26 April 2010

Update no.436

Update from the Heartland
No.436
19.4.10 – 25.4.10
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- I did not acknowledge the sinking of the Republic of Korea, Pohang-class corvette, ROKS Cheonan (PCC-772) at 22:45 [H], 25.March.2010 [432], due to conflicting reports as to whether it was an internal or external explosion. Given the location, I had my suspicions, but I chose to refrain from comment. On Thursday, based on various sources, Sky News reported that they now believe the sinking was the direct result of a DPRK human torpedo, reminiscent of the Japanese Kaitin suicide submarines used at the end of World War II, killing 46 ROK sailors. The ROK has salvaged the remainder of the warship. The evidence of an internal or external explosion will be clear and unmistakable. There are more than a few aspects of this incident that are rather odd. Firing a missile or spewing slogans of the Cold War injure no one. This incident killed citizens and sank a ship of another country – an attack on a warship. Countries have gone to war for less.

Jeanne insisted that I read one of her books. She knew I would get into the story, and she was quite correct, as she so often is.
Picoult, Jodi. “My Sister’s Keeper.” New York: Atria Books, 2004.
Before I get into some of my ruminations sprouting from the story, I would urge everyone to read the book – the reasons for my recommendation may become apparent.
We are presented with moral and ethical challenges virtually every day of our lives, whether we recognize those challenges. Here we have a story about a family struggling with the life-threatening illness of their daughter – leukemia – reminiscent of the Ayala family in the early 1990’s. In 1988, Mary & Abe Ayala’s daughter, Anissa, 14, was diagnosed with Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML) – a grim diagnosis . . . typically fatal in three to five years. A bone marrow transplant held the potential to cure Anissa. The family was tested – no match. The family queried the fledgling National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP) registry – no match. Mary & Abe took the controversial of conceiving another child as a potential donor for Anissa. They were successful; another daughter, Marissa, born in 1990, proved to be a perfect match. When Marissa was 14 months old, the Ayala’s gave permission to extract some of Marissa’s bone marrow for her ailing sister. Anissa is 38 years old and a mother herself, and Marissa is 20 years old and a senior in college. Success stories like the Ayala family give patients hope. At the time, many folks fretted over the ethics of “producing” children, or “selecting” matched embryos as related marrow donors. Marrow donation, while it does present some risk of infection, is a renewable tissue like blood, and causes no long term injury to the donor. The book takes the ethical dilemma farther down the road. What if a “donor child” is sought as a kidney or liver donor? Neither organ donation is life threatening, but they are clearly far more risky procedures. Does a parent have the right to approve donation of a kidney from a 13-year-old child? Clearly, no one has the right to sacrifice one child for another. Kidney donation is a permanent “injury,” not life-threatening, but certainly more risky than a blood or even marrow donation. What say does the child have regarding donations of her/is bodily fluids or organs? At what age does a child begin to take on some right to decide?

Numerous news sources reported the declaration of Iranian Hojatoleslam Kazem Sedighi told worshippers in Tehran on Friday that they had to stick to strict codes of modesty to protect themselves. He declared, “Many women who do not dress modestly ... lead young men astray, corrupt their chastity and spread adultery in society, which (consequently) increases earthquakes.” Sedighi asked, “What can we do to avoid being buried under the rubble?” He went on to proclaim. “There is no other solution but to take refuge in religion and to adapt our lives to Islam's moral codes” – a common solution from clerics. The use of many “fears” to control the conduct of believers and even demand subservience of non-believers is not unique to Islam. To me, such ridiculous attempts to coerce people into submission, obedience and domination of those around them, not just those who choose to believe – is yet another real example of why the “separation of church and State” is such a wise principle of governance and essential to individual “Life, Liberty and pursuit of Happiness.” Unfortunately, ignorance continues to be a comfort for far too many people.
A friend and contributor offered his opinion of Sedighi’s Friday sermon declaration.
“There is a recognized mental illness (actually a symptom, not an illness) called magical thinking. It is where an otherwise cognizant adult denies reality and known facts with a belief that certain thoughts can induce changes in physical reality. It is a mainstay of childhood imagination and a normal adult's enjoyment of fantasy, but when it becomes impossible for an individual to separate the fantasy from reality it becomes dangerous, to the individual and those around them. Unfortunately, throughout the ages, the willingness of religious leaders to push the limits of followers' separation from magical thinking has been a powerful tool of religion. This sex/quake analogy is one example. "The Power of Positive Thinking" or an evangelist asking for prayers for the ill via television broadcast is a more benign usage. Promising future rewards for current deeds and sacrifice with those rewards being in a realm that is wholly a function magical thinking is a center-point of many powerful religions and religious motivations, from the Crusades, to suicide bombers, to a grieving mother hoping beyond hope that her missing child will be rescued by God's intervention stemming from the prayers of Fox News listeners, to a religious group saying pandemic flu or war deaths are the result of societal sin. Separating the positive from the negative in such results is often a mere matter of point of view.”

At 13:30 [T] MST, 23.April.2010, in Phoenix, Arizona, Governor Janice Kay “Jan” Brewer née Drinkwine signed into law SB1070 – an act amending [the law] relating to unlawfully present aliens. At the signing ceremony, Governor Brewer said, “We in Arizona have been more than patient waiting for Washington to act. But decades of federal inaction and misguided policy have created an unacceptable situation.” Predictably, the action has touched off a firestorm regarding illegal aliens and immigration reform. One side claims the law violates the Constitution, while the other side claims the state is simply filling the void left by an ineffectual or incompetent Federal government. Whether the Obama administration will attempt what the Bush (43) administration failed twice to achieve remains beyond the public horizon. I suspect the legal challenges will come quickly and might force the administration to act more quickly than otherwise may be desired. The administration has taken the first big step toward health care reform – the Democratic Party agenda – which has occupied Congress for more than a year. Now, it is time to take up the enormous challenge of financial industry reform that certainly will occupy the legislature for perhaps another year. Immigration reform may well push for attention. The burdens of leadership rarely lessen. So it is, so it shall be.

