Update from the
Heartland
No.746
28.3.16 – 3.4.16
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
Among
this week’s political fare, the CNN Republican Presidential Town Hall occurred
on Tuesday evening, at Riverside Theater in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, hosted by
Anderson Cooper. If you will allow
me, I offer just a few comments:
TrusTED:
Audience
Q: “As president, how will you ensure that America is not blindly attacked,
while also maintaining the privacy of the American people?”
TrusTED
response: “The Obama administration is not very good at distinguishing
between bad guys and good guys. So
over and over again, the Obama administration's solution, for example, when it
comes to surveillance, was to monitor the phone calls or the e-mails of
millions of law-abiding citizens, but because of their political correctness,
because they won't focus on and identify radical Islamic terrorists, they don't
actually target the bad guys. It's
why it's so important . . . people in the media, sometimes they ask, why does
it matter whether Obama will say the words ‘radical Islamic terrorism?’ It matters because if you don't identify
the problem, you don't devote - you don't direct law enforcement and national
security resources to stopping it.”
TrusTED’s
argument is specious and fallacious, at least in part. We can argue whether Obama’s war
efforts are productive or correct; however, to claim the administration does
not know who the bad guys are is just plain wrong. He also implied that massive electronic surveillance was the
brainchild of Barrack Obama. It
was not! That label clearly
belongs to George W. Bush (43). If
anything, Obama could be criticized for not advocating for broader electronic
surveillance. At the bottom line,
TrusTED did not answer the question and attempted to deflect the question on a
popular but false premise.
GOP front-runner:
There
is just too much to deal with regarding the front-runner. Instead, I offer a few timely
observations.
-- His double-speak on so many topics remains hugely
disappointing to me. He thinks and
claims the Press is treating him unfairly. If he is being treated unfairly, it is the inverse that is
true; the Press has been too bloody gentle (if not fearful) on the schoolyard
bully.
-- What the heck is a campaign manager doing crowd control
rather than leaving that task to the security personnel? Charges have been filed in Florida
against Lewandowski for one incident, and should be in others. Of course, the candidate defends the
conduct of his campaign manager, which yields another reason he is not fit.
-- Anderson Cooper noted and challenged him on the
disgusting exchanges on the wives.
Anderson was precisely correct . . . he was using the argument of a
five-year-old . . . I didn’t start it, daddy.
-- The GOP front-runner claims he is against nuclear
proliferation, and yet suggests Japan and the Republic of Korea should have nuclear
weapons to counter the DPRK and relieve the U.S. of that role. This guy is dangerous.
Kasich:
The
Governor of Ohio remains the seemingly most mature and balanced of the
remaining Republican candidates.
How
much more torture can we tolerate?
An interesting but disturbing question, it seems to me.
The
GOP front-runner publicly stated that if abortion was made illegal, again,
women who receive abortions should be punished, and then immediately began
backtracking on his statement. In a
48-hour period, the GOP front-runner espoused virtually every position
possible. I actually did not
believe the news reports until I listened to the actual words in the actual
interview. I am not a woman, but
this disturbs me, greatly. Oddly,
I think I understand his mistake, i.e., break the law = be punished. However, he is not man enough to admit
his mistake. His pride,
egocentricity and narcissism dictated his reaction. This episode illuminates so many flaws in him and in this
rancorous debate over abortion.
The
Legislature of the State of Mississippi has passed House Bill 1523, AKA the Religious
Liberty Accommodations Act” law proclaims that marriage is between man and
woman, sexual relations are reserved for marriage, and gender is determined at
birth. The law would enable
businesses to discriminate against non-heterosexual residents but also those
who have had extramarital sex (regardless of consent).
This
madness has got to stop! The
government (federal, state or local) has NO business injecting itself into
private affairs – nada, niente,
nothing. And, no commercial enterprise
should have any right and thus no protection to discriminate against another
citizen for ANY of the social factors; their choices are serve all citizens or
close. The government has no
business being in anyone’s bedroom or body; and that means no business owner or
manager should have that right.
This continuing nonsense is one of many reasons elections are so bloody
important. Get government out of
our private lives!
As
seems to be the practice, especially during the silly season, we are bombarded
by anonymous, send-this-on messages for any of a host of topics. This particular messaged concluded, “Let’s
put it around the world, and let the world see and remember what this great
country was Built on The Holy Bible and belief in GOD!” And then, s/he asked, “How then, have we
gotten to the point that everything we have done for 220 years in this Country
is now suddenly wrong and Unconstitutional?” I shall come back to the author’s question, asked perhaps
rhetorically, but I shall treat it as sincere. The author cited some facts to support her/is premise.
