Update from the
Heartland
No.661
11.8.14 – 17.8.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- The TWA Flight 800 incident [17.July.1996] remains an
event of continuing and apparently perpetual interest to more than a few of us
[102-4, 115, 115A, 122, 125, 140, 147, 150-1, 154, 168, 171, 222-3, 235, 240, 245, 268, 269, 272, 281, 290, 332, 345, 443, 601-2, 639, 655, 657, 661]. Dr. Tom Stalcup, PhD (physics), has been a stalwart,
consistent and insightful critic of the government’s public investigation of
the incident. I missed his latest
effort circa the 18th anniversary, so I note it in this week’s
Update for those who remain concerned about the government’s
investigation. Please watch this
video-clip:
A reminder: to my knowledge, there has never been any
question regarding what happened during the ground preparation, taxi and
takeoff of TWA Flight 800, or what happened to the aircraft after the fuel-air
vapor ignited in the Center Wing Tank (CWT), if we exclude the debate over the
so-called “zoom climb,” used to discredit further discredit the CIA video. The sole issue has been and remains:
what caused the ignition of the combustible atmosphere in the CWT that evening. The total exclusion of eyewitness data
from the official NTSB investigation persists as a near extraordinary hole in
the government’s investigation. We
relied upon fragmentary, incomplete information from Press reports and a few
witness statements obtained from the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office, which
would be considered at best raw data, as there is no correlation to other
factual data associated with the event timeline or corroboration assessments;
that information was sufficient to convince me something was not correct with
respect to the government’s public statements. As Tom notes quite effectively, the government relies
heavily on a CIA-produced animation to disengage the FBI and deflect,
diminished or discount the undisclosed eyewitness information. To this date, We, the People, have
never received an explanation, rationale or justification for the denial of
eyewitness data, which in turn raises significant suspicions regarding the
integrity of the investigation.
Tom has worked tirelessly to connect with some of the eyewitnesses who
have come forward or been identified, and has attempted to correlate their
information with the event timeline.
That said, it is essential to note, as every accident investigator can
testify, eyewitness information is rarely accurate and is often misleading, yet
the collective body usually offers valuable “coloring” to the technical
analysis and the process of connecting the dots to paint the picture of what
happened. In the case of the TWA
Flight 800 incident, we are denied that important information, especially since
the aircraft data gives us no information as to what was occurring exterior to
the aircraft. Perhaps, the USG
wants to maintain the comfort of their position – trust us, there is nothing
relevant in the eyewitness data as illuminated by the CIA animation video. The 20-year mark is approaching, and I
expect the missing Eyewitness Group report and the associated data to be
publicly released and subjected to critical public scrutiny. We may not gain access to the military
and intelligence data until the 50-year mark, but it will eventually become
public as well. Until then, I urge
you to attentively watch Tom’s latest video debunking the CIA animation video.
My evolving opinion of the violence in
Ferguson, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, has fluctuated wildly as events
transpired subsequent to Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson, 28, shooting
and killing Michael Brown, 18, who was apparently unarmed, although a rather
large man. The events leading to
the fatal, Saturday, 9.August confrontation remain far too confusing and
uncertain for a clear view. The
publicly available information suggests Officer Wilson escalated the
confrontation quickly and for unknown reasons. The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) and the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI) have been called in to conduct a separate, independent
investigation, to determine whether federal law(s) may have been violated. Missouri Governor Jay Nixon deployed
the state police to supervise policing in Ferguson and later declared a state
of emergency. At this stage, I am
confident the investigators will sort out what happen leading up to the fatal
shooting. I comment today out of
blooming anger over the ambulance chaser opportunists who always show up to
stoke the smoldering embers of perceived injustice. They thrive on generating what must be called mobs with
essentially no control or order.
Of course, anarchists, hooligans and criminals are attracted to such
crowds to degenerate and unravel what moral fabric may exist among the local
protesters and populace. Then, we have looting, thievery, property damage and
random violence. The bad actors use “protest” crowds as cover for their
violence and destruction, just as Islamofascists use innocent citizens for
cover. The initiating event was
bad enough. What happened
afterward is far worse, in my humble opinion. Saner minds should have prevailed in the volatile
environment. Unfortunately, once
again, those opportunists who apparently are far more driven by the perceived
solidarity of the “protests” than they are about public safety or the plight of
the local population disappoint us.
