Update from the Heartland
No.777
31.10.16 – 6.11.16
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- A frequent contributor sent along a new article on MH370 [638, 691, 711, 716]:
“New MH370 analysis suggests no one at controls during crash”
Associated Press
Published: November 01, 2016
“I am sure hoping the two pilots did not accidentally lock
themselves out of their own cockpit. This would not be the first time that has
happened.
“Though with the amount of time they had out of cockpit, I would
think one of them would have figured a way to breach the cockpit door and get
re-entry.
“In the future, there should be a system of contracting ground
control (airline ops) and getting a remote entry to cockpit in case pilot or
pilots are locked out.”
. . . to which I
replied:
Interesting hypothesis.
. . . with a
follow-up query:
“Did they ever rule out a loss of cabin pressurization and lack
of/loss of O2 capacity for the flight crew?”
. . . and my
response:
No, not that I'm aware of. Apparently, the recovered wing debris is suggesting an
uncontrolled impact. Analytic
simulations suggest a high rate, spiral, final descent. If we assumed that hypothesis, cabin
depressurization would be a nice, painless suicide. I think there is little doubt the aircraft was
pilot-controlled at least through an FCS programming effort, or until it was
headed south into the Indian Ocean. Cabin depressurization (without supplemental oxygen) would
ensure everyone was dead prior to fuel exhaustion.
On
the eve of our historic election, I wish to proclaim my profound disappointment
in virtually all of the mainstream news sources with the paucity of coverage
given to Gary Johnson and Jill Stein.
I suppose there should be some consolation that Stein and Johnson are at
least shown on some of the polling status reports. The lack of coverage for the Libertarian and Green Parties
does serious disservice to We, the People. CNN had a good start prior to the presidential debates, but
they failed in the final stretch.
Furthermore,
the reporting on the early voting, while I am certain it is factual, is highly
misleading. The party
registrations of citizens choosing to vote early may reflect blind party
affinity and presumably voting, but the states are bound by law to not report
actual votes cast until the election polling stations close on Election
Day. Party registration and ballot
cast (the act of voting) are facts of public record; the specific vote
selection of every citizen is private and protected. This is the same fallacious implication we saw in the open
primaries, i.e., we have no way to know the actual votes or voting intentions
of citizens, except as an individual chooses to public disclose. We will not know who citizens voted
for, including early voting, until the votes are tallied on Election Day. Further, as we bore witness in the 2000
presidential election, we may not know for weeks, if there are any anomalies
during the voting process, or the vote count is so close that it automatically
triggers a recount. The only thing
that matters is the actual vote counts at the end of the election process, and
ultimately, the translations of those votes within each state into the voting
of state electors in December – the outcome of which actually determines the
president-elect. An added twist,
in accordance with the Constitution, if no candidate achieves a majority, i.e.,
270 electoral votes, the election of the president goes to the House of
Representatives for decision – a provision never exercised in our history, yet. The consequences of that potential
verge upon unimaginable and would make the confusion, uncertainty and rancor
eclipse our experience in the 2000 presidential election – hanging chads et al. Let us hope there is a clear decision
(>270 electoral votes). We do
not need more disturbance in the Force.
News from the economic
front:
-- The Bank of England indicated their forecast for the
Brexit impact is improving, and thus lessened the potential for further
stimulation by interest rate reductions.
Bank officials also suggested there are limits to their tolerance of
inflation in excess of their 2% target and they are prepared to raise borrowing
costs.
-- The Labor Department reported nonfarm payrolls rose by a
seasonally adjusted 161,000 in October and revised September's employment gain
upward to 191,000. The
unemployment rate ticked down to 4.9% last month from 5.0% in September. U.S. employers continued steady growth in
October, as well as accelerating wage growth to its strongest pace since the Great
Recession.
Comments and contributions from Update no.776:
Comment to the Blog:
“This Presidential election campaign has gone far beyond the usual
‘silly season.’ It occurs to me that it’s more like spending a year and a half
in daily preparation for a national colonoscopy. Who knew we had that much crap
in us? Let’s hope the ‘test’ results are not cancerous. There’s no more denying
that something unhealthy is going on at gut level.
