Update from the
Heartland
No.619
21.10.13 – 27.10.13
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
My most
humble apologies for my faux pas of
oversight . . .
On Tuesday, 15.October.2013, President Obama awarded the
Medal of Honor to Captain William D. Swenson, USA, of Seattle, Washington, for
conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond
the call of duty during Operation Buri
Booza II (Dancing Goat II).
On the morning of Sunday, 8.September.2009, Captain Swenson was serving
as an embedded advisor to the Afghan National Border Police, Task Force
Phoenix, Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan in support of 1st
Battalion, 32nd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain
Division, as his combat team was moving on foot toward the village of Ganjgal,
Kunar Province, Afghanistan, for a meeting with village elders. The team entered a well-executed
Taliban ambush. Captain Swenson repeatedly
defied withering small arms, heavy automatic weapons, RPG and mortar fire to
rescue his comrades, evacuate the wounded, organize their defense and account
for everyone in his team. Thank
you Captain Swenson for your extraordinary service to this Grand Republic.
Rather than continue my Quixotic railing
against the duplicity, hypocrisy, corruption and outright insanity of pork
barrel politics practiced so expertly by our dear, esteemed, Members of
Congress, I should offer solutions.
So, in that vein, here is a suggestion.
Let
us agree by law to set aside a small percentage of every annual budget solely for
the largesse of Members of Congress. Each Member
would be allocated a portion of the Largesse Pool to be dispersed at his
discretion. Since we have senators
and representatives, each citizen is represented three times, so the pool would
be divided into thirds: a Senior Senator Portion, a Junior Senator Portion, and
a Representative Portion. If there
is no proper budget, then there is no largesse pool. Further, just as they do with their various pork projects
and earmarks, they would have no requirement for legislative or public scrutiny;
they simply must declare this project or that is to be funded by their
respective Largesse Portion – no justification or rationale required. If their projects in any particular
year exceeded their Portion, they are permitted to trade or pool their Portion
allocations as they choose. In
this scheme, no expenditures will be permitted beyond the Largesse Pool without
an individual, specific, legislative bill that must go through the community
review process, and by proactively notice to the Press and the public – active
notification rather than passive access; i.e., no earmarks, no attachments, no
amendments, only the straight bill.
Thus, if Congress passes a proper budget (continuing resolutions or any
other similar instrument do not qualify) and as an example we say the Largesse
Pool for a given fiscal year was say US$3B, each senator of a state would have
an allocation of US$20M and each representative would have an annual allocation
of US$2.299M. The only restriction
other than as noted above would be it must be a public project; they could not
spend the funds on themselves, or family members, or cronies, or contributors,
or intangibles; they could spend it on a museum of tiddlywinks or a bridge to
nowhere as long as the project is auditable and fulfilled.
Since
human beings elected to Congress are flawed and cannot resist the temptation of
corruption, let us legalize corruption, get it out into the sunlight, kind of
like drug abuse or prostitution should be. We must find a way to stop these damnable unscrutinized pork
barrel attachments to vital legislation.
Another, different opinion:
“Edward Snowden is no traitor”
by Richard Cohen
Washington Post
Published: October 21 [2013]
Since I am one of those who uses the term “traitor” in
referring to Snowden or his actions, I feel compelled to acknowledge Cohen’s
opinion as well as argue my case more specifically. Cohen asks, “If he is a traitor, then which side did he
betray and to whom does he now owe allegiance?” I do not believe treason requires a recipient of the
betrayal or allegiance to a foreign or rebel entity; betrayal is the only
requirement. Nonetheless, Snowden
betrayed the United States of America and We, the People. His only discernible
allegiance is to himself, as the prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner. Cohen concluded, “But (and?) I am at a
loss to say what should be done with Snowden. He broke the law, this is true.
He has been chary with his information, but he cannot know all its
ramifications and, anyway, the government can’t allow anyone to decide for
himself what should be revealed. That, too, is true. So Snowden is, to my mind,
a bit like John Brown, the zealot who intensely felt the inhumanity of slavery
and broke the law in an attempt to end the practice. My analogy is not neat —
Brown killed some people — but you get the point. I suppose Snowden needs to be
punished but not as a traitor. He may have been technically disloyal to America
but not, after some reflection, to American values.” Edward Snowden and John Brown are not comparable. Yes, they both broke established
law. Brown fought the scourge of
slavery. We could argue that
Snowden fought against what he saw as illegal, unconstitutional surveillance
and spying by agencies of the U.S. Government (USG). However, Snowden chose a path to harm the entire nation, not
just those he believed exceeded their legal authority. Brown sought only to harm those
involved with slavery. I could
accept Cohen’s argument, if Snowden had chosen a means to raise the question
without damaging national security.
