Thursday, July 29, 2010

The Intended Consequences of "Unintended Consequences"

I have been reading "Dare to Inquire" by Bruce I. Kodish, Ph.D. and am about 1/2 way through the book. It's a good but heavy read that I highly recommend. So when you read it, take your time and digest what Dr. Kodish presents. In a strange way, it fits with the purpose of this post but I don't think that was Dr. Kodishs' intent. I'll get back to DtI later. I think the best is yet to come although his chronicle of the history of GS is illuminating. So . . .

A friend called and during our conversation mentioned the book "Unintended Consequences" (UI) by John Ross. Even though I have a PDF copy downloaded some months ago I had never read the book. (Out of print copies can be purchased for between $200 and $400. There are announcements for a new release or a paperback edition but none are available. So I opted for a copy reportedly posted by the author. When an edition becomes available from a source where the author gets paid, I will purchase a copy. I quite honestly think the nature of the book discourages after-market or tiers of purchase price. I use Ross' discussion of the three-tiered pricing of certain weapons due to absolutely ridiculous weapons laws to justify the download.) The recent conversation brought it into focus so I sat down, read the novel (It's an easy read and I finished all 749 pages with research in just under 14 hours.) and researched some of the points made in the book. The following is my review/opinion of the book and contents.

First, let me say that Ross has taken the term unintended consequences to a new level of understanding. In essence, everything we do has unintended consequences but in the novel, consequences aren't always associated with or even mostly associated with negatives. This applies to seemingly meaningless things, things that are legal one day that turn illegal the next, use and misuse of power, egotistical behavior, government excess and arrogance and applications of ideology over human rights along with relationships, belief in freedom over slavery, self-reliance and the belief that the founders got it right. UI deals with the unintended consequences of weapons laws, the actions of totalitarian governments, government agents gone wild, (Ross used the incidents at Ruby Ridge and Waco to highlight government actions gone wild with disastrous consequences. Maybe Ross should have titled the novel: Disastrous Consequences.) and a basic situation where human rights have become subservient to those of self-appointed authorities. But the central character learns to fly and this has unintended consequences. He becomes a weapons expert and this has unintended consequences. He grows up with a belief in American values of freedom and self-reliance and these beliefs have unintended consequences. He meets others of similar mind and these meetings have unintended consequences. The Germans killed thousands of Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto and millions during the Holocaust and these have unintended consequences. As many Jewish, Democratic congressmen and senators as there are who advocate gun control in the name of progressivism, there are an equal number who belong to organizations like "GOA" Gun Owners Association and JPFO (Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership.)

The novel follows the exploits and life journey of Henry Bowman. Henry starts out as a kid who loves guns, shooting, targeting, hunting and all the other aspects of what has been described as "The Gun Culture." Basically this culture is comprised of law-abiding citizens with interests in all kinds of shooting from skeet, to target to just blasting off thousands of rounds through a machine gun for the pure fun of wielding that much fire power. As described in the novel, the gun culture has people from all walks of life and all income levels. Gun collectors tend to be financially stable professionals. There are the few "redneck gun nuts" but these are an isolated lot who are not embraced the great numbers of responsible owners. Race is not a factor and the novel delves into the idea that much gun control legislation was initially passed to keep minorities, including ex-slaves, from owning guns. Ross posits the theory that current gun laws are directly aimed at keeping blacks and hispanics from arming themselves. The fact that others come under the blanket of gun control is simply an intended consequence of such laws.

A side note from my own experience. Some twenty years back, I got involved with archery. When I was learning, I used to go to a range in a public park across from one of the movie studios. I met two other archers there regularly. What turned out to be a chance meeting became a friendship and they invited me hunting. They were great shots and showed me things about bows, aiming and hunting with a bow that I had never known. I bagged my first kill with a bow on our second trip and even though I moved some distance away, we still converse. These guys knew bow hunting but also shot rifles (Both had large collections.) and they got me involved with black powder rifles. All in all, we had a great time together and when I moved away, these guys threw me a barbecue and party. By the way, both of these guys were black and they mentioned several times that gun control was aimed at blacks. I never really believed them or thought that much about it until reading Ross' book.

Ross knows the culture well and research into the various gun meets, shoot outs, competitions all proved to be accurate. Also very accurate is his description of the kind of people in the "gun culture." They are universally law abiding, self-reliant, trustworthy hobbyists who like to shoot, collect, compete and talk about weapons of all kinds. The great majority feel that current gun control laws only affect them and do nothing to control criminal elements which are supposedly the cause of gun legislation in the first place. But I'll get into that later.

Henry is a product of the Midwest and contrary to popular opinion, the great heartland has seen some of the most restrictive gun legislation in the country. Henry gets the bug to collect weapons and his father supports his passion by buying and training his son in safe weapon use. By his teens, he has a large collection. He also learns to fly because his father was a flight trainer during WWII. Basically, Henry's an all-American kid growing up in a family that thought weapons were as much a part of life as a computer is now. But Henry is exceptional. He reads about famous marksmen/women who did amazing things with guns like shooting skeet with a bolt-action, centerfire rifle. He practices and gets quite proficient with different rifles and falls in love with a semi-auto configured BAR also known as the Browning Automatic Rifle made famous during WWII. He can shoot single shots at 2" blocks thrown into the air like famous marksmen from the past. He describes some, like Ed McGivern, who shot over 50,000 such cubes in a long time period with minimal misses.

So Henry can shoot and he gains a reputation as a crack shot. He is a respectful lad and makes friends of all ages he meets at gun shops, shows, meets and through acquaintances. He is a quick study and his fast mind is a library of knowledge about loads, calibers, rare and famous guns. His life-long quest is to get a 4-gauge, double-barrel rifle also known as an "elephant" gun. These were made in the late 1800s and were noted for the huge cartridge (It's just over 1" in diameter and about 4" to 5" long.) At eighteen, he gets a federal permit to collect and own machine guns and while he is a legal collector, this starts his troubles.

The novel takes place right after WWII to present (1995) and Henry meets several veterans. One of the people he meets is a relative named Max who married a Polish woman, brought her to America and later divorced her. But, he brought her to America which she found so incredible that she accepted the divorce even though it saddened her. Her sister married a Jew named Irwin Mann. Irwin was a grocer in Danzig who had never fired or owned a weapon in his life. When the Germans started relocating Jews into the Warsaw Ghetto, Irwin's family was broken apart, his wife sent to be a sex toy for German soldiers and he was moved to the Ghetto where he joined one of the resistance groups. In the ghetto, he did learn to shoot and learned the value of weapons to defend one's life. He was one of the few who escaped the Ghetto just before it was burned and he made his way to America.