It appears recent events are meant to achieve chaos as a public price to
pay rather than a demonstration about injustice. I look forward to the day we no longer have to endure their
ilk. This has got to stop!
Associate Justice Elena Kagan wrote for
the narrow 5-4 majority in the rather odd-duck, Second Amendment case of Abramski
v. United States [573 U.S. ___ (2014); no. 12–1493]. The Court’s decision is not so much
about the Second
Amendment, other than it involves the sale of firearms. It is more about a straw purchaser
making a false statement during the requirement background check process
involved in the sale of a pistol from a federally licensed firearms
dealer. The whole case boils
down to a yes-no response on ATF Form 4473 – Firearms Transaction Record Part I
- Over-the-Counter, specifically, Question 11a, which asks:
“Are you the actual transferee/buyer of the
firearm(s) listed on this form? Warning:
You are not the actual buyer if you are acquiring the firearm(s) on behalf of
another person. If you are not the actual buyer, the dealer cannot transfer the
firearm(s) to you. (See Instructions
for Question 11.a.) Exception: If you
are picking up a repaired firearm(s) for another person, you are not
required to answer 11.a. and may proceed to question 11.b.”
[bold & italics as shown on Form
4473].
In this instance, Bruce Abramski offered to buy a Glock 19,
9x19mm, semi-automatic pistol for his uncle, Angel Alvarez. Abramski was a former police officer
who thought he could obtain a discount on the purchase for his uncle by using
his no longer valid police identification credential. Although not stated anywhere in the ruling, I suspect it was
Abramski’s attempt to obtain a discount with a false police identification that
actually flagged the sale in the first place. Nonetheless, Abramski answered “Yes” to Question 11a, when
he knew he was purchasing the pistol for his uncle, and he received a check
from his uncle, which he promptly cashed.
Thus, according to the majority, Abramski violated 18 USC § 922(a)(6) {Gun Control Act of
1968 (AKA GCA or GCA68) [PL 90-618; 82 Stat. 1213, 1218;
22.10.1968]}. The law was intended
to prevent the transfer of firearms to unauthorized or prohibited individuals
or organizations. Neither Abramski
nor Uncle Angel Alvarez were in any of the specified groups, thus both
qualified as legal purchasers; however, it was Abramski’s answer to Question
11a and the Court’s very strict interpretation of “actual buyer” that generated
this case in Richmond, Virginia, through the federal courts to the Supreme
Court. Kagan noted, “Abramski
thwarted application of essentially all of the firearms law's
requirements. We can hardly think
of a misrepresentation any more material to a sale's legality.” She did add, “Alvarez could have
[legally] bought a gun for himself.”
Associate Justice Antonin Scalia wrote for the dissent and concluded, “The
Court makes it a federal crime for one lawful gun owner to buy a gun for
another lawful gun owner. Whether or not that is a sensible result, the
statutes Congress enacted do not support it--especially when, as is
appropriate, we resolve ambiguity in those statutes in favor of the accused.”
To
me, this ruling represents precisely the most basic fear of law-abiding
citizens, regarding the application of firearms laws. Both the majority and the dissent acknowledged the
congressional intent of the GCA68 was expressly to keep firearms out of the
hands of:
1. felons
2. fugitives
from justice
3. controlled
substance users and addicts
4. mentally ill
5. illegal
aliens
6. citizens
dishonorably discharged from the military
7. citizens who
have renounced their citizenship
8. citizens
subject to specified court orders
9. those
convicted of domestic violence or trafficking in firearms
[summarized from 18 USC §922(g).]
The GCA68 law and subsequent revisions did not address straw
purchases for citizens not identified in 18 USC §922(g). Yet, in the hands of zealous law
enforcement and prosecutors, this is what we get – a very broad dragnet that
will undoubtedly make criminals of innocent, peaceful, law-abiding
citizens. Now, thanks to the Abramski
ruling, it is illegal to gift a pistol or any other firearm to another
lawful citizen, even a spouse or other family member. If I had been in Abramski’s position and purchasing a
small-caliber pistol for my wife, I probably would have answered “yes” to
Question 11a as well, even though the pistol was intended for my wife.
