Wednesday, June 15, 2016

To a heartbroken Twitter User:

I want you to read this. It is a series of tweets from a user called supergrover (@fuzzlaw) that I compiled. This is as poignant and heartbreaking as anything you will read on the subject. I am not gay, but to the LGBTQ community, I promise you are not alone, though I imagine it's almost impossible not to feel that way often. We who support you outnumber those who don't, even if the "leadership" does not reflect that on the whole yet. It will in time, but never soon enough.

I'm an aging dyke, so I'm just going to get this out of my system: kids, y'all 35 and under, this wasn't supposed to happen to you. The generation ahead of us knocked down the wall: Stonewall. Initial visibility. Standing proud. Being out. They suffered the consequences. Backlash. Violence. The Upstairs Lounge in New Orleans. Guns fired at the places they dared to gather. Then AIDS swept in and devastated the community. Reagan and his ilk laughed at our suffering. They closed ranks. Cared for one another. Tended the dying and buried the dead. There's a reason why most 60+ gay leaders are women. See the genocide underneath the demographics. Then, the mid-90's. Anti-retroviral drugs came along. Our men started surviving. We began to flourish, stand up, stand out more strongly. Here and there, we fought for 'gay' marriage. Folks started coming out. Melissa. K.D. George. Ellen. Each was huge and life-affirming. Reveling in our newfound life and out-ness, Matthew Shepard's death cut us to the core. It was 18 years ago. 1998. As a community, we threw it down. HELL no. We didn't survive AIDS for this. We mobilized. Flexed our muscles. Change came. With every step of progress came backlash. But we pushed. And we pushed. And there weren't any Upstairs Lounges. No Matthew Shepards. We won. We won the right to marry, to have our employment rights protected, to live as fellow citizens. Fights remain, of course. But we were winning. Then, Pulse. 50 dead. 50 wounded. Babies. Kids. The ones we fought so hard to protect from the backlash. The backlash we knew all too well, but that the post Matthew Shepard generation has never known. We never wanted you to know about this. We never wanted you to experience this. It's why we fought, and fight, so hard. Yes, it's for our generation, but really...it's for you. For us, this violence is...not unexpected. We know it's possible. We've seen it. But you all...dammit, you've never had to worry about it, not collectively. We never wanted this for you. We thought we had protected you. But...clearly, the past is not even past. Welcome to being GLBTQ* in America. There are people who want us dead. And that's no exaggeration. And it's not just the nuts with the guns. It's the politicians who sacrifice us on the altar of hateful rhetoric to score political points. It's the churches that won't ordain us, won't celebrate us, who insist on continuing to 'love the sinner and hate the sin". It's the nonsensical fight over who can use which bathrooms. The inability of Congressmen to mention that it was GLBTQ* people who died. It's the families who turn GLBTQ* teenagers on to the street instead of just fucking loving them. Schools who expel them. It's every bully who teases and effinite boy and harasses a masculine girl. Every man who tells a lesbian she just needs the 'right dick'. It permeates our society. It is SO much better than it was, yet remains SO awful. It's why our generation kept fighting, and keeps fighting. But it's time for our generation to teach the next. Welcome to the fight for your lives, kids. We're with you. We'll guide you. We'll teach you everything we know. We'll stand on the front lines until you can do it. We'll be the cannonfodder. You're not alone. But the college-environment-creating-change-kumbaya-all-is-well-everyone-has-to-bow-to-what-we-say approach isn't reality. The world is not a safe space, and it only gets safer when you fight like hell for it. We weren't given the spaces we have. It's a fight. So get prepared. Read your history. Talk to your elders. Listen, and learn. And show up. We need you. Your energy and ideas. We'd still take a bullet for you, literally, and figuratively. You were just never supposed to have to take a bullet for us. RIP, my nieces and nephews and sons and daughters in Orlando. I'm so sorry we didn't protect you.
To supergrover (@fuzzlaw) :
This was not your fault. It is everyone's fault. There is failure at every juncture. We don't protect everyone in our society, only those we don't deem "less than." We continually exercise our rights at the expense of the rights of others, a direct violation of the one cardinal condition of having those very rights. Our nation's leaders do it daily, and often with the support of the Supreme Court. This is not your failure - it is systemic failure. Individually, we care very deeply. But as a country, we do not care one bit. Our elections are a clear indication of this. Voters continually re-elect bigoted and corrupt politicians who have rigged the system to their benefit, at the expense of the country, in general, and of the people most in need of protection, specifically. We have a segment of the citizenry who wants to exploit their rights the way the politicians do - so they use "freedom of religion" as a backdrop for discrimination. They tout the 2nd Amendment as the backdrop for endless and militaristic armament, walking through towns with assault-style weapons slung from their shoulders to scare and intimidate people, just praying - practically daring - someone to confront them and gives them a reason to engage their weapon.

