Update from the
Heartland
No.677
1.12.14 – 7.12.14
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
As I sit on the living room couch,
watching the Colts vs. Browns football game on this particular Sunday
afternoon, I cannot avoid the history of another professional football game 73
years ago -- Brooklyn Dodgers vs. New York Giants (yes, that is correct). The Polo Grounds public address
announcer broadcast a message that William J. Donovan had an urgent telephone
call at the usher’s office. The
call waiting for him was from the White House. He was being recalled to Washington immediately for an unscheduled
Sunday evening Cabinet meeting.
The Imperial Japanese Navy devastated the U.S. Pacific Fleet at anchor
in Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii.
The Brooklyn Dodgers did not survive the war, and the team’s lineage can
be traced to the Indianapolis Colts, who are on the field as I write this
segment. History is awesome! On a winter’s day just like today, the
United States was pushed into a truly global war that engaged virtually every
nation on the planet for the next four years.
In Update no.673, we were alerted to one of several new books. The first one I completed was:
Cleaver, Thomas McKelvey. “Fabled Fifteen – The Pacific War Saga of Carrier Air Group 15.” Pacifica, California: Pacifica Military
History, 2014.
The book had significance for me on several levels. First and foremost, one of the
principal characters in the history book was Commander David McCampbell, USN
[USNA 1933] – Commanding Officer, Carrier Air Group 15 – embarked aboard USS Essex (CV-9) during the epic First and
Second Battles of the Philippine Sea in the Pacific Theater of Operations
during World War II. Carrier Air
Group 15 (CAG-15) was in the thick of what became known as the Marianas Turkey
Shoot [19.June.1944]. Fighter
Squadron 15 (VF-15), CAG 15, accounted for 68.5 of the total 371 victories by
the 15 fighter squadrons of Task Force 58 claimed that day, with the loss of only
14 American pilots. McCampbell was
the Navy’s Ace of Aces with 34 aerial victories in the war, nine in one day,
for which he was awarded the Medal of Honor [24.October.1944]. Cleaver also chronicles the Second
Battle of the Philippine Sea, more commonly referred to as the Battle of Leyte
Gulf, during October 1944, of which CAG-15 played a vital role. The Air Group participated in numerous
other operations in the Pacific Campaign, including air raids on Peleliu,
Formosa (Taiwan), and Okinawa.
On
a personal level, the CAG-15 history took me back to the first individual study
I undertook as an early teenager.
While my father was reluctant to talk about his wartime experience, the
evidence of that experience was visible daily in our lives. He told me enough to stimulate me to
know more, thus my research into the Battle of Leyte Gulf. My father served as an infantry
sergeant with the 96th Infantry Division and was near fatally
wounded during combat operations on Leyte Island. Most notably, he recounted the night of 24.October.1944,
when the battleships of the 7th Fleet classically “crossed the T” on
the Japanese Southern Force in Surigao Straight, lighting up the night sky as
the big guns decimated the Japanese fleet. The ‘fireworks’ told the soldiers on Leyte something of
enormous scale was happening that night.
So, when Cleaver tells us of the Battles of Palawan Passage, Sibuyan
Sea, San Bernardino Straight, off Samar, and Cape Engaño, they are names and
events all too familiar to me, as if I had just heard them yesterday.
Cleaver
did a magnificent job gathering up an enormous body of information from widely
dispersed sources, including personal interviews with those men still alive who
were there. If you are a student
of history, or even just minimally curious about those cataclysmic events in
the Pacific during the Autumn 1944, I enthusiastically encourage you to read Cleaver’s
book – “Fabled Fifteen.”
My only criticism would be the need for more perspective on the scale
and significance of those operations to make the details stand out more in the
epic Pacific naval battles.
