Update from the
Heartland
No.647
5.5.14 – 11.5.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
As is so often the case these days, the
Supremes sparked yet another public debate. On Monday, the vaunted panel of high court justices rendered
their thin 5-4 decision in the case of Town of Greece v. Galloway [570 U.S.
___ (2014); No. 12-696] – allowing an opening prayer for the monthly town
council meeting in Greece, New York.
I have not read the ruling, as yet, so I shall reserve my opinion until after
the read-through. However, the
editorial opinion published by the Washington
Post poked me to tinkle the keys before me, perhaps prematurely but now
nonetheless.
“Sanctioned prayer has no place at legislative meetings”
by Editorial Board
Washington Post
Published: May 10 [2014]
Various, 17th and 18th century,
political philosophers articulated the need for secular government, separate
from the monarchy or theocratic authority. Thomas Jefferson’s letter to the Danbury Baptists (1802)
stated the principle most succinctly.
The separation of church and state did not and does not mean expunging
religion from public life. The
wall was never intended to exclude religion from the public domain and debate. The key and only issue is balance. The Founders had first hand, direct
experience with theocratic rule, and they also understood the importance of
religion in their lives and in a free society. We have negative examples even
today. The Founders understood the
need for balance. I suspect the
Supremes are seeking that balance point to ensure inclusivity as well as some
distance between theocratic domination and public policy.
A thread from
another arena is transplanted to this humble forum may be useful in this
forum. I recognize and acknowledge
the whole nasty business with Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling does
not make fruitful public debate; however, there are elements that may prove
useful. The opening argument comes
from a friend and contributor to this humble forum.
“Funny how hypocritical our president and all the alphabet
news agencies really are. When Clippers owner Donald Sterling made the alleged ‘racist’
comments (though I still am not so sure they were racist), why THE HELL is our
loser president and all the loser Al Sharptons and other coke head corrupt
minions, not at all saying WHAT DONALD STERLING said in private, should have
been kept private. Since when in our country do we leak audio recordings of
private conversations, then use it ON-AIR to conduct the lynch mob witch hunt of
trying him, and finding a verdict, and sentencing him--in the court of public
opinion, when he was never given any due process (nor did he commit any
crimes).
“This is all a good example of how sick our country really
is.”
My response"
“Wait just a doggone minute here! Sterling has a
history with this crap and not a short history either. I believe the
mistress was pissed off, acted out of spite, and simply queued him up. He
did not disappoint those who wanted his head on a pike. This was not some
drunken blathering. He stepped in it full on. The President,
Sharpton or the alphabet news agencies simply called a spade a spade. Has
anyone asked where or when it was recorded, or how the recording got released
to the public?”
“That's just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
. . . round two:
“This is what I blogged in a news media site:
“My
opinion on Don Sterling/Clippers/NBA: Even if he is racist, why does our
alphabet news agencies over-cover what was a conversation in private, exposed
to world (legally?). Then our so called POTUS has to weigh in on it from Asia
even though the world has so much stress? Race baiting? Divide the
people? And now Oprah weighs in saying Sterling demonstrates the
"plantation mentality" and now a "Sterling anti-racism
rally" planned which LAPD must plan for. Thanks news media: you fuel the
race problems!”
“Cap, most of us can be hypnotized by the news media
reporting, style, format and focus. I am not immune to it what so ever,
if anything, I might be more captivated by the wrong events, for the wrong
reasons. The point I want to make is WHAT IF much of what they
report on the network/cable news outlets, is not as much for the actual ‘NEWS’
value but an objective of the reaction it causes in the public?
“All because Don Sterling's private conversation was
recorded then outed, now LAPD must plan on a possible tactical alert, increased
staffing, embeddings C.I.'s and U.C.'s into the groups, and likely alert if not
deploy their Mobile Field Force, all because of some drunk man's sloppy and
racist speech to someone he thought was his girlfriend.
“Here's a question, has anyone been probing the legality of
whether that conversation was illegally obtained? No, the news media and
our president (if one can call him that), and Oprah, and Al Sharpton, and all
the race baiters that keep popping their heads out on cue, are working as the
clowns they are at our CNN circus, to divide and distract the people.
“I've always said I don't think deep down to our core, most
of us are racist, it seems very silly that we would judge one another based on
skin pigmentation, when all of us were created by God.
