1. At its core, every government program sold as a public purpose has a way to fleece the public.

For this fiscal year, after 30-years of population loss, the City of Paris (Texas) hit taxpayers with a 3.5% tax increase, the highest allowed by law without a vote. This “small, measly increase” amounted to about a 7-million, 300,000 thousand dollar budget increase, which roughly averages another $700.37 owed by each of the occupied households inside the city limits just to pay for the increase.

Total Housing Units & Occupancy: 11,854 units, 88% Occupied: 10,432.

The increase was on top of rate increases on water and sewer bills, with a percentage of those fees swiped off and added to the annual general budget, which, if transparency was required, would likely put the increase over the 3.5-percent.


2. The promotion of government programs are far better than the products. Listen to government and everything sounds as good as burial insurance:

The most pernicious of all Big Myths is that the economy and society – at least, any economy that is productive, and any society that is good – are of the results of the state or sponsoring entity. But society is not a manufactured process, however, that can be controlled and managed. It is a living entity, comprised of sentient individuals each with his or her own mind and preferences and fears and hopes.

Stupid people actually believe that socialism is greater than the American Constitution’s construct of individual freedom with equal economic opportunity because it is based on ideas greater than their narrow view of what they see only as greed and self-interest.

But history teaches that it is the collective totalitarian control of society by a nation state that leads to the enslavement and human misery of its citizens.

 

3. Good government can only be achieved by its citizens.

Based on the Paris Chamber’s knowledge of economic incentive programs, gained through years of community and economic development work, we believe that every citizen should be held accountable for the actions of their government. Government is their responsibility.

It’s why we have a vote.

It is in the development and implementation of policies that encourage private business investments in local families and neighborhoods, which encourage business growth and keep the economic gates open to equal economic opportunity and innovation to reward all taxpayers, are how communities and, in turn, economies are likely to achieve success.

 

4. The Paris leadership should remember that community growth will come from Paris being a resource for its citizens.

Instead of contributing to or building a prosperous economy for all Paris families and promoting the creation of good jobs over the last 25-30 years, Paris has actually acted to lose population, deepened the expenses of small businesses, created income inequalities for working families, encouraged blight and decay in many neighborhoods, increased the tax burden on every citizen, and it has done so by meaning to do good.

This is not good government.

But whose fault is it?

 
5. It is the job of a responsible citizenry to remember – and demand – that the local leadership remember how government acts under the THE BIG MYTH, which is government viewing the citizen as
  • a) its servant: “do this, and don’t do that….”
  • b) its resource: “I need more money, its for a [my] common good.” And
  • c) The conscious creation of everything good comes from my blessings and benevolences.”  
 
6. The Texas Legislature meets in a regular session for 140 days every odd numbered year when 181 elected officials delight in making private citizens into common criminals.

Over 8,100 bill were introduced in the 88th Legislative Session; surpassing the 87th Session, which totaled 6,919 bills. Creating laws that control our lives increase every session, creating citizens as criminals and the criminals as isn’t . . .   Soon, we’ll all be in government or criminals.

For the past 40-years, an average  of over 5,000 bills were introduced in each legislative session: You can find more information on the number of bills filed in recent sessions of the Texas Legislature here.

Now, we have over a year of listening to why they need more money and more laws, why the laws we have now need changing (’cause they got it wrong the first time),  and how all the rest of us are so desperately in need of their control because we don’t know – like they do – what’s good for us.

Then during the 89th Legislative Session, in 2025, they’ll listen to the ones who feel they still need more of our money or why we need controlling.

Can you imagine the national corruption in Nutland, D.C., with the 535 elected members of Congress hotly pursued by thousands of lobbyists waving million-dollar bribes to attain some goal outside the best interest of citizens?  If not, you’re probably one of the 83-million plus dead and alive voters who keep us in an outside normal.

 
 A (bonus) basic truth: The PARIS TEXAS CHAMBER brings clarity and transparency to the conversation.

