Update
from the Heartland
No.756
6.6.16 – 12.6.16
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
I am Pulse!
The follow-up news items:
-- As the Church Lady says, “Isn’t that special!” In the wake of racist statements by the
Republican presumptive nominee [755],
he whined, “My words were misconstrued,” . . . now, ain’t that rich! “It is unfortunate my comments have been
misconstrued as a categorical attack against people of Mexican heritage.” He then repeated a gazillion times:
“He’s Mexican. I’m building a
wall.” I am left with one
predominant impression. He must
believe no one else speaks the English language as well as he thinks he
does. He must also think many of
us are just plain blathering idiots.
What was even worse, he browbeat his surrogates into making valiant
attempts to sell his drivel. The
evidence continues to mount, so much so the evidence pile is bound to topple
over, soon.
The
last of the Super Tuesday primaries were completed this week (the last six
states). There is only one primary
remaining now – District of Columbia; then, it is onto the party nominating
conventions in July. We must all
offer our special congratulations to Hillary Clinton for making history and
clinching the Democratic nomination – the first woman in history to be the
presumptive nominee for a major political party. As I indicated earlier, once the candidates achieved
sufficient delegate counts to clinch their party’s nomination, I would change
their reference from front-runner to presumptive nominee; so it shall be.
-- Donald John Trump is now the Republican Party presumptive
nominee.
-- Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton is now the Democratic Party
presumptive nominee.
-- Gary Earl Johnson is the Libertarian Party nominee.
-- The Green
Party National Convention will be held the first week of August, in Houston,
Texas; we will not likely know their nominee until after their convention.
-- Darrell Castle is the Constitution Party nominee.
Congratulations to each nominee. After next Tuesday, the primary phase of this rendition of
the silly season will close, and the convention-nominating phase will begin. The stage is nearly set for the fall
election. Then, it will be up to
We, the People, all of us. . . . well, at least those of us who do vote, to
decide who will be our next elected representatives.
Then,
as the results of the last Super Tuesday were announced, the Republican
presumptive nominee publicly stated, “I am a fighter. Now, I know some people say I'm too much
of a fighter. My preference is
always peace, however.” What the
GOP presumptive nominee failed to speak was his parenthetical conclusion – (as
long as you agree with me and do what I say).” That may be a message of peace in a dictatorship or
autocracy, but it is a long way from such a message in a raucous, diverse
democracy. Further, he could
easily add: “And, if you do not agree with me, I will bludgeon you into
submission.”
Libertarian
candidate Gary Johnson was interviewed on CNN after this week’s Super Tuesday
primaries. Refreshingly, he
congratulated Hillary Clinton on her historic accomplishment and clinching of
the Democratic Party nomination – quite a contrast to the Republican
presumptive nominee. What he said
that was most resonant with me was the government should NOT be involved in
making decisions or taking actions in the private domain of individual
citizens. I say, amen brother! The Libertarian candidate offers a
refreshing contrast to the two major party nominees.
When
I served as chancellor at a university campus, I had to deal with several
alleged rape cases similar to the Stanford University case featured in the news
these days. In every case I dealt
with, the accusers refused, despite strong advice, to press criminal charges
against their perpetrators. As a
consequence of my frustration, my experience evolved into several items of
counsel to students.
1. An
intoxicated or unconscious person cannot give consent, by definition, as that
person is not of sound mind or body.
2. If you
consume anything to excess, where your capability or capacity is diminished,
you entrust your life to those around you. If you are going to drink, or consume any other psychotropic
substances, whether intentionally or not, ask yourself: do I trust every person
in this room or house with my life?
The answer should guide your conduct.
3. When you consume
a substance of unknown origin, you literally entrust your life to the provider. Ask yourself, do you trust the person
handing you a drink, a pill, a powder, a smoke, with your life?
4. Air is
consumption. If you attend a party
or gathering, and anyone creates smoke or gaseous variants or exhalants of
illegal substances, you are consuming those substances as well, by default, via
the air you breathe.
5. ANY form to
sexual contact – touching, fondling, or any penetration however so slight of
any bodily orifice – without consent is a criminal act.
The cases I dealt with were tragic – every one. I truly believed that every accuser was
subjected to sexual intercourse without her consent, and I believed the
perpetrators, when they could be or were named, intentionally took advantage of
a compromised young woman. I
desperately wanted to prosecute the perpetrators, but we were not able to
prosecute a single one. Two of the
perpetrators made subsequent mistakes of sufficient magnitude to result in
their dismissal from the university.