1. “DID YOU KNOW? As you walk up the steps to the
building which houses the U.S. Supreme Court you can see near the top of the
building a row of the world's law givers and each one is facing one in the
middle who is facing forward with a full frontal view...It is Moses and he is
holding the Ten Commandments!”
Yes, actually, I did know this particular factoid. It should be noted that the Supreme
Court building as it stands today was completed in 1935, when Jim Crow laws continued
to deny citizens with dark skin pigmentation the right to vote and other basic
rights simply because of their skin color or anatomical features.
2. “DID YOU
KNOW? As you enter the Supreme
Court courtroom, the two huge oak doors have the Ten Commandments engraved on
each lower portion of each door.”
Nope. Didn’t know this one,
but see no.1 above.
3. “DID YOU
KNOW? As you sit inside the
courtroom, you can see the wall, right above where the Supreme Court Judges
sit, a display of the Ten Commandments!”
I didn’t know this either.
I am not sure when that display was installed, so no comment on this
one.
4. “DID YOU
KNOW? There are Bible verses
etched in stone all over the Federal Buildings and Monuments in Washington,
D.C.” Truth be told, the same is
true in many, if not most or even all, of the states in the Union.
5. “DID YOU
KNOW? James Madison, the fourth
president, known as 'The Father of Our Constitution' made the following
statement: ‘We have staked the whole of all our political Institutions upon the
capacity of mankind for Self-government, upon the capacity of each and all of
us to govern ourselves, to control ourselves, to sustain ourselves according to
The Ten Commandments of God.’” Of
the whole original message, this is particular one is the greatest stretch and
most misleading. In 1811, President
Madison vetoed the bill passed by Congress establishing the Episcopal Church in
the town of Alexandria, in the District of Columbia. In his message, he stated he vetoed the bill, “Because the
bill exceeds the rightful authority to which governments are limited, by the
essential distinction between civil and religious functions, and violates, in
particular, the article of the Constitution of the United States, which
declares, that ‘Congress shall make no law respecting a religious establishment.’” President Madison along with President
Jefferson clearly recognized the separation of church and state, contrary to
the implications of the author’s original selective quotation.
6. “DID YOU
KNOW? Every session of Congress
begins with a prayer by a paid preacher, whose salary has been paid by the
taxpayer since 1777.” I knew this
one, too. The Supreme Court has
sought a proper balance, last articulated in Town of Greece v. Galloway
[572 U.S. ___ (2014); 5.5.2014] [647, 656]. They advocated for non-denominational,
non-sectarian prayer to represent all citizens.
7. “DID YOU
KNOW? Fifty-two of the 55 founders
of the Constitution were members of the established Orthodox churches in the
colonies.” Wow, this statement
depends heavily upon one’s definition of “orthodox.” There is no question that the majority of Founders, like the
population of the American Colonies they represented, were Protestant
Christians, who fled Europe to escape persecution for their religious beliefs.
8. “DID YOU
KNOW? Thomas Jefferson worried
that the Courts would overstep their authority and instead of Interpreting the
law would begin making law an oligarchy the rule of few over many.” Indeed, he did. He also most clearly articulated the
necessity of “a wall of separation between Church
& State.”
That
said, I return to the original question: “How then, have we gotten to the point
that everything we have done for 220 years in this Country is now suddenly
wrong and Unconstitutional?” My
first blush response: Evolution. At
the ratification of the Constitution, 228 years ago, slavery and the oppressive
subjugation of an entire race of citizens was protected by the
Constitution. Women and children
were considered the property of their husbands / fathers. The power of the State did NOT include
electronic, or multi-spectral, perpetual surveillance of citizens. The question alone suggests a profound
paucity of comprehension of the Constitution and the associated writings of the
Framers and Founders. Logically,
based on the circumstances surrounding the birth of this Grand Republic, the
separation of church and state has been and remains an essential cornerstone for
the basis of our Republic. I have
faith that one day, probably not in my lifetime; we shall one day mature to be
the citizens the Founders believed we could be. With questions like the subject of this tirade, we are
simply not there yet, not even close.
