Update from the
Heartland
No.657
14.7.14 – 20.7.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
Erratum:
“It is Messi, not Messier.”
Indeed,
many of you caught my literary faux pas.
To all, I offer my most humble apologies for misspelling the family name
of Lionel Andrés “Leo” Messi – the forward for Spanish fútbol
club FC Barcelona and the captain of the Argentina national team. Thank you all for your diligence and
constructive criticism. I try to
get it right, but clearly do not always succeed. Again, my apologies!
We can always count on a flare up on the
Israeli-Palestinian situation. To
my knowledge, this latest rendition of the perpetual conflict began with the
brutal, tortuous murder of three Israeli teenage boys – one with a U.S.
passport. The boys disappeared on
12.June; they were found dead north of Hebron on 30.June. The following Wednesday (2.July) a
Palestinian boy walking home from morning prayers in the pre-dawn hours was
abducted and murdered. Shortly
thereafter, Hamas militants in Gaza began lobbing a variety of homemade,
Russian and Iranian rockets into Israel.
Despite valiant efforts by Egyptian diplomats to broker a ceasefire and
negotiations, Israeli Defense Force ground units entered northern Gaza
[17.July], going after Hamas rocket launchers and border infiltration
tunnels. Apparently, Hamas wants
the people they are supposed to support and protect to be the victim; they want
the Israelis to strike and they want as many women and children bloodied and
killed to further their malicious purposes. Now the question is how long will this violence last?
Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 disappeared
from air traffic control radar while enroute from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, on
an established airway in cruise flight at FL330 – above the briefed 32,000-foot
ceiling over the conflict zone in Eastern Ukraine. The time and date were: 16:20 [B], Thursday,
17.July.2014. The wreckage and
debris appears to be spread over a very long area near the village of Torez,
Donetsk Region, Ukraine – roughly 30 miles from the border with Russia. The size of the debris field is
indicative of an in-flight break-up.
Given other uncorroborated information, there is very little doubt the commercial
aircraft was shot down by a sophisticated Surface-to-Air Missile (SAM). The rebels in the area have reportedly
recovered the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR), and
both boxes were reportedly sent to Moscow. Also, a Buk Mk-1 [NATO: SA-11] SAM launcher with 1 or 2
missiles missing was photographed being transported by flatbed truck to
Russia. I strongly suspect we will
never see those items again. Whether
it was a mistake by ill-trained operators or a calculated intentional act, the
fact remains 298 innocents lives were sacrificed at the altar of Putin’s ego. MH17 was certainly not the first
commercial aircraft to be shot down by military weapons. Past major events:
-- 1.September.1983 – Korean Air Lines Flight 007 (B747-2B5B)
shot down by Soviet Su-15 fighters just past Sakhalin Island after overflying
Kamchatka without clearance, enroute from (New York) Anchorage to Seoul,
-- 3.July.1988 - Iran Air Flight 655 (A300B2-200) shot down
by USS Vincennes (CG-49) enroute from
Bandar Abbas to Dubai,
-- 4.October.2001 – Siberia Airlines Flight 1812 (Tu-154M) shot
down by SAM fired from Crimean Peninsula, while aircraft was in cruise flight
at FL360, enroute from Tel Aviv to Novosibirsk.
Unfortunately, they will not be the last. Now, we add another incident.
Those
who claim the Russian-backed separatists or the Russians themselves had no
motive to shoot down a commercial aircraft are apparently blind to
reality. Putin has been carving up
the sovereign nation of Ukraine ever since the pro-Western rebellion ousted the
Kremlin’s lackey Viktor Fedorovych Yanukovych [23.February.2014]. There is also no doubt the Putin regime
instigated the separatist movement in Eastern Ukraine as its surrogate to
accomplish the carving with some modicum of plausible deniability. Let us not be fooled by Putin
propaganda. Sure, Vladimir Vladimirovich
Putin may be a hapless victim of the nationalistic, glory-days forces he
unleashed but he remains the leader, just as Josef Stalin was in his day. Putin must keep sufficient mystery and
uncertainty in any potential investigation to maintain that deniability. I also suspect that if we were allowed
to fully interrogate these so-called separatists we would find a substantial
portion are FSB, MVD, GRU, Spetsnaz and other Russian special operators. Putin’s plausible deniability is
eroding rapidly.
