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Question of the Week

At what point does government oversight on things like kids working on farms become intrusive and harmful to those very kids, farms and other aspects of traditional American life?
Post your answer below.

Morning Commentary

Farms Too Tough for the Kids

By Charles Payne, CEO & Principal Analyst
4/26/2012 7:47 AM

"I do not believe there ever was any life more attractive to a vigorous young fellow than life on a cattle ranch in those days. It was a fine, healthy life, too; it taught a man self-reliance, hardihood, and the value of instant decision...I enjoyed the life to the full."

- Theodore Roosevelt

The plan to break down the American can-do spirit and replace it with the notion we can only achieve as a collective overseen by the government is focusing more and more on the youth of America. When I was growing up, I used to hate our visits to Alabama for so many reasons but mostly because it was a harder life. My grandparents owned a nice-sized farm that had cows, chickens, pigs a couple of horses and an array of crops. They didn't have running water or central air and heat. Plus, you had to work. If you think the mule or horse does all the work with hand plows, you make the same mistake I made.

Man, holding that thing up and keeping it straight and in the ground is a physical challenge. I was squeamish when it came to milking cows and feeding slop to hogs. And I dreaded nothing more than having to use the outhouse. In short, it was a tough trip except for all the fun of riding the horse, picking fresh fruit from trees, and running free in the fresh open air. The older I got the more I appreciated that farm and my grandparents. They survived without government help. They lived off the land and raised a large family. I marvel at how they pulled that off in a time and place that offered brutal realities.

There is something spiritual about succeeding against all the odds because you gave it all you had day in and day out.

These days there is an attempt to kill off that kind of euphoria and replace it with a cerebral sense of accomplishment that can only be measured in the context of the collective or the collective good. You don't score the touchdown, the team does, and while it sounds great in the post game interview, the fact is the person that scores the winning touchdown reaches a higher plain of joy than his teammates. Of course, it's even deeper than that. In a strange way, we are making it so there is no joy in the winning touchdown from the player to the team to the fans.

To accomplish this innate desire to win, American traditions of can-do must be stamped out as early as possible. It means the creation of spiritual and economic eunuchs.

Can't Keep Them Down on the Farm

The Department of Labor is antithetical to its own title and will make things worse by making sure children under the age of 18 can no longer work "in storing, marketing transportation of farm product raw materials." The rules don't just stop at prohibiting 18 year olds from working in silos, grain storage bins or manure pits, they stop younger kids from participating in farm life. Moreover, the new rules would eliminate 4-H and other agricultural education programs and replace them with government run programs. Heck, children will not be able to do chores or use wheelbarrows, flashlights, or screwdrivers.

The rules are an obvious power grab in the face of America's heartland tradition and actual trends. Kids are getting physically hurt less on the farm these days. According to statistics from the National Agriculture Statistics Service, youth injuries decreased from 13.5 per 1,000 farms in 2001 to 7.2 per 1,000 farms in 2009. I understand you can't keep them down on the farm, but these new rules impact 50,000 kids and the fabric of the American ethic. The idea that this administration would continue to lure young voters by offering the kind comfort that seems conscientious isn't surprising.

Keeping people on welfare, food stamps, housing allowance, free cell phones, and those crazy checks is viewed as being kind but at some point it's cruel. There is an old saying about teaching a man to fish, which can be applied to teaching a boy to farm. Giving people all the basics and them some makes them eunuchs and not introducing hard work to children makes them lazy, unprepared, and dependent. Maybe that's the game plan after all?

Investment Allocation

Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus and there is also a Grinch that lives inside all of us and feeds on our poor fiscal habits.

On April 7, 2012, Virginia Fike popped into a convenience store and decided to play one Powerball and one Mega Millions lottery ticket but purchased two of the former by accident. The tickets had the same number based on her parents anniversary, age, and year they were married. According to kypost.com Virginia loves jackpot games and plays when "she can afford it." When discussing her great fortune of winning the lottery twice in the same day, Fike gave advice to others looking to strike it rich via the lottery:

"Just don't give up … it's going to happen one day."