You live in a country that is not emotionally stable. And the nation's leadership operates in a manner that keeps people there. We try to improve things, we try to engage people's hearts, so that they might see who the people are that they actually hurt, rather than the demographic. And you plug along, and you see small indications of improvement, you think things are starting to take on an exponential pace... and then you watch someone like Donald Trump take over the Republican party. And you realize the improvements are just a facade. That, given a bigoted presidential candidate to rally around, the id of the hateful segment of this country races to take over the spotlight.

So please, superuser, do not carry this cataclysm on your shoulders. This country was supposed to protect these victims. You are part of why improvements have occurred all. And they will continue to because, as I said, we who support you outnumber those who don't. As much as your heart is broken, you are not responsible for what happened. This country is. And we will continue to try to wrestle power away from those whom thrive on our instability and feed the hateful id that festers just below, and sometimes above, the surface. I promise. You are not alone.

Monday, June 13, 2016

Guns Are a Problem, But Not THE Problem

With the continued frequency of mass shootings across the country, the most recent being the attack on the Orlando night club Pulse, with at least 49 dead and another 53 injured, the discussion, as expected, has come around again to gun control. Gun control advocates think that these mass shootings would go away, if only better regulations were in place. Opponents say it's not the guns, it's the people who use them. Advocates say the countries around the world who have very few, if any, gun fatalities in a given year is because guns are either banned or heavily restricted or regulated in those countries. They would be correct, but that doesn't settle every issue. And in this country, it's not so much about rights as it is politics.

Lobby organizations like the NRA would have you believe that the muskets available to citizens in the early years of the country and its Constitution easily translate to the military-style weapons and handguns of today. It's an idiotic premise rooted in the fact that the Founders are no longer available to confirm or deny it. The reason we have so many amendments in the first place is because the Founders knew things might change with the times, and so a mechanism needed to be in place to update the Constitution if the changes with the times were substantial enough to conflict with the intentions of laws previously written. One might wonder if the Second Amendment, as written, would still exist today, if the Founders had lived long enough to see the state of weaponry evolve, as well as the conflicting interpretations of "a well-regulated militia..." But since that is not possible, we are left with NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre masturbatorily pontificating about what the Founders really meant when they wrote the 2nd Amendment, while Charleton Heston's "cold, dead hands" statement at the NRA convention in 2000 practically had the membership cheering wildly to communal orgasmic release.

What is lost in all of this is the practicality of regulation. A big reason regulation is impractical right now is because our government does not address the black market. We only deal with illegal weapons when they interfere with the weapons the government themselves are dealing. We supply weapons to dictatorship countries, to guerrilla militias and revolutionaries. And as long as no one messes with what we do with weapons, we do very little to stop it. So our black markets continue to thrive, the government doesn't destroy weapons caches, nay, they raid them and supply them to criminal enterprises to "track" illegal weapons movement, e.g. Fast and Furious, and then sit back shocked and dismayed to hear those weapons have been killing our border guards, as if it's a complete surprise that Mexican cartels and coyotes would do such a thing. And this is the real problem: If the government is, itself, a supplier of illegal weapons, from where do they get the nerve to talk about gun regulations?