Ironically, on the evening of 17.July,
CNN broadcast its Special Report titled: Witnessed: The Crash of TWA Flight 800
– the 18th anniversary of what remains one of the most controversial
in-flight explosions of a commercial airliner on a revenue mission. There was nothing new in the report,
just a different perspective of the same information. The report offered an animation of the government’s
hypothesis, but did not even mention the other hypotheses, including ours. There was never a debate or even
question about what happened once the combustible fuel-air vapor in the Center
Wing Tank (CWT) ignited; well, we must exclude that bogus CIA animation
intended to create a reasonable doubt with the witnesses. The whole debate hangs upon what
ignited the CWT vapors? We cannot
prove our hypothesis. The U.S.
Government (USG) has not proven their hypothesis. We need the USG’s classified information to either prove one
hypothesis or another, or disprove all other hypotheses (Occam’s Razor). Regrettably, we may not see what the
USG has concealed until 2046; I will be 98 years old. I have to stay physically and mentally healthy to appreciate
the information when we see it, to either apologize for getting it wrong, or
close our hypothesis as a proven cause.
One of several authors to write on TWA
800, Jack Cashill, wrote an opinion piece and offered a proposal:
“Why Congress Must Reopen the TWA 800 Investigation”
by Jack Cashill
americanthinker.com
Published: July 7, 2014
While I agree and support Cashill’s proposal, I cannot
imagine the NTSB reopening this case without the government’s classified
material in the public domain.
Yet, altering evidence tags and removing or withholding evidence are by themselves
criminal acts. In this instance,
the agency normally tasked with investigating federal felonious conduct is the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Unfortunately, the FBI itself appears to be involved in committing the
crime(s). So, who will (can)
investigate the FBI’s conduct? As
Cashill proposes, without a special prosecutor, only the Congress has that
authority.
A related topic
at times like these:
“U.S. needs a discussion on when, not whether, to use force”
by Robert Kagan
Washington Post
Published: July 15 [2014]
This is a perpetual question . . . whether a schoolyard
bully or a rabid dictator. When is
it time?
News from the economic front:
-- Citigroup announced a deal with the USG to settle
allegations it sold deficient mortgages that contributed to the financial
crisis and led to the Great Recession. The US$7B deal includes US$4.5B in cash
and US$2.5B in consumer mortgage relief. The cash portion consists of a US$4B
civil monetary payment to the Justice Department and US$500M in compensatory
payments to the associated state attorneys general and the FDIC. Citigroup will also take a charge of
about US$3.8B pretax in 2Q2014, which of course We, the People, pay for at the
end of the day.
-- Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen testified before the
Senate Banking Committee that she expected to maintain low interest rates,
noting the U.S. economic recovery is “not yet complete” and the unemployment
rate remains too high.
-- The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the People’s Republic
of China (PRC) rose 7.5% from a year earlier in 2Q2014, up from 7.4% growth in 1Q2014. The growth in the world's
second-largest economy has apparently stabilized after a slowdown earlier this
year.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.656:
Comment to the Blog:
“In reference to the under-age refugees from Central
America, you make a statement that they come here for , ‘. . . a better life.
Most of the rest of the world could have the same objective.’ While that holds
true for Central America, it no longer applies to the ‘developed’ world,
including for example Chile, Argentina, and Brazil. Like it or not, we have
fallen behind many nations in many social and economic measures of well-being,
and most of the global population knows that.
“The sentence, ‘The challenge for us is sorting out the
genuine threatened and oppressed from those who are looking for the angle’
brings us back to duality. What makes you believe that either the children or
their parents are one thing or another? The foundation of duality is this kind
of over-simplification. I would be astounded of most of these people did not
find strong motivation in both of those factors.
“I agree in remarkable detail with your statement on the Town
of Greece v. Galloway Supreme Court decision bearing on prayer at
government functions. However, you refer to ‘bad men’ in the clergy; I tend to
see them as thoughtless and/or misguided but not ‘bad’ at some deep level. I
imagine most of them do some good for their congregations and many for the
larger community as well. They just fail to understand the issues of
non-Christians and the Christians who disagree with them. The fact that I am
myself clergy probably bears on my opinion. Other than that phrase, we are in
striking agreement.