News from the economic
front:
-- The Labor Department reported nonfarm payrolls rose by a
seasonally adjusted 215,000 in March, while the unemployment rate ticked up to
5.0% in March from 4.9% – a sign
of the domestic labor market's resilience despite economic turmoil overseas. They also reported that average hourly wages
of private-sector workers rose by US$0.07 last month to US$25.43. Wages rose 0.3% from the prior month and
have climbed 2.3% from a year earlier.
Comments and contributions from Update no.745:
“Another good one!
“On a light note about the serious subject of our national
epidemic of Political Correctness, the ‘Tale of the Pinched Butt Punishment’
episode reminded me of the GMC sedans (at least the Buicks, and I think the
Chevys) of the 90's (or was it the late 80's?) which simply for the sake of
style change, for the sake of style change that would last only a few years,
narrowed the rear ends uselessly, resulting in what I called the ‘pinched butt’
look along with reduced trunk space, etc., . Like all unnecessary (except for
crass marketing purposes to amaze or deceive) style changes for the sake of
style changes (cars, clothes, food containers, etc.), these to have passed.
Maybe the overreactions to the reactions to the reactions to the actions
to perceived political incorrectness will, like obsessions with current styles
and anticipated changes, will also pass. America will be more peaceful
and productive when we all learn to take a joke, even the poorly expressed or
mean ones.
“On the U.S. vs Apple subject, I was for weeks on the fence but
mostly in support of Apple even while not liking some of its public responses
to the embarrassing pleas of our government. I changed to open support of
Apple when the Bullying by the U.S. government reached more onerous
proportions. Now we see that Apple's well-stated objections were well
founded and that even our civil servants have what it takes to hack their way
into any secure system devised by man.
“On the continued Trump bashing you understandably encourage, I
must remind us all that your terms like ‘narcissist,’ ‘creepy,’ ‘character
flaws,’ ‘inflammatory,’ ‘self-aggrandizing,’ etc., etc. are perfectly
applicable to many of our previous presidents. We just did not have the 24/7 microscopic views of them as
candidates and only discovered these attributes or proved the allegations of
them after their elections. The
examples are numerous; I'll let your readers who know history think of their
own.”
My reply:
Re:
political correctness. My first
blush reaction: how dare you accuse me of political correctness. My more reasoned response: my opinion
was not based upon or even considered political correctness. My opinion was specifically about
equality. We cannot and should not
have unequal treatment of anyone based on any of the social factors, including
gender. As a related side note: I
am an advocate for the basic respect of other citizens. If anyone wishes to label that courtesy
as political correctness, then so be it.
I do not do so. I see
political correctness as a lame societal endeavor to constrain free speech,
free debate and limit dissent.
Free speech is too bloody important to be constrained.
Re:
U.S. v. Apple. The USG announced
today they have formally withdrawn their suit against Apple, since they found a
‘third party’ to break open the subject iPhone. Now, don’t we all feel safer? I am not impressed with the USG’s conduct in this matter.
Re:
continued bashing. I do not recall
ever hearing this kind of offensive rhetoric or even a representation of the
insult politics being demonstrated during this particular silly season. My presidential political awareness
goes back to the 1964 election with some limited awareness of the 1960
election.
. . . follow-up comment:
“Didn't mean to accuse you of political correctness and didn't
think I did, but I'm sorry if it read that way. I just meant to suggest
that much of the sillyness (one of your best descriptive terms yet!) of the
current presidential campaign seems to me to be over reaction to commentary
that, while undeniably low-class, would not have warranted such vehement
response in years past. Of course, as you have pointed out, in years past
there was not so much silly stuff. Of course, in years past the American
public had not quite reached the point of near rebellion against the political
establishment, the mentality into which Trump has opportunistically tapped, as
is his trademark skill. Too bad Cruz can't just ignore the jabs below the
belt.”
“BTW, has anyone matched my partial list of your adjectives with
prior presidents yet?”
. . . my follow-up reply:
My
apologies. I was not clear. My first blush reaction was incorrect,
although I did not explicitly state so.
Re:
“silly stuff.” Indeed! Quite so. There is no question the Republican front-runner has seized
the opportunity to tap and let slip the dogs of discontent and anger. Yet, he has ignored the perennial
caution: be careful what you sow.
Re:
“partial list.” No, to my
knowledge, no one has yet connected the dots.
Comment to the Blog:
“I care about Kansas politics, partly out of human concern for
Kansans and partly because Governor Brownback exemplifies voodoo economics and
scary Republicanism in general. The assorted disasters in your State are an
object lesson for the rest of us, but I would not wish them on you or anyone.
