30 May 2022

Update no.1063

Update from the Sunland

No.1063

23.5.22 – 29.5.22

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

 

To all,

 

The follow-up news items:

-- Vadim Shishimarin, the Russian tank sergeant put on trial in Ukrainian court [1061] has been convicted of premeditated murder and violating international laws of war. Shishimarin was sentenced to life in a Ukrainian prison. One down, several thousand to go.

-- The array of the four planets [1059] continues to amaze observers including yours truly. On the 29th of May, Mars and Jupiter came within a finger of each other and then swapped places in the line. According to the experts, the last time all of the planets aligned was 949 AD, and the next time all of the planets align will be 6.May.2492. I will not make it that far, but it sure would be fantastic to witness.

 

The wisdom of Benjamin Franklin is most appropriate at troubled times like these.

Those who would give up essential Liberty,
to purchase a little temporary Safety,
deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.

Let us be extraordinarily careful when we consider laws that will affect the fundamental right to privacy and freedom of choice.

 

On the 24th of May, 2022, an angry, barely 18-year-old boy walked into Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, through a locked security door that had been propped open by a lazy teacher who had gone to retrieve her cellphone from her automobile. He had just shot and seriously wounded his grandmother, who is still struggling to survive. That boy killed 19 elementary school students and two teachers, and wounded or injured 17 other people. The paramount tragedy is the murder of so many innocent children in the still stinging wake of Sandy Hook (Elementary) School in Newtown, Connecticut, [14.12.2012]. The penultimate tragedy is the 77-minutes armed law enforcement officers stood frozen by the on-scene commander’s erroneous assessment. He apparently decided the situation was a barricaded suspect with hostages rather than an active shooter incident. Texas law enforcement mucked up the incident response from the get-go, and they are paying a helluva price today.

I try not to armchair quarterback law enforcement, doctors, pilots, and other professionals who must make split second decisions. But this atrocity is just too much.  A barricaded suspect is one level, but a suspect who has escalated to active shooter status deserves no quarter. An active shooter is an order of magnitude more serious and urgent situation. 

As we have seen in so many of these events, the angry teenager at Uvalde offered a plethora of signs that he was transforming his anger into action, not least of which were posted videos of him abusing small animals. The signs were there! I watched a short interview with the perpetrator’s mother; she claimed she knew he had problems and sought help, but could not find anyway to help her son. Then, on the 24th, through a cascade of errors and missteps, the angry teenager actualized his anger until he was eventually terminated by law enforcement. The perpetrator had demonstrable mental health problems that went untreated and unrecognized by law enforcement.

These incidents spark an avalanche of comments, opinions, and debate. The first item is a text exchange the day after that I included here with permission.

Contributor:

Not sure I agree that one’s individual rights outweigh the right to live of 14 children.

Me:

Amen. It does not. We do not know the details, yet, but I suspect there were many pre-cursor signs that were ignored or discounted. Tragic!!

Contributor:

The price of freedom, right?

Me:

No! What happened in Uvalde was not freedom.

I argue to dealing with the root causes, not the symptoms.

Contributor:

He was free to go purchase those guns. This is the result 

Me:

We cannot penalize millions of peaceful, proper gun owners for the criminal actions of a very small fraction of disturbed people.

I would bet a dollar to donuts that there were many pre-cursor signs that were ignored or discounted.

We refuse to deal with those signs.

The police were chasing him. I want to know why they did not stop him before he reached Robb Elementary.

How the hell did he get into that school with firearms?

Texas is the most heavily armed state in the Union, and it did not stop him. More guns are not the answer. But, I want my rights protected as we deal with these disturbed individuals.

Of course, “That’s just my opinion, but I could be wrong.”

Contributor:

I’ll argue that yes, yes we can “penalize” millions of peaceful gun owners. If you’re one of them, you’ll understand going through heavy background checks and obstacles in order to purchase one. You’ll be fine with waiting 6 months or 1 year while it’s determined you can safely own one.

The result is too costly. The Founding Fathers were fucking wrong (or narrow sighted). It’s called an Amendment for a reason. Time to change it.

When [you] lived in England did you feel violated? Was your penis smaller? Were you oppressed?

Me:

To your questions: No. My penis was always small. No.

I do not know where this is headed, but I am doing a lot of writing about this issue. To me, it is no different from other prohibitions, e.g., abortion and books on the right; firearms on the left.

I have absolutely no problem with background checks, but the issue is the administration of such controls. We have seen what happens when the USG gets control of a (in hindsight) foolish law. We have 50 years of destruction (so far) with no improvement. I have lost confidence in our ability to administer the law. This is a highly and emotionally charged topic, just like abortion.

Can I re-print this exchange in this week’s Update (without names or relationship, of course).

Contributor:

Obviously I’m being facetious but I’m tired of the GOP/redneck rebuttal to this issue.

There is no one-direction answer to this. So let’s attack it from multiple angles. Reformed gun laws, mental health assistance, parent accountability (in the case of a minor), 30-day death penalty in certain scenarios. The whole 9 yards.

Yes, you can

Another contributor offered the following meme:

“Guns don’t kill people. People kill people.” Well, no shit.

We want mandatory safety courses for people, not guns.

We want more thorough background checks of people, 
not guns.

We want stricter negligence penalties imposed on people, not guns.

If you’re stupid enough to think activists are pissed at guns, you’re too stupid to own one.

The meme represents many aspects of the current societal question before us and offers plenty for debate in this humble forum.