What does the Jewish experience in Warsaw in WWII have to do with post war America? Just before the German soldiers isolated the Jews, they confiscated all guns by imposing legal but draconian weapons laws that severely limited the guns people could own. And this is a major point of the book: The right of American's to keep and bear arms. While the second amendment to the Bill of Rights states that citizens have this right, how it has been interpreted is a matter of debate. The interpretation Ross uses in his novel is based on letters and other writings found in The Federalist Papers, diaries and other documentation used to support the constitution. This interpretation is that to insure that the government cannot get so strong as to impose its will on the people, the people should be armed on par with the government forces. In other words, there is no special category to keep and bear certain arms for government employees than there is for the average, law abiding citizen. This point is brought out several times in the novel.

Henry's experience and world view are formed around his love of shooting in a responsible, safe way. His experiences are interesting and pointed. Each experience described in the novel is a lesson of sorts but the lesson isn't presented in cookbook form but thrown out as concepts. If one reads this book as a primer, one finds all kinds of ways to manipulate and operate in systems that are perceived to be moving towards totalitarian modes of operation. But those "lessons" are not the main point of the book and since the book was written in 1995, certain modes have changed in fifteen years. However, getting a new identity is easy even in this day of computer scans and id tracing. You see, these things only work on people who follow laws. People that break laws and do not adhere to the "formulas" used to track and identify people move through society quite easily. For example, if one wants a gun, current gun laws make it rather difficult. There are cooling off periods, registration requirements that you have to pay for and tracing as well as purchase limits. If you are a crook willing to purchase unregistered guns, any number are available and can be found even in such places as Washington D.C., New York, San Francisco and/or any other major American city. There is a whole industry based around unregistered weapons. This did not exist before the government decided to impose gun control laws on law-abiding citizens. But, interestingly enough, the only unregistered weapons used in the novel are those carried by law enforcement officers. These are commonly referred to as "throw aways."

While the novel focuses on registration and ownership requirements of machine guns or guns that can be "rewatted" (This means that more than one round fires when the trigger is pulled. Making a machine gun into a semi-auto weapon is known as "dewatting." Sometimes dewatting includes filling barrels with lead, sealing the trigger mechanism, drilling holes in the barrel or some other way to disable the gun.) into rapid fire weapons, rapid fire weapons are only used by government agents much to their detriment. Only certain qualified dealers can keep, sell and use these weapons. But getting a permit is next to impossible and even those that do must adhere to strict taxation.

Taxing of weapons is discussed in the novel quite extensively. I researched most of the references and found them to be accurate. The taxation is so onerous that few get involved in collecting the guns unless they have licenses grandfathered into current laws. But as much as the novel discusses laws governing machine guns, cannons and other weapons that exceed single shot or semi-automatic weapons, none of these weapons are used to achieve any of the goals defined in the novel. These goals are simply a complete reversal of all gun control laws where law-abiding citizens are concerned.

While Ross uses Ruby Ridge and Waco as examples, other incidents drawn from real events are used to support the generally anti-government tone of the novel. Several raids by BATF agents are described including one where a gun owner's cat was stomped to death when the agents could find no illegal weapons in the person's house. Was this a true story? Yes, as it turns out. In fact, a simple internet search turns up lots of evidence of misdeeds by agents from all federal agencies. Surprisingly, there are many more than ever make the news but do make for law suits against the agents and the agencies.

So in the novel, Henry and three other federally licensed machine gun collectors have their houses raided. The raids are illegal and a rogue BATF supervisor wants to plant evidence to get the collectors thrown into jail and their collections confiscated. This singular act set into motion a series of events that bring into focus one of several major questions posited by the novel: At what point does a person recognize that a government (In this case, the government of the United States.) has so grossly overstepped its bounds, that the average law-abiding citizen deems it necessary to kill off a sufficient number of federal agents to evoke change?

Also, other questions arise: At what point does the usurpation of civil rights by the government, regardless of how noble the intent, warrant it's demise? How does one justify a death based on legislative misdeeds? At what point is the limit reached where Jefferson's admonition (When people fear their government, there is tyrany, When government fears the people, there is liberty.) is finally recognized by the people and they do something about it? And ultimately: How would one go about forcing the government to change without using the ballot box but by using carefully applied force? Where should that force be used?

The novel answers these questions with one scenario. Is this scenario possible? I suggest getting a copy of "Unintended Consequences" by John Ross and find out for yourself.

Now back to "Dare to Inquire."

FB

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Oh Those Pesky Leaks: Let's Find A Scapegoat? Sure. It's the Obama Administration. They're the Only Ones to Benefit from the Leak.

Wikileaks prints a bunch of leaked documents which are SitReps (Situation Reports), AA (After Action) reports, BDAs (Battle Damage Assessment)s, and other misc. documentation made during a time span that conveniently ended on January 1, 2009. There may be others that go beyond that date but they haven't been released by Wikilieaks.

If one looks through the data, one sees all kinds of reports about intel, operations, troop movements, results of IED (Improvised Explosive Devise) and DED (Directed Explosive Device) encounters. But there are also reports that show when aid was given to earthquake victims, innocents who were shot or injured during operations, innocents killed, tortured or mutilated by the Taliban and other such matters. But the clear intent was not to show what we were doing right but what mistakes were being made. I will state this again: IF WE HAD CONDUCTED WWII THIS WAY, WE WOULD BE SPEAKING GERMAN AND JAPANESE NOW.

So who released them?

The Obama administration. They're the only ones who benefit from this. In a situation where sagging polls are indicating that Obama's plan for the transformation of America into some kind of Socialist paradise is meeting resistance, the easiest thing to do is bring back something they could blame on Bush. See, Bush's plan of Counter terror where the terrorists are hunted down and killed has been replaced with Counter insurgency. There is a gross difference between the two and the TOE to accomplish the two goals is completely different as are manpower requirements. Bush wanted to kill belligerents, Obama wants to bribe them. But nation building in a place that has no concept of "nation" in the sense we, as Americans, have is not only difficult but foolhardy. So regardless of how capable our military leaders are, we don't have the political will to accomplish the goal of building a nation then educating the populace to accept what has been built for them. So with everything sagging, what's the easiest way to get attention off the failure? Bring up a ghost from the past.

Think of it like the "wave the Bloody Shirt" campaigns after the civil war. In order to divert attention from existing problems, bring up something that everyone can easily identify from something in the past. So politicians would "wave the Bloody Shirt" as a way to fire up resentment and retain office.

While the "Bloody Shirt" was used in America, it is not without precedent. Many people think that Marc Antony's eulogy was used the same way. And Hearst newspapers used the same idea in the "Remember the Maine" battle cry to get us into a war with Spain when, in reality, we could just as well have sunk the battleship moored in Havana, Cuba and certainly had more opportunity.

Why wouldn't the Obama people do the same thing? Look, the president was a community organizer who is used to extortion. He certainly extorted $20M out of BP. Community Organizers distort truth to get the objects of their ire to do what they want. For example: "If you don't fund our community center, we will boycott your company and stoke the press with all kinds of negative publicity about your company." The company may or may not have any real wrongs the company has done but that doesn't make any difference. Community Organizers have a higher calling and the end justifies the means and blah, blah, blah. . . So the tactic would be one that fits into a larger plan. In reality, the data exposed will not really hurt anyone and will not change any direction we, as a nation, are pursuing. So, in a very real sense, the logical source would be somebody from the administration. We may never know, but while Obama cries foul, he's laughing all the way to election day. It wouldn't surprise me to see more of this kind of thing released to the public in one way or another.

