Update from the Heartland
No.667
22.9.14 – 28.9.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
In Update no.662,
I wrote about the notification of an important book’s publication. I finally completed reading every word
– very carefully. The book:
Timberg, Robert.
Blue-Eyed Boy – A Memoir.
New York: The Penguin Press, 2014.
The book is available in hardback print and electronic
formats. Before you read my words,
I enthusiastically and strongly urge everyone to read Timberg’s book. His story goes far beyond one man or
one life. It is a story of an era
in our history.
First Lieutenant Robert J. “Bob” Timberg,
USMC (Ret.) [USNA 1964] went to Viet Nam in 1966, as an infantry officer once
commissioned as a lieutenant of Marines, completing The Basic School (TBS) in
Quantico, Virginia, and also completing transition at Camp Pendleton,
California. He went to Viet Nam as part of Bravo Company, First Antitank
Battalion, First Marine Division (Reinforced), Fleet Marine Force Pacific. The 1st AT Bn. was based
near Da Nang in the I Corps Tactical Operations Area, the northern most of the
four tactical areas and closest to the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV, AKA
North Viet Nam). The unit operated
the ungainly little tracked monster known as Ontos (officially the Rifle,
Multiple 106 mm, Self-propelled, M50A1). Ontos means “thing” in Greek and its main armament consisted
of six 106 mm recoilless rifles. These
facts alone establish an affinity connection with those of us honored to wear
the Eagle, Globe & Anchor, and more so the subset of Marines who endured
the Little Boys Boat & Barge School.
I was in my Plebe Year at the Naval Academy when Timberg was in combat
in Viet Nam. On 18.January.1967, 13
days before his scheduled Rotation Tour Date (RTD) back to the United States,
Bob was pressed into special duty service as the unit pay officer that day,
covering for another lieutenant who was the scheduled pay officer for the
bi-weekly pay day but had a conflicting assignment. He was riding on AmTrac (Amphibious Tractor) [officially Landing
Vehicle, Tracked, Personnel (LVTP-5A1)] – a lightly armored amphibious landing
craft, not designed to be a land, armored, personnel carrier but used that way
in Viet Nam. While enroute to a
deployed unit, Timberg’s AmTrac was hit by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED),
seriously wounding him and others.
That moment dramatically altered the course of his life. Blue-Eyed Boy is Bob’s story of his
life from that moment through the following decades of his life.
We
rarely get a glimpse into a life worthy and well lived. This book is one of those
rarities. Timberg takes us through
the extraordinary recovery process he endured for several years. He frankly and candidly shared the
personal struggles he faced in returning to some semblance of normalcy. As Bob reached the limit of his
immediate treatment, he chose and was selected to attend the Stanford
University Graduate School of Journalism to learn the basic skills of what he
thought could be his new profession.
Bob walks us through the stepping stones of his journey from disfigured
isolation to a successful, accomplished, and acclaimed journalism career. Of particular interest to me was his
behind the scenes experience developing the story of what became his
bestselling account of the Iran-Contra Affair [25.11.1986] – The
Nightingale's Song [1995].
Timberg wrote, “I didn’t realize how angry, indeed merciless, the
criticism had become until some commentators compared [Ollie] North to Adolf
Eichmann, the Nazi hanged in Israel in 1962 for his role in the extermination
of six million Jews during World War II.
Those critics, recalling the striking phrase ‘the banality of evil’
employed by author Hannah Arendt in writing about Eichmann, bestowed it on
North as they sought to equate his defense for his actions to Eichmann’s in
that both maintained that they were ‘just following orders.’” I found numerous connections and
intersections with Timberg’s story.
Lieutenant Colonel Oliver Laurence “Ollie” North, USMC (Ret.) [then
Midshipman First Class] trained and prepared me for Jungle Warfare School, Ft.
Sherman, Canal Zone, Republic of Panama, during the summer of 1967 (as Bob Timberg
was well into the long recovery from his wounds, I might add). Ollie was also a central character in
Bob’s books. We also share an
appreciation for common authors like John le Carré and David Halberstam. Humility
may prevent Bob Timberg from claiming himself as a favorite author, but that
limitation does not apply to me. Halberstam’s
The
Best and the Brightest [1972] had the same impact on me as it did on Timberg. Bob did not mention Halberstam’s The
Powers That Be [1979] or The Coldest Winter [2007] [300], yet I imagine he has read them,
enjoyed them, but they were simply not relevant to his story. I have learned from Blue-Eyed
Boy and Bob Timberg’s writing.
