Update from the Heartland
No.676
24.11.14 – 30.11.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- With the President’s executive order on immigration
enforcement [675], Representative
Michael Richard Pompeo of Kansas, 4th District [USMA 1986], sent the following
newsletter to his constituents, of which I am one:
“This
past Thursday, President Obama addressed the nation and committed an overreach
of his Executive authority. Instead of working with Congress to craft a
true solution to the immigration crisis, as required under the Constitution,
the President proposed we simply ignore current law and provide legal status
for nearly five million illegal immigrants.
“Immigration
is a wonderful American tradition, which is why we have a thorough process in
place for those who wish to enter America legally. To ignore that system
sets a dangerous precedent by placing politics ahead of the rule of law.
“My
office has assisted many Kansans who have patiently gone through the process of
our immigration system, which can take years for some. Is the message now
that we are a country that promotes the lawlessness of bypassing the rules
countless others had to follow?
“President
Obama’s action will only serve to exacerbate the underlying problem and drive
more people to illegally cross our borders. Instead of ignoring our laws,
the White House should finally enforce them by ending the flood of illegal
immigrants at our borders.
“Thank
you to those of you who have called into my office to share your concern about
the Executive Order. Rest assured I will do everything in my power to see
the rule of law returned. Kansans deserve better from Washington and
the President.”
Sincerely,
Mike Pompeo
Member of Congress
An Open Letter to Representative Pompeo:
Re: your newsletter message dated: Mon, November 24, 2014;
5:05 am.
I
write to voice my disappointment in your reaction, as reflected in the
reference message, to President Obama’s recent executive action regarding
immigration enforcement.
As
a West Pointer and former Army Armor officer, you know quite well the old,
time-proven adage: any action is better than no action. You and your colleagues certainly have
a right to publicly criticize the President or anyone else. However, your implicit defense of
inaction appears to be nothing more than parochial, partisan tripe. Further, your claim that the
President’s executive order is an overreach of his Article II authority fails
to hold water in the light of historic precedent. Every president since George Washington, except for William
Henry Harrison, issued executive orders as part of his extra-legislative,
constitutional authority. Some
presidents have taken far more impactful action by executive order (or
equivalent). Thus, I urge you to
be careful and respectful of history in your criticism of President Obama.
Additionally,
if Congress does not like the President’s action, I strongly encourage the
Legislative Branch to craft and pass the necessary legal reforms to our current
immigration laws and fund the required resources to enforce those new
laws. Harping on defending the
border without dealing with the underlying forces involved in the illegal
immigration process is simply foolhardy and wasteful, quite like the tragic,
so-called war on drugs. Prohibition
has never worked in a free society and it will not work now. Continuing to screech at the President
for doing something is simply wrong, counter-productive and otherwise quite
unhelpful.
Respectfully submitted,
Cap Parlier
-- The continuing troubles centered in Ferguson, Missouri [661, 672], came to a boil again after the after-hours public
announcement of the grand jury’s unanimous findings in the case of Police
Office Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown. This time, disruptive public protests
and demonstrations sprang up in many cities across this Grand Republic, ala
the Watts Riots (1965), Martin Luther King Jr. (1968), Rodney King (1991),
Trayvon Martin (2012), et al.
You know, perhaps, just maybe . . . young
Michael Brown was exactly as he appeared to be . . . a strong-arm robber, who
resisted arrest, and paid for his actions with his life. Some may argue, Brown was impaired,
intoxicated, and did not know what he was doing. I say . . . he made his choices. He reaped the consequences of those choices.
The
violence we saw Monday night does not help the case presented by American
citizens with dark skin pigmentation who seek justice. From my perspective, that anarchic
violence further drives the wedge into the chasm of racial injustice extant more
than a century after freedom [1865].
