DOES FLORIDA NEED A NANNY?
December 2009
I know a thing or two about children. I have eight of them. So bear with me if I give a lesson on child rearing. 
Freedom is something you give gradually to a child and at times it is something you need to take away. For
example, a couple of my younger children used to tear up my wife’s flowers in the backyard. In response, I
removed their freedom to play there unwatched. Since there wasn’t always a parent available to oversee their
backyard romps, they often would have to find something to do inside. When they complained I would say, “If
you govern yourself, you won’t need someone to govern you.”  I use this saying often, even with older kids as
they grow in maturity and want more freedom. And if they show they can handle self sovereingty, I increase
their freedom.
As I ponder these things, I have to wonder what the Federal Government thinks about us. They take away more
and more of our self rule, contrary to the what’s written in the United States Constitution. It’s as if we are
irresponsible children who need managing. Are the States the Federal Government’s children? Irresponsible, in
need of parenting? Not at all. The State of Florida rules its self far better than Washington rules the country. 
Consider the following proofs:
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Pd. pol. adv. paid for and approved by Scott Yardley, Republican for State Representative District 95.
Scott Yardley for Flordia House Fighting For State Rights Tenth Amendment
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WASHINGTON
When our country started, congressmen were 
paid $6/day. Granted, a dollar was worth 
much more then than today, but it didn’t 
compare to what a businessman could 
make elsewhere. No one fore-saw  career 
politicians becoming a problem. 
But as the years rolled on, Washington 
gradually increased their power and salary 
until this once public servant became a 
lucrative power broker.  Now, large 
corporations are more than ready to pay 
the campaign money needed to keep these 
career politicians in office as long as 
bailouts, grants, contracts and laws in their 
favor keep rolling out of Washington. 
Rights and tax money are taken from the 
people and given to big business and 
special interest groups.  Many have 
tried to push for Washington to set 
term limits, but the U.S. Congress knows they have 
a good thing and they won’t budge.
FLORIDA
The State of Florida limits how long a person
can hold  office. After a legislator serves eight
years in office their name can no
longer appear on a Florida ballet. The
Offices covered are: 
Representatives, Senators,
Lieutenant Governor and the Florida
Cabinet.
Florida even passed a bill to limit the
term of their U.S. Senators and
Representatives which is well within
their Constitutional rights. They are
Florida’s representatives to Congress,
not vice-versa. The 10th Admendment
states that powers not given to the Fed
belong to the States. Since the Fed says it
doesn’t have this right, it only follows that
the States can set these term limits.
Nevertheless, in 1995 the Supreme
Court ruled that no one has the right to limit Federal
terms.
WASHINGTON
Where to begin?
Our national debt is so big that it over fills our ability to 
comprehend its size. Kind of like the buffer overflow 
vulnerability that computers used to have. Computer viruses 
would send so much information to a computer that  the 
computer would just stop working. The same has 
happened to us.
The size of one trillion alone cannot be grasped by 
the human mind. We need visuals to gain 
perspective. For example, a stack of a  
trillion one dollar bills would reach more 
than one fourth the way from the earth to 
the moon.
Because the number is cognatively 
unattainable, we don’t see 
the large jump between  1 
trillion to 2 trillion or even 
to 24 trillion for that 
matter. So we don’t cry 
out when another trillion has been added 
to the debt.
This has left the door wide open for crooked Federal 
lawmakers to OK any Federal spending as long as it helps 
them get re-elected. 
 
FLORIDA
Our Florida
Consti-
tution pro-
hibits the
state
govern-
ment from
spending more
money than it
takes in.
Article VII, Section 1 (d) reads:
“Provision shall be made by law
for raising sufficient revenue to
defray the expenses of the state
for each fiscal period”.
Or in other words, Florida
lawmakers must raise as much
money as they spend each year.
Florida can only raise money by
taxes and fees. Since lawmakers
who raise taxes usually don’t get
re-elected, Florida legislators are
careful about increased
spending.
WASHINGTON
The United States was founded, in part, as a 
result of colonists revolting against unfair and 
exorbitant taxes. Today, the tax laws are 
so complex people are afraid to file their 
own taxes. This has brought on the rise of 
tax software and tax filing services. Now, in 
addition to having to pay taxes, we have to pay 
someone who will do our taxes for us. That’s like 
going shopping and having the cashier charge you 
extra just for telling you what the charge is.
The general public doesn’t like the IRS. And because we are 
afraid of it, unlike the colonist, we take it. As the largest federal 
bureaucracy in our nation, the IRS employs 115,000 people. Thats 
larger than the Brittish army during the revolutionary war (50,000 
Redcoats & 30,000 German mercenaries).
The IRS has mercenaries, too. In 2004, the IRS started using private 
collection agencies to collect unpaid taxes. So now if you owe taxes, in 
addition to the IRS emptying your bank account and garnishing your wages, you 
can expect someone calling you up and telling you you’re a loser. 
FLORIDA
Florida doesn’t
have an income
tax. You keep
what you make.
Florida collects
revenue with
sales tax. So
everyone pays a fair
share of taxes. Drug
dealers, prostitutes, and
illegal aliens and others who
wouldn’t pay income tax can’t
escape sales tax.
There you have it. Florida is a better run government than Washington. There is no precedent for federal
beaurocrats ignoring the Tenth Admendment of our Constitution which prohibits them from increasing their
power over us. We, as well as most states, do a better job than Washington, but even if we didn’t, the federal
government has no right to disobey our Constitution.