“Stereotyping does causes judgment, and it is of course easy
to stereotype others, but much of this has been created by how news media
reports events.
“Are people tribal? I tend to believe they are.
We have a natural tendency to feel comfortable around people who we MIGHT
BELIEVE are similar to ourselves in values/behavior/etc. Many tend
to want association with those in their social-economic sphere. Do you
think my high-net-worth clients want to hang out in their free time with their
chauffeur? Hell no! Some have already asked me before why if I had
my own business before, or was director of marketing for 2 companies, why I
would be a ‘driver?’ They judged me per my occupation. I don't take
it personally. Would I want to hang out with some of my client/passengers
off-duty? Hell no! I don't relate or value what they
do. But even on an occupational level, everyone judges
others. I'm not in their economic class, likely won't ever be, so I am
not as good (in their eyes). Would I feel comfortable hanging with Don
Sterling in a quaint steakhouse in Brentwood or Toluca Lake? Likely not,
though if I was just as drunk as Sterling, it might be entertainment.
“Here is the central point of my originating message: Would
you or I like our conversations that were held in PRIVATE, made public?
Would we want some of our behavior in PRIVATE exposed to TMZ, then the
president can weigh in on it? I doubt it. Would we want video of
something we did aired for the world? I doubt it. All of us have
probably said things that could get us fried in the court of public opinion, if
the news media's crafting of the story was to fry us.
“So if some rioting starts up soon over this, hopefully not,
let's not blame Don Sterling, but blame the entities/agents that recorded the
conversations and then systematically exposed it with the agenda to divide the
people on RACE.
“What's another scary takeaway from this (besides private
recordings released) is NPR saying this morning that the only way we could
accept Sterling back into his position as a sports teams owner, is if we can
prove he is not only apologizing on the surface, but his values and opinions
have been changed down to the root. I find this Orwellian that NPR is now
going to dictate our collective values to us in the global village.
With the extensive data-collection (vacuuming); data-warehousing; and
data-mining that NSA has been and is doing, why any of us could be the target
of a private conversation being outed, then used against us in some fashion.
“BTW, I pretty much had this same opinion when Mel Gibson's
recordings were released of conversations he had in private, while drunk, and
being really stupid.”
. . . my
response to round two:
I
absolutely agree with your privacy premise. None of us wants our private affairs broadcast across all
media worldwide. Likewise, I immediately
asked the same questions. Who
recorded that conversation? And,
who leaked it to the Press? My
opinion of the two women involved is not particularly good. “Vengeance is mine, sayeth the
Lord.” The mistress (assistant?)
has not been serving her reputation well with her antics and interviews . . .
all of which, IMHO, confirm her purpose in all those.
I
surely hope the IRS has opened an investigation into whether Ms. Stiviano has
paid her proper taxes on all those “gifts” and “benefits” given to her by
Sterling. Gold-diggers must pay
taxes too.
I
shall offer a few opinionated observations for public debate in this (or any
other) humble forum. The aspect of
this sordid affair I find most intellectually stimulating is the human
dimensions of the illuminated dynamics.
First, her questioning of him has flashing lights and red
flags of a purposeful, intentional set-up; she knew how he would react, and she
queued him up quite well.
Second, we tend to forget that the mantle we embrace
curtails our freedoms including speech.
When I wear a uniform or display an employee badge, I am no longer John
Q. Citizen; I am a representative of whatever that affiliation may be. Despite his wealth and influence,
Sterling forgot, or perhaps never learned, that he was an owner of just one
franchise in a much larger organization, and his words, actions and conduct in
public or private will be judged by the keepers of the brand he represents.
Third, there is a lesson for all of us in this. When our private and public words,
actions and/or conduct differ, we immediately establish a dichotomy that can
be, and often well be, interpreted as hypocrisy or contempt for society’s sense
of “normal.”
Fourth, this is yet another demonstration of the awesome
power of The Box (= society’s definition of normal). He chose to live his life in a manner well outside The
Box. Society does not take kindly
to crabs trying to escape the heat of the boiling pot.
Lastly, his money obviously bought a lot of power, influence
and things, but at the end of the day, he is just another citizen and a flawed
human being. Humility might have
served him well.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.646:
Comment to the Blog:
“Let's see, how can I stir something up? I wonder what's
behind the landslides and sinkholes lately. Could that be a more-or-less direct
result of changing rainfall patterns as the climate changes? Is Latvia the next
target for the Russians? Have you noticed people talking more often and less
kindly about the Koch brothers? I have seen TV reports of various views on
domestic commercial drones. What do you think?
