"Governments have an obligation to spend our tax money on programs that work.  They fail at this fundamental task. Do we really need dozens of retraining  programs with no measure of performance or results? Do we really need to spend  money on solar panels, windmills and battery-operated cars when we have ample  energy supplies in this country? Do we really need all the regulations that put  an estimated $2 trillion burden on our economy by raising the price of things we  buy? Do we really need subsidies for domestic sugar farmers and ethanol  producers? 
Why do we require that public projects pay above-market labor costs? Why do  we spend billions on trains that no one will ride? Why do we keep post offices  open in places no one lives? Why do we subsidize small airports in communities  close to larger ones? Why do we pay government workers above-market rates and  outlandish benefits? Do we really need an energy department or an education  department at all? 
Here's my message: Before you "ask" for more tax money from me and others,  raise the $2.2 trillion you already collect each year more fairly and spend it  more wisely. Then you'll need less of my money." -  Harvey Golub American Enterprise Institute
The entire Wall Street Journal op-ed is at the link below:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111903639404576516724218259688.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop
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