Update from the Heartland
No.599
3.6.13 – 9.6.13
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- The President signed into law the latest attempt by
Congress to protect the nation’s highest awards for valor in combat – Stolen Valor Act of
2013 [PL 113-012; H.R.258; Senate: unanimous consent; House:
390-3-0-40(2); 127 Stat.
xxx; 3.June.2013]. You may
recall the Supreme Court case – United States v. Alvarez [567 U.S.
___ (2012); 28.June.2012] [563] –
that declared the previous congressional attempt unconstitutional {Stolen Valor Act
of 2005 [PL 109-437; 120 Stat. 3266; 20.December.2006]
[450, 454, 560]}. The new
law appears to fully address the Court’s concerns with the previous law, so it
should stand up to judicial scrutiny.
I hope so, and it is about time.
Many of us have seen the General Mills
Cheerios commercial with the precocious, beautiful, little girl asking her
mother about the cereal being heart-healthy, and taking the box and pouring the
contents on her dozing father’s chest to convey her concern for his health. Now, we hear there are more than a few
folks in this Grand Republic who have expressed outrage over this commercial
because her mother has light skin pigmentation and her father has dark skin
pigmentation. Such bigoted outrage
literally enrages me, which is not good for my blood pressure. Fortunately, for all of us, General
Mills has defied the racist protest and thankfully so. Freedom of Speech is not always
eloquent or proper, and such is Liberty.
As the public debate regarding the
government’s electronic surveillance activities rages on, we learn the name of
the traitor . . . or in some quarters, he may be referred to as a noble whistleblower. He chose to publicly disclose his
identity for reasons unknown. He
is Edward Snowden, 29, a former CIA employee, and until recently, an electronic
infrastructure contractor for the consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton assigned
to National Security Agency (NSA).
How he gained access to such a highly classified compartmented program
as PRISM will be a paramount concern to the government and rightly so. Snowden apparently gathered numerous
PRISM documents and flew off to Hong Kong to turn over the documents to the
Guardian's Glenn Greenwald. The
Washington Post and the Guardian have confirmed Snowden’s identity as
Greenwald’s source. Snowden claims
he did this to let the American People know what their government was
doing. Unfortunately, he also told
the enemies of the United States valuable information regarding the
capabilities of the government.
Every
citizen should hold a healthy concern for the increasing capacity of the State
to intrude upon and violate our fundamental right to privacy. Yet, I urge moderation and a broader
perspective as we debate the surveillance question. All of the publicly available information indicates the NSA
collected metadata attached to electronic communication, i.e., from, to,
duration, et cetera. The Supreme
Court decided in Smith v. Maryland [442 U.S. 735 (1979); 20.June.1979] [232]
that pen registers, the equivalent of electronic metadata, were beyond the “reasonable
expectation of privacy” test, i.e., such collection did not violate a citizen’s
fundamental right to privacy.
Let
us avoid jumping to conclusions. I
have maintained for a long time the need for and right to intelligence data
collection that is respectfully of every citizen’s constitutional rights. Concomitantly, enemies of the State
cannot hide behind the Constitution.
I will say, if Snowden did what he claims to have done, then he is a
traitor and must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. Lastly, I am disappointed, staggered,
shocked and otherwise gobsmacked that anyone with Snowden’s background,
employment status and capabilities could ever gain access to TOP SECRET – PRISM
intelligence data or any other Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) at any
level. I am far more concerned
about the protection of SCI than I am the government’s surveillance effort.
News from the economic front:
-- The Financial Stability Oversight Council, led by the
Treasury Department, has finally taken the first long-awaited step to address
market vulnerabilities, proposing that a first round of large, non-bank
financial companies. They voted to
designate several companies, like American International Group (AIG) and
Prudential Financial, as “systemically important” and should face tougher
government oversight. Better
late than never, but about freakin’ time.
-- The Wall Street
Journal reported that the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) could face
losses as high as US$115B over the next 30 years under a previously undisclosed
stress test conducted last year to determine how the government
mortgage-insurance agency would fare under an extremely severe economic
scenario.
-- The U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) decided
Apple’s iPhone violated a Samsung patent and issued an exclusion order barring
the importation of various Apple mobile devices, including the iPhone 3GS &
4, and the iPad 2 & 3G. The
order does not affect the latest Apple products – iPhone 5 and iPad 4.
-- The Wall Street
Journal also reported that investors are apparently returning to their old
ways as they seek synthetic Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO). J.P. Morgan Chase and Morgan Stanley
bankers in London are moving to assemble synthetic CDOs to satisfy the
voracious demand for higher returns amid rock-bottom interest rates. Not a good sign, it seems to me.
-- The Labor Department reported the U.S. economy added
175,000 jobs in May, although the unemployment rate rose slightly to 7.6% from
7.5% in April. The economic
recovery continues, albeit at a rather slow pace.
London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
Debacle [552]:
-- The European Union is seeking to put the scandal-ridden LIBOR
lending rate under stricter supervision a pan-European unit based in Paris, in
a far-reaching overhaul of pricing methods for everything from oil and gold to
property.
-- U.S. and British authorities are preparing to bring
criminal charges against former employees of Barclays for their alleged roles
in trying to manipulate benchmark interest rates, marking an escalation of a
global investigation now entering its sixth year.
-- So we don’t lose focus . . . the infamous 16, involved,
international banks are:
· Barclays [UK] – US$454M fine [550]
· Bank
of America [U.S.]
· BTMU
[Japan]
· Citibank
[U.S.]
·
Credit Suisse
[Switzerland]
· Deutsche Bank [Germany] – US$654M LIBOR profit [578]; set aside €500M (US$641M) for LIBOR
liability [589]
·
Lloyds TSB [UK]
·
HSBC [UK]
· HBOS
[UK]
· JPMorgan
Chase [U.S.]