The last item is a relevant article from across the eastern moat:

“New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern addresses Harvard on gun control and democracy – Ardern warns against ‘scourge of online disinformation’, and wins standing ovation for crackdown on weapons”

Australian Associated Press

The Guardian

Published: Thu 26 May 2022; 21.05 EDT

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/27/jacinda-ardern-wows-harvard-with-new-zealands-lesson-on-gun-control-and-democracy

There are some good and valid points in Ardern’s address.

 

One point of order, for precision, an assault rifle is a military weapon capable of automatic fire as long as the trigger is depressed, and rounds are fed automatically from a magazine. Automatic weapons have been and remain illegal since 1934 – National Firearms Act of 1934 [PL 73-474; 48 Stat. 1236; 26.6.1934]. One action we can and should take is the prohibition of any modification by any method by any source to an existing weapon that enables more than one round to be fired with a single trigger pull.  Such a prohibition would be consistent with the National Firearms Act of 1934. Unfortunately, far too many people in the press, in government, and in the public refer to weapons that look like an assault weapon as assault weapons, and that reality is wrong. Let us get our nomenclature correct.

 

Changing the topic to the on-going rape of Ukraine [1050] by the dictator Putin, the following article sent by a friend and contributor, and corroborated by multiple independent sources, is a revolting and disgusting shocker.

“Henry Kissinger: Ukraine must give Russia territory”

by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

The Telegraph

Published: Mon, May 23, 2022, 10:48 AM

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/henry-kissinger-warns-against-defeat-174812366.html

To which I replied:

I am gobsmacked with Kissinger’s opinion. In fact, I will also say I am horrified by his opinion. I also think German Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck was spot on correct when he said, “We’re seeing the worst of Europe,” in reference to Hungary and other resistant nations in the European Union. The dictators and wannabe dictators find affinity in supporting each other. Putin and Russia do NOT deserve, warrant, or have any valid claim to one square inch of the sovereign nation of Ukraine—not Donbass or Crimea. Conceding any land to Russia would be catastrophically wrong, just as Chamberlain’s appeasement was in 1938. Kissinger’s opinion must be condemned.

 

Comments and contributions from Update no.1062:

Comment to the Blog:

“Meanwhile, the very wealthy and their chosen government operatives gather in Davos to plot continued profit. Also, the more radical conservatives (CPAC) are holding their conclave in Hungary in honor and alliance with the Hungarian strongman Victor Orban.

“Who exactly wants to prohibit firearms? Some want to take military-style weapons out of the hands of civilians or to require that all firearms be registered so that dangerous people have a harder time getting them, but that’s all I’ve heard. In the same paragraph: please define ‘radical ideology.’ Republicans describe proposals such as free college as ‘radical.’

“The decision that politicians can accept unlimited bribes openly (FEC v. Cruz) finalizes the corruption of the United States Government.

“The morning’s breaking news reports Biden taking a couple of foreign policy actions that could be consequential, directed at China rather than Russia.”

My response to the Blog:

Yep, an annual event in Davos, Switzerland, these days. It will be interesting to see how the World Economic Forum proposes to deal with the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Another yeah, the CPAC choice of convention sites is yet an additional evidentiary fact that the fBICP has supplanted what used to be known as the Grand Old Party (the Republican Party). The fBICP wants to anoint King Baby as you call him. We still have the 2022 and 2024 elections ahead of us, and we shall see if the fBICP efforts in many states to suppress the vote will be successful.

I am not going to take the time to quote examples because they are too easily discounted, but they are out there. How are “military-style weapons” defined? Who maintains that definition? When I served as a Marine Recon platoon commander, I carried an M1911 pistol and a Mossberg 500 shotgun similar to weapons I own today. They are “military-style weapons.” Are they to be included in the ban? Am I to be made a felon when I have NOT threatened or injured anyone?

Touché! Definitions matter, and I did not define the term. In the context of my previous comment, I meant those statements, claims or words advocating or suggesting violence against others or damage to their property based on any combination of the social factors. Your point was well-taken; perspective is crucial.

To be clear, the Supremes in FEC v. Cruz did not sanction bribes. The mechanism at issue was repayment of personal loans to campaigns, and more specifically, loans that are paid off by donations post-election. Of note, none of the Supremes (majority or dissent) mentioned the additional potential of unpaid debts being declared “bad debt” for tax purposes, which means we the taxpayers will pay the bill. The whole Cruz case from his original action to the Supremes’ decision stinks to high heaven, but it is consistent with Citizens United.

Just a related FYI: I did not mention it in my opinion [1062], all of these cases pressing the limits of campaign finance law have been initiated by Republicans. I did not want to get into listing them all, but there are more than a few. And, the Supremes continue to side with money is speech, and corporations are citizens.

Yeah, I noted the same thing. I suspect the IC sees signs the PRC is taking the cue of Russia-Ukraine to close the loop on their claim to Taiwan. We must pay attention.

 . . . Round two:

“On the prohibition of firearms in general: if you don’t give me specific references that I can check, I won’t believe any credible source has called for such a ban.

“‘Military-style’ weapons refers to AR-15s and other rapid-fire weapons or those that can be modified for that. Why do you need such things when they could be stolen from you or easily acquired by others and be used against you or me? In any case, those are used for mass shootings, which are a dramatic but lower-volume source of death and injury by firearms.”

 . . . my response to round two:

I understand and appreciate your need, your requirement. I could easily spend every waking hour and every word I can plunk out on the keyboard on this one issue alone. Regrettably, or perhaps selfishly, I do not have that capacity.