At the end of the day, I am left with one overwhelming thought, we
absolutely must find the courage to teach our children far better than we do,
about sex, relationships, psychotropic substances and social decision-making. We have failed our children and
occasionally we are presented graphic evidence of our failure. There is no such thing as “affluenza,”
or the country bumpkin ignorance claimed by the convicted rapist in this latest
crime at Stanford University. The
perpetrators were never taught to respect another human being; everything, for
them, is all about me-me-me.
Just
another random thought . . .
I
have been working, for many months now, on finishing up the page proof review
of my next book – “The Clarity of Hindsight” – a history book and a unique
compilation of significant words of World War II placed in the context of
surround momentous events. This
book has been 20 years in construction, and thank goodness my publisher
encouraged me to finish the project; but, it is a lot of work, like birthing a
baby . . . lots of pain before the impending joy. If I can get my work done, hopefully, the book will be
published in the next month or two.
Anyway,
the thought that came to me . . . when an individual thinks of himself as well
. . . God . . . who makes no mistakes, is never wrong, never has to apologize
for anything because he is never wrong, who thinks of himself as perfect in
every form . . . bad things can happen, and many people usually suffer the
consequences. When you put a man
like that in power, at the head of a nation-state, the consequences are amplified
by orders of magnitude.
The
moment that comes to mind is the decimation and surrender of the remnants of
the entire German 6th Army at Stalingrad [31.January.1943]. A year after the invasion of the Soviet
Union [22.June.1941], Hitler’s ego and sense of superiority led him to divert
and commit Army Group B, including the 6th Army, to taking
Stalingrad – a city on the River Volga (formerly Volgograd). The city had comparatively little
strategic or even tactical value other than as an historic way station for
river traffic and a railway junction.
As the second winter of the invasion enveloped the Germans, the Soviet
Red Army counterattacked [19.November.1942] in a two-pronged operation, clearly
intended to encircle and cut off the Germans in the besieged city of
Stalingrad. The German Army
commanders wanted to withdraw and regroup in order to blunt and stop the Soviet
attack. Hitler directly
countermanded the Army professionals, and ordered the 6th Army to
stand fast and hold the city. Four
days later, the two Soviet penetrations linked up and the 6th Army
was doomed. A quarter of a million
men were lost that winter; 150,000 died in the fighting, 91,000 surrendered,
and only 6,000 survived the war.
And, of course, as it virtually always is with egomaniacal leaders like
Hitler (and others), he blamed the Army for the defeat at Stalingrad (of
course, it could not be his fault; he was infallible) and the loss of all those
men. This is what happens when
self-professed, god-like men gain power as a commander-in-chief. History is beautiful, isn’t it!
To
put a point on it, in the instance cited, a quarter of a million men died
because of one man’s ego. It
cannot get more stark and grotesque than that. There are other examples, but this is the one that struck me
at this moment. This is what is at
risk today.
We
knew it was bound to happen, eventually.
At 02:00 [R] EDT, Sunday, apparently a lone gunman entered the Pulse
nightclub in downtown Orlando, Florida.
The shooter has been identified as Omar Saddiqui Mateen, an American
citizen of Afghan heritage, who was living in Fort Pierce, Florida. Initial reports indicate Mateen was
armed with an AR-15 assault rifle and a semi-automatic pistol. He killed 50 and wounded 53 others
before SWAT officers dropped him.
Mateen reportedly made a 911 call and claimed allegiance to ISIL. This looks like, sounds like, a
lone-wolf attack by an Islamo-fascist sleeper, convert, agent, or
sympathizer. The FBI is leading
the investigation as a terrorist event.
We will learn much more in the coming days, much of which we will not
like to hear. These are the days
in which we live. May God rest the
immortal souls of those who lost their lives and those who remain at risk, and
comfort the families and friends who lost so much early Sunday morning.
Comments and contributions from Update no.755:
“I am disappointed. Once again we have predominantly all
lambasting of the GOP front-runner and what appears to be a complete oversight
of last week’s revelation of the State Department’s highly unethical and
illegal editing of videos with no one in the State Department or above at the
National Leadership level—who might that be—willing to take the responsibility
as to why this was authorized or allowed to happen without consequence.