As
a student of history, I recognize, acknowledge and quite frankly understand the
general resentment of law enforcement by a substantial segment of our
citizenry, especially those with dark skin pigmentation. For centuries, they were enslaved,
grotesquely abused, denied justice and equal treatment under the law, and what
is far worse, their persecution often came at the hands of deeply flawed men in
police uniforms. They have reason
to be angry. However, the indictment,
trial or mob persecution of a police officer who was doing his job to the best
of his ability simply because the death of a young male at the hands of that
police officer with near total disregard for the facts will NOT aid the
professed objective of equal justice under the law. Respectfully, such mindless, knee-jerk reaction will achieve
just the opposite – broaden the chasm rather than bridge it.
Law
enforcement officers are members of our communities. They need to feel apart of the community. They deserve our respect, support,
assistance and participation. No
police force is staffed to do their job without us. We must overcome and eliminate the “don’t snitch” mentality
that protects criminals and hinders law enforcement. Treating law enforcement like they are an occupying enemy
will never help ferret out bad officers or overcome the general distrust. Lastly, if you dress like a criminal
and act like a criminal, no one should be surprised if you are treated like a
criminal.
I
wish just once the perpetrators of racial-based violence would find a reasonable
example for their destructive indignation. A strong-arm thug is NOT a worthy example. Once violence and destruction begins,
the message of any protest or demonstration is lost completely. We simply must break this damnable
cycle.
A friend and
frequent contributor to this humble forum sent along the link to this article:
“7 leading
candidates for corporate rip-off of the year – Pharmaceutical companies are
jacking up drug prices, while Wal-Mart is paying its employees with your money”
by Paul Buchheit, ALTERNET
salon.com
Published: Friday, NOV 28, 2014; 07:00 AM CST
As illuminated by Buchheit:
1. Selling Medication For Up To 100 Times More Than It’s
Worth
2. Paying Their Employees With Our Tax Money
3. Giving Money to Executives Rather Than Investing in the
Future
4. Making Money on Dirty Air and Water
5. Making the Highest Profit Margin in the Corporate World —
And Demanding a Tax Cut
6. Skipping Out on the Country that Made Their Business
Possible
7. Group Ripoff: $74 Billion in Profits…and a Tax Refund.
I cannot validate some of Buchheit’s observations /
conclusions, yet my experience and knowledge suggest that he is spot on
here. With recent Supreme Court
rulings strengthening the influence of corporations over the political process,
unraveling the corporate welfare tax code will be nearly impossible.
News from the economic front:
-- U.S. imports of crude oil from OPEC nations is at its
lowest level in almost 30 years, underlining the impact of the shale revolution
on global trade flows. These are
interesting results in the post-embargo era of OPEC [1973].
-- The Commerce Department reported the nation’s GDP grew at
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.9% in 3Q2014, indicating the U.S.
economy is strengthening despite increasing global uncertainty. Gains in the past two quarters
represent the best six-month growth period since late 2003.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.675:
Comment to the Blog:
“Regarding President Obama's executive action on immigration, I
see this as a situation where Obama has given up having a battle of wits with
an unarmed opponent. He chose one of several issues where the Republicans in
Congress have essentially taken an ad hominem attack on Obama as an excuse for
inaction or even for harming the public interest. He quit listening to their
babbling and took action. The claim of illegality in Obama's executive order on
immigration is the stuff of dystopian fiction. I think you will comprehend
their actions if you understand that the Tea Party wing of the Republican Party
has no interest in the public good. Underneath the bluster and BS, they are
merely corrupted Libertarians, not staying true to those values because of
their financing.
“The arrogance of religious leaders goes back at least to Biblical
times. We know this because it arises in the synoptic Gospels. Those
self-proclaimed Christians need to read their Bibles. Mark 15:22 says,
"Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s; and unto God
the things that are God's." Those owners' beliefs are a matter for their God;
their employees' beliefs are protected by the modern "Caesar," the
Constitution.
“That Constitution was written largely to protect the weak from
the strong. Allowing corporations to have an unnatural personhood gives them
power they can use against the rest of us. Corporations have more money and
expertise than any given person, and they feel no obligation to loved ones,
their nations, or to the God they may claim to worship. Some of my ancestors
were Mennonites, fleeing Europe for reasons similar to your Hugenot ancestors'.
I share your sense of diminishment. Because of my own small-minority religion,
I have dread to go with it.