Postscript: The heads-up about the book came to me from a
classmate and contributor to this humble forum, and further information
provided by Captain McCampbell’s son – Commander David Perry McCampbell, USN
(Ret.) [USNA 1970]. Dave has a
website that I encourage everyone to visit [http://www.svsoggypaws.com]
and especially the “Presentations” section. I have been through only a few of his many chronicles that
document in photographs, maps and detail his sailing and diving adventures as
he and his wife retrace the sites of his father’s epic Pacific Campaigns. Thank you so very much for sharing your
experiences, Dave, and thank you Jim for making the connection for me. And, as we say in the nautical
services, godspeed and following winds.
Keep ‘em comin’!
BTW: Soggy Paws is
the name of Dave’s ocean-going sailboat and the base for his continuing Pacific
adventures.
On Tuesday, the House of Representatives
passed H.R.5739, titled: No Social Security for Nazis Act, by a vote of
420-0-0-14(1). The bill has gone
to the Senate for action and is expected to pass easily. Normally, I would not report on in
process legislation like this bill.
However, the title and the language of the proposed law struck a
sensitive nerve. I am a quarter of
the way through the book Aslan Soobzokov [673]
asked me to review – “The Nazis Next Door – How America
Became a Safe Haven for Hitler’s Men” (Lichtblau: 2014). My evolving opinion is not good, but I
want to do a thorough assessment to be fair – I need to hear Lichtblau
out. The H.R.5739 bill is not
particularly controversial until you place it in the soup of a book like
Lichtblau’s, thus my concern about the law. More to follow on this one, I suspect.
One of many benefits of being old and
retired . . . I got to watch the entire flight of the NASA / Launch Alliance
Orion spacecraft from launch to splash down. I tried to get to Cape Canaveral for an Apollo / Saturn V
launch and twice for Shuttle launches and failed to make it. I did watch most of those launches,
albeit most in replay, and they never cease to amaze me. The Orion flight did not
disappoint. Orion is the launch
and recovery vehicle for future manned spaceflight to the Moon and Mars. This flight was intended to test the
launch sequence, the radiation shielding, and especially the high-speed
re-entry design of the capsule for a simulated return flight from Mars. From my lay perspective, it was a
flawless mission. Congratulations
to NASA and the Launch Alliance team.
Well done!
News from the economic front:
-- The Labor Department reported nonfarm employment rose by a
seasonally adjusted 321,000 jobs in November, the strongest month of hiring
since January 2012. The
unemployment rate remained unchanged at 5.8%, still the lowest level since
mid-2008. The employment picture
has steadily improved this year even as wider economic growth metrics have
proved less even.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.676:
“No wonder we're friends. We think alike!
“Especially on Ferguson.”
Another contribution:
“Good one on pompous Pompeo!!”
My reply:
You
know, I actually think the guy wants to do the right things, but he is so bound
up in parochial politics that he does foolish things like that newsletter (and
others).
Comment to the Blog:
“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 Michael 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 understanding
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.”
NOTE: The article that sparked a goodly portion of this
exchange:
“The Science of Why Cops Shoot Young Black Men – And how to reform
our bigoted brains.”
by Chris Mooney
Mother Jones
Published: Mon Dec. 1, 2014 6:00 AM EST
My response to the
Blog:
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 anarchic,
quite like Ferguson, et al.
PS: Re: mistrust voters. Please see answer received and noted below.
. . . Round Two:
“I do not expect that many will read the article on cognitive
psychology as applied to racism all the way through, but it deals with very
important ideas.
“The point of the article on cognitive psychology is that we do
not see what we wish to see. Instead we see what the deeper parts of our
brains, conditioned by evolution, show us. The reason that article got my
attention is that it matches my own experience gained through attempting to
leave behind me a conservative and racist background. In about forty-five years
of conscious effort, that has never once been as easy as choosing or deciding
to see people and events differently. It's hard work. That article explains
why.
“I do not really believe in ‘flawed’ people. DNA, personal
history, and culture dictate that no two humans are alike, so how can a ‘perfect’
(meeting a standard) person exist? With no standard, ‘flaws’ are very
subjective. People are not machines. We are different from one another and that
is not a problem in its own right. It merely indicates that we need to escape
the idea that we should be alike.