Just
a bit of a related history detour, Bob joined other military burn victims who
overcame their fear of public aversion by taking on very public careers.
-- Warrant Officer William Geoffrey “Bill” Foxley, RAF:
A Vickers Wellington bomber, with Foxley serving as the
navigator, crashed during take off from RAF Castle Donington aerodrome on 16.March.1944. He was admitted to Queen Victoria
Hospital, East Grinstead, West Sussex, with horrific burns to
his hands and face. The pioneering
plastic surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe, Kt, CBE, treated Foxley over the next
three and a half years during almost 30 operations. Foxley was a founding member of McIndoe’s Guinea Pig Club. Foxley spoke widely about burn
treatment, and performed a prominent role as Squadron Leader Evans in the epic
movie Battle of Britain (1969).
-- Brigadier General William Willing “Bill” Spruance, USAF
(Ret.):
Those of us aviators of my vintage quite probably heard Bill
speak about aviation safety based on his experience after a T-33 airplane crash
(4.June.1961) in which he suffered serious burns. Bill reportedly made more than 3,000 speeches and
presentations, of which I heard him on a handful of those occasions. His impactful presentation certainly
and positively affected my flying life.
I never had to deal with an aircraft crash, but thanks to Bill, I knew I
was prepared properly to deal with such an event should it occur. I had the honor of serving with Bill
during my tenure at Embry Riddle Aeronautical University. He was a confident, engaging,
persuasive, amiable and valuable friend.
-- Corporal Jose Rene “J.R.” Martinez, USA:
On 5.April.2003, while serving with the 101st
Airborne Division in Karbala, Iraq, his Humvee hit an IED. He suffered serious burns and endured
the treatment common to burn injuries.
J.R. overcame his wounds and the treatment for those wounds to become a
motivational speaker and appeared on several television programs – not
exactly a shrinking wallflower.
Bob
Timberg overcame his injuries and treatment as these other brothers in arms did
over generations. His writing is
physical, lasting proof of his success as a journalist, and as an author. True, he is flawed as we all are; yet,
he is a far better man than most as he laid bare his inner-most demons and
mistakes. We are all much better
for Bob Timberg’s generosity, courage and sharing. He is truly an American worthy. I must say in conclusion, Bob Timberg is a man with whom I
would love to share a few beers and swap war stories with on a sunny
afternoon. Every citizen should
read Timberg’s memoir – it is far more than a trip down memory lane. Lastly, I would like to thank all those
friends of Bob Timberg who encouraged him to write this story – perfect!
The follow-up news items:
-- President Obama pulled the trigger on airstrikes in
Syria. While I am convinced
hitting ISIL [652, 665] on their home turf was the correct
and necessary action, I am rather confused. The President signed into law PL 113-164 [666] a week ago Friday, including §149(i)
that clearly states no “United States Armed Forces into hostilities or into
situations wherein hostilities are clearly indicated by the circumstances.” Perhaps they have decided ISIL
possesses no air defense systems.
While we know ISIL has 23mm and 57mm anti-aircraft guns, I’ve seen none
of the RADAR-directed versions.
Pilots of any branch or forward air controllers of any branch are “U.S.
Armed Forces” and Syria is definitely hostile. I suppose he could exercise his authority as
Commander-in-Chief; however, by 21.October.2014, he will run into §149(j) and
the War Powers Resolution [PL 93-148; 87 Stat. 555]. I just hope everyone involved returns safely. We do not need another constitutional
crisis.
-- Uncle Voldya continues to flex his military muscles [636, 640, 658, 665] with violations of the airspace of
other sovereign nations from the Baltic States to the United States. Latvia has experienced the most
violations with Estonia and Lithuania not far behind. NATO interceptors have been scrambled with each
incident. These are armed aircraft. It would not take much for a major
incident to occur. I cannot
imagine there is any doubt remaining with respect to Putin’s intentions to
intimidate or dominate Russia’s neighbors.