First and foremost, deal with the illegal weapons trade and black markets. Regulations on guns will not work if there is a plethora of places to get them. Regardless of what Wayne LaPierre says, I don't think most gun owners have a problem with regulations. They get their guns through legal channels and protocols anyway. And as long as they can get what they need, regulations are fine, so long as the criminals being targeted can't still get them without effort. If they can, then you are just making regulations for the sake of making regulations - THAT they have a serious problem with. So if the government takes the illegal trade seriously, instead of being the traders, people will take regulations seriously. To that end, here are the regulations that I believe should be in place, if we are ever to get to that point:

  • Background checks at all purchase venues, including online. This should include criminal at all levels. It should also include all available psych records, such as Baker Act or any law enforcement cases involving psychological issues. The system should know if someone has psychological issues, even those not law enforcement related, but we have to create a system that secures that information to HIPAA guidelines so that doctors and hospitals will be willing to follow a regulation that requires them to put a patient's name into the system so they can't buy a gun. And it must be a closed system, ONLY accessible for weapons checks.
  • Require a weapons license, just like a driver's license. Pass a written test that shows you know the laws regarding what you can and cannot do with your weapon, and a physical test that shows you know how to handle a weapon. If you do this once, you never have to do it again, the license follows you for life as proof of weapons competency, unless you are convicted of a crime that revokes the right to have a weapons license.
  • Just like a vehicle, guns should come with a title of purchase. You should have to notify the registry agency of a gun sale by turning in a transfer of title, a process that should be streamlined to be handled online. You should be required to confirm that you sold the gun to a licensed purchaser, and provide the purchaser's name. The agency then contacts the purchaser via encrypted email to confirm the purchase and transfer of ownership. This information would be available to law enforcement, as a means of absolving the previous owner of any connection to, or responsibility for, any crimes committed with that weapon after the date of transfer, unless it can be proven that the weapon was reacquired by the previous owner without notification.
  • All NFA regulations already in effect, as well as those involving Title II weapons. Miltary-style design weapons, such as the AR-15, should be added to the Title II list. I know the backlash here. But the reality is that people focus on the rifles being "semi-automatic" as the problem. That is a red herring argument. Most guns are semi-automatic these days, including most handguns. The real problem with weapons like the AR-15 is the power and range. Handguns, with their short barrels, do not have the effective range of military-style rifles. That's the exact reason the military uses such weapons in the first place. Even a hunting rifle with the same caliber ammunition is typically not carrying a magazine that can hold up to 100 rounds. The magazine capacity, combined with the effective range, combined with the semi-automatic capability typical in most weapons nowadays, are why civilians should not have access to them. This is not an unprecedented philosophy. We banned civilian access to machine guns, like the M16, in the 1980s. Well, the AR-15 is an M16. It's just been stripped of certain features, like selective fire (the ability to switch between semi-automatic, fully-automatic, and burst fire), so manufacturers could sell the weapon to civilians. And AR-15s were originally banned in Bill Clinton's Assault Weapons Ban in 1994. The weapons only became legal because the ban expired in 2004. So this is not a revolutionary argument. These are military weapons, and no civilian has a justifiable reason to have them. If the weapon, and all iterations of the kind, are added to the Title II list, there is no expiration.
These are just the basics. Even with these in place, we still have no way of guaranteeing the emotional capability of trained and licensed gun owners to react properly, to know when and when not to pull their weapon, to hold fire to protect innocent people from getting hurt instead of opening fire with adrenaline feeding it (the "cowboy effect"). We need to know that the people who buy weapons know how to use them, and know the laws governing them. And we need to know that weapons are not being bought and sold at will with no oversight as to who has them. Gun owners like to point to mental issues being addressed. But if we have no mechanism for knowing if someone has sold their weapon to someone with mental issues, it becomes a moot point.

And no matter what Wayne LaPierre says, no one is coming for your guns. This has been a common tactic by the gun lobby and manufacturers to stoke fear of government-turning-Gestapo, and they reap huge power and profits from such fear. Profits from gun sales exploded when Obama was elected president, because the race for your guns was on, and just a matter of when, not if. President Obama has never indicated, or even implied, that such a confiscation was even considered, let alone planned. And no president going forward will either, there are simply too many guns out there for that to be practical. But if the black market can be dealt with, most gun owners would not have a problem with common sense regulation. Having said that, you do not get to claim a standard that all law abiders who respect their weapons would already follow, yet leave the rest of it open to the criminals. And when the government itself feeds the criminal market, there is no respect to be had with the "do as I say, not as I do" argument.