“The issue with respecting the police is how much respect they
deserve. I do not believe anyone deserves respect by virtue of the title they
hold. Richard Nixon makes a good example of this, but many others come to mind.
I will respect the police, as a body, when they show signs of earning my
respect. I already respect those who have shown me that they are respectable.
However, expecting drunks and petty criminals to respect people may be
unrealistic.
“Incidentally, neither I nor anyone I am in touch with has
attacked the grand juries making decisions we see as misguided lately. What I
see as the issue is the power and human qualities of prosecutors who have too
much control of the grand jury process. Indeed, the American Bar Association
has expressed its negative opinion of the prosecutor in Ferguson, MO. I agree
with others that prosecutors are very reluctant to indict police officers, with
whom they work daily and who they see as important resources. This issue came
up for discussion on CBS Morning News today (12/5/2014), so I know I am not
alone in this and my non-expert opinions are supported by at least some with
professional backgrounds in the subject.
“Much of this comes back to the tribal factor discussed in the
article. Prosecutors and police are part of the same tribe, and it is one of
the tightest communities we have in our society. Black men not in uniform,
Latinos, gay people, poor people, the mentally ill, and others are not the same
tribe. That's where the fear and trouble begin. Such people as middle-class
white men are typically seen as neutral, but many others are perceived as
dangerous by virtue of being ‘not like us’ (the wrong tribe).
“Indeed, I suspect that the tribal responses underlay much of the
strife in our society. For a random example, in California as elsewhere farmers
understand that sufficient water is absolutely necessary to their output and
therefore their entire way of life. Despite their physical isolation, farmers
act as a tribe. People living in suburbs need abundant water for their
expensive lawns and for more important functions (to me) such as showers and
cooking. Suburban people are less cohesive, but they understand one another in
that tribal sense and the farmers are not of their tribe. When the drought
limited the water supply, the two tribes collided with no effort at
understanding each other's views. No cooperative solution is in sight or to be
expected. Such is the mentality discussed in the article, and it is not conscious.
Even when people attempt to cooperate, they have to make their ways past
obstacles deep inside their own minds. The marvel is that sometimes it works
anyhow. Society makes progress over centuries and millennia, because eventually
we get past our limitations.”
. . . my response to round two:
Well,
now, that was quite the exchange.
There
have been many attempts to analytically understand human behavior. We have discussed elements of behavior
both publicly and privately. I am
neither a scientist nor expert at anything, least of all human behavior. Thus, my opinions on such at best
should be considered idle, lay, novice perspective – nothing more.
Many
people believe, truly believe, our destiny, our behavior throughout life is written
indelibly in our DNA, which in turn means that our lives are defined from that
mere instant in time when the genetic material of a sperm cell and an ovum
combine and replicate to produce a zygote cell that eventually leads to this
old man sitting at a keyboard before a display in his basement study typing
these words. Homosexuality, or
rather non-heterosexuality, is perhaps the most popular notion in contemporary
discussion – we are wired this way.
Well,
I can neither affirm nor reject such hypotheses. Thus, I have no counter-argument I can present to your
dissertation. Nonetheless, I do
have an opinion for whatever that is worth in this dialogue.
Some
actions in our lives are indeed and emphatically written in our DNA –
heartbeat, breathing, hunger, et al – are directly part of our moment of
conception. Most products of
conception have normal or functional basic functions; some do not. Beyond the physiological functions of
life, I believe we are born largely, if not predominately or even totally, as a
blank slate upon which is written our behavior that will broadly control our
actions as adult human beings. We
are taught most of the traits that will govern our lives – the tribal rules, so
to speak. Those traits are very
deeply rooted, often beyond our consciousness, and thus are quite difficult to
alter. For all that, some people,
a very few, have actually learned to overcome their DNA “wiring” and more learn
to overcome their infancy traits.
My
use of the descriptor ‘flawed’ is simply a recognition that I do not conform to
any notion of ‘normalcy.’ As
Popeye said, “I am what I am and that’s all that I am.” Normal will be defined by others, not
by me. As you say, we are all
unique, thus there can be no ‘normal.’
