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UncommonSense

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  1. There are several fundamental structural problems with the current set arrangement of democratic structures around the World. One case in point is the current conflict between the city of Seattle Washington and the large businesses that are headquartered in the city. Fundamental Problems with democracy Government leaders do not share in profits so have the incentive to seem compassionate and not to maximize growth in population or revenue Leaders in a democracy change frequently so that no one’s reputation or brand is on the line when they change the rules. The key costs like taxes are not nailed down contractually for long periods of time (decades or more) But they could be in a corporate federation The municipality and the state is too large and there are large costs associated with moving the long distance from one jurisdiction to another One of the problems with democratic governments at the state and municipal level is their ability to arbitrarily change the rules of the game at any time. It becomes excruciatingly difficult to engage in the kind of long-term planning that large-scale businesses need to engage in when you have a substantial line item on the cost side of your ledger that is subject to change with little or no notice. One example of this kind of short notice rule changing is currently taking place in Seattle Washington. The City counsel of Seattle recently floated the idea of imposing a 26 cent per man hour worked per employee on any company with a gross revenue of more than $20 million. This comes out to about $540 per employee per year. This included companies who are headquartered in the city like Starbuck’s and Amazon. Amazon was in the midst of building an office tower capable of housing approximately 7,000 additional employees. This would be in addition to the 40,000 employees that Amazon already employs in the city. This means that the new tax would cost $20 million in new taxes even without the additional expansion. Amazon had already sunk several million dollars into the new tower but stopped construction in response to the city counsel’s proposed employee head tax on large companies. When the counsel later reduced the proposed tax increase to $275 per employee Amazon resumed construction. Amazon’s Vice President Drew Herdener warned that Amazon remains, "very apprehensive about the future created by the council’s hostile approach and rhetoric toward larger businesses, which forces us to question our growth here.” The interesting thing about this particular situation is that this “head tax” is being justified to solve a homelessness problem that is largely the result of other Seattle government policy relating to zoning. "Normally, higher prices would induce more construction, but zoning laws prevent that," Glenn Kelman, CEO of Redfin Corp. wrote in a blog post on Tuesday. The Seattle-based real estate company did not sign on to a widely circulated petition opposing the tax, but Kelman did argue that it would ultimately fall short. "The amount of housing the city can build with a head tax, or any tax, is nominal," he wrote. While homelessness is driven by many factors, including the nationwide opioid epidemic and the state’s meager mental health resources, new research indicates the city’s rising housing costs corresponds to increases in the number of people without shelter. A pro bono report that McKinsey & Co. produced for the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce found a “96 percent statistical correlation between the region’s rent increases and the increase in homelessness,” according to the Seattle Times. These two data points taken together make it clear that the solution here is for the city to make it a priority to prove private sector expansion of housing and transportation infrastructure. This is a supply and demand problem that the private sector is more than capable of solving by streamlining the approval process for housing. High rents and high market sales prices are extremely attractive to developers but the city is not allowing them to proceed with plans that would be tremendously profitable to developers and immensely valuable to the employees of the companies that are flocking to the Seattle area for the AI software developer talent. How to Solve the Fundamental Problems: First to solve the problem of government leaders not having an incentive to facilitate growth in population and revenue flip government completely upside-down. I talk about this in detail on my youtube channel UncommonSenseUSA and will elaborate in my upcoming book but here are the essential elements of radical reform that could fundamentally solve the problems prevalent in all democratic governments. The solution is a completely new form of governmental organization that flips the relationship between companies and governments on its head. Here are the bullet points in a nutshell. They will seem shocking and ridiculous at first. All new ideas do, so buckle up. 1. All property in a given area should be owned by a single company. Private ownership means the non-government owner has skin in the game and wants the area to prosper so that they can maximize revenue. They are also held accountable because if they fail to govern well they will lose customers (citizens) and will not attract new citizens or businesses. 2. The company needs to allow people groups with to charter very small government authorities within the land that they own. These mini-governments or “townships” should be no more than one square mile or so or 5,000 to 15,000 people. Small size of each township is important because it allows each individual to move from one township to another without having to move a great distance from their job, family, or geographic areas they want to live close to. This forces townships to compete for citizens but allows each one to be unique and actor to religious or philosophical niches that a larger government could never accommodate. 3. Taxes should be a two-way negotiation and put down in a contract that is guaranteed to remain unchanged for a specified number of years. This would be like a long-term lease or a cell phone contract or a mortgage. By entering into a tax contract with a private corporation you don’t have to work about your taxes changing during the agreed time frame. Then when the contract is up you are free to shop around and find another jurisdiction or to renegotiate a better deal. If we really want to see a day where the government does not act the way governments act, we need to totally rethink the idea of government and design a power structure that flips everything upside-down. Host of UncommonSenseUSA: Michael Conn https://www.facebook.com/Uncommon-Sense-USA-1222350231143031/?ref=bookmarks https://twitter.com/TwoUncommon https://www.youtube.com/user/UncommonSenseUSA Amazon fight with Seattle is one Example of How Democracy Fundimentally Doesnt Work.pages Amazon fight with Seattle is one Example of How Democracy Fundimentally Doesnt Work.docx
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