Update from the
Heartland
No.800
10.4.17 – 16.4.17
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To all,
If
anyone needs a prime example of why history is such an important topic,
especially for people in the public eye, you have to look no farther than the
current White House Press Secretary this week. Sean Spicer publicly stated that Syria’s Assad was worse
than Hitler, since even Hitler did not resort to the use of chemical
weapons. What Sean failed to
learn, realize or remember, Xyklon-B was the chemical nerve agent of choice
used by Hitler’s SS to kill millions
of innocent people at his extermination camps. Spicer might have gotten away with his faux pas, if he had added the caveat of chemical weapon use on the
battlefield, but he did not. Then,
he made matters worse by fumbling around trying to justify his remarks . . .
before he eventually apologized for his mistake. While I would not expect John Q. Citizen to know that
history, or that detail of history, politicians, celebrities who choose to
speak about such things, and government civil servants must know those details
of history, or avoid any such references.
Hitler’s der Endlösung von die Judenfrage (the Final Solution of the Jewish Question) was orders of
magnitude worse and beyond the totality of what Assad has done, so far.
As
many of your know from my history, I am no fan of United Airlines. My negative opinion of that company
goes back four decades and has not abated with time. The recent viral video of a resistant and belligerent
passenger being forcibly removed from a flight after he had properly boarded
has caused quite a stir. My
opinion is markedly different from the majority of the Press and talking
heads. What we do not see is the
flight crew doing their jobs properly.
When that passenger resisted following proper and legal instructions,
they called law enforcement to deal with a non-compliant passenger. The video showed law enforcement
forcibly removing the belligerent passenger. Frankly, that passenger deserves to be charged with a
federal crime of obstructing a flight crew, disturbing the peace, resisting law
enforcement and other crimes.
Could United have dealt with the situation better? Perhaps, they could have dealt with the
crew movement and over-booking situation in the boarding area, rather than on
the aircraft. However, at the
bottom line, that passenger was dead wrong and should be properly charged,
tried, convicted and punished for his conduct. All this yammering about how mistreated he was will only
encourage others to resist inappropriately.
A
related and relevant independent opinion:
“I Know You’re Mad at United but… (Thoughts from a Pilot
Wife About Flight 3411)”
by Angelia J. Griffin
The Pilot Wife Blog
Published: APRIL 11, 2017
She stated, “If a federal law enforcement officer asks
me to exit a plane, no matter how royally pissed off I am, I’m going to do it
and then seek other means of legal reimbursement.” That is the bottom line. The public reaction to the video clips of that event will do
nothing but encourage resistance to proper law enforcement action. I am far more concerned about what this
will do in other similar situations.
Ms. Griffin goes on to offer some germane and appropriate observations
as a consequence of this incident.
We
bear witness as a new dictator is born.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey publicly declared victory in a
controversial referendum that concentrates far more power in the person of the
president – Erdogan. The
Sunday vote had a reported 85% eligible voter turnout with 51.41% voting yes
and 48.59% voting no. Preliminary analysis indicates the vote was split largely
on a rural versus city basis, or fundamental Islam versus secular division. Erdogan has persistently sought greater
power after surviving a coup d'état last
year [761, 15.July.2016]. It never ceases to amaze me when people
vote for a dictatorship.
Comments and contributions from Update no.799:
Comment to the Blog:
“The sarin gas attack on the village of Khan Sheikhoun, Idlib Province,
Syria, had yet to be investigated before U.S. missiles destroyed the evidence. Hence, most of the details of that
attack remain unknown. Mainstream
discussions are now dominated by conspiracy theories, so this ought to be
interesting.
“Your and some other Congressional special elections may
demonstrate the current political direction of this country. As I write this,
Kansas awaits vote counting. People predicting anything further ignore the pace
of events.
“Those who seek to kill large numbers of people, regardless
of motivation, have found a new weapon that will not be banned. The entire
world in this century depends on motor vehicles. Turning them against one’s
perceived enemies or random targets makes a whole new danger for everyone. If
such perpetrators die, any supporters or helpers may become impossible to
track. Vehicle thefts make a blind alley for investigators. This also makes
claims of responsibility dubious. Explosions continue to have the same
trademarks and/or traceable residues as before.
“We may well mourn the end of bipartisanship in Washington,
DC, but it comes as no surprise. The U.S. Federal government has been that way
since the Reagan Administration.
“As far as Mr. Justice Gorsuch, we shall see. Jurists who
refuse to state positions prior to being seated cannot be tied to them later.
“I believe the Donald has no clear clue that he annoys
and/or amuses the rest of the planet. His self-involved and arguably insane
viewpoint does not seek accurate outside information.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
“destroyed the evidence.” The
evidence was not collectible at either end per
se. This is where we must
trust the Intelligence Community and the President. It is quite plausible and well within the capabilities of
the allied powers to have seen the Syrian attack mission unfold from takeoff to
consequence. On this one, I must
give the President the benefit of the doubt. Despite the naysayers, I think he took the correct action in
this instance.
Re:
Kansas 4th District special election. The results have been counted and reported. The Republican candidate, who stooped
to rather vile, personal, advertisement attacks, was elected.
Re:
terrorist weapons of choice. The
bad guys will use anything they believe undermines the resolve of
freedom-loving people and raises doubt in our governments.
Re:
“end of bipartisanship.” Quite
so. I will disagree only in the
genesis. I will argue the source
was prior to the Reagan administration and most likely originated in the
Johnson administration and the broad distrust of government, in general, born
in the societal consequences of the Vietnam War, and specifically how it was
conducted by the Johnson administration.