I think Cohen is flat wrong.
And, I believe Snowden is a traitor by the strictest or any definition,
and should be tried and punished as such.
News from the economic front:
-- The Labor Department finally reported the U.S. economy added
148,000 jobs in September., as the unemployment rate decreased to 7.2 per centum. Analysts had expected an increase of 180,000 jobs last
month, and that the unemployment rate would remain at 7.3 per centum. The
October report will reflect some of the impact of the USG shutdown.
-- The Federal Reserve proposed new rules requiring the
largest banks to hold enough safe assets—such as cash or those easily
convertible to cash—to fund their operations for 30 days, if other sources of
funding are not available. The proposal goes beyond international agreements
and is intended to strengthen the ability of the largest banks to withstand
periods of market stress. The
rules are also intended to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis, when
financial markets froze due to a lack of liquidity.
-- The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced US$5.1B
in settlements with J.P. Morgan Chase, including US$4B to end legal actions
over securities disclosures and US$1.1B covering mortgage repurchases. The deal apparently clears a lawsuit
alleging the bank misled Fannie-Mae and Freddie-Mac about the quality of
mortgages it sold to them during the housing boom, and less than the US$6B
billion initially sought by FHFA.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.618:
Comment to the Blog:
“I reside in the U.S. State of Ohio, and I remain unaware of
any issues concerning the Lower Ohio River. There are ways and means of
following campaign contributions and awarded contracts to seek out the
pork-barrel culprit in the lock-and-dam issue, but it’s simpler to note that
Senator McConnell is the only suspect who voted for the project.
“I’ll leave your main issue mostly alone except to note that
France, Brazil and others are more concerned with the NSA violations of their
personal and collective privacy than with Mr. Snowden. Me too.
“I have no idea why veterans and others would be unaware of
the cause of Federal shutdown.
“The Baseline Scenario economics blog pointed out this past
week that rating services’ rating of the Federal government mean very little
right now. Nobody believed that Government debt would remain unpaid. The only
question was exactly when that would happen. Usually that matters very little
for the large entities that would be making decisions related to the issue.
“Realistically, “a billion here and a billion there” means
less to JP Morgan Chase than it apparently did to Senator Dirksen. At least,
they seem not to mind racking up fines in that range.”
My response to the
Blog:
I
do not know about the worthiness of the Lower Ohio River construction
project. Further, I do not have to
time or capacity to work the laborious process of tracking down the source §123. My point for illuminating the change
was the timing, choice and ethics of adding it specifically to the continuing
appropriations act, delaying a proper appropriations law(s) and increasing the
debt limit to respect the spending by Congress. If the project is worthy, then it can withstand the
legislative scrutiny and proper rigor rather than buried in a critical stopgap
law. It should have been discussed
in the Press, the local media, townhall meetings, and petitions to various
governmental agencies. The lack of
general regional public awareness strongly suggests the project is exactly what
I believe it is – pork barrel benefits for local crony construction companies
and rich donors.
The
faux public indignation over the Snowden betrayal belies the reality of
international intelligence operations.
France is notorious for their intelligence agencies breaking into hotel
rooms or any other facility that struck their interest. It happened to me in 1990 when I
participated in the Paris Airshow, and it still happens to this day.
The
veteran protest at the World War II Memorial is so typical of the political
extremes at both ends of the spectrum.
They have no qualms using citizens or veterans for their parochial,
selfish, political purposes. Those
veterans may have been coincidental or they may have been die-hard Tea Party
supporters bent upon embarrassment of the President. Either way, using the WW II Memorial as a cause célèbre for the anti-PPACA folks
is wrong in every way I can think of.
Being used like that really pokes the coals for me.
For
big banks like JP Morgan Chase, it is just a cost of doing business they pass
along to the shareholders and customers.
The only thing that possibly stands a chance of slowing down this
rampant greed is long-term prison sentences and prohibitions from the industry.
. . . round two:
“Re the Lower Ohio River Project, that's pretty much what I
said. If someone wants to follow this particular money trail, they have a
starting point. What might make it worthwhile for someone is the utter
hypocrisy of crusading against spending while inserting new projects within your
constituency into the budget.