The key word is credibility. Opinions voiced in this forum and related fora are just common citizens like me willing to express and debate their opinions. I am just a man with a view. I have no credibility.

I am driven by a greater, broader principle in the dark cloud of dueling prohibitions that all impose upon our fundamental right to privacy and freedom of choice. The left has their prohibitions, and the right has more prohibitions that matter to them. In general terms, I am against them all. Abortion does not affect me, but I take a position. I do not and have no desire to own an AR-15, but I take a position. As a society, we have an aversion to dealing with root causes and instead choose the easy path of prohibition. Fundamental rights do not work like that. Either we are free, or we are not. Full stop!

To that end, I am fairly certain you do not care for me to repeat what I see as the other side of reality. Millions of citizens own and use AR-15s and related weapons, but it is only a few who choose to use those tools to kill or injure others. The problem is not and never has been the weapon. The root issue is the disturbed or demented mind of the man who chooses to employ that tool for destruction.

 . . . Round three:

“I'll note that we have the same rates of mental illness as the rest of the world, but our homicide rate is far higher than any other developed country. How could that be?”

 . . . my response to round three:

Noted, agreed, and unequivocally undisputed.

As I have argued with other intractable societal issues like immigration reform, we need comprehensive change. Firearm regulation is another such intractable matter. Fifty U.S. senators have been bought and paid for by vast sums of money, and we have been unable to break that obstacle; we only need 10 of them to abandon the money.

My objection is the emotional response to act on the symptoms without also addressing the root cause. I have opened myself to considerable criticism and that is the nature of the beast in an open debate forum. I only urge calm, careful, thorough legislation. Benjamin Franklin’s wise words seem most appropriate: “Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.” We are headed in a direction of tinkering with the fundamental rights and freedoms of 330 million American citizens; let us tread very carefully and deliberately.

 . . . Round four:

“We are not ‘tinkering with’ anyone’s fundamental rights and freedoms. We’ve been accepting a corrupt misinterpretation of the Second Amendment. So long as we ignore the first clause, we continue endangering ourselves. How about we read the Constitution literally on this point?”

 . . . my response to round four:

We disagree on the interpretation of the 2nd Amendment, and I doubt that disagreement will change. I understand and appreciate your interpretation, but I cannot agree. Strict interpretation cannot and must not be confined to one amendment out of convenience. The Supremes have been pretty clear on that aspect.

Just as a historic reference, after the Dunblane massacre, the British Parliament passed the Firearms (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1997 [1997 c. 64] that prohibited ownership or possession of most firearms leaving essentially only muzzle-loading historic weapons in private hands.

I favor, support and advocate for comprehensive firearm regulation, control and reform as long as we address the root causes. Confining our actions to the symptoms will NOT and NEVER will solve the problem; we must treat the root causes.

 . . . Round five:

“Treating ‘the symptoms’ seems to have worked for the rest of the world.”

 . . . my response to round five:

What?

Pardon my ignorance, I do not understand.

 . . . Round six:

“Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and many others have regulated firearms to reduce shootings, and it's working for all of them.”

 . . . my response to round six:

I have not studied the Australia and New Zealand laws. I have studied the British firearms laws that prohibit all firearms other than muzzle-loading historic weapons. Yes, agreed, those laws work in the named countries. I cannot imagine such laws overcoming the history of this once grand republic.

It is intellectually intriguing to read the so-called “strict constructionists” twisting their interpretation of facts to suit their purposes—abortion versus gun rights.

 

Another contribution:

“Hi Cap, how is Putin's deviation any different than Bush (43) and Iraq? I keep this short for clarity.”

My reply:

I have no intention of defending 43. The Iraq incursion was a stretch from the get-go, although there were more than a few contributors. Bush 43 lost me when he sacked Shinseki for speaking the truth, and he & Rummie did not listen. That said, surely you are not justifying Putin’s War by invoking Bush’s mistake?

 

A different contribution:

“We’ve spoken on this subject before because as you know over here we have very strict rules for individuals on weapon control. And so we Brits, over the pond, find it so hard to understand your utterly relaxed laws, I know it goes back a long way but you really must produce an amendment and begin to stop this butchery of the innocent and children especially.

“As you know as a ‘cold war’ warrior I had responsibilities on weapons that had such devastating power it has cured myself of ever coming close to weapons large and small.

“Mr. Biden is absolutely correct on this, your nation, all of it, needs to listen and act.

“I trust Cap you will understand my interfering attitude to this subject but I’m not alone am I-the free democratic world shares these views. Amongst us all, you are alone, can I urge your great nation to take action on this. I know it won’t happen overnight but you need to make a positive start, now. Not next year NOW.”

My response:

My apologies for the delayed response. The latest tragedy, this time in Uvalde, Texas, has besieged and overwhelmed me. That is just reality. I say, Don’t cry for me, Argentina! This is what I signed up for—a vigorous public debate forum. That said, on to your contribution.

Again, you are entitled and welcome to contribute as you wish. I try to avoid nationalistic parochialism in this forum. The United States certainly deserves criticism.

As you will read in this week’s Update, you are not alone in questioning U.S. law regarding firearms. I think I have reviewed U.S. law from the Constitution to current laws with you and in this forum; no need to repeat. I will also note British law regarding firearm regulation began with the Firearms Act, 1920 [10 & 11 Geo. 5. Ch. 43] [16.8.1920]. After the Dunblane Primary School massacre [13.3.1996], Parliament tightened British firearm laws further with Firearms (Amendment) Act 1997 [1997 c. 5] and Firearms (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1997 [1997 c. 64] that essentially left only muzzle-loading historic weapons in public hands.

