The big news is the pardon of nut cases like Chelsea (nee Bradley) Manning. The real story came from a friend who is a long-time FBI agent.
Yep, the inmates at Gitmo who once numbered in the 250 range is down to 50. The rest are back in the warm hands of whatever terrorist supporting state would take them. Back in the game.
But the wholesale pardons that have been issuing from the White House in the last days of Obama (that is a nice phrase to write) are scary. According to my friend, he was scanning the list of names a few weeks ago and he spotted a guy who was a really bad actor. Armed robbery, assault, basically a sociopath. Not just drug dealing, but a king pin. Then another, then another.
They were serving time for "minor offenses." Not their real crimes, but the ones they pleaded down to. Our court system does this routinely to put nasty people away from the rest of us but avoiding the expense and time to actually prosecute the worst crime. Did the pardon-makers even look at the history and the facts? Apparently not.
The result, my friends, is that some dangerous people have been put back on the streets.
In one of the posts, I mention that we need to write memoirs before we get too old since old men often don't differentiate between the important and the trivial. And I'm not getting any younger. This blog is mostly for my kids, to understand a bit about the world I came from and lived through. Welcome to anyone else, but this is not profound and it is very personal.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
DEMOCRATS BLAME...
Now NBC has come out with a big story about how the
Democrats have lost power, not only at the national level, but the local level. Couple months late? I think most of us knew about this. Some say the Democrats haven't been this ticked off since we took their slaves
away. They point to gerrymandering, the big win in California and "not
getting their message out there." The one thing you never hear is,
"We have been wrong."
I'm amazed at the "fake news" that has been
filling CNN, CBS, NBC and ABC along with the tag a longs like Yahoo! since the
last election. There is NO journalistic integrity. Frankly, it reminds me of
the fringy stuff we heard during the eight long years of Obama. But it came
from independent places, one man outfits that were writing stuff to fill the
internet.
Putin is having a field day. His last is
hilarious--responding to the accusation that Trump "entertained"
prostitutes while in Russia, Putin says, "Our sex workers are the best in
the world." Do we honestly think that Trump is unaware of Putin's use of
prostitutes? Putin came up through a rough and tumble structure that more
resembles the Mafia than a political party. Trump has told his associates and
employees for years, "There are cameras everywhere." And when
Christie told him he was impervious to the bridge scandal--and then it turned
out he was complicit--Trump dropped him. Did you see that on the 6 o'clock news?
Oh, the irony that Obama is the best thing that has happened
to the Republicans, perhaps ever. The Democrats may never recover. Actually,
the thing that may never recover is the "mainstream news" and
polling. Notice now when you see a poll that says that everybody agrees with
Michelle Obama that all Americans have lost hope, you are skeptical? And then
another poll comes out that says what is affirmed by the stock market,
etc--Americans have more hope and faith in the future now that Obama is gone.
Obama and Hillary have also been the best thing to happen to
the gun industry. Unintended consequences.
Think of the good things that have happened with Trump: no
more Kennedys, no more Bush dynasty, exposure of the absurd idea that 97% of
scientists could agree on anything let alone the cause of "global
warming" as being caused by humans. Potential definition of the radical
Muslim threat, potential slow down of government-by-bureaucrats causing tens of
thousands of expensive regulations that are some sort of liberal substitute for
actual enforcement. The laws are basically there, but Democrats/liberals who
can't say no to their kids let alone to law breakers want to layer on more
regulations instead of enforcing the law.
And then we come to pardons. Next post, wait for it.
Tuesday, January 3, 2017
831
I seldom post twice in one day. I am frequently out of touch with what's going on and here's an example.
A term has been "banished" from our vocabulary by Lake Superior State University that has been publishing a banished list for 42 years. One of the terms this year is "831."
OK, I am in agreement, it can be banished since I didn't even know what it meant. Be informed, grasshopper: texting shorthand for I love you. Eight letters, three words, one meaning. The reason for banishment? "Never encrypt or abbreviate one's love."
Now ya know. Be complete, treasured ones.
A term has been "banished" from our vocabulary by Lake Superior State University that has been publishing a banished list for 42 years. One of the terms this year is "831."
OK, I am in agreement, it can be banished since I didn't even know what it meant. Be informed, grasshopper: texting shorthand for I love you. Eight letters, three words, one meaning. The reason for banishment? "Never encrypt or abbreviate one's love."
Now ya know. Be complete, treasured ones.
INAUGURAL ADDRESSES
Initiate
(inaugurate?) the new year of 2017 with a serious look at the topics of
political language as represented by the addresses given by newly inaugurated
Presidents. If I were able, it would be less than the 1,000 words herein, but
sorry.
