Update from the
Heartland
No.826
23.10.17 – 29.10.17
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To
all,
I first saw and listened to a CNN public service
announcement Monday morning, 23.October.2017, after Update no.825 went on the
wire. The image was a white screen
with a nice, single, red apple; the narrator’s spoken words were:
“This is an apple.
Some people might try to tell you that it’s a banana. They might scream banana, banana,
banana, over and over and over again.
They might put BANANA in all CAPS.
You might even start to believe that this is a banana. But, it is not. This . . . is an apple.”
The image of the red apple was then
replaced with two words: Facts First.
(emphasis added by Cap)
This is a simple, succinct, exceptionally effective
statement that facts are facts, and a huckster, snake-oil salesman cannot alter
the facts no matter how hard he tries to convince us otherwise. Yet, in today’s political environment,
many citizens do not care that he calls an apple a banana, or they have truly
consumed the message and believe the apple is a banana; therein lies the
essence of our societal conflict that we must endure at present. When I see him waving his accusatory
finger at us and saying: fake news, all of it is fake news, I hear him
screaming, “Banana, banana, banana.”
The truth is, HE is
fake news, not the Press. Sadly,
as a commentator noted, the people who need to know the apple is not a banana
are not watching CNN—preaching to the choir.
The follow-up news items:
-- The Catalonia regional parliament voted 70 to 10 to
declare independence from Spain [822,
824], escalating a standoff with the
central government. In response, the
Spanish Senate voted 214 to 47 to invoke the Constitution’s Article 155,
authorizing emergency powers for the government to dismiss the provisional
government, dissolve the Catalonian regional parliament and take direct control
of the separatist region. The
actions move Catalonia and Spain closer to civil war; the kindling is
smoldering and it would not take much of a puff to burst the situation into
full flame.
-- The Wall Street
Journal reported on Saturday, Special Counsel Robert Mueller has filed criminal
charges against at least one, as yet unnamed, person in the investigation into
alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election [804, 807]. The person(s)
could be taken into custody as soon as Monday. The number and identity of the defendants, and the charges, should
be revealed at that time. I, for
one, eagerly await more information about what happened. We shall see.
When
a man has to tell someone he is the best at anything, he is NOT! I thought I would just share that little axiom of life. Oh dear, where do we see that sort of
behavior?
I am going to take a risk here to offer just a little word
of caution with respect to this sexual harassment debate currently boiling
around us.
First,
I have been a vocal advocate for equality in the workplace and in life
regardless of gender . . . and for all of the social factors, all of my
professional life.
Second,
I have little doubt the likes of Bill Cosby, Roger Ailes, Bill O’Reilly, et al
have conducted themselves in both the workplace and social environments in an
inappropriate manner with respect to women. The best we can hope for is such conduct is charged and
tried in a court of law, with appropriate punishment, if convicted.
That
said, I think it may be fitting to share my related negative experience, to
serve as a caution noted above problem.
In the mid-1990s, I served as Vice President, Engineering, for Raytheon
Corporate Jets—a newly acquired business jet design and manufacturing
company. The parent corporation
made the decision to move the company from Hatfield and Hawarden, United
Kingdom, to Wichita, Kansas, and combine the company with Raytheon Aircraft
Company. Once that decision was
made, I picked up several additional responsibilities, one of which was coaxing
as many engineers as possible to relocate from England to Kansas. Long story short, my efforts to fulfill
that responsibility were not entirely appreciated by the then Vice President,
Human Resources, who hinted to my boss that I should back off my advocacy,
since there were rumors that I had allegedly sexually harassed a female manager
in the Human Resources Department several years earlier and he did not want any
damaging investigation to be raised.
I was shocked and disgusted that he would stoop to such nefarious
behavior. My inclination was to
confront and fight such scurrilous innuendo. I was advised not to do so. In the end, the maneuver worked. False accusations have, do and will occur, and once those
accusations are made in the public domain, the societal ostracism is
irreversible and often devastating, quite like being accused of any other
malfeasance like rape, domestic abuse or pedophilic conduct. As I said above, I offer this
disgusting tale as a word of caution in this hyper-charged environment; there
are bad people out there on both sides of this issue, especially in the wake of
the Harvey Weinstein revelations [824].