We continually face the onslaught of such omissions by the liberal left
media, have for years, and continually face the leadership challenged Obama and
just about anyone that reports to him to take responsibility myriad nefarious
goings on within our Government. And we also have the oversight of the hijacking by Michelle
Obama of a commencement ceremony to further the DNC agenda.
“So, yes, I am willing to side with the GOP frontrunner. I
am ‘that angry, that pissed off, that disgusted with professional politicians,
that I would find satisfaction, or refuge, or solace, or comfort with an
individual of such outrageous and boundless personal flaws’ at least for the
time being. I am willing to take a
chance that Trump can get things turned around from the dismal direction the
country has been heading under the “hope and change” that so many unsuspecting
voters bought into during the past two elections or the dismal direction we
will head if an inveterate liar ends up in the White House and if the same
racketeers types that corrupt the present administration retain their usurping
positions of power.”
My response:
I
am always sorry to disappoint. “I
am what I am and that’s all that I am.”
At least you know my opinion on any given topic.
Re:
angry. Well, apparently you are
far angrier than me, which is unfortunate. So, just to be clear, the GOP front-runner could shoot
someone in Times Square and you would still support his candidacy for
President? Do you support his
verbal attacks on a sitting federal judge? You did not answer my question: are there no limits?
Re:
State Department video editing.
What is your source, if I may ask?
Thank
you for expressing your opinion.
Re:
take a chance. I can understand
taking a risk. Thus, I deduce that
you see the positives outweigh the negatives. I trust you can accept that I see the equation heavily
weighted to the negative, i.e., the risks appear far too great, based on my
assessment.
We
will not know what choices we have until the end of July. We will have more
than two choices. All of us will
evaluate our choices before we cast our vote in November. Until then, we debate potential.
. . . Round two:
“‘So, just to be clear, the GOP front-runner could shoot someone
in Times Square and you would still support his candidacy for President?’ I thought this to be to absurd to
answer. I guess I was wrong. But to be clear, unless it was
self-defense, no, I would not support his candidacy. As regards the
verbal attacks on a sitting federal judge, I am remiss on knowing more about
this story. I will say, that there
are many people, in government service or not, regardless of their position,
that warrant having verbal attacks levied upon them, and we witness this in
your forum each and every week. It would be hypocritical of me to say
otherwise. It would be even more hypocritical of me to say that I have
never verbally attacked someone.
“State Department video editing -- Please see the following links
for some background. There’s a lot more to it, but this is probably a
good place to start.
“Yes, you do deduce correctly, and you make it quite obvious that
you see the equation differently.
“You forgot to address Michelle
Obama hijacking the commencement ceremony.”
. . . my response to round two:
I
do not think my question was absurd at all. The GOP front-runner made that public statement. I was simply probing for the
boundaries, the limits to that loyalty.
Clearly, he believes he has many followers who would not reject him if
he shot someone in Times Square, or did anything else outrageous or illegal. OK, so at least we know there are
limits to loyalty for that man.
You
apparently missed my point. My
criticism of his remarks was not that he was dissatisfied with the judge’s
contributory ruling. My objection
was that he was using his position as the presidential nominee of the
Republican Party; he is no longer a private citizen . . . at least until he is
defeated, or his service is complete, and even then as a former president, he
should not use his office or position as a personal microphone. He is now representing all Republicans
and perhaps one day he might be speaking for all Americans. His attack on a sitting judge violated
a plethora of principles, precedent and order.
Re:
State Department video editing.
Lynch ‘em all.
Re:
Michella Obama. I only heard
snippets of her speech. What I
heard sounded like so many other commencement addresses. Guest speakers are traditionally
invited to offer words they consider significant to the graduates. I imagine she believes she did just
that.
. . . Round three:
“Just to be clear, you say the GOP front-runner made the statement
highlighted in Yellow below, which you in turn posed to your readers? So
you are saying Trump said he could shoot someone in Times Square and people
would still support him? If that be true, then no, I will agree that your
question was not absurd.
“As to missing your point, I suppose I did. And does not the
sitting president—has not the sitting president—representing and speaking for
all Americans, violated certain principles by speaking disparagingly against
others, by not holding fellow presidential administration corrupters of our
country responsible for their acts, by secretly helping to further Iran’s
ultimate goal of having nuclear destructive capability, and by speaking in such
a manner as to promote divisiveness within our country, use his position as a
personal microphone? And does not the sitting first lady do the same as
well?”
