A couple of weeks ago I posted about the unbelievable incompetence displayed by the office of Texas Comptroller Susan Combs (pictured). Employees in this state agency posted the personal information of over 3.5 million Texans (names, addresses, social security numbers, dates of birth, driver's license numbers, etc.) on a computer system that was accessible by anyone in the general public. And making it even worse, they didn't find their mistake for more than a year -- leaving these millions of people at the mercy of identity thieves.
The only thing that could have made this any worse was if they had advertised their dumb mistake after doing it (and I'm half-surprised that they didn't). If you think I sound a little angry at this blunder, then you are exactly right. My daughter and I were two of the 3.5 million people who's private information was exposed by the comptroller.
Comptroller Combs has assured Texans (and those who were affected) that the information is no longer available to the general public. And she has said that those who were responsible have been terminated. I still wonder if the people responsible for supervising those employees, including Combs herself, aren't also responsible and should be submitting their resignations -- especially in light of the huge amount of money the stupid mistake is going to cost the state now.
In an effort to make up for the egregious mistake, the comptroller's office is now offering credit monitoring, free of charge, to all 3.5 million people affected by their blunder. Each of those people will have the option to sign up for a free year of credit monitoring, and if they all sign up, it will cost the state of Texas $21 million dollars (at the rate of $6 a person). I've already signed up and I don't see why the other 3.5 million wouldn't do the same.
As you may know, Texas is already in the throes of a serious budget crunch. It has an anticipated budget deficit of about $27 billion for the next biennium. The legislature is already proposing large cuts to every state agency and to social programs, and from $5-$9 billion in cuts for K-12 education. The state certainly didn't need another bill for $21 million to clean up the incompetency of a Republican office-holder.
But the Republican-dominated legislature can't say too much because they're engaging in their own brand of fiscal idiocy. They have decided that a mere $27 billion budget shortfall doesn't warrant an increase in state revenues -- just massive cuts to nearly everything -- cuts that will negatively affect the quality of service delivered to every Texan. In fact, instead of raising taxes (or broadening the sales tax base) they have decided to cut taxes -- not for everyone, just the richest Texans.
A House subcommittee has approved a cap on the state sales tax for YACHTS that cost at least $250,000. Now a reasonable human being might think that anyone who can afford a yacht costing $250,000 should be able to pay the full amount of the sales tax on that purchase. But not our Republican leaders. The thought that the rich might have to pay the same percentage in sales taxes that the poor and workers pay just horrifies these Republicans. What are those poor rich people going to do if we actually ask them to pay taxes?
I've come to the conclusion that the Texas voters are getting exactly what they voted for. They elected these incompetent idiots, and that's what they are getting -- incompetence and idiocy.
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