“Hillary’s damn emails are indeed Hillary’s doing. I have kept
work versus personal email separate with ease. So have any number of other
government and corporate workers. In the ‘sympathy for the devil’ department,
the latest round is not about her own emails. Maybe Wikileaks didn’t get around
to these. In sending the letter at the center of this round, FBI Director Comey
disobeyed instructions from his superior, admittedly a close friend of the
Clintons. Your claim that the letter was not intended to be made public doesn’t
hold water. He had to know that would happen, unless you also want to claim
that he’s not aware of the election campaign. Also, I have seen an excerpt from
the Hatch Act supporting the statement that intent is not a factor in that law.
“We already know that Hillary could not be elected in normal
conditions due to her unpopularity and her husband’s anti-progressive
Presidency. That leads me to a headline I saw this morning on Alternet, a
Hillary supporter. It read, “Understanding the Psychopath Candidate.” Leaving
aside the unfairness to diagnosed psychopaths, that is the only viable
explanation for Hillary leading the polls. If she wins, she owes it to Donald
Trump.
“Your argument in favor of the Electoral College (our ‘rigged’
election system) fails. What can you offer to make me believe that our ‘leaders’
in these more-educated times are better informed, wiser or more benevolent than
the masses? I have not seen that since at least the 1970s, and maybe it never
truly applied.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
“something unhealthy.” Amen,
brother . . . in so many dimensions.
The root causes of our unhealthy state are deep and complex. They seem to be related to our inherent
distrust of government and the failure of Congress to find the path to
compromise for solutions.
Intransigence has become a badge of courage for those who seek to impose
their beliefs on everyone else. I could
go on, but this may suffice.
Re:
“FBI Director.” The Director was
between a rock and a hard spot.
Let’s imagine, if you will, the public outrage that would have occurred
if the disclosure of those discovered eMail’s on the Wiener laptop had come after
the election . . . or, even worse, they contained classified material (on an
unsecure computer). From my
perspective, he had no choice. I
do not agree that he violated the Hatch Act. Given my hypothetical above, a good portion of our
population would accuse him of transgression either way . . . disclosing or
withholding – better to be ahead of it than behind.
Re:
Hillary. I do not agree that she
was un-elect-able. Again, given
her terribly selfish and ego-centric decision in 2009, she could have come out
OK, if she had handled it differently.
She has been subjected to right-wing propaganda, abuse and attack for
much of her adult life. I can
appreciate her reluctance to open her private life (communications) to public
scrutiny. No one is perfect or
without flaws, including her, so I understand her efforts to minimize her
exposure while living in public life.
I could go on, but basta! . . . as the Italians say.
Re:
rigged. As I wrote that section, I
debated stooping to his erroneous use of the word. Your response illuminates my failure. Rigged in this context means to
manipulate fraudulently. Article
II, Section 1 of the Constitution established the electoral process. It is the law. Each state determines their electors in
accordance with the Constitution.
To “rig” the electoral process would take a conspiracy of epic
proportions, and I shall respectfully suggest such a massive conspiracy would
be virtually impossible to keep hidden.
Lastly, there is zero – nada, niente,
nothing – evidence or even hints of evidence of a conspiracy of that magnitude. The Republican nominee has been using
and abusing the word “rigged” erroneously, emotionally and quite
inappropriately. He has never had
the ground game to play by the rules.
He has been whining about the process, from the primaries to now the
election itself, because he apparently believes the rules do not and should not
apply to him. While the latest
popular polls suggest they are nearly tied in popular vote, the electoral map
(the rules according to the Constitution) suggests the Democrat nominee is and
remains in a dominant position.
His persistent whining will do nothing to improve his prospects and will
only harm this Grand Republic . . . then again, he cares only about
himself. Our election system is
NOT rigged and has never been rigged, period, full stop!
. . . with follow-up comment:
“I certainly agree that the FBI Director is in an untenable
position. I doubt it matters whether we perceive him as having placed himself
there.
“Hillary's problems run far deeper than the specifics of her email
mistakes. Were the primary process not controlled by her close friends at the
DNC, she could not have won the nomination. Her elitism and its results were
ably pointed out by Senator Sanders and others, and many progressives,
including me, refuse to vote for her based on the sources of her personal and
campaign income as well as her hawkish term as Secretary of State. The email
issue is a symptom, not a cause.