I have a list of court cases (like legislative bills) that have attracted my attention – my to-read list. I read as my capacity allows. I take notes to capture the words from the rulings as well as my impressions of those words. I do not always consider those cases in this forum; then, one comes along that trips my trigger. Obviously, that threshold has been passed this week.
In 1978, James Dale, age eight, joined Monmouth Council's Cub Scout Pack 142. He became a Boy Scout in 1981, and an Eagle Scout in 1988. Dale applied for adult membership and was approved as assistant scoutmaster of Troop 73 in 1989, as he entered Rutgers University. While attending university, he joined and became co-president of the Lesbian/Gay Alliance. In 1990, Dale attended a seminar addressing the psychological and health needs of lesbian and gay teenagers. In early July 1990, a local newspaper published an interview with Dale and his photograph as it reported on the seminar. Later that month, Dale received a letter from Monmouth Council Executive James Kay revoking his adult membership in the Boy Scouts. Appropriately so, Dale filed suit, claiming the Boy Scouts violated the New Jersey's public accommodations statute that prohibits, among other things, discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in places of public accommodation. The state superior court sided with the BSA. The state appeals and supreme courts disagreed and found for James Dale. The BSA appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, claiming the application of the public accommodation statute violated its 1st Amendment right of assembly (expressive association) – Boy Scouts of America v. Dale [530 U.S. 640 (2000); no. 99-699]. Chief Justice William Hubbs Rehnquist delivered the opinion of the divided Court. “[A]ssociations do not have to associate for the ‘purpose’ of disseminating a certain message in order to be entitled to the protections of the First Amendment. An association must merely engage in expressive activity that could be impaired in order to be entitled to protection.” In his conclusion, he quoted from an earlier, related case. “While the law is free to promote all sorts of conduct in place of harmful behavior, it is not free to interfere with speech for no better reason than promoting an approved message or discouraging a disfavored one, however enlightened either purpose may strike the government” [Hurley, 515 U.S., at 579]. Associate Justice John Paul Stevens wrote an excellent dissenting opinion. “That such prejudices are still prevalent and that they have caused serious and tangible harm to countless members of the class New Jersey seeks to protect are established matters of fact that neither the Boy Scouts nor the Court disputes. That harm can only be aggravated by the creation of a constitutional shield for a policy that is itself the product of a habitual way of thinking about strangers. As Justice Brandeis so wisely advised, ‘we must be ever on our guard, lest we erect our prejudices into legal principles.’” The dissent’s argument is precisely correct . . . there is no logical reason to exclude homosexuals from leadership roles within the BSA. The myopic attitude of the BSA perpetuates the erroneous notion that homosexuals are somehow, by some means, less worthy, appropriate, or productive toward the objectives of the BSA. Homosexuality is not some contagion spread by contact or a sneeze. The BSA implicitly subscribes to the myth that homosexuals are pedophiles, and thus a threat to children. As much as I argue for extermination of mindless, illogical discrimination, the 1st Amendment articulates clearly our freedom of assembly as we see fit, not as the government deems appropriate (within limits, of course). In this instance, the Boy Scouts of America is not a public institution. As the Court tried to illuminate, in this form of assembly, discrimination and unreasonable bias exists in the fuzzy, grey area at the boundary. Against the logical and reasonable argument by the dissenting justices, the Court sided with the 1st Amendment over the inclusive intent of “public access” laws in effect with numerous states. The bottom line is, private organizations like churches, affinity groups and the BSA have the right to discriminate against those who do not fit their notion of membership. Trying to force the BSA to admit or accept homosexuals is akin to legislating private morality. As idiotic as I think the BSA position is, there are no differences with the lunacy of the Fred Phelps clan. We may find such discrimination nauseating, but we must protect every citizen’s freedom of assembly. Sad . . . the consequent message of Dale, and DoD’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy, to be successful at their chosen profession or avocation, non-heterosexuals must deny who they are and be staunchly protective of their identity, i.e., in the closet, as they say, and stand in stark contrast to heterosexuals who may freely flaunt their sexual identity. I shall end my review and opinion with two questions. Why is homosexuality immoral? Says who?

News from the economic front:
-- The International Monetary Fund forecast the world economy will expand by more than 4% this year, with the United States projected to grow by 3.1% -- better than the 2.3% estimated average growth for the advanced economies.
-- Existing-home sales rose to a 5.35 million unit annual rate (+6.8%) in March, slightly more than economists had expected. First-time buyers purchased 44% of all homes, lured by the government's tax-credit program. The supply of unsold homes fell to eight months, down from 8.5 in February.
-- Moody's Investor Services downgraded its rating on Greece's sovereign debt from A2 to A3, and warned that further downgrades could be in the offing. The action sent Greek bonds into a tailspin, with the yield on a Greek 10-year bond nearing 8.7%, and all but dashed any remaining hopes that Greece might borrow afresh from international markets. We bear witness to a genuine, contemporary, Greek tragedy.
-- President Obama returned to Manhattan’s Cooper Union on Thursday, to admonish the financial industry that so often has forgotten the ordinary Americans who have suffered from its reckless irresponsibility. The President said, “A free market was never meant to be a free license to take whatever you can get, however you can get it.” Risk is essential to capitalism. We must protect the ability of industry to take risk, however that risk can only be balanced by the threat of failure. Without the threat of loss, risks become reckless, irresponsible and broadly injurious to so many innocent citizens who lose their jobs as a consequence. Reform is vital to re-find balance.
-- In more leaks from the government’s hand in the case against Raj Rajaratnam [409/10, 418, 435] – founder of the hedge-fund, Galleon Group – a Goldman Sachs director apparently tipped off Rajaratnam about a US$5B investment in Goldman by Berkshire Hathaway before a public announcement.
-- The Commerce Department reported that new home sales rose in March to a seasonally adjusted, annual 411,000 units (+27%), due to better weather and government incentives. The new home sales figures significantly exceeded the previous month's record low and was the strongest month since last July as well as the biggest monthly increase in 47 years.

Comments and contributions from Update no.435:
Comment to the Blog:
“First, I want to say that you presented a very decent, balanced view of the Confederate History Month flap. Thanks.
“I will note that the health care reform was passed by the usual method, a majority vote. It was not rammed down anyone's throat by any minority. That the Democrats do not have a "supermajority" is neither here nor there. I did not come close to getting what I wanted in the bill, but it passed. Let's all get over it.
“Very related to that is the implosion of the Republican Party. While I agree that dissent ought to offer alternatives, I see a strategic distinction here. The Democrats' views moved left and got more support from the party as more people agreed with them. The Republicans are moving to the right and getting more party support as fewer people agree with them. Major strategic error. Sarah Palin and the Tea Baggers (what a name!) do not represent the views of any moderates, and moderates are the "swing" voters who decide elections. It's a shame; even if a day comes when my party is in power, a "loyal opposition" is necessary to the American system. Perhaps the Libertarians will be able to step up in that role.
“I had not been aware of the Phelps crowd showing up at the mine disaster. I don't know the specific families at that mine. I do, however, know plenty of people in or from West Virginia. I'm a bit surprised that no Phelpses were injured in the making of that incident. In the end, though, I must agree with your position. However repellent I find Phelps and his minions, they are allowed to have and express their opinions.”
My reply to the Blog:
Thank you. I try to see all sides of a given set of events.
My “rammed down our throats” comment was not meant as a universal notation, only a reflection of those who strongly oppose what the Federal government has done. Clearly, those who support the change do not feel the change in quite the same way. My point was, we must not ignore the opposition. We will adjust. I would have preferred we deal with more of the medical cost root causes. I am not happy with the resultant law either, but I do concede that it moves us in a better direction. Now, the challenge will be improving the law.
I would not be so quick to discount the Republican Party. I do not think either party has been a loyal opposition in quite some time, like at least 40 years, maybe even as long as 60 years. No political party represents the majority of American citizens. As you note, moderates & independents tend to swing back & forth. Libertarians are closer to my vision of government, but not entirely – law & order cannot be maintained with a laissez-faire approach. There is a proper, legitimate place for government in the regulation of public life. Unfortunately, we have allowed the government to go too far and consequently penetrate far too deeply into the private domain.
The Phelps clan has positioned itself quite well for vigorous public debate.