“In reference to Justice Thomas, he is noted for keeping
silence almost all the time in the proceedings of the Supreme Court. This
opinion demonstrates the reason for that. He simply does not have the intellect
required of the legal profession. His reference to conditions preceding the
Constitution, in this instance, refers to things the Framers specifically
sought to change. Therefore, the existence of those state-established religions
does not support his position. The fact that he also fails to understand the
purpose of the Bill of Rights reinforces the fact that he is incapable of
performing the role in which he finds himself. He should continue in silence if
he will not resign and has not been removed thus far.
“Mother Nature continues to show her displeasure. While the
West bakes and burns, the Great Lakes and Midwest continue to have increased
rain and occasional violent storms. This aggravates the economic doldrums as
well as causing unhappiness and health issues.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
U.S.A. hope. I do not have quite
such a diminished view of our economic hope or potential.
Re:
“What makes you believe that either the children or their parents
are one thing or another?”
It is simply a reflection that we must define a threshold of immigration
worthiness – yes or no. If that
establishes a duality in the context of our previous discussions, then so be
it. To me, it is simply a decision
mechanism. Threatened and
oppressed . . . again, a threshold must be established for proper decision-making. No country, including this Grand
Republic, can afford open borders – accept all comers.
Re:
bad men among clergy.
Parochialism, supremacy and exclusivity among some clerics put them in
that negative category, in my humble opinion. One more observation, I suspect if the Christian majority
continues to press its numerical advantage, they will find increased
resistance, despite the Supremes’ tendency. Even Stalin & Hitler had good achievements, but those
good things cannot mitigate the profound negative impact on human history.
Re:
Thomas. I am not a fan of
Associate Justice Thomas. I very
rarely find affinity with his reasoning.
Yet, I am not so hard on him either. He is apparently a product of the Bob Bork school of strict
constructionist originalism. Even
if so, I still disagree with him, for the reason you cite. If one sees the Constitution as a
definition of federal authority only, then I suppose it is understandable how
he reaches his reasoning. To me,
there is a very specific, real, substantive reason the Framers began the
preamble with “We, the People.”
Thomas apparently fails to appreciate that subtlety.
Re:
Mother Nature. Has anyone
considered that our view of Mother Nature’s wrath may be a product of vastly
enhanced, instant communications?
Weather at any locale has cycled and been subjected to happenstance.
Round two:
“Some of the better evidence around national well-being
comes from immigration trends. The poor and less-educated from Latin America,
particularly Mexico, had almost quit coming here by the bottom of the
recession, and they will probably never resume the levels of the early 2000s.
The dominant source of immigration now is Asia, and many of the Asians are
wealthier and better educated than Americans (source:
http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/immigration-is-changing-much-more-than-the-immigration-debate/).
The wealthier and better educated do not come here for the
kind of life improvement we have been discussing. (We might want to think about
what attracts them.) Clearly, those children from Central America are an
anomaly in this. Most likely they are indeed fleeing violence at home.
“As far as the Christian clergy, the exclusivity is built
as deeply into their religion as it is into Judaism and Islam. Indeed, I believe
it is the source of most of the strife among the various factions of those
religions. The supremacy is part and parcel of that. Parochialism is simply an
artifact of humanity. You and I have seen the difficulty of getting people to
see beyond the ends of their noses. This is aggravated because many of their
clergy and officials have become aware of their lessening influence. The Gallup
folks have confirmed this by long-term study conducted since the 1950s
In 1957, 82% of the people said religion “can solve all or
most of today's problems.” Only 7% saw religion as outdated. By the 2010s, only
57% agreed with that statement, and 30% saw religion as “old fashioned and out
of date.” Religion as a whole has lost much of its influence. That numerical
advantage you mentioned still exists but has been in decline for over fifty
years. Incidentally, if you refer only to Christian clergy, please say so. Keep
in mind that you have a regular reader (me) who is clergy in a non-Abrahamic
religion.