· Rabobank
[Netherlands]
· RBC
[Canada]
· RBS [UK] – £390M (US$612.6M) in fines,
21 employees involved [582]
· UBS [Switzerland] – US$1.5B fine, two charged [575]
· West
LB [Germany]
·
Norinchuckin [Japan]
I trust none of us will lose sight of what these banks have
done.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.598:
Comment to the Blog:
“Housing prices have rebounded to what I suspect is their
appropriate level. Let us remember that the reason the prices collapsed was a ‘bubble’
caused by speculation and fraud in derivatives markets. Under those conditions,
the prices should not return to their pre-collapse levels until some future
time when inflation or other “natural” factors take them there independently.
“In whose imagination would an unregulated digital currency
exchange not become a tool for criminals? All together now: ‘Duuuuhhhh.’
“Yes, prosecuting Kaitlyn is clearly wrong, even more so
because there is no risk of pregnancy by means of sex between two girls. Unless
some hint of coercion exists (not alleged in this case), Kaitlyn’s love life is
not anyone’s business. However, the puritanical forces in this country insist
on sticking their noses into everyone’s bedroom.
“If/when the government seizes firearms, it will be a
formality. Study the histories of Germany and Italy during the preface to World
War II or any number of dictatorships since. Those who are so hysterical about
supposedly rising up against a tyrannical government have already missed their
chance. Bush 43 and Obama both clearly claim a “right” to kill anyone of their
choice in the name of the “war on terror.” If you’re a danger to them, you’re
next.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
causes of banking collapse.
Housing speculation has apparently picked up where it left off in
2007. The gambling by major banks
has also restarted. Apparently,
there are few checks in place to prevent the unsustainable debt increase that
got us into this mess in the first place.
This is where banking supervision is necessary.
Re:
unregulated digital currency exchange.
Spot on. It’s about time
the USG asserted its authority.
Re:
Kaitlyn. Agreed. The State’s intrusion into private
matters must stop. Freedom is too
important. The law must
mature. I would hope that we could
evolve as a society to have a more realistic attitude toward sex and respect
for privacy. Kaitlyn is not a
criminal.
Re:
firearms. The choice is not ours,
but rather each individual citizen.
Some of us trust the government; some of us don’t; the rest of us are
undecided or skeptical.
Re:
right to kill. Taken in isolation,
yes, a danger and threat to us all.
However, placed in the greater context, it is not without constraints
and it is consistent with the Constitution and the expectation that the
Executive wage war successfully. I
do not see the president’s war powers as dictatorial as apparently you do.
. . . a follow-up comment:
“I'll only follow up on the ‘right’ to kill people. The
context of that justification is dubious and ill-defined at best. The
constraints are not accountable or transparent; therefore, they may not exist
in useful forms. And no, I do not trust the governing people with this type of
power. My personal political life goes back to Nixon, and my study of history
goes back as far as written history. None of that gives me a reason to trust
the people at the top of any given government.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Re:
“right to kill.” I certainly
concede the current War on Islamic Fascism is ambiguous legally, which in turn
makes the right to kill enemies of the State comparably confusing. In this instance, I must lean toward
the Commander-in-Chief, since he has far more information than we do.
Re:
“trust in government.” I peg the
genesis of my political life back to Barry Goldwater. The right of the State to take a life in peacetime or civil
circumstances is established by due process of law. In wartime, the right is clearly the domain of the
Executive. There are numerous
Supreme Court cases that substantiate the President’s war powers. I think we all agree that we should be
perpetually skeptical, watchful and critical of government. We have to trust the government to an
extent for society to function under the rule of law.
. . . and a follow-up to the follow-up
contribution:
“I'll say it again, it's not war unless someone can define a
clear enemy nation or organization and state what constitutes victory or defeat
in a quantifiable way.”
. . . along with my response.
Rather
than continue around the same circle, I shall note the interesting legal
question concerning the actions taken by Congress. The President ended combat operations in Iraq on
15.December.2011, which presumably should have closed or terminated the Authorization for
Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 [PL 107-243;
116 Stat. 1498; 10.October.2002].
I have not seen either legislation or a court test of that premise. Further, the President has publicly
stated his intention to end combat operations in Afghanistan. It is even less clear whether that
action might terminate the Authorization for Use of Military Force [PL
107-040; 115 Stat. 224; 18.September.2001], since the latter law is less
geographically specific. Congress
has renewed other laws associated with the War on Islamic Fascism. At some point, we should expect them to
not renew those laws and allow them to expire. While the legal support for the War on Islamic Fascism is
not as definitive as the Declaration of war with Japan [PL 77-328; 56
Stat. 795; 8.December.1941], the Supreme Court has generally supported the
wartime footing of the AUMF laws, so far.
The law has a long way to go, but it is what it is. History shall eventually judge what
Congress and the two presidents so far have done in the War on Islamic
Fascism. More to follow, I’m sure.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
This comment arrives late. For that and other reasons, it will be brief as well.
Rather than debate the general intelligence issues again, I'll emphasize another issue you mentioned. When did the government acquire that misplaced confidence in private contractors that allowed Mr. Snowden access to large amounts of sensitive information? Methinks the Ayn Rand nutbars have completed their takeover of the government.
Calvin,
Re: “contractors.” OMG, spot on, brother! I understand the need to supplement, permanent, active employees, but for the life of me, I do not understand how a contractor is given access to SCI-compartmented information. He was not an employee of the NSA or the United States Government; he was an employee of a commercial consulting company. Someone has some major splainin’ to do.
Cheers,
Cap
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