31 May 2021

Update no.1011

Update from the Sunland

No.1011

24.5.21 – 30.5.21

Blog version:  http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/

 

            To all,

 

On Wednesday, 26.May.2021, another celestial event occurred—an eclipse of a Blood Supermoon.  Unfortunately, I had to contend with a high, cirrus overcast as well as the obscuring lights of Phoenix to our southwest.  Even with the interference, I could still watch the eclipse.  This one was odd from others I have been able to witness.  The eclipse peak for our location occurred at 04:15 [T] MST with morning nautical twilight beginning at 04:16 and moonset at 05:26, thus the moon was low on the western horizon.  Despite all those negatives, it was still great to watch.

 

            The follow-up news items:

-- Another step closer.  The Manhattan (New York) District Attorney has reportedly impaneled a 23-citizen Special Grand Jury to consider felonious criminal charges against the [person who shall no longer be named] [236 to present] and others for fraudulent business practices.  The Grand Jury will sit for six-months (if not extended), so the clock is ticking.

An interesting twist: the action of the [person who shall no longer be named] to move his residency to Florida [September 2019] may well have been motivated as much to avoid extradition to New York given the development of this investigation.  He presumably saw the handwriting on the wall, when the Supreme Court decided the New York Country district attorney had the authority and right to the subpoenaed tax returns (multiple years) of the [person who shall no longer be named] {Trump vs. Vance [591 U. S. ____ (2020); No. 19–635] [965]}.  His bosom-buddy DeSantis may have already made the commitment to block extradition.  Who knows?

-- On Friday, the Senate voted [54-35-0-11(0)] in favor of insurrection commission [H.R. 3233]; however, the vote was insufficient to break BICP anonymous filibuster (60 votes in favor required).  The vote was technically a vote to reject the cloture motion to override the filibuster.  Six Republican senators voted to invoke cloture—Cassidy of Louisiana, Collins of Maine, Murkowski of Alaska, Portman of Ohio, Romney of Utah, and Sasse of Nebraska.  Eleven senators chose not to vote, presumably to avoid having their vote recorded, of those, two were Democrats—Murray of Washington and Sinema of Arizona, very disappointing.  I imagine the BICP sees their defense of the BIG LIE is vital to their survival; it that, they may well be correct.  What action Congress will take as a consequence of this foolish rejection of the January 6thcommission is still unclear, but I hope this is not the end of it.

On top of this moral failure of the BICP members to face the truth, we have the Gaetz-Greene traveling clown show in the BICP’s effort to perpetuate the BIG LIE.  I only report this aspect to record the words of Representative Matthew Louis ‘Matt’ Gaetz II of Florida.  The accused pedophile publicly shouted to the gathered believers, “This is [the person who shall no longer be named]’s party.”  You got that right Gaetz.  He went on to declare, “We have a Second Amendment in this country, and I think we have an obligation to use it.”  [cheers]  “The Second Amendment, this is a little history lesson for all the fake news media, the Second Amendment is not about . . . it’s not about hunting, it’s not about recreation, it’s not about sports.  The Second Amendment is about maintaining within the citizenry, the ability to maintain an armed rebellion against the government if that becomes necessary.  I hope it never does, but it sure is important to recognize the founding principles of this nation, and to make sure they are fully understood.”  The Gaetz statement represents the precise dilemma and conundrum we face in the current political situation.  In a broad sense, Gaetz is correct; however, his intent is for a white supremacist minority to dominate political influence to protect white privilege, and that objective is unconstitutional, immoral, and otherwise an unacceptable notion.

 

will state here for the record that I strongly and emphatically encourage the U.S. Senate to abandon the anonymous (no effort) filibuster.  I favor returning to the standing oral filibuster of 50 years ago.  If the Senate cannot return to the old form, then I say end it entirely.  The U.S. Constitution never enabled a single anonymous senator to require the entire Senate to vote in a 3/5th majority for simple legislation.  So, I say make senators stand up and be counted for what they believe or screw them.  This nonsense must end.

 

week ago Sunday, 23.May.2021, the Belarus dictator Alexander Grigoryevich Lukashenko ordered a Belarus Air Force MiG-29 fighter to divert Ryanair Flight 4978 from its flight path to Vilnius, Lithuania, to Minsk, Belarus.  The grounding occurred under the pretense of a bomb, but actually the action was to arrest Belarusian dissenter and opposition activist Roman Dmitriyevich Protasevich.  The audacity of the operation is staggering.  They poison dissenters in other sovereign countries, and they order their fighter jets to bring down commercial airliners to arrest those who speak out against the dictator.  Both the EU and the U.S. have proposed heavy sanctions against Belarus and its dictator.  I am not sure how that will work since Belarus receives most, if not all, of its support from Russia.

 

The Biden administration has agreed to a summit conference between President Biden and the dictator Putin in Geneva, Switzerland, next month.  I suppose it is not a surprise that some have begun to criticize President Biden for “rewarding” the Russian dictator with the legitimacy of a summit conference.  I find such actions really bizarre in the light of the previous president’s conduct on the world stage, and especially with the behavior of the [person who shall no longer be named] around and in response to the dictators—Putin, Xi, Salman (Salman), Kim, and ErdoÄŸan.  At least at this stage, there is no reported agenda.

 

It is curiously intriguing that the BICP (former Republican) members of the Senate stand against an independent, bipartisan commission to record what happened on the 6th of January (a real factual event) and scream at the top of their lungs for the “fraudit” in Arizona on what happened in one county on the 3rd of November last year (based on false accusations of QAnon and the [person who shall no longer be named]).  The hypocrisy is barely dripping it’s so thick.