“I do not see the climate change issue as a product of
enhanced communication. Communication increases our awareness of this, but the
phenomenon itself is verified by reams of statistics gathered since the 1880s
and by sound, replicated scientific studies. At some point, belief must give
way to evidence.”
. . . my response to round two:
Re:
immigration. People have come to
this country for centuries for many reasons, mostly known only to the
individuals. The process of
naturalization has been established by law since 1790 [PL 1-II-003; 1 Stat. 103]
– the 3rd law passed by the first constitutional Congress. The first federal law on immigration
was not enacted until 1875 [PL 43-II-141; 18 Stat. 477]. Congress did not create a “land-border
patrol” until 1924 [PL 68-I-153; 43 Stat. 205, 240], more to support
Prohibition than immigration control, but it was the beginning of border
control for immigration.
Transportation alone to reach this country was well beyond the means of
most folks until the advent of affordable air travel and other mass
transportation forms. I am a
little suspicious of Casselman’s facts and presentation, but let us set those
suspicions aside. For the sake of
discussion, we shall assume his essay is precisely correct. To the point, I do not agree with the
implications of his conclusion. At
least since the Immigration
Act of 1924 (AKA Johnson–Reed Act) [PL 68-139; 43 Stat. 153], the
United States has had laws to regulate immigration and naturalization. The issue is not nationality, skin
pigmentation, racial features, religion, well none of the social factors. It is regulation of access and entry to
this Grand Republic. Those who
cross our borders by any means, for any reason, must follow the rules to
legally enter this country. Bottom
line: the Central American children did not apply for refugee status; they
crossed the border illegally.
Re:
religion. Agreed! Parochialism and exclusivity have been
built into the revealed religions, which in turn has been the root cause of
considerable destruction, death and mayhem throughout recorded history. The numbers and trends cited in your
link seem reasonable to me.
Christian clergy on the whole have tempered their parochialism of late,
although certainly not expunged it from their rhetoric and homilies. Dampening pressure on Christianity has
been presented since the beginning of the Renaissance. My references to clergy in the context
of this particular topic is predominately focused on Islamic clergy, although
not exclusively, since they have had 600 years less dampening than Christians
or Jews. We still see significant
parochialism even within Judaism, despite the fact they have had far longer to
temper their exclusivity. So, let
us say in this context, my comments to clergy are aimed solely at clergy of the
revealed religions, i.e., Abrahamic religions.
Re:
climate change. As we have
discussed, we continued to debate the accuracy and significance of climate
change. My comment was simply to point
to the reality that we know more about climate (weather) today than ever
before. Tornados have occurred
longer than humans have walked the earth.
Today, we know instantly when and where they occur, and have near
instant, vivid images of the destruction they wrought; the same with hurricanes
(of any name), earthquakes, forest fires, or any other natural calamity. Weather varies every single moment of
every single day . . . has been and will continue to do so. Let us be careful not to ascribe too
much significance to local, transitory, weather phenomena. As I have said before, weather will
continue to cycle, short term and long term.
Round three:
“The only thing here I want to dispute is this one
sentence with respect to immigration. ‘The issue is not nationality, skin pigmentation, racial features,
religion, well none of the social factors.’ How
do you support that statement? I see those as major, if undisclosed, policy
factors.”
. . . my response to round three:
Re:
social factors. I think you may be
confusing the conduct of flawed human beings with the ideals at the root of
this Grand Republic. Our history
is replete with examples of prejudice, persecution, discrimination, segregation
and other malicious conduct despite the ideals espoused by the Founders and
Framers. Yet, that does not alter
the ideals that remain our objective interaction with our fellow citizens. That is how I support my statement.
Round four:
“Exactly. This particular discussion began when you stated
the ideal as if it were the reality.”
. . . my response to round four:
My
oh my, we are splitting hairs today.
What matters are actions! I
will argue the actions deserve the perspective of the ideals held by the
individuals whose actions we seek to understand.
Round five:
“I didn't realize we were discussing ideals. I concern
myself with actual results. Ideals, to me, are strictly a way to choose a
direction for policy and action. If the action does not carry us in the
direction of the ideals, we must change the action. I'm still waiting on that
to happen in immigration policy and law.”
