By Charles H. Smith
If you make it increasingly costly and risky to open a
small enterprise, then no wonder unemployment remains high.
You hear a lot about Kafkaesque stifling bureaucracy
in Greece and other struggling European nations, but America's Status Quo is
trying its best to destroy small enterprise with taxes and crushing
bureaucracy. I am self-employed, and have been for most of my life. When I did
take a paid position, it was in other small enterprises or local non-profit
organizations.
I mention this because there is an unbridgeable divide
in any discussion of small business between those who have no experience in
entrepreneural enterprise (i.e. they've worked for the government, NGOs/non-profits
or Corporate America their entire careers) and those who have.
There are all sorts of similar chasms that cannot be
crossed and which quickly reveal a surreal disconnect from actual lived
reality: for example, the difference between actually playing football--yes,
with pads, a muddy field and guys trying to slam you to the ground--and being
an armchair quarterback who's never been hit even once, never caught a pass or
ever struggled to bring down a faster, bigger player. (And yes, I did play
football in high school as a poor dumb skinny kid who mostly warmed the bench
for good reason, but I lettered.)














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