“The ultimate usefulness of the Snowden and various other
well-publicized revelations is that collectively they might change
"business as usual" in the mis-named intelligence community.
“The specific protest at the World War II memorial flies in
the face of common sense a little too much to avoid the implication of being a
setup. US politics is not getting any more ethical.”
. . . my response to round two:
Re:
“earmarks.” And, that was
precisely my point . . . the hypocrisy and outright audacity to add another
US$2.2B of new spending for a local project to a continuing resolution spending
authorization after putting the nation and the world through the trauma of
uncertainty. There must be a
better way.
Re:
“intelligence.” I sure hope the
Snowden treason does not change IC’s means & methods; they work. That is not to say reforms are not needed,
but I’m reluctant to support restrictions. Yes, there are reforms required. I have advocated for filters or firewalls of sorts for a
long time, to reduce the potential to use the data collected for collateral or
political purposes. You suggest
the IC is mis-named. What would
you name the IC?
Re:
“politics & ethics.” The reference
antipodes are mutually exclusive and defy common sense. To watch these politicians defile
monuments and veterans along with other good citizens really raises my ire.
. . . round three:
“In re the intelligence community (which is neither notably
intelligent nor a true community), my point was precisely the opposite of what
you said. Edward Snowden, Wikileaks, etc., will change the ‘means and methods’
of government by repeatedly providing proof that secrecy has become impossible
to assure. The enforced transparency that is occurring is not limited to any
given nation or phase of operations, and that may well result in healthier
limits on governing bodies in general.
"Another name for what you call the ‘intelligence community’?
Spies."
. . . my response to round three:
I
suppose the simple question here is, if we make all of our intelligence
material public, aren’t we telling our enemies exactly what we know? If our enemies know what we know, they also
know what we don’t know. It
doesn’t get much better than that for our enemies. So, how is that a good thing?
Another contribution:
“I am not now able to completely digest and respond to your
latest Update. However, I believe maybe instead of treating Snowden like he is
a traitor, perhaps, we should be looking at our own government and the NSA as
traitors to our Constitution and lawful Americans. We are on very dangerous
slopes of balance. Our Fourth Amendment rights are breached by those you
believe are there to protect US. My
1st Amendment
rights gets violated daily in the name of political correctness ("hate
speech"?). My
2nd Amendment rights get breached all the time in
the good old state of California. My 4th Amendment rights again get violated going
through highway checkpoint, regardless of what the $old-out SCOTUS rule. Most
of them are traitors, total sellouts. You are very critical, and you have your
right, against Cruz and the Tea Party. Maybe Cruz and they are the
few left in
Washington who truly are American. George Washington was after all considered a
revolutionary, today he'd be a terrorist.
“And those that are supposed to be sworn to uphold our
Constitution, are much worse I bet than Snowden. Your targeting seems off, in
all due respect, Cap.”
My reply:
Oh
my . . . a lot in a few words. I’m
going to try to break it down into segments.
Re:
“traitor.” Perhaps we need to
agree on a definition. The
dictionary says a traitor is someone who betrays another person or his
country. As used in the Constitution,
treason is a betrayal of the country – the key word being betrayal. In this context, betrayal means being
unfaithful in guarding, maintaining or fulfilling his commitment to this Grand
Republic. Regardless of his
employment status, he took and signed an oath to protect (not disclose) the
information he had access to . . . to anyone who did not hold the appropriate
security clearance AND had a need to know. The information he chose to steal and disclose to the Press
and public was about as highly classified as it gets within the U.S.
classification system. He chose to
be prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner all by himself; he had no way to
know or appreciate the context of what he considered wrong. George Washington did NOT do that EVER;
he operated with a collective, resisting oppression. Snowden did nothing even remotely similar.
Re:
“USG.” My opinion(s) does not
exclude criticism of the USG.
Those key individuals charged with clearing him and supervising him
failed miserably to perform their duties.
If the NSA or any other element of the IC exceeded its authority under
the law, they should be prosecuted.
There is culpability with in the USG. I trust those responsible will pay the appropriate price for
their failure(s). Further, I have
long advocated for IC reforms to better control the classified information we
collect. I truly wish Elliott
Spitzer had had the strength and courage to challenge what the politcos did to
him; I believe he was truly harmed by the NSA warrantless surveillance program
– opportunity lost.