“To continue briefly on the EU economy topic, the "inordinate
influence of bankers" is the point I was trying to make. The follow-up question,
though, is, "What other experts can we consult in high-finance
situations?" It seems to me that the only real course of action is to find
ways to hold those bankers and their regulator puppets accountable for the
corruption in their industry.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
Obama executive action. The
governing principle in this instance is, any action is better than no
action. The claims of illegality
or even unconstitutionality are bogus and will not survive judicial
review. The historic precedent is
far too deep and pervasive. The
President did what had to be done.
Tea Party = “corrupted Libertarians” I don’t think I can go quite that
far.
Re:
arrogance of religious leaders.
Interesting perspective.
Re:
corporate personhood. Unnatural
indeed! As I have tried feebly to
argue, the corporate personhood notion has dramatically unbalanced our society. I think I understand what the Court is
(was) trying to do, but what they did was so wrong. No court has noted the reality that corporate CEOs and
Boards now have not only their vote, as you and I do, they have far greater
access to resources they can use anonymously to amplify and multiply their
opinion, their perspective. These
are not corporations talking, they are human beings – citizens – using the
resources of corporations to extend their arguments. And, what’s worse, they write off those expenditures as
expenses, which means the rest of us pay for their actions by reduced corporate
taxes excluded by the profit equation.
The Court has shown progressively less concern for the Liberty of
citizens. I still believe the
Supremes will eventually see the fallacy of Citizens United and Hobby
Lobby; it just might not come in my remaining lifetime. It just appears the current Supremes
are far more concerned with inanimate organizations than individual
citizens. I wish I knew why?
Re:
accountability of bankers. Spot
on! That is precisely the point,
but we are a very long way from that state.
. . . a follow-up comment:
“Why would the Supreme Court be more concerned with inanimate
organizations than with individual citizens? Let's follow the money. The Justices
are appointed by Presidents with the consent of the Senate. They invariably
choose people who agree with their contributors' philosophies.”
. . . my follow-up response:
A
rather pessimistic view, it seems to me . . . however, quite plausible.
Another contribution:
“Obama is ‘firing’ Hagel? Wow. Things may be worse than we had
heard. I perceive Obama may feel he was sandbagged on the data that caused him
to call ISIS ‘junior varsity’ last winter.”
My reply:
There
is much more to this story.
Perhaps we shall hear how this went down in time, but probably not for
two years or more.
A different
contribution:
“Yes, the GOP leadership is trapped again by our more clever POTUS.
The Repandercrats will succeed again in offending that portion of the
electorate that they have been foolishly wooing by trying to outpander the
Democrats rather than by selling the true merits of private enterprise
operating under limited government (limited social and/or corporate welfare,
and reliance upon human nature's response to incentives for self improvement).
The Republican Party is incapable of saving our once great nation from
the phenomena predicted by that great Frenchman and echoed in futile warnings
ever since: non-taxpaying voters will vote for more and more benefits
until the money and credit runs out.”
My response:
The
best I can say is, I truly hope you are wrong. This Grand Republic has demonstrated throughout history a
propensity to self-correct when things go too far one direction or the
other. I continue to hold onto my
faith that we shall continue that history into the future.
We
shall see.
Yet another
contribution:
“Yes I find it difficult to associate with the actions of those
rioters in Ferguson and our own quite recent events in Tottenham London very
much for the same reason. Why? Is it because I was brought up in a country
suffering from the deprivations and suffering of war? A country where nothing
was wasted and everything was scarce. There was nothing to riot over, life was
to damned hard.
“And now, do we have to toe the line in order to survive? If there
is something to riot over let’s do just that and hell with the consequences.
“Are those who behave thus deprived of a sense of reason and
natural justice? Or are they, as perhaps they the rioters, might want us to
believe, a down trodden segment of our global society who believe natural justice
will always evade them.
“One question I have been unable to conclude in my own mind. Would
I or yourself, faced with the circumstances that both your policeman and ours
faced on those darkest of days pulled the trigger?
