Update from the Heartland
No.775
17.10.16 – 23.10.16
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
Several
public opinions were published this week in our local newspaper and seem quite
appropriate at this juncture of the silly season.
-- “This isn’t ‘how men are’”
by Leonard Pitts Jr. – Miami Herald
Wichita Eagle
Published: OCTOBER 17, 2016 5:12 AM
-- “Win or lose, Trump damages democracy”
by Davis Merritt
Wichita Eagle
Published: OCTOBER 18, 2016 5:01 AM
Yet,
it was a simple Opinion Line contribution that rang the bell for me.
“I’m so confused. It seems as if the Republican Party
is trying to make me vote for Clinton.”
I
understand Melania’s defense of her husband, but I’m sorry, Melania . . . what
was on the video tape was not “boy talk.”
She also affirmed the reality that she had two (2) boys at home – her
son and her husband. Further, I do
NOT want a boy in the Oval Office.
I want a mature, calm, level-headed, contemplative person (male, female,
transgender . . . well gender is irrelevant) in the Oval Office. ‘Nuf said!
This
week, the Republican nominee Donald Trump offered his governmental ethics
reform proposal.
“First: I
am going to re-institute a 5-year ban on all executive branch officials
lobbying the government for 5 years after they leave government service. I am
going to ask Congress to pass this ban into law so that it cannot be lifted by
executive order.
“Second: I
am going to ask Congress to institute its own 5-year ban on lobbying by former
members of Congress and their staffs.
“Third: I
am going to expand the definition of lobbyist so we close all the loopholes
that former government officials use by labeling themselves consultants and
advisors when we all know they are lobbyists.
“Fourth: I
am going to issue a lifetime ban against senior executive branch officials
lobbying on behalf of a foreign government.
“And Fifth:
I am going to ask Congress to pass a campaign finance reform that prevents
registered foreign lobbyists from raising money in American elections.”
The
next day, he added his advocacy for congressional term limits – a six-year
limit for the House [three (3) terms] and a 12-year cap for the Senate [two (2)
terms]. At least the Republican
nominee acknowledged that a constitutional amendment would be required to
impose term limits on Congress.
A
regular contributor added his opinion.
“Here is another reason I urge patriots to vote for the rogue
non-politician Independent Republican who offends many with his bad habits,
scares the timid with his unapologetic pride in the values that made America
great, and gives us every reason to believe that he will actually begin to
change things in Washington while respecting and protecting the constitution.
“Incidentally, I do not plan to vote for any Repandercrat and may
actually vote this time for a Democrat for my U.S. representative, confident
that the incumbent republican will win on his way to inherit Thad Cochran's
revered Senatorial mantle and spend another career in Washington along with all
the others that oppose term limits in favor of the status quo.
“One can hold one's nose and hopefully vote for Trump in good
faith. One cannot block the stench of corruption surrounding Clinton by
any nasal pressure or other pretense at the polls.”
I could not resist responding.
First,
I must confess, I fully support Trump’s ethics and term limits proposals. I have a long history of advocating for
similar ethics reforms and especially for term limits for Congress. The 22nd Amendment was
ratified by the states in 1951, to prevent a repeat of FDR’s four terms as
POTUS. Unfortunately, the 22nd Amendment
only applies to POTUS.
I
would argue that Trump’s ethics proposal does not go far enough in curtailing
the influence of lobbyists and the incestuous relationship between Congress and
lobbyists. It is not clear to me
how his Fifth point would play with Citizens United [558 U.S. 310
(2010)] [424], but it is still worth
a shot. Also, only partially
constraining lobbyists, especially with congressional term limits, might
actually make things much worse.
Now
that we have the agreements out of the way, I cannot resist responding to some
of your other points.
Re:
“the
values that made America great.”
OK, I’ll bite. What values
are those? I had no idea
self-serving, egocentricity, narcissism and demagoguery were historic values
lauded in this Grand Republic. I
have so much yet to learn.