The dictator Putin may well be correct—democracy is a failed governance concept. This once grand republic is perhaps exhibit no.1; we are frozen by tribal intransigence. The vast majority of American citizens are in favor of reasonable firearm regulation, but money [i.e., the National Rifle Association (NRA)] has bought enough senators to block any legislative attempt. How much longer this situation will prevail is unknown.

My words are meant to apply calm, unemotional reason to this highly volatile issue. I will persevere. 

 . . . Round two:

“Thanks Cap-yes you are perfectly correct and in order to mention our Dunblane school disaster, that was a school I would visit and often pass when speaking to youngsters about service life.

“That shook us all quite severely and the government of the day took the necessary action. You must somehow do the same. There has to be a procedure in your constitution that could overwhelm these controllers, these sad gun lovers. It is a mental discrepancy and an ancient and unneeded requirement to deter other gun lovers from their personal lives.

“Our thoughts are with all the lives of those poor ruined families.”

 . . . my response to round two:

I illuminated Dunblane only for the historical record. I certainly am not noting such tragedies to somehow backhandedly justify the vulgar carnage we endure in this once grand republic.

It is amazing the small-world connections we have. I note here that back in the day, I flew a Premier I jet into Uvalde airport numerous times. There was a good size aircraft modification company we were working with for an upgrade kit to the H400 Beechjet.

I cannot predict what may result from this latest senseless savage massacre of children. We shall see. I doubt it will be as strict as we should have.

I would caution the “gun lover” moniker. The place of firearms in American history and culture is far more complex than simple affinity.

Yes, absolutely, our thoughts, prayers, and concerns for the mounting families who have lost precious children. I remember Columbine [20.4.1999] and all the others in between.

I wish the far-right conservatives cared about children as much as they claim they do about a microscopic clump of dividing cells. I am all in favor of comprehensive firearm regulation and control that respects the fundamental rights of all citizens, especially the peaceful, law-abiding, contributory citizens. Again, we shall see.

 . . . Round three:

“Thanks, Cap, for your words. We Brits and I’m certain many others wish you God speed in national efforts.”

 . . . my response to round three:

Thx mate. We need all the well-wishes we can gather. It is a rough road ahead.

 

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

Cheers,

Cap                  :-) 

23 May 2022

Update no.1062

Update from the Sunland

No.1062

16.5.22 – 22.5.22

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

 

To all,

 

The follow-up news items:

-- The Russian brutalization of Ukraine [1050] is difficult to watch or tolerate. It was sad to witness the subjugation of Mariupol, the Ukrainian port city on the shore of the Sea of Azov. In addition to the dictator Putin’s unprovoked, naked, unilateral aggression against a peaceful neighboring sovereign nation, we must bear witness to Putin’s vengeful, inhuman, wonton destruction of everything within reach of his weapons of war.

-- Finland and Sweden officially approved, signed and submitted their application to join NATO [1057]. Of course, the dictator Putin has issued more threats in his effort to intimidate his neighbors. Putin has done more to unify NATO than any single individual. Having observed more than a few Russians back when they were Soviets, and then when they were free, Putin’s conduct is not Russian, it is Putin and the power hierarchy that supports Putin and dominates today’s Russia.

Is the dictator Putin really that bloody naïve to think his free neighbors would simply kneel before the distant memory of the once indomitable weight of the Red Army? The Finns fought a war against the Soviet Union 83 years ago and convinced them to join Germany against the Soviet Union during World War II, just as many Ukrainians and Romanians joined the Nazis. The 14th Waffen-SS Grenadier Division was composed of Ukrainian volunteers, and the 1st Waffen-SS Grenadier Regiment had all Romanian volunteers. And the dictator Putin refuses to ask himself the salient question . . . why?

-- Several reliable news sources reported that unspecified U.S. officials have indicated the most likely cause of the March 2022 crash of the China Eastern Boeing 737-800 [1054] was intentional. The U.S. NTSB publicly announced and affirmed that the official final report will come from the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC). The final report is not expected until next spring.

Since the day the China Eastern crash happened (21.3.2022), I have seen the shadows of the Germanwings event on 24.3.2015 [693] and Egypt Air Flight 990  on 31.10.1999. The two dates may be coincidence, but I am not a fan of coincidences, because such occurrences always remind me of 20.4.1889 and 20.4.1999, or 19.4.1992, 19.4.1993, and 19.4.1995. Other similarities bother me, namely that no weather, mechanical or other non-human failures have been detected. Why remains an active question. 

 

Prohibition is rarely—I will not say never—but very rarely the answer to our moral objections to the choices of others. I have owned and possessed firearms from pistols to long guns all of my adult life. I have been well trained to kill other human beings with a variety of weapons from my extremities to firearms and offensive flying machines. I have and know these elements of death, but I do not use them. I do not hate. I do not feel any urge to use the tools and knowledge I have. What I ask is, should I be included in a firearms prohibition? Is that right and respectful of my rights? The same rationale applies to many, if not all, of the prohibitions so many of us choose to bandy about, e.g., abortion, psychotropic substances, firearms, censorship, et al. One side wants to impose their prohibitions on the other side and everyone, while the other side seeks to impose their different prohibitions on everyone. Neither side is correct or respectful of every citizen’s fundamental right to privacy. The latest racist mass shooting in Buffalo has brought social media ranting back to the fore. Instead of beating up on the various social media sites, I would encourage them to monitor and report radical ideology to the FBI, DHS, or state or local police, and record their notification. I want these haters out in the open where we can see them. Returning them to the shadows just makes it easier for them to hide. Let us deal with solutions to societal problems without imposing upon every citizen’s fundamental right to privacy and freedom of choice.