“The term ‘rigged’ was not the focus of my comment. Mr. Trump
brought that up when he was making an excuse for losing the election prior to
doing so. That's just noise. I understood your section as a defense of the
Electoral College based on its original reasoning that a demagogue might be able
to persuade an uneducated and credible public to elect him despite what the
Founders would see as inappropriate attitudes or criminal intent. My question
stands. What is your basis for believing that the ‘leaders’ they left in charge
would do any better, given that the population at large is far better informed
and educated than in 1783?”
. . . my follow-up response:
We
can argue whether Comey’s predicament is self-generated, but that element
verges on irrelevant at this point.
Let it suffice to say, I do not believe his situation was
self-generated.
Re:
Hillary’s deeper problems. Oh my,
yes, spot on! Full stop! Her conduct (and her husband’s conduct)
has consistently indicated her sense of superiority and entitlement, i.e.,
divine right of kings (queens) – the law does not apply to them. What is different from Trump’s version
is subtlety, i.e., she is less obvious, thus offering her plausible
deniability, which her supporters swallow hook, line and sinker.
Re:
Sanders. Bernie Sanders carried
out a far more credible, anti-establishment campaign than the Republican
nominee was, is or might be capable of conducting. Of all the candidates, he was certainly the most noble . . .
although I have a hard time accepting his democratic socialist agenda.
Re:
“What
is your basis for believing that the ‘leaders’ they left in charge would do any
better, given that the population at large is far better informed and educated
than in 1783?” There is
zero debate that the population at large is far better informed 2 ½ centuries
hence. As a related side note: let
us not forget, the only people who could vote in 1788, were white, educated,
male, property owners – a rather narrow segment of the population. The constitutional construction was
focused on that voting population, which I believe says even more about their
concerns. My argument within this
topic is that their concern then is still applicable today. Further, the filtration process is
intended to distill out the demagogues and radicals. The process has worked for more than two centuries. There are clear failures of the process
sprinkled throughout our history, but I will respectfully argue there have been
more successes than failures. Let
it suffice to say, I will never make any claim the electoral process is perfect
or flawless, but it is a demonstrably successful system in the main.
Another contribution:
“‘So, yes, our presidential election system is rigged (to use the
erroneous word of the Republican nominee), and I want it to remain that way.’ ... taken from below .. you wouldn't be
saying this if you were for the candidate being slighted .. it's okay .. the
right is on it ...
“You say you do not believe the ‘Republican nominee’ .. so you
believe Hillary will do anything she is stating she'll do ?? Ha.... as
far as publicity a candidate needs it .. especially the good kind .. I find it
brave and admirable that Trump has taken on the corrupt system as do a large
amount of the American people .. that he is wealthy and confident are highly
needed characteristics in a Presidential election (go ahead and continually
call it narcissism as a true left winger does).. without wealth unfortunately
and confidence one stands no chance .. kudos to him, win or lose ..”
My reply:
Re: rigged. I tried to write that section tongue in cheek. Our election process has never been rigged. The rules have been the rules for more than two centuries. Just because the Republican nominee does not like the rules he must play by, that does not mean the system is rigged. BTW, rigged means “to manipulate fraudulently.” There is not one scintilla of evidence even remotely hinting at such a necessary vast conspiracy. The Constitution remains the law of this Grand Republic.
My reply:
Re: rigged. I tried to write that section tongue in cheek. Our election process has never been rigged. The rules have been the rules for more than two centuries. Just because the Republican nominee does not like the rules he must play by, that does not mean the system is rigged. BTW, rigged means “to manipulate fraudulently.” There is not one scintilla of evidence even remotely hinting at such a necessary vast conspiracy. The Constitution remains the law of this Grand Republic.
Re:
believe. You jumped to an
erroneous conclusion. I do not
believe the Democrat nominee either.
Re:
corrupt system. I categorically
and emphatically disagree. The
fact that the Republican nominee has convinced you and many others that our
presidential electoral system is corrupt is no small measure of how much damage
the Republican nominee has done to this Grand Republic with his incessant
whining.
Re:
“highly needed characteristics.”
From your words, apparently you favor an elite class. I must respectfully disagree. We cannot tolerate such a divided class
structure that your words suggest.