Re:
“gives
us every reason to believe that he will actually begin to change things in
Washington while respecting and protecting the constitution.” I genuinely and truly wish your
assessment is and would be correct.
Unfortunately, I see very little to give me similar confidence. In fact, I see far too many signs that
a Trump presidency would be the antithesis of what this Grand Republic has stood
for nearly two and a half centuries.
As
I have acknowledged with other contributors to this humble forum, I offer
nothing but praise for your ability to so clearly see your choice. I have not made my choice, as yet,
other than I cannot find any path to vote for the Republican nominee; his
character flaws are simply too monumental and threatening for my tolerance.
Re:
“the
stench of corruption surrounding Clinton.” I am no fan of Hillary – never have been and probably never
will be. There is certainly a
plethora of salients to criticize her conduct. She has clearly done some really bonehead things. Further, we may not like the rules of
the game, but we should not criticize her for playing by those rules better
than anyone else. Bernie sought to
protest those rules and went a long way to doing just that; he still played by
the rules. If we don’t like the
rules, let us change the rules before the next game rather than crucify a
candidate for playing by the rules.
The
third and final presidential debate of this silly season was held at the Thomas
& Mack Center, University of Nevada Las Vegas, moderated by Chris Wallace
of Fox News. I will begrudgingly
give Trump credit for his mighty effort to appear and act presidential, but he
failed to sustain that Herculean effort for 90 minutes. He simply does not have the maturity to
keep his mouth shut and retain some modicum of discipline.
I
could offer multitudinous observations on both candidates. I certainly have those opinions. However, I highly doubt my opinions or
observations matter a hoot to anyone.
To me, the truth-teller above all others was the Republican nominee’s
response to Wallace’s query: “I want to ask you here on the stage
tonight, do you make the same commitment that you'll absolutely accept the result
of the election?”
Trump answered, “I will look at it at the time. I’m not
looking at anything now, I'll look at it at the time. What I've seen, what I’ve
seen, is so bad.”
Trump rambled on in a valiant effort to deflect from the
question. Wallace pressed him, “Are
you saying you're not prepared now to commit to ” [the] principle [of peaceful transition of power]?
To which, he responded, “What I’m saying is that I will tell
you at the time. I'll keep you in
suspense, okay?”
While this is an abridged transcript of the exchange, it is
the essence of the problem I have with the Republican nominee. The whole election is ALL about him –
not this Grand Republic, not history, not tradition, not precedent, not
anything beyond himself. His
response is consistent with his “I alone can fix it” statement [762], i.e., only he can determine the
legitimacy of this election. This
is NOT a reality show, Donald!
This is the presidency of the United States of America. It is NOT about you.
I
stand squarely and solidly with Hillary; I am horrified that a presidential
candidate would fail to stand with the democratic process in this Grand
Republic. Every losing candidate
in my lifetime has conceded with dignity and grace. Donald Trump has no clue – none – what those words mean.
The
Donald had not even left the stage when his surrogates rushed out to begin
their work – “Of course, we’ll accept the election results.” Thank goodness his surrogates had their
decoder rings to translate his words into proper English for the rest of us. But, no, the Donald could not leave
well enough alone. He had to
double-down in the days following the debate. His narcissism and demagoguery will go down in history as
unprecedented and unequalled.
At
the end of the day, I am left with the Comment Line statement noted in last
week’s Update [774]. Donald Trump is working very, very hard
to make me vote for Hillary Clinton (which I absolutely resent, i.e., she does
not deserve my vote).
Postscript note:
FYI, Donald, the Supreme Court does NOT do anything “automatically,” no matter
what you may want. You clearly have
no clue about how the Supreme Court works. Supplemental: Sam Brownback is trying to do a similar “court
packing” campaign here is Kansas.
These damnable ideologues must be stopped.
A relevant observation:
“Republicans are so quick to use the term ‘constitutional right’
to bear arms aka 2nd Amendment. But they won't do the same for Roe v
Wade. The same ‘constitutional
right’ applies.”
To which, I replied:
I
certainly understand and agree with your sentiment. However, we need to be quite precise and clear, especially
on such volatile and polarizing issues.