“Have you heard the prediction that China's economy will
grow to be larger than ours this year? In the long term that may be more
important than those other items above. Also in reference to China, do you
think they will do something to keep the peace in their region while their
economy flourishes? Both Russia and North Korea are among China's neighbors.
“The Fed has decided to cut back on bond buying despite the
continuing confusion among economic indicators. At this point, I guess one move
has as much chance as another. Until someone important either comes to
understand whatever is going on or decides to impart such knowledge to the rest
of us, action is pointless. For my own viewpoint, the thirty years since Reagan
began to get his owners' ideas implemented have convinced me that John Maynard
Keynes came far closer to sound ideas than the distorted version of Adam
Smith's notions that currently passes for economics. Are you (or is any
non-economist?) aware that Adam Smith completely opposed the idea of limited
liability? Limited liability is the foundational concept underlying
corporations.”
My response to the
Blog:
I
always appreciate a good stir.
Thank you for that.
Landslides
and sinkholes have been happening since forever. They are microscopic events in the macroclimate dynamic,
i.e., spot extremes, hazards, or other calamities will always occur regardless
of the climate; thus, I do not think the recent catastrophes are due to climate
change.
Re:
Latvia. The Baltic States would be
easy pickings compared to the Ukraine, except for one small detail – the
European Union, and consequently NATO of which the United States is a part. Latvia is farther along in the EU
membership process than the Ukraine.
That said, Latvia and the Baltics are highly unlikely targets short of
general warfare.
Re:
Koch Brothers. Nope, not seen that
as yet . . . still very much the villainous portrayal, it seems to me.
Re:
domestic drones. The use of
domestic drone aircraft of various sizes is inevitable, in my humble opinion –
endurance, size, repetition, risk, cost, among other reasons. The potential for chaos is real. It does not take much imagination to
see that potential without regulation, control and structure. The FAA has several initiatives in play
to get a handle on safe use of unmanned aircraft in U.S. airspace.
Re:
PRC. Yes; in fact, by the latest
estimates, the PRC economy may overtake the U.S. economy as the world’s largest
earlier than expected, prior to 2020 by one estimate. The consequences to the world economy are certainly less
clear.
Re:
PRC regional aggression. This is a
tough one in my mind. I do not
know why the PRC is taking progressively more aggressive action against its
territorial neighbors . . . could be a sense of remedy to enduring grievances,
or simply the schoolyard bully syndrome.
Re:
Fed action. That was precisely my
point. The economic signs are not
all positive or consistent, which suggests to me that the nation’s recovery
from the Great Recession is more mushy and unsteady.
Re:
limited liability. Yes, I think
most folks can see the consequences of limited liability for corporations. Perhaps less can see the benefit. As with most things, the key is
balance. Given the uncharted ramifications
of Citizens
United, the pendulum appears to have swung too far toward the benefit
of corporations. Adam Smith’s
premise was cause and effect, i.e., consequences for decisions taken. The market cannot be a reliable broker
in the arbitration of wrongdoing or the public good in contemporary society, as
modern technology enables dramatic market manipulation by forces with the means
to do so, i.e., the wealthy bending the market to their will . . . kinda like
royalty of a bygone era.
. . . follow-up
comments:
“Landslides and sinkholes are indeed old phenomena, but I
suspect they are becoming more common. If that is so, the landslides might be
due to saturated or at least moistened soils becoming more susceptible to
gravity. The sinkholes are more likely to be the result of depleted aquifers
caused by unsustainable population growth and thirsty agriculture and by
reckless development of wetlands.
“I have been aware of the Koch Brothers for several years,
but only recently I have seen mentions of them on TV news and by President
Obama that led me to think they are becoming more known to the public. As a
progressive and a defender of the American concept of equality, I do not favor
a situation where people who make a great deal of money in the petroleum
industry can dominate our political discourse by the use of their wealth. These
guys finance the Tea Party. The Tea Party may be irrational but it has
succeeded so far.
“I share your prediction of domestic drones. I sincerely
hope the FAA will implement and enforce controls to prevent the chaos we both
envision and to protect domestic privacy.