 

In another sign of the times Supreme Court case, we have yet another money over citizenship case to add to the growing list—FEC v. Cruz [596 U. S. ____ (2022)]. I struggled mightily to get through my reading of this case; it is so bloody depressing. Chief Justice Roberts wrote for the 6-3 majority [you know the divisions]. The majority opinion is a rather convoluted circular argument not intended to clarify but rather to obfuscate. The reasoning is ridiculous and a rationalization obtuse view of the law. What Roberts fails or refuses to acknowledge—the law was the law. Cruz chose not to obey the law, and after the fact, Cruz claimed the law imposed upon his freedom of speech. Regrettably and erroneously, the majority conceded to Cruz’s defiance of the law.

Twenty years ago, Congress passed the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA){AKA McCain–Feingold Act or Shays-Meehan}[PL 107-155; 116 Stat. 81; 27.3.2002] [322501] in a valiant effort to clean up the inherent corruption of money in politics. Since then, the Supremes apparently see money and corporations as interchangeable with speech and citizenship; they have been hell bent upon carving up McCain–Feingold. They were wrong 10 years ago {Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission [558 U.S. 310 (2010); 21.1.2010] [424]}; they remain wrong today. Congress sought to “level the playing field” in an albeit brutal contact sport that is American politics. The Supremes have done their level best to negate the best efforts of Congress. The Supremes have not made this a better country. They only made us more susceptible to corruption and abuse by the wealthy and privileged. 

 

Congress passed H.R.7691 - Additional Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2022 [Senate: 86-11-0-3(0); House: 368-57-0-5(5)]—the US$40B additional aid package for Ukraine. President Biden reportedly signed the aid package into law on Saturday while he was in the Republic of Korea on his Asian journey. I have not yet been able to independently confirm the president’s action, so I will have to wait for the full citation. In a vote like this one, we get to see physical evidence of the true believer fBICP members of both the House and Senate. We have only to look at the list of representatives and senators who voted against the aid bill.

 

Comments and contributions from Update no.1061:

“Rep. Jordan of Ohio has already dodged a major scandal from his Ohio State days. He might believe he can skip out of the January 6 one too. Given that Attorney General Garland seems reluctant to do his job, it could happen.

“Criminalizing drug use has failed and has caused massive collateral damage.

“Be careful with any saber-rattling. That ‘mutual assured destruction’ concept isn’t taken as seriously as it once was.

“The discussion of Scotland reinforces my notion that no conquered nation is ever content.”

My response:

Yeah, Jordan has dodged several controversies. He may not dodge this one. AG Garland is very slow and deliberate. Sometimes the facts are overwhelming. In the Meadows case, I believe he is moving far too cautiously, almost deliberately slow. Not a good thought, but that is the image I have. I wish he was more forthright in keeping We, the People, with him, i.e., what is he concerned about? Prosecution of Meadows will now be well past the mid-terms; the AG is not likely to change, but Congress might. If the fBICP takes over the House, I can easily see them immediately withdrawing the criminal complaint {H.Res. 851 [1040] 13.12.2021}.

Oh my, yes . . . and your statement may well be a gross understatement . . . massive collateral damage indeed! I will continue and persist until I am unable to do so in voicing my grave objections to the monstrous invasion of a citizen’s fundamental right to privacy that is the Controlled Substances Act [Title II; PL 91-513; 84 Stat. 1236; 27.10.1970].

{Just an unrelated side note: I’ve always found it mildly intriguing that CSA stands for Controlled Substances Act as well as Confederate States of America. Connection?}

I do believe I am quite mindful of “mutually assured destruction.” I also know that, if we cower in the face of nuclear threats, we display weakness a sociopathic, megalomaniacal dictator will exploit to feed his purposes. We bear witness today.

How far back into history does your “conquered nation” hypothesis go? Virtually every nation, region, or tribe has been conquered at one time or another. Do we dissolve nations and just revert to every person for his or herself? Do we allow and accept the Confederate States of America to reconstitute itself and separate? How far do we go back? IMHO, people like Mary Louise McDonald and Nicola Sturgeon are far more interested in power than solving issues.

 . . . Round two:

“I’m sure you are aware of ‘mutually assured destruction.’ My point is that various generals and heads of state can find ways to ignore that idea.

“Even Rome couldn’t maintain order in the nations it conquered—and I was referring to nations, not individuals. The states of the Confederacy were never an established nation, but we can map the radical right onto its territory. I have no solution for that one. Lincoln’s plan for Reconstruction wasn’t carried out, and it’s too late now. However, we conquered Germany and Japan after World War II, then helped them become sovereign nations again. Hence, we have far less stress with them.

“The Defense Department has indeed been audited. It just hasn’t passed an audit.”