Part
of the basis of our system of jurisprudence (right or wrong) requires an injury
or impending injury to have a foundation for legal action. I’m not aware of any injury, or
oppression, or threat suffered by Snowden. Are their elements of his disclosures that are valid topics
of public debate and action – YES!
What he did and how he did it was not to foster public debate, but
rather to inflict serious injury on this Grand Republic. Further, he took his intentional, purposeful,
informed action to harm the United States of America during wartime; that is
treason by any definition. As I
have written before, I am not aware of any treason that has been more damaging
to the national defense of the United States than what Snowden has done, and
that goes from Benedict Arnold to Snowden. In a slim sense, I think Snowden may have seen evidence he
believed violated the Constitution; however, the expanse, scale and depth of
his treason defy a noble purpose.
We need public debate on some of these issues, but NOT this way.
Re:
“Our Fourth
Amendment rights are breached.” Really? How
have you been harmed? Have you
seen any evidence your privacy has been violated? Certainly, the generalizations offered second, third, fourth
hand suggest a potential violation of our collective 4th Amendment rights, but I have
seen no evidence . . . only the Press yammerings about these Snowden
revelations. I have physical proof
the USG censored personal mail during WW 1 and WW 2; I don’t recall public
outrage at those proven violations of 4th Amendment rights.
Re:
“My 1st
Amendment rights gets violated daily in the name of political
correctness ("hate speech"?).”
I respectfully submit, your sense of violation in this context is
self-inflicted. Political
Correctness (PC) is a societal induced form of peer pressure to impose the
vocal groups sense of propriety.
I’m not aware of any legal restriction other than the common inciteful
speech provisions.
Re:
“My
2nd
Amendment rights get breached all the time in the good old state of
California.” I’ve heard rumors of
this nonsense, but I’ve not studied the law, if there is a law. If there is a violation of the Constitution,
challenge the damn law in court, as it should be done.
Re:
“highway checkpoint.” We can have
a good, hearty debate on this topic.
I do believe the common law jurisprudence recognizes the misty line here
between individual privacy rights versus the common good.
Re:
“Cruz & Tea Party.” As I have
written, I may not agree with Cruz, but I defend his right to do what he feels
appropriate within the law. To my
knowledge, he violated no law. My
stiffest criticism goes to the House leadership who allowed the fiasco to
progress to the shutdown and potential debt default. Shutdown the government and penalizing the rest of the world
because they object to the PPACA is like Russian roulette with our head.
Re:
“much worse I bet than Snowden.”
Again, really? Please give
me an example or two. I can
understand and appreciate Snowden’s contention that operatives and agents
inside the USG may have violated the Constitution, i.e., 4th Amendment; but, there are
legal, proper means for challenging those actions without jeopardizing the
national security of the United States.
I
think my targeting is spot on but not exclusive.
From the same
contributor but a different thread:
“The way I interpreted [his] response Cap, is that simply: Institutions become
self-serving and can deviate outside the laws/Constitution. Look at Judge
Andrew P. Napolitano's most recent opinion, which you read. There are certain
principles I don't need to educate people as bright as you, and well studied as
you, on, but they need to be black or white, very binary, and we're currently
operating on the backside of the power curve.
“And as to my opinion that institutions become self-serving,
that is the non-sinister version that those within the institutions given
excessive power (CIA/NSA/FBI/etc.) can become abusive/dangerous to the very
citizenry they are pledged to protect. What happens when they go to the dark
side or become directed by elements that don't recognize our country's
sovereignty, history or Constitution?”
My reply:
I
think we all share concern for rogue agents and/or agencies given the
enormously powerful tools currently available to the USG. Where the threshold tolerable conduct
and performance lays should remain a perpetual topic of public debate. My concern remains reform or refinement
of the IC to avoid broad general constraints like the Church Commission induced
in the late 70’s. We should be
looking for ways to allow the IC as much range as possible while restricting
the uses or application of the collected material, e.g., using intercepted
communications of enforce morality (private conduct) principles. We must focus our attention on proper
objectives rather than taking the easy path as Congress did with the Church
Commission findings.
A different
contribution:
“How naïve of them ‘to think or not to think’ that this eavesdropping
was not going on!
“The technology of listening to a radio communication even
if one of those in the communication has some form of protection has been in
practice for many a year. I believe that even you and I are occasionally
‘listened’ too. And why not? I have nothing to hide. This is pure political
venting and squabbling. I have never heard such nonsense. I shall be pleased to
see your views, which may be roughly aligned with my own. We shall see.”