Adding your email address to the Paris Texas Chamber of Commerce mailing list encourages good citizenship. It’s voluntary. It’s free. And you can unsubscribe at any time.

 

return to  Paris Texas Chamber of Commerce

Summertime
When the livin’ is easy
Fish are jumpin’
And the cotton is high
Oh, your daddy’s rich
And your ma is good-lookin’
So hush, little baby
Don’t you cry” 

                                                      –  George Gershwin

                                    It’s Summertime. Again. Time for the Paris Chamber’s annual rant on “Paris Texas – where weeds reach higher”:

The Widow’s mite is often greater than a rich man’s thousands.

The City of Paris codes regarding grass and weeds:   

“It is a violation for any person owning, claiming, occupying, or having control of any property within the city to permit weeds, brush, vegetative growth, or any objectionable or unsightly matter to grow to a height greater than 12 inches.
“If the property is five acres or more, the owner or person in control is required to mow at least a 100-foot perimeter from the property line. 
“If a person fails to comply with these requirements and is convicted in the City of Paris Municipal Court, the fine could be as much as $2,000 for every day the violation exists. The city can also correct the violation at the owner’s expense and assess an administrative penalty of $220. If the costs of the work are not paid within 30 days, a lien will be filed against the property.”

 

A draconian approach – if you’re not one of the who-you-are or the who-do-you know crowd.

                                                But it’s June, and weeds are bustin’ out all over. Again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are weeds – no, grass – all over Paris that’s higher than 12-inches. In some places, weeds are already three feet fall. Some even taller. Many, as they sing in Oklahoma, are as tall as an elephant’s eye.

 

 

Regardless of the policy, there are places where weeds three feet tall (and taller) are still standing from last year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                               

 

 

Pitiful.  

 

 

(There’s no excuse for it.)

              We’ll see what tomorrow brings . . . .                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

Forgive us, but that bit in the code on any “objectionable or unsightly matter” with its 12-inch high requirement: There’s gonna be some really short people walking around if the city ever enforces it.

Why do we have ordinances, if they won’t be or can’t be enforced or enforced equally in all areas inside the Paris city limits?

The city demands that citizens follow the city’s policy and city ordinances when the city, itself, doesn’t do it.  Just look at the city’s rights-of-way.

The Paris Texas Chamber of Commerce actually believes (despite what some may want to claim) that each citizen has an obligation and responsibility to the community in which they live, work or do business. Examples being you don’t litter, rob, steal, injure or kill people, and break other reasonable laws.  We also believe, on the other hand, that a community – even Paris, Texas, where weeds reach higher – also has an obligation and a responsibility to each citizen to act without favoritism or different considerations.

Decisions should never be based on perceived percentages; whether it’s the widow’s mite or the rich man’s thousands.

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                           Paris Texas: “Where Weeds Reach Higher”

 

 

 

 

 

           Darn that dream

and Bless it, too

It haunts me

that it won’t come true

O, darn … darn that dream 

 

Most of the things that we brag about in Paris Texas are amenities, not essentials.  

The difference is important.

Most of the more recent things Paris brags about, such as the Eiffel Tower replica, the Red River Valley Veterans Memorial, the Maxey House, the Lamar County Historical Museum, The Valley of the Caddo Museum, and others, are the result of private efforts; started and carried out to completion by private individuals – while the city has wasted about 13-years and hundreds of thousands of dollars trying to restore the Grand Theater (which, if it ever gets fully restored, may be an amenity).

Even the Civic Center and both prized and re-purposed Depots are the results of large contributions from private funds. 

All these things are amenities. 

And, yes, they are worthwhile, and they contribute to the community.  Oh, sure, the city and other organizations in Paris supported the efforts (the city and the PEDC even giving, when they shouldn’t, tax dollars). But those efforts were started from scratch, led and supported by individuals who achieved the worthwhile results –

Of course, amenities are nice, but they’re not essential.

