RatcliffeBlog—Mitch’s Open Notebook

RatcliffeBlog—Mitch’s Open Notebook
“Then, there has been an absurd line of reporting about Saddam’s dedication to Joe Stalin. Now, he may have been an ardent admirer of another murderous monster, but when commentators appear on air suggesting that Saddam, the egomaniacal despot, had his statues made to look more like Stalin than himself, you have to wonder about the sanity of the producers. Saddam’s interest in Stalin as a model is an meaningful anecdote, but not the important explanation of Saddam’s rise to power.Why is there not coverage of the meeting between Donald Rumsfeld and Saddam in 1983, when the United States and Iraq agreed they shared many common interests? This was, of course, after the genocide for which he was sentenced to die. Joe Stalin had less direct influence on Saddam than the Reagan Administration and Don Rumsfeld, who cleared the way for sales of weapons to Iraq throughout the 1980s. President Reagan released a national security directive (NSDD 139) that codified our support of the Saddam Hussein regime in 1984.Saddam was a monster, but let’s be realistic about this. He was our monster, not Stalin’s, not Russia’s, not even Islam’s monster. Saddam was an instrument of U.S. policy toward Iran while he cemented his power in Iraq and, like many strongmen we’ve supported in the past, it backfired.

I read that on Mitch Ratcliffe’s blog this morning and it rung so very true. I remember those days… I was in my 20’s and in college, reading in Time & Newsweek how Iraq was or friend and bulwark against the Iranian regime.

The Iranians are still there, we’re sinking into a quagmire in Iraq, and we just provided the “insurgents” with a martyr.

And the best part: George W. Bush will retire and leave the whole mess… “his legacy” to some other poor bastard to try and clean up. What do you want to bet the GOP moves to control Congress and cede the White House to the Dems for ’08. Turn the next guy into “Carter II, the Sequel.”

sigh… I hate politics.

The Seattle Times: Opinion: The other war we can’t win

The Seattle Times: Opinion: The other war we can’t win

Isn’t this the truth?

I am not a drug user, but I really don’t care if other people do use them (so long as they don’t put others in danger, by doing things like driving.) But instead of viewing drugs as a source of taxation/income, the US Government has been throwing BILLIONS of dollars per year down a black hole fighting this stupid “War on Drugs.” Like the editorial says, it hasn’t worked. People still use and still get addicted. Not only have we made criminals of users, we’ve created an economy that encourages both violent and property crime to support itself. It is ludicrous.

We Liked Ike (but didn’t listen to him.)

Eisenhower’s Farewell Address to the American People – Google Video

What Eisenhower warned us about has come to pass. Not specifically or only the companies illustrated in that video (with the cheesy music overlaid, sorry) but “special interests” have essentially taken complete control of the two dominant political parties of this country. Ike’s last thought is the most prophetic:

“The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.”

Misplaced power, indeed.

In 2000 two interesting and truly different candidates for the US Presidency emerged. Both were excellent illustrations of their respective party’s “true philosophies.” As such, the special interests rejected them. I refer to John McCain & William Bradley. It is a shame that the party machinery denied us such a choice, because unlike the choice we were offered in November 2000 a McCain v Bradley race would have actually been a choice. Instead we got Bush v Gore, which ironically became the title of a Supreme Court case. There was no choice there, it was two pillars of mediocrity from which to pick. The populace split quite literally 50/50. (For a fascinating look at visualizing the 2004 and other {back to 1960} election results by geography and population, have a look here and here.) The Onion, that hilarious satire site prophetically wrote a “Bush quote” from the inauguration: “Our Long National Nightmare of Peace & Prosperity is Finally Over.” We all chuckled. Bush