That
said, I must note for the record, I could easily and readily argue this case
from either side – it is that marginal.
Yet, ultimately, I think the Court got it wrong in that they have now
allowed the prosecutorial net to be cast far too broadly beyond the intent of
Congress.
News from the economic front:
-- The eurozone’s largest economy, Germany, contracted by
0.2% in 2Q2014, while the zone’s second largest economy, France, remained
stagnant (0.0%) in the same period.
The disappointing results probably reflect the consequences of the
continuing unrest in Eastern Ukraine and doubts about the region’s capacity to recovery
from the Great Recession.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.660:
“Goodness Cap a novel size update!
“Wars with the French, Trafalgar and Nelson 1815/ 65million
years ago and the tribes, no we were still wallowing in the slime pits then
surely?
“However a good read mate from a windy and cooler Suffolk
U/K.”
My reply:
LOL. These things happen . . . a very long
thread in the Comments section bulked up last week’s Update.
I
was suggesting we could use many examples of protracted conflict . . . between
the British & French at least back to 1337, and indeed Napoleon was finally
beaten by the troops of the Duke of Wellington and surrendered a month later
aboard HMS Bellérophon in 1815 . . .
nearly 500 years of conflict. The
65M years milestone is a time frame when primates appeared on Earth and formed
tribes for protection and survival.
I suppose the last one was a bit of a stretch. I don’t have a marker for the slime pit, but I might suggest
that might go back 400M to 4B years ago.
OK, let us use 50K years ago when anatomical homo sapiens sapiens began to dominate Earth. Regardless, humans have been fighting
for one reason or another for a very long time, so the Palestinian-Israeli
tussle is quite young by comparison.
. . . follow-up comment:
“But yes we are, us homo
sapiens a war like species as we have proven so many times.
“Let’s look forward to peace in Gaza.”
. . . my follow-up reply:
Re:
homo sapiens. Indeed! Perhaps someday, we shall out grow our propensity for
violence and mature as a species.
Re:
Gaza. I’m with you my friend.
Another contribution:
“From Colonel Pat Lang’s blog…not that much in the U.S.
media about this in the moving into the Green Zone of mostly pro-Shia troops:
“Inkilab 'Askari (Coup d'Etat) in Baghdad?
“It appears that a putsch against
the constitutional government of Iraq is underway in Baghdad. This seems
to be on behalf of Nuri al-Maliki and against the newly elected Sunni Arab
president of the country and the parliament. Maliki has been under great
pressure from the U.S. to leave office because it has been thought that he
has largely been responsible for the alienation of many of Iraq's Sunni Arab
population. He is said to have done this by oppressing that population
as a means of advancing the interests of his own group, the Shia Arabs.
“An alternative narrative of what is occurring is Maliki's
claim that he is protecting the city against someone else's coup.
“According to early reports large numbers of Ministry of
Interior police troops (overwhelmingly Shia and loyal to Maliki) have taken
control of the various bridges over the Tigris River that separate Shia East
Baghdad from largely Sunni West Baghdad. These police troops are reinforced
by armored vehicles that must come from the Iraqi Army. They have moved
in strength into the Green Zone, which contains the US Embassy, the Parliament
and various government facilities.
“If Maliki wishes to seize control of West Baghdad it is
difficult to see what would stop him.”
PL
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/10/us-iraq-security-maliki-military-idUSKBN0GA0WM20140810
and
Another contribution
on a different topic:
“Any thoughts on this.”
My response:
In
short: the hypothesis presented is plausible.
The
Ukraine does possess several squadrons of Su-25 attack aircraft, and the Su-25
is armed with an integral 30mm cannon.
The only use of ball ammunition is for basic training purposes. Certainly, they could load a can-load
of ball ammunition, if they chose to do so. As mentioned last week, the common combat load is usually a
mix of various explosive rounds, e.g., HE, AP, WP, et cetera. The image shown last week as well as in
the vid-clip do not show indications of explosive warheads of any sort that I
could see . . . just moderate-energy, ballistic impacts.