Nixon’s paranoia did not help and most likely amplified that blossoming
distrust of government.
Re:
“Gorsuch.” Indeed, we shall
see. Just a tangential comment,
the only proper “stated position” for a judge should be, must be, the law. Personal opinions have no place in
judicial pronouncements.
Re:
“the Donald.” I think you have
seriously understated the negative consequences of his pervasive, personality
flaws . . . but that is not news.
. . . follow-up comment:
“You seldom say anything as implausible as, ‘This is where we must
trust the Intelligence Community and the President.’ That's silly. I
did not understate the results of Trump's flaws. I said he has no clear clue about their effects. That cluelessness makes the whole thing
worse, not better.”
. . . my follow-up response:
Re:
“That's silly.” LOL So you say! However, what is the alternative?
Re:
“That cluelessness makes the whole thing worse.” Spot on . . . without question. An ancillary comment: I’m not sure if it is cluelessness or
the ambivalence of his narcissism.
. . . the contributor’s closing comment:
“There was a day when the function of the press was investigating
claims and events. That
alternative has largely collapsed, led down the toilet by Rupert Murdoch with
plenty of help. I suppose there's
no way to know the truth until historians move in later, but hope springs
eternal.”
Another contribution:
“Yes, Devin Nunes overstepped his boundaries and norms, and got
him self in a bunch of trouble.
“My reservations on your views/opinion on the Syrian chemical
attack, is whether this was state sponsored, done by ISIS/AQ, or any other
rogue agents. When Trump launched
the Tomahawk attack on an airbase that really had no real effect on the Assad
regime, it was done before an investigation by the proper entities, I suspect
U.N., could be done. My guess on
it was Trump needed to look like he was in-charge and posture for Russia,
posture for North Korea. Maybe I
am wrong.
“I've heard much about the TV program ‘Homeland’ but not seen
it, I might need to try a view it.
“I am disgusted about this point with Trump. I don't tell too many people about it,
am not sure if someone will try and shoot me or punch me. But I think Trump is a disgrace because
he most misrepresented what he truly was about, more than any presidential
candidate I can recall. He has no
moral, ethical nor psychologically sound bar or standard. This makes Donald Trump very dangerous.
I see him as a narcissist like we
do not know, and time will tell, but Nixon may look very saintly.
“The St. Petersburg bombing, very interesting given the unusual
geopolitical events and tension these days.
“On 'extreme vetting', once more Trump and ADMIN is showing me we
are entering a dark state (not Deep State), that is not good for U.S.A. nor
anyone else. It sort of portends
the times I think we may be entering. Maybe they clued Trump & Gang in on what was about to
come, for him to take these extreme positions.”
My reply:
Re:
Nunes. Quite so. It will be difficult for Nunes to shed
the image of him as Trump’s lackey; he compromised himself.
Re:
Syria chemical attack. As I have
written previously, this is where we must trust the Intelligence Community and
the President. The capability to
‘observe’ the chemical attack from takeoff to result is well within the
capacity of the allied powers. The
Assad regime has certainly used chemical weapons before, so this instance is quite
plausible. Frankly, I support the
President’s action in this case.
In fact, I think we should have imposed a “no fly” zone at least over
rebel territory, if not the whole of Syria, when this fracas began. We certainly have the capability to
enforce that action. Once Russia
entered the fray, the situation became substantially more complicated and
dangerous. I would not say you are
wrong; I just offer an alternative perspective.
Re:
“Homeland.” I have thought that program was well
done from the get-go. Season 6 is
the most relevant to contemporary events, but the whole program is worth your
time.
Re:
“Trump.” I share your perspective,
although I think the situation is far worse than you state.
Re:
St. Petersburg bombing. Quite
so. Personally, I think the
Russian and American people have far more in common than there are differences;
it is the Putin regime that is the problem.
Re:
“dark
state.” Oh my, yes. The signs are not good. They tried to float a lead
balloon. I suspect this is only
the bitter foretaste of what is to come.
Semper viglians.
My
very best wishes to all. Take care
of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
I see that United Airlines passenger as legally wrong and morally right. He is a doctor who was traveling to see a patient, and he had paid for his ticket and boarded correctly. He wasn’t even bumped in favor of some other passenger, but for airline employees who did not pay. The fact that airlines can over-book and “bump” passengers legally says more about their ability to buy politicians than about anything else. This sort of runaway greed is bound to meet with resistance at some point. I hope to see much more. Awareness of this is one more reason I do not fly. I am not afraid of flying itself, but I’m not willing to put up with airlines or risk the Department of Homeland Insecurity. Not everyone has that choice.
I can only mourn for Turkey. Their experiment with democracy lasted longer than many.
Your other correspondent’s concern about Trump supporters punching or otherwise attacking him is supported by events.
Calvin,
Re: unruly passenger. The airline had no means to assess the veracity of his statement in a timely manner. He was not morally right to resistance law enforcement. There were other means for him to object, if he believed his rights were violated.
Re: airlines. I am NOT defending United Airlines. They were wrong to deal with the over-booking onboard the aircraft; should have been dealt with in the lobby. I have faced onboard removal more than a few times; I never liked that threat. “runaway greed” – I think that is a bit steep. In this instance, they were sacrificing revenue in pocket for the larger picture; they had to move a flight crew quickly to avoid losing a plane-load of paying passengers. Running an airline is NOT as easy juggling act. They are driven by load-factor.
Re: Turkey. We shall have to keep a close eye on the political evolution in that important country.
Re: Trump supporters. Indeed! Passions have been stirred.
Cheers,
Cap
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