. . . my response to round five:
Re:
ideals. Agreed. Ideals give us the foundation and
objective for us on our journey through the life we have. The problem with actions is performance
of flawed human beings, in many cases who are incapable or unwilling to seek
the ideals. All of recorded
history offers a boundless plethora of examples of actions of those flawed
human beings willing to oppress and subjugate other human beings for their
self-aggrandizement, e.g., royal prerogative so common prior to the founding of
this Grand Republic. Even in our
comparatively brief history we have had the slave trade, the subjugation of
Chinese immigrants, Prohibition, coverture, and the confinement of American
citizens solely because of their heritage (racial ancestry), et al ad infinitum ad nauseum. None of those things are consistent
with the ideals of this Grand Republic.
Yet, through all of our sordid history, the ideals have remained our
guiding light on our journey.
A different
contribution:
“Ja, die Mannschaft hat ausgeseichnet gespeilen!!
Excellent playing. The German defense was excellent as well, esp against
Brazil. I think Messi was playing injured, he didn’t seem that sharp
during the knockout round.”
My reply:
Jawohl,
mein oberst! Messi
injured, perhaps; he sure quickly got up a head of steam when he needed to, so
he couldn’t have been injured that badly.
This World Cup did not serve his reputation well.
Another contribution:
“I commented earlier that we live in ‘dangerous times’. I
rather wish I hadn’t said that as since then we have seen the escalation of the
conflict in Gaza to which I can see little hope for conclusion unless the
Israelis and the world are happy for Israel to ‘rule’ Gaza as a governing
power. We need, as always, too look at these situations from both viewpoints,
however, if I was living in the land adjacent to Gaza I would get sore if a
daily barrage of homemade rocketry persistently came into my backyard and would
therefore very much wish to respond in kind.
“What of the Gaza view? Israel has its enemies, the Arabic
states of the middle east are full of members who wish to see Israel deleted.
With their functionaries gathered on the border unwilling to listen to
the democratic principle then conflict is inevitable I fear. But why? Why
cannot the masters of this world come together and force a long lasting
solution to this endlessly recurring situation?
“And now we hear of the shooting down of a Malaysian
Airliner with all involved shrugging shoulders. denying responsibility.
We would have gone to war over such and incident not many years ago. How can
this be resolved with the lies and counter lies we witness coming from The
Kremlin.
“Let’s, as a world, sort these problems out. You know when
the Romans ruled, when the British Empire dominated, such disturbances would
have been crushed and forgotten. Is that the only way that we humans can live
in harmony with one another and our beautiful planet.”
My response:
Re:
dangerous times. Indeed! Prophetic, it seems to me. Hamas was looking for an excuse to
start shooting. Situation in Gaza
has never been good. With Hamas
elected by the people of Gaza, it simply compounds the problems. I have often thought they patterned
their structure on the IRA, i.e., political & military wings intermixed,
hard to separate. News just
reported this morning, Hamas used a donkey for a suicide bombing; somehow that
seems even more inhumane than using children – the donkey has no sense of right
or wrong. I share your
frustration. I do not envy the
Israeli position. I still believe
Hamas is simply an unfortunate surrogate for the Islamic Republic of Iran. BTW, their rockets are predominately
supplied by the IRI and those are military grade weapons.
Re:
Israel. Most of the Arab states
have reconciled with Israel. They
may not like it, but they have accepted Israel as a regional state. Heck, even the majority of Palestinians
have accepted Israel. It is groups
like Hamas and Hezbollah, who are more driven by power than helping their
people, that need to keep hostilities stirred up. I look on the Palestinian situation quite akin to addiction
– obsessive, compulsive, consumptive behavior. Like addiction, there is nothing anyone can do for the
Palestinians (like addicts) until they decide for themselves they must change
their behavior. I want the
Palestinian people to have their own sovereign state and live in peace with
their neighbors, so that everyone can prosper. Yet, I am resigned to the reality that things will not
change until the Palestinian people reject the violence of Hamas &
Hezbollah, accept Israel as their neighbor, and seek to live in peace. Like the addict, they are still seduced
by the siren’s song of Hamas.