We have a fascinating Senate race playing
out here in Kansas. The incumbent,
Senator Charles Patrick “Pat” Roberts (Republican) is embroiled in quite the
contest according to the polls, the local talking heads and prevalent
television advertisements. The
Democratic Party candidate, Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor won
his party’s primary election, and then withdrew from the race a few months
later. Taylor’s withdrawal leaves
only Independent candidate Gregory John “Greg” Orman. The twist in all this is Kansas Secretary of State Kris William
Kobach (Republican) refused to remove Taylor’s name from the ballot, claiming
the law allowed a candidate to be removed only if he was unable to serve if
elected, and Taylor refused to so declare. An emergency case was brought before the Kansas Supreme
Court and Kobach argued the law by his interpretation and lost. Then, Kobach expressed doubts whether
there was sufficient time to change the ballots, creating confusion. There is little doubt why Kobach fought
so hard to retain Taylor on the ballot – bleed off votes that would be
meaningless and might otherwise go to Orman against Roberts. The teller for me and a sure sign of
Roberts’ desperation is the markedly negative, content-less advertizing his
campaign is broadcasting about Orman.
Fortunately, the Orman campaign has not taken the bait. They have kept their advertising
message positive, constructive and above board, which makes the Roberts
negative messages seem all the more desperate. What party Orman decides to caucus with is immaterial to
anything important in Kansas. What
matters is how he votes on the issues before Congress. Apparently all this political dust-up
here on the Great Plains has attracted national attention, as George Will wonders
whether the Republicans might lose control of the Senate.
“Staking the Senate on Kansas?”
by George F. Will, Opinion writer
Washington Post
Published: September 24 [2014]
News from the economic front:
-- The U.S. Treasury Department issued sweeping new rules to
crack down on companies that move their headquarters overseas to reduce tax via
a maneuver known as an “inversion.”
Under the new rules, it will be harder for U.S. companies to meet the
requirements for an inversion and more difficult for companies that invert to
access their overseas cash piles without paying U.S. tax. Unfortunately, taxes are just another
expense to be minimized or eliminated; therein lays the perpetual
conflict. Nonetheless, if true and
seen to fruition, I say Hallelujah!
-- The preliminary HSBC China Manufacturing Purchasing
Managers Index (PMI) rose to 50.5 in September, compared with a final reading
of 50.2 in August. The PMI
reflects business activity in China's manufacturing sector and the value shows
modest growth, which may ease some concerns over the Chinese economy.
-- The U.S. Commerce Department reported the world's largest
economy grew at a 4.6% annual rate in 2Q2014, up from the 4.2% pace previously
estimated and matching the pace of growth since 4Q2011.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.666:
Comment to the Blog:
“Regarding the approval of arming ‘appropriately vetted’ Syrians,
they will still wind up using our weapons against us. No amount of logic or
emotion supersedes actual history as the best predictor of the future.
“Scotland remains restive, and the promised autonomy measures have
yet to be revealed, much less implemented. Underlying all of this is the simple
fact that no nation is willing to be conquered, even hundreds of years after
the fact. That is the central fallacy of conquest, whether military or
economic.
“I see a hint of the best way to address domestic violence at the
end of your comment on that subject. This is another issue where the ‘us versus
them’ good guys/bad guys outlook is failing us. Something very similar to the
mental health approach would serve us better, although society (i.e., Congress)
has refused to provide adequate funding even for what we already have. A
forcible element would need to be included as it is with some forms of mental
illness due to the inherent danger to spouses and children.
“I take offense to your statement that, ‘There is only one God.’
No, no, a thousand times no. I do not share the God you (and Christians, Jews,
and Muslims) believe in.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
vetted Syrians. Perhaps so, but
that is the point of the law as written.
Congress wants a CYA provision, so they can sit back in their righteous
aloofness and pronounce, “I told you so.”
I do not know how such a vetting process will work.
Re:
Scotland. So, you would agree the
secession movement in Scotland is emotional rather than logical or substantive.
Re:
domestic violence. Yes, I think
that gets us back to the notion of social police – some degree of official intervention
short of prosecution and punishment.
Social police is a bad term, but my little pea-brain cannot seem to
produce a better descriptor. Yes,
exactly, the mental health portion of my proposal must have several layers of
intervention between “wait for violent action” and criminal prosecution. At least several of those levels would
include some form of due process and physical restraint / treatment.