 . . . my response to round two:

I have lived with ‘mutually assured destruction’ for decades—all of my military career and after. Frankly, I cannot imagine any military or political leader ignoring MAD. Perhaps, you are conflating the confrontation of naked aggression with circumvention. I doubt Putin is ignoring MAD; I think he is gambling that his threats will cower and split the Western Allies, just as Hitler did in 1938. If we allow his threats to work, we have given him another tool to use for his hegemonic ambitions today and ahead. There will be no winners in a nuclear exchange, but he has to know that Russia is likely to suffer more than Europe or North America. Then again, perhaps Putin has suicide pact mentally, i.e., if he cannot have what he wants, burn the whole house down. He is doing just that in Ukraine, and he is certainly capable of doing it to the world. If we give in to him in Ukraine, where will it stop. Chamberlain thought appeasement would stop Hitler at Sudetenland in 1938; how did that work out?

Members of the Confederate States of America might vigorously debate you on that question. They raised a standing and very effective Army. I sense that the radical right is heading in the direction of secession; they cannot countenance anyone who does not look and believe like them reaching leadership and positions of power. The notion has been around longer than this once grand republic and was not confined to the former CSA states. I would say the answer is education, but where education will not or cannot work, perseverance must be our watchword.

Yes, indeed, Lincoln’s Reconstruction Plan was the best hope we had to heal the wounds swiftly. He chose Andrew Johnson in a gesture of reconciliation, but that choice backfired with his assassination. Fate works that way on occasion. Yes, two excellent examples . . . again Sir Winston’s wise words: “In War: Resolution, In Defeat: Defiance, In Victory: Magnanimity, In Peace: Good Will.” We have strong allies today as a consequence.

I suppose it boils down to your definition of ‘passed.’

 . . . Round three:

“I’m aware of mutually assured destruction, and I expect that’s what would happen if someone used nuclear weapons. However, I remember a discussion a few years ago of ‘battlefield’ or ‘tactical’ nukes, and that’s an attempt to support the use of nuclear weapons.

“The Confederacy lost their war. My point is that the area still has the collective resentment of a conquered nation.

“Even internal audits of the Department of Defense haven’t met their standard.

https://www.govexec.com/management/2021/11/defense-department-fails-its-audit-again-officials-have-no-doubt-it-will-eventually-pass/186865/

 . . . my response to round three:

There is a difference between “support the use” and “not afraid to use.” There are also monumental differences between a 2KT weapon and a 10MT weapon. I am in the camp of never take anything off the table. I would give no one unilateral use. If Putin is crazy enough to use them, then so be it; he will suffer the consequences. Nuclear, Biological and Chemical weapons are NOT weapons of vengeance. Putin must know and realize we are not afraid of him or his weapons.

OK, I’ll grant you that. So what do you suggest we do about it? Further, I suspect the majority of citizens in the former CSA are not supporters. Nonetheless, there are those who do hold resentment, just as there are still second and third generation Nazis in Germany. My salient question remains, how far back do we go?

We may never know what produced the “failed” conclusion. Hard to fix what we do not know. My experience within the Defense Department tells me there are good people trying to do the correct things responsibly, but there is no doubt there is waste and perhaps even fraud. However, I am still driven by the old adage, don’t throw the baby out with the bath water.

 . . . Round four:

“Regardless of semantics or size, the potential use of nuclear weapons scares me.

“We can’t go back with our radicals, but we need to find a way to go forward.

“Nobody wants to shut down the Defense Department, but it gets a bloated budget. Change is in order.”

 . . . my response to round four:

To be candid, biological weapons concern me far more than nuclear weapons. Nuclear weapons are predictable; biological agents are NOT. I am NOT an advocate of nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons, thus my previous distinction between ‘support’ and ‘not afraid.’ Your fear is quite understandable; they are all mass, indiscriminate killers.

To me, irrational hatred is quite like an infectious, lethal virus and needs to be treated as such. As I have previously written, I am of the mind that we need these hateful people in the open where they can be monitored, illuminated, and appropriate sanctions applied.

Oh my yes, change for DoD is very much in order. I have been convinced for some time that the DoD budget is the favored hiding ground for the far right. I think we were surprised to see in the last administration that reality reached public scrutiny. Yea verily! Change for DoD is very much in order.

 

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

Cheers,

Cap                  :-) 

16 May 2022

Update no.1061

 Update from the Sunland

No.1061

9.5.22 – 15.5.22

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

 

To all,

 

The follow-up news items:

-- The United States House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol [1020] {HSCJ6} continues its vital work investigating the insurrection [991 & sub]. This week, they subpoenaed five of their fBICP colleagues.

“January 6 committee subpoenas 5 GOP lawmakers close to Trump, including McCarthy”

by Scott MacFarlane, Melissa Quinn, Kathryn Watson 

CBS News

Published: Updated on:  May 13, 2022 / 7:30 AM / 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/january-6-committee-subpoena-kevin-mccarthy-jim-jordan-mo-brooks-scott-perry-andy-biggs/

Those who received HSCJ6 subpoenas this week were members of the House of Representatives: Minority Leader McCarthy of California, Biggs of Arizona, Brooks of Alabama, Jordon of Ohio, and Perry of Pennsylvania, each of them for different reasons. All of them have indicated they will defy the subpoenas. I hope and trust the Committee and the House will move swiftly to file a criminal complaint with the Department of Justice for prosecution. They all deserve to go to jail. That said, Bannon was the first to be indicted last year, and his trial is not scheduled to start until July, and Meadows is yet to be indicted for his defiance of the HSCJ6 subpoena to testify.