 

With insurrection now an acceptable path for the BICP (Republicans), I have been reminded of the Tytler Cycle, again.  Law professor and lawyer Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord Woodhouselee observed, “A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government.  A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury.  From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship.”  Tytler went onto note, “The average age of the worlds greatest civilizations from the beginning of history, has been about 200 years.  During those 200 years, these nations always progressed through the following sequence:

From bondage to spiritual faith;

From spiritual faith to great courage;

From courage to liberty;

From liberty to abundance;

From abundance to complacency;

From complacency to apathy;

From apathy to dependence;

From dependence back into bondage.”

At 232 to 247 years depending upon event you choose for the beginning of the republic, we are passed Tytler’s longevity threshold for a republic.  Further, what we endured for the last four years and especially after the 6th of January, we are well into the dependence phase and headed to bondage.  The ready embrace of the BICP (Republicans) ihres Anführershas led that substantial segment of our citizenry to the comfort of dictatorship.  I imagine Valodya Putin has been a diligent student of Alexander Tytler . . . or perhaps it was Josef Stalin.  To Tytler, the most stable, enduring, and efficient form of government is a monarchy.  To Putin, Xi, and the [person who shall no longer be named], it is a dictatorship—the ultimate in bondage.  The question before us is, are we strong enough to step back from the precipice to prove Tytler and the believers of the [person who shall no longer be named] wrong?  Will we preserve what is left of this once grand republic, or will we complete the Tytler Cycle?  It is up to the rest of us to save this once grand republic, and hopefully, return the country to grand and stable status.

 

            Comments and contributions from Update no.1010:

Comment to the Blog:

“The Democrats will not have a January 6 investigation without ending or modifying the filibuster.  McConnell holds the power in the Senate despite leading a minority party.

“On the discussion of law enforcement: A) any training in threat assessment should somehow overcome in-group thinking.  That ‘us against them’ approach colors all of these events.  B) Your point about law enforcement getting involved only when infractions are involved is unrealistic.  If there’s no infraction available, taillights will be kicked in or some ‘discretionary’ ordinance invoked.  Been there, had it done to me, and I know I’m one of many.  C) Not ‘any’ mentally ill or addicted person can or will suddenly become violent.  A few might.  Not even close to all.  That’s another reason for people with mental illness training to be involved somehow.

“The Middle East has been inflamed since the Canaanites returned from Egypt.  We’re not going to change that.

“The New York Times' ‘Morning’ column points out that the vaccination ‘gap’ correlates more to class than race or party.  I’ve been going unheard for several years on the class strife issue.  At least we’re almost done with the damn-fool masks.”

My response to the Blog:

You may well be correct.  Time shall tell the tale . . . I hope soon.  Every other similar commission of which I am aware of did great job—Pearl Harbor, JFK assassination, Watergate, Church Committee, 9/11, et cetera.  None of them were perfect.  We need the 6th January commission.  It will not be perfect.  I want to see how the Majority Leader handles this situation.

To your 2nd paragraph comments:

A. Yes, absolutely!  Unfortunately, easier said than done.  I have heard too many chiefs parroting the party line and not enough chiefs willing to take on the status quo.

B. I am not quite so pessimistic.  A LE officer who will “kick in” a person’s taillight is by definition a bad cop.  As long as we accept bad conduct, we will continue to get what we’ve always got.

C. I don’t think any responsible person claimed ‘all.’  Those who do resist, are non-compliant, and/or resort to violence seem to have mental illness and/or intoxication involved, but certainly not all.  Sure, I imagine there are substantive numbers of incidents that claim mental illness, but they have no clinical mental illness.  We see too many resisters using the “I can breathe” excuse.  Mental illness seems to be becoming a defense for felonious conduct.

So, should we just give up and tolerate this intractable violence?

I’ve seen stronger evidence the vaccine gap correlates closely to political alignment.

We’re not discarding our unused masks.  Class strife has been a plague upon us since before the founding; yes, absolutely, it remains an issue to this very day and will likely continue to be an issue, e.g., systemic racism.  Now, “that group” is resisting vaccine passports.  Why?  Because they know there are restrictions coming for those unvaccinated citizens.  And, I will say rightly so.  I can and will argue that unvaccinated citizens are a threat to public safety for a host of reasons.  As such, they should face restrictions.

 . . . Round two:

“What Mitch McConnell does will serve his own purposes, not the national well-being.

“The ‘bad cop’ argument is flawed.  Even if they were unusual, systemic issues attract and protect them.

“The person who said ‘all’ mentally ill people and addicts were dangerous was you.  Did you read what you wrote?

“We must treat police violence separately from society’s violence.  If there’s any relationship, the brutality of law enforcement gives people less hope of justice, leading them to resort to violence.

“You may keep wearing your masks until banks and others recognize the risk of masked customers.  For my part, I’m vaccinated but not indoctrinated.”

 . . . my response to round two:

Oh my, you got that right.  Spinelessness, fickleness, arbitrariness and hypocrisy are certainly not obstructions to the pursuit of power for McConnell and his ilk.

What I cannot accept is the indictment of all law enforcement for the actions of a few.  I advent of cellphones with still & video cameras has alter the landscape in this particular debate.  We watched Chauvin murder George Floyd.  We have witnessed bad cops.  We know they exist.  But, their existence does not color the whole of the law enforcement profession.  We also witness heroic action of law enforcement to save individuals from danger and to protect us.  I am not trying to dampen the outrage over the actions of bad cops.  I am only seeking balance.

Yes, I read what I wrote numerous times.  Please pardon my ineptitude with the English language, but I cannot find my use of “all” with respect to mentally ill and gun violence, or even an implied “all.”  Please help me see the error of my words.

There may well be a correlation between societal violence and LE violence.  After all, the correlation exists in history, e.g., the Wild Wild West.

I am also vaccinated but not indoctrinated.  Full stop.

 . . . Round three:

“The notion of ‘indictment’ off all officers is in itself an attempt to assign individual responsibility for a systemic problem.  The system is the issue, not the individuals.  We need change, not blame.