Re:
one God. We have discussed this
point many times, so I’m not sure where your offense is grounded. My contention is, God is not some
Judeo-Christian-Islamic construct; God is God. I respectfully contend, we see God in all religions
including agnosticism and atheism.
My definition / image of God is far more inclusive than the clerics of
the revealed religions profess.
Further, I am not asking you to believe anything other than what you
already believe . . . that is your God.
Perhaps you see Him differently than me, but it is God nonetheless.
. . . Round two:
“If we would have our nation return to any kind of leadership, we
will have to get beyond CYA in our attitudes. This particular move just
reinforces the pattern of arming people who turn on us.
“Cap, I don't know any more ways to tell you that most of human
behavior is ‘emotional rather than logical or substantive.’ Only the likes of
Churchill, Stalin, or Putin get behind the emotion and actually operate on
substance. Often enough, even they act on emotion.
“I do not, cannot, and will not accept the notion that I worship
the same god as delineated in the Pentateuch or any of the other
Judeo-Christian-Muslim sacred texts. That is as silly as it is unacceptable. On
top of that, ‘him’ is not an appropriate pronoun for at least half of the
deities in my pantheon.”
. . . my response to round two:
Re:
CYA. Indeed and precisely! The CYA attitude is the blame game in
reverse. I am not a fan of either,
which is exactly why I am not pleased with HJ Res 124. We have debated the Military Force
resolutions [PL 107-040, 115 Stat. 224; and PL 107-243, 116 Stat. 1498] at
length. This version is even more
ambiguous. I doubt it has any true
meaning legally.
Re:
emotional. Perhaps so, that is not
how matters of State should be decided – far too prone to error, misstep and
injury.
Re:
God. The beauty of freedom is our
right to believe as we wish and choose as we wish. Just as a footnote, I think you are missing my point, if you
look beyond the detailed descriptors, whether mono- or poly-, whether male or
female, or called by any name, the higher power is the same, order to
society. If you don’t like the
name God, fine, call Him whatever you wish, by however many names & genders
as you wish. My point is, in the
main, your descriptor(s) does not alter the reality that you recognize a higher
power. I hope that makes sense.
. . . Round three:
“We certainly agree on the deficiencies of the CYA approach, but I
expect we disagree on what would be effective, and therein lies the rub.
Politicians live for elections, and they will do what gets them re-elected. If
the people who finance elections urge nonsensical and ineffective actions, the
politicians will take nonsensical and ineffective actions. They cannot count on
a given position pleasing enough voters to overcome big money's influence.
“I see no point in how things ‘should’ be done. Emotion is the
nature of people, and unless you can propose both an effective method and a
clear reason to change that, emotion is what we have to work with.
“If one sees ‘order to society’ as their God, I have no quarrel
with that, but that goal or God is far from universal. A quick study of the Old
Testament brings up the Tower of Babel (the idea was to unite everyone), the
deluge, and other examples of destruction. That is not limited to the Abrahamic
religions. The Hindus have Shiva and Kali, the Hawaiians have Pele, the Native
Americans various trickster gods, and the Celts have the Morrigan. All of these
are important figures that are disruptive. Usually the disruption is in service
of positive ends, but disrupt they do. The world's religions share little, and
the individuals who follow them even less. I have seen recently the idea that
we all seek the same end, but I do not see that short of the level of the
entire Universe (or Multi-verse to be more correct in physics). I believe those
who see all routes as the same miss the entire point of religion, and
especially of freedom to choose one's religion. I still reject any imaginable
connection to the Abrahamic God.
. . . my response to round three:
Re:
CYA. Oh well, life goes on. Every vote counts. There are more of us than there are of
them.
Re:
emotion. Perhaps you are
correct. I can only say, we must
strive to overcome emotion and decide based on facts and reason.
Re:
God. I have not and will never
claim to speak for the beliefs of others.
I only offer kernels of reasoning for a more expansive perspective of
God. My suggestion points to a far
broader, more inclusive, more expansive perspective that requires looking
beyond the trappings, labels, ceremonies and rituals. From my study of various religions, I see far more in common
than I do differences. Our
problems with religion hang upon the facial details and feeble interpretations of
flawed men who serve as clerics of these various religions. We tend to get so hung up on the façade
of these flawed interpretations.
The fanaticism we see in radical jihadist Islam stems directly from
those flawed clerics who incite the believers to violence in the name of
parochial megalomania.