-- We have the first criminal prosecution from the Russian invasion of Ukraine [1050 & sub]

“Ukraine begins first war crimes trial of Russian soldier”

by Pavel Polityuk and Tom Balmforth

Reuters

Published: May 13, 2022; 4:14 AM MST

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/ukrainian-court-hear-first-war-crimes-case-against-russian-soldier-2022-05-13/

The accused has been identified as Vadim Shishimarin, a 21-year-old Russian tank commander. The man claims he was ordered to shoot a 62-year-old man on a bicycle because he was talking on a cell phone and might be passing the location of the Russians to Ukrainian forces in the area.  The real culprits who should be tried have president or general in front of their names. Whether the perpetrators ever see a court room for their crimes is doubtful, but those individuals should never be allowed outside of Russia for any reason.

 

The Senate failed to pass S.4132 - Women’s Health Protection Act of 2022 [Senate: 49-51-0-0(0)] to codify women’s health care rights in the wake of the leaked draft Supremes’ ruling. Senator Manchin of West Virginia voted with the few remaining Republicans and all of the fBICP members. So now, we wait for the end of June and the Court’s formal and final ruling.

 

Another interesting article this week:

“More than 107,000 Americans died from overdoses last year. This drug is behind most deaths.”

by Ken Alltucker

USA Today

Updated 12:57 pm EDT; May. 11, 2022

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2022/05/11/illicit-fentanyl-propels-overdose-deaths-us-new-record/9720422002/

I do not dispute the facts reported in the article. Multiple sources report on the scourge of fentanyl, the powerful synthetic opioid, throughout the nation. One phrase in the article set me off—“fentanyl is now responsible for most overdose deaths.”  I take serious exception to the author’s use of the word ‘responsible’ in this context. ‘Involved’ might have been a more acceptable word choice. While a goodly portion of fentanyl overdoses  could be attributed to direct ingestion of fentanyl, the majority of fentanyl overdoses are more likely due to contamination of other consumable substances like marijuana, cocaine, meth, and even heroin; in other words, inadvertent and unknowing ingestion of the powerful opioid. Presumably, the idea for the drug producers and pushers is to hook consumers on the opioid—better profit margin, more committed consumers. As long as psychotropic substance consumption remains illegal and outside the law, these woefully needless deaths will occur. We really need to outgrow our foolish moral objections to psychotropic substance consumption. If you do not want to consume those substances, then do not do so. Like so many of these damnable morality laws, we put a band-aide on a problem to make ourselves feel better rather than taking steps to solve the problem. We must legalize and regulate the substances to ensure the uniform content, purity, and consistency. Fifty years of moral projection prohibition has not stopped consumption and never will do so. Fentanyl is NOT responsible for overdose deaths; contamination is responsible for overdoses. Let’s grow up. Prohibition has not worked, and it never will work. It is long past due to try a different approach to solving the problem of overdose fatalities.

 

president Sauli Väinämö Niinistö of Finland publicly announced to the world that his country would end decades of neutrality and non-alignment, and apply for swift admission to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). President Niinistö’s announcement prompted immediate threats from the dictator Putin, so the action must have been spot on correct. As for me, I think Finland should be admitted promptly and enthusiastically to NATO. Sweden, as well, if they wish to join.

Late this week, the ruling Social Democratic Party in Sweden indicated they favored swiftly joining NATO, also ending decades of neutrality and non-alignment. The Swedish Parliament has not yet voted to do so.

I will repeat my opinion that I also think Ukraine should be admitted to NATO and an ultimatum issued to the dictator Putin and Russia that they must withdraw from all of Ukraine (to the pre-2014 border). If Putin rejects the ultimatum or refuses to comply, then all of NATO including the United States should then mobilize to defend a member nation.

 

Der Spiegel offered an interesting European view of the potential Ukraine membership in the EU. It is not quite NATO, but it is certainly much closer.

“United Against Russia? Ukraine's Membership Application Poses Tough Questions for the EU – European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is pushing for rapid EU accession talks with Kyiv. The Eastern Europeans are applauding the move, but Berlin and Paris are applying the brakes. The issue poses a threat to Europe's united stance against Russia.”

by Ralf Neukirch, Ann-Dorit Boy, Leo Klimm, Maximilian Popp, Lina Verschwele and Jan Puhl

Der Spiegel

Published: 13.05.2022, 17.57 Uhr

https://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/united-against-russia-ukraine-s-membership-application-poses-tough-questions-for-the-eu-a-c2454fad-5c6b-4164-9a08-47d32cf63762?sara_ecid=nl_upd_1jtzCCtmxpVo9GAZr2b4X8GquyeAc9&nlid=bfjpqhxz

If Putin feels threatened by the expansion of the EU and NATO, he has only one person to blame, and President Niinistö answered most succinctly and correctly, “look in the mirror.” Precisely! NATO is a convenient excuse for Russian hegemony. Putin has sought to re-constitute the Soviet Union including the Warsaw Pact, and he is grasping at any excuse, any rationale he can find to justify his intentions—much like Hitler’s Lebensraum. He dreadfully miscalculated, probably because he intimidated everyone around him to validate his intentions and his plans.

Does that sound familiar?

 

Comments and contributions from Update no.1060:

Comment to the Blog:

“A variety of sources tell me that the leaked draft of Alito’s Supreme Court anti-abortion ruling includes the phrase ‘domestic supply of infants’ in reference to adoption. That’s repellent.

“The 4th Amendment to the Constitution guarantees ‘the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects.’ Doesn’t that include privacy? ‘Secure in their persons’ seems to me to include whatever we choose to do with our physical persons, so long as it doesn’t impinge on someone else.

