thomas</p>
<p>
Mar 21, 2006</p>
<p>
Not so long ago, in a country that now seems far, far away, Ronald<br />
Reagan told the nation: &#8220;we don&#8217;t have deficits because people are taxed<br />
too little. We have deficits because big government spends too much.&#8221;</p>
<p>
He uttered those words in a year when Democrats controlled the House<br />
(the body in which spending legislation originates) and the national<br />
debt, according to the Bureau of Public Debt, was $2.3 trillion.</p>
<p>
Last week, a Republican Senate voted to raise the debt ceiling to nearly<br />
$9 trillion. Senators quickly passed a record $2.8 trillion budget. What<br />
would Reagan say now? He said then, &#8220;the federal deficit is outrageous.<br />
For years I&#8217;ve asked that we stop pushing onto our children the excesses<br />
of our government.&#8221; He called for a balanced budget amendment to the<br />
Constitution and labeled the budget process a &#8220;sorry spectacle.&#8221; That<br />
Republicans are outspending the most reckless 1980s Democrat (and 1960s<br />
Great Society Democrats and 1940s FDR Democrats) is the sorriest<br />
spectacle of all.</p>
<p>
The Senate vote increased the debt ceiling for the fourth time in five<br />
years. The statutory debt limit has now risen by more than $3 trillion<br />
since President Bush took office. That any Republican majority could<br />
preside over such fiscally irresponsible spending ought to be grounds<br />
for revoking their party membership.</p>
<p>
This is mostly about politics, not terrorism. Republicans fear that only<br />
gobs of money will endear them to voters in sufficient numbers to<br />
re-elect their increasingly precarious majority. Why should Republicans<br />
be re-elected when one of the major reasons the GOP exists is to reduce<br />
the size and cost of government and free more people to do for<br />
themselves instead of restricting their liberties through costly and<br />
overreaching big government?</p>
<p>
Sen. Jim DeMint, South Carolina Republican, rightly blamed<br />
out-of-control spending on his colleagues&#8217; political nervousness: &#8220;They<br />
want to go and say they are helping people, but we are not helping<br />
people when we are selling out their future.&#8221;</p>
<p>
DeMint might have added that it doesn&#8217;t help people to cause them to<br />
rely on and pay for ever-expanding government. Such a policy stifles<br />
initiative and personal responsibility and discourages incentive. It<br />
goes against the &#8220;Puritan ethic&#8221; that was one of America&#8217;s foundational<br />
principles.</p>
<p>
Sen. Lindsey Graham, South Carolina Republican, observed, &#8220;This budget<br />
could be the final nail in our coffin if we don&#8217;t watch it.&#8221; Graham said<br />
Republican spending habits are demoralizing voters: &#8220;I don&#8217;t think we<br />
properly understand the keys to our electoral success.&#8221;</p>
<p>
Sen. Arlen Specter, Pennsylvania Republican, defended spending an<br />
additional $7 billion for health and education programs, claiming those<br />
areas have lacked money in recent years. Is he kidding? The Bush<br />
administration has sired the biggest new entitlement program in history<br />
- a prescription drug benefit for the elderly. And let&#8217;s not forget &#8220;No<br />
Child Left Behind,&#8221; which massively increased federal education spending<br />
when there is no evidence of a connection between money and academic<br />
achievement.</p>
<p>
Perhaps the real culprit is not Congress, but us. The Pew Research<br />
Center poll of March 14 found that only 55 percent of Americans rate the<br />
deficit as a &#8220;top priority.&#8221; That contrasts with the 1990s when the<br />
deficit resonated more strongly with voters. As long as we are willing<br />
to take the money in exchange for our votes, politicians will give it to<br />
us. This must change, not only because we are in debt up to our<br />
eyeballs, but also because many of the note holders are, or might<br />
become, our enemies.</p>
<p>
Means testing for all government programs and term limits for Congress<br />
are the answer to never-ending debt, but neither is likely to happen.</p>
<p>
Reagan said his favorite president was Calvin Coolidge. In 1923, when<br />
Coolidge was vice president, he said, &#8220;After order and liberty, economy<br />
is one of the highest essentials of a free government.&#8221;</p>
<p>
Coolidge left the presidency with a surplus. So did Bill Clinton. That a<br />
Republican Congress and administration are engaging in such promiscuous<br />
spending is obscene. If voting in Democrats -who in the past engaged in<br />
deficit spending &#8211; punishes Republicans, little will change. What to do?</p>
<p>
Maybe it&#8217;s time for a strong third party, or failing that, another<br />
revolution.</p>
<p>
Cal Thomas is the co-author of Blinded By Might.</p>
<p>
Copyright ? 2006 Townhall.com</p>
<p>
Find this story at: http://www.townhall.com/opinion/column/calthomas/2006/03/21/190629.html</p>
<p><p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
6. CALENDAR OF EVENTS</p>
<p>
April 22 (10AM &#8211; Saturday): VTLP State Committee Meeting at City Hall in<br />
           Montpelier. Use the back door, go up stairs, Memorial Room<br />
           is on right.</p>
<p>
April 29 (9:30AM-4PM): VTLP State Convention. Capital Plaza Hotel, Montpelier.</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
7. DONATE, VOLUNTEER, RUN FOR OFFICE</p>
<p>
To make a contribution to the Vermont Libertarian Party or to sign</p>
<p>
your friends up for the newsletter, visit us on the web at</p>
<p>http://www.vtlp.org.</p>
<p>
If you are interested in volunteering or running for office, then</p>
<p>
contact Hardy Machia at chair@vtlp.org.</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
8. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR / SUBMIT AN ARTICLE</p>
<p>
For information or to submit news, letters, or articles, contact</p>
<p>
Hardy Machia, Chair, Vermont Libertarian Party, chair@vtlp.org,</p>
<p>
(802) 372-9512.</p>
<p>
<p>
******************************************************</p>
<p>
The VERMONT LIBERTARIAN NEWS is a publication of the Vermont Libertarian</p>
<p>
Party, PO Box 5475, Burlington, VT 05402.  All Rights Reserved.</p>
<p>
Copyright ? 2006.</p>
<p>
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