Also
gives me a chance to put in another good word for a President who continues to
rise in my estimation, James Garfield. Not for his actions as President, though
in his short time he did a lot, but because of his lifetime accomplishments.
Much of this is based on a January 12,
2009 article in The New Yorker magazine
by Jill Lepore. You will notice a much more level and less antagonistic
political attitude in that 2009 article than we see today, particularly the
disdain that is typically leveled at Republicans in general and the
"deplorables" in particular. Their apparent audience today seems to
be that minority that resides on the coasts and subsists on lattes, kale and
free range chicken with a liberal dash of contempt for people who work for a
living and live elsewhere. Figures--Obama had just won.
James
Garfield was a Republican (gasp) who is praised in Lepore's article (double
gasp), born in a log cabin, but not, in the author's opinion, the match for
Lincoln, another member of the log cabin fraternity. At least when it came to
oratory. Garfield continued as a candidate and as President to further the
principles of not only abolishing slavery but achieving full citizenship for
Negroes (now known as African Americans…or just Americans?) to the chagrin of
Democrats.
Frankly,
I am not an expert, but it is difficult to argue about Lincoln's status as the
finest speechmaker to occupy the White House, and his inaugural addresses are
pretty darn good. For instance, see the suggestion and his rewrite:
Lincoln gave a draft of his first inaugural to his
incoming Secretary of State, William Seward, who scribbled out a new ending,
offering an olive branch to seceding Southern states:
I close. We are not, we
must not be, aliens or enemies, but fellow-countrymen and brethren. Although
passion has strained our bonds of affection too hardly, they must not, I am
sure they will not, be broken. The mystic chords which, proceeding from so many
battlefields and so many patriot graves, pass through all the hearts and all
the hearths in this broad continent of ours, will yet harmonize in their
ancient music when breathed upon by the guardian angels of the nation.
But it was Lincoln’s
revision that made this soar:
I am loath to close. We
are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have
strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory,
stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and
hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union,
when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.
Today
we can't see anything about these addresses without seeing Kennedy's "Ask
not…" written for him by fellow Nebraskan, Ted Sorenson. But it wasn't a
great address…just pretty good.
One
of the stellar points made in the article is that every nineteenth century
inaugural except Zachary Taylor's mentions the Constitution, another fact and sentiment noticeably absent in publications like The New Yorker, The New York Times, etc. Listen up when you
hear the oath of office--they do not swear to serve the people but to
"uphold the Constitution." Thoughtful people have worried that "By appealing to the people, charismatic
Chief Executives were bypassing Congress and ignoring the warnings of—and the
provisions made by—the Founding Fathers, who considered popular leaders to be
demagogues, politicians who appealed to passion rather than to reason". This
worry has been extended to the appointments to the Supreme Court which invites disaster.
Another
point, similar in tone and potential impact is that the speeches in the
twentieth century have become pandering, sloganeering and begging for applause.
Part of this is the change in the society and the "American"
language, but part of it is, regrettable, the "absence of precision, the
paucity of ideas and the evasion of every species of argument." The
speeches are mostly written by journalism graduates who have been brought up on
Strunk and White's "Elements of Style ("Omit needless words")
and Orwell's 1946 essay "Politics and the English Language"
("Never us a long word where a short one will do").
At this point,
take another look at Lincoln's speeches--I would maintain that he conformed to
Elements of Style and Orwell but retained an elegance and grace totally absent
in today's speeches.
Back
to my man, James Garfield. He was not inaugurated until March, as was the law
then, but he worried in his diary about the speech from early after the
election, even going so far as to consider scrapping the whole idea. After all,
there is no legal reason to make such an address, just the custom established
by Washington.
In
the end, it was passable:
My
countrymen, we do not now differ in our judgment concerning the controversies
of past generations, and fifty years hence our children will not be divided in
their opinions concerning our controversies. They will surely bless their
fathers and their fathers’ God that the Union was preserved, that slavery was
overthrown, and that both races were made equal before the law. We may hasten
or we may retard, but we can not prevent, the final reconciliation.
"Race
relations" would be the current phrase. Worse than they have been in most
of our lifetimes. Maybe things will get better, but the divisive attitudes make
us worry. My vote was for Trump, but my hope is that his inaugural address will
be a bit more than tweets. Let us hope for a map for the future, a guide to
actions and activities that can unite this great land. We really need the
elites, the press and many celebrities to embrace a society where their views
are heard and considered, not just their bile directed at the rest of us. Let's
review the lesson as stated by Jefferson in his first inaugural:
If there be any among us who would
wish to dissolve this Union or to change its republican form, let them stand
undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be
tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.
In
the lingo of today, comments attributed to the military and police: "I
hate what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)