. . . with follow-up comment:
“Is this a SCINTILLA of evidence??? (Attachment)”
. . . with follow-up comment:
“Is this a SCINTILLA of evidence??? (Attachment)”
Attachment: 14956391_1783652088540291_1802698128176861270_n.jpg
[NOTE: The attachment was a purported eMail
fragment from Todd Macklerr to Donna Brazille and John Podesta. I cannot establish the authenticity of
the message, thus I will not be a party to further dissemination of the
document. If the reader chooses to
search for the noted file, the file name is as offered by the Update contributor.]
. . . my follow-up reply:
We
can discuss rules of evidence and such, but I will not waste your time, or
anyone else’s for that matter.
I
could create a similar, more condemning example message, but I have enough
other projects in hand.
Each
of us is free to choose whether to believe such “evidence” as authentic and
bona fide. I shall not argue with
your freedom and right to choose.
Just
a related side note: one essential element of propaganda and disinformation
campaigns is the element of believability, i.e., does the document play to the
target audience’s preconceptions, and thus “confirm” those preconceptions,
making them “facts”? Case in
point, Operation BODYGUARD during World War II – a highly effective
disinformation campaign that was arguably pivotal in the success of the Allied
offensive into Germany.
Lastly,
for the sake of argument, let us assume the attached message fragment is
precisely accurate, authentic and un-tampered – a felonious, federal crime, if
true, I might add. There are 50
separate states and something like 200,000 separate voting precincts in this
Grand Republic, with several million voting machines. The number of tampered voting machines necessary to affect
the election would be massive – a conspiracy of epic proportion. In our hypothetical, let us take a less
ambitious sub-set, i.e., not a national conspiracy, but a more focused, smaller
conspiracy, on those “battleground” states that are a toss-up – seven (7)
states as of this writing and continue to vary. We are talking about roughly 30,000 precincts and several
hundred thousand voting machines, all of which are not the same, i.e.,
different processes. The magnitude
of even the smaller conspiracy is mind-boggling. The potential tampering with one voting machine or even
dozens of voting machines will not alter the outcome. Let it suffice to say, to believe such a conspiracy speaks
volumes to the effectiveness of the electoral system distrust sown by the
Republican nominee – a substantial number of citizens want to believe what they
are being fed. Every citizen is
free to choose. At the end of the
day, I do NOT accept the conspiracy espoused by the Republican nominee, and his
continued advocacy reflects negatively upon him.
P.S.: I am far more concerned about voter exhaustion, voter
apathy and active voter suppression efforts than I am about voting machine
tampering; but hey, that’s just me.
A different
contribution:
“I really appreciate your objective assessment/opinion on Hillary, and her problem.
“Knowing you like many do not support Trump, makes me see your integrity/honesty on this issue, as you are able to clarify the reality of the individual, her character, versus what she wants us to see, or her spin machines like CNN and many-many other so-called independent journalists.
“Did you see that the guy you and I followed closely during the TWA#800 investigation, former FBI director James Kollstrom, said during a radio interview in the last 48-hours:
“I really appreciate your objective assessment/opinion on Hillary, and her problem.
“Knowing you like many do not support Trump, makes me see your integrity/honesty on this issue, as you are able to clarify the reality of the individual, her character, versus what she wants us to see, or her spin machines like CNN and many-many other so-called independent journalists.
“Did you see that the guy you and I followed closely during the TWA#800 investigation, former FBI director James Kollstrom, said during a radio interview in the last 48-hours:
“The
Clintons, that’s a crime family, basically,” Kallstrom said. “It’s like
organized crime. I mean the Clinton Foundation is a cesspool.”
“Interesting the progressives in the press, are trying to throw
FBI's director Comey under the bus now, for allegedly violating the Hatch Act. Too bad the same talking anchor heads
(including Wolf Blitzer and Anderson Cooper) did not focus on the deleted
emails, and much more, during their clear cheerleading campaign to install
their girl, Hillary. My take on
Comey's timing of the re-opening of the probe as announced to his letter to the
U.S. Congress, was possibly because he has information brought to him by
lead investigators, that there may be serious (if not) criminal conflicts of
interests, at the worst, at best--political conflicts of interests, by our own
A.G. Loretta Lynch. So you bet,
Comey's timing while awkward, may be preemptive so we don't start Hillary's
potential presidency in a vacuum akin to Nixon and Watergate. Perhaps Comey is asserting that FBI does
have integrity and is not compromised, because once We the People lose our
trust in a few institutions we entrust to help maintain political legality, we
become like many third-world nations, if not nations like Russia, Brazil or
Venezuela. The more popular theory
being bounced is Comey moved last week because of an in-house mutiny brewing,
with many FBI agents ready to sign their resignations.