Another contribution:
“I am not sure I want to say anything, but we arrived at your
Update #666. Let's hope this week is smooth! :o/ ;-?
“Take care Cap. I meant to reply to some items to Update
#665, and unfortunately did not get them out to you before this past weekend.”
My reply:
Update
no.666 was last week’s Update.
Everything is smooth so far.
Update no.667 is this week’s Update to be published next Monday.
No
worries. Actually, you are (anyone
is) welcome to respond to any Update [FYI: it makes it easier for me if you
refer to the particular Update you are responding to, but not a
requirement]. Or, you can raise
any topic you wish, any time you wish.
The door is always open, the modest fire in the fireplace makes it warm
inside, and we leave the light on for you.
A different
contributor:
“I write in reply to your statement ‘Saner minds prevailed.’
When I read that, I thought, ‘Great Scott, how did Cap arrive at that
conclusion?’ I don't think the Scots who voted to secede are less sane
than other Scots. I was reminded of 2 things from history. From the
days of the Revolutionary War, consider the minds of the secessionist Ben
Franklin and the anti-secessionist King George III. George was the one
who died insane, not Ben. Then there is that twice told tale from the Old
Testament in the Bible about the secession of the10 tribes after the death of
King Solomon. In verses 1 Kings 12:24 and 2 Chronicles 11:4, God says the
secession was His idea. Surely you don’t think God is less sane than the
mere mortal anti-secessionists living in Jerusalem about 920 B.C.”
My response:
In
both the examples you offered, there were a long list of grievances (abuses if
you will) that stimulated and justified the secession. Shoot, even the Confederate secession (1860)
had their grievances. I have seen
nothing of the grievances in Scotland to justify such a radical move. As you recall, the Declaration clearly
states, “Prudence, indeed, will dictate that
Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient
causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more
disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by
abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.” In that context, what has become so
insufferable in Scotland? What has
been so bad and evil in Scotland?
How have the Scots been abused (in contemporary times)? I understand the history of centuries
ago, but to me the past is an emotional response, not logical.
I
will avoid “God’s will” for now.
. . . Round two:
“I know of nothing unsufferable in Scotland. My response to
you was more about your statement about saner minds prevailing. I still
am convinced that the Scots who voted to secede are no less saner than other
Scots. That is, sanity is not a factor in why people choose to secede or
not secede. This is loosely related to your writing about mass shootings
where you write that the issue is more about detecting people with mental
health problems than gun legislation or something else. Determining
sanity/insanity is hard to do, I think, at least in borderline cases. Yet
you wrote as if it were easy for you to determine.
“I have 2 stories relating to secession that I hope won't bore you
to tears. First, I have a Canadian friend who is from Quebec. His
name is Rene Bertrand, so like you, he has a French last name. We have
talked about the election held about 20 years ago, which dealt with the
secession of Quebec. I think the vote was about 51/49 percent
split. He told me that his family was split on this issue. I think
he told me his dad, who is now dead, was against secession, and one of his
dad's brothers was for it. Like Scotland, I know of no unsufferable stuff
in Quebec, just that for some reason enough Quebecois wanted to vote about
this.
“The 2nd story is about a Biafran I met mowing his lawn next to a
friend's house I went to visit about a year ago. He is about 4 or 5 years
younger than we are. He was a boy soldier in the Biafran attempt to
secede from Nigeria in the war that took place most of the time we were middies,
roughly 1967 to 1970. Over a million people died in that war. He
gave me a business card, which I have kept. He is a Christian and is
working on translating some of the books in the New Testament into some
language he knows but I forget which language it is. I judged him to be as sane
as I am.
“So I am interested in the subject of secession and how it is a
factor in today's world and results in many deaths. Some Tibetans,
Basques and Kurds would like to secede and have their own country.
Panama, Peru and Equador all used to be part of Colombia, although I think it
was called Grande Colombia at some time. Why they seceded, I don't know,
except in Panama, the U.S. interfered because some U.S. citizens wanted to
build the canal. The Colombians would not agree to that, so Teddy
Roosevelt got involved in getting the Panamanians to secede and agree to
letting U.S. folks build the canal. I don't think there was any unsufferable
stuff going on in Panama, yet they seceded. And my guess is they were as
sane as any other group of humans. I don't know about Teddy. I am
interested in the secession of Panama because it is a part of U.S. history.”