Another contribution:
“Good points on the ‘Southern Heritage Month’ kerfluffle. The Sons of the Confederacy played a big role in this, requesting the holiday. They seem to forget that the Confederate soldiers, while brave, were engaged in an act of violent treason against the United States. When you put it that way, it isn't so romantic. And if they wanted to do a Civil War memorial month-- why not also honor the Union soldiers, who were as brave, if not braver. After all, they were the attacking forces most of the time.”
My response:
Indeed!
Resorting to armed conflict was not the answer – a mistake that killed hundreds of thousands of citizens and devastated this Grand Republic . . . but we survived and became better for the trauma.
Conversely, trying to abolish slavery without solving the economic equation of such an action virtually forced strong resistance. Faced with what they perceived as economic ruin, they took the action they felt necessary.
You have a good point for comparable recognition of the Union forces as well.
“They” were the attacking force . . . presumably you refer to the Confederates? I might quibble with that notion. The CSA did not seek domination of the North, only sovereignty for the South. They attacked because exceptional students of war led them – the best defense is a good offense. They were aggressive because they had to be. They were out numbered, out gunned, and fighting mostly on their land.
I see the Civil War as a symptom of imbalance in the political process of the day. The eruption became part of the healing process.
. . . a follow-up comment:
“My bad for not being clear. In most of the battles, the Union was attacking the Confederate forces- hence the greater casualties. Part of that was due to the 'modern' weapons, the more accurate and rapid fire, which didn't allow the charges to succeed like Napoleon's. Whereas a cavalry or even infantry unit could cross a field to contact with the enemy in the Napoleonic age, that was much more problematic in the Civil War. The advantage usually was heavily in favor of the defensive forces. (Interesting sidelight on how the French infantry under Napoleon were able to move so quickly on the charge compared to others). Also, the Confederates had great engineers -like Lee- who were able to construct/develop excellent defensive positions. Did you know that there are works that Lee supervised the construction of that are still standing? Fort Monroe is one.”
. . . my follow-up response:
No worries, mate.
Both sides had their battles of offense and defense. The Confederate military leaders tended to be more imaginative and innovative in their tactics and strategy, given the serious constraints of the Confederacy – a brutal, bloody slog no matter how we cut it. Engineering was a major contribution on both sides . . . as it has been since Roman times . . . always intriguing to study.

A different contribution:
“I see your early morning weekly Update includes something on [Thomas] Drake. I am just starting your Update, but thought you had received this sent on Saturday, but I somehow missed you on the send.”
The Contributor added two informational links:
Cryptome Blog:
http://cryptome.org/drake/thomas-drake.htm
. . . and, the Department of Justice public notice:
http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2010/April/10-crm-416.html
My response:
I had not seen the DoJ details when I wrote my piece. I expect we are going to learn a lot more about what this guy has done. I, for one, will read the court documents with keen interest as they become publicly available. The difficulty in this case may well hang upon the classified nature of some key collateral information. Nonetheless, I hope this guy feels the full weight of the Federal government. What he did was treasonous, even though he did not aid the enemy directly; he certainly did indirectly by disclosing critical intelligence programs.

An opinion from another contributor:
“Well, this is one update we will have to differ on. If this health care bill is not the correct solution, then why pass it? I don't buy the "it's better than nothing" argument if this bill is going to make the health care system even worse. How will that help anyone? And I do think there have been some people offering solutions other than the "You better buy health care insurance whether you want to or not" bill, like trying to get a handle on damages from malpractice suits, one of the things that really jack up health care costs. And I do support the state's organizing court challenges to this bill. I mean, isn't there a thing about state's rights in the Constitution? Didn't a majority of the population express their disapproval of this bill, only to see Obama and his cronies in Congress shove it down our throats? The time has come to take a stand against this overreaching government.
“As for Clinton's bit on "tone down the rhetoric, or else people might get violent," I'm on Rush Limbaugh's side there. As far as I'm concerned, saying something like that is designed to try to get more negative press aimed at folks like the Tea Party, and get them to shut up because I think Obama and his ilk absolutely cannot stand being criticized. People are pissed off in this country, and they have every right to be. Obama is spending money we don't have, trying to pass all sorts of regulations and legislation that a majority of the people don't want, and as a result, many people (me included) feel disenfranchised. If they don't like some of the angry words coming from people, tough! Then represent us like you're supposed to. I also don't buy into the argument that we must tone down the rhetoric because there are nutty people out there who may step over the line and do something like the Oklahoma City bombing. That, to me, is a cop out. If we're going to do that, then let's blame J.D. Sallinger for the death of John Lennon and the shooting of Ronald Reagan, as both assailants pointed to "Catcher In The Rye" as a reason for doing what they did. Let's blame dogs for the murders committed by the Son of Sam in NYC. Let's blame rock performers like Ozzy Osbourse and Evanescence whenever some teenager kills him or herself because they have songs that deal with suicide. No one knows what is going to set off an unstable person. And if the Obama crowd has a problem with harsh rhetoric and violence, why don't they condemn what happened in Seattle during the WTO conference a few years ago? Hey, I don't recall any Tea Party rallies that wrecked a downtown.”
My reply:
I respectfully submit . . . the health care reform law was the best we could do given the myriad of forces at play. The status quo ante simply could not be maintained and was unstable. I do not believe it will make the health care system worse. If it does nothing else, it will begin to flush out all the hidden costs that are in every health care dollar we spent, like our penchant for litigiousness, as you note. Once illuminated, we can begin correcting them or moving toward reconciliation.
Yes, there is a states’ rights issue in health care reform. One side justifies their action via the Commerce Clause, which has been grossly abused, IMHO; although the Supremes have been quite liberal in their interpretation on behalf of federalism, and the other side claims no constitutional authority. The court challenges are appropriate and relevant; however, given the Supremes bias on the Commerce Clause, I suspect the challenges will be futile.
I do not know that a majority of citizens disapproved. This is rarely a popularity contest. As a representative republic, we have entrusted Congress to do the correct things, which in turn illuminates the importance of voting. Thus, we will get a pretty good view of the mood of the citizenry this fall. Remember, overreaching to some is not reaching far enough to others. This law was a compromise; neither side got what they wanted. My opinion remains, at least we have tried to do something; now, let’s make it better.
I do not think it was Bill Clinton’s objective to silence anyone. He was simply and directly urging everyone to use the full expanse of the English language, to move our point across without inflammatory words and phrases. I try to practice that very exercise in this forum and others. So, we shall respectfully disagree on Clinton & Limbaugh.
Your example of our unhinged citizens does not float. To my knowledge, Salinger did not advocate armed violence or conflict to resolve issues.
We can have a good, long discussion about Kurt Cobain and suicide if you wish, or about any one of dozens of rappers who urged their believers to kill a cop. Incitement to riot or commit a crime is itself a crime, even if prosecutors have chosen not to pursue such crimes. The 1st Amendment goes a long way, but there are thresholds of tolerance as well as acceptability for civil discourse – one is defended by the law, the other by our disapproval. Neither Bill Clinton nor I advocate for censorship, but rather self-restraint and intellectual focus, i.e., use words with precision and clarity rather than the blunderbuss of explosive discharge.

My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)

19 April 2010

Update no.435

Update from the Heartland
No.435
12.4.10 – 18.4.10
To all,

The follow-up news items:
-- Information about the Smolensk Tu-154 crash [434] that killed Poland’s President Lech Kaczynski continues to trickle out. The pilot (captain) was Polish Air Force Captain Arkadiusz Protasiuk, 36 – an age that seems fairly young for carrying a head of state. Conflicting bits of information make it difficult to gain a clear image of what happened. One report indicated the aircraft clipped at tower and rolled. Another report suggested the aircraft clipped an 8m tree at a point on approach that it should have been at about 60m height above ground. Polish sources are not embracing the pilot error scenario, while Russian sources hint at what would be a classic CFIT accident.

Please permit me to make a couple of general observations.

