Update from the Sunland
No.840
29.1.18 – 4.2.18
Blog version: http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/
To
all,
Another
astronomical rare occurrence came to us this week on Wednesday morning—a lunar
eclipse and rare combination of super moon, blue moon and blood moon. I tried mightily to capture the event;
however, my cameras could not handle the thin, high cirrus clouds and low light
conditions. Lunar eclipses last
longer than solar eclipses. From
our location, this lunar eclipse began at 04:30 [T] MST. Totality began at 05:31 and lasted past
the beginning of morning nautical twilight and local horizon moonset at 07:03,
and well before local horizon sunrise at 07:39.
The follow-up news items:
-- The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
(HPSCI) on Monday invoked an obscure rule to release a classified
Republican-authored memorandum that alleges surveillance abuses against an
associate of President Trump dating back to the 2016 campaign. As noted in last week’s Update [839], the Russian election meddling
investigation [782, 804] continues unabated despite the
persistent efforts of the fellow in the Oval Office and supportive Republicans
to discredit, distract, derail, or at least create sufficient confusion to
affect “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The latest distraction: Representative Devin Gerald Nunes of California,
Chairman, HPSCI, sought the release of a specific committee internal
memorandum:
Date: January 18, 2018
To: HPSCI Majority Members
From: HPSCI Majority Staff
Subject: Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Abuses at the
Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation
The memorandum in question was classified: TOP
SECRET/NOFORN, which is not particularly exclusive in the realm of contemporary
classified material; however, only the President has the authority to
declassify USG material. On
Friday, under the 2.February.2018 cover letter of Counsel to the President Donald
F. McGahn II, the subject memorandum was declassified by order of the President. At the outset, the memorandum states:
“Our findings, which are detailed below,
1) raise concerns with the legitimacy and legality of certain DOJ and FBI interactions with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), and
2) represent a troubling breakdown of legal processes established to protect the American people from abuses related to the FISA process.”
1) raise concerns with the legitimacy and legality of certain DOJ and FBI interactions with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), and
2) represent a troubling breakdown of legal processes established to protect the American people from abuses related to the FISA process.”
Prima
facie, the memorandum has no direct applicability to the special prosecutor’s
investigation other than as a distraction. I also read nothing that would warrant classification, set
aside the original mid-level classification. Also, I could not find any direct implications regarding
intelligence means & methods that raised the ire of the FBI, DoJ and
others. The entire memorandum
impugns the basis of the multiple FBI requests before the FISC for electronic
surveillance of Carter Page, as a suspected foreign agent; and yet, there is no
indication whatsoever that anyone actually scrutinized the official submittal
rationale to the FISC.
As
I stand back from this whole kerfuffle, I am the most disturbed (by an order of
magnitude) by the overt efforts to restrict and control the access of We, the
People, to relevant information.
Such conduct would be condemned in a court of law and must be equally
condemned in the court of public opinion that they have all sought to sway with
limited, biased, selective information.
The suppression of the Opposition is simply anti-democratic at its
root. We need at least a
quasi-independent, trustworthy source to actually read the entire FISA
application to properly assess the Nunes’ memorandum.
Of
course, the fellow in the Oval Office simply could not resist the urge to
tweet. At 09:40 [R] EST, 3 Feb
2018, Donald J. Trump tweeted:
“This memo totally vindicates ‘Trump’ in probe. But the Russian Witch Hunt goes on and
on. There is no Collusion and
there was no Obstruction (the word now used because, after one of looking
endlessly and finding NOTHING, collusion is dead). This is an American disgrace!” (sic) [emphasis his]
He is his own worst enemy. Why on God’s little green earth does he insist and persist
in making himself appear so bloody guilty?
As
I imagine most of us did on Tuesday evening, I listened intently to the
President’s constitutionally mandated State of the Union speech. He stayed on script, reading from the
teleprompter and certainly performed well as the nation’s cheerleader-in-chief. The President tried to avoid the
current hot button issues still active before us. At the end of the day, the SOTU speech was not high on the
list of exceptional public rhetoric; however, it was a good speech well
delivered. Yet, it is a few
negatives that attracted my attention.
I
continued to be befuddled by his use of the term “clean coal,” as if somehow
the various versions of coal can be magically scrubbed clean. There is no such thing as “clean coal,”
or even the application of scrubbing the byproducts of burning coal into some
innocuous outflow.