The
2nd Amendment
has been and remains a part of the Constitution of the United States since
1791. The matter addressed in Roe
v. Wade [410 U.S. 113 (1973)] [319]
is constitutional interpretation by the Supreme Court and it is not represented
or reflected in any of the articles or amendments to the Constitution.
I
will say, I highly doubt Trump has read Roe v. Wade or even has a smidgen of
understanding of what the SCOTUS ruling actually says beyond what he has been
fed. I make no claim to being a
constitutional scholar, but I have read the ruling (carefully). The instigating issue in that case was
abortion. Yet, the ruling deals
with a citizen’s (a woman’s) fundamental right to privacy in making intimate
and very personal medical decisions.
Neither abortion nor privacy are written into the Constitution.
SCOTUS
is driven by an important, I will say essential, point of law called “stare decisis” = “to stand by a
decision.” The body of decisions
regarding the 2nd
Amendment is far greater than that of abortion or even privacy. Yet, at the end of the day, SCOTUS is
the sole interpreter of the Constitution since Marbury v. Madison [5
U.S. {1 Cranch} 137 (1803)] [414]. The reality is, SCOTUS can and has
changed its collective mind (albeit, comparatively rarely), e.g., Citizens
United v. Federal Election Commission [558 U.S. 310 (2010)] [424].
There
are many such matters that remain lightning rods in contemporary society;
regulation of firearms and abortion are but two of those issues. I will close by saying the ultimate,
single most critical issue that remains under constant pressure is a citizen’s
fundamental right to privacy, IMHO.
Vote
wisely .
With this follow-up contribution:
“Thank you for the insight and clarity. I knew Roe v Wade wasn’t part of the actual
Constitution but your description helps provide context.
“I thought last nights debate was the best out of the 3. It got a little much towards the end as
they tried to talk over each other but overall it was good. As for ‘wisely,’ not sure that's
possible in this election. I guess
anyone but Trump will be wise in our sad state of affairs.
“We'll know in 3 weeks!”
Along with my follow-up reply:
Debate
2 sealed and locked the door for me.
I’m still writing about Debate 3, but the truth-teller moment was “I’ll
keep you in suspense.”
The
best we can hope for is an overwhelming landslide defeat (losing the presidency
and both chambers of Congress) that embarrasses him so much that he disappears
. . . not likely, given his character flaws, but still a nice thought.
Yes,
indeed, we shall know in 3 weeks.
Philippine
President Rodrigo Duterte [769] continues
his pledged efforts to distance his country from the United States, while he
cozies up to the People’s Republic of China. It would appear the Philippines have conceded the island
dispute in the South China Sea to the PRC [696]. The Philippine people elected Duterte
based on his professed intentions to warm to the PRC and cool to the
U.S.A. Separately, Russia
has apparently told Duterte to give them a wish list for military
hardware. This is not a good sign
for open navigation of the South China Sea.
A regular contributor added his public opinion on the
impending election.
“No doubt.
Predictable Hillary Clinton, extremely wealthy and comfortable after a
long controversial public-paid career, is an excellent debater. She is the long time opportunistic
presidential aspirant/politician's wife/political insider, accustomed to achieving
success by defusing or defending questionable personal and professional conduct
with clever obfuscation, always with careful regard for appearances and blind
loyalty to the Democratic Party line.
She is still pleased with her party's efforts to keep America strong and
promises more and better of the same approach along with bigger government and
a more left leaning Supreme Court.
On the other hand, unpredictable Donald Trump, also extremely wealthy
but after a long controversial privately paid career, is a very poor
debater. He is the long time
opportunistic entrepreneur/job provider/political outsider, accustomed to
achieving success by ignoring complaints of his male chauvinistic mistakes and
out-negotiating or bullying weaker opponents while cleverly minimizing taxes,
always with little regard for appearances and somewhat fickle support for both
Democrat and Repandercrat party lines.