All this kerfuffle over Governor [Robert Francis] “Bob” McDonnell of Virginia and his Confederate History Month proclamation has now blown up into an indictment of Southern Republicans. Under a massive barrage of righteous indignation, Bob acknowledged the error of his proclamation and revised it to acknowledge the involvement of slavery in the formation of the Confederate States of America. Then, to stoke the fire, Governor Haley [Reeves] Barbour of Mississippi in another interview proclaimed the brouhaha “didn’t mean diddly.” I witnessed an interesting little on-line debate – one side outraged that no mention was made of slavery, and the other side offended that such a noble cause was being diminished over a peripheral issue like slavery. The only thing I can figure is this must be selective memory for political purposes, on both sides. To suggest slavery was not a primary factor and a major cause for the Civil War is just flat-assed wrong. The catalytic event was the election of Abraham Lincoln – not some new legislation, or law enforcement action . . . an election – three months before he became President. Just the perception of expected future action was sufficient to instigate a horrendous armed conflict. The first shots fired came one month after Lincoln’s inauguration. I have been a Jeffersonian states-rights person for a long time. I have long believed in the elegance of the 9th & 10th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, despite the reticence of the Supremes to face the implications of those two amendments. Yet, I must put all of that aside when there is a collective need like an attack or infringement on a citizen’s rights. The key has always been and will always be balance and respect. The Confederacy is our history, just as slavery is part of what has made us what we are. We must not deny the horrible consequences of slavery. Conversely, to denigrate the noble intentions of the Confederacy is equally wrong in the other direction. The War between the States became a violent struggle for the definition of union, federalism, and primacy; that struggle has been reinvigorated of late. The Civil War accomplished many good things, but it also killed 600,000 American citizens and wounded another 500,000. Lest we forget.

I understand the dissatisfaction of a goodly portion of our citizens with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act [PL 111-148] [432] and the method of its passage, leaving us with the impression that it was rammed down our throats. Yet, much of what I hear today has nothing to do with health care reform and seems to be exclusively dogmatic, anti-Obama vitriol – the flip side of the anti-Bush venom of a few years ago. I mean, really, states challenging the law in court, talk of armed rebellion, throwing labels like socialist and communist around like spit-balls in school . . . is this really what political intercourse has degenerated to? To me, what is far worse than all of the political diatribe . . . the opposition has offered nothing, nada, niente, not a word about alternatives. I am left with the impression that the opposition’s attitude is quite akin to an earlier era’s royal nonchalance – “Qu'ils mangent de la brioche” = Let them eat cake! Despite my objections to the methods employed, at least the President and Democratic congressional leadership did something about a very real, tangible problem. It might not even be the correct solution, but it is far better than the status quo ante. It is easy to grinch & grind about all the things we don’t like; it is far harder to offer solutions. I am tiring of listening to all the naysayers who have nothing to offer toward solutions. Furthermore, it seems rather sanctimonious to pretend there is no problem when you have adequate medical insurance coverage or sufficient resource to pay for treatment outright. I ask all the naysayers . . . where is your compassion for those not so fortunate? I recognize and acknowledge how hard it is for the opposition party to have to watch the other guys spending the People’s Treasury on their pet projects. I understand their interest in denigrating the party in power for one sole reason . . . to return their party to power . . . so they can spend the People’s Treasury on their own pet projects. It seems all politicians are just simple variations of exactly the same traits. Sure, we can all agree that none of us are interested or enthusiastic about supporting those among us who prefer to be non-productive and make no contribution to the betterment of society; however, there are far more citizens who are productive and need our assistance. So, if the [law] is not the answer, what is?

President Bill Clinton was interviewed by CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on the 15th. When asked about the harsh rhetoric during the health care reform debate, Bill said, “By all means keep fighting, by all means, keep arguing, but remember, words have consequences as much as actions do, and what we advocate, commensurate with our position and responsibility, we have to take responsibility for. We owe that to Oklahoma City.” Bill’s point: people must mind their words and tone down the divisive rhetoric as less stable citizens can easily become unhinged and injure others, like Timothy McVeigh, David Koresh, Scott Roeder, among far too many others. Spot on, Bill. I fundamentally disagree with Rush Limbaugh’s condemnation of Clinton’s statement; sometimes I wonder if el-Rush-bo has gone ‘round the bend.

On Tuesday, the United States of America and President Obama hosted the chiefs of state for 47 nations in the Nuclear Security Summit. The first sentence of the resultant communiqué fairly well stated the purpose. “Nuclear terrorism is one of the most challenging threats to international security, and strong nuclear security measures are the most effective means to prevent terrorists, criminals, or other unauthorized actors from acquiring nuclear materials.” The summit was the culmination of a series of actions by the President to reduce the threat of nuclear weapons and further isolate rogue states like the DPRK and IRI. I continue to hope the President’s approach is successful.

Before the ink on the Nuclear Summit memorandum could dry, a secret, three-page memorandum from the Defense Secretary to top White House officials was disclosed that the United States does not have an effective long-range policy for dealing with Iran's steady progress toward nuclear capability. I am not sure what purpose was served in releasing such a document other than some disgruntled alter-ego for Tom Drake (noted below). Leaks like these are destructive to this Grand Republic, i.e., all of us . . . We, the People, no matter what your political persuasion or party in power.

Thomas A. Drake, a National Security Agency (NSA) employee, stands accused by the government of providing classified information to various Press outlets between February 2006 and November 2007. Based on public information, it is rare that we try, convict and punish one of these guys, so I hope he feels the full weight of the United States of America to the fullest extent of the law. I have railed against guys like Drake for many years, and now I want retribution for his betrayal of We, the People.

On Thursday, President Obama issued another historic memorandum, this one to the Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius née Gilligan, titled: “Respecting the Rights of Hospital Patients to Receive Visitors and to Designate Surrogate Decision Makers for Medical Emergencies.” The first sentence of the memorandum: “There are few moments in our lives that call for greater compassion and companionship than when a loved one is admitted to the hospital. In these hours of need and moments of pain and anxiety, all of us would hope to have a hand to hold, a shoulder on which to lean -- a loved one to be there for us, as we would be there for them.” The initiative is intended to end discrimination against non-heterosexual, non-conventional relationships and allow individual citizens to identify the people who are significant to them at an important part of their lives. Fortunately, some vestiges of humanity are beginning to creep into our public policy.

I am getting very tired of this “Party of No” crap. I am always thankful for a vigorous opposition, but if I had tried to do in the military or in business what the Republicans are doing in Congress, I would be a destitute, unemployed, homeless vagabond. Now, to be fair, the Democrats were doing precisely the same thing when they were the opposition, so while the Republicans garner my ire today, my anger applies to both parties. Why we continue to tolerate the “nattering nabobs of negativism” from either political party is simply beyond my comprehension. We need solutions to very real problems. I do not want to listen to anymore whining from these malcontents. Take what is on the table and make it better, or offer a better alternative. Enlist We, the People, to help achieve a reasonable compromise. Just saying NO simply ain’t gonna cut it.