In the case of a religious excuse for discrimination, the best hope in other
places is that such laws will not complete the legislative process or will be
vetoed. I imagine Kansas’ law will have to go through the courts. Such nonsense
cannot withstand that test. With any luck, an injunction early on will prevent
people from attempting to carry out their supposed freedom to discriminate.
“About the 12-year-old girl who is caught up in the legal system
for pinching a boy’s butt: I see this as a grossly overstated response to a
common incident. No essentially innocent 12-year-old should spend even a few
minutes in any of the U.S.’s juvenile jails. If the genders were reversed, I
would feel exactly the same way I do now. Those places are too dangerous and
ugly. My concern in that situation would be whether the ‘victim’ would harm the
‘perpetrator’ too much. Certainly that’s a possibility if a boy pinched my
daughters, granddaughter, nieces, or any girl in my family. Some of those
females have found it necessary to hit back, but nobody went to jail over it.
I’m not sure what the boys would do.”
“Davis Merritt’s analysis of Donald Trump’s psychology strikes me
as spot on. In other words, without the open, bombastic way his ego presents,
he would be a typical politician. However, in a year that pundits and
game-playing partisans cannot fathom, his appeal is simple. He comes across as ‘real’
in an environment where both parties’ manipulative, self-serving actions show
through the veneer of their messaging. That is, he may be asinine but at least
we know what he is (we think), and too many share his backward positions. The
same feeling of authenticity applies to Senator Sanders, but the Democrat
machine has withstood its own and independent voters’ desire for change better
than the GOP has coped with Trump. That may be changing, though. http://www.alternet.org/election-2016/hillary-clinton-running-away-political-reality?akid=14113.235367.GixZ-i&rd=1&src=newsletter1053402&t=2.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
Kansas politics. Thank you for
your human concern. It is nice to
know there are others who are concerned about our plight out here on the Great
Plains.
Re:
Brownback = scary Republicanism.
Indeed! My thoughts
precisely. I am not a fan. I would like to think you are
correct. However, the majority of
voting residents elected the . . . the . . . man; no, I won’t even give him
that . . . the person. He sweated
the last election; just barely got re-elected. Hopefully, the next time we will knock him off his
holier-than-thou, sanctimonious pedestal.
I guess you can tell I am not a fan.
Re:
12yo girl. As I read your words, I
think we are saying the same thing from different perspectives. As I said in last week’s Update, I
agree with equal treatment regardless of gender. I also agree that girl’s punishment was excessive for that
age, regardless of gender.
Re:
“both parties’ manipulative, self-serving actions.” Perhaps you are correct. I cannot argue against your
perspective. As I interpret your
words, you are suggesting there is no difference between, the Republican
front-runner, or the second place fellow, and Senator Sanders. Perhaps you are correct. The personality differences are
monumental and a differentiator.
. . . follow-up comment:
“I do see serious differences between the GOP front runner,
Senator Sanders, and Senator Cruz. What I was pointing out is the perception
about the GOP front runner and Sanders both presenting as very direct and not
like ordinary politicians. Their substance is very different. Sanders stays on
issue questions most of the time. The GOP has degenerated into a schoolyard
bragging match around personalities and macho status. Senator Cruz is his own
kind of wingnut, but his demeanor is closer to a traditional politician's.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Quite
so! Portraying themselves as
outsiders is a common theme, but they are indeed seriously different. An outsider at any cost, or overlooking
any character flaw, is just a bridge too far for me to negotiate.
Another contribution:
“Has Merritt conveniently forgotten the dishonesty involved with
the current administration and high ranking sycophants, i.e., no one or few
taking responsibility for Benghazi and the smokescreen of a video that was a
lie that was quickly pedaled by our nefarious administration afterward, the
targeting of conservative organizations by the IRS and the lack of
responsibility in taking appropriate action toward the perpetrators, and
allowing high ranking state department members and their leaders to circumvent
classified information handling protocol. Need I mention the travesty with the VA? Not being a Wichita Eagle reader,
perhaps I owe Davis Merritt an apology for he may have reported appropriately
in the past of the liars and deceivers of our administration regarding the
aforementioned. Then again, he may not have, but I’m sure he must have
apologized.”