FB

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Democrats Attack Unpleasant News Stories About the Administration: Goodbye Free Press

Fox news has been questioning why other networks don't run some of the same stories they run. In general, they are questioning the motives of the stations and the networks as well as print media. So democrat mouthpieces have decided to attack Fox's inquiry with a full court press (No pun intended.) based on the following assumption: The stories Fox chooses to follow and air, many of which are highly critical of the administration, are unworthy as news. In other words, the essence of the stories is so feeble that the other stations don't follow them because there is really no news. I have seen the usual suspects on many stations issuing the same line. I find this absolutely crazy. Then I remember, the best defense is a good offense.

This reminds me of the old TV show and eventual movies called "Police Squad." In many of the episodes, there would be something really interesting happening such as a fireworks company exploding and standing in front of a small crowd was a policeman with a megaphone exhorting everyone to leave because there was nothing to see.

H. L. Mencken used to work for the Baltimore Sun. He was famous for quotes about the media and the job of the journalist along with being a die hard anti-semite. If he were alive and working today, he would have similar status as Mel Gibson. But his anti-semitism has nothing to do with his powers of observation. He was quoted as saying that the job of the media was to: "Comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable." Now, running news stories that embarrass the administration is what the press should be doing. A free press was guaranteed in the first amendment of the Bill of Rights. The founders thought it was one of the most important freedoms. If we have a substantial part of the press acting as a PR arm of the administration, how can we discern whether any news story they offer is not based in bias?

I may or may not like Fox News. But I am far more comfortable with a critical story about any administration than one that ends up being nothing more than cheerleading. An interesting note: When Reagan and Bush were in the WH, the same press and the same channels ran piece after piece critical of those administrations.

Ah, ah, aaaah, Good bye freedom of the press. (Sung to Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.)

FB

Monday, July 19, 2010

Obama Is A Racist and He Surrounds Himself With Racists

Here we have an official from the Agriculture Department (USDA) giving a speech to the NAACP and basically telling how she prejudged a caucasian applicant and went out of her way to make sure he didn't get any help. She was positively crowing to her all black audience about how she screwed the white farmer because, according to her, some black farmers had lost their farms. She went on to say that she "learned" a lesson about racial tolerance and realized that the real problem was have vs have-not. This is all fine and dandy. It's good when people realize that racial motives influence a lot of decisions. But that isn't what's important here,

Regardless of the speaker's personal enlightenment, the audience was laughing and happy that she had "stuck it" to the white man. The initial reaction was racially based and many of her statements were racially, not financially based. Even if she did have an epiphany, the idea was put forth and accepted by the audience that decisions should be made by race. After all, the audience was made up of NAACP members attending a convention of sorts.

Why is it that we keep finding racial motives at the bottom of decisions made by Obama appointees? Why is race playing such a large part in every decision being made by this administration?

In my experience, racism can only exist when it comes from the top. Racism is not a bottom to top situation. If we find this level of racism in departments filled with Obama appointees, we know they are reflecting the feelings of their boss. If the boss didn't tolerate racism, we would hear nothing from his subordinates. There may be some minor people at the bottom who overstep their bounds and engage in racist policies but if there was policy or general feeling that the behavior was inappropriate, the people exhibiting the behavior would be fired immediately.

As it stands now, they are only brought to task after widespread exposure. What a sorry condition for our country. Obama should be censured. His administration has shown to be antiAmerican ideologues and they can only be this way if their boss supports it.

FB

Obana is Ignoring Sun Tzu's Advice on Warfare: We Cannot Succeed If This Continues. Part 1.

Back in the '80s, every business in America was requiring managers to read "The Art of War" by Sun Tzu. The book became one of the best selling books in the business category. God forbid anyone would look at the text historically. Maybe Reagan did. It and the Clausewitz three volume treatise were both listed in his library. One would have assumed that Carter was at least familiar with the concepts but his actions belie that assumption.

But let's look at a few of the concepts Obama and his administration as well as the State Department are ignoring to their and our peril. (By "our" I mean the average American who wants his country to be the best, most prosperous, most free and the basis for the most opportunity in the world. The "US" that doesn't mean United States.)

The whole treatise in a translation by Lionel Giles, reads like an outline. Of interest is the commentary added by other military strategists. Like another famous Chinese book called the "I Ching," there is a main text and commentary that almost dwarfs the original concepts. The commentary often "interprets" the original statement. Sometimes these interpretations end up changing the view off the original into something with a completely opposite meaning. Think of them like Constitutional Scholars who somehow derive the ability to control and eliminate the right to bear arms from a reading of the Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights.

Here's a link to a source of all governmental documents. Included are links to commentaries and an especially interesting one is the link attached to "to keep and bear arms." If you follow this link, you will see all kinds of letters and commentary and supporting sources behind this phrase. The drafters of these documents wrote each other and argued over every phrase. So the intent is clear. But follow the links, they are an interesting read.

http://www.consource.org/index.asp?bid=582&documentid=13524

So back to Obama's actions in light of Sun Tzu's treatise:

There are some "rules" that have no bearing unless one extrapolates a meaning from the statement. For example, "When a fire breaks out inside to (sic) enemy's camp, respond at once with an attack from without." Obviously this is tactical advice and one wouldn't currently expect actual camps where accidental fires break out from time to time. But if this is interpreted as: "Attack your enemy when they show any sign of weakness." we have something that can have value. Or, If your enemy is distracted for any reason, that is when you strike (Read my posts: "Can America Survive 24/7 news" for a view of what distraction can lead to politically.) you have something that can have value at any time. Outside of a few small thinkers, business is not war. Of course, businesspeople fancy themselves everything but what they are because in final analysis, sitting at a desk or in front of a computer or operating a cash register is pretty boring stuff. So one would expect sales motivators to try to get toothpaste salesmen or copier salesmen or office supply salesmen to think they operate the same as some of the most profound military minds. But it's all fantasy. Where the president is concerned, however, it isn't fantasy and the rules codified by Sun Tzu have value and are pertinent.

According the Sun Tzu, the art of war is governed by five factors. These should be taken into consideration when evaluating the battle arena. They are:

1. Moral Law - People must be in complete accord with their ruler so they can accept danger and still follow.
2. Heaven - All times, seasons and climate must be factored into decision making.
3. Earth - Distances, security, layout of the terrain and life and death.
4. Commander - Virtues: Wisdom, sincerity, benevolence, courage and strictness.
5. Method and Discipline - Accurately using forces at one's disposal, ranks within the forces, maintenance and supply, transportation and finances required to sustain any endeavor.