The best we can hope for is, the
charges are brought to a court of law with rules of evidence and the judgment
of a jury; yet, even the judicial process is not foolproof.
I must tip my hat to President Trump for pushing the USG to
release the remaining documents associated with the assassination of President
Kennedy. For the CIA & FBI to
cry foul at the last minute, 25 years after the passage of the President John F.
Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 [PL 102-526;
106 Stat. 3443; 26.10.1992] is simply unacceptable, inappropriate and otherwise
a really bad idea. President Trump’s
public statement on the baulking was quite apropos. He reluctantly gave the CIA & FBI 180 more days to
comply with the law or present proper justification and rationale for further
redaction or withholding classified material for an event that happened 54
years ago. Heck, even the British
breaking the German Enigma codes was finally declassified and made public 30
years after the war ended. I hope
and trust President Trump will insist upon full declassification and
disclosure. I cannot imagine what
the CIA & FBI might be concerned about other than embarrassment, which is a
woefully unacceptable reason for continued classified protection.
I
would also take this moment to encourage President Trump to declassify and
publicly disclose all the USG’s information regarding the TWA 800 incident—21 year
ago. I surely do not want to wait
50 years for that process to be completed.
Comments and contributions from Update no.825:
“Found your update waiting for me- a good read my friend. Trump certainly gives you all plenty of
material to work with so no complaints there. Certainly he is an extraordinary choice for your homeland.”
My reply:
Yes,
the current occupant of the Oval Office offers a bountiful cornucopia of offensive
statements in one form or another.
He remains consistent—crass and disgusting. “Extraordinary” would not be my choice of adjectives,
although it is certainly correct and appropriate. Unfortunate is the word I would use. There is comfort in the fact that . . .
this too shall pass.
Comment to the Blog:
“The abuse of women is ultimately abuse of power and
position. That will never stop
without leadership and strength from the abused. Abusers don't see an issue with their behavior without people
in their faces and consequences for their actions. Society as a whole needs men, especially survivors of similar
abuse, to join in support of women.
“I'm already hearing rumbles about the ‘War on Terrorism’
moving on to Africa. I assume that
will begin in Niger. I had not
been aware we had troops there until the recent incident, but neighboring
Nigeria has oil and accompanying scandals involving Western oil companies. As in Raqqa, the oilfields will be
secured regardless of other issues.
“The Muslim ban issue is getting old, but then so is
everything T-rump.
“I doubt T-rump has any instinctual understanding of
consoling anyone. He probably took
whatever words he'd heard and used them without understanding what they would
mean to that soldier's widow. The
whole thing blew up into another distraction, drawing attention away from the
disaster in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. We don't even know the death toll there, but it's much higher
than T-rump thought in his speech when he visited. You and I have discussed ‘neocolonial’ behavior before. Despite being U.S. territories, Puerto
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands are examples of that. Perhaps the term for that situation
should be ‘corporate colonial’ rather than ‘neocolonial.’
“Senator McCain has a strong point about ‘half-baked
spurious nationalism,’ but he does not realize that the U.S. has lost both the
status and the capacity to lead the world. We need to heal our wounds and rebuild our infrastructure at
home before we concern ourselves with policing the rest of the world. I agree that our economic treaties need
revision, but this is not the administration to do that.
“Here in Ohio, that segment on the opioid crisis hits close
to home. I have already seen too
much on local news to watch more about it. The relevant factor about the 60 Minutes segment is the
simple fact that pharmaceutical (and all) corporations exist to make money. Our national failure to regulate the
ways they do that is a direct result of their investing in politicians. Capitalism 101. We will not make progress in containing
corporate damage of any kind unless we change political campaign funding and
make elections more open and secure.”
My response to the
Blog:
Re:
abuse of power. Precisely! . . .
all the way around.
Re:
war of terrorism. I cannot argue
with your observations.
Re:
Muslim ban issue. I believe the
fellow in the Oval Office is betting on just that reaction . . . tired and
don’t care in a sufficient portion of the citizenry.
Re:
“consoling anyone.” The egomaniacal,
huckster, snake-oil salesmen are noted to have a paucity of compassion for
other human beings. Mix in rampant
narcissism with that odiferous admixture, we have a very dangerous personality
affliction.