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Ted Cruz and States' Rights

Ted Cruz participated in a Good Morning America Town Hall, during which he answered questions posed by voters. Todd Calogne, a pizza parlor owner in New York City, asks Cruz what he would do to protect Todd and his husband of two years from religious freedom laws that he referred to as "institutionalized discrimination." Cruz answers in the video below:


In his response, Cruz makes some interesting generalizations, in an effort to avoid directly addressing what Mr. Calogne asked:

"When it comes to religious liberty, religious liberty is something that protects all of us; it applies to Christians, it applies to Jews, it applies to Muslims, it applies to atheists... that freedom ultimately protects each and every one of us."

Robin Roberts followed by asking, "doesn't everyone have the freedom to be treated equally...?," clearly implying that Cruz's response didn't really address what Mr. Calogne asked. Cruz sidestepped it once again, and reiterated the same answer, that the "First Amendment protects everyone equally..." George Stephanopoulos then redirects Cruz to his support of creating a constitutional amendment to overturn the Supreme Court decision on gay marriage [Obergefell v. Hodges], and how that would affect couples like Mr. Calogne and his husband, who already married:

"Listen, I am a constitutionalist and, under the Consitution, marriage is a question for the states - that has been the case from the very beginning of this country, that it's been up to the states. And so if someone wants to change the marriage laws, I don't think it should be five unelected lawyers down in Washington dictating that, and even if you happen to agree with that particular decision, why would you want to hand over every important public policy issue to five unelected lawyers who aren't accountable to you, who don't work for you...

and by the way, it may end up... that the laws in one state may be different than another state, and we expect that... and that's the great thing about a big diverse country, is that we can have different laws that respect different values."


There is a whole lot wrong with this line of thinking. For starters, I'm not sure Cruz should be touting himself a "constitutionalist," when it does not appear that he knows that the Constitution says nothing whatsoever about marriage. DOMA, however, was a federal law. DOMA prevented federal benefits to same sex couples living in states that had legalized same sex marriage. But what about states' rights? Not so much. Cruz supported DOMA, much as he supports states' rights, so long as the state decisions are in line with what he wants. And he was none to pleased when SCOTUS ruled that Section 3 of DOMA was unconstitutional under the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. The most recent ruling was based on the Fourteenth Amendment. The Fourteenth Amendment was written in regards to the rights of all citizens of the United States. Article 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment states:

"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."

This is what the Supreme Court was deciding on. And while some may think the decision is tantamount to the SCOTUS saying the Fourteenth Amendment requires the states to redefine marriage, it does no such thing. What they said, essentially, is if the states are going to "define" marriage at all, they cannot do so in any way that discriminates against anyone. As for Cruz's love for the First Amendment, the one condition to the First Amendment is that you cannot exercise your rights at the expense of someone else's. Using religious freedom to violate the equal rights of someone else also violates the spirit of the Constitution, not just the letter of it. Intent and effect are the barometers typically judged in these kinds of cases. Supporters of marriage definition, like DOMA, may claim that there is no intent to discriminate against homosexuals, but the effect was just that. And I would also argue that, since marriage is a universal construct that everyone accepts, the only reason to define it to any specificity at all is to disinclude those who do not meet the specificity defined, thereby demonstrating clear intent.

As for the "five lawyers in Washington," that is a wholly specious argument, coming from a candidate who touts his professional achievements in that very chamber. He's argued before the court nine times (two of them for one case), winning twice, partial victories in two more, and four losses. He has historically shown little respect for the SCOTUS, except when he needs them, as in the patent case for a private client in one of his two victories - BUT he wants us to elect him President because he should be the one to decide who to replace Antonin Scalia with. Right.

Krugman is Reaching for the Unreachable Bernie

Paul Krugman has historically been one of my favorite economist-writers. He's smart, pragmatic, and generally manages to successfully blend those with his ideology. Unfortunately, these have given way to his allegiance to Hillary Clinton, and he has effectively demonstrated as much in his columns over the last six to eight months. His most recent opinion has declared Bernie to have morphed into one of his own "Berniebros," a term coined by Robinson Meyer of The Atlantic  to describe young males who are fanatically and overtly die hard - with a healthy dose of cognitive dissonance - for Bernie Sanders.