My reply:
Re:
Benghazi attack. I have studied
too much history. Dishonesty is a
very strong word. I do not see the
purpose. I see the fog of
war. I remember distinctly thinking
the Benghazi attack was an emotional reaction to that damn video. As the attack developed and we learned
more, it was pretty clear it was a purposeful attack. They made the wrong call. Is that dishonesty or an incorrect knee-jerk reaction? I ask, if it was truly dishonesty, for
what purpose? How could anyone
believe they could bury the facts?
Most of us, who are students of war, recognize the extraordinary
confusion that accompanies any sudden enemy action. I believe I understand why some folks are so critical of the
President, the former Secretary of State and the administration for their
erroneous initial assessment. I am
not willing to condemn them for their error.
Re:
IRS abuse. Surely you are not
suggesting the Obama administration was the first or only administration to use
the IRS feloniously for political purposes. Like most folks, I condemn what the IRS did. It was wrong in so many ways. The people who decided, directed and
executed those actions should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the
law. I am disturbed that those
characters have not and may never be prosecuted.
Re:
classified information handling.
As we have learned, many other political leaders across contemporary
administrations and political parties have made that terrible mistake. Of all the things that bother me about
Hillary Clinton, it is the apparent arrogance of power – normal rules do not
apply to them – that bothers me the most.
For her to claim that none of her communications were marked classified
when they were transmitted defies logic, reason and common sense. The Secretary of State, or any other
cabinet secretary, creates classified information by their words alone; those
words are often highly classified and rarely if ever so marked until well after
they are spoken or written. To
suggest otherwise, it is simply ridiculous. All their communications must be protected with the utmost
security, and of all jobs, their personal and work communications should be
strictly exclusive.
Re:
“Need I mention the travesty with the VA?” Again, surely, you are not suggesting
or intimating that VA travesties are unique or original to the Obama
administration. The VA, as we know
it today, came into existence in 1944.
But, veteran treatment issues go back all the way to the Founding of
this Grand Republic, e.g., Newburgh Conspiracy [1783], and the ‘Bonus Army’
confrontation [1932]. So, let us
not condemn the current administration for what has been a perennial problem,
predominately due to inadequate funding from Congress, not the performance of
the Obama administration.
Re:
“liars and deceivers of our administration.” Wow, these are very strong words that
imply this administration is somehow unique. I do believe I can offer similar examples for every
administration in my lifetime – Republican and Democrat. I wrote a book about a previous
administration’s obfuscation regarding an important public event.
I
challenge your opinion, not to refute or discourage your expression, but only
to seek a reasonable, apolitical balance in our assessment of the actions of
public women and men. The Obama
administration is not as bad as some like to portray it, and it certainly could
have done better.
One more contribution:
“Regarding Herr Trumpf- his comments about ‘being open to
the idea of Japan and the ROK getting nuclear weapons’ should be the final
straw in declaring him unfit for the Presidency. Already those comments are
causing major problems for us overseas and are against what has been against
U.S. policy since the advent of the nuclear age. And they are going to be eagerly seized by Little Kim and the
Norks. The man has no idea of what
he is talking about- and he is getting dangerous. And Japan pays a lot for our forces- in fact, if we had to
rebase the 1st Marine Wing and 3rd Marine Division back in the States, it would
cost us billions.”
My response:
Actually,
Herr Drumpf, I do believe.
I
had exactly the same reaction to his statement about nukes – that is insane! We don’t need more nukes floating
around; we need less. The most
recent episode of “Madame Secretary” was good and reflective of just some of
the issues.
Too
many people see forward basing in Germany, England and Japan as wasted
deployment. I cannot imagine how
much more complicated and expensive Middle East operations would be without
just Mildenhall in England.
. . . follow-up comment:
“I used to go out of Frankfurt AB to go on our missions to Russia.
We lost an enormous logistical
asset when we handed it over to the Germans and Lufthansa.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Quite
so! List could go on.
My
very best wishes to all. Take care
of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
At this point, any attempt by party-line Republicans to respond to any issue must involve condemning President Obama. I still find it bizarre that Governor Kasich has managed to appear so much saner and more mature than his competitors. If he could survive the primary and/or convention battles, he would be a far more viable candidate, even with his Ohio record.
The current GOP front runner, I suspect, started with little interest in becoming President. That would explain his essentially random party affiliations and issue statements, his running despite his prior business/personal/political relationship with the Clintons, and the statement attributed to his former communication director that he originally planned to achieve second place in the GOP primary in order to increase his prestige and name recognition.