Well, it's not going to happen one day, 99% will never win the lottery once, let alone twice in a single day. With that mindset, I worry about Virginia Fike being yet another lottery winner that ends up broke down the road. She has a GED and loves horses including her own quarter horse, Freckles. How should she and anyone with less than $3,000,000 in cash allocate their earnings or winnings?

> Old Formula- 100 minus your age gives you stock allocation and the rest goes into bonds

> Charles Payne Formula 120 minus your age gives you stock allocation, bonds (corporate) capped at 10%, Gold 10%, the rest in hard assets from land to antique watches and guitars.

We are living so much longer that you have to have investments with more upside potential and at the same time hedge against inflation. There will be times when gold is even larger, but for now it's about becoming a part owner of good companies. I'm not touting the stock market- I'm touting ownership. I'm touting putting your money to work. I'm touting living a great life and not waiting for a social security check that might not show up because the funds ran out to pay young men to sit on porches all day long while they watch the grass grow and our greatness fade.

For Virginia Fike, age 44, she should have 76% of her funds in stocks of which I would look for 20% of those stocks positioned for yield and the rest based on growth potential.

Ray of Hope

There were a lot of stocks that stood out yesterday but one that really hit me was Robert Half (RHI). The staffing company posted strong earnings result that at one point had the stock trading at a new 52-week high. The shares settled up 5.7% for the day and hint at positive things in employment.

Permanent job placements +28.1%
Temporary job placements +19.0%

Here's the catch-the company focuses on technology, legal, administration, and creative marketing jobs. On that note, I found it odd Ben Bernanke would say 100,000 a month would stabilize the economy when it's clearly much too little even in a normal environment.

Big Ben

The Street still isn't quite sure what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke was saying, and the main thing that caught my attention was the "fiscal cliff" comment that should have made Wall Street excited. The Dow was up 41 points when the question and answer period began and almost got back to up 100 points. Yet, it was clear that nobody is really clear on the next move. Before the Q&A session the Fed increased its GDP forecasts for 2012, 2013 and 2014. Inflation expectations climbed and anticipated unemployment rates decreased. None of the adjustments were earth-shattering, and I even think were the perfect mix to green light more magic from that Fed bag of tricks.

Today's Session

It looks like an anti-climatic day after the Apple bounce and Bernanke dud. I was bracing for a revised initial jobless claims number of 400,000, but it was increased just below that number-what a relief. The 388,000 from last week is scary, coupled with all those people dropping off extended unemployment benefits. This would be a great time to announce a major tax amnesty program for repatriated money- the cash brought in by Apple alone would create 100,000 new (real) jobs. On the earnings front, Aetna (AET) and Exxon Mobile (XOM) disappointed setting the tone for large cap names. It's not panic time, but back to frustration and looking for signs. Tomorrow is the GDP number that is all over the place in the guessing game of Wall Street. I suspect a number above 2.0% will be viewed as a victory. There was a time it would have been viewed as mediocrity, but tomorrow it could spark a rally in stocks.


Comments
This mornings commentary provides some great insight about the events that shaped your world view. I grew up on a farm exactly like the one your grandparents owned. My mother nurtured the family while my father worked the farm along with another full time job. He never went in to debt, never had any government "help", and never complained about his lot in life. His great legacy to his eight children was one of respect for the land and respect for others. Unfortunately, I did not come to appreciate that life style and the great foundation it provided for my life until many years after leaving the farm.

Robert Tucker on 4/26/2012 10:15:40 AM
The more important questions is this: How does the federal government gain the jurisdiction to rule over state citizens in areas not specifically enumerated in the Constitution. The answer is: by usurpation of states' and Citizens' rights. The federal government has no authority to tell State Citizens what they can and cannot do. The states may do that but not the federal government. Conversely, the states can not tell federal citizens what they can and cannot do. Only the federal government can do that. People who do not make the distinction between state Citizens and federal citizens, state jurisdiction and federal jurisdiction, state laws and federal laws, native citizens and 14th amendment citizens, those are the people who have allowed the federal government to become the over-sized, over-bearing, over-reaching, out-of-control behemoth we have today.