“The People's Republic of China continues to baffle all
outside observers as it has always done. I can only hope they figure
prominently in the planning functions of the developed world's other
governments.
“The importance of limited liability in our economics
context is that it invalidates much of Adam Smith's economics. Smith made no
attempt to deal with large-scale operations such as the Hudson Bay Company or
the Dutch East India Company. Wealth of Nations, his best-known
work, discusses local shopkeepers and small-scale manufacturers specifically
because they were operated by sole proprietors or partnerships that were and
are held fully accountable for any damage they caused. Today's economy does not
turn on those small businesses, but on multi-national corporations and
"too big to fail" banks. People who use Smith's ideas in relation to
the enormous entities of the 21st Century are essentially trying to manipulate
the rest of us. Unfortunately, they are largely succeeding. That is why so many
people vote against themselves. The arbitration of wrongdoing and especially
the public good are generally presented as among the objectives of economic
systems in general; wealth in and of itself is a tool used for those ends. The
differences arise in how each system tries to accomplish its objectives.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Re:
landslides & sinkholes. Yes to
both; those are generally the causes of both geologic phenomena. However, what is not so clear is any
generalized linkage to global climate change.
Re:
political discourse. Agreed. Likewise, I do not want anyone
dominating the political discourse by anything other than the power of their
rhetoric and strength of the argument.
The Tea Party is an excuse for intransigence rather than compromise.
Re:
drones. The FAA has a legal
responsibility to implement controls on the operation of unmanned aircraft in
U.S. airspace. We shall see how
they choose to accomplish that task.
Re:
PRC. If the PRC continues to treat
their neighbors in the manner they have been doing so, I cannot see them being
a beneficial influence in the developing world.
Re:
small business. Interesting
perspective, it seems to me. The
“too-big-to-fail” banks and large multinational corporations do indeed have an
inordinate influence. Yet, I do
believe small businesses still account for the majority of economic activity. I do not have any idea whether or how a
proper correction takes place; but, that correction is needed.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I agree with the Washington Post that prayer has no place in government functions, for exactly the reasons they give. As a member of a non-Abrahamic religion I assume I have a different view from mainstream people on this issue. Christian prayers leave me cold at best and typically feel hostile to me. However well intended, they use Christian values and concepts with which I have conflicts. There are other issues as well. By way of illustration, I have already seen a story floating around Facebook that a Satanist has sought to open a town council meeting somewhere in Florida. I wish him well, and I hope Hindus, Buddhists, Rastafarians, and Wiccans, among others, follow his example. That still leaves one problem, though. What about those who sincerely believe that no deity exists or that prayer in public is inappropriate (for example, followers of Matthew 5:5-6)? Any prayer or religious function at all will leave them isolated. If, as stated in the article, the people making rule decisions for these meetings seriously seek a sense of unity in their proceedings, they need to find a more unifying way to do that.
I have heard Donald Sterling's famous remark too many times on TV. I remain uncertain as to what exactly he meant, but let us assume it is racist. The woman to whom he addressed that remark has a history of issues around her own race as well as a personal history that makes her integrity doubtful. There is a reasonable possibility that he was advising her on dealing with her personal issues. In any case, she has asserted that she has a large volume of other recorded conversation. Even though Mr. Sterling is a public figure, I believe he is entitled to some level of privacy. “V. Stiviano,” who has used several other names, has abused his trust and most likely should be sued for her actions. Given that I have quit listening to this particular story, I do not know if a criminal charge of extortion is in order. Okay, that's plenty for that distraction.
Calvin,
Re: town council prayer. I do not support opening with Christian prayer, even though only Christian churches are available in Greece, New York. I do support non-denominational prayer. I will try to get the Greece ruling read ASAP. Non-denominational prayer does not impose any religion on anyone. God is as each of us holds Him in our heart and soul; God is not as others may try to define for us. To me, prayer is not a religious function. Rather, it is a reminder of the morality legislators must bring to their deliberations, e.g., God give us strength to do what is right.
Re: Sterling. Yes, we are all entitled to privacy, including Donald Sterling. Yet, he chose to allow that woman into his private domain. He chose to say what he said, regardless of stimulation or catalyst. I hold that woman in even less regard than Sterling. She exudes all the characteristics of the worst kind of gold-digger – willing to betray anyone and everyone to get what she wants, and vindictive when she doesn’t. It’s all about the money for them.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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