I can't think of a single factor that Obama has considered in making proposals. Obviously with health care, he ignored that most people were not in accord (1. Moral Law) with his plan. With the stimulus, he ignored alternatives that could have saved billions and been more effective.

When it comes to times (2. Heaven) Obama certainly hasn't factored in time and conditions when making his proposals. To a small group, there may be benefit in the short term but in the long term, there will be lots of damage to a large group. In this sense, Obama should take a lesson taught by Confucius and also indicated by the I Ching: Helping someone by lessening yourself helps neither the person needing help nor the person offering the help. Parity and/or equality cannot be achieved by destroying a wealthy person so that everyone is poor. Obama's idea of "spreading it around" takes from those that have in an attempt to balance everyone by giving to those that don't have. According to at least two influential Chinese sources, he's got it dead wrong.

According the Sun Tzu, "All warfare is based on deception." Obama, please read the book and use it for more than a door jamb. (Actually it's so thin that it would have to be folded in half to stop a door.) Pull out dates or dates when forces are taken out of combat roles should never be broadcast. Those dates should be determined by Generals in the theater and only be assigned after hostilities have generally ended and the remaining belligerents can be handled by occupation forces. Then and only then should departure dates be discussed and NEVER made public. After all, the president's job is to ensure we don't get attacked but it can happen and when it does, it's his job to unleash the war hounds and keep them unleashed until all threat is completely nullified. Anything less courts disaster according to Sun Tzu.

"There is no instance of a country having benefited from prolonged warfare." The Vietnam experience should be a guide: Get in, achieve your military goals, secure the battle arena and render the enemy unable to continue. Then and only then can one divert resources to rebuild the damage. The two cannot be done at the same time. It's financially impossible and the financial drain on the people of the state will make any just cause seem unjustified. As people suffer, Sun Tzu cautions: "With this loss of substance and exhaustion of strength, the homes of the people will be stripped bare, and three-tenths of their income will be dissipated; while government expenses for broken chariots, worn-out horses, breast-plates and helmets, bows and arrows, spears and shields, protective mantles, draught-oxen and heavy wagons, will amount to four-tenths of its total revenue."

Now what other meaning can we attach to this? Because of ongoing war expenses and the expenses of plans Obama has initiated, the value of American currency is in danger. Obama is allocating tremendous resources that are draining our country not only of funds but of will. If people stop believing in the cause of the leader, we get back to Moral Law. Without the support of the populace, all the lies and misconceptions offered by the state will soon be discovered. Then the state loses authority and cannot sustain regardless of how lofty its motives.

Sun Tzu states that: "There are three ways in which a ruler can bring misfortune upon his army:

"1. By commannding the army to advance or to retreat (Departure dates.) being ignorant of the fact that it cannot obey. This is called hobbling the army."

If you don't think our army is hobbled, check out the plethora of Rules Of Engagement (ROEs) that shower down from above. There are so many and they are so confusing that Field officers don't even pass most of them down.

"2. By attempting to govern an army in the same way as he administers a kingdom, being iggnorant of the conditions which obtain in an army. This causes restlessness in the soldier's minds."

First of all, the only thing Obama has successfully run is his campaign and he had plenty of help to do that. He knows not of military matters and he appears unable to learn from history. He can't learn from history because he is hell bent to "try out" his ideology on America and truth or facts will not deter him from his myopic attempt to "level" the global playing field.

"3. By employing the officers of his army without discrimination, through ignorance of the military principle of adaptation to circumstances. This shakes the confidence of the soldiers."

Could we really have Generals like Patton, Bradly, MacArthur, Grant, Lee, Pershing, Eisenhower today? No. While an Eisenhower might make the grade, a Patton would never be allowed to operate as independently as he did. As a matter of fact, he had a hard time even in WWII. We have done away with the commander in place of administrators who fit into the current version of Command and Control. That absolutely limits what a commander can do in the field.

Back in the hunt for OBL, we actually had him in our sights with snipers ready to take him out and we also had some missiles standing by to make sure he was gone. But nobody could act and the field troops had to wait for a presidential approval to complete the mission. While they waited, the opportunity evaporated.

In Mogadishu, everything was controlled via drone observance and field troops were left waiting for approval to do almost every action. The Special Forces snipers who received the MOH, might be alive had they been allowed to infiltrate when they first requested. Because of the delay, belligerents were able to mass and organize. Meanwhile, the commanders were miles away watching drone cameras.

Now, neither of these were under Obama's watch but Obama is operating as if these were successful operations. He has effectively turned generals into mid-level bureaucrats in and effort that basically "hobbles" the army.

Sun Tzu advises: "In all fighting, the direct method may be used for joining battle, but indirect methods will be needed in order to secure victory." and "Indirect tactics, efficiently applied, are inexhaustible as Heaven and Earth, unending as the flow of rivers and streams; like the sun and moon, they end but to begin anew; like the four seasons, they pass away to return once more."

What could he mean by these statements? Battles can be won but wars lost. We experienced this in Vietnam and partly in Korea. In Vietnam, the American forces virtually won every battlefield encounter but America did not have the political will to apply indirect pressure on the enemy. Instead, our enemy used indirect pressure first through student uprisings, sympathetic Americans and finally our own press to sap the energy we needed as a country to win. What is Obama following? A philosophy and strategy of our enemies. Instead of using indirect methods to isolate and make our enemies irrelevant, we are elevating them to equals. We do this by announcing that at a certain date, we will end hostilities or that we so hobble our troops that our enemy has the chance to apply indirect methods to us. What would they use? It's simple. In America, we have political correctness that forces us to accept anything an enemy might say as if it has the same level of credence as our Constitution. So we have Imam's and other Muslim leaders gaming our system against us and decrying "religious freedom" when Islam is the most restrictive religion on the face of the planet. They even have us making statement like, "Radical Muslims are the same as Fundamentalists Christians." when nothing could be further from the truth. But this indirect method allows some of us to feel superior to the others and divides our resolve.

Sun Tzu cautioned about divided resolve and I will deal with that in Part 2.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Grown People Lying and Lying and Lying and Goebbels is Laughing: How Our Government is Becoming Totalitarian (Or Fascist if you will.)

I have lied. I have been drinking in bars and told some whoppers. I've also embellished factual stories to make them more entertaining. In most areas, I believe in truth but sometimes, truth is a wascally cowacter. Sometimes, truth just won't work. Take comics, for example, truth is a variable thing with comics but that kind of lying is harmless because a "factually" accurate or "true" story wouldn't entertain. Also, so-called "bar talk" is mostly lies anyway. That's what bars are for. They're in existence so the average guy/gal can go and create an alternative life full off imagination and fantasy. For a short time they can get outside of themselves and interact as role players rather than their boring selves. People mostly understand that stuff and don't place too much credence on the stories. While I admit to telling some, I have heard some than make mine seem timid by comparison. The only thing the two have in common is that they are both, in the last analysis, untrue. Does anybody really care? Would anyone make plans based on someone lying in a bar?