He
speaks of eliminating regulation, as if it is some badge of honor. It is not! The reason regulations exist is not to protect corporations;
it is to protect We, the People, from the bad conduct of some
corporations. Certainly, some of
the regulations constrain corporations and thus restrict the profit they can
generate at the expense of We, the People. While there are likewise bad or inappropriate regulations
that need to be negated, the current fellow in the Oval Office is going too
far.
Lastly,
I cannot avoid the observation that his speaking mannerisms continue to remind
me of the dictator Benito Mussolini, almost like he has used the Italian
dictator as his role model for public conduct and speaking. It is eerie to say the least.
In
an interesting juxtaposition, ABC broadcast an advertisement for the movie “The Post” immediately after the
President’s State of the Union speech—a cinematic rendition of another troubled
time in presidential politics.
This particular clip opened with the Washington Post leaders listening to
Walter Cronkite’s news report of the New York Times imbroglio with respect to
the Pentagon Papers publication.
Representative
Joseph Patrick Kennedy III of Massachusetts delivered the Opposition rebuttal
in good form and content. The tone
was positive, and he tried to avoid partisan political intransigence. I was not a particular fan of his
chosen venue for delivery, but that is not my call.
The
Wall Street Journal reported that
they have obtained and reviewed thousands of text messages between discredited
FBI agent Peter P. Strzok II and FBI attorney Lisa Page. According to the WSJ, the trove of
communications lays bare the lives of Strzok and Page, who were accused of bias
against the fellow in the Oval Office and others. Communications critical of President Trump represent a
fraction of the roughly 7,000 messages between the two FBI employees—communications
that also show dedication, ambition and no hesitation to criticize colleagues.
I
have not read any of the subject communications, but I trust the WSJ accurately
represented what they reviewed. I
do not share the opinion of the fellow in the Oval Office regarding the broader
application of this kerfuffle to the far deeper implications of the Russian
meddling investigations. What this
disclosure brightly illuminates is a lesson for everyone who works for an
organization, whether governmental, corporate or other. You cannot and should not hold any
expectation of privacy if you use work systems for personal communications. Strzok and Page made a terrible mistake
in believing their communications could or would remain private. Further, such clear bias by a
governmental employee is wrong in a number of ways and must be condemned. However, the Strzok-Page mistake does
NOT taint the entire FBI or render void their investigations. Full stop!
The
fellow in the Oval Office has repeatedly and consistently touted his individual
contribution to the surprising rise in stock market valuation. So, will he also take singular credit
for the falling of the market? Or,
will he blame the fall of the stock market on President Obama?
Comments and contributions from Update no.839:
Comment to the Blog:
“The Democrats already gave up the DACA issue and should
accept their pending election losses on that issue. From here on, they work from a position of weakness on that
issue.
“Some chance remains of Trump testifying under oath before
the Mueller investigation. As I
considered your paragraph on that, I got an idea. If we were considering a random person, I know a name for
that trait of saying or doing whatever comes to mind without restraint. In the learning disorder/developmental
delay field, it's called lacking ‘executive function.’ (That's ironic in a ‘Chief Executive.’) Lacking executive function is a common
feature of ADD/ADHD and several other conditions. I'm aware of this because of my own learning ‘disorder,’ and
I'm living proof that the ability to put words together need not mean a person
has clear ‘normal’ functioning. Perhaps Trump will become the ultimate example of lacking
executive function. He's surely
well on his way.
“Incidentally, people with some severe learning disorders
(including me) can do tasks such as giving speeches or many other functions in
certain settings. Trump can no
doubt give a good speech, written by someone else, with training and rehearsal,
and in a distraction-free environment. In an unplanned task, he loses his
self-control. That doesn't mean
the speech indicates his future actions.
“I would go along with Trump's deal on immigration. We need to keep the DACA people here. It's in the qualifications that they
have no criminal records and that they work or attend college. They will make better-than-average
citizens because of those qualifications. Immigration standards will change once campaign ‘donors’
realize how badly they need immigrants, who will not stay without their
families. Undocumented immigrants
will keep coming as long as certain industries need them. The means by which they arrive is a
minor facet of this. That only
leaves the outlandish cost of the wall or barriers or whatever. We can take that back after Trump
resigns. In any case, immigration,
in general, has been blown up as a distraction from bigger issues, such as
infrastructure, education, and economic inequality.