Re:
MH17. There is no doubt in my
little pea-brain that Russians pulled the trigger on that Buk SAM. The Buk Mk 1 & subsequent SAM
systems are NOT simple rifles where they put a round in the chamber, cock the
hammer and pull the trigger. It is
a sophisticated missile system.
Russia has been the root instigator of the situation in Crimea &
Eastern Ukraine since the get-go, and they are in it up to their eyeballs. Russians have been and remain experts
at false flag and subversive activities; they are also experts at subterfuge.
Re:
Pax Romana & Pax Britannia. Spot
on! We just don’t have the stomach
to be the world’s policeman. The
inverse of enforced peace will inevitably be acquiescence to those who seek
power by stirring up local ethnic parochialism. If we head down that path, can we handle a thousand, a
million little local nations? Like
Rodney King so eloquently said, “Ca . . . ca . . . can’t we all just get
along?”
Round two with a shift:
“Lots of press about assisted dying here at the moment with
a member of the Lords attempting to submit a private members bill. I know it’s
a subject that you expressed eloquently when your mother was ill. Oddly, I
think, but am obviously wrong, most of the resistant feelings to this is coming
from those disabled, not at all what I would have expected.”
. . . my response to round two:
Re:
assisted dying. Yes, I remain an
unwavering, out-spoken advocate, and will do so for anyone willing to
listen. I’m not sure of the
significance of a “private members bill”?
Do you recall who the sponsoring member of Lords is, so I can keep an
eye out as well? Yes, the
experience with my Mom’s passing made me a committed believer. Resistance to Death with Dignity laws
(DwD) is largely out of emotion and ignorance. The disabled may fear DwD due to their perception of abuse,
e.g., Nazi Heredity Law [14.7.1933].
The established laws I have studied (Oregon & Washington states)
have significant safeguards, not least of which is ONLY the individual can activate
or execute DwD procedures; the law specifically prohibits any delegation or
collateral authorization. We have
a long common history, born largely in our Judeo-Christian faith, of
prohibition of suicide, and rightly so for a host of reasons. However, DwD should be excluded from
those existing prohibition laws in the name of compassion and sympathy for the
day that will come to all of us eventually. A long, slow, lingering death is not an attractive path and
it is not God’s will; no one deserves that punishment in their end of
days. DwD is absolutely, solely,
and completely a personal, private, individual choice, and must never be
expanded beyond that point. Thus,
if one’s religious beliefs reject such options, then no one could “force”
activation; but, it is wrong to deny DwD to those who might wish to use such a
procedure because we are offended by the notion. Please keep me posted as you are able.
Round three:
“Lord Falconer. Non ministerial. That’s the rules.”
. . . my response to round three:
I’ve downloaded Lord
Falconer’s Bill to my Death with Dignity folder. I hope it progresses steadily through the parliamentary
process. I’ll keep an eye on
it. As is so often the case, the
Motherland is leading those of us in the colonies.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
With respect to Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, I doubt very much that Putin would have ordered such a thing in any direct way. Your statements that the rebels are his creatures are not well supported as of now, but there's a simpler reason. Putin is not stupid enough to order a move that would turn the entire world against him. That is the predictable result of attacking unarmed and uninvolved craft that were following the appropriate directives and is what has happened. Whether the rebels are essentially independent lunatics/incompetents or are merely a poor choice of tools by Putin, we may not assume insane stupidity on Putin's part without considerably more evidence. The shoot-down was most likely a mistake. Time will tell whose mistake it was.
The true fate of Flight 800 is likely to remain unknown until some future time when historians gain access to the information, as most such controversies do. By that time, the only effect it will have on society will be to deepen the cynicism of history students like me.
Your linked article by Mr. Kagan of the Washington Post fails to account for two major factors. First, the Vietnam event cost much more than the immediate loss of United States lives and treasure. The harm to the United States image worldwide continues to this day. The disillusionment at home paired with that of the Watergate scandal caused permanent damage to Americans' view of our political system that I think has led to much of the conflict between people who grew up before those two events versus those roughly my age and younger who came along during or after those events and were permanently affected by them. On top of that, the effects of that conflict on Vietnam veterans and the United States government's shameful treatment of those veterans have rippled nationally and continue to do so.