“In my reading of your very complex post, I lost track of your quoting some anonymous contributor to some other blog.  Here's the sentence in question: ‘That balance between being PERT and COP is vital as any mentally ill (or drug/alcohol induced) subject, can quickly go from sitting and having a chit-chat about the benefits of the San Diego Zoo, to going absolutely wild with super-human adrenaline kick-in, where it takes literally 10 cops to control that subject and get a set of cuffs on them.’  It was indeed someone else's statement.  The reading comprehension level here is even beyond mine sometimes.”

 . . . my response to round three:

I can agree with your assessment with one proviso—such systems are people.  As Lao Tzu observed 2500 years ago, “The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.”  Democratic change (small ‘d’) is inherently slow, but we must persist.  We shall overcome.

Thank you for the acknowledgment.  Beyond that, in the contributor’s words, I do not see the word all—explicit or implicit.  The contributor was discussing the potential of any given encounter turning violent or bad.  Is that not a true statement?

 . . . Round four:

“It's important to distinguish the law-enforcement system (policies and procedures) from the individuals who compose it in order to address the issues.  The pretense that removing a few ‘bad apple’ individuals will bring about real change has cost us decades of failure.

“The person you quoted used an absolute about mentally ill or addicted people: ‘any mentally ill (or drug/alcohol induced) subject, can quickly go from sitting and having a chit-chat about the benefits of the San Diego Zoo, to going absolutely wild with super-human adrenaline kick-in. . .’ They said ‘any,’ not some or those with specific diagnoses, etc.  I read that literally, of course.”

 . . . my response to round four:

With respect, my friend, I think you are excessively simplifying the situation or circumstances.  Removing a few bad LE officers will not solve the systemic racism problem in law enforcement or any other segment of society.  Again, with respect, racism is a learned (taught) trait.  Parents teach their children.  Racism has not been in the law for decades, and not in the U.S. Constitution for 153 years.  Systemic racism is in the minds of the people who implement and execute policies developed by men with racism in their hearts.  Yes, systemic racism is far larger than a few “bad apples.”  But, removal of bad officers before they kill someone is a really good place to start.  Lastly, also with respect, removing “bad apples” is not a failed process because it has not been executed in far too many locations, e.g., Minneapolis; they knew Chauvin was a “bad apple” a long time ago, and they refused to intercede.  I fear your words imply throwing the baby out with the bath water.  We cannot disband or terminate police functions to rebuild/reform a new system.  And, there will still be flawed men with racism in their hearts that they learned from their parents.

In my understanding of the English language, the contributor’s words were not absolutes, but rather an obvious potential.  There is a huge difference between an absolute and a potential.  The law sees mental illness in general as a potential, e.g., innocent by reason of insanity, or mental incapacitation.  I do not read the contributor’s words the same way that you apparently do.  The only people I know who resort to absolutes are at the political extremes—both left and right.

 . . . Round five:

“Removing ‘bad apples’ is a failed process because more of the same events continue to happen.  Apparently, bad apples are still in the system even after we remove the most prominent ones.”

 . . . my response to round five:

I agree, and that is because the police unions and impotent chiefs have not broken the shell.  That’s all people.  Perhaps it will take the law to break the grip of the police unions, but I would like to think there is a more productive process.

 

            My very best wishes to all.  Take care of yourselves and each other.

Cheers,

Cap                  :-) 

24 May 2021

Update no.1010

Update from the Sunland

No.1010

17.5.21 – 23.5.21

Blog version:  http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/

 

            To all,

 

            The follow-up news items:

-- A friend from the Motherland sent along this URL:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-57166735

And asked, “Is this the final answer to the future of your unnamable former leader?”

To which I responded:

Yeah, been on the news this morning.  No, the final answer will be when he enters federal prison for his crimes.  It is getting closer.

He has always been a charlatan, huckster and con man (since he was a boy) [705 through 993] who convinced 74M citizens to drink his magic snake-oil elixir and believe.

I predict, even after he is sent to federal prison, he will try to conduct business like an incarcerated mob boss, and there will be believers standing in line to do his bidding.

Damn, that's a rather bleak prognostication.

-- On Wednesday the 19th, the U.S. House of Representatives passed HR 3233 – National Commission to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol Complex Act, to investigate the genesis and action of the insurrection [991].  The vote [House: 252-175-0-3(5)] included 35 Republicans, who defied their party leadership and their disgraced leader, to vote in favor of the bill.  House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Representative Bennie Gordon Thompson of Mississippi and Ranking Member Representative John Michael Katko of New York had negotiated the text of the bill jointly in good faith and in a true bipartisan manner, only to have it fall victim to the whims of the [person who shall no longer be named].  Of course he does not want an investigation; he is a principal object of such an investigation.  What is really staggering is both McCarthy and McConnell who argued vociferously on the floor of their respective chambers in favor of a thorough bipartisan investigation, now salute their führer.  You know, the dictator Putin may well be correct—democracy is dead.  Quite a few former Republicans publicly supported the need for the commission, only to have the party leaders pull fingernails to ensure compliance with the dicta of der führer.  The bill goes to the Senate for consideration.

 

For history aficionados, I strongly recommend a PBS Nova program titled Hindenberg: The New Evidence, broadcast on Wednesday, 19.May.2021.  They presented new experimentation to demonstrate the likely cause of the 6.May.1937 disaster—the destruction of the Nazi, hydrogen-filled, airship Hindenberg on landing at Lakehurst, New Jersey, after completing a trans-Atlantic crossing.  The combination of circumstances based on the known facts is replicated and establishes the likely cause of the disaster—static discharge near a hydrogen leak in the tail containment bag.  And, as they say, the rest is history.