It should not be a surprise that Krugman has taken this tack now. He's a New Yorker, arguably one of the most popular who writes for New York City's most prestigious newspaper, the New York Times. The New York primary is fast approaching, and Sanders has been steadily eating into Clinton's pledged delegate lead, Wisconsin's being the most recent. The victory itself was not the biggest problem for Clinton. The biggest problem was that She was up by 6 points in the week before the primary, to lose it by 13.5 points, an almost 20 point swing, and a clear demonstration that Bernie's momentum is not waning. It's only getting stronger at the worst possible time for the Clinton campaign. This has caused Krugman to use his popularity and influence over the next couple of weeks to throw shade at Sanders as much as possible. A successful primary for Sanders in Clinton's home state (yes, carpet-bagged, but still) on April 19 could pose bigger problems than the outcome itself, if it causes the superdelegates to start entering the conversation, which is Clinton's biggest fear.

"The easy slogan here is “Break up the big banks.” It’s obvious why this slogan is appealing from a political point of view: Wall Street supplies an excellent cast of villains. But were big banks really at the heart of the financial crisis, and would breaking them up protect us from future crises? Many analysts concluded years ago that the answers to both questions were no. Predatory lending was largely carried out by smaller, non-Wall Street institutions like Countrywide Financial; the crisis itself was centered not on big banks but on “shadow banks” like Lehman Brothers that weren’t necessarily that big. And the financial reform that President Obama signed in 2010 made a real effort to address these problems. It could and should be made stronger, but pounding the table about big banks misses the point."

This is not exactly true. These are not non-Wall Street institutions when they are publicly traded. And Wall Street was very much in bed with big banks during the crisis. The repeal of Glass-Steagal, which existed to keep commercial banks and investment banks separate, allowed these institutions to merge or be bought as a subsidiary. Even in the predatory lending portion, Wachovia and Washington Mutual were eaten alive for their share of the sub-prime mortgage and credit default swap market. Bank of America bought Countrywide. These institutions are not mutually exclusive.

"You could argue that policy details are unimportant as long as a politician has the right values and character. As it happens, I don’t agree. For one thing, a politician’s policy specifics are often a very important clue to his or her true character — I warned about George W. Bush’s mendacity back when most journalists were still portraying him as a bluff, honest fellow, because I actually looked at his tax proposals. For another, I consider a commitment to facing hard choices as opposed to taking the easy way out an important value in itself."

This is a very interesting spin. I do believe character matters more. And the roots of Sanders' policy desires lie in a more even playing field for everyone, and curbing the uber-wealthy's exploitation of an imbalanced tax system to widen the wealth gap. But more interesting is Krugman's little tilt at the end there, "taking the easy way out." Really? Sanders is taking the easy way out? No one could have chosen a more difficult way than Bernie. He has used socialist buzzwords that have demonized him from the start. If anyone is taking the easy way out, it would be Hillary, hoping to maintain the establishment status quo. Selling out has never been so easy.

"But in any case, the way Mr. Sanders is now campaigning raises serious character and values issues. It’s one thing for the Sanders campaign to point to Hillary Clinton’s Wall Street connections, which are real, although the question should be whether they have distorted her positions, a case the campaign has never even tried to make. But recent attacks on Mrs. Clinton as a tool of the fossil fuel industry are just plain dishonest, and speak of a campaign that has lost its ethical moorings."

Bernie did not have to make the case that Hillary's positions have been distorted by her Wall Street connections. Elizabeth Warren already did that - sliced and diced Hillary on her complete reversal of position on the banking reform bill in 2005. As for her connections to the fossil fuel industry, Bernie did not make that correlation. Greenpeace did. Bernie only mentioned it as an example of allegiances beyond just Wall Street that could be damaging to the country's economy, and he quoted Greenpeace to do it.

"And the timing of the Sanders rant was truly astonishing. Given her large lead in delegates — based largely on the support of African-American voters, who respond to her pragmatism because history tells them to distrust extravagant promises — Mrs. Clinton is the strong favorite for the Democratic nomination.

Is Mr. Sanders positioning himself to join the “Bernie or bust” crowd, walking away if he can’t pull off an extraordinary upset, and possibly helping put Donald Trump or Ted Cruz in the White House? If not, what does he think he’s doing?"