Russia
is one of the most accomplished and successful false-flag operators, which is
not to say the Ukraine did not learn well from the KGB, NKVD, SVR, FSB, et al;
they certainly have been the victim of Russian false-flag operations (1941/2). The resultant international outrage and
reaction would certainly substantiate the success of the operation, if it was a
Ukrainian false-flag operation. It
is equally plausible the vid-clip is a false-flag, false-flag effort by the
Russian to deflect accusations.
The
only hope we have of sorting it out will be an independent, expert
investigation that can establish the authenticity and chain of custody for the
evidentiary data. I suspect the
Russians will not be helpful to the independent investigation.
In
the light of all the conflicting information, my intuition still says the most
likely scenario is a Russian firing unit, provided to the rebels, mostly manned
by Russians, or possibly a Russian-trained, rebel firing crew, and an
engagement of what the crew thought was a Ukrainian aircraft, but turned out to
be MH-17.
. . . follow-up comment:
“thx- interesting the analysis of the tape, as well.
“Also other commentators have mentioned the Spanish
controller. Now I see what the issue was. A lot of loose clues
floating around!!
“What is odd is that there has been no analysis of the black
boxes...understand they have been found.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Loose
ends, indeed! As the
mathematicians say, too many variables and not enough equations. It is a near perfect situation for
misinformation to induce confusion and doubt.
Re:
black boxes. To my knowledge, both
the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) have been
recovered and transferred to the Dutch (and probably the British AAIB or French
BEA). I am fairly certain both
units have been examined by now, probably initial and secondary interrogations. If the status has been made public, the
Press has not picked it up. We
need to know authentication of both units as well as integrity, i.e., have they
been tampered with? A few aviation
sites report they have valid data from both units, but I’ve not seen official
authentication. Given the
uncertainty on the ground at the crash site, I doubt the authorities will
release the associated data without public demand, until the ground
investigators have done as much as they can do in situ, given the proximate combat. I would not be surprised if there were signs of SVR efforts
to watch what is evolving inside the investigation team. The FDR & CVR data should provide
very important information regarding what happened.
Re:
vid-clip. A few additional
observations on the U-Tube vid-clip: I am quite suspicious of the commentators
claim the single recovered piece (we have been discussing) is a long way from
being definitive of either cannon fire or “targeting the pilot.” We need a lot more definitive
evidentiary data to substantiate a claim like that in this instance. There was way too much loosey-goosey,
suggestive information, which simply heightens my doubt regarding the clips
premise. Further, if the evidence
conflicts with the Russian hypothesis, it would be further implication
regarding Russian culpability in this incident.
. . . and one more round before
publication:
“I am skeptical too of the Su-25 shootdown – however, I
noted that some of the holes in the wreckage are round, like ball ammo – and
not like that from a missile.
“Also, the longer the black box details are kept out of the
public, the more speculation- especially since the boxes are with the Dutch or
another Western country. Further, there was a NATO exercise ongoing at
the time in the Black Sea region, BREEZE 2014 that should have electronic
records of the MH17 flight. The fact that nothing has been released from
what records should be available is curious.
“The Spanish controller might also be a fake, and the
Ukrainian General Prosecutor is reported to have said that the Ukrainian rebels
did not have a Buk missile system.
“Stay tuned....”
. . . my follow-up response:
Re:
MH-17 penetrations. I noticed that
as well. I am not that familiar
with the SA-11 warhead, i.e., I’ve not see representative, burst, test patterns. I know it is a fragmentation warhead,
which is common among SAM weapons.
It appeared the impact trajectory was a fairly sharp, oblique angle to
the fuselage skin. Fragments can
make strange patterns. I did not
see signs of high energy or explosive impacts.
Re:
FDR & CVR data. I believe the
actual units have been transferred to the AAIB (UK) for download. It is not clear who will analyze the
data – probably a combination group.