“If we believed our own or our families lives were in mortal
danger then we would.”
My response:
I
write more about the Ferguson riots in this week’s Update. I recognize and even understand the
historical frustration, but this misguided violence does nothing but broaden
the racial divide, not bridge it.
Somehow, this damnable cycle of violence must be broken.
At
such times, I am reminded of a popular tactic used by Hitler’s SS and we now
bear witness to Putin’s use in Eastern Ukraine – use violence to induce
anarchy, then peaceful citizens turn to authoritarian / autocratic forces to
stop the violence.
In
answer to your question, I sure hope so.
I think the point on debate is why Wilson allowed Brown to get so close.
Once the first strike was
inflicted by Brown, there were only two outcomes remaining, to my thinking –
submit to arrest or die. Brown
chose the latter. Whether Brown
was impaired by intoxication is irrelevant. He chose to resist and reaped the consequences. I believe all law enforcement are
taught to eliminate the threat, and once a weapon is drawn, you must be
prepared to kill.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I hope for your sake that somewhere in Kansas resides a politician with more intelligence than your State Secretary of State or your Congressional Representative.
Whether Micheal Brown (Ferguson, MO) was "exactly as he appeared to be" depends very much on perception. Even among the people on the scene of that event, the stories vary. That is the usual result of interviewing witnesses. When we go to a broader view, Mr. Brown, Darren Wilson, the prosecutor, and the other players each assume their own meaning for each observer. I commend to you the study of cognitive psychology, the study of the mental processes underlying mental activity. Much effort has gone into undestanding people's mental workings, and that has much to do with the situation in Ferguson, as it has with most human issues. It seems to me that a great many people assume that others see the same things (actions and attitudes) in a given situation that they do. Whence this assumption arises has always puzzled me. Clearly, each person filters each situation through his or her own experiences, intellectual ability, and thoughts. Cognitive psychology studies how that filtering occurs.
Incidentally, the resentment of law enforcement you mention is by no means limited to "minorities." Poor people, gay people, and nearly anyone not immediately similar to police officers is also subject to the fear that gives rise to the resentments. I believe that arises from the "us versus them" attitude that runs deep in law enforcement.
I will note here that the grand jury did not make its choice in a vacuum. The American Bar Association has issued a letter sharply critical of the prosecutor in the Ferguson case.
Some of your other contributors make allusions unknown to me. Who is "the great Frenchman" that so mistrusts voters? What has happened in Tottenham, London that someone else assumes I will associate with Ferguson, MO? I fear some of your readers are trapped inside their own minds or milieux.
Calvin,
Frankly, I hope the same thing. I shall continue to keep a look-out for that voice of reason here on the Great Plains.
Re: cognitive psychology. Well said, and agreed without qualification. In the more street version, some folks see the glass half full, others half empty, and some don’t really give a damn. Yes, we all see what we wish to see. I try mightily to see all sides, but alas I am a flawed person who makes mistakes and is far from perfect in that endeavor.
Re: resentment. You touch on some of it. It also goes to the “don’t snitch” mentality; the police are the enemy; never assist the police. I am of the generation of military professionals who were spit on, drenched in blood, and virtually hated by a large segment of our citizenry for our service to this Grand Republic. We felt, for very real reasons, an “us versus them” mentality. Fortunately, society’s attitude toward the military has improved in the last four decades. I shall respectfully suggest, if we treated law enforcement personnel with the respect due them as important members of our communities, I dare say citizens would be treated with more respect by law enforcement. They do a thankless job to protect us. They make mistakes. They also perform extraordinary feats in ferreting out evil people among us. Let us treat them with the respect due their service to the community.
Re: grand jury. The system is a time-proven check on the prosecutor from acting unilaterally. We can condemn the Ferguson grand jury; that is our right. Yet, we must admit the possibility they got it precisely correct based on the evidence; their conclusion was unanimous, not just the necessary super-majority.
Re: Frenchman. I do not know and I have not yet received an answer.
Re: Tottenham violence. A series of events in the last few years in the London district that appeared to be quite archaic, quite like Ferguson, et al.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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