I was out of work one time and a guy I met said he had a job for me as a production manager at Mark VII Productions. That was Jack Webb's (Dragnet fame.) studio for those who don't know. He told me to arrive at the lot on a Thursday. There were some drinking buddies in the bar and they all congratulated me. I told them I thought it was all BS. I thought the guy was trying to be a big shot and that I called the studio and they never heard of the guy. He had a bunch of other stories that just didn't ring true and who would offer a guy in a bar a job with such responsibility without an interview and/or seeing a resume or getting some references? I told him I had never worked as a PM and he didn't seem to think that that made any difference. Anyway, I never took the offer seriously.

On Wednesday night before I was to show up for work, he strides into the bar and states that MARK VII just had a big layoff and all productions were put on hold so I would have to wait a week before I could get the job. I told him thanks, bought him a drink and said something else had come up anyway. But my friends in the bar really got hostile. They called the guy all kinds of names and were really mad that he had led me along with hopes of a job. They roughed the guy up and threw him out of the bar. I never saw him again.

Afterward, I explained that I thought the whole thing was BS anyway and gave my reasons. My buddies stated that this guy held out false hope and led me to believe that something was going to happen outside of the bar that could bring me employment and possibly a new career path. I reemphasized that I never took it seriously in the first place so I wasn't hurt by the episode. My argument concluded that the entertainment business was full of wannabes who pretend they have some influence and connections when they don't know anybody.

I met Clint Eastwood once at Paramount Studios. (I actually did meet him and the circumstances follow.) We both were driving older cars and I happened to park a car away from him. When I got out, his back was to me. I was heading to an interview to do some work on a show and as I passed, I commented that his was in just slightly better shape than mine. He laughed and turned and I recognized him. He was pretty wrinkled and that was a shocker. He said his probably had more miles. I said we should bet but I didn't want to be late for my meeting. He nodded and I walked off. That was our whole conversation. In the entertainment business, I should make the contact seem important and write that I had a conversation with Eastwood about lot transportation around the set or some such exaggeration. So I wasn't put off or offended or anything about this guy doing something like he did. I couldn't figure out why he did it but we are people and people have strange motivations. But the other guys I drank with took it far differently and that brings me to the point of my post.

Every day we are lied to by politicians. We find out from polls that Obama is unpopular and that Democrats, in general, are unpopular. But if you listen to democrat pollsters and strategists, they simply say how great everything is and it's only the republicans who are trying to thwart progress who are to blame for the perception. They look into the camera and lie. They lie to achieve a goal and that goal is to stay in power. Everybody knows they lie. Nobody thinks that politicians tell the truth and use facts in a way that makes the facts meaningless.

Maybe the ultimate game is politics which means lying. We have come to accept the best liar as the best politician. After they are elected, we get to hear more of their lies about what a great job they have done. In other words, lying has moved out of the abnormality of "bar talk" and moved into the normality of representation. We have allowed liars to lead us and, it appears, we don't just allow them, we crave them. The news channels are loaded with liars. They pervert facts to fit agenda and simply lie away. Barney Frank is an out and out liar and opportunist yet he gets elected consistently. How can such a person be viewed with any kind of credibility?

I would like to see a broadcast from any of the major stations where the facts are used to expose these lies. Here's the problem: Lying has gotten so bad and so endemic that a rational person cannot use what is said to derive any legitimate position on any subject. We are being disinformed at a level where the only "truth" we can derive is the truth of the lie. In other words, we know we are being lied to and that is all we know. We can't even discount the lie or take the opposite position because we do not have enough data to be able to put the fiction into a context. There are interrogation techniques that can be used to determine when a person is lying but knowing a lie doesn't get one closer to a truth. There is no opposite of a lie because the lie is crafted to confuse. If you believe the lie and accept it as true, you are operating from a fallacious position. The falsehood allows you to be manipulated into an intellectual position of impotence because you don't have a basis to create a sequence of ideas that will give any kind of answer to any question surrounding the subject matter being lied about.

We can't know about anything based on what we are being told by our politicians because they are liars. We have grown people lying as a business and a lifestyle and they believe we are stupid because we believe their lies. We tell our children to tell the truth but every time they listen to a politician or listen to their parents talk about politics, the subject matter of lies enters the conversation. Our kids know that politicians lie because parents tell each other and their kids that politicians lie.

We have a situation where grown people lie and want to be taken seriously. If we laugh at them and point out their lies they simply repeat the lie louder. Here are some quotes from one of the masters of propaganda: One Joseph Goebbels. See how much relates to our newscasts and commentary programs.

"If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the state can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the state to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the state."

Think about what the administration is doing to the Tea Party movement, the BP oil spill and the situation of illegal invaders on our Southern border as a start. Then figure out where all the so-called "stimulus" money went. Why did only big business get help? Is global warming really the sole result of human intervention? Astronomers are indicating that Mars is also undergoing a warming trend which almost exactly mirrors Earth. No people on Mars at last check so where is the truth here?

"Faith moves mountains but knowledge moves them to the right place."

Get people to believe and act as if that is factual and true.

"The most brilliant propagandist technique will yield no success unless on fundamental principle is borne in mind constantly -- it must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over."

The Tea Party members are racists. The Tea Party has racists elements. The Tea Party promotes racism. The Tea Party racists are perverting the Tea Party message. Tea Party = Racism. Tea Party = Racism. Racism, Racism, Racism. And who is saying this? The most racist group in America: NAACP. Their initialization says it all: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. That's racist. If an organization existed calling itself National Association for the Advancement of All People, the NAACP would call them racists.

"Think of the press as a great keyboard on which the government can play."

First you get newscasters to promote your point of view and you call on them to keep the view in front of people. It's all about the lie and getting people to swallow the lie because it is presented by people who "appear" to have no connection with the lie.

"If the day should ever come when we (Nazis) must go,if some day we are compelled to leave the scene of history, we will slam the door so hard that the universe will shake and mankind will stand back in stupefaction."

What do you think the current administration is doing? Capitalism is bad, Socialism is good. Individual achievement is bad, collective achievement is good. Individual salvation is impossible but collective salvation is good. Ideas are bad, adherence is good. Individualism is bad, group identity is good. Obama and company are changing America from a country of individual excellence into a country of group mediocrity. We are being lied to from a propaganda engine that makes Pravda (Truth in Russian) and Chinese state organs look childish by comparison. Small is sacrificed for large in a push to centralize everything. Our guarantees established by the Bill of Rights have been reinterpreted so that our guarantees are considered something akin to prosaic prose of another age. When this group is finished, we will stand agape at the wreckage they have created in the name of social justice. They will have turned the greatest nation in the world into a police state unmatched in history. And they will do it in the name of Social Justice for all. In the end, there will be no justice and we will be more isolated and apart as a nation than ever. The rift will be bigger than the Civil War over secession to preserve slavery.