He is disgusted with both parties' failures to keep America strong and
promises a fresh different approach along with leaner government and a Supreme
Court that respects the constitution as written. These are important differences, folks. Clinton the experienced debater energetically
prepares for television with experts and debates articulately with
condescending smiles and smooth insults. Trump the poor debater casually prepares with loyal
followers and debates awkwardly, with ugly frowns and rough shotgun jabs. No doubt, if voters believe debating
skills are essential, another Clinton will disgrace the White House! However, presidents don't debate; they
lead. More than ever in history
our country needs a tough independent political outsider and private job
creator, not a polished status quo politician, to lead our Executive Branch of
government. As Chief Executive,
Trump would restore international respect for our country while cleaning house
in the Executive Branch, protecting the integrity of our Judicial Branch
(Federal Courts) by nominating constitutional scholars, and inspiring our Legislative
Branch (Congress) to do its constitutional job by doing his. Debating skills are not
leadership skills. I hope voters
will think for themselves and not be swayed or scared by pollsters or talking heads
who swallow smooth political rhetoric and use debates to prove presidential
fitness. Of two unpopular choices,
the outsider who will shake up Washington is by far the better one on November
8, 2016.”
My supplemental contribution:
First
and foremost, thank you so very much for sharing your opinion.
Second,
since you wrote to a newspaper, I presume it is acceptable to publish your
opinion in this week’s Update.
Now,
I cannot resist my urge to comment.
Please forgive me.
Your
words feature debating skills as a pivotal matter. Respectfully,
the debates rarely yield valuable insights to the candidates intended policies
or potential leadership skills.
The debates do offer a graphic view of how candidates handle stress,
thinking on their feet without notes and teleprompters (i.e., command of the
issue at hand), and how they handle inter-personal relationships. They are unscripted moments that
reflect commitment and preparation, which presumably will indicate how they
will perform as POTUS.
Re:
“respects
the constitution as written.”
Interesting topic for public debate. We have touched upon this issue many times. SCOTUS has existed to interpret the
words. So much comes down to the
question: did the Founders / Framers intend the Constitution to be interpreted
in the context of 1788? In those
days, only white, male, property owners had the right to vote, and slavery was
codified in the Constitution.
Strict constructionists demand interpretation ONLY in the context of
1788 and only the articles as written in the King’s English. Thus, contributing words, e.g., the
Preamble, the Declaration, the Federalist Papers, et al, have no bearing upon
constitutional interpretation. I
am not and never have been a strict constructionist. Case in point, privacy is never mentioned in the Constitution,
and yet, I truly believe the Founders / Framers understood and espoused a
citizen’s fundamental right to privacy.
I
do not share your appreciation of Donald Trump. To me, he is a huckster, selling snake oil, and a lot of
people have bought the snake oil. He
is only interested in himself – his image, his brand, his success – NO ONE
ELSE’S. I say, as long as each
individual is happy with the snake oil he is selling, then all is right with
the world. I have not and will not
buy his snake oil.
That
said, contrary to the Republican nominee, I shall accept whomever is elected
POTUS and do my best to support the new president to the best of my ability.
A quiet, calm footnote to all of this silly season vitriol:
no matter who is elected and becomes the 45th President of the
United States of America on 20.January.2017, I am certain I will agree and
disagree with the positions, conduct and actions of the new president, as I
have with every president since I became politically aware of the Constitution,
the governance of this Grand Republic, and the contributions of the person who
is POTUS. We are about to elect a
president . . . not enable a dictator or crown a king. It is simply the nature of the
beast. So it shall be when all of
this is said and done.
Comments and contributions from Update no.774:
“Good day Cap from
an Autumnal England.
“Mein Gott! What an update! I thought we had some problems this
side of the pond but they fade into utter insignificance compared to your Grand
Republic’s.
Will it all settle
after the election? Will the people of your Republic accept the results or can
we expect post-election chaos and revolution? Some of those comments must
border on invective broadsides surely. I wouldn’t risk making such statements
over here without fear of a writ coming through the letterbox. Is that all
acceptable your side Cap?
