Update from the
Heartland
No.651
2.6.14 – 8.6.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
Sergeant Bowe Robert Bergdahl, USA, was a
POW held by the Haqqani Network for five years in Pakistan and Afghanistan. On 31.May.2014, Bergdahl was traded for five
Guantánamo detainees – all Taliban leaders, not al-Qa’ida operatives. The exchange sparked volatile public
debate and outcry largely because of the circumstances surrounding his capture. This whole Bergdahl kerfuffle is so
bloody emblematic of the insane political calcification that has crippled this
Grand Republic for decades.
Yes, there are more than a few aspects of the Bergdahl case that bother
me. Yet, for reasons I can only
attribute to blind political partisanship, a lot of folks have their panties in
a knot. Yes, the publicly
available information strongly suggests Bergdahl is a deserter on the battlefield
– an offense that used to be punishable by death – Private Eddie Slovik
[31.January.1945] comes to mind.
Yet, the issue here is NOT the trade. Prisoners have been exchanged for centuries, so that cannot
be the objection. Some members of
Congress whined about not being notified prior to the trade. We can argue the wisdom, purpose and the
intentions of the trade at this particular moment in time; however, the prisoner
exchange has absolutely nothing to do with the circumstances of Bergdahl’s
capture. My recommendation would
have been, celebrate the exchange to get our last POW back on our side. Once that is done and secure, then let
the experts investigate what happened on 30.June.2009, and during his
captivity. If he was a deserter,
then charge and try him before a general court-martial, and then sentence him
to the punishment he deserves for his crime(s). The President deserves our gratitude, not our disdain. As for the five Taliban leaders, I hope
they do go back to their support for radical Islamic fundamentalism and
Islamo-fascism, and the next time we run across them, they get a bullet or
twenty, rather than a hood and plastic restraints. So, I shall be a minority voice here; thank you President
Obama for having the courage to do what had to be done. Now, let the debate begin.
President Obama nominated General Joseph F.
“Fighting Joe” Dunford, Jr., USMC, to be the next Commandant of the Marine
Corps and replace General Amos, whose term of office expires this coming
fall. Dunford is currently
commander of the International Security Assistance Force and U.S. Forces
Afghanistan. He should have
little problem with confirmation, unless of course the politicos decide to
resist “just because.”
News from the economic front:
-- The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported its
Purchasing Manager's Index (PMI) rose to 56.0 in May from 54.9 in April. The PMI indicates the manufacturing
sector is picking up the pace and supporting the improving recovery from the
Great Recession.
-- The Frankfurt-based European Central Bank (ECB) reduced its
emergency overnight loans to 0.40% from 0.75%, its main refinancing rate to
0.15% from 0.25%, and its deposit rate from 0.00 to -0.10%, becoming the first
major central bank to venture into negative territory. The ECB is walking a very fine line as
it seeks to keep ultralow inflation from gaining traction and derailing the
euro zone’s fragile recovery.
-- The Labor Department reported non-farm employment increased
a seasonally adjusted 217,000 in May. April's gain was revised down slightly to an increase of
282,000 from an initially reported gain of 288,000. Still, April's improvement
was the best in more than two years. March's gain was unrevised at 203,000. The unemployment rate remained unchanged
at 6.3% in May, matching the lowest level since September 2008, at the
beginning of the Great Recession.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.650:
“When you
started this debate on prayers at council meetings I thought that’s going to be
a long runner and it has proved so to be.
“I have had
the honour of addressing the full council of our county at the opening slot
normally reserved for prayers. I used the moment not to eulogize but to remind
all of the sacrifice of our warriors and of the duty incumbent on all citizens,
especially those in power, to uphold and maintain the obligation of support to
the dependents of those who have made the supreme sacrifice.”
My response:
Indeed,
my friend . . . a worthy debate nonetheless.
It
is nice to see your exercise of freedom and your demonstration of precisely the
point made in this humble forum – a solemn statement of purpose or inspiration
before public meetings.
Another contribution:
“I'm concerned as we're in the 100th year anniversary for
WW-I, or in your blog, the context-fit is that geopolitical strains and
tensions could take us into something bigger than any of us need/want.
Flash points, outliers, or a Black Swan. It would appear both Russia and China
are taking advantage of a perceived leadership weakness of the United States of
America, whether they miscalculated, that remains to be seen, and
simultaneously makes it dangerous.
“While Russia is playing chess, the Chinese moving on the GO
board, are we really just playing poker, or as you suggest, Russia and China
are "bullies" and taking advantage of a RISK board full of hot
points?
“Was Syria a test, by the other players, to see about our
RESOLVE (which amounted to not much)?
“It's not climate caused GLOBAL WARMING most of us should be
concerned about right now.”