Goebbels would be proud of the propagandistic use of media by so-called authoritarians who are going to tell us everything we "should" be doing as opposed to what we want to do.

How could we have come from Hippies in the '60s to Yuppies in the '80s to facists in 2008? We got there because we have become lazy. We have been educated through lies to believe that government is the only solution and that anyone not involved with government is a greedy, self-centered, uncaring parasite on the body politic. Lies, lies and more lies and we act as if they are true.

We need a revolution but one of spirit. A revolution of individuals who speak in one voice because that voice is saying the same thing: Freedom isn't just another word for nothin' left to lose. Freedom isn't free. Freedom cannot be bestowed, it can only be taken away. And, my dear readers, it is being taken away faster and more efficiently than any Communist-hating, right-wing zealot in the '50s would have believed possible.

FB


Monday, July 12, 2010

Can America Survive 24/7 News? Part 3: Observations and Conslusions

So how is the French obsession with a 1914 media extravaganza related to our current fixation with 24/7 news and the growth of journatorials and outright editorials as news? Let's see if I can connect some dots.

We know that French diplomats and social circles were fixated with the four-month pretrial and eight-day trial of Madam Caillaux. The press whether right or left wing was consumed with details of the trial and continuing investigation. So while there were pages in the press about the trial, there was scant information about the whole of Europe spinning into war. As a point, French newspapers did not even report Austria's declaration to Serbia which was widely reported through leaks and finally official statements.

While the French government was about as disfunctional as our current administration, the French military was well trained and led. Ever since France lost the Franco-Prussian war and lost Alsace and Lorraine, the French military drafted plans to recover both with a huge offensive known as Plan 17. They actually initiated it after the declaration of war by Germany. (Just hours after Germany declared war on France and Russia, France responded with a declaration of their own against Germany.) The French military were brave and well led but they weren't supplied to current trends. They were behind many nations as far as military technology was concerned and most of their supply chain and technology was aimed at one and done offensive campaigns. Had the government offices responsible for military build up, training and supply not been completely distracted, there is a chance that they wouldn't have lost four months of time to prepare for the impending war. Also, they might have been able to evaluate the situation with a more balanced perspective. Once attacked, everything was reactionary and reaction limits options. But we will never really know. The French government officials were as good at avoiding responsibility as any American office holder or diplomat.

Our military does not havve limited resources. We have the best trained, best equipped and best supported military in the world. Bravery and leadership are traits that show up during conflict. It's impossible to know how people will react until some conflict places them in situation that test their mettle. There is every reason to believe that the French were as brave as the current American military and that the leadership was as well trained, motivated and capable as ours. So, on a military basis, we can only say that soldiers serve as commanded. The military does not make policy but does carry out policy. Without political will, military might is directionless and useless.

The Law of Distraction or Golly Was That Really A UFO?!?

Times weren't any simpler in 1914. There was less media and information as well as all aspects of life moved more slowly. But people were pretty much the same as now. (I have travelled all over the world and have found that technology aside, the average person is pretty much the same everywhere. All have somewhat similar desires and goals. Some are greedy and some are giving but all want prosperity and opportunity to grow.) While the French were distracted by an incredible trial, we are as or more distracted by a number of factors. Where do I start identifying the myriad of information sources facing the average American with a television and a car radio? Let's start with the simple distraction built into the mass of sources.

We live in a carefully crafted world of distraction. News isn't designed to inform, it's designed to entertain and keep you watching or listening. How many times have you watched a news program only to be touted by one story while being fed a diet of nonsense. All the while, you are teased with the "hard" or "interesting" segment to come. This can go on for up to one hour. Basically, though, we are so distracted and overwhelmed by information that we can't discern issues of importance. We are led to believe that national issues are more important than local issues which is exactly the opposite of reality. In essence, local issues that immediately affect one's life are far more important than any national issue unless it imposes on basic freedoms. (Interesting that we have had quite a lot of that lately.) The French were overwhelmed by the tragedy and drama of a single trial. That trial affected political and social circles. We are overwhelmed by a plethora of information about a myriad of nonsense of which we have absolutely no control. Of what value this?

The Powerlessness of The Information Junkie or I Want My Candy NOW!

Because the French became fixated by the pretrial press and the trial proper, they lost power of action. While our society isn't quite as stratified as the Belle Epoch, our elected officials have cast themselves into an elite as strong as that of movie stars and sports heroes. We keep telling ourselves that we are all equal but in America, some are more equal than others. Elected people have become their own "clique of importance" and we have knowingly elevated them to this status by constant reportage. One of the biggest sins a politician can make is to go uninterviewed by some news organization. The more they are interviewed, the more important they are. They develop such hubris that they feel quite good about ignoring a request from a constituent unless that request comes with a large check. While the average office holder has joined an elite, there is a special elite for those who have long spans in office. The job these people have is to keep you interested in "them" as office holders so they opine on all kinds of issues as if they have more than an opinion. In reality, opinion is all they have. The more news programs focus on these people, the more important they become. They craft their pitch to keep you following them the same as a drug dealer gives free drugs to newcomers to develop addicts. Once they have attained the position of information bearer, we follow them and develop the mindset that we too are informed and involved. Nothing could be further from the truth. We have become deluded to the point that we think that if we know about something, somehow we are participating in the outcome. We have become information junkies who feel self important because we have the latest news about a number of topics. There's a difference between knowing of a field and knowing about a field. Because of the way the news is crafted and sold, we think we know about something when we really know of the thing.

Real action is not covered because if people are out acting, they aren't watching and the goal of the networks is to keep people watching not doing. This is one of the reasons that the Tea Parties are such a threat; people are acting in ways uncontrolled by newscasts. So the movement is attacked by a substantial portion of the networks and defended by a few. But attack or defense makes no difference, the idea is to get people away from action and get them back to the illusion of action through information gathering via watching. The more one acts, the more a person develops different ideas about what they are doing. They develop different ideas because their experience is based on action not on waiting for input from any source. The more one acts, the more one realizes that there is power in action and the last thing the media wants is for people to develop power from action outside of their influence. What is ideal for the media is powerlessness of inaction based on the illusion that knowing of something is the same as knowing about something.

Being filmed or written about is flattering. But few are strong enough to keep moving forward in what they are doing and ignore media coverage. When they look to see themselves, the mind does a strange thing: it self criticizes. Self criticism is the quickest way to stop doing anything. If you are looking at yourself doing something, you aren't doing that thing. Soon, you fall back into the trap of waiting to see what the commentators or opinion makers say about your action and you become stifled. This happens to people newly protesting or organizing and that is one of the reasons it's so hard to keep momentum. We become junkies for our own junk or users of our own supply. When we don't get that coverage, our spirit wanes and our energy to act is diminished. This is similar to what happened to the French government during the Caillaux affair. Attention was diverted and no action was taken. We have turned this process into an institution and we call it 24/7 news.