Re:
neocolonialism. In the case of PR
& USVI, we have a unique situation.
To my understanding, the U.S. territories want to become full-up states
of the union with all the associated rights. Unfortunately, statehood for the territories is caught up in
partisan politics and the associated narcotic of perceived vote counts.
Re:
“US has lost both the status and the capacity.” Perhaps. I am
not to that point, as yet.
Certainly, the fellow in the Oval Office succumbed to the Siren’s song of
Steve Bannon and his “half-baked, spurious nationalism,” and has performed his
intended function as a single-man wrecking crew. Here, I see too much of the dictator’s axiom—out of chaos
comes control and via control domination . . . if I wanted to give him that
much credit for being a student of history.
Re:
capitalism. Again, I have some
difficulty in arguing against your observations. I will only note there is a very fine balance between motive
and balance. Business needs and
thrives on the profit motive. The
common good demands balance to avoid or minimize injury to others. We have more than a few notable
failures in our history. There
will be more.
. . . Round two:
“One minor quibble. Puerto Rican opinion is split between wanting statehood and
wanting independence. What they
don't want is to continue being treated as if it doesn't matter whether they
have electricity, water, or other necessities.”
. . . my response to round two:
Yes,
there is an independence vein in Puerto Rican culture, e.g., Puerto Rican
nationalists attempted to assassinate President Truman [1.11.1950]; they also
shot up the House of Representatives [1.3.1954]. It is my understanding the statehood portion is the majority
and remains so. Nonetheless, yes,
absolutely, they do not want to be treated as second-class citizens. However, I am conflicted at this point;
part of me sees this as a self-inflicted wound. Puerto Rico has been and remains prone to hurricanes, just
as California remains prone to earthquakes. California has evolved its building codes to protect against
the potential damage by earthquakes.
Above ground power & communications lines are highly susceptible to
wind damage. If we are going to
invest in Puerto Rico, let’s prepare the island for future hurricanes. Also, quite a few of the buildings were
clearly not built to endure a strong thunderstorm, set aside a Cat 4
hurricane. The USG has not done
its best job in Puerto Rico. My
impression: partisan politics may be playing into this situation more than we
think.
. . . Round three:
“Partisan politics is right in the middle of the Puerto Rico
tragedy. Compare the aid efforts there to those in Texas and Florida for
similar hurricanes, or to California's wildfires. Puerto Rico's infrastructure
was surely more vulnerable, but how much of that results from it's lesser
standing?”
. . . my response to round three:
Indeed! The relationship between Puerto Rico’s
vulnerable infrastructure and the purported “lesser standing” seems like a
chicken & egg question based on a debatable premise. Regardless, they must harden their
infrastructure to withstand a Cat 5 hurricane.
. . . round four:
“I'm not sure what you find debatable in that comment. Perhaps you don't realize that saying
Puerto Rico ‘must’ strengthen their infrastructure does not make that
financially possible.”
. . . my response to round four:
Well,
here’s a few thoughts. If people
are allowed to live in plywood houses, it should be no surprise they get blown
down in a storm. Puerto Rico is
US$70+B in debt; where did all that money go? It surely did not go to raising the standard of living for
the residents of the island. My
response may well get us back into any federal obligation to a particular
citizen’s standard of living, i.e., where does the individual’s responsibility
end? Needless to say, there is a
lot tied up in Puerto Rico’s condition.
. . . Round five:
“I think a full discussion of neocolonialism (or corporate
colonialism) is beyond the scope of a blog reply. The assumption that Puerto
Rico ‘must’ strengthen its infrastructure ignores the entire context of Puerto
Rico's situation. Even much of the
mainland infrastructure has fallen into disrepair. How can you expect Puerto Rico to do better while the Federal
government ignores their needs? We
don't even have most of the electricity back on this long after the hurricane. Disowning any responsibility for
millions of Americans being destroyed by big banks and nature's conditions
totally abdicates the commitment in the Preamble of the Constitution to ‘establish
Justice, insure domestic Tranquility . . . promote the general Welfare, and
secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity. . .’”
