Update from the Heartland
No.698
27.4.15 – 3.5.15
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
The follow-up news items:
-- The Supremes heard oral arguments in the appeal of
marriage rights cases from four states – Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and
Tennessee. The Court’s ruling is
expected by the end of June. The
Stonewall riots of 1969 sparked the civil rights movement for non-heterosexual
citizens. We have been discussing
the civil rights, including marriage rights, of non-heterosexual citizens for a
long time [171 & sub]. We have a plethora of state and
federal, lower and appeals court decisions as well as the nibbling of the
Supreme Court of the United States of America. The usual swing vote in narrow judgments of the Roberts Court
rests with Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy. A key word in Justice Kennedy’s queries during oral
arguments was “millennia,” as in monogamous, heterosexual, bilateral marriage
has been defined, established and enforced for millennia. Whether the Court’s widely
anticipated decision is definitive or just another nibble, we must wait two
months to learn.
I
should reserve my opinion comment until we have the Court’s decision. However, Justice Kennedy’s concern for
millennia of tradition and the convention of normalcy exceeds my capacity to
resist. Human history has myriad
milestones of evolution and maturation.
Respecting the rights and dignity of non-heterosexual citizens is LONG,
LONG overdue. The loss of genius
minds and monumental contributors to the history of mankind simply because of
our induced homophobia must end, like so many other traits of our past. Let us mature, Justice Kennedy, and
exceed the constraints of that past.
The latest
potential police misconduct event came to us from Baltimore, Maryland, shortly
after the reported death of Freddie Carlos Gray, Jr., 25, yet another citizen
with dark skin pigmentation (19.April.2015). Gray suffered a fatal injury to his spinal cord while under
arrest, confined, in restraints, and being transported in a police van (12.April.2015). After a comparatively brief
investigation, State’s Attorney for Baltimore Marilyn Jones Mosby announced criminal
charges against six of the involved police officers – the most serious being
second-degree murder against the driver of the van. The investigation indicated the police confrontation with
the police escalated quickly, resulting in Gray’s arrest for what turned out to
be bogus reasons. Based on the
publicly available information, the Gray arrest and fatal injury is one of the
clearest examples of police misconduct in recent times.
Public
protests began before Gray’s death.
Unfortunately, as is so often the case in events like this, the protests
turned violent on Saturday, 25.April.2015, with potentially lethal assaults on
police officers, destruction of property and looting. The violence prompted the deployment of the Maryland
National Guard and the imposition of a nighttime curfew. I have long touted the wisdom of Doctor
King, yet there are limits.
“A riot is the language of the unheard.”
-- Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. (14.March.1968)
King’s statement was marginally understandable and perhaps even
acceptable in the heady days of the 1960s civil rights movement; however, his
words of disenfranchisement have become a rationale for unjustifiable, criminal
behavior, often sparked by blue-on-black incidents. In the scheme of “black lives matter,” this was a
near-perfect event to let the justice system work and set the stage for
corrections to the police-community relationship and interactions. The violence and looting diminished the
potential benefit of this unfortunate event.
News from the economic front:
-- The Commerce Department reported the U.S. Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) expanded at a paltry 0.2% seasonally adjusted annual rate in
1Q2015, compared to a 2.2% pace in 4Q2014 and 5.0% in 3Q2014, and well below
expectations. The report cites the
slowing in the economy due to businesses reducing investment, exports dropping
and consumers showing signs of caution.
The uneven growth seems to be a hallmark of the post-Great-Recession economic
recovery. The Federal Reserve
attributed the slowdown to transitory factors, in effect signaling an increase
in short-term interest rates remains on the table for the months ahead although
the timing has become more uncertain, which means the chances of a rate
increase by midyear have greatly diminished.
Comments
and contributions from Update no.697:
Comment to the Blog:
“Your new web site is clean, clear, and well suited to its
purpose. You have a good result for your effort.
“The only design quibbles I found are (a) no apparent link to this
blog, and (b) you mention Wichita prominently, which carries a much more
localized and parochial connotation than your career and viewpoint deserve. You
carry experience and insight derived from traveling and working across a large
slice of the world. The local reference takes away from that.”
My response to the
Blog:
Thank
you for your comments.
Re:
Blog link. Actually, it is at the
top of the “Other Writing” page. I
should be more specific on my Home page.
Re:
Wichita “Kansas.” Well, now, that
you mention it, my location has no bearing on my writing. And, again, thank you very much for
your generous words.
Postscript: I thought the suggestions were quite
appropriate. I have modified and
uploaded the website with these changes.
Thank you very much.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
Justice Kennedy's argument against same-gender marriage based on "millenia of tradition" is strikingly unoriginal. That exact appeal has been used to support slavery and many other injustices. Usually Kennedy knows better than that.
The violence in Baltimore is perhaps inexcusable but is certainly understandable. A couple of additional points merit consideration, however.
The first is the origin of the worst rioting, on the first day. A central factor in that is the police method of preparing for violence they were certain would occur. They shut down bus service, thus trapping students downtown who could not get home from school. Student frustration ensued, of course.
Another fact worthy of consideration is that this was not an isolated incident. Over 100 people had been killed by Baltimore police since 2010. Nobody sane would want to continue that, but it continued anyhow. Perhaps the feeling in play was a desperate need to bring attention to this pattern.
Calvin,
Re: millennia. Precisely the point. Perhaps he was just baiting the plaintiffs to hear their arguments. We will know, or at least we should know, by the end of June.
Re: Baltimore violence. I am afraid it is long past understandable . . . looting a local, pharmacy . . . really? Perpetual resentment . . . well, then, storm the Bastille rather than loot the bakery.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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