The Exercise of Will or Wallpapering One's Mind

One of the consequences of fixation or addiction (It is interesting that the brain seems to react to drug or alcohol addiction in a similar manner as it does to a fixation with a soap opera or any other diversion that takes a dominant place in a person's life.) is a reduction of will. The more fixated, the less will to change and act differently. Of interest is the inability to formulate long range plans. (Remember the Lotus eaters in the Odyssey? They frittered their time away under the illusion that they really were doing something profound. The illusion of the Lotus created an ongoing dependency. Along with the dependency was the illusion of accomplishment.) This trend has been identified in alcohol, drug and other addictions. Addiction seems to be a process that transcends obvious and easily identified abuses. Addiction is fixation to the point of disruption of normal activities. While a person pursues the object of his fixation, his entire life can fall into disrepair and his life becomes one of complete inaction.

We have become so fractionalized and disassociated that we are losing diplomatic and political will. In other words, we don't have the will to act in our own interest. This is interesting. Someone once commented that it took Playboy magazine just a few years to change man's primary sexual interest from the hips to the breasts. We are under the same influence. Things and events we should be concerned with are bypassed for the illusion that knowing about something is the same as action. Action takes energy and is often painful where watching someone from the media is a process of inaction and it is safe. The two are not the same thing. We are being led to believe that the inaction of observation, in the sense of watching a newscast, is the same as developing information from one's own work and effort.

If we apply this to our military, we get a situation where we want results but don't want to pay the price it takes to get those results. We deploy our troops but we handcuff them with restrictions that have nothing to do with how a military operates. We develop operations centered around zero casualties rather than the attainment of an objective. Had General Patton operated like this, we would all be speaking German. If General Macarthur had operated like this, we would be speaking Japanese. Military operations mean casualties. Sometimes, they are the result of accidents that occur when a large number of people are moved quickly but if you are facing any kind of opponent, the deployed force will suffer deaths and wounded. It cannot be avoided unless you so restrict operations to minimize casualties that you render your forces impotent to complete any kind of mission. This lack of political will to use the military as it should be used hamstrings even the most effective fighting force. In this sense, our government has become exactly like the French government of 1914. Both have lost will and the media was at the heart of the problem. Why does Obama rely so heavily on the Predators? There are minimal casualties from operation of a drone. A "pilot" sitting miles away or even on a different continent is far less likely to suffer from enemy actions than a pilot in the arena of action. The President can say he's taking it to the enemy but in reality, it's a little like a pyrrhic victory where we get kills but the unintended consequences will lead to far more damage than success in the overall campaign. It's similar to the German bombing of London during WWII. Yes damage was done but the bombing campaign gelled the British resolve and instead of being of benefit, the bombing campaign turned out to be a disaster for Germany.

It isn't like people haven't warned about this and there are a lot of books describing exactly what is going on. But outside of a few "interested" parties, these warnings go unheeded. Even if one of the authors gets interviewed on a news show, the reality of what he says is unappreciated. The statement fit into the nonactive, passive information gathering mode of the rest of the newscast. So nothing gets done. People think they know because they have heard but what they have heard is a microcosm of reality. Think of it like trying to read a book if you can only see a section of a letter at a time. First you have to identify the letter, then other associated letters, then find the word, then find all the other words using the same process, then identify sentences, then identify concepts in the sentence, then fit the sentence into a paragraph and then associate paragraphs. It simply can't be done. However, the illusion is that from the part of the letter you can see, you understand the whole book.

In a strange sense, media extravagances were and are behind tremendous failures. We are simply not more capable of dealing with media bias and excess than the French were in dealing with the scandal of the Trial of Madam Caillaux. While the French military did recover to a degree, the distractions caused a number of problems and upped the casualty count significantly. The governmental will wasn't there even though every indication was available that the war was eminent. We suffer similarly in that our government is distracted just as the citizens are by masses of nonsense. Our government has lost will to act in matters that are threatening us from both inside and outside. In essence, our will has become as wallpaper; endlessly repeating patterns going nowhere.

As long as this political ennui is in force, we might as well call our troops home, put everyone on some sort of welfare and wait for the world to overwhelm us. If we are unwilling to fight to preserve the essence of what allowed our country to rise to the position it currently occupies, we don't deserve to keep it. We need will to assert our authority when challenged or attacked. We don't need to talk about it or rationalize it or understand the reason we are attacked. We need to strike and strike hard and keep striking until the threat does not exist. If that means a one-hundred year occupation of a country supporting hostilities, so be it. Better we occupy someone else than be held hostage by actions formulated inside those borders. But this takes the will to exert force against people who are equally driven to destroy our country for whatever reasons they may have. Historically, there is no right or wrong. There are only winners and losers. We have so lost our will that it is doubtful that we can defeat even the smallest of threats. A threat cannot be contained, it must be eliminated. It takes will to do that. Sitting around watching the world envelop us on 24/7 news, news excesses and the manufacturing of newstainment programs almost ensure that America will not survive.

So the next time you sit down and watch your favorite newscaster or commentator, think about what they are doing to keep you watching and doing nothing.

FB


Friday, July 9, 2010

Hate Speech By Any Other Name is as Sweet as a Rose By Any Other Name

We have a DOJ whistleblower who seems to be intimating that the politically appointed heads of DOJ are redefining hate speech, voter intimidation and hate crimes in general. In short, hate speech by some is to be tolerated.

My son goes to public school. If he were to call another student a "fag" or "queerbait" he could be expelled. If he makes any kind of veiled threat, he can be turned in by any anonymous person and be held accountable for the threat. Similarly, if a bar patron uses any kind of slur, he can be arrested for a "hate speech" crime. If he gets into a fight, the sentence can be worse if he calls his opponent nigger, kike, wop, spic, beaner, queer or a thousand other racial or social epithets.

So it is unclear to me how a person can stand at a microphone and call for "killing" people in the name of anything and not be charged with a hate crime. The evidence is there and the person can be seen exhorting people to kill in the name of ending some kind of perceived oppression. How can this happen?

We have changed from a country ruled by law to one ruled by whim. In what a sad time we live.

FB

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

New Arab Sympathetic Association (NASA)

If Alfred Korzybski were alive today, he would certainly have a stroke over how we have butchered the language. Not only do we inappropriately use words and concepts, we intentionally engage in disinformation. I just started reading a book based on Korzybski's general semantic theories. It's called: "Dare To Inquire: Sanity and Survival for the 21st Century and Beyond" by Bruce I. Kodish. I haven't gotten too far into the book yet and will report on the read when I finish but so far, it appears that Mr. Kodish would find good company with Ayn Rand, Nick Gillespie (Ed. in Chief, Reason Magazine), W. F. Buckley, both of the Pauls and many other thinkers like Gore Vidal who seem to defy easy definition but who are thoughtful at any rate. Mr. Kodish's book is a kind of guide to understanding and dealing with the mass of gobbledygook we are fed daily from all media sources. An example (Not from the book.) might be, the opposite of white isn't black, it's Afro-American. But this post isn't about this or semantics, it's about NASA: The National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

I don't know why people have trouble understanding that we either move forward scientifically or we stagnate. It's cruel but in science and all other areas, we either progress and develop newer and better tools and methods or we limit ourselves on every level. Experimental science is a hard sell in the best of times. We have to consider ourselves lucky that John Kennedy not only reacted to the threat of Soviet space dominance but actually had a vision that went beyond simply "beating" the Soviets. His vision was broad, long range and, at the time, completely beyond our capability. That's the kind of vision that gets results.

