Update from the
Heartland
No.689
23.2.15 – 1.3.15
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
Texas justice . . . ain’t it grand. On Tuesday, a jury convicted Eddie Ray
Routh, 27, of capital murder after killing former Navy SEAL Christopher Scott ‘Chris’
Kyle and Chad Hutson Littlefield at a Texas shooting range in 2013. Routh plead innocent by reason of
insanity, claiming to suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and
paranoia-schizophrenia. The jury
did not buy his argument. I
surmise most folks are familiar with Kyle’s story, so I do not need to waste
anyone’s time. Frankly, I am a
little surprised the judge did not give Routh the punishment he deserved.
The following thread regarding vaccinations
was extracted with permission from a parallel forum for public debate. Hopefully, these thoughts will prove
useful to others in this forum.
Contributor 1:
“Huh? Vaccinations are pretty much already required and almost
universal. This laundry list of problems and issues is therefore pretty much
already in place.
“I personally think that not vaccinating your kids is just
monumentally stupid, but I can see the point of the parents who feel that way.
I can also see the point of the people who resent being exposed to serious
illness because of other people's choices.
“Like most things, this has to be a balance between competing
needs and desires, in this case freedom of choice versus creating a hazard to
others. A good friend has what I think is a good solution - kids who are not
vaccinated are not allowed in public schools. There are lots of home-schooling
opportunities and assistance, people who don't want to have their kids get
vaccinated can take advantage of them.
That doesn't solve the total exposure problem, but it goes a long way toward
cutting back on one of the main sources of transmission.”
Contributor 2:
“It's a complex issue, no doubt. For others, a very binary choice on their part, for their
children's future (for good or worse), and so-called ‘collective good.’
“Personally, keeping my kid (if I had one) out of public school
for private school, would the best investment I could give the poor kids of
today, who are pawns in a sick game of robbing them of independent thinking,
programming them with the group-think of today (and tomorrow) often for
political correctness.
“I really feel sorry for the kids today, because their adult lives
of tomorrow, seem to me, may be much more difficult with less options for the
kind of opportunities we once had.
“Cap Parlier had some thoughts on this matter of vaccination, in
his current Update. I intended on
responding to a few items on his Update and hope to get to that
tonight/tomorrow, but will send the Update out next.”
Contributor 3:
“What's the beef?
“If you choose to vaccinate, then theoretically you should be
protected from all those that don't.
If you choose not to then that's your choice, but if you get sick you
have yourself to blame. Then there
is the issue of all the toxic agitants like Thimerisol, Mercury, blood cells,
etc. that can cause fatal or severely adverse reactions in some people. How many Gardasil treatments have gone
bad? There was a story just
recently of a 20-something nurse dead after a flu shot.
“There are risks everywhere in life, yet it seems the only lawful choice
is to terminate a pregnancy...soon it may be lawful to kill your baby but not
to refuse a vaccination. Just more
twisted, F'd up liberal groupthink.”
My contribution:
The
issue for me is far bigger than vaccinations – every citizen’s fundamental
right to privacy. Like so many
issues – drugs, sex, rock & roll, abortion, et cetera et al – I hedge to
the individual’s freedom of choice.
Personally, I think rejection of vaccinations is foolish, ill-informed
and otherwise not a wise choice.
However, to be vaccinated is a private matter. My earlier point, like all of these private choices, our
choices have consequences and the public domain has obligations, e.g.,
quarantine should symptoms present and individual accountability. Bottom line: we must get the State out
of our private lives and choices.
Congress passed S. 1, AKA Keystone XL Pipeline Approval Act [PL 114-xxx;
S.1; House: 270-152-0-10(3); Senate: 62-36-0-2(0)] to enable the construction
of the controversial Canadian oil pipeline across the Great Plains states to a
Gulf Coast terminal at Port Arthur, Texas. The bill was replete with the usual pork. President Obama vetoed the bill
(24.2.2015) and sent it back to the Senate, as he said he would. This was only the 3rd veto
in his presidency.