 

From an on-going exchange from a different network regarding the confluence of Law Enforcement (LE) and mental illness, I have extracted a portion of the thread that is relevant to this forum and based upon an encounter between LE and a mentally ill woman.  

I said: 

“Mental illness does not entitle to or absolve her from breaking the law.  If she is that incapacitated, she should not be wandering around in public; such incapacity is a threat to public safety.  On the flip side, LE must have some humanity.  We really need an in between, mental health professionals, like EMT, to avoid these LE confrontations.”

To which, the contributor replied: 

“I think what needs to be addressed in law enforcement training/tactics for officer safety framework, is who is a potential threat and who likely is not a threat. I realize on initial contact, lawmen cannot make that assessment as easily as they might like.  I've watched the subject video a few times and think the male officer was far too heavy handed with an elderly lady.  Of course he had no way of knowing she had dementia.  My problem I had with the male and female officers is how they seemed to celebrate watching their badge CAM videos once the woman was in a holding cell, injured, in distress, and that is what decided for me, my opinion that I don't think the male and female officers belong in law enforcement nor upholding the age long mantra: "To protect & serve". The male officer, furthermore, was far too interested in impressing upon his female partner, while an elderly woman with dementia, and an injury resulting from the arrest, sat in a cell while cold, scared, confused and likely in great pain.

“In San Diego, both our SDPD, sheriff's department, and local agencies, for years have deployed PERT volunteers as ride-alongs with patrol officers.  PERT= Psychiatric Emergency Response Team. Trained professionals in psychology, intervention, substance abuse, and more. Plus most the departments have trained negotiators who get extensive education on deescalation goal communication.  I believe our society in the future will need much more of this, the problem of course is you cannot have a PERT member in each patrol car, and as crime is rising along with mental illness, how do you cover each 911 call?  Maybe more officers/deputies/troopers/agents will need to get personal training to be both a PERT kind and COP kind when/if needed.

“[Another contributor] has pointed out something important, which is America has an enormous amount of guns, both legal and illegal, and lots of violence.  Understandably, cops are on the defensive when they first stop a vehicle, or respond to a husband vs. wife argument.  Things can go south as quick as an airplane stall/spin.  Enough case evidence where husband beats on wife, 911 call is made, cops response and peacefully take husband into custody for DV, then ‘victim’ wife all of a sudden grabs a kitchen knife and is advancing on the arresting officer.  Like in flying airplanes: Expect the unexpected!”

I replied:

Good points all.  LE usually does not get involved unless there is some infraction or violation of local law, e.g., broken taillight, jaywalking, public intoxication, walking in traffic, and such.  We can argue about whether LE should get involved in minor misdemeanor violations, but the law is the law.  If we don’t want the law enforced, don’t make the law.  The law is not the deterrent; LE is.

Yes, their reaction to her detention was disgusting.  It is precisely that kind of inhumanity that alienates LE from the society they are sworn to serve.  It was the paucity of any humanity in the George Floyd case that was the most damning to me; he enjoyed what he was doing; to me, Chauvin’s conduct was verging upon sociopathic, if not psychopathic.

The inclusion of PERT volunteers seems to be a worthy first step.  But, there are more steps needed to help avoid confrontations between LE and the mentally ill.  If someone is that incapacitated to not understand basic safe, respectful, public conduct, then respectfully, those individuals should be in an environment more compatible with their affliction, not in the public domain.  The laws are intended for public safety and good order & discipline for everyone’s benefit.  Mental illness cannot and never should be an excuse for aberrant or unlawful conduct.

That said, resistance and non-compliance are a direct threat to LE, who are just trying to do what we have asked them to do.  If we don’t want LE doing something, don’t make laws.  Yes, absolutely, de-escalation is an essential skill for professional LE.  Yet, there are always bad men and some actually make it into LE with a badge & a gun.

The contributor added:

“[M]ore and more cops may need additional training on evaluation, communication and de-escalating skills (often by the very words one chooses).  That balance between being PERT and COP is vital as any mentally ill (or drug/alcohol induced) subject, can quickly go from sitting and having a chit-chat about the benefits of San Diego Zoo, to going absolutely wild with super-human adrenaline kick-in, where it takes literally 10 cops to control that subject and get a set of cuffs on them.  Or, that same person can pull a knife, grab a hammer, and be an absolute deadly threat to officers.  I know you know of the 21-foot rule, and many times cops breach that in order to communicate with a subject/suspect, and attempt to humanize things and de-escalate the trend-vector. If any of the readers here do not understand nor value the 21-foot rule, I suggest some further research on the well documented rule."

I responded:

“Yeah, but even with PERT at the scene, mental illness does not give anyone a pass when breaking the law.  Some type of diversion/assistance/restriction is needed.  Whether PERT or LE, their first priority is self-defense, self-protection; second priority is public safety.  When any perp, mentally ill or not, violates those thresholds, action to diffuse the situation becomes paramount.  The 21-foot rule is time—time to react appropriately.  It is not particularly different from any other security system; there is no such thing as perfect security.  And, any system is intended to buy time for appropriate reaction.”

 

On Thursday the 20th, President Biden signed into law the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act [PL 117-xxx; S.937; House: 364-62-0-3(6); Senate: 94-1-0-5(0); 135 Stat. xxx] by a substantial bipartisan majority.  The text of the new law is more apple pie and motherhood.  While the purpose of the law is relevant and appropriate given the flare up of discriminatory violence against American citizens of Asian ancestry, it does not do much other than illuminate the mindlessness of hate crimes.  Of course, what would life be during these days without Senator Joshua David ‘Josh’ Hawley of Missouri standing as the lone BICP senator voting against the bill?

