Update from the Sunland
No.830
20.11.17 – 26.11.17
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To
all,
The follow-up news items:
-- In this plethora of bad conduct accusations [824] filling the capacity of the Press
and our consciousness, apparently, an abuser/perpetrator must simply deny,
deny, deny, and deny again. “He
totally denies it,” proclaimed our Commander-in-Chief. Unfortunately, in the specific case of
Roy Moore, the statute of limitations has expired in all instances (to my
knowledge); thus, he cannot be tried before a jury of peers in a court of
law. As a consequence, this boils
down to a character issue. Those
who support his prior conduct will not be swayed. Yet, I will state for the public record, the outrageous
hypocrisy represented by Roy Moore is indescribable. He was the Alabama State Supreme Court judge who defied the
U.S. Supreme Court regarding the state display of the Ten Commandments—a
Judeo-Christian entity. Also, for
the record, of his female accusers I have heard speak directly versus his
awkward, lame denials, I believe the women—they have little to nothing to gain. He does not deserve any public office,
set aside the United States Senate; however, that decision rests with the
voters of Alabama, and if elected, ultimately with the Senate.
-- The Wall Street
Journal reported that Facebook intends to notify millions of users who
liked or followed any of the 290 Facebook or Instagram pages created by Russian
actors that they viewed alleged misinformation [782] in the lead up to the U.S. presidential election last
year. The notification provides
little information to users who did not visit or follow the affected pages.
On
Friday, a horrific mass murder event occurred during evening prayers at the Al
Rawda mosque in the village of Be'r Al Sabea, west of the city of al-Arish on
the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt. The
attack involved multiple perpetrators (35 at last report), at least one
explosive device, and automatic weapons fire. As of the closure of this week’s edition of the Update, at
least 235 people were killed and 109 injured, and no group has yet claimed
responsibility. The Egyptian
branch of the Islamic State has regularly staged attacks in Sinai, and is
active in al-Arish area. The
mosque is reported linked Sufist faction of Sunni Islam, but still Sunni in
affiliation. The attack appears to be a fratricide terrorist event within the
Sunni sect of Islam and perhaps an attempt to find ISIL a new home with Iraq
and Syria disappearing.
A friend and frequent contributor to this humble forum sent
along the following link and article for our considerations.
“What Explains U.S. Mass Shootings? International Comparisons Suggest an
Answer”
by Max Fisher and Josh Keller
New
York Times
Published: NOV. 7, 2017
To which I responded:
I
cannot argue with the data. The first
chart is compelling. However, the
suggested conclusion seems rather simplistic to me.
When
you examine the mass murder events in our history, the availability of firearms
is clearly an indicator—no debate.
However, the involvement of mental health problems with the perpetrators
is also a common, if not universal, factor in every single event. To suggest the availability of firearms
is the sole causal factor is simply wrong. Further, the number of firearms versus the number of mass
shooters is likewise simplistic; the following per capita chart is closer to being
representative, and yet, it ignores various control factors like firearm
control measures in place, such as they are.
The
authors stated, “If mental
health made the difference, then data would show that Americans have more
mental health problems than do people in other countries with fewer mass
shootings.” They add “trust
me” statements that suggest no correlation with mental health factors, and yet,
they ignore the one central, common fact—the mental health problems of the
perpetrators. If there was no
mental health correlation, the mental health of the perpetrators should be representative
of the mental health fraction in the general population; it clearly is not. I ask them, why is mental health
problems as common as the choice of weapons in these events?
I
fundamentally reject their conclusion.
Comments and contributions from Update no.829:
Comment to the Blog:
“Congratulations on your move to the Valley of the Sun! You have arrived at the best time of
year because you have months of pleasant weather ahead.
“While none of the Trumps has been convicted so far, maybe
they act guilty because they are guilty.
“Sexual assault and harassment occur at every level of
society right down to prisons. I
agree that they are abuses of power. I have talked to several women who have been through these
experiences and have gone through one incident myself. I believe the obvious about reporting:
the position of power has protected the perpetrators. Those I know who have reported incidents
and sought redress have been ignored at best and have sometimes faced
retribution. Until large numbers
of people report the same kind of behavior, it continues. I believe the current wave of reports
may bring about an important change in this country, although the shape of that
change is not clear yet.
“I do not favor cutting income taxes in general, least of
all for the wealthy. That process
has been under way since the Reagan Administration without any particular good
results. We need to invest in our
country, not allow the wealthiest few to continue looting it.
“That John Oliver clip is remarkable. Oliver's exposition of Trump's methods
would be a credit to my instructors in critical thinking and logic. Of course, the instructors weren't
nearly that funny, but that clip teaches good lessons in logic and reason.
“The discussion of mental illness as the cause of mass
shootings is accurate internally, but lacks insight. The strongest correlation to mass shootings, and firearm
homicide in general, is domestic violence. That is not officially mental illness. Some actions have been taken to prevent
people with histories of violence from acquiring firearms at legitimate
dealers, but loopholes remain for weapons bought at gun shows or over the Internet.
Also, the factor that affected the
recent Northern California case was not those exceptions, but indifferent
reporting. The loopholes and
reporting issues could be changed far easier than the whole issue of mental
illness detection and treatment could be addressed.”