Prosecutors
are simply human beings who sought and attained powerful positions within the
legal system. They are driven by
their learned traits, their tribal mentality, through their interpretation and
thus enforcement of the law. We
had a state attorney general a few years back who was so driven by his
religious beliefs his focus narrowed to virtually one issue, almost to the
neglect of everything else. Even
in a very socially conservative state his nearly mindless pursuit of that one
issue did not and could not sustain his holding of that office. The same is true for police. As much as I try to respect those
flawed human beings who wear a badge and carry a pistol, I occasionally run
into one of those mindless zealots, who seems almost incapable of cognitive
thought. But, that is life.
. . . Round three:
“There have indeed been many attempts to analytically understand
human behavior. I have found studying them much more useful than unassisted ‘logic,’
which really is not so logical to others with different histories, assumptions
and motivations.
“As far as DNA, the extremes assumptions about that have long been
disproved. People are not in fact ‘blank slates’ at birth. Genetics has been
clearly shown to influence alcoholism and some other ‘behavioral’ illnesses,
and behaviors that are not illnesses as well. Studies of identical twins
separated at birth by war or legal intervention have yielded some fascinating
findings. Those studies come as close as anything outside the ‘hard’ sciences
to scientific method applied to humans. You might want to study those. On the
other end of the scale, socioeconomic background, parenting dysfunctions, and
the availability or not of good schools have been shown to influence the course
of children's lives beyond a reasonable doubt. As all the experts I have read
agree, the question is not "nature versus nurture," but where the
balance lies.
“In any case, I only brought up DNA to account for the statement
that each of us is different from all others. That much is indisputable.
Therefore, ‘normal’ or ‘flawed’ cannot truly exist.
“Relatively recent findings on the origin of homosexuality
attribute it to neither DNA nor environment. It seems to be brought about, at
least in males, by specific pre-natal conditions. Non-heterosexuality is a much
deeper discussion and gets completely away from either/or positions.
“What I ‘presented’ is no dissertation. These are merely casual
interchanges.
“To come back to those very important ‘tribal’ responses, I'll say
it again. I do not see those things as conscious or as any sort of
immediate-environment issue. These are traits that served our pre-agricultural
ancestors very well. Those who instantly recognized ‘our tribe’ versus ‘not our
tribe’ survived longer and had better lives than others; thus they were more
likely to have surviving children. Our modern-day problem is that those traits
do not change quickly enough to keep up with changes in human society in the
past few centuries.
“Prosecutors are indeed human beings who have attained powerful positions.
I had no intention of painting them as villains. I do not indulge in the ‘us
versus them’ mentality that makes morality seem so easy for so many. My point,
in common with many others, is that prosecutors, by the nature of their jobs,
have a difficult time accepting or admitting that police officers can do wrong.
They rely on law enforcement for all of the evidence they use to do their jobs.
Prosecutors would not be human if they were truly objective about the
reliability of those officers' statements. In addition, many prosecutors have
personal friends in police departments, giving them an additional conflict of
interest. We need another way to deal with accusations against the police.
Grand juries, in themselves, are not the issue.
“I will admit to surprise that you have encountered zealotry among
police officers. As a white middle-class male with a military background, you
are among those most similar to the law-enforcement tribe. Think what that
zealous response would be like if your appearance, accent, or mannerisms scared
every officer who saw you.”
. . . my response to round three:
Now,
this exchange has evolved into one of our better examples, so thank you for
that. I will further add, I hope
others on the distribution list or who visit the Blog site will benefit as
well.
Re:
unassisted ‘logic.’ OK, point
taken and conceded. Unfortunately
for me, I have limited capacity and I absorb as much as I am able.