 

After nearly two weeks of combat, the Hamas Palestinian terrorist group sponsored by the IRI & the Israelis agreed to a ceasefire on Thursday, 20.May.2021, in the latest flare-up in the region.  As with all things, there is plenty of wrong on both sides.  However, boiled down to its base elements, I see the hand of the Republican Guard of the IRI.  They are intent upon stirring things up and imposing just another obstacle for the Biden administration to deal with along the way.  I have never been a fan of Prime Minister Netanyahu and especially the damnable Israeli settlement policy.  The intractable violence in the region has stopped for this tenuous moment, but the underlying root causes have not changed.  This is only a temporary respite.

 

Among all of the ridiculousness we are immersed in these days, I have seen the same words—“Masks are slavery.”  Then we have that outrageous woman in the House of Representatives who repeatedly tried to compare the requirement for masks in public contact situations to the murder of 11M people including 6M Jews during the Holocaust.  What struck me is such statements are the definition of insanity—not based on fact, only emotion.  Worse, the emotion is misguided and fueled by the nonsense of ihr anführer.  The end of these foolish notions is not in sight, which makes me wonder how long we must endure this idiocy.

 

            Comments and contributions from Update no.1009:

Comment to the Blog:

“I have been considering indoctrination lately, in light of its failure as a virus response.  One issue with both that and King Baby’s ‘big lie’ approach is that we have many more voices than we had even as recently as the Clinton Administration.  The Big Lie is premised on a society having only one dominant source of information.

“The letter signed by conventional (non-cult) Republicans probably will not affect anything.

“I have no idea, other than indoctrination, why people profess surprise that the restrictions are failing.  I’m surprised indeed that they lasted longer than six months.  Our governor here in Ohio made a simpler announcement.  All the restrictions will be removed by June 2.”

My response to the Blog:

Indeed!  All of that you say and the BIG LIE depends upon believers who do not question information.  Some folks simply do not care to take time to learn, to research, to question the accuracy and reliability of the information they are being fed.  Some of this nonsense is easily refuted.  Other bits are far more difficult to refute since the source is hidden or masked.  The BIG LIE is an excellent example—slivers of truth to validate the LIE.  Was there attempted fraud in the 2020 election.  Yes, absolutely.  I suspect there have been fraud attempts in every election since elections were conceived and performed.  The question is really, were the fraud attempts successful?  If so, were they relevant or substantive.  There are examples of success, e.g., the 1960 presidential election in Chicago, Cook County, and Ballot Box no.13 in Texas (1948).  Such success inspires nefarious fellows to take the risk.  The issue has never been whether there was fraud; it has been and remains whether the fraud could even remotely affect the outcome.  There is zero evidence that any attempted fraud in the 2020 was successful and more importantly had any effect on the outcome.  At the bottom line, the BIG LIE stays alive because sufficient believers do not question the information they are being fed, or they have nefarious or malevolent purposes.

Yeah, probably not.  From what I see, the size of the sanity movement is insufficient to overcome the forces that enabled the [person who shall no longer be named] to achieve power.  Those forces have not gone away.  It is going to take a lot of time to overcome those forces.

You call them restrictions, which implies the force of law—true in some places, not in others.  There is no federal law.  I see them as guidelines intended to protect the public . . . all people in public spaces.  I am grateful we have achieved what we have, but I think the guidelines are being lifted too soon for one reason alone—far too many people refuse to be inoculated against the virus.  That reality makes that segment of our society a fertile ground for perpetuation of the virus and worse they enable the inevitable mutation of the virus.  The virus is going to adapt and find a way to overcome the vaccine or antibody immunity.  I suspect this rush to abandon the guidelines will give us another spike of cases.  I truly hope not, but that is my worry.

 . . . Round two:

“Those restrictions have had the force of law in many places including here.  Much of that was misguided, and the agencies issuing them long since lost credibility.”

 . . . my response to round two:

Let’s accept as a given that you as well as most folks do not like the CDC guidelines for a host of reasons (some valid, others not).  The question that keeps coming back to my consciousness is, what would you (or anyone else) propose we do differently?  Surely, you are not signing up to the do nothing, every man for himself, laissez-faire approach advocated by the [person who shall no longer be named].  I will point out that much of the confusion and conflict in the current status of the pandemic response was induced by the prior administration.  The scientists, with the quiet support of the current administration, are working to climb out of the hole dug for them by the previous administration.  If anything, I think they may be trying too hard.  Those responsible agencies (NIH, CDC, FDA, HHS) lost credibility directly because of the [person who shall no longer be named], and his overriding narcissism and egocentricity.  He was literally desperate to avoid being held accountable.  I know and acknowledge that you do not want to talk about him, but he is the root cause for what we are dealing with today (in many more ways than one).

 . . . Round three:

“That people ‘do not like’ the mis-guidelines is a given.  What I said is that the agencies lost their credibility.  Their insistence on making people afraid, their claims of efficacy for useless masks, and their extended focus on minor risks such as droplets wiped that out.  What we should have done is what other, more successful nations have done.  They provided real personal protective equipment to at-risk workers, closed borders, and focused on all forms of congregate living, not just nursing homes.”

 . . . my response to round three:

A couple of further thoughts, if you will allow me.  1.) I read your words and what I perceive is, your position is all or nothing.  You see no value to something is better than nothing.  2.) What got us to this position was the USG lack of preparedness and logistics failures, not the science.  The scientists were left with trying to make lemonade out of the lemons they were handed because of the politicization.  3.) “Real PPE” is a symptom, not the root cause.  The objective was to break the chain of infection.  4.) The pandemic response (or rather lack of proper response) has been and remains predominantly political, not scientific or factual.

So, with that said, are you suggesting the proper going forward position should be to issue every citizen a dozen N95 masks?  Or perhaps even hazmat suits along with disinfecting stations to avoid the objectionable properties of facial masks?

 . . . Round four:

“(A) My ‘no value’ position on lesser masks comes from personal experience with PM2.5 particulates, exactly the size we're discussing.  Non-medical and cloth masks do me no good with that.