Article
I, Section 7, Clause 2 of the Constitution does not specify whether the 2/3
vote in favor of override is a simple, super majority or an absolute super
majority – the former being 2/3 of a quorum, and the latter 2/3 of the
membership (seats). It is my
understanding of the Senate and House rules require an absolute 2/3 super
majority. Thus, the required votes
in each chamber would be 67 in Senate and 290 in House. They are short of the requisite vote
count in both chambers. It is not
yet clear whether the congressional leadership will attempt a veto override.
The
strange thing in this whole affair . . . major segments of the pipeline have
already been completed and are in operation. Canadian oil has been flowing to Wood River oil terminal on
the Mississippi River in Illinois.
The primary objective of the S.1 bill is authorization of a 36-inch pipe
from Hardisty, Alberta, Canada, to Steele City, Nebraska, through Baker,
Montana, to carry American crude oil as well as the Canadian product. The environmental concerns have already
been addressed and met. To me,
this appears to be just another political football being kicked back and forth
within a divisive, uncooperative Congress.
In Update no.666, I illuminated the Continuing Appropriations Resolution, 2015 [PL
113-164; 128 Stat. 1867; 19.9.2014].
The subject of the earlier paragraph was actually § 149 [128 Stat. 1874]
– the Syrian opposition support provision. The subject of this paragraph is actually § 106(3) [128
Stat. 1868] of PL 113-164, specifically and solely the date – December
11, 2014. In the political drama
playing out before us on the congressional stage in Washington, the House
rejected the Senate’s effort to pass a 20-day stop-gap funding of the
Department of Homeland Security [H.R.240; House: 201-218-0-13(3)] on Friday,
and then hijacked another bill (H.R. 33) to change the PL 113-164 §
106(3) date to 6.March.2015, which extends Homeland Security funding for one
more week. The Senate passed the
bill by voice vote. The House
passed the H.R. 33 bill at 21:59 [R] EST Friday night [House:
357-60-0-15(3); Senate: voice].
The President has probably already signed the bill, buying Congress one
more week. The drama in Congress
apparently hangs upon Republican objections to the President’s executive action
regarding immigration reform [675]. The sad part of this whole ‘affair’
grows from the reality that Congress can negate, supersede, alter or otherwise
amend the President’s initiative by passing a bill to reform immigration
law. Holding the government
hostage for petulant political statements or leverage is simply wrong. At least the President has the chutzpah to do something that needs to
be done. Congress cannot claim the
same.
Former deputy prime minister under
President Boris Yeltsin and prominent Russian opposition politician Boris
Yefimovich Nemtsov was assassinated by multiple gun shots on Bolshoy
Moskvoretsky Bridge in Moscow near the Kremlin, while walking home from dinner. This was not just another murder in a
big city. To me, this is another
dot . . . that reminds me too much of other similar nights – 29/30.June.1934, Nacht
der Langen Messer (Night of the Long Knives); 1.December.1934,
Sergei Mironovich Kirov assassinated and signaled the beginning of Stalin’s
purges of the Soviet military & political leadership; and, 20.August.1940, Lev
Davidovich Bronshtein, AKA Leon Trotsky, assassinated, the last of the
Bolshevik ‘Old Guard.’ President
Vladimir Putin denied any knowledge or involvement in the Nemtsov murder; of
course, this is what dictators do . . . eliminate their opposition and claim
their opponents did the crime to implicate them. I continue to ask, how many more signs do we need?
News from the economic front:
-- Federal Reserve Chair Janet Louise Yellen testified
before the Senate Banking Committee, “The employment situation in the United
States has been improving on many dimensions.” She went onto testify that if the economy keeps improving,
the Fed “will at some point begin considering an increase in the target range
for the federal funds rate on a meeting-by-meeting basis.” Yellen subtly shifted the Fed's public
discussion of the outlook for rates, away from assurances that rates would stay
low and toward a discussion of when and how fast they would move up.
-- The People's Bank of China announced the reduction of its
benchmark lending rate and deposit rate each by 0.25% to lower domestic
companies' borrowing costs. The
one-year lending rate was reduced from 5.6% to 5.35% and its one-year deposit
rate from 2.75% to 2.5%. The
action reflects Beijing's concern over slowing growth.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.688:
Comment to the Blog:
“I cannot resist an attempt to boil down the issue of your very
long comment thread to the ‘sound bites’ your other commenter claims are
inappropriate.