. . . my response to round five:
Perhaps
the full discussion of neocolonialism is beyond the scope of this humble forum;
however, it remains a most worthy topic for continuing intercourse and debate.
You
are of course quite correct regarding the repair of the PR infrastructure. Nonetheless, the debate with respect to
the demarcation between federal and state responsibility and obligation remains
a dicey matter. While big banks
bear some culpability for the enormous debt load carried by PR, as with Greece,
Spain and other financially troubled nation-states, no one forced or coerced
them to sign their names to the fiscal documents; the PR government is
ultimately responsible and should be held accountable.
Nice
touch, relating this topic back to the Preamble . . . and quite appropriate I
must add.
. . . Round six:
“I understand that you want to hold anyone who ever signed a loan
document utterly responsible for it.
You completely discount coercive marketing, outright lying, and abuse of
technical expertise in every example you mentioned, and that doesn't address
the possibilities of buying politicians.”
. . . my response to round six:
I
do not share your discounting assessment.
Further, I do not understand why you think your accusations regarding
banking malfeasance absolve the consumer (individual or nation-state) from responsibility?
. . . Round seven:
“Because at some point marketing and lying are no different. The bankers hold a position of trust in
our society, but at this level most of them betray that trust.”
Another contribution:
“See below!! Comments!
I don't have colored print so I
will space and use caps .. most all liberal fed lies... sorry you are part of
them Cap. :(
“****** YOUR
AND MY PRESIDENT .. THANK GOD LITERALLY!!
“****** HE DIDN'T ... ALL LIES STARTED BY LIBERAL
CONGRESSWOMAN WILSON WHO TRIED TO SAY THE MOTHER OF THE SOLDIER WAS AN OLD
FRIEND WHEN SHE ONLY JUST MET HER AND PROCEEDED TO PULL THE TYPICAL LOONEY LEFT
LYING SHENANIGANS .. ALL CONTINUOUS DISTRACTIONS, SAUL ALINSKY STYLE, TO IN
THEIR HOPES KEEP OUR PRESIDENT FROM DOING HIS JOB .. FORTUNATELY HE IS SEEING
THIS AND LEARNING TO IGNORE THE LIES AND MOVE ON FULL SPEED .. AND HIS MULTI
MILLION SUPPORTERS ARE IGNORING TOO !!
“****** BROUGHT DOWN????? Cap, cap ....
“****** HEAR, HEAR
TO THE ABOVE!! Of course the press does not adequately
explore or ascertain truth because most of the press is owned and controlled by
the left!!!!
“****** BECAUSE OF WHO HE IS?? OBAMA?? SHALL I
SEND YOU THE LIST AGAIN OF ALL HIS ATROCITIES?
“****** I'D RATHER HAVE A PRESIDENT WHO CARES FOR THE PEOPLE
OF OUR COUNTRY BUT MAYBE DOESN'T SPEAK ELOQUENTLY THAN ONE WHO HAS TRAINED IN
SPEAKING AND HATES THE COUNTRY HE PRESIDES OVER ..
“****** THIS IS CHANGING, MR MCCAIN!!!
“****** YOU CAN'T HAVE EVERYONE EXACTLY THE WAY YOU THINK
THEY SHOULD BE CAP!!! I FIND HIM
REFRESHINGLY UNIQUE .. AS DO MULTI MILLION OTHERS!!”
My reply:
Yes,
he was duly and properly elected.
He is my president, as well.
Unfortunately, I do not share your jubilation.
Regarding
the most recent gold star wife, I find it somewhat baffling that you believe
him over her. I find such
unilateral and blind belief and trust in him by you (and many others) to be a
persistent source of amazement. I
respect your absolute right to see and evaluate information as you so choose;
however, you (or anyone else) cannot eliminate facts . . . ignore them, yes . .
. but facts remain facts, to be assessed by the rest of us.
Yes, brought down; he has always been a
man of integrity; now, he is falling victim to the common disinformation
processes his boss utilizes. I am
far more disappointed by his fall.
The
Press reports as they see fit. It
is our sole responsibility to collect, absorb, evaluate, assess and decide on
how we choose to respond to all of the information we can understand. We need sources from as many aspects as
possible. The Press is comprised of
individuala who naturally and understandably have political, social and
intellectual affinities; they are human beings, not mindless automatons.