“(B) I object to the use of the word ‘science’ to describe correlations (weak ones, at that), educated guesses, and never-investigated claims by pretty much anyone.

“My statements stand.”

 . . . my response to round four:

My apologies.  I did not realize we were discussing your personal position.  You know best what you need.  The USG must provide generally applicable guidance, not individual prescription.  Certainly, some of the masks in use are of far less value than the N95 variants, but I still content that something is better than nothing.

With respect, my friend, we do not know as a fact that black holes exist in the universe; we see collateral effect that lead us to conclude they do.  We do not know exactly how single cells divide to form specific tissues, but we know that they do.  However, science entails collecting facts and rendering judgment based on the facts we have.  As new facts become available, we refine our conclusions.  We are dealing with the behavior of microscopic single virus cells in the living tissue of a human host.  The scientists make the best judgments they can based on the facts they have.  Science, or scientia in Latin, means knowledge, and is the testable examination of facts.  Most of medicine is based on examination of the facts we have.  The science of epidemiology is no different.

My statements stand.

 . . . Round five:

“Enough discussion of masks.  Your discussion of black holes etc. is a diversion and perhaps a failure to understand the scientific method.”

 . . . my response to round five:

As you wish . . .  I offered an analogy, not a diversion.  I see no reason to defend my understanding of scientific methods.  I recognize and acknowledge your medical reasons for doffing the facial mask.  You are vaccinated, so I believe you can lose the facial mask except when using mass transit systems or in close contact situations.  ‘Nuf said.

 

Another contribution:

“Four Horsemen of Calumny?  You have me their Cap.”

My reply:

Yeah, not a common term in your country or mine.  However, the word is quite descriptive and appropriate.  She spoke those words 70 years ago, but they are spot on accurate with today’s malfeasance.

 

            My very best wishes to all.  Take care of yourselves and each other.

Cheers,

Cap                  :-)

17 May 2021

Update no.1009

 Update from the Sunland

No.1009

10.5.21 – 16.5.21

Blog version:  http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/

 

            To all,

 

            The follow-up news items:

-- I watched and listened to the testimony of former acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller, former acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and Metropolitan Police Department Chief Robert Contee before the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, investigating the insurrection and the events on the 6th of January [991].  If someone wants to see another example of the consequences of the BIG LIE, they have but to watch and listen to the words by everyone in that hearing on Wednesday the 12th.  But, the BIG LIE is just not enough.  I will also state for the record that the Democrats on the committee did not comport themselves well.  I understand the frustration they must feel with the BIG LIE, but every time they exaggerate or pick & choose their facts they diminish their position.  The testimony and outrageous statements of the BICP members on the committee took me back to an era 71 years ago.  In that day long ago, another lone voice of reason spoke truth to power.  On 1.June.1950, Senator Margaret Chase Smith of Maine rose alone on the Senate floor.

“I would like to speak briefly and simply about a serious national condition. It is a national feeling of fear and frustration that could result in national suicide and the end of everything that we Americans hold dear.

“I don’t want to see the Republican Party ride to political victory on the Four Horsemen of Calumny—Fear, Ignorance, Bigotry, and Smear. 

“Surely we Republicans aren’t that desperate for victory.”

For those who may not know and are too lazy to look up the definition of calumny, the word means “the making of false and defamatory statements about someone in order to damage their reputation; slander.”  Senator Smith’s words were pointed directly at a fellow Republican senator who was not yet to the peak of his bigotry and despotism.  I am certain Senator Smith held no imagination that her words would take on prescient dimensions to a time seven decades in the future—the Four Horsemen of Calumny indeed!  Thank you, Senator Smith . . . very wise and insightful words.

-- In the environment established by the perpetuation of the BIG LIE [991], 150 national, state and local Republican notables endorsed a letter and website—“A Call for American Renewal – Building a Common Sense Coalition for America.”  Their website states, “We are concerned citizens—a group of national, state, and local leaders—calling for American renewal.  The country is tired of division and political extremism.  It’s time to restore a ‘common-sense coalition’ in our political system, and we are committed to making that a reality.”  What decent American could possibly disagree with that?  As for me, I absolutely agree . . . as long as we (they) do not speak platitudes to mask just another “my way or the highway” approach.  They went on to declare, “A Call for American Renewal is a rallying cry for pragmatists everywhere. Our nation’s future should not be dictated by a single person but by principles that bind us together. That’s why we believe in pushing for the Republican Party to rededicate itself to founding ideals—or else hasten the creation of an alternative.”  They closed with “Details to follow.”  It is those details upon which this clarion call depends.  Many have interpreted this open letter as a threat to leave the party and form a new political party, and there is no direct condemnation of the [person who shall no longer be named].  While I would like to view this sign in a hopeful context, there is insufficient detail to properly judge this action.  We must diligently maintain our vigilance.

I must illuminate that other notable Republicans have not signed onto this new message—Romney, Cheney, Kinzinger, and such.  I suppose the best we can hope for is this movement, or whatever it is, grows with time.  One thing is absolutely certain, the [person who shall no longer be named] must be expunged from our collective political consciousness forever—the sooner the better.

-- After Governor Ducey vetoed the ill-advised and foolish social conservative sex education bill [1006], the BICP dominated legislature would not be deterred.  The Arizona House initiated HB 2035 to replace the failed SB 1456 [1006].  This is ignorance in the extreme.  Instead of teaching children about sex, an important, if not essential, part of life, these social conservative prefer ignorance, i.e., let the children learn on their own like they had to do.  HB2035 is as bad as SB1456.  I would prefer sounder minds reject HB2035, but the social conservatives will likely pass the bill, and then we must hope the governor vetoes this version as well.  Once again, I feel compelled to state, knowledge is always better than ignorance.