“Your interaction with your other contributor from last week
makes a fine example of the battle of wits with an unarmed opponent. I have learned through long experience
that fact and logic only appeal to those who choose to listen to them. Your other contributor was wrong in
every one of his facts. The 800,000 number is DACA recipients, not all ‘illegals,’
family visas are not available to the undocumented, and on and on. He will not accept correct facts,
either, regardless of source or soundness. He and millions of others are aggressively ignorant,
accepting only sources of information and ideas that support their hateful/fearful
outlook. It's best to just see him
as a troll.”
My response to the
Blog:
I
am not so sure the Opposition has relinquished their position of advocacy for
the DACA qualified folks—8.Feb is rapidly approaching.
Interesting
observation with credence. You
call it “lacking executive function.”
I call it juvenile immaturity.
Whether the fellow in the Oval Office is clinically diagnosable is
problematic. As you note, he
continues to exhibit more than a few associated symptoms.
The
sad but true reality regarding the public speaking of the fellow in the Oval
Office is he has established a very low threshold. His WEF Davos speech was good compared to his yammerings in
unscripted situations and even more so when compared to his Twitter rants. Even his best speech is orders of
magnitude from the skill, eloquence and craftsmanship of Sir Winston Churchill,
Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and even Barack Obama. You are quite correct; his words have
no substance or value. He has
persistently made statements, and then virtually the next day said or done
exactly the opposite. His
positions vary sometimes by the minute, circumstance or audience; there is no
solid ground.
I
am with you. I am dismayed that
the DACA solution has become so bloody political; logically, it should be a
no-brainer. Likewise, if spending
a dreadfully wasteful amount of precious treasury on a foolish, inefficient
border wall is what it takes to achieve a DACA (and here I will add the larger
DREAMers) solution, then so be it.
Republicans are just as accomplished at borrowing money and increasing
the national debt for their pet projects and largesse as the Democrats
are. The Trump wall will do little
harm, other than waste taxpayer funds and tarnish our public image, so let’s
get on with it. We can tolerate
his relentless boasting about winning.
I
try to listen to all voices (within reason). The contributor took the time to express an opinion; that is
what is valuable to me. Most folks
will not take the time to contribute to the public debate on contemporary
issues.
. . . Round two:
“We are largely in agreement this week, but I want to clarify the difference
between juvenile immaturity and the lack of executive function in the ‘correct’
sense. Either one causes pain and
suffering in many forms for a person, more and more as they grow to
adulthood. If the issue is
immaturity, the trouble causes the person to pause for at least a second and
consider the best path to the result they seek. Even psychopaths and other mentally ill people grow out of
that immaturity. People lacking
executive function only stop those ‘instant’ reactions with professional help,
if ever. Not doing so causes
unhappy consequences. I'd be
willing to bet that Trump's history of bankruptcies and other stressors results
from a history of unfiltered reactions that he then has to live up to or escape
the consequences. The Electoral
College and enough voters to swing the election have chosen to make the U.S.
subject to this obvious trait. I
don't understand why.”
. . . my response to round two:
Based
on the principal difference being the capacity to learn and adjust behavior, I
will agree with your assessment.
I
have tried to understand the attraction of so many citizens to the fellow who
now occupies the Oval Office. My
current conclusion (as it may change with additional information) is they were
so desperate for change of any kind outside the status quo that they found the
means to ignore or discount his extraordinary collection of personality
flaws. Or, perhaps, they were
blinded by the brilliance of his celebrity. Or, maybe, they voted for anyone with Republican after their
name regardless of any other factor.
Or, a combination of all of the above. I am still seeking to understand why we are in the pickle we
find ourselves.
. . . Round three:
“I agree with the ‘desperate for [a] change of any kind outside
the status quo’ analysis. That was
the clear difference between Trump and Hillary Clinton. She was never the least bit outside of
the status quo. That is also why
the Democratic Party should have learned from their internal defeat of Bernie
Sanders. He would have made far better changes than Trump ever will and had a
much better chance than Clinton of winning in the 2016 political climate, but
the Clinton/centrist DNC prevented that.”