. . . my response to round three:
For
the record, the now GOP presumptive nominee said publicly at a campaign event
in Sioux City, Iowa [23.January.2016]:
“The people, my people, are so smart, and you know
what else they say about my people . . . the polls, they say I have the most loyal people. Did you ever see that? Where I could stand in the middle of
5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters. OK, it’s like incredible.”
What sort of person says something like that . . . any
person on the street, you, or me, in public or private, anyone . . . set aside
a candidate for the presidency of the United States? What is more significant, he clearly does not think anyone
but him has any intelligence or understanding of the English language. He believes we are idiot lemmings
running for the cliff.
I
suppose to further our boring into the substance of your opinion regarding
President Obama, you will need to produce a specific example. So, pick one, if you wish. Perhaps I am blind, deaf or blissfully
ignorant. I simply do not see his
public rhetoric in the same light you do.
Since
the 2004 Democratic National Convention [27.July.2004], I have seen President
Barack Obama as one of the most gifted public speakers and masters of political
rhetoric since President Ronald Reagan.
While I would not place him at the level of President Franklin Roosevelt
or the paramount public speaker, Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill, he is
well above the majority of public figures. He has done exceptionally well regardless of the medium –
teleprompter, press conference, impromptu remarks, National Press Club dinner,
doesn’t matter.
. . . Round four:
“Regardless of your contempt for Trump and my disdain for the
sitting president and the corruption proliferated during his reign, let us
please get to the bottom of this contentious quote you brought forth. I
ask, because this still bothers me, is something taken out of context with the
quote you provided. Did Trump say that he could stand in the middle of
5th Avenue and shoot somebody or is he restating what someone else (‘…the
polls, they say…’) said, which you have presented—in your argument—as if Trump
said it in first person?”
“The people, my
people, are so smart, and you know what else they say about my people . . . the polls, they say I have the
most loyal people. Did you ever see that? Where I could stand in the
middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters. OK, it’s
like incredible.”
. . . my response to round four:
I
am not, and have never made any claim to being, an expert in the English
language. English was not one of
my strongest subjects in high school.
Yet, I have found a passion for the language. I am a novice, or journeyman at best, and I certainly
appreciate the subtleties of the language. So, to be precise, he had sentences in proximity, which at a
distance give him plausible deniability, i.e., I did not say it; I was simply
repeating what someone else said.
On the flip side, he did NOT conjoin those sentences. Thus, both sentences stand alone within
the context of the statement. As a
consequence, the actionable sentence was NOT qualified, and therefore, it
remains his original statement of thought, not a reflection of someone
else. Lastly, he chooses what he
wishes to say; no one is making him say any of these things. He chose to convey that thought, that
image, that impression, as his own, whether repeating it or not.
At
the end of the day, I ask myself, what would Sir Winston think of the GOP
presumptive nominee’s words – choice, delivery, message, meter, et al? He was an expert and master craftsman
of the language.
Perhaps,
part of my problem with the GOP presumptive nominee’s conduct is I have given
him far too much credit for intelligence, i.e., that he has carefully chosen
his words to convey the message he wishes us to receive. Repeating profanity from his audience
is hardly a wise choice. To me,
this whole fiasco surrounding him has absolutely nothing to do with political
correctness; it has everything to do with basic human decency and respect for
other human beings as your equal.
His purported wealth does NOT make him God, despite the fact he thinks
so.
You
are, of course, free to rationalize his speech as you wish, for any reason you
wish, but that does not alter the language . . . or his intention, in my humble
opinion. I am not attempting to
alter your opinion . . . only to understand the basis of your opinion. I certainly respect your courage and
confidence in expressing your opinion, which is the very essence of this humble
forum, I must say.
. . . Round five:
“Thank you for the kind words. I wish you were
running. I know without a doubt I could count on you to do the right
thing; not pander for votes, not flip flop on your position unless you owned up
to being wrong, not usurp the powers of your position to further your party’s
position, not condone people in your administration usurping their power to
target organizations of the opposing political party, not put out and
facilitate a lie to cover up failings in Benghazi, put the justice back in the
Justice Department, not play golf or attend fundraisers when your presence is
needed elsewhere, and hold those in your administration responsible for their
actions, all in the name of making this Grand Republic great again.”