George on 4/26/2012 11:11:08 AM
One of the first things Hitler did was to get control of the German youth, via the Hitler Youth Groups, I know, I was there.Although I was Catholic, my father was jewish and I had a jewish last name, I can still see me in my short pants and brown shirt.......Heil Hitler! My last summer in Germany 1938 was spent in a Hitler Youth camp, how do you like them apples ???? no cows, no outhouse...just the words of Adolf, day and night.....and what is it here today???? frightening isn't it?

Seems odd that our govt. is now doing the same here,you have to wonder if Obama and friends are reading Mein Kampf? Your story of your farm days, wonderful, no wonder you developed into such a brilliant grown up......

tom wayne on 4/26/2012 11:16:23 AM
Here we go with too much government intrusion into our lives. Working on a farm as a child instills a work ethic that is unmatched. What's next get rid of 4H. My wife was in 4H and had a great experience. Oh, lets get rid of the Boys and Girls Scout next. Camping is dangerous.

Bob Medkeff on 4/26/2012 11:16:59 AM
The "government" training young people to work on farms smacks of Nazism and their government youth corps. Will youth be asked to report farms that break the rules? WHAT NEXT?

Gretchen on 4/26/2012 11:23:58 AM
Charles, I just tweeted your column today, with the comment "Does this mean I have to fire the teenagers who depend on me for their summer jobs?" I have a small horse ranch in a rural area of the southwest and jobs just aren't that easy to find, even in a good economy. Love your phrase, "spiritual and economic eunuchs" as well as all of your sage input on Fox FN.

Bonnie Ebsen Jackson on 4/26/2012 11:36:24 AM
The real question is when will the slippery slope hit city and suburban kids who do chores around the house or mow the lawns?

Mom of 4 on 4/26/2012 12:41:19 PM
During the Great Depression, I sold my first newspapers at the age of 6. People would give me a quarter for a nickel newspaper because they thought I was cute. That was my edge. By 7, I was following my older brother around shining shoes from one saloon to the next. By 8, he and I sometimes made more money selling newspapers than my father made in a week. We learned that it takes initiative to survive in tough times. Today, they're destroying boys' latent period of development by getting them obsessed with sex far too early. By the time I was 20, I thought nothing of helping to launch a daily newspaper. That was my J-school and didn't cost me a dime. Those early experiences taught me initiative and self reliance, and now at 82, I'm still at it, and having as much fun as ever. Horatio Alger isn't dead. They just buried him prematurely.

Dennis Howard on 4/26/2012 1:18:36 PM
The intrusive harm manifests at the point where reasonable people recognize its inane uselessness. Comparing proscribed farm activities to other activities children and teenagers might engage in leads to the unhappy conclusion that we must now all raise unprepared, overweight sloths. How much 'work' is involved in high school football? What about those dangerous sewing machines we used in home economics class, or machines in wood shop? Aren't those laptops just too risky and likely to damage the eyesight of young students? Forget tennis or golf for anyone under 18. All those dangerous racquets and clubs pose a huge threat. No rock concerts - studies show that standing for that many hours could damage developing bones. I could go on, but I'm getting flu symptoms just thinking about this ridiculousness.

Patricia Flynn on 4/26/2012 3:33:58 PM
The government is taking too big of a bite out of our life and our freedom. Children should be engaged in more responsible and skill building activities and that includes helping out on the family farm or cleaning house. What is next; will it be illigal for a child to mow the lawn, put out, or wash the dishes.

Judy Brinton-Bleak

Judy Brinton-Bleak on 4/26/2012 4:19:03 PM
Another liberal attempt to dumb down America. The push is moving too fast toward a socialist economy for America.

It is time to reverse the tide and move back to the principles of what America was founded on.

Jim Gill

Jim Gill on 4/29/2012 3:03:44 PM
 

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