I
did not respond to your “list” of alleged “atrocities” earlier and I shall not
respond, now. It is simply my
opinion that you’re choosing to see what you wish to see and believing what you
wish to believe . . . regardless of the facts; and, that is your choice
entirely.
“Cares
for the people” . . . OK, that is rich; to me, a sure sign you have swallowed
his snake-oil and truly believe it has cured and perpetually immunized you to
all the ills in your life. To me,
he cares ONLY about himself and feeding his ego—just the nature of who he is.
We
shall respectfully disagree about the current, transient occupant of the Oval
Office as well as Senator John McCain.
I do not want
anyone to be as I think they should be.
Quite the contrary, I cherish and advocate for diversity, disagreement,
debate, and active political intercourse, which are all necessary for a viable
democracy. You surely know by now
that I rail against moral projectionists who feel compelled to dictate to
everyone how we should live our lives.
I’m glad you find him refreshing; simply put, I do not! Unique . . . yes, upon that we agree
absolutely. I have not seen
another human being quite like him.
Also, yes, many citizens agree with you and disagree with me; I am
genuinely grateful for that disagreement.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
My very best wishes to all. Take care of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
The CNN analogy of an apple remaining an apple no matter how many times someone screams that the object is a banana is apt, simple, and memorable. Unfortunately, too many Americans, including your other correspondent, seek to believe a “leader” rather than evaluate the information available to them. From what I understand, a growing majority of us are indeed evaluating the information we see and the sources of that information. However, that still leaves millions of our countrymen blindly following the orange-haired personality flaw. In another context, I would call him a false prophet. Considering the number of self-proclaimed Christians among his followers, I might say that anyhow.
The Catalonia story continues. My ruling emotion about that right now is curiosity about whether the Spanish are sufficiently civilized that they can reach a peaceful resolution of some sort. I hope so.
Events develop today in Special Counsel Mueller's investigation. Paul Manafort and his aide have been charged and have or will plead not guilty according to the last report I saw. Another T-rump adviser, George Papadopoulis, was revealed to have already entered a guilty plea to lying to Federal agents about Russian contacts. Wow. The local news is discussing this as I type. Evening news will follow.
The sexual harassment discussion also continues growing. More CEOs and a prominent actor have been accused. The actor made a statement that seems to indicate he was in an alcoholic blackout and doesn't really know whether he did the specific act his accuser describes. That would be a very honest statement. The larger dialog involves power, abuse (including false accusations), work, sex and sexuality. That's overwhelming, but we need an large, open national process to heal these issues.
I also would like to see final release of all the JFK documents. The notion that some national security concern would prevent that fails my bullshit detector. In the case of TWA Flight 800, I also doubt national security issues matter, but opening that one could potentially result in firings or even possibly legal issues for the guilty.
Calvin,
Well, on the “Facts First” advertisement, I would tend to agree. Blind loyalty can be very dangerous on a variety of levels. The same blind following is true on both sides. I saw the same phenomenon in reverse during every administration as far back as I can remember; it is part of the political intransigence we endure to this day. People know their representative spends money, but as long as he is spending money on them, they keep electing their guy . . . and that is why we have what we have in Congress.
I hope you are correct about the Spain-Catalonia situation. We do not need more blood to be spilled.
Charges from the Mueller investigation . . . the net tightens a little more. This investigation appears to be a long way from over, and I suspect there will be many more charges. Worse, they are serious charges “conspiring against the United States” verges upon treason.
Yeah, I’ve seen the press reports. Unfortunately for Spacey, alcohol is not an acceptable excuse for criminal conduct. Oh my, yes, we need a much larger dialogue with respect to this issue. We have a lot of culture to correct. Behavior associated with the Doctrine of Coverture has been unconstitutional for 35 years. We still have Neanderthals among us who believe in and practice the divine right of kings; we must confront those aberrant individuals wherever and whenever we witness that behavior. We have looked the other way for too many years and look at what we have for it; bad behavior is not self-correcting.
Yeah, the national security rationale for the remaining JFK documents fails the smell test in so many ways. If there are consequences to the aftermath of TWA 800, then so be it . . . as it should, let the chips fall where they may.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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