As I mentioned, Bernie has been cutting into Hillary's pledged delegate lead. And her lead is not large, unless you count the superdelegates, as Krugman clearly does. He obviously does not think superdelegates are malleable if the pledged delegates become a tight race. As for the ridiculous canard that Sanders is joining the "Bernie or Bust" crowd, he's already said more than once that he will support Hillary if she becomes the nominee. But Krugman is not looking for reality. New York's primary is coming, so the narrative needs to shift as quickly as possible. So quote Bernie out of context when you need to paint him one way, then ignore his actual quote when you need him to be something he's not.

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Bernie's Negative Campaign?

As the Democratic primary moves to New York, Bernie Sanders would like to debate Hillary Clinton to make sure their differences are well defined, if he has any hope of trying to steal more of Hillary's momentum - which would be a major accomplishment in her home state.

This is proving difficult, as Hillary for America Chief Strategist Joel Berenson explains to CNN's Kate Bolduan:



Apparently, Bernie has been a naughty boy.  In the latest attempt to lobotomize Democrat voters, Berenson references a Washington Post article claiming that Sanders' campaign was poll testing negative ads.  Except that they weren't, not really.  Quoting the article:
"His advisers, spoiling for a brawl, have commissioned polls to show which contrasts with Clinton - from Wall Street to fracking - could do the most damage to her at home."
Berenson uses this as an excuse to chastise Sanders as if he is puerile little toddler:
"Let's see the tone of the campaign he wants to run, before we start talking about any other questions... if he goes back to the kind of tone he says he was going to set early on - if he does that, we'll talk about debates. "
For those people who really despise the culture that has arisen in the past couple of decades - everyone getting trophies, playing sports with no points so no one loses, college kids whining about every little thing that offends their fragile sensibilites - I point you to Joel Berenson and Clinton's campaign as an example of where that mindset might be fostered.

The Democratic primaries have been the friendliest in decades, mostly because of Bernie. Hillary's campaign against Obama in 2008 showed she has no problem going negative. But that poses a problem against Bernie Sanders, because there is really very little to go negative on.  So little, in fact, that they had to go back 30 years for quotes on Cuba and the Sandinistas.  So little that they have tried several times to hint, with a wink, at Sanders as racist, despite him having a big head start on race relations activism in Chicago in the early 60's. So little that the strategy has become the invention of a narrative with Bernie as a negative campaigner. Does not matter if it is true.  Perception is reality, especially in politics. So Bernie not only magically becomes a negative campaigner, but one who needs to be chastised by Joel Berenson of the Clinton campaign for being so. This strategy says more about Hillary than it does about Bernie.

The reality is that Sanders' momentum has been growing at the same time Clinton's negative ratings have been increasing.  And the last thing Clinton needs is Sanders taking a big chunk of her home state's pledged delegates.  If he gets much closer, the unpledged delegates (superdelegates) start becoming part of the conversation.  Sanders, for his part, needs to make a big showing in New York and, with it being Clinton's home state, he needs to find as many issues as possible to contrast himself.  So he polls the issues that are most important to New Yorkers to figure out where Clinton is most vulnerable.  That's simple politics, that's not negative campaigning.  This is the same Washington Post that ran an editorial accusing Sanders of running a "fiction-filled campaign," that Clinton's team redistributed ahead of the New Hampshire primary.  But Sanders is negative, and should sit in a corner without his dinner and think about what he has done.  Bad boy.

Clinton better be careful.  New York is home to high taxation (especially New York City) and Wall Street, where a big chunk of her funding comes from. The frustration over the economy is most starkly represented there, from both sides of the spectrum.  There is potential for Hillary to do as much damage to herself as Bernie might do.  Having an adviser give a verbal spanking to one's opponent. particularly one who does not deserve it, could come back to bite later on. 

Monday, February 29, 2016

Air Force Attacks Christianity?

The United States military spends the majority of its time and resources fighting to ensure freedoms in this country are not endangered by any outside forces.  Almost all military personnel would likely agree that this freedom includes those that they themselves may not agree with, but will protect anyway, because that is what America is about.  If you attack one freedom, you potentially attack the others as well.  They may not like something you do, but they will protect your right to do it, and die in the process, if necessary.



In a February 26, 2016 Raw Story article, Bethania Palma Markus discusses reactions by the conservative "non-partisan" foundation, Judicial Watch, to a "Freedom of Information Act [FOIA] request in October, seeking records about 'Earth-based worship' for the 2013/2014 academic year..." at The United States Air Force Academy.