My response:
As
I have repeatedly said in a variety of fora, folks who are disturbed by signals
intelligence should read a few books that detail the ULTRA and MAGIC programs
70 years ago, or even a few history books that document the enormous benefit of
those programs to waging war successfully. NSA & GCHQ have been listening to communications since
their inception, and I hope they continue to do so for as long as there are bad
men in this world. I also hope they
continue to refine and hone their skills as technology evolves.
In
fact, I believe eavesdropping as a legal term goes back to at least 1765 and
Sir William Blackstone. A lot of
the public outcry is a paucity of understanding regarding signals intelligence
(SigInt) and/or resentment they do not possess the capability and capacity of
NSA & GCHQ.
I
think the best the professionals can do now is close the door, shutter the
windows, and disappear . . . as they keep their governmental supervision
informed. I note with interest the
congressional and parliamentary members charged with that supervision have
remained largely silent or issued innocuous statements of defense.
The
furore will burn itself out eventually, although in this instance Snowden, his
helpers and the collaborative Press are insuring a constant trickle, which I
surmise may go on for quite some time.
. . . and a follow-up comment:
“We’re working up to Remembrance Sunday here. We have a very
hectic couple of weeks with fund raising and the Poppy appeal. I have 5 school
presentations to do and will speak to approximately 2000 youngsters. It’s quite
brilliant and beneficial but tiring. I take a couple of WW2 veterans and one
who served in Malaya. They have tragic memories.”
. . . my
follow-up response:
Always
interesting to talk to veterans. I
hope the Poppy Appeal is amply successful this year. Malayia was nasty business for Percival’s III Corps as well
as the assets and population they protected. Good luck.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
We might call your largesse fund by some other name, but it’s as reasonable an idea as I have seen to date for allowing politicians to repay their contributors. I still favor public financing of campaigns, though. So long as our elected officials account to anyone other than the public as a whole for election money, corruption will continue.
The economy continues to confuse forecasters. That supports the Federal Reserve’s proposal to require the big banks to have reasonable reserves. Think of those rules as having similarity to traffic laws. People (or banks) will never really like them, but they protect all parties.
On one of last week’s topics, I heard on a radio agricultural report today that the Ohio River does indeed have “an outdated system of locks and dams.” Perhaps Senator McConnell has a legitimate object for his largesse, although I surely agree that his timing could have been far better.
I am not sure how you come by your assertions of Edward Snowden’s (and many others’) mental state and intentions. Mind reading is not merely an inexact science; it’s not any kind of science. My guess of Mr. Snowden’s intention is that he intended to improve the United States in the long term by restraining those who would do such foolishness as spying on Angela Merkel’s cell phone and such grossly unethical behaviors as the dozen or more known instances of personal spying on spouses and others.
Calvin,
Re: Largesse Fund. We can call it anything; I was simply calling what it would be . . . solely to constraint the corruption of Members of Congress. Public financing is not the answer either. Yet, it would be better now that the Supremes have opened the gates of hell with their Citizens United decision.
Re: banks. IMHO, the banking reform necessary to minimize the impact of a market collapse like the Fall of 2008; however, these are positive moves, it seems to me.
Re: dams & locks. As I acknowledged, the Ohio River project may well be a worthy endeavor. If it is, it can and should stand alone with proper scrutiny. Hiding it away is like sneaking around in the death of night; it looks, smells and tastes bad by the way it was done. And, it is morally worse, the Minority Leader will condemn President Obama for spending too much. It is hypocrisy and duplicity that enrages me.
Re: Snowden. I make no claims to reading anyone’s mind. I only see the dots and connect them to create a picture. I simply report upon what I see in that picture. He may have had the best of intentions; however, his chosen path to achieve his objective(s) was about as wrong as it could be.
Re: espionage. It is a nasty business, much like the sausage-making process. This kind of illumination is NEVER healthy. The Church Commission hobbled the IC for decades. The U.S. IC had essentially no effective Human Intelligence (HumInt) when compared to the British, Russians, French, Chinese, et cetera. Then, 9/11 struck our blind eye and we scrambled to recover; good people died as a consequence. Now, here we are yet again back in 1976. Instead of dealing with the actual abuser, we are heading down a road to once again hobble our entire intelligence apparatus. I may be the lone voice in the wind, but I shall speak out vigorously against restriction . . . reform, yes, absolutely; restrictions on access, yes; list goes on. The issue is not what we collect, it is how we use the information that is critical.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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