"However I have said
before I cannot understand your electoral system-as you are well aware here our
Prime Minister is automatically placed as head of government as he or she is
the leader of the governing party therefore carries the majority in Parliament.
Not so state side I believe. It
appears to me after all that diatribe that you have two candidates who are
plainly unfit to govern especially as the leader of the most powerful nation on
earth. Do put me down my friend if my understanding is flawed. We can enjoy
that beer together one day.
My response:
Tatsächlich! Mein Gott!
Oh,
my friend, we all have problems.
Re:
“Will
it all settle after the election?”
The optimist in me would answer, yes, of course; it always does . . .
the nature of the beast.
Re:
“Will
the people of your Republic accept the results or can we expect post-election
chaos and revolution?” The
Republican nominee has already begun setting up his version of Hitler’s “Nero
order” [19.March.1945]. He is
blaming anyone and everything for his dropping poll numbers. It would be entirely consistent with
his personality and character to publicly demand his supporters “burn the house
down,” if he is not elected. We
shall see. He has tapped into and
encouraged some very ugly forces that have always existed in this Grand
Republic. The reality about
freedom . . . it is not always pretty.
Re:
“invective
broadsides.” Wieder einmal, in der Tat! The tone of this silly season has been
like none other in history. Again,
the optimist in me will say, this too shall pass.
Re:
“Is
that all acceptable your side Cap?” Short answer, under the law, yes. In my opinion and in my life, absolutely and categorically
NOT acceptable. What he has and is
doing is very disrespectful of other citizens and the very diversity that is
essential to this Grand Republic.
As
history has recorded, the Founders and Framers of this Grand Republic rejected
the parliamentary system from which they had come, for very real and valid
reasons. As Sir Winston so
eloquently observed, “It has been said that democracy is the worst form of
government except all the others that have been tried.” His wisdom and statement plays out every
day, especially in this Grand Republic.
Comment to the Blog:
“As with another contributor from last week, I find it irrational
that we are not discussing national and world issues. The specific item that
person mentioned, Secretary Clinton's unfortunate record as Secretary of State,
ought to at least be in the discussion, along with her campaign resources.
Senator Sanders, if he did nothing else, proved that such funding is not
necessary.
“(I think I've caught on to Sanders' approach. He wants to re-take
the Congress with progressives and work from there.)
“Mr. Trump's personal failings, at this level of severity, are
worthy of discussion, but so is the question of exactly how he lost $915
million in a time, place, and business sector where big money was often made.
The details of his blowhard policy statements need examination, too.
“One of Trump's dumber notions is that building a physical wall
will keep out undocumented immigrants. What is sending them home is the U.S.
economy. (There's a net migration to Mexico from here.) Have he and his
supporters heard of air and sea travel? Are they aware that the valuable jobs
taken by immigrants are mostly going to Asians and Russians working in
computer-related fields?
“I'll say it again. With either of the major-party candidates for
President, the U.S. is driving steadily over a cliff. The only question is how
heavy a foot will be on the accelerator.”
. . . to which the contributor added:
“Here's a link to Snopes.com's story concerning the re-filing of a
lawsuit concerning Trump and another man, convicted sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein, accused of raping the plaintiff when she was 13 years old in 1994.”
My reply to the Blog:
Re:
Hillary Clinton. Point made.
Re:
Sanders. Perhaps.
Re:
the business failings of the Republican nominee. Spot on! Yet,
he has successfully stonewalled virtually all efforts to expose the details of
his business failures. I certainly
believe those failings (and his successes) are valid topics. The only means we have to rejecting his
selfish stonewalling is our vote.
We can only hope he is defeated in a landslide to reject his conduct for
history.
I
do not concur with your “cliff” assessment. This too shall pass . . . no matter who is elected.
The
case noted is a civil case, not a criminal one. The statute of limitations for rape varies from state to
state – four to ten years. The
alleged incident(s) occurred well beyond criminal prosecution. My opinion of retrospective remorse /
accusation remains the same.