“I’ll note that my discussion of guilt last week had more to do with writing style than anything else. In order to reach an audience effectively, you need to understand the feelings you evoke.

“We are finally having excellent spring weather. I’ll enjoy it. You have a good day also.”

My response to the Blog:

As I indicated, I have not yet read the phrase “domestic supply of infants” in reference to adoption. If the phrase makes it to the final, released decision, I will certainly highlight the phrase and my comparable revulsion with Alito’s use of such despicable terms. I am still resisting the reading of the draft. I suspect there will be much more revolting terms, phrases, concepts, and opinions. The callousness and inhumanity he is apparently using to justify his staunchly conservative interpretation of the U.S. Constitution are, to put it mildly, disgusting. There is a reason Justice Thomas chose Alito to write the draft majority opinion. Rightly so, the public outrage of a few Republican senators who voted to confirm the nominees of [the person who shall no longer be named]—Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett—is boiling over . . . not quite to perjury under oath, but about one step short. I suspect they will write concurring opinions in a lame effort to redeem their integrity. Or perhaps, they do not care since they have lifetime appointments.

Re: 4th Amendment. In my opinion, yes, that is exactly what it means. Unfortunately, I do not believe that is the opinion of Alito et al. I say this because I have heard the rationale many times—“Privacy is not explicitly stated in the U.S. Constitution.” The statement is absolutely true. It also ignores the 4th, 5th, 9th and 10th Amendments that certainly heavily imply a citizen’s fundamental right to privacy. The Court’s jurisprudence regarding the 4th and 5th Amendmentsis extensive; not so for the 9th and 10th Amendments. Thomas and Alito, as with Scalia before them, often point to the fact that privacy is not a matter of constitutional jurisprudence (according to them). Other justices like Douglas, Blackmun and O’Connor did not agree . . . thank goodness. At the risk of appearing pedantic, the 4th Amendment, as written and ratified, states: 

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

The conservatives in the Judiciary point to the object of the amendment, namely warrants, i.e., governmental action regarding search and seizure, and the violation is the government entering our homes. The conservatives have used a variety of tricks and slight of hand maneuvers to circumvent the 4th, 5th, 9th and 10th Amendments. The Court goes through phases or cycles unfortunately, and we clearly have entered a deeply conservative cycle. I do not know if I will see the day of correction, but I have faith the day will come, hopefully for our children, but more likely for our grandchildren or great-grandchildren. Such are the cycles of the Court.

{Supplemental note: what we are debating re: the pending Dobbs decision is exactly why intelligent conservatives have supported [the person who shall no longer be named], they held their noses while he blindly followed their judicial nomination recommendations. He did exactly what they wanted. Moscow Mitch was his willing accomplice. We witness the consequences.}

Thank you for your constructive criticism regarding my writing. I remain a firm believer in Sir Winston’s unique wisdom: “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.” Just for the record, I am not writing for one audience. I am trying to reach many people across a broad spectrum of society.

I am glad you’ve got a respite in the weather and spring has arrived. Every day I awaken is a great day, and today is another great day.

 

Another contribution:

“Cap, Indeed they are led by an lady who does not, in my view, encourage support from us outsiders. I’d rather watch a television advert! However as we have said before this is the pleasure of democracy that is what we have opted for and so we tolerate these oddities, there is no choice, and that view is profoundly supported by the dreadful attack on Ukraine by a demented country led by a despicable non-human being.”

My reply:

I assume you are referring to Mary Louise McDonald. If so, she is a disciple of a long line of Irish nationalists and comparably intransigent. At least they have not regressed to the violence of The Troubles. She has made public statements condemning the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. Am I missing something?

Yes, Putin has cemented his status as a world pariah. He has ordered the Russian armed forces—all branches—to destroy everything in Ukraine. The Russians are not hitting military targets. They are intentionally and purposefully attacking civilian buildings, infrastructure, and facilities of life—water and food. And still, the Ukrainians defy the Russian dictator.

I am coming to the position that President Biden was fundamentally wrong in taking military action off the table at the outset. I know and acknowledge the reason, i.e., he had to reassure the American people he was not taking us into another war. President Roosevelt faced a similar conundrum as the fascist regimes exploited the reticence of the Western Allies to avoid war. Putin is doing exactly the same thing as Hitler, Mussolini, and Tojo. Biden is doing more than Chamberlain and Daladier did in 1938, but it all still led to the same place—WAR! Dictators have no morality. They know only megalomania. Putin is no different. I am beginning to see NATO membership for Ukraine and Moldova as the best logical step. After that, if the Russians do not leave Ukraine including Dombass and Crimea (the border prior to 2014), then war it is. The sooner we get on with it the sooner we will be done with Putin. I also think Putin should be completely and absolutely isolated—everything; the Russian people will suffer but they sustain him; make him a sole matter for the Russian people. They have been lied to deeply, and they must correct the problem. But, Ukraine deserves its sovereignty and independence; they have earned it the hard way. A united NATO poised to liberate Ukraine as it liberated Kuwait would be Putin’s worst nightmare. So be it.

 . . . follow-up comment:

“In this case I was referring to the leader of the Scottish government Nicola Sturgeon.

Leader of the Scottish National Party. She speaks without any affectionate attitudes or approval of the rest of us British people. She is determined that Scotland leaves these Isles and after that what then I wonder.”

 . . . my follow-up reply:

Ahso. Another nationalist firebrand! What’s next Wales independence? As I understand things, the nationalists are a minority, which means voting is very important.

 

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

Cheers,

Cap                  :-)