News from the economic front:
-- U.S. retail sales increased 1.6% in March from a month earlier. Strong automotive sales led the way, yet other retail sales, excluding the automotive sector, rose 0.6%. Consumer prices rose 2.3% compared with a year ago, while prices excluding volatile food and energy were 1.1% higher on the year – the smallest annual increase since January 2004. Americans appear to be gaining confidence the economy is improving.
-- This has not been a good week for the investment bank, Goldman Sachs Group in the legal arena. The expanding Federal investigation into insider-trading and the financial crisis of 2008, is pointing toward the venerable Wall Street firm, largely unscathed in the crisis. A board member is under investigation for providing inside information about the Wall Street firm to indicted, Galleon hedge-fund founder Raj Rajaratnam [409-10] during the height of the financial crisis. The firm also stands accused of grievously misleading investors regarding an array of sub-prime mortgage instruments, essentially advising customers to buy while they took out derivatives that the funds would fail. This is going to get very ugly before we see the light of a new era.
A postscript: What is any different from what Goldman Sachs (and probably other [if not all] commercial and investment banks) has allegedly done and what Pete Rose and other sports stars did betting on games they were playing in? I imagine they never considered the ethics of what they were doing, and certainly did not think they would ever get caught. Surprise! I hope more greedy bastards like Bernie will get to be Bubba’s love buddy.
Just an FYI: we are still waiting on the Supremes to decide the appeal of Jeff Skilling (of Enron infamy), not quite nine years after the collapse of the company he ran. Jeffy has been in prison since 2006 – poor boy! Enron was one of many “canaries in the mine” that foretold what was coming. We chose to ignore the signs. Skilling is whining like all the other greedy bastards who got caught. We have many more to go before retribution is served.
-- President Obama signed into law the Continuing Extension Act of 2010 [PL 111-157; H.R.4851; House: 289-112-0-29(5); Senate: 59-38-0-3(0)] to extend unemployment compensation for another six (6) months.

Comments and contributions from Update no.434:
“The Phelps group sickens me. I heard this morning that they showed up at the site of the West Virginia mining disaster to pull their crap. I know what I am about to say crosses the line into vigilantism, but I don't care. I'd love to see some of those coal miners or their families grab a couple of those Phelps scumbags, drag them into an alley and pummel the snot out of them. If I sat on that jury, I wouldn't convict them. I won't feel an ounce of sympathy for anything bad that happens to those toerags that make up the Phelps group.
“Our moronic President does it again. Hey rogue nations, go ahead and unleash chemical and bio weapons on us, and we won't retaliate with nuclear weapons. This guy has no clue when it comes to protecting the nation. Then again, given his apology tour at the start of his administration, and his association with Reverend Wright, it's clear he doesn't think highly of this country and that he thinks being nice to bad guys is the way to peace. Yeah, that really worked for Neville Chamberlain, didn't it? And I thought Bill Clinton was a bad President.
“Yes, I admit, I am letting my emotions getting the better of mine. But I'm to the point where I just don't care.”
My reply:
Quite understandable. The Phelps clan has found the means to attract national and international attention for their rabid ideology. I understand your sentiment. Yet, I imagine there are folks who feel the same about my opinions. I would hope there would be someone who would stand up and defend my freedom of speech, as I find myself defending the freedom of speech of the Phelps clan and their right to be uncivil, disrespectful, and otherwise disgusting. The Phelps clan represents one of many heavy, burdensome prices we must pay for “Life, Liberty and pursuit of Happiness.” Freedom is freedom . . . not fragments for the chosen.
As I have written, I do not share the President’s approach to many things. Regardless, I want his softer approach to be successful. We need him to be successful. I am willing to give him the benefit of the doubt for the moment. I made the reference to Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement policy for a precise, purposeful reason . . . the similarities are too obvious. Much as I fear the comparable policy approach, there are many reasons that today is different from 70 years ago. The speed of modern life makes realization of the consequences easier to see and quicker to recognize . . . at least in theory.
BTW, FWIW, IMHO, Jimmy Carter was far worse as a president than Bill Clinton – the worst in my lifetime. Also, Barack is way too early in his presidency to make such judgments. Results will prove or disprove his policies and establish his success or failure. Time shall tell the tale.

Another contribution:
“Re the Polish plane crash…the Russians warned the Polish plane not to land, some accounts say ordered. The Russian controllers had forbid a Russian military plane from landing shortly before the accident. They had attempted to divert the Poles to Minsk, Belaruas, but the Poles still tried to land. Had they landed in Minsk, they well would have been late for or missed the event for which they were traveling. Also, relations between Minsk and Warsaw are somewhat strained, so it would been difficult- but not impossible- to land there and move to Katyn, near Smolensk, Russia. One account held that the Polish president had browbeaten pilots to land in other difficult situations. At any rate, an entirely avoidable tragedy.”
My response:
Available public information supports your views. This accident has all the hallmarks of CFIT. Whether the president browbeat the pilot is really immaterial. Every commercial pilot knows the time comes when pressure is applied from many sources. Military pilots face an even greater challenge – they know lives depend upon their skills & decisions. Yet, at the end of the day, the pilot is trained, experienced, and paid to resist all pressures and make the correct decisions for mission accomplishment. The pilot was probably a Polish Air Force colonel, and should have been immune to such pressure. For whatever reason(s), the captain failed. An entirely avoidable tragedy, indeed!!

One more contribution:
“The only comment to the top portion of this blog in regards to parents is this ... parents can teach kids right from wrong and discourage mean behavior … but just as dogs when they get into a pack, kids at the teen level have a mind of their own and throw all previous learnings into the wind … I have lived with this similar situation when [my daughter] was younger … she had several girls that made life miserable for her on a daily basis at [her high school] . Which is why she ended up leaving the school and getting her GED instead. Those girls at [her high school] could very well have been raised by their parents to be nice to others, but once they got together into their ‘pack’ at school and away from their parents, they fed off each other and had fun playing their little torment games. The incident with the Irish lass sounds so familiar ... [my daughter] also went ‘out’ with one of the boys a grade ahead of her and from that time on, was treated meanly by the young wenches in that grade. The school DOES have a responsibility in that often what happens in school, is merely a school incident and needs to be addressed … maybe parents should be brought in so that ALL are informed of the bad behavior but often kids at that age don't want their parents included thus don't say anything ... the Irish lass probably figured matters would worsen if she brought her mother into it … she probably felt life was futile … she was here in a strange land and had no where else to go … social life is so important at that age and when it is taken away, it is devastating … there are so many psychological factors and schools should not wear blinders nor blame things on parents ... if a student appears to be distressed due to social factors, a formal SIT DOWN of all students involved needs to be had … with no one leaving the discussion until matters are resolved … this can only be done at school, WHERE the events are taking place … parents being involved in the meeting might not be a bad idea either … but it must take place at school.”
My reply:
I remember what you told us about [your daughter’s] experience. I do not know the details either in [your daughter’s] case or in Phoebe Prince’s case.
I offer my opinions only. I am not a psychologist, forensics expert, or even a social worker. I just think.
Sure, those girls that tormented [your daughter] may have been delightful children, raised properly by their caring, involved, attentive parents. Anything is possible. My opinion, based on thinking a lot about these things, I say bullshit! I’d bet a dollar to donuts that parents were at least complacent . . . more likely negligent or even abusive.
Packs occur when individuals cannot hunt by themselves. Bullies rarely act alone; they commonly gather backers, supporters, similarly minded kids. The pack does not have a mind of its own; it has a leader. I also believe the signs of such behavior are readily observable. Bullies lack confidence in themselves and seek validation by dominating or intimidating others, or by inciting others to do their dirty work (Hitler comes to mind on that one), or any combination thereof.
Your assessment of Phoebe Prince’s likely mindset is probably correct, certainly the most probable. If all we did was focus on the bully, as is so often the case, then the “make matters worse” would most likely be the outcome. The right way to deal with bullies or even packs is via the parents . . . to let them feel the heat, to know we are watching, to know that we will hold them accountable for the conduct of their children. Such confrontation would not work in every case, especially the extreme ones, but it does work in most cases.
You have a very good point . . . an all-hands, student sit down would certainly help . . . if for no other purpose than to raise awareness or present relief outlets. But, I keep returning to the root cause. Human children are not born hunters, self-sufficient, autonomous individuals; they are taught . . . by example, by instruction. Children are not born bullies. They are not born killers. They are not born criminals or even bad; they are neutral, clean slates; they learn. They learn everything – eating, cleaning, speaking, sex, relationships, all of it – they learn; when they are not taught by parents, they learn from peers. Schools are certainly a party to the process. After all, kids spend about a 1/3 of their school days in school; it is also where they gain much of their social interactive skills. So, yes, schools must be involved. However, so much of their character is established in infancy; some say the dye is cast by age 5 – infancy – virtually all parent(s).