Re:
DNA. I had to read your words
several times to conclude that we appear to be in agreement. I am of the balanced school. I generally reject arguments that
behavior is written in DNA, and thus immutable and unalterable. Conversely, I do agree that our DNA
code likely provides “enablers” that make one person versus another more
susceptible to addiction, or violence, or many other behavioral anomalies. I simply attempted to state my belief
that addiction or male homosexuality is not pre-destined by our DNA. Further, while DNA may best be thought
of as a foundation upon which our behavioral traits are built, it does not
define those behaviors . . . well, except in some mental health situations,
e.g., DNA may, and probably does, make one individual more likely to exhibit schizophrenia
or cerebral syndromes like Tourette. My point is, a foundation is NOT a house, and I am most
concerned about the house. A
clinical physician will be quite concerned with the foundation in any treatment
scheme . . . or at least should be.
As you said, it is about balance.
Re:
normal. Again, I believe we
agree. “Normal” is a societally
defined construct of expected or allowed behavior. As I believe you accurately note, our evolution as a species
was influenced by those basic tribal responses that enabled survival and
procreation. As communications
evolved, other influences came to play, not least of which was religion in all
its forms. Normal is what I often
refer to as “The Box,” as constraints of clearly defined behavioral boundaries
for a myriad of purposes, not least of which was procreation for us,
elimination for them.
Re:
dissertation. OK, but I think of
these exchanges as much more.
Re:
tribal. I have conceded some
tribal behavior is instinctive and most likely written in our DNA, e.g., fight
or flight. Most of what we would
call tribal behavior is learned, assimilated from our infantile environment –
parents, teachers, neighbors, et al.
To put a point on my opinion, I do not believe distrust of the police by
citizens with dark skin pigmentation is instinctive; it is learned. Are there tribal influences? Yes, absolutely; but, they are learned
nonetheless.
Re:
accusations against police. A
different process for dealing with accusations of police wrong-doing . . .
perhaps so; although the concept makes my suspicion fear an anarchist dream
come true. Appointing a special
prosecutor for every citizen complaint of mistreatment is unbounded,
approaching infinite, and thus unaffordable, as a society, not just financially.
Re:
police zealotry. Yes, I do agree. There are predisposition elements that
add to our reaction to that zealotry.
My urge was to confront his behavior before a judge, but ultimately I
decided my time was worth more to me than US$90 . . . sad but true. That ridiculous officer does not alter
my respect for law enforcement and first responders in general. He was one flawed human being enamored
with his importance.
Answer from above:
“I am attributing to Alexis de Tocqueville a prediction about
voters eventually discovering that they can vote themselves gifts from the
treasury, bringing on the end of any democracy. He has been widely
misquoted, so I may have added this to his insights about America.”
. . . to which I added:
I
could not find anything comparable by Alexis de Tocqueville. The closest I could get was Lord
Woodhouselee [Alexander Fraser Tytler], who was known for the Tytler Cycle – a
rather pessimistic view of democracy.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I went to Wikipedia for the history of a Brooklyn Dodgers football team. How bizarre. It does give insight into the very commercial nature of big-time sports.
My interest in history does not focus much on military history. I am more interested in why we make such effort to keep old wounds open.
The “No Social Security for Nazis Act” is a prime example of pandering for votes. Very few authentic Nazis remain alive, fewer in the United States, and those convicted of crimes will not be receiving Social Security. The real point is that every incumbent in Congress can say he or she voted against Nazis. They would pass a bill against Satan, too, but for the voting non-Christian likes of me.
I look forward to progress in astronomy and to manned space travel. It might even bring prestige back to a government program if any credit can be wrestled away from private contractors' marketers.
Calvin,
Re: commercial nature of big-time sports. Not a news flash, but at least you got there. When I first read that little factoid during research, I thought it was a typo . . . and a rather bad one . . . but it was not.
Re: “such effort.” Like what? To what are you referring?
Re: Nazis. Quite so. Window dressing. The bill seemed so odd as I am reading this book about Nazis in the U.S. I will have more to say once I’m done with my reading. It is not clear whether the bill will make it through the Senate before the closing of the 113th Congress . . . so yes, most likely a value-less symbolic vote.
Re: space. I have faith . . . it may not be the glory days of Apollo, but it will be good and we shall learn more about where we live.
Cheers,
Cap
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