I do agree; withholding the flight data will only add to
speculation. Perhaps the
authorities remain concerned about the safety and security of the field
team. Once they are safe and out
of the combat zone, hopefully, they will release the data for public scrutiny.
Re:
Operation BREEZE 2014. Thx for the
information; I had not been aware of the NATO, Black Sea exercise in proximity
to the MH-17 event. I have not
heard anything from those warships.
I would feel a lot better if we had a U.S. Navy Aegis-class cruiser in
the Northern Black Sea at the time.
Re:
rebel Buk system.
Interesting! So, if true
and it was an SA-11 missile involved in the shootdown, then it was either
Russian or Ukrainian. I am not
sure how they will sort that out.
Comment to the Blog:
“I understand that the various spy agencies have long argued
about who is more incompetent or crooked than whom, but that is simply the
result of that dualistic outlook among the unsupervised. It's rather like
giving kindergarteners real weapons with live ammunition. The question is
whether the adults can regain control.
“I'll say again that the real issue facing spies everywhere
is the increasing difficulty of maintaining secrecy. Regardless of any opinions
about what should be, what has always been, etc., a question remains. If the
spy agencies, Facebook, Google, and various other entities can obtain anyone's
information almost at will, can complete, involuntary openness/transparency be
far behind? That ought to be interesting.
“I had a difficult time understanding the Aero lawsuit. If
the programming in question is actually broadcast (rather than delivered via
cable or satellite to only paying customers), the point is probably moot
anyhow. Even if not, the trip to the Supreme Court has given this technology
enough publicity to open the way for an underground market that will thrive.
“In reference to copyright and several other issues, I will
recommend a book. Free: the Future of a Radical Price, by Chris Anderson (ISBN
1446409554) centers on Internet commerce but touches upon numerous other
topics. The basis of his discussion is how authors, musicians, and other
creative people can adapt to the fact that copyright protection has become
impossible. As a small-time writer, I found it fascinating and relevant.
Anderson uses numerous examples from a broad spectrum of the business world to
show that profitability can be maintained by a major change of perspective. (I
got my Kindle copy for free, of course, but the hardback is around $14.95 on
amazon.com.) Anderson published in 2008. Since then, the advent of 3D printing
has made this work even more important.
“I never really expected the FDIC to become the guardian of
sanity in banking, but I certainly welcome them if it plays out that way.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
spy agencies. We shall respectfully
disagree.
Re:
secrecy. You are probably quite
correct. However, as a
consequence, we are likely to experience far more misinformation usage to cause
confusion as to what is real.
Re:
Aereo. The case was marginal at
best from the get-go. To put it simply,
the Court erred on the side of the copyright holder. According to the law, the
case could have easily been decided either way. The broadcast networks are desperate to adapt to a vastly
different medium than they enjoyed in their heyday.
Re:
copyright. Without copyright
protection, why should authors, musicians or artists create anything new or
original?
Re:
FDIC. Indeed. Agreed.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I disagree that investigation will prove exactly how Mike Brown's death came about. See your own discussion of Flight 800 for how disputes remain after investigation. Endlessly pursuing details typically causes the investigators to ignore social background and people's attitudes. Disputes based in those factors keep controversies going indefinitely, as in the Lincoln and Kennedy assassinations.
The Abramski case attempts to clarify murky lawmaking. I will note that at least two of the categories as given, addicts and the domestically violent, consist mostly of the undetected. The only real point I see in this case is that law enforcement officers tend to disregard law as applied to them. This is common knowledge (or a social background issue, if you prefer) among poor people, especially among minorities. That, my friend, is what powers the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri. We assume that ordinary police officers act on their own attitudes, including racism, and give lip service to actual law. Law enforcement compounds the problem by taking the usual all-out suppression approach.
Calvin,
Re: Brown death. How about this . . . why don’t we wait to read the various investigation reports before we judge the results? Facts are vital in all investigations. Let’s see the facts, first.
Re: Abramski. OK, I’ll bite. How did LE disregard the law in the Abramski case? I think the Court majority stated the facts quite clearly. Abramski answered Question 11a “YES” when he knew he was buying the pistol for his uncle. The law does not make exceptions for gifts.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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