My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)

12 April 2010

Update no.434

Update from the Heartland
No.434
5.4.10 – 11.4.10
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- Opinions continue to flow in the wake of the Appeals Court’s order for Albert Snyder to pay the court costs as a consequence of Snyder v. Phelps [4CCA no. 08-1026 (2009)][430]. This opinion is worth your time.
“Order to pay Phelpses is sickening”
by Leonard Pitts
Wichita Eagle
Posted on Mon, Apr. 05, 2010
http://www.kansas.com/2010/04/05/1255309/leonard-pitts-order-to-pay-phelpses.html
-- Finally! Someone other than me has focused upon the contribution of parents to the conduct of delinquent children [citations too numerous]. This is the truly sad tale of the suicide of 15-year-old, Irish transplant, Phoebe Prince, along with her tormentors – “a coterie of aspiring fascists” – and South Hadley High School (Massachusetts).
“Kids gone wild, parents gone missing”
by Richard Cohen
Washington Post
Published: Tuesday, April 6, 2010
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/05/AR2010040503549.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions
Richard observed, “You will notice that in all the finger-pointing -- the students, the teachers, the administrators -- not a digit is aimed at the parents” (emphasis added). Why on God’s Little Green Earth do we seek to blame everyone else except the real, bona fide, root cause for the injurious conduct of children? Children are taught by example, abuse, neglect, complacency, or any combination thereof, to act out in violent ways as well as a paucity of such traits as respect, integrity, honor, dignity, humility and accountability. It is the parents (or lack of same) who set the stage in infancy and teach the conduct in toddler-dom. When are we going to wake up and recognize reality? We must hold parents accountable for the conduct of their children. These parents should be criminally liable and just as culpable as the monsters who perpetrate such crimes – ‘should be’ . . . as the law is not written that way today. Events such as these make my case for what I call the “social police” – an organization between law enforcement and social workers.
Then, the next day, Ruth Marcus weighed in:
“Should we be criminalizing bullies?”
by Ruth Marcus
Washington Post
Published: Wednesday, April 7, 2010
http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/r/PSLW3N/4G14M/C5WJLL/05S1Q1/8DP4H/GX/h
Ruth said, “I'm doubtful, though, that criminal prosecution is the best way to punish or prevent it.” Perhaps so. She conceded that the bullies, children included, should be punished – detention, expulsion and such. She mentions nothing about the parents. Prosecution of children hardly seems like the correct way to deal with the true root cause of such behavior. When will we hold parents accountable for the destruction and injury they wrought upon society via their spawn?

One more launch closer to the end, NASA successfully launched Space Shuttle Discovery on-time at 06:21 [R] EDT on the STS-131 mission to the International Space Station. The pre-dawn launch was amazing to watch the flight across the day-night terminus, with on-board cameras looking back into the night and then daylight near booster burn-out . . . really cool. Only three more shuttle flights remain.

President Medvedev and President Obama met in Prague, Czech Republic, to sign what has been dubbed the New START Treaty, to reduce the remaining nuclear warheads of both countries by a third. In what appears to be a coordinated, orchestrated set of events, President Obama announced a restructuring of American nuclear strategy to substantially narrow the conditions under which the United States would use nuclear weapons, even in self-defense. For the first time, the United States has announced to the world it will not used its weapons against non-nuclear states that are in compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, even if they attacked the United States with biological or chemical weapons, or launched a crippling cyberattack. This coming week, the United States hosts a nuclear proliferation conference after which the Americans hope to issue a joint communiqué calling for leaders from more than 40 countries to endorse a global crackdown on the illicit trade of nuclear material, including tougher criminal prosecution of traffickers, better accounting for weapons-grade nuclear materials and more international collaboration in such cases. All this activity seems to be the diplomacy of hope. I truly, genuinely want the President to be successful. Yet, I am haunted by the last time the diplomacy of hope was tried . . . 50M people died.

Prime Minister James Gordon Brown went to Buckingham Palace and asked Queen Elizabeth II to dissolve Parliament in order to hold a national election. On Tuesday, the Prime Minister announced that Great Britain will go to the polls on May 6, amid a battered economy and soaring deficit. The election promises to be dramatic and could end the 13-year, Labour Party run in power.

Wednesday night, United Flight 663 carried passengers from Washington, DC, to Denver. A disturbance caused the captain to request assistance, which scrambled two, armed, F-16 fighter jets. The crew caught a man smoking in the first class lavatory. When confronted, he apparently made a joke about lighting his shoes on fire. The crew, not seeing any humor in the situation, requested the assistance of two air marshals, who subdued the man. The FBI scrambled its local counter-terror team and met the aircraft on landing at Denver. The perpetrator of the in-flight incident turned out to be 27-year-old, Qatari diplomat, Mohammed al-Madadi, who happened to be enroute to the Federal Supermax prison near Florence, Colorado, for a consular visit to convicted and imprisoned, Qatari al-Qaeda member, Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri [288, 346] – the focus of considerable legal wrangling in this country. The young, foolish, disrespectful man, protected by diplomatic immunity, has been recalled to Qatar for reassignment and probably will not set foot in this Grand Republic again – good riddance. I truly despise any person who places himself above other human beings no matter what their title, what language they speak, or who the hell they are. Al-Madadi is one of those men who warrant my scorn – you are no longer welcome.

President Lech Kaczynski of Poland and wife Maria died in the crash of the government’s Tupolev Tu-154 airplane on approach to the air base at Smolensk, Russia, along with 95 other government leaders, dignitaries, guests and crew. Early reports strongly suggest this tragic accident was yet another Controlled Flight Into Terrain (CFIT) event. The airfield and surrounding area were reportedly shrouded in heavy fog, and the air base apparently did not have a conventional Instrument Landing System (ILS). The aircraft was also an aging, Soviet built and configured airliner, and probably not equipped with a state-of-the-art Flight Management System (FMS) or Global Position System (GPS) navigation equipment. Further, air traffic controllers also reportedly warned the captain multiple times that the airfield was below weather minimums and he should divert to his alternate airport. The airplane flew into trees on the captain’s fourth attempt to land and everyone perished.