"The Air Force Academy leadership is attacking traditional Chrisitian beliefs, but will fund witchcraft and magick?" Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton told Christian website WND.  "These records show the misplaced priorities in the Air Force and why traditional Christians increasingly feel unwelcome in the Air Force Academy."



That quote is the result of the following information:


  • "Judicial Watch got documents showing the Academy paid $260 for two cadets to attend the Beltania Festival, an Earth-centered celebration in Colorado."
  • "The academy also spent $120 for four cadets to attend the Denver Witches Ball."
  • "The kicker here seems to be that in 2013, the Academy made the phrase "so help me God" optional in its cadet oath."

Why is it that every act involving religion that does not put Christianity front and center constitute an attack on Christianity?  And Christian attitudes, when they do allow for the far-fetched possibility that other religions may exist in the world, will embody the implication that those other religions are okay, as long as Christianity is the most important one, and the only one that is looked to on important matters, especially legal and political.  It is extremely needy, considering that it is based on a construct that is unprovable - hence the "faith."

The article goes on:

"In December, the academy said its cadets have the right to observe any faith, or no faith at all, after they received complaints about football players praying in the end zone."

"The United States Air Force Academy places a high value on the rights of its members to observe the tenets of their respective religion or to observe no religion at all," the academy said in a statement.  "The United States Air Force Academy will continue to reaffirm to cadets that all Airmen are free to practice the religion of their choice or subscribe to no religious belief at all.  The players may confidently practice their own beliefs without pressure to participate in the practices of others."

So, this is not really about Christianity being attacked, so much as the academy helping a few students participate in religious events that the Academy didn't provide for on campus. Which may pique curiosity:  What do they provide for?

At the Cadet Chapel, the academy offers:


Catholic Program
During the academic year (August through May) Catholic Masses are celebrated weedays (except Friday and academic holidays) and Sunday.  Roman Catholic holy days are celebrated during the academic year.

Protestant Program
Protestant worship services are held every Sunday throughout the academic year (August through May) with special worship opportunities on holy days. Worship includes traditional and contemporary services.  During the academic year Holy Communion will be offered on the first Sunday of each month at the traditional service.

Jewish Program
The Jewish Chapel offers a wide range of religious services and education for Jewish cadets and military members.  Friday night Sabbath services are held weekly followed by a kosher dinner.  Specific Jewish holy days are celebrated in conjunction with the Jewish Community of Colorado Springs.  Services and meals are open to all regardless of religious affiliation.

Muslim Program
The Islamic Chapel offers a wide range of religious services and education for cadets, staff and families.  Noon "Zuhur" Prayers, Weekly Friday "Jumu'ah" Prayers and luncheons are conducted every Friday.  Islamic holy days, including the month of Ramadan, are celebrated with daily services and prayers.  Services and meals are open to all regardless of religious affiliation.

Buddhist Program
Buddhist services are held every Sunday and Thursday during the academic year, with additional services on dates of special significance.

They also offer Community Center Chapel Programs.  

This country was founded by colonists wanting freedom  and independence from King George and Great Britain.  Despite incorrect proclamations that the country was founded on Judeo-Christian principles, religious freedom was a major factor in this desire.  The factor was so important to them, that they wrote into the Constitution that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;..."

Many of the founders were Christians, many were deists, but the majority of them agreed that free exercise of religion means no definition or establishment of official religion, and that the 1st Amendment served as a "wall of separation between the Church and the State."

The Air Force Academy provides education to cadets seeking to join the Air Force, and prepares them to enter service ready to defend the country and the Constitution it is founded on. So providing a few cadets the ability to attend religious events that the campus does not explicitly provide or host on its own is the very embodiment of religious freedom. And doing so reinforces what those same cadets will be fighting to protect once they graduate from the academy.  Christians may make up the largest block of cadets, but the academy makes sure that they provide for the majority of the biggest religions on campus and, if necessary, they will provide means of access for any that aren't represented officially.

Freedom could not be more perfectly represented.

Friday, February 19, 2016

Bernie Hates You

You know you are having too much success with what you are doing if a bunch of billionaire hedge funders create a new SuperPAC just so they can run attack ads on you.