-- On Thursday, the CDC announced that fully vaccinated citizens no longer needed to wear masks, although they would still be required on mass transportation (buses, trains, airplanes), and in hospitals and other special interior spaces.  We will apparently be relying on the honor system in a society where there are far more than a trivial number of citizens who are not honorable.  I am afraid we are in store for a wild ride through the next few months and years.  The large group of anti-vaxxers, liberty chest-thumpers, and consumers of the magic snake oil elixir peddled by the [person who shall no longer be named] will provide a fertile ground for the virus to spread and replicate.  God help us all.

 

Representative Elizabeth Lynne ‘Liz’ Cheney of Wyoming held her head high, spoke well, and accepted her fate.  The BICP simply could not tolerate the truth, so they ousted her from her leadership role as the Republican conference chair.  Kevin McCarthy has demonstrated his spinelessness.  He accurately accused the former president for what he did leading up to the 6th January insurrection and then within days attended the [person who shall no longer be name] to genuflect at the altar of QAnon.  McCarthy called for a simple voice vote.  No one called for a recorded vote—secret or otherwise.  McCarthy wanted no numbers recorded—only Cheney’s ouster.  Thank God, Cheney is strong enough of character to speak truth to power.

 

On top of all the news this week, on Monday, a group of 124 former flag officers calling themselves Flag Officers 4 America issued a manifesto screed that was literally jaw-dropping for a variety of reasons.  If you wish to read it and/or check the list of retired military officers who signed onto this statement, here is the URL:

https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/fb7c7bd8-097d-4e2f-8f12-3442d151b57d/downloads/2021%20Open%20Letter%20from%20Retired%20Generals%20and%20Adm.pdf?ver=1620643005025

About all I wish to say is, there are more than a few flag officers on that list that I know personally and have served with in my day.  The men I know on the list are intelligent, well-educated, and experienced officers.  But frankly, this sounds like, smells like, and looks like typical BICP drivel--black or white, this or that, one or zero, no in between; we’re right, you’re wrong.  I cannot find anything beyond the platitudes that I can agree with in that letter.  Sad; there are really good men on that list; but, I am left with the impression that they have all swallowed the magic snake oil elixir.  Most unfortunate.

 

            Comments and contributions from Update no.1008:

Comment to the Blog:

“I have enough awareness of space flight to appreciate the successful terrestrial landing.  That facilitates a great deal more space flight in the future.

“I’m not focusing on that much this morning.  The news is filled with our much higher homicide rate.  I note that mental health, addiction, and their related issues resulting from the response to the virus will take far longer to control than the virus.”

My response to the Blog:

Indeed!  And, I’ll keep watching and learning.

I have had exactly the same thought.  Our increased homicide rates are a direct reflection of our abysmal mental health detection, triage and treatment processes and capacity.  This is one of many things that happen when mental illness of all levels go untreated.  Unfortunately, the people charged with finding solutions will not take on the difficult aspects of the problem and will far more likely focus on the easy stuff—the low hanging fruit.

As a minor footnote, I will illuminate that several medical TV series programs have started to feature mental health and psychiatric intervention as main characters and principal storylines.  Progress by jerks, as the physicists say.

 . . . Round two:

“Yes and no.  The mental health treatment system is far less than we need, but the increases in incidents and cases are the result of the response to the virus.”

 . . . my response to round two:

Nothing to debate in that statement.  I agree completely.  I cannot deny that the realities of the pandemic have exacerbated mental health vulnerabilities in citizens, but I do not have sufficient evidence to affirm the laissez-fairepandemic response of the previous administration being the primary cause—a contributing cause, certainly.

 . . . Round three:

“Fascinating.  You're still hung up on King Baby's failures.  The improvement in virus rates under Biden is primarily a result of timing.  The aggravation of all mental health issues results from the response, not the prior failure to respond.”

 . . . my response to round three:

Yes, the vaccines were developed with the stimulation of and under the administration of the [person who shall no longer be named], so timing certainly plays into the outcomes.  The CDC and USG announced on Thursday that fully vaccinated citizens no longer need to wear masks inside or outside, with the exception of special conditions, e.g., mass transit, hospitals, and close contact gatherings.  Good news for those of us who are fully vaccinated, but I suspect we may experience another spike as unvaccinated citizens become bolder.  I do believe President Biden deserves credit for the unified, leadership message and policies; he chose to lead rather than shuck responsibility as the [person who shall no longer be named] did with this laissez-faire, every state for themselves, approach to the pandemic response.

Aggravation of underlying mental health issues is certainly a reality, but we shall disagree on the contribution to that aggravation by the prior administration.  I think the [person who shall no longer be named] was singularly a major contribution to that aggravation in a variety of ways.

 . . . Round four:

“King Baby united and empowered a group of people who already had mental issues compatible with his, but the issue at hand is the spikes in all mental health issues resulting from the virus response.  The bottom line will be that the USA's emergency preparedness system is underfunded, unsupplied, narrowly focused, and all-around incompetent.”

 . . . my response to round four:

I have no evidence to validate or refute your statement.  It is certainly plausible.

Oh my yes!  And that requirement is the ultimate responsibility of the POTUS, thus my earlier remarks.  I dare say President Biden’s administration is working to fulfill their responsibility.  Another pandemic may not be a century away, but it is unlikely that we will test the current administrations preparedness . . . at least I hope not.

 . . . Round five:

“Preparedness seems to get little attention.  The issues with FEMA go back to at least Hurricane Katrina (1995), but the agency is a constant target of budget cuts and suffers more than most from globalization's ‘just in time’ logistics methodology.  The failures to provide personal protective equipment (PPE), even now, to facilities like prisons fall to FEMA as well as HHS.  Also, communication has suffered because ‘none of the above’ is geared to communicate using 24-hour news and social media about an event that continues longer than a week or so.”