“Network Neutrality” has become a big topic these days. The term has been bandied about by the Press with respect to a recent ruling from the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia – Comcast v. FCC [USDC DC no. 08-1291 (2010)]. Unfortunately, the court mentioned not a word about net neutrality. Nonetheless, the court focused on interpretation of the applicable law relative to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and its enforcement authority regarding the Internet. In this particular case, the FCC intervened when Comcast restricted bandwidth for some of its bigger consumers. The FCC ordered Comcast to provide open access, i.e., no restrictions. Comcast confronted the FCC’s authority to issue such an order. The FCC utilized an extension of what law refers to as “ancillary authority” – derived or implied authority from policy intent statements by Congress. The laws in question here are: the Communications Act of 1934 [PL 73-416], the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 [PL 98-549], and the Telecommunications Act of 1996 [PL 104-104]; none of which explicitly delegate authority to the FCC for the actions they took against Comcast. Circuit Judge David S. Tatel concluded for the unanimous court panel, “Because the Commission has failed to tie its assertion of ancillary authority over Comcast’s Internet service to any “statutorily mandated responsibility” [Am. Library, 406 F.3d at 692], we grant the petition for review and vacate the Order.” In essence, the court declared the FCC had gone too far beyond established law. We never know whether the Supremes will hear a case, but the public sensitivity may convince the Court to either validate the DC Circuit’s interpretation of the law, or they could overturn the appeals court ruling on something as simple as their expansive use of the Commerce Clause; I suspect the former, if they hear it at all. The Comcast ruling substantially ups the ante in the net neutrality debate and places far more pressure on Congress to update the law. The current version before Congress is the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2009 [H.R.3458], which is stuck in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, where it has remained since the middle of last year. The court is telling us . . . enough already . . . we’ve stretched existing law too far; and, they are precisely correct. As a theoretical or even ideological objective, net neutrality is a worthy goal – everyone having equal access and freedom without interference by the State or corporations. Unfortunately, the Comcast ruling pushed control of Internet access back to the Internet Service Provider(s) (ISP), which does not sound all that bad. Yet, what happens when an ISP “chooses” to restrict one content provider, when that entity is a direct competitor with another part of the company serving as the ISP? The Comcast ruling had one sentence in the 36-page ruling to at least acknowledge the conundrum, but they chose to ignore that direct, real, tangible conflict. The Internet has become essential infrastructure like roads, bridges, waterways, airspace, electricity transmission lines, telephone lines, et cetera. Thus, the challenge we face, comes in the tension between open use and regulation, between the profit of entrepreneurial ingenuity and the general public good. To the contrary, the State has not engendered trust with respect to protecting our freedoms in a wide variety of well-intentioned laws grotesquely extended far beyond their original legislative intent. The State seems quite comfortable ignoring our rights when it suits their perception of need or the greater good. Despite the inadequacies of the current law and my inherent suspicion of the State, the Comcast ruling serves notice that the law must change and adapt, but I fear what we may face in the aftermath of more well-intentioned, miss-applied legislation.

“Hands off the Internet”
by Robert M. McDowell
Washington Post
Published: Friday, April 9, 2010
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/08/AR2010040803375.html
On balance, I must admit to the same opinion. The risk of government abuse is simply too great. That aside, I have not faced an obstructive or vengeful ISP as the non-profit advocacy organizations, Free Press and Public Knowledge, did with Comcast. Based on the publicly available information, Comcast should have had its knuckles rapped. Unfortunately, the FCC exceeded its authority when it tried to do just that. Until we can sort out this conundrum, I shall endorse and support McDowell’s “Hands off the Internet” admonishment.

News from the economic front:
-- The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4% for the first time since last June. The 10-year yield is a key benchmark for mortgage rates as well as other consumer and corporate lending.

Comments and contributions from Update no.433:
Comment from the Blog:
“What I noted this time: your cheerful suggestion of setting up a ‘killing ground’ versus your deep concern about Constance attending the prom.”
My response to the Blog:
Yes, quite a contrast ay.
Big difference . . . we are talking about enemies in the former, and a fellow citizen who deserved equal rights in the latter.
Was there something more you wanted to say?

Another comment:
“I like this idea [of moving Guantánamo to Afghanistan]. Have you sent this to Obama? Or should we start a FaceBook page?”
My reply:
Glad you liked it. I said it somewhat tongue in cheek, but it does have merit I think. I do send the Update to Congress & Legislature, but not to the Prez. I guess I should, huh. I do have a Facebook page, but I haven’t yet featured the Update.

My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)

05 April 2010

Update no.433

Update from the Heartland
No.433
29.3.10 – 4.4.10
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- After the well-publicized signing of the health care law [
431], President Obama signed into law the final piece of his health-care reform legislation -- Health Care and Education Affordability Reconciliation Act of 2010 [PL 111-152]. The challenges to the new law from the states have only just begun. The next few years are going to be rough as the new law is implemented.
-- After the ruling in favor of the Phelps clan – S
nyder v. Phelps [4CCA no. 08-1026 (2009)] [430] – the 4th Circuit Court of Appeal ordered Albert Snyder [235, 307, 308] to pay the Phelps’ court cost, amounting to roughly $16,000, adding insult to injury. In 2005, Albert buried his son – Lance Corporal Matthew A. Snyder, USMC – who was killed in action in Iraq. Reportedly, donations have poured in to cover the court costs and hopefully allow Albert to continue his appeal to the Supreme Court.

The Chechen “Black Widows” are back at it, again; this time detonating their explosive vests on Moscow Metro rail trains during morning rush hour. A third explosive device was detected at another Metro station and disarmed. Chechen rebel leader Doku Khamatovich Umarov claimed responsibility for the bombings and promised there would be many more. I trust the Russians will employ their usual brutal efficiency in dealing with their portion of Islamo-fascist terrorists.

President Obama agreed to new security screening protocols in conjunction with 14 foreign governments for anyone flying to the United States, intended to prevent attackers like the Christmas Day bomber [
419]. The Department of Homeland Security will implement a more intelligence-based system to focus secondary, enhanced screening at foreign airports and reportedly includes intelligence-developed profiles to aid screeners. Based on limited information and no experience with the new U.S. system, I strongly suspect our screening system is moving closer to those procedures used by the Israeli airlines for decades . . . and successfully I must add.

I have been watching the government’s case against the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, Inc, an Oregon nonprofit corporation, in what has become known as the NSA case, or a more colloquial version being the “illegal wiretapping” case. The latest episode is a ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker in the case of
al-Haramain v. Obama [USDC NDCA M:06-cv-01791-VRW (2010)] [see Update no. 343]. Walker wrote, “Under defendants’ theory, executive branch officials may treat FISA as optional and freely employ the SSP [State Secrets Privilege] to evade FISA, a statute enacted specifically to rein in and create a judicial check for executive-branch abuses of surveillance authority.” He went on to observe, “Perhaps sensitive to the obvious potential for governmental abuse and over reaching inherent in defendants’ theory of unfettered executive-branch discretion, defendants protest that ‘the government does not rely on an assertion of the [SSP] to cover-up alleged unlawful conduct.’” Of all the intelligence, electronic surveillance challenges to the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001 [PL 107-056] and presidential directives, the al-Haramain case has survived the longest and is far from over. The latest ruling was a denial of the Executive’s petition for dismissal. Based on the publicly available information, I believe al-Haramain is as guilty as O.J. Simpson in 1995, but that is not the law. The government is protected and yet shackled by its ability to collect classified information, and the essential challenge in this case rests upon the ability of the prosecution to develop and present sufficient, non-classified evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that al-Haramain in fact is a conduit for al-Qaeda fund-raising and recruiting. This is a very important case not only to the War on Islamic Fascism and also to our protections against unwarranted government intrusion into our private lives.