. . . my response to round five:
Thank
you for your confidence, but I have far too many flaws to even dream of
submitting to the process.
For
the record, this Grand Republic has not stopped being great in my entire
lifetime.
Another contribution:
“Once again, you give entirely too much space for a reader who is
so fond of his/her words that he/she cannot shut up.
“If you were targeting some portion of the population or selling
something, which you are not, his/criticism might apply, and you might start
telling readers what they want to hear, as he/she apparently thinks bloggers
must be bent upon doing in order to gain numbers of readers.
“I say keep on keeping on.
I don't care a whit about being targeted, and I have no need for blog
ratings.
“I do care, however, about wasting my time reading inane argument
offered by one of your reader who seems to enjoy just arguing. One round, maybe, but not two, three,
etc.”
My reply:
Guilty! Anyone who takes the time to express
their opinion in furtherance of the public debate deserves a voice.
I
offer my apologies for exceeding your threshold of tolerance.
I
continually seek balance. Clearly,
I am not always successful.
Thank
you for expressing your opinion and reading the Blog.
A different offering
from the same contributor:
“Thought you might be interested in part of an exchange on our
local solo practitioner list service.”
The
opinion submittal to a separate forum:
“In a recent email, I expressed distain for what I considered
unbalanced news on June 6, the nearly forgotten D-Day anniversary, in favor of
huge coverage of Ali's passing. I was properly chastised, I think, for a
perceived attitude on my own part, a reaction to my use of certain words that
struck the responding solonet contributor as religious. What I said was
"Thank you for the poignant reminder of the date, once
again almost forgotten in the
press
as it celebrates the life of one obnoxious athlete who managed to REDEEM
himself partially
by sharing a little of his gains. I am glad we can FORGIVE
Cassius and admire his
adult accomplishments, but I regret the media's unbalanced attention to such a
low priority
in American history."
“Now, having learned much more about the late adult life of AlI, I
must confess that I let the attitude of my early years influence even my
present willingness to forgive him for those obnoxious early years, and I have
become thankful for the extensive coverage of a life that truly seems to have
redeemed a youthful self-centeredness.
“Cassius Clay became Mohammed Ali and took political positions
under what I considered dubious motivations at the time, but he later
repudiated radical Islamic extremism and became deserving of the adulation
evident over the years in some circles and covered quite well in the press upon
his passing. And, I must add in retrospect, he was quite right in his
objection to our miserable efforts in Viet Nam.
“Let us never fail to celebrate D-Day every year, but let us not
forget the example of Ali, who made a difference in the world that continues to
inspire young and old.
“I repeat: I must apologize for my own unbalanced reaction
to the lack of adequate coverage of D-Day by overreacting to the quite proper
coverage of Ali's death.”
My response:
First
and foremost, remembrance of D-Day is a worthy endeavor. There were many D-Days and L-Days
during World War II. Operation
OVERLORD is not yet forgotten. The
historic event is certainly featured in my next book due out in the next couple
of months. It is also an important
event in Book VII of my To So Few series of historical novels . . . just in
case you wanted to know. In this
instance, I do not fault the Press.
History never goes away.
Contemporary events superseded history this year.
Re:
Muhammad Ali. He was a product of
his time . . . a very tumultuous and divisive era in our history. His life reflected the frustration of citizens
with dark skin pigmentation during those years. I have far more respect for Ali than many others of that
time. He sacrificed enormously for
his principles rather than run for the sanctuary of Canada. He was an amazing boxer and truly
awesome to watch. Our middle son
asked me, who do you think would have won if Muhammad Ali and Mike Tyson had
fought? My answer: Muhammad
Ali. He was a very smart, capable
fighter. BTW, our son disagreed.
At
the end of the day, thank you for your generous words and recognition.
May
God bless the soul of Muhammad Ali and all those veterans who sacrificed
everything in the close run thing that was Operation OVERLORD.
May God bless this Grand Republic!