. . . my response to round three:
We
could argue Bernie’s better changes, but that is all a matter of
perspective. My opinions regarding
Hillary are unchanged; however, her status quo would have been preferable to
the chaos we endure today. I’m
just sayin’. We can draw some
comfort from the reality that . . . this too shall pass.
Another contribution:
“Cap the massive audit of funds given to immigrants will not be
dependent on cooperation of the undocumented .. It will be accomplished by the
data retrieved from the social programs' records of funds allocated to non
citizens .. Assuming they have records to provide .. Just like FISA texts they
most likely will be suddenly unavailable ...misplaced, lost, whatever the Dems
can do to hide truth.”
My reply:
I
do believe you seriously underestimate the complexity of performing and
validating such a comprehensive audit of federal, state and local records.
Interesting,
last time I checked, the Republicans are in control of the entire federal
Executive Branch and both chambers of the Legislative Branch. How on earth do you think the Democrats
can hide anything?
. . . Round two:
“How can they hide things? Put it under the jurisdiction of the
FBI who is notorious for ‘losing texts/emails’ etc .. The speech was spot on
last night .. Not about Trump ..about America .. ‘Our children dream too’ ..
Big statement and truth .. Let immigrants become citizens and pay income taxes
like the rest of the country before they get financial assistance!”
. . . my reply to round two:
So,
now, you are claiming that the FBI is a puppet agency of the Democratic
Party. Is that correct?
“Let
immigrants become citizens and pay income taxes like the rest of the country
before they get financial assistance!” I say, amen! I
am compelled to add the proviso that the process of naturalization must be
reasonable, consistent and equitable, rather than discriminatorily preferential.
. . . Round three:
“There are remaining FBI members from the previous
administration(s) who are obviously suspicious .. being a CNN viewer almost
solely .. or NBC .. I would bet you haven't heard about a memo the people want
to view but the Democrats are rebelling against it becoming public? They
are so busy distracting with Russian collusion nonsense that the MSM is
purposely not talking about it. It's all a cover-up.
“I would like to hear your version of a reasonable, consistent and
equitable process of the naturalization process .. are you aware that Mexico
only allows citizenship if the persons can offer something valuable to the
country, I.e. doctor's, etc .. they are very strict. Why can not we cap
our immigration to those who earn a living and pay taxes?”
. . . my reply to round three:
I
have not yet see the infamous Republican memorandum or read it, but I most
certainly will do so when publicly available (since reviewed as noted above). I am waiting to see how it is
released. Regardless, I find it
extraordinarily disturbing that the Chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee has cast off any vestige of impartiality in the important Russia
meddling investigation.
I
do not know how you would know what news sources I tap. All I will say is, they are widely
varied from extreme right to extreme left and many in between.
BTW,
the Democrats are against release of the memo, as is the FBI and other
intelligence agencies, because it is incomplete, including the cherry-picking
of intelligence and the partial presentation with a clear attempt to bias the
narrative; what they are primarily against is the direct effort to silence the
Opposition. They insisted that if
the Republicans insisted on releasing their version that they jointly release
the Democrats’ version with it.
The Republican rejection of the joint release is what I find the most
disturbing; they are seeking to only have We, the People, hear their
perspective without the Opposition.
When the Opposition companion memo is released, as it will inevitably
be, the Republicans will take on a very narrow, parochial hue.
Q:
how on God’s little green earth can you say the “Russian collusion nonsense”? I am still waiting to see the
evidence—either way. Where is the
evidence . . . well, other than the incessant denial whining of the fellow in
the Oval Office. If, at the end of
the day, evidence is not presented, then I will be the first to say the
investigation was much ado about nothing.
Until then, the investigation must play out . . . despite the direct,
consistent obstruction by the fellow in the Oval Office that makes him appear
so bloody guilty. Me thinkst thou
doth protest too much.
First,
there is a huge difference between the naturalization process and the green
card (authorized resident) process, as well as simple visitor visas et al. The process to become a full-fledged
citizen is long, precise and detailed.
“Why cannot we cap our immigration to those who earn a living and
pay taxes?” Amen
sister! You may not recall that I
was responsible for the immigration of 100+ British engineering personnel
during the mid-1990s, roughly a quarter sought and obtained full
citizenship. It is my
understanding of the naturalization process (for full citizenship) requires
judgments regarding productivity, contribution and paying taxes.