 . . . my response to round five:

“Just in time” logistics are not appropriate for emergency preparedness, never was, never will be.  By definition, emergencies cannot possibly be forecast.  Just in time depends directly upon reliable demand and supply systems.  PPE should be a designated strategic stockpile item in all its forms.  I will also argue that doctors and nurses should be a national emergency reserve, some able to deploy faster than others, e.g., military medical personnel and capacity.

 . . . Round six:

“We agree on what is real preparedness.  If we study FEMA and the USA's preparedness more generally, that's not what this nation is doing, even now.”

 . . . my response to round six:

Your opinion may be accurate, but I have insufficient evidence to validate or agree with it.  We do not see what is occurring beyond our awareness or the Press.  We will not know if our preparedness has changed and improved under the current administration until we face the next emergency.  Ultimately, the responsibility for our emergency preparedness clearly and mostly rests with Congress, which regrettably is a generally dysfunctional legislative body.

 

            My very best wishes to all.  Take care of yourselves and each other.

Cheers,

Cap                  :-)

10 May 2021

Update no.1008

 Update from the Sunland

No.1008

3.5.21 – 9.5.21

Blog version:  http://heartlandupdate.blogspot.com/

 

            To all,

 

The last four months have been dominated by working with my publisher, Saint Gaudens Press, Inc., to reformat and refine my latest manuscript into production form.  The files, print and digital forms, have gone to the printing and distribution phase.  I expect to announce the publication of my 19th book and the 9th book of my To So Few series of historical novel.  The transformation of a manuscript into a released book is never easy.  Some are harder than others.  It is done.  We await the release.

Last summer [967], I noted the completion of another manuscript I had provisionally titled Heaven on Earth.  The manuscript was rejected by the publisher.  At least, the chief editor offered a laundry list of mandatory changes, including a new title--Indulgence.  The modifications essentially required a rewrite.  After several weeks of cogitation, I saw my way through the directed rewrite.  The revised manuscript is complete and will be submitted when the publisher is ready to receive and consider its worthiness.  There is a chance Indulgence could be published this year as well.  Time shall tell the tale.  I will, of course, keep you posted as I know more.

 

Another perhaps small but important space flight milestone was achieved this week.  On Wednesday, 5.May.2021, at 17:25 CDT, SpaceX launched the latest flight test of their Starship spaceship—Serial Number 15 (SN15)—from their launch complex at Boca Chica, Texas.  [They skipped SN12 – SN14; the SN15 vehicle was a block upgrade to the earlier test articles.].  For those who missed the flight and may be interested, here is the URL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9eoubnO-pE
Ignition of the three ascent engines (T-00.0) occurred at 6:30 of 16:05 of the video (to save time).  The flight was a magnificent achievement, climbed to 33,000 feet, flopped over to the descent attitude, and then, they stuck the landing.  The ship shutdown its engines at the edge of the landing pad, standing on its legs; they did not hit dead center, but at least, they were on the pad and upright, which is pretty darn impressive.  They did have a post-landing fire at the base of the ship that appeared to be a liquid methane leak; they extinguished the fire within minutes using a remote fire suppression system.  The continuing problem of post-landing fuel leaks and resultant fires is troubling and worrisome.  Elon Musk declared the flight including the landing was officially nominal.  From my perspective, I would agree; it was near perfect.  SN16 is being prepared for its flight test with an as yet unspecified launch date.

 

Sunday’s 60 Minutes program on CBS titled: “Ingenuity & Perseverance” lead off with a feature about the Mars rover Perseverance [997] and its little drone helicopter Ingenuity [1006].  Regardless of whether you are interested in space exploration, I strongly and emphatically urge every thinking human being to watch at least the first segment of the program.  It is an incredible feel-good story.

 

            Comments and contributions from Update no.1007:

Comment to the Blog:

“I see Joe Biden as a competent politician despite his advanced age.  The times may call for more than competence, but we have what we have.

“We would do well to examine our own wealth gap, as someone else mentioned.  That is also a factor in the political money issues, because great wealth buys politicians.

“The Ottoman Empire committed genocide in 1915.  Do we have any current issues that deserve our energy?

“I’ve seen the older version of 12 Angry Men.  I imagine factual events in that mode are exceedingly rare.”

My response to the Blog:

Yes, the times do demand far more than just competence.  Yet, after the last four years, we need recovery and healing.  Unfortunately, the BICP wants to keep the wounds open and festering with the [person who shall no longer be named] persisting in the BIG LIE even to this very day.  Healing will take longer than I would like, but that is life.  My threshold was stability and humanity.  I think Biden is better than competence, but it is going to take time to know that; I will feel good as long as he just stays above my minimalist threshold.

Re: wealth gap.  I agree all the way around.  The wealth gap is rapidly becoming another de facto form of royalty and slavery—not healthy.

Yes, they did.  It is unfortunate that Turkey’s sense of nationalist machismo prevents them from recognizing or acknowledging history.  It is long past due for them to recognize reality.

Re: “Do we have any current issues that deserve our energy?”  Yes, absolutely!  Tons of issues.  Law enforcement reform, white supremacy nonsense, comprehensive immigration reform, paying down the national debt, every citizen’s fundamental right to privacy and freedom of choice, et cetera ad infinitum.  All of these issues and many more deserve our energy to resolve.

Yes, true, but the movie represents the struggles of every jury, some more so than others.

 . . . follow-up comment:

“Subtlety doesn't benefit me.  The question about current issues was meant to point out that the Turks committed the atrocities in question over a century ago.  When do we let go of the past?”

 . . . my follow-up response:

I think the point was acknowledgment.  We are still trying to move past a large chunk of our nation who supported and actively sought to oppress an entire group of citizens because of the pigmentation in their skin.  Acknowledgment is not easy.

 

            My very best wishes to all.  Take care of yourselves and each other.

Cheers,

Cap                  :-)