“Whoever is brought to the office of POTUS, we need someone with utmost integrity and leadership in these dangerous times in our world, where the state of relations with Russia is low and could trend to a much more dangerous point, we need to entirely avoid, while exercising strong leadership and diplomacy, with Russia and all.
“This is shared with many in my group (including some pilot friends), and I ask many of you to share Cap Parlier's Update, with your folks too.” [emphasis by the contributor]
. . . my response:
Rather than respond directly, I shall offer a few related observations.
“Whoever is brought to the office of POTUS, we need someone with utmost integrity and leadership in these dangerous times in our world, where the state of relations with Russia is low and could trend to a much more dangerous point, we need to entirely avoid, while exercising strong leadership and diplomacy, with Russia and all.
“This is shared with many in my group (including some pilot friends), and I ask many of you to share Cap Parlier's Update, with your folks too.” [emphasis by the contributor]
. . . my response:
Rather than respond directly, I shall offer a few related observations.
I
had not seen the Kallstrom quote.
Thank you.
Your
disdain for the Press has been clear.
I would only urge you to take a broader view of the Press in this Grand
Republic, or any free society for that matter. Every news anchor, reporter, journalist or other member of
the Press are human beings, just like all the rest of us. We do not agree on many topics, and we
agree on others. Members of the
Press are no different. The key to
interpreting the news is reading, listening and absorbing a broad and diverse enough
spectrum of news sources to develop a reasonable understanding of events.
I
do not believe Director Comey violated the Hatch Act.
Director
Comey was and remains in an impossible position. He did what he had to do to stay ahead of the situation
created by the terrible conduct of the Democrat nominee, from her selfish, ego-centric
decision seven years ago, to her decision to unilaterally delete eMail messages
to which she had abdicated her right to privacy. Clinton created this situation. Comey did what he had to do.
One last contribution:
"Indeedy young Sir-that blog was a blast. And if I might add, quite suitable a reaction to those belligerent aggressive voices we hear far too frequently these days. What a mess you are facing. Why and how did your main political parties ever select such a pair of poor quality ‘burdened’ candidates for what is the most important leadership position on our planet. My advice would be dismiss them both and start again. Maybe your ‘Founding Fathers’ did get it right for their age but now, worldwide, there is considerable concern over what the outcome of your election might be. [emphasis by the contributor]
“However Cap to use your words. ‘I could be wrong’.”
My reply:
You are not the first to suggest discarding both of them and starting over. I’d be for that. Unfortunately, that option is not available. The inexorable cogs of our electoral process continue to grind on. We are less than a week from the conclusion of this damnable silly season. No matter who wins, we’ll make the most of the result.
One last contribution:
"Indeedy young Sir-that blog was a blast. And if I might add, quite suitable a reaction to those belligerent aggressive voices we hear far too frequently these days. What a mess you are facing. Why and how did your main political parties ever select such a pair of poor quality ‘burdened’ candidates for what is the most important leadership position on our planet. My advice would be dismiss them both and start again. Maybe your ‘Founding Fathers’ did get it right for their age but now, worldwide, there is considerable concern over what the outcome of your election might be. [emphasis by the contributor]
“However Cap to use your words. ‘I could be wrong’.”
My reply:
You are not the first to suggest discarding both of them and starting over. I’d be for that. Unfortunately, that option is not available. The inexorable cogs of our electoral process continue to grind on. We are less than a week from the conclusion of this damnable silly season. No matter who wins, we’ll make the most of the result.
It
is truly unfortunate that our rather disgusting election has such consequent
effects upon our allies, friends, neighbors . . . and even potential
adversaries.
. . . with follow-up comment:
“‘Spring up and fall down’. I know it refers to the position of the ‘Big Dipper’ in our northern skies however it could be seen as the way the world is viewing the state of American politics currently-let us all hope, as you have suggested, that whatever the outcome y’all will accept that result and drive your nation forward. It is essential for the peace of our world. Do you need proof? Just look at the chancing Putin is up to currently while you are so involved in your election process.