Of the presidents since Kennedy, only Reagan had such vision. Clinton came close but he was thwarted by his own monsters. Bush 41 did not have any vision as far as I could tell and Bush 43 was hampered by the attacks on 9/11. Carter's vision was so meager that he couldn't even enthuse himself. Nixon might have been a visionary but he had a meager soul. Ford. . . Ok, a place holder who could have been good but never rose to the occasion. Johnson was a political wheeler-dealer but like a used car salesman, had the puny vision of the next sale. Obama has ideology but no vision unless his vision is to destroy some fundamental American institutions, like the Constitution.

In fact, Obama has killed the space program. He killed it with a shot to the head that sent brains splattering. "Oh," his supporters intone, "He actually added money to the budget." That's great. He took a space program and turned it into a workfare program: The end goal is not exploration or developing the next generation of heavy lift vehicles or transit/landing craft. What is the goal for NASA under Obama? It's to reach out to Muslim (Primarily Arab countries.) and somehow get them to "feel good" about their historical contributions to science.

I don't know who thought up this incredibly innovative idea. Maybe it's the product of the new head of NASA; Charles Frank "Charlie" Bolden, a political appointee who, it appears, has even less vision than his boss but who knows how to implement PC programs that "feel good." Bolden might be a political appointee but he is a NASA veteran and he served with distinction. He was involved in several shuttle missions: STS-31 (Pilot), STS-45 (Commander), STS-60 (Commander), STS-61 C (Pilot). So he is not hostile to NASA and the space program in general. However, he is no visionary like Willy Lea. One of the first directors, Lea had a vision of using rockets for all kinds of work beyond just space travel. He actively promoted manned space flight and in an incredible twist of fate, died just days before the first lunar landing on July 20, 1969. But a visionary he was in every respect. Of the astronauts, Aldrin is a great visionary as is Edgar Mitchell. Mitchell founded the Institute for Noetic Sciences. Like Aldrin, he landed on the moon. His vision was endless and he was committed to the exploration of new and alternative ways of looking at the same things. But what are Bolden's visions for NASA? He has three that he delineated in a speech in June of this year: 1) Inspire children to want to get into science and math 2) Expand NASAs international relationships and 3) Reach out and engage the Muslim world. By the way, the way to inspire people is to have a mission and goals they find interesting. How do you get kids to get into math? Have programs, like those on NASA TV that show how math works and how it is used in space flight. But overall, people want to be working towards some end that is bigger than themselves. It's hard to get people interested in higher math to make money in investing but tell people that they can use math to help plot the course of an asteroid and change its direction, and you have something they can hang all their work on. You see, it turns out that money alone is a poor motivator.

Notice that there is no mention of any kind of space flight, exploration, missions, programs or new development. NASA has become a psuedo-educational facility where social policy can be forced down the throats of staff, employees and the American public. How could this have happened? NASAs charter was to develop the equipment and methodology to explore space and land man on other planets. Now we have a director who wants to turn it into a pre-school.

I mentioned the NASA redirection to a retired teacher who happens to be a friend. He is an avid Obama supporter and conversations with him have become tiresome. We can't even discuss Obama's missteps because every utterance is met with the following statement: "At least he isn't Bush." He thinks the space program is a total waste of money, time and energy. He thinks we should take the NASA budget and use it to force people to accept government solutions to things like poverty, homelessness, drug addiction and a host of other programs with no clear resolution and lots of opportunity to appear to be solving problems. In other words, as long as there are human problems, we shouldn't be wasting money on space. This is not an uncommon sentiment in the black. . . oops, African-American (Another complete waste of a hyphen.) community. Even though my friend is white, I know people of all ethnic backgrounds who think the space program is actually too small and should be expanded. Add whatever ethnic group in front of the hyphen you want but there are a large number of Americans who take pride in America's accomplishments in space exploration. If anything, people complain about NASAs monopoly but that is being addressed by private sector entrepreneurs.

So in light of the new director and his absolutely wrong-headed vision, I propose we change the initialization of National Aeronautics and Space Administration to the New Arab Sympathetic Association. I think that more closely identifies the current lack of a clear mission.

We are being led by self-serving boneheads who see not. This administration is unaware, cannot lead, motivate or inspire. They are the worse products of American left-wing, statist thinking. Thank God we have a constitution that guarantees that Obama and his ilk can be thrown out of office through election. And we must throw him out and all the people who support his self-centered lack of direction.

FB


Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Michael Steel's Comment about "Obama's War"

Ok, republican chairman Michael Steele was making an off-camera comment about the Afghan war. Now a goodly number of people want his hide. The problem is that he is correct. He may have misstated or used a phraseology that was questionable but in essence, he's 100% right.

Remember back when Iraq was the bad war started by Bush/Cheney to resolve the family feud started by Bush 41 and Obama was going to deploy troops to fight the "good" war in Afghanistan? At that time, everyone was saying that the real war was in Afghanistan and that we had been diverted by those inhumane republicans by pursuing a losing conflict in Iraq. Well, well, well. Things have worked out a little differently than planed. Iraq is basically over. There're some skirmishes but there were those when Saddam was in power.

Obama wanted to go to battle in Afghanistan because Bush had basically implemented a counter-terror plan that focused on killing belligerents rather than looking at the conflict as an insurgency. It was working but it wasn't the "nation" building wanted by the democrats. So in a very real sense, the Afghan war is as much Obama's as the Vietnam war was Johnson's. Sure, Eisenhower deployed trainers and special ops like Frogmen and Special Forces types and Kennedy doubled down the deployment of Special Ops troops. But Johnson really escalated the war in 1965 with the massive build up of troops from all the services.

So desperate are democrats for anything that will take the spotlight off the incompetent actions of Obama that they will even exploit a minor incident. Republicans have become members of feeding frenzies in the sense that they are anticipating negative press and are trying to play politics by beating that press to the punch. They have become unwitting tools of their opposition. What a joke.

Maybe Steel should go as chairman. One always wonders whether he would have been chairman if Obama had lost the election. Politics and politicians are so cynical that the republicans, who are often viewed as a closed party, would have chosen him to "show" how inclusive they are rather than on merit. (I happen to think the guys pretty good. I certainly don't care about a few gaffes but overall, I want a system where people acknowledge race but respect those of different race heritage then their own.) I would hope that he really earned it by work in the party not by the color of his skin. If he really earned it, republicans should be backing him with all the fervor each can muster.

FB