So this new Person (remember, corporations are people too...), named Future 45 (I do not know why that has not made the list of most popular baby names), has created an ad.  It's not a particularly good one:

                   

BUT it does hit a bunch of trigger words that people think make it a good ad:
  • STAGNATING incomes
  • PRICES RISING
  • WEAK ECONOMY
ergo, Bernie wants
  • To raise the minimum wage to $15/hr, which HURTS SMALL BUSINESS
  • HIGHER TAXES on banks and corporations (read: "The Good Guys aka Job Creators") that would KILL JOBS
  • FREE (read: "Takers") college and health care for all, paid for by RAISING TAXES (verified in the ad by playing the first four (detail-less) seconds of a minute long detailed answer to a question)

Translation: Bernie wants to hurt Small Business and kill jobs.  Bernie wants to hurt people.  Bernie hates people.  Bernie hates YOU.  Why would you ever vote for someone that HATES YOU? Don't vote for Bernie.

The sober reality:

  • $15/hr may be a bit high, but at least tie the minimum wage to inflation or the Consumer Price Index (CPI).  So $12-13/hr.  It's called a Cost Of Living Adjustment, (COLA).  We are supposed to be keeping up with the COL, but the COL left wages behind a long time ago.
  • Higher taxes on banks and corporations Do.Not.Kill.Jobs.  We are primarily a consumer-based economy.  If people buy more (because they have more money to do so, see Minimum Wage above), companies will try to produce more to keep up with demand, and hire more people, as needed, to do so.  Not complicated, really.
  • Consumers are the job creators, not corporations, no matter what those CEOs are espousing from the deck of their 200-foot yachts.  Higher taxes do not kill jobs any more than lower taxes increase them.  Lower taxes only increases corporations' bottom lines, which maintains or increases their P/E ratio, which maintains or raises stock values.  They are not going to screw with that by hiring more people just because they got tax breaks.  Hiring statistics going back decades have proven this, no matter which party the president has been in.  Productivity was through the roof back in the days of the 80-90% tax rates.  The economy was booming, and families still made a decent income.  This fallacy of "higher taxes kills jobs" has been way overplayed, for a very long time, despite evidence to the contrary, yet it is always presented as innovative thinking.
  • Free College:  I do not agree with this at face value.  If it is going to be done at all, it should be merit-based.  Tax payers should not be paying for substandard students.  If you get good grades, then tax payer funded college that educates students so they can contribute to the country's economy might be worth it.  But it should be renewable annually.  A student's first year is covered.  If they get good grades, they get a second year.  And then a third, and so on.  But if their grades are crap?  They have to pay for the next year - and if they bring their grades up, they can file for reimbursement of costs.  College is an investment.  If students can not prove they are worth the investment with solid effort, they do not deserve it.  I also think students should have to contribute to an area of the economy that the country lacks, that their degree can contribute to.  We pay for your college?  You can still hunt for the job you want, but you help us out in this area part-time for a year or two.  And employers are not allowed to hold that requirement against a prospective employee.
  • Health Care:  Bernie wants Medicare for all.  The following information is taken directly from Bernie's campaign site:
         The typical family earning $50,000 per year:
                  •  Now pays an average of $4,955 in premiums
                  •  Another $1,318 in deductibles for care that is not covered
                  •  And the covered costs aren't covered until the deductible is met.

         The same family would only pay $466 annually into the Medicare for all program

         Businesses would save more than $9,400 per year, from an average cost per worker 
         of $12,591 to just $3,100.

         Medicare for all would be paid for with:
                  •  2.2 % health care premium (per rules for federal income taxes)
                  •  6.2 % payroll tax on employers (the $3,100 mentioned above)
                  •  Estate tax on wealthiest 1%
                  •  Reducing outlays for taxpayer-supported health care expenditures

          So everyone would be covered, taxes raised a little bit, but insurance premiums and 
         deductibles eliminated, leaving families with an extra $6,000-ish dollars per year in 
         their pockets on average.  And that would be BAD.  'Cause Bernie hates people.
         Bernie hates YOU.

And remember, these people are not attacking feasibility.  They are attacking intentions.  So whatever you agree or disagree with, Bernie's intentions at least seem to be looking out for everyone's financial well-being.  Whether it can be done is a whole other debate.

What are your intentions, Future - ahem - Mr. 45?  Whatever the hell your name is.