My
very best wishes to all. Take care
of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
To repeat the obvious, Donald Trump's personality failings make him a dramatically inappropriate choice for President. Unfortunately, the high-functioning gentlemen who wrote the Constitution failed to foresee our national descent into madness. They neglected to specify admission of criminal behavior or dramatic personality dysfunctions as disqualifying factors for high office.
However, "Even a blind hog can find an acorn once in a while." (Attributed to William F. Shumaker by goodreads.com) Trump's proposals on revolving-door lobbying, should they be enacted, would benefit the US a great deal. I see term limits on Congress less favorably unless similar limits could somehow be imposed on lobbying. Otherwise, experienced lobbyists could manipulate even more rookie members of Congress as easily than they do now.
Comparing Trump to Clinton resembles comparing arsenic to cyanide as a food additive. You die either way. I am glad I already voted. My enthusiasm drops lower daily. The only reassuring factor is that Congress could restrain either of them.
I would not oppose lawsuits exposing corruption in our electoral system, although the outcomes of those are beyond my imagination. However, some of Trump's supporters may make some attempt at armed revolt when their candidate loses. The duly elected President will put that down forcibly. In the process, she will demonstrate the futility of those who claim to keep arms in anticipation of revolting against an oppressive government. The United States has by far the largest military in the world. If someone thinks they can beat that with a few thousand personal arsenals, let them have at it.
Your statement about Senator Sanders is false. "Bernie sought to protest those rules and went a long way to doing just that; he still played by the rules." Not quite. The "rules" that bother most of us in regard to the Clintons deal with fund raising. Sanders out-raised Mrs. Clinton more months than not without taking corporate or PAC money. That's on record at the Federal Elections Commission. Sanders did not play by "the rules" (Citizens United and the rest). A few others are still doing that grassroots fundraising. Voters may forget that for a while, but progressive office holders and potential candidates will not. Furthermore, Senator Sanders is not going away. If the Democrats successfully re-take the Senate, as they may, Sanders will become the chief check on Hillary Clinton's corporate paybacks. Senator Warren, Sherrod Brown of Ohio, and others will support his efforts.
Calvin,
Re: “failed to foresee our national descent into madness.” On the contrary, I think they constructed the Electoral College to avoid or deal with just this situation – popular seduction by a demagogue.
Re: lobbyists. That is the flaw in term limits. Many laws are drafted and pushed by the lobbyists for their self and client benefit. I am not sure how we break that one without impinging upon the 1st Amendment.
Re: “arsenic to cyanide.” Good one!
Re: “lawsuits exposing corruption.” I do not know anyone who would oppose such litigation, well other than the culprits. However, it should be criminal prosecution, not civil lawsuits, against such felonious conduct.
Re: “armed revolt.” That is my concern as well. The Republican nominee has unleashed the white supremacists and xenophobes among us. If we have an oppressive government, we have ourselves to blame. We elected, enable and allow the moral projectionists in government, who pass those oppressive laws. It is up to us to undo what they have done. Returning us to slavery or oppression of women in the name of “Making America Great Again” is on us.
Re: “the rules.” I understand the resentment to the fundraising rules. I share in that resentment. I was gobsmacked throughout my reading of Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission [558 U.S. 310 (2010)] [424] that struck down the guts of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA){AKA McCain–Feingold Act or Shays-Meehan}[PL 107-155; 116 Stat. 81; 27.3.2002] [322], which made a valiant attempt, albeit not far enough, to constrain the effects of money (and more importantly, dark money) on federal elections. I strongly disagreed with the lopsided interpretation of the Constitution, then, [by the so-called strict constructionists in the Court] and my opinion has not changed. If anything, the Hillary Clinton campaign of 2016 has demonstrated the negative consequences and reinforced my opinion. SCOTUS has forced the issue into the realm of a constitutional amendment to clean up elections. Given my experience with the Equal Rights Amendment {House Joint Resolution No. 208; 22.3.1972}, I know how hard constitutional amendments can be, but that does not mean we should not try.
Re: “chief check.” I pray you are correct.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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