“The more important issue is parenting. The important issue in
parenting is not gender. Any child raised by one parent is by definition raised
in a single-gender home. So what? The question is not what gender the parents
are but how they parent. Addiction, abuse, and neglect are the overwhelming
factors in poor parenting. No studies have found higher rates of those issues
in a given sexual orientation. End of topic. The commenter's examples must be
taken as a false generalization unless he or she can provide quantified
evidence obtained in an objective study. Preferably, that study would be
published in a peer-reviewed journal.
“The rest of that issue is a discussion of the First Amendment
to the Constitution. If the institution of religion (which is not the religion
in itself) is threatened by the existence of others' beliefs, that is the
weakness of the institution and not a governmental responsibility. I will point
out here what ‘regarding an establishment of religion’ meant in 1776. At that
time, each nation had an ‘established’ religion. Our Constitution was novel in
forbidding that practice. I would like to avoid establishing any religion or
type of religion, such as Christianity.
“As an aside, I would like to point out that even the Abrahamic
religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) did not originally support
man-woman monogamy as the only form of marriage. The founder of those religions
married his half-sister (Sarah or Sarai) and had his first son with her servant,
Hagar, at his wife's urging. Many other examples of non-monogamy and other
violations of Victorian morality can be found in the Bible. Secular examples in
other religions abound as well.”
My response to the
Blog:
Good
parenting is good parenting regardless of the social factors. Clearly, not everyone agrees.
Keeping
religion out of secular governance was/is a cornerstone of this Grand Republic. That is not to say we are not
respectful of the Creator. There
is a huge difference between spirituality and the influence of religion. The challenge is always finding a
stable balance.
There
are seriously contradictory examples in all religious texts. There are also wise words worth our
embrace. We must filter what
matters to each of us.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I have a strong impression that the general notion of Chris Kyle comes from the popular movie about him. A more accurate picture may be derived from his "autobiography," which involved not one but two ghost writers. Mr Kyle took an incredibly (but predictably) thoughtless risk in his attempt to cure his fellow veteran, and he paid the price of that.
The deadlock and irrationality in the current Congress goes back to Republican statements the night of Obama's first election as President and the following days. The Congressional majority has no interest in governance. They focus only on defeating Obama.
The Keystone pipeline carries major environmental issues. The notion that they have been resolved is false. I will note here that Keystone XL would exist for the purpose of exporting oil, not for use by Americans.
The murder of Mr. Nemtsov remains unsolved and probably always will. You seem to imply that Russian President Putin had something to do with it and yet you are apparently indignant that he has yet to admit any such thing. All political and other considerations aside, when did murderers begin confessing their crimes to the world's news media? Duh.
Calvin,
Re: Kyle. Outside the sphere of special ops, perhaps the movie is all they know. For those in that world, his reputation and accomplishments place him in a rarified group of warriors. I was not there when he was killed. I have not seen an accurate portrayal of exactly what happened, as the event was not in question . . . only Routh’s conduct. We may not agree with Kyle’s choice to help a troubled veteran, but at least he tried to do something.
Re: congressional majority. Frankly, I agree. Congress appears to only care about remaining in power, being re-elected, and of course “benefiting” from their position.
Re: Keystone pipeline. The part of the pipeline not yet completed would in fact transport American crude oil from the oil fields of the north central states. Even the oil from Canada would go to the refineries of Port Arthur, Texas, in addition to being available on the world market . . . as it should be. Even U.S. crude is not restricted to U.S. consumption. Lastly, the operations of oil pipelines have been successful for decades. The trans-Alaska pipeline has operated successfully for decades in far harsher environmental conditions. The arguments against the completion of the pipeline appear to be bogus and politically motivated, not rational.
Re: Nemtsov. His assassination was not a random act of violence. It was well planned and executed by multiple assassins. Thus, who had a motive? I have zero expectation of Putin confessing his complicity. None of this alters my opinion of Putin. He is a ruthless dictator, driven by megalomania. While he is not yet to the depravity of his predecessors – Stalin, Hitler, et al – he is more than a few steps down the same path.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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