My reply:
Good
points. The similarities with history are far
too striking. The motivations of
the leaders vary as each human being is unique. However, from my perspective, there are more than a few
commonalities. Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin and Kim Jung Un are dictators who appear
to be ego driven. Xi Jinping is
the titular leader of a small, central Politburo, which means the PRC is driven
by an odd group-think. Putin is
more like Josef Vissarionovich Stalin, Adolf Hitler and Benito Amilcare Andrea
Mussolini, while Xi is more like Hideki Tojo. These aggressive leaders strive mightily to whip up
nationalistic fervor within their people for their selfish, egocentric
purposes, and once those fires are lit, they take on a resonate sustenance of
their own. From my experience, the
people are rarely the problem; most folks around the world want the same things
. . . to live a peaceful, comfortable life and to help their children to have a
better life than they have enjoyed.
Megalomaniacal leaders are the problem, not the people.
. . . follow-up comment:
“One of the angles that I entertain, while not wanting to be
overly speculative since some call it conspiratorial, is that these leaders
that from time-to-time pop-up, are elected (or installed), or gain their power
through coup (like Saddam), actually are being directed or brought forward by a
cabal that is orchestrating global events on mass scale, in concert with
objectives that only the initiated would understand. Do you believe this
is too difficult to achieve, and that rather than a long time organized
blueprint, these leaders you refer to are just part of the chaos of a complicated
system of nation-states with independent nationalistic leaders?
“At any rate, whatever is happening now, sure seems it will
compromise a unified global order, though maybe this too was the goal.”
. . . my follow-up reply:
Interesting
question and proposition.
There
is certainly history to support your hypothesis. William Randolph Hearst and his newspapers are often blamed
for whipping up nationalist fervor after the sinking of the USS Maine in Havana harbor, Yellow
Journalism at its most graphic performance. We get another look-see in Smedley Butler’s essay “War is a
Racket” [1935]. There are
certainly examples of orchestration.
However, I have a hard time finding those connections with guys like
Hitler, Stalin and Mao. Saddam,
yes, Komeini, no. Who knows how
deep some of these connections go?
For
the most part, I think folks should choose their leaders, their form of
government. If the people accept
the mullahs of the IRI or the Taliban, I’m OK with that. What I am not OK with and cannot
tolerate is their exporting or supporting violence or interference with
commerce. The U.S. supported
Saddam in his confrontation with the IRI, if not back to his coup d’etat; but,
when he began to support Islamist terrorist groups, he became an enemy.
Comment to the Blog:
“Putin and Russia are louder than China, but that is no
measure of the situation. Putin most likely hopes to live out a false memory
(“euphoric recall” if we were discussing alcoholism) of the days when the USSR
dominated a much larger area than Russia does today. The USSR paid a price for
those days and so will Putin. However, these days Europe is far stronger than
it was in the Cold War days. Let us allow those in the most danger to lead the
response.
“China, on the other hand, has a long and strong history of
empire-building. I caution that meeting threats with threats will not bring
about any desirable resolution to this tension. China fears nobody, and they
have much stronger support for that position than Putin or that clown in North
Korea. If Vietnam has become an ally in the formal treaty-bound sense, we need
to find ways to support them. Peaceful methods should receive strong
preference. If we have no obligations, let us tread carefully. Historically,
the great empires have fallen through over-extending their resources. Ours is
in enough trouble already.
“I will state here as I have elsewhere that if I were in
Edward Snowden's position, I would not attempt to change the system from
within. It is no secret today that the US spy services have upset entire
national governments. There is no reason to believe that they would hesitate to
simply kill a low-level contractor who tried to upset their operations, legal
or not.
“Your pro-Christian correspondent and his kind need to study
the subject rather than quote hymns and such behaviors. Probably the least they
need to do is read a book or two by people who have spent years studying their
subject. The American Revolution was based on Enlightenment thinking, and that
thinking did not endorse the religions of its time or of ours. Thomas
Jefferson, the subject of a biography I just finished (A Life Worth Reading:
Thomas Jefferson, by C.P. White), was a deist, as were many of the Founders.
This particular book defines deism as “a quasi-religious view . . . which
believed the universe was the creation of a rational God that can be known
through the observation of natural phenomena and understanding of natural
laws.” That is rather far from Christianity, whether conservative or not. No
Bibles in that, none of the trappings of any formal religion at all. There are
good reasons why not. The Founders understood the potential for abuse of
religion far better than modern Americans. They had seen it in action.
“I guess I need to state that I support your view on the
Founders' readiness to support broadening the availability of freedom to women,
people of other races and religions and responsible persons in general.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
Russia. Spot on, I’d say. Putin sure appears to be nostalgic for
the bad ol’ days of Uncle Joe.