I still believe favorable versus unfavorable perceptions of the candidate by the general electorate will decide the general election. That would favor Bernie Sanders if current trends hold. He is the only candidate of either party with net favorable perception, and that has held from the beginning. Hillary Clinton’s high unfavorable rating would overcome any amount of messaging, but might leave her as the “lesser of two evils” to a Cruz or Trump.
The hideous laws permitting discrimination in the name of religious freedom surely will not withstand judicial scrutiny. In an interesting side note, the Supreme Court has handed down a couple of decisions favoring progressives in the absence of Scalia or a replacement. It appears the GOP Senate’s refusal to consider a nominee could be backfiring. My first guess: maybe Scalia was the persuasive conservative voice or knew “where the bodies were buried.”
You provide a masterful defense against your “Christian nation” troll. I would, however, dispute your item #7. “There is no question that the majority of Founders, like the population of the American Colonies they represented, were Protestant Christians, who fled Europe to escape persecution for their religious beliefs.” Many Founders were not first-generation Americans, including Franklin, Washington, and Jefferson. They had not fled Europe. Washington and Jefferson were Virginia gentry, not persecuted at all. Franklin was born in Boston and fled from there to Philadelphia because of poverty, not religious persecution and also to suit his personal ambition. Some of the Founders were not considered Christians by the other Christians of the time, including the Quakers so important to Pennsylvania history. Others cannot be called conservative Christians by any standard. Many, including Franklin per his autobiography, attended church for business and/or political reasons, just like modern political and business leaders. Many were influenced in college by the late, lamented Age of Reason. For a fuller discussion, here’s a Brittanica reference: http://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Founding-Fathers-Deism-and-Christianity-1272214.
One of your other commenters responded to your linked article on Trump by changing the subject to President Obama and Secretary Clinton. You took the bait on that one. I would like to point out something in that discourse, though. The two of you went around on Benghazi, but I don’t see that as worthy of discussion. The good discussion is about how we came to be in Libya.
I am as reluctant as Senator Sanders to take the accusations about Secretary Clinton’s email server seriously. However, I’m seeing a few signs that she may have ignored legitimate policy about security, and that arrogance of power issue bothers me. This is also, unavoidably, an election issue. Had Secretary Clinton settled this shortly after it arose, this would be over with little lasting damage to her. Now I’m reading rumors she will be interrogated by the FBI. If this blows up, we will see those “superdelegates” run like rabbits from her to the last Democrat standing, Bernie Sanders.
Calvin,
Re: bizarre. Well said. Agreed.
Re: GOP front-runner. Again, quite so. Everything about his conduct says he did not and does not take the process seriously or with respect. I suspect you may well be spot on correct regarding his root motivation.
Re: general election perceptions. I resist conjecture as the party nominees are still too uncertain, and we probably will not have clear candidates until July.
Re: religious freedom. I would like to think that judicial scrutiny would strike down such discriminatory laws. Yet, after the Supremes’ decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores [573 U.S. ___ (2014); 30.6.2014] [655, 675], I am not optimistic. Yes, recent cases have been split decisions, and thus, they are default affirmations of Appeals Court rulings.
Re: “Christian nation.” OK, let’s debate item no.7. By my statement, I implied ALL immigrants to the Colonies were fleeing persecution. I apologize for my over-statement; that was not my intention. Some immigrated for new opportunities, or adventure, or just ambitious motives. I should have been more precise. The Pilgrims, Puritans, Quakers, Huguenots, and other Protestant sects fled. Or, to be even more precise, my paternal ancestors fled France to survive religious persecution and literally save their lives. [Side note: I would not be here, if they had not fled.] The original colonial charters emphasized religion faith, e.g., Mayflower Compact [11.11.1620] – “Having undertaken, for the Glory of God, and advancements of the Christian faith and honor of our King and Country.” Christian religion was a dominant force in Colonial America.
Re: Libya. OK, I’ll take your bait. Why wouldn’t or shouldn’t we be in Libya? After the Arab Spring and the removal of Gaddafi, we should have been in Libya if for no other reason than to observe and monitor events, and if had been even remotely lucky, influence evolving events. All gambles do not pay off.
Re: Hillary’s private server. As I have repeatedly stated, the issue was not her decision of use a private personal server. It was her handling of classified material. Worse, her claim that she never transmitted classified material is just patently misleading at best and outright deceitful at worst. She generated classified material, labeled or not; further, such labels are usually, if not exclusively, applied later. Her very words are classified by definition. I do agree with you; if she had stood up to the real issue, she probably would be passed this by now.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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