. . . my response to round two:
Re:
sanity. OK, I concede . . .
certainly in the classical sense.
From my perspective, decision-making based on emotion is a form of
insanity, as it often blots out facts and reasoning; thus, my statement. I certainly agree with your principal
contention that diagnosing and identifying mental illness for treatment or at
least isolation to prevent injury to others is not a simple or easy process. I have long contended we need an
intervention process between over-taxed social workers and stretched law
enforcement. I call them the
social police, but I am not satisfied with that label. They would have triage process of progressively
greater intervention to ensure public safety and proper treatment for mentally
ill citizens. My proposal for the
social police is, better safe than sorry.
I would rather have slight overreaction than no action, as we have
suffered for decades . . . examples galore.
Re:
Québécois. A good example of
emotion over reason. The Canadians
have gone out of their way to accommodate the Québécois in almost every aspect
of public life.
Re:
Biafran. Wow, we learn something
every day. I was not aware of the
Biafran secession effort. I
suppose Viet Nam dominated my attention back in those days. Their grievances may have been valid 45
years ago, perhaps not so today. I
do not know in this instance.
Re:
secession. I suppose the essence
of the question is whether secession is for “light and transient causes.” As with most things, where do we draw
the line? Does every individual
become a State? Panama is a bad
example of the past – TR imperialism or at least jingoism. Yes, Panama’s secession from Columbia
came in the interests of the United States, although in that instance I could argue
international interests, like international eminent domain. We could also argue the Russians are
trying to do the same thing in Eastern Ukraine as Americans did in a century
ago in Panama. We cannot undo the
past. So, we return to what is unsufferable
in Ukraine, Quebec, Biafra, Scotland, et al?
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I find it interesting that Americans are still defending Oliver North. "I just followed orders" is as defective morally in one defendant as another. My only published work to date is a series of essays on the decline of the rule of law in the United States. The Iran-Contra scam figures prominently in that series because it expanded the disregard for culpability that Ford began by pardoning Nixon to include any government officials, not only the President. Bush the Elder simply pardoned all of the criminals when he was a lame duck, no longer subject to the pressure of re-election.
Speaking of the rule of law, that tide may be turning at last. The setbacks the Kansas Secretary of State has encountered in simply changing election rules to suit his party's needs are a sign of hope, along with most of the recent rulings on marriage equality and some of those on voting rights.
We shall see how the government proceeds in dealing with inversions. As you almost point out, corporations exist to make money. In a for-profit environment, such notions as patriotism, the health and well-being of customers, or the functioning of the planet are strictly secondary to making money. If we accept that, many controversies resolve themselves.
Your other correspondent gave you a thorough and appropriate discussion about your use of the term "saner minds." The only addition I can make to that is to encourage you to look at your writing in general. You decry the use of emotion in decision-making but you use prejudicial and inflammatory words often. I hope I need not dissect this; you write regularly and publish much of what you write. Please decide whether you want to use fact and logic to persuade your audience or whether you would rather take the easier route of arousing emotions.
Calvin,
Re: Iran-Contra. I recommend you read Timberg’s “The Nightgale’s Song” before casting judgment. As Timberg so expertly accounts, the whole picture is not so simple, North became the fall guy, not that he was not without culpability. Timberg adds further enlightenment and illumination in “Blue-Eyed Boy” as background behind the scenes. If you would like to understand Iran-Contra, I would urge you read both books.
Re: rule of law. We can debate this topic.
Re: Kansas. The results of the upcoming, mid-term election will be an illuminating event, I suspect.
Re: corporations. Indeed! Corporations in general do not have altruistic motives at heart. A century ago, most corporations saw employees as simple consumables . . . to be used, thrown away, and replaced. Government is charged with protecting all citizens, not just corporations. There must be balance . . . to go too far in either direction, everyone gets hurt. Inversion and taxes are really no different from health care or risk.
Re: “saner minds.” OK, so now y’all are piling on. Emotional decision making is not a mental illness by any professional definition. My comments on the Scotland independence referendum were not intended to reflect on genuine mental illness, which is a bona fide public issue in its own right. My comment was reason over emotion, not sane over insane. There is no decision for me; my entire professional and personal has been based on reason rather than emotion.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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