My response to the
Blog:
Yes,
indeedie; glorious weather—high 70’s during the day, low 60’s at night,
beautiful blue, cloudless skies.
We had planned to winter here like last winter. Wintering became moving in August.
Re:
guilty. I am inclined to
agree. There is way too much smoke
for there not to be fire, IMHO.
Re:
sexual harassment. I do believe
the floodgates have opened, and I hope and expect that we bear witness to a
pivotal change in our society that will lead to respecting other human beings,
especially females. The days of
the Doctrine of Coverture are long gone.
It is well past time to treat women with respect, dignity and
equality. The large numbers of
victims are coming forward, feeling safer in the collective. Yet, as I have written previously, I
worry about false accusations in this climate of retribution. I also strongly object to the condemnations
of public opinion; however, I fear that is the price we must pay for our past acquiescence.
Re:
taxes. Again, I agree. I do not want anyone to pay more taxes
than is necessary to fund our various governmental organizations. Today, we also have a huge debt that
must be paid down as well. I am
not interested in creating a pool of money for Congress to spend as they wish;
they have proven themselves irresponsible. Spending should be debated in public and agreed; then, taxes
should be imposed to pay for that approved spending.
Re:
Oliver clip. I agree. I thought it was extraordinary as well,
on many levels—exceptional message, artfully delivered.
Re:
mass shootings. I cannot argue
with your assessment. I will only
add: these all still boil down to all of us being observant of those around us
and helping law enforcement identify dangerous individuals. We must care enough for our communities
to illuminate those who show signs of aberrant behavior that might lead to
violence against others.
Another contribution:
“Re Trumps ‘junket’ / ‘soiree’... good to see you've adapted to AZ
already ... you're not in LIBERAL, Kansas anymore!! :)) And Trump IS VERY
important!! Let's see YOU do his
job! (No, nix that)
“John Oliver and Steven Colbert are two of the greatest asses on
TV today ...and the most extreme liberal fools around .. if you listen to their
tripe long enough you might get sick from their koolaid ..tell me something
factual either of them have blurted beside just hate speak .. and his
vocabulary/use of profanity is proof of lack of substance in his material ...
hahaha ... let's see which loony liberal can diss the president the best ... such
disrespect .. and sad you too accept the CNN etc media lies .. they are so
obvious .. you would make a great buddy with George Soros himself ...”
My reply:
Kansas
. . . liberal, hardly; more religiously conservative than Arizona, I do believe. Also, last time I checked, not every
resident of Arizona voted for the fellow in the White House.
Nope,
I couldn’t be POTUS, even if I wanted to be; I’ve got more skeletons in my
closet than the great orange one; the majority (if not all) of Americans would
never accept a person like me.
Did
you listen to the whole John Oliver video clip? Oliver literally quotes Trump’s words
verbatim. Are you claiming they
are not his words? Facts are
facts. You and your savior can
spin the facts as you choose, but your spin does not alter the facts. I appreciate your consternation with
criticism of your bright shining light; yet, like Sir Winston so succinctly and
eloquently said,
“Criticism
may not be agreeable, but it is necessary. It fulfils the same function as pain
in the human body. It calls attention to an unhealthy state of things.”
Wise words, it seems to me.
One more contribution:
“Thank you kindly for answering some of my prompts, in this
Update. Sorry for being late in
the game--reply wise.
“On the sexual harassment if not battery/assault
allegations, I agree with you and can only imagine the law firms must be doing
Black Friday value business. I
don't know where all this is heading, but would not be surprised to have total
surveillance (CAMS) in most workplaces.
I appreciate on your observations on the sense of entitlement when
raising children.
“Thanks for your good analysis on the situation in Saudi
Arabia. Yes, As the World Turns...
My response:
You
are most welcome, and thank you as well for raising topics—always
appreciated. I’m usually good for
an opinion, for whatever that’s worth, on most topics (not all), but most, so
raise topics as you wish.
Yeah,
hard to say how the sexual harassment situation will play out, but it is surely
my hope and expectation that it will lead to a more enlighten state and true
equality for all citizens within this Grand Republic regardless of the social
factors—age, gender, race, ethnicity, religion, political affiliation, sexual
orientation, or disability.
Indeed
. . . as the World turns . . .
My
very best wishes to all. Take care
of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
Here's a WHO study of mental health issues in various nations: https://scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0042-96862000000400003&lng=&nrm=iso. The most notable point, to me, in the abstract is that the US is on a level similar to the Netherlands in prevalence of mental health issues. Homicide rates (given here https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/VC.IHR.PSRC.P5 from Worldbank) are far lower in the Netherlands. You may dismiss any or all studies, and that would make you ordinary. I prefer to rely on the best sources of evidence that I can find.
Calvin,
Thank you for your continuing Herculean efforts to educate me.
Please, I am NOT dismissing any or all studies. I am only trying to place studies like these in perspective and the broader context. I prefer and choose to rely on the best sources available for facts to inform me on any particular topic.
That said, I must return to the observation of the disproportionately high contributing factors of mental illness among the perpetrators of mass murder events. Why is that? Do firearms contribute to the mental illness of these perpetrators? If so, how?
Just a few thoughts . . .
Cheers,
Cap
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