Indeed, Europe is far different from 70 years ago. Yes, Europe can handle Russia today,
but I doubt that will happen without the United States.
Re:
PRC. I am not aware of any
official or public defense treaty with the SRV. Again, spot on, regarding the PRC. Further, I’m not aware of any threats to the PRC. Our public statements have been to
standby our allies and resist PRC hegemony.
Re:
that fugitive in Russia.
Assassination, yes, plausible, but more an event of the cinema than
reality. If he was as smart as he
thinks he is, he could have figured out a way to alert Congress and to expose
the warrantless surveillance programs without doing such extensive harm to the
national security of this Grand Republic and the safety of ALL American
citizens. Yes, this is a debate we
must have, but he did not have to instigated in such an injurious manner. This is one of many reasons his actions
appear to be far more narcissistic and egocentric than in the public interest.
Re:
Christian. I think the point of noting
the historic patriotic songs was a reminder that God has been prominent in our
heritage from before the Republic.
As has been voiced in this small, humble forum, many Christians feel and
believe the efforts to secularize our history is an assault on our Christian
founding. Yes, history has
recorded that prominent Founders and Framers were deists rather than
Christians. Likewise, the history
is undeniable that this Grand Republic has been and remains predominately of
the Christian faith. My point has
been not to expunge history of God or even religion, but rather to find balance
between our religious faith (whatever that may be) and our secular
governance. The challenge before
us is balance. Again, spot on, the
Founders had graphic, first-hand evidence of religious abuses. Heck, so many of the early settlers in
fact fled religious persecution in Europe, including my ancestors . . .
Huguenots fleeing deadly violence in France (1686). As I’ve said many times and continue to say, this Grand
Republic is a nation of all religions and no religion.
Re:
broadening freedom. Thank
you. From my perspective, they
intended “men” to be all human beings, although in their day, only educated,
male, Protestant landowners were understood to be relevant. Fortunately, we have grown and matured.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
Bowe Bergdahl is getting more media attention than his situation warrants. As best I understand the legalese, he would have been Absent WithOut Leave (AWOL) when captured and a prisoner of war ever since. Some news source (on CBS News, I think) stated that desertion requires a longer period of absence prior to his capture by the other side. Apparently Bergdahl left his post against orders, but I will leave it up to the military legal system to define the offense. In the meantime, the prisoner exchange is simply one facet of military life. All the rest is showmanship and nonsense.
It's always possible the economy is improving. If I get a job, my personal economy will surely improve.
Your correspondent who addressed his or her county council and reminded them of their duty to support the dependents of soldiers provided a better service than anyone offering prayers.
Your other commenter who used all those metaphors gives me the impression that he does not deal with reality. All of those board games put together offer confusion but no evidence of anything bordering on knowledge. If my guess is correct, he is a conspiracy theorist at best. In addition, the focus on long-distance psychoanalysis of prominent figures rather than evidence of concrete operations and objectives leaves me uninterested. We could analyze any prominent individual's thinking, but we have no way of understanding the other people influencing those public figures, and much information is not available to anyone outside their immediate circles. Secrets can still be kept if they do not reach the Internet.
My most prominent ancestor was a Mennonite who may well have fled religious persecution. I myself am part of a religion that is unpopular and a small minority. I do not believe that injecting religion of any sort, Christian or otherwise, into public life is balanced or appropriate. We need simply to protect all Americans' right to worship or refrain as they choose, so long as they do no damage to others. That is enough.
Calvin,
Re: Bergdahl. All this drama regarding the exchange is so bloody misguided and driven by partisan parochialism. How he became a POW is a separate issue. My point was, the President made the decision to trade Taliban leaders to recover Bergdahl; he made a good decision and deserves credit for that decision. Whether Bergdahl is a deserter, or AWOL, or just a dupe is for military investigators to determine. I am certain the military will take the appropriate action depending upon the findings of the investigation. I’m not sure what you are referring to in your statement: “All the rest is showmanship and nonsense”?
Re: economy. I wish you the best of luck finding employment you enjoy.
Re: prayer. I think we agreed on that comment regarding an opening inspirational statement of purpose.
Re: “long-distance psychoanalysis.” “Prominent figures” are proper debate topics, as they should be. We form our opinions based on the information available to us by whatever means we find useful. History strongly suggests far too many people wanted to see the good in Hitler, rather than trying to understand what motivated him. If more people had read Mein Kampf prior to 1933 or 1938, history might have come out differently.
Re: religion in public life. As I have tried to make the case for, I am against religion in public life; however, I also think God is important in public life, as we all need a higher power to help us avoid chaos, anarchy and disorder. We need to be reminded that we are NOT the center of the universe, and we are NOT individuals independent from everyone else. I continue to maintain there is a distinct difference between God and religion. So, the struggle for balance continues.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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