The other factor not recognized by Mr. Kagan is simply that the United States is not only not responsible for leading/policing the developed world today but has lost both the leadership and the capacity to sustain it. We are today neither the most prosperous nation by most measures nor the most socially advanced. Measures that seek to understand “happiness” leave us in the dust. Let those who benefit by leadership exercise it.
Citigroup has made another civil settlement for their wrongdoing. Even if they complain about it, “too little, too late” still applies.
In reference to the Middle East, the Pax Romana never truly took hold there per many sources and the Pax Brittania came to grief as well. The Babylonians failed before those two and we have failed since, as has the UN. The Mongolians probably did better than the others, but only in a relative way. The area from the Jordan to the Mediterranean has seen conflict ever since the Canaanites (ancestors of the Jews) returned from Egypt to find others living in what had been their territory. I cannot suggest a rational way to end that conflict.
In reference to the debate over “death with dignity,” I know several of the disabled and may fall into that category myself soon. Abuse of such laws concerns us. In addition, I am well acquainted with quite a number of people whose heirs are untrustworthy to the point of shortening lives for their own benefit. I also spent several months last year doing what I could to support a man who died of lung cancer following a long bout with throat cancer. Thus, I am can understand more of the sides of this debate than most. Today, I stand in favor of some sort of death with dignity process but with very stringent controls.
Also, whatever results from the death with dignity debate, suicide is a separate issue. Laws against the actions of those who are dead are ludicrous, and those who attempt suicide, whether or not we see them as “serious,” need other kinds of help, not prosecution.
Calvin,
Re: MH-17. I agree. There is no evidence of and I do not suspect Putin ordered the shoot down of MH-17. I do believe Putin did order Russian military and special forces to support a publicly perceived separatist movement in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine to carve off more territory for Russia. Whether he specifically and expressly ordered Buk Mk-1 (SA-11) SAM units into Eastern Ukraine to provide air defense for the “separatists” may not be known for many years. The publicly available information strongly suggests the Russians directly enabled those SAM units either by direct operation (as Soviet pilots did in North Korea and North Vietnam) or they inadequately trained the “separatists” to a sufficient level to launch a missile at a target – any target. Yes, I doubt anyone intended to shoot down a scheduled commercial aircraft in transit. There is no doubt in my mind that Putin is supporting directly the “separatist” movement in Eastern Ukraine – his surrogate for Russian expansion.
Re: TWA 800. Probably so.
Re: Kagan. Vietnam was a complicated history in a complicated time. Yes, he did not wax on expansively about Vietnam or the political complication of Watergate. I am not sure what your point is relative to his central topic? As we discussed before, we do not share the same assessment of the future for this Grand Republic. The issue is, where do we draw the line with the use of force?
Re: Citigroup. Agreed . . . hardly punishment for those corporate officers who made the decisions and/or enabled those actions.
Re: Pax Romana. As with so many of our discussions, definitions become vital to perception. There were centuries of commerce and comparatively good standard of living. Sure, those times were not without crime or tensions, but it was a time of prosperity for many, not all, in the context of those days. Peace will only come when they accept the geographic reality and respect each other, so that they can move on to focus on the future of their land and people.
Re: Death with Dignity. Concern with such questions is healthy. We should all be concerned. I have a goodly portion of examples of malicious relatives or relations in such circumstances. The system must provide those protections. It is absolutely a condition when such authority cannot and must never be delegated. If an individual does not have demonstrable and recordable mental and emotional competency for such decisions, then they do not qualify, period. I absolutely agree . . . with stringent controls; however, those controls or administration of the process must not become de facto prohibitive. We are talking about citizens at their end of days, and allowing each individual the choice of death with dignity, when appropriate.
Re: suicide. Here we go back to the shameful mental health treatment system in this country . . . or actually lack of same. The law must stand squarely against suicide, but I have always thought the existing laws are meant more for “supporters” or “enablers” of such events. This is part & parcel to the DwD process. We must find the will to vastly improve our mental health care system.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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