“Their one carrier has just wheezed it’s way along our south coast on its way to support the disgustingly outrageous attacks on families in Syria. Whoever takes control your end they will need to be strong with these murdering empire builders. So let’s look forward to the ‘Spring Up’.”
. . . my follow-up reply:
We have less than a week to go before we have a decision [excluding the anomaly of the 2000 election]. I will vote in the conventional manner early in the morning of Tuesday (Election Day), and then I shall wait with everyone else for the results. We can only hope we have a clear result before the following dawn.
. . . with follow-up comment:
“‘Spring up and fall down’. I know it refers to the position of the ‘Big Dipper’ in our northern skies however it could be seen as the way the world is viewing the state of American politics currently-let us all hope, as you have suggested, that whatever the outcome y’all will accept that result and drive your nation forward. It is essential for the peace of our world. Do you need proof? Just look at the chancing Putin is up to currently while you are so involved in your election process.
“Their one carrier has just wheezed it’s way along our south coast on its way to support the disgustingly outrageous attacks on families in Syria. Whoever takes control your end they will need to be strong with these murdering empire builders. So let’s look forward to the ‘Spring Up’.”
. . . my follow-up reply:
We have less than a week to go before we have a decision [excluding the anomaly of the 2000 election]. I will vote in the conventional manner early in the morning of Tuesday (Election Day), and then I shall wait with everyone else for the results. We can only hope we have a clear result before the following dawn.
Putin
is quite like Trump in many ways, although far less obnoxious. He (Putin) exhibits classic bully
traits. He expects his victims to
back down out of fear of his reaction(s).
The difficulty with Putin, any confrontation to stop his intimidation of
others will play directly to the nationalism inside Russia. Putin needs external confrontation to
solidify internal support.
I
certainly agree . . . whomever becomes POTUS must find the means to contain
Putin’s intimidation of his neighbors.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I share your wish that the press would cover "third party" candidates who have enough ballot presence to possibly win. I suspect the news sources no longer feel a need to compete with each other due to the consolidation among their operations. In any case, they have done the nation a disservice by failing to cover alternatives to the stinking "major party" candidates.
I write this the day before "Election Day," having voted a few weeks ago. It fascinates me that turnout has been very high for that. As I read your post, I listened to the local CBS station report that waiting times have been over an hour at the early voting location, which is quite large. The NBC affiliate reported the same story last night. What makes that so interesting is the unpopularity of the Republican and Democratic candidates. Are people that eager to vote their fears, or is something else happening? As you point out, we have no way of knowing today. Party affiliation could be meaningless, and I'm sure independents are voting early as well. Most of the voters the two stations interviewed gave no hint of how they'd voted.
A potential local factor not mentioned on TV is that polling places were moved, at least for my precinct, in late September. Mine was moved to a place I cannot reach unless the weather is nice enough to ride my bicycle there. That factored into my early voting decision; I reached the early voting location by bus.
If this election is "rigged" at all, it will be through such maneuvers as that, not through people voting more than once or computer hacking. We have a precedent for that kind of chicanery in Ohio in the messy election of 2004. My clergy person endured several hours of waiting that time, and so did many others voting in lower-income areas. Others gave up. Various other games, such as poll workers telling people to vote in some other precinct, played out as well. I would like to have poll watchers and other outside scrutiny via the United Nations.
Calvin,
Thank you for your observations. I share your concerns.
One of my very serious concerns is de facto voter suppression efforts. To me, long lines at polling stations are one of many voter suppression efforts, and an indictment of state and local governments for their failure to fulfill the most basic of governmental functions – voting by ALL eligible citizens. I shall have a first hand observation of our local voting process tomorrow. I am retired (self-employed, perhaps), so I plan to vote after my late morning nap – my first time with a mid-day vote. I expect little to no lines. Previous times, the bottleneck was the registration check. I do not recall ever waiting for an actual ballot station. We seem to have sufficient quantities and locations of polling stations. Mine has remained the same for the duration of our presentation residence, and it is close enough I could walk – a little over a mile. We shall see.
If one voter gives up, or does not vote because of any number of obstacles, government has failed. Such obstructive conduct should never be tolerated.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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