. . . Round four:
“All I can say is there is only ONE truth ... May it be reported
correctly and may they finish all investigations quickly so Trump is able to do
his job without so much drama ... from what I see, the whining and lies are
coming from the far left ... Pelosi and Schumer are the worst of them ...”
. . . my reply to round four:
Have
you ever wondered whether you could be wrong in your unswerving loyalty to the
fellow in the Oval Office?
Yes,
the truth is the truth. Yet, as is
so often the case, we have seriously incomplete information and facts, and
despite that paucity of facts, we are compelled by instant communications (and
political parochialism) to make judgments and take positions that often calcify
before sufficient facts are known.
In a transparent, open debate, why on God’s little green earth would
anyone want to limit the access to broad analysis of facts? Opposition in a viable democracy is
absolutely vital and essential.
Why would Republicans seek to suppress the Opposition? Regrettably, one day the shoe will be
on the other foot. The actions of
Representative Nunes and his Republican supporters are about as undemocratic as
it gets (at least I hope). And
now, the fellow in the Oval Office has joined them, if not coerced them, into
this very undemocratic action.
Proper public debate and intercourse depends upon disagreement,
argument, presenting various analyses of facts and such. Suppressing the Opposition is wrong,
wrong, wrong . . . no matter who does it.
Suppression of opposition is a common trait of dictators and must be
condemned whenever it occurs. It
is NOT the President’s or Representative
Nunes’s place to decide what we should see, hear, read or consider. (emphasis
mine)
My
very best wishes to all. Take care
of yourselves and each other.
Cheers,
Cap :-)
2 comments:
We agree on the formerly secret memo, its Democratic answer, and the implications of events around them.
Having become averse to staged media events, I didn't watch the State of the Union speech, the Democratic response, or the Super Bowl. I will note that Joseph Kennedy III has taken over $50,000 from the pharmaceutical industry, which rules out any support from me. What was the objectionable venue for his speech?
“Clean coal” is a marketing term for coal pollution mitigation. Due to that “clean coal” term, I imagine many Americans, including the Trump family, have an image of chunk coal on a conveyor belt being sprayed with some chemical to “clean” it, or of a different kind of coal being mined. Those pictures do not approach reality, but marketers of coal would like you to have them. The best actual information I found in a casual search is the Wikipedia article linked here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_pollution_mitigation.
The Russia investigation continues. Harold Watson “Trey” Gowdy III (that is, Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-SC), best known for his dogged and fruitless pursuit of evidence against Hillary Clinton in the Benghazi mess, had an important role in drafting the Republican memo currently in question. He stated on Face the Nation this week that the memo has nothing to do with the meeting in focus at the Trump Tower and nothing to do with obstruction of justice. Trey Gowdy is a lawyer as well as a Tea Party member and is deeply involved in the investigation. No source could be stronger than that.
Nothing to date has vindicated Trump. The odds against that grow ever longer.
Calvin,
Re: SOTU. It may seem so; however, it is a constitutionally mandated event . . . although not required to be verbally delivered, presidents have addressed a joint session of Congress since President Wilson (1913). For that reason alone, I believe listening (or reading) the president’s report is like our obligation to vote. But hey, that’s just me.
Thank you for the explanation. I know what the term refers to technically. However, it was the context and usage by the fellow in the Oval Office that has continued to be an irritant to me.
Quite so! ‘Trey’ Gowdy is reported to be the only Republican to actually read the submitted FISC requests for surveillance of Carter Page. I have no reason to doubt Gowdy’s representation in direct contrast to the yammerings of the fellow in the Oval Office. Since last week’s Update [840], the HPSCI reportedly voted unanimously to release the Opposition companion memorandum. What remains disturbing is why the Republicans refused to do so originally. I look forward to reading the Opposition’s perspective. Now, we wait to see what the fellow in the Oval Office will do with the HPSCI request.
Again, quite so! Nothing has been publicly presented to date, to vindicate the fellow in the Oval Office. In fact, as I stated, with each attempt at self-proclamation, he appears guiltier. Given his penchant as a snake-oil salesman, perhaps that appearance is by design and intention . . . although I am reticent to give him that credit. We shall see.
“That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”
Cheers,
Cap
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