I just had an epiphany – a solution to the aversion of some citizens to the Guantánamo detention facility. Let us find some nice vacant, open ground on the plains of Afghanistan, build a nice facility there, to match the capabilities of the Guantánamo facility, and then publicize the transfer of all Islamo-fascists terrorists to that facility. Bait! Perfect. The Left gets what they want – close the Guantánamo facility – and, we gain a tempting objective for the other Islamo-fascists at large – a worthy killing ground – kinda like Khe Sanh (1968) in my generation’s war.

U.S. District Court Senior Judge Glen H. Davidson of the Northern District of Mississippi heard arguments in the case of
McMillen v. Itawamba County School District [USDC MSND(ED) Case 1:10-cv-00061-GHD-JAD (2010)]. Plaintiff was Itawamba Agricultural High School Senior Constance McMillen in Fulton, Mississippi -- an openly and honestly self-identified lesbian since the eighth grade. She wanted to attend her senior prom with her girlfriend and dressed in a tuxedo. The school and board rejected Constance’s requests citing a number of lame antiquated excuses. The judge made a rather emphatic statement regarding the State’s violation of Constance’s civil rights and yet denied her request for preliminary injunction as a result of the short time interval and the fact that parent’s had organized a separate, all-inclusive prom where all students were welcome, including Constance McMillen and her girlfriend. I hope Constance pursuits her rightful claim for damages to punish the school and its board, and send a clear message that such violations of a citizen’s civil rights based on sexual identity and orientation are not acceptable.

In the light of a federal court’s view of the
McMillen case, Marine Corps Commandant General James Terry Conway publicly stated, “We want to continue [two-person rooms], but I would not ask our Marines to live with someone who is homosexual if we can possibly avoid it.” He continued, “And to me that means we have to build BEQs [bachelor enlisted quarters] and have single rooms.” General Conway is trying to make the pending repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” {National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994 [PL 103-160 (312, 408)]} and the prohibition of discrimination based on sexual orientation an economic matter in a rather feeble effort to avoid the root question. General Conway and the other leaders of the military would be better advised to create and implement an education program, similar to the racial integration education programs of the 1970’s, to help service personnel to adjust attitudes and interaction with citizens regardless of their sexual orientation. The time has come.

The German newspaper
Der Spiegel reported a rather curious item. The European Union’s Trade Marks and Designs Registration Office rejected complaints and approved a trademark application from a German company to brew a beer labeled “Fucking Hell” and sell clothing with the trademark. The EU’s rationale: 1.) “hell” is a German word for a light ale, and 2.) “Fucking” is an Austrian town near the border with Germany, north of Salzburg. The translation into English evokes strong emotions on many levels. Ultimately, if it is not a good beer, it will not sell; but, the sensationalized trademark may well find customers among English-speakers who seek a counter-culture image or statement. Language is such a powerful tool.

News from the economic front:
-- The Commerce Department reported U.S. consumer spending increased 0.3% in February, and inflation remained stable, despite the fact that personal income remained static and unemployment remained high.
-- The
Wall Street Journal reported that U.S. employers created 162,000 non-farm jobs in March, the largest gain since March 2007 and the fastest pace in three years, although nearly one-third came from temporary hiring for the Census. The unemployment rate, calculated using a different survey, stayed at 9.7%.

Comments and contributions from Update no.432:
Comment to the Blog:
“As a non-mainstream person, I see ‘God’ (singular with a capital ‘G’) as essentially the artifiact of monotheist religions. I do not, however, see the total purging of historical documentation that you envision as a likely outcome of any given court decision. Besides, there's a simpler method of dealing with formal oath-taking. When I enlisted in the US Army many long years ago, the instructions included, "You may remain silent rather than say 'under God' if you so choose." Problem solved. Besides, even though I have had a running irritation with the casual official use of "God" for about forty years, I still see the whole question as a tempest in a teapot.
“I attempted to send you my blog post on the health insurance mess, but did not accomplish that.
“Before I reach my central points, let me state my agreement with your other poster on being required to purchase health insurance. This is not a valid parallel to auto insurance. When the State made auto insurance mandatory, I could and did stop driving until my financial situation improved. I cannot do that with my health. The fact that tax dollars will surely finance my health insurance makes it no less a gift to already-bloated insurance companies.
“My central complaints are two: the Congress failed to repeal the insurance companies' anti-trust exemption and failed to do anything else that might encourage actual competition, especially to set up a public option that would be able to negotiate with pharmacy companies and ‘care’ providers.
“I do not see emergency room visits, in their own right, as driving the cost of health care. I see the fact that so many have no access to health care except through emergency rooms as one of the important factors, but we must include provider greed, the antitrust exemption for the insurance companies and the pharmaceutical companies' insane pricing in this equation.
“The bottom line: if nothing changes, nothing changes.”
My response to the Blog:
One of the many beauties of the First Amendment . . . it protects our freedom to believe whatever we wish to believe. I cannot imagine anyone assaulting God’s name in our historic documents; however, using the Newdow dissent’s logic, the exclusion / expulsion is the logical conclusion. For whatever it’s worth, I do not agree with the Army’s “remain silent” approach. No one is telling anyone who or what they are to believe. Nonetheless, I think it is important to swear the oath to a Higher Power, otherwise there is little substance to such an oath.
I am sorry you could not post your health insurance opinion. Perhaps you can re-try when you get a chance.
I was trying to make a representative analogy however feeble it might have been. The mandatory element is a very sensitive issue with many Americans. The health care reform is only a small step on a very long journey. Hopefully, this will move us along just enough to enable us to refine the health care process. I absolutely agree with the failure of Congress to remove the anti-trust protections still in place for medical insurers. The pharmaceutical patent protections that enable companies to recover their development costs with exclusive marketing rights, like a time-limiting monopoly, are worthy of analysis and reassessment. To break the cost cycle, we must alter the business paradigm for everyone. We have such a long way to go, and as you say, we must change.
. . . a follow-up comment:
“I'll leave the rest alone and pick on ‘it is important to swear the oath to a Higher Power, otherwise there is little substance to such an oath.’ First, the substance comes from the person, not the Higher Power. As we have seen
ad nauseum, many people feel no compulsion to tell their truth in a court or to live up to other oaths, ‘God’ or no ‘God.’ Second, some people don't work with any Higher Power at all and feel very seriously insulted by the insistence that they do so, which is a position I was in during my younger years; others work with a ‘Goddess,’ with gods plural as I do today, or with something that has a specific other name. Better to either work with everyone somehow or to let the whole issue drop.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Interesting perspective. My understanding of a “Higher Power of your understanding” embraces many possibilities, but boiled down to its essence, represents morality, order, discipline, respect, and many other attributes that come from somewhere. A “Higher Power” might be Mother Nature, or a sense of right & wrong, or the memory of our parents or grandparents looking over our shoulder. I do NOT ascribe any definition other than there must be something that is significant to each individual . . . even Michael Newdow. To think otherwise would be chaos and anarchy. The point I was trying to make was there must be something beyond ourselves that draws out morality. Sure, some have a higher level than others. A few individuals among us have no qualms taking another life or stealing another man’s property. Further, just swearing an oath to a “Higher Power” will not stop the habitual liar from perjuring himself before the bar. I believe the oath or the Pledge serves to tell us that the words are important; we will be judged by our conduct under these words. Again, no one is telling anyone who God is or what God means to the individual, but such reference does connote importance of the words.

Another comment:
“I believe you are correct, so help me, God.”

My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap
:-)