A different
contribution:
“Regarding the attacks by Herr Drumpf on a sitting U.S. judge,
this is an extremely egregious move that is totally unprecedented. From media accounts today, he has
instructed his surrogates to attack the judge and is doubling down. This may be in response to the
seriousness of the suits, which tend to undermine his story. Further, one of the California suits is
under a civil application of RICO statutes. There is a similar suit being brought in New York state by
the State AG- who calls the Trump U an “outright fraud”. It is
further interesting to hear that AGs in Florida and Texas curtailed
investigations of Trump U in their respective states. Subsequently, the
AG of FL got $25K for her re-election campaign and the then-AG of TX got $35K
for his election campaign to governor (looks, smells and sounds like a bribe). And to make things more muddy, the
present AG of TX issued a cease-and-desist letter to the retired AG attorney
who disclosed data on the investigation that was cancelled- with no further
recourse under the state AG for citizens to recover their funds. Thus,
Trump’s ire may be undergirded by real fear of potential criminal action.
Stay tuned.”
My reply:
Herr
Drumpf, indeed . . . that German running for POTUS.
I
had not heard most of that information.
If true, yes, waddles, quacks and looks like . . . a bribe.
The
extreme, unprecedented reaction from the GOP front-runner is precisely why I
quoted Shakespeare in the Update . . . a perfect quote. He has exposed his perceived
vulnerability. I hope the Press
picks and bores deeply into this Trump U. nonsense. I suspect there is much more to this story than what we know
so far.
Stay
tuned . . . oh my yes . . . I’m not going anywhere.
My
very best wishes to all. Take care
of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
Senator Clinton is the presumptive and presumptuous Democratic nominee. The Clinton campaign’s history of premature celebration supports a reminder here that the FBI has not finished with her. If that nomination prevails, I and others are done with the Democrats. Theirs has been the most openly corrupt primary process I have ever seen. President Nixon’s Watergate transgressions are looking relatively minor in comparison.
The Green Party’s nominee will almost certainly be Dr. Jill Stein. I was not aware of the Constitution Party. In how many states have they achieved ballot status?
I will listen to the Libertarian Party’s nominee, assuming his history does not contradict his words. The Libertarians certainly have a different viewpoint from what remains of the Republicans, and what you stated about keeping the government out of people’s private lives resonates with me. However, I fear the Libertarians would allow corporate entities so much freedom as to further harm most Americans.
I will note that you did not say whether your “items of counsel” in alleged rape cases were provided to the accused, the accusers, or both. The accusers need to know that drunkenness or drug use does not excuse their actions.
I tire of the description of any and all mass homicides as “terrorist” attacks. The ease of acquiring and operating these weapons made the horror in Orlando possible, regardless of motivation. I will spare your readers the intent and wording of the Second Amendment because I am morally certain they don’t care, but at some point we must consider international relations. As long as we continue to prove daily how barbaric our nation has become, the rest of the world will see that. Who can respect a government that lets these multiple murders continue?
Calvin,
Re: Democrats. Well, with one major distinction . . . what Nixon did was felonious on multiple levels. To my knowledge, Hillary has complied with the law . . . as it stands today. So, if there is any wrong-doing, I would say Congress has failed to pass appropriate laws to avoid the alleged corruption.
Re: Green Party. I suspect you are correct, but their nominating process is far less publicized . . . thus my statement. To my knowledge, the Green Party candidate will be listed in at least 36 states; FYI, Kansas is one of those states.
Re: Libertarian candidate. Gary Johnson is not a particular articulate public speaker, but he does have a resonant message.
Re: “items of counsel.” Those items were provided at special disciplinary sessions and at new student orientation. The alleged perpetrators (when identified) received a far more pointed counsel along the lines of we know what you did and we will be watching you. All students were repeatedly informed that intoxication by any substance by any means for any reason will never be accepted as an excuse for bad behavior.
Re: mass homicides. Good point, actually. In fact, I have already begun writing about the Orlando event in this week’s Update. As more information becomes publicly available, it is looking progressively more like a hate crime rather than a terrorist event. The ‘perp’s’ Islamo-fascist claims were contradictive and not particularly well informed . . . as if he cited his affiliation with ISIL as justification for his violence, rather than his true homophobic hatred. His father’s post-events comments are quite telling to me.
Re: “Who can respect a government that lets these multiple murders continue?” Unless we are prepared to accept “Minority Report” thought-based, pre-emptive, governmental interdiction prior to crimes being committed, we will suffer these events. Mateen passed multiple background checks. It was not like he was an invisible unknown. The authorities had recorded glimpses of his violence, but I suspect they were looking for the wrong form of hatred; they were looking for Islamo-fascist leanings or potential, and he appears to be far more homophobic than jihadi. Also, the various governmental databases are not connected.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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