You can have a house full of amenities, modern or antique, but they are not part of the necessity for basic shelter.  Others may not like or appreciate your rooms of stuff, amenities, but you don’t expect or demand others to pay for them.

Local churches are considered community amenities, so if some of the local Baptists need a new church, should community tax dollars pay for it? 

Government supposedly is to provide for what is essential, not for amenities.

We vote to impose taxes on ourselves because infrastructure is essential to a community. In return, this creates an obligation on, and a responsibility for, the community to provide those things that are essential, such as police and fire protection, maintaining streets and traffic flows, providing water and sewer, trash collection and disposal, etc., and developing ordinances and zoning to help provide for an orderly, cohesive community; those things which benefit all the citizens.

Amenities are not used by all citizens.  As an example, not everyone goes to a Baptist Church, despite us Baptists thinking everyone should…(that’s a gentle bit of humor for those of other denominations. You know, like “where you find four Baptists, you’ll find a fifth.”)  Anyway….

….volunteer organizations, such as chambers of commerce, came into being to develop amenities of the community (and to be an independent business voice for a community); not to be parasites sucking up non-voluntary tax dollars.

 

If a project is worthwhile people will voluntarily fund it; if it isn’t, they won’t.

This is why good and sound and varied leadership is important.  As long as folks voluntarily use their money to pay for what they want, it’s not a big deal, which is not true when forced to pay for someone else’s pride and joy. 

Subsidizing amenities – giving tax-dollars to a favored few – deliberately and knowingly picking and choosing winners and losers – are things a city (or any government) should not do.  There is no fair or equal way to spend tax dollars on amenities. The Goosey-Gander principle will not work because of personal opinions. Neither will robbing Peter to pay Paul.

Paris didn’t get behind the economic eight ball because city government did its job: Over the years, city government let things slide – from neglecting certain areas and aging streets and increased traffic flows to letting favored landlords neglect property to allowing zoning changes that drained away the downtown business district. Plus, the city started giveaway programs of everyone’s tax dollars to a special few. In short, most of what is currently wrong in Paris is because the city didn’t do its’ job –   

Paris forgot that the basic job of government is to take care of the essentials.

 

IF a government can’t take care of what is the government’s business, how can it take care of what isn’t the government’s business?

Today, instead of doing those things – and only those things that are essential – that are their obligations and responsibilities, our local problems are compounded by the City of Paris acting as an “expert” in the development and the funding of community and economic amenities. 

But when was the City of Paris endowed with Emperor status?

Since the New Frontier and the Great Society programs of the early 60’s, government advocates have promised that their economic programs would eliminate poverty. They’ve spent trillions of tax-dollars trying to do it. But according to the government’s own statistics, there are more poor people today and fewer equal opportunities for economic advancement.  All those dollars and all those efforts only succeeded in creating wealth for fewer and fewer folks.

Government not only has lost the war on poverty, but also the war on drugs; it can’t even protect our border. So, it should be evident that government isn’t always the answer. 

Over the years, our trust in government has slowly eroded away.

To the Paris Chamber, it seems the city (like government everywhere) tries to do too many things which are not in their job description.  And as long as the city will do or fund those things which should be the responsibility of others, they will let the city do it.

And they’ll never fuss when the city does something wrong, especially if the city is also giving them other people’s tax money. Most importantly, how can the taxpayers trust the city, when the city is giving their tax dollars to a select few?

The question citizens need to ask:  If we can’t trust our local government, how can we trust our state and national legislative bodies?

We should remember that while common-sense is a hoped for amenity, it isn’t a qualifying essential to serve on a board or for holding public office or even to manage the affairs of an organization.

“In fact, if law were restricted to protecting all persons, all liberties, and all properties; if law were nothing more than the organized combination of the individual’s right to self-defense; if law were the obstacle, the check, the punisher of all oppression and plunder — is it likely that we citizens would then argue much about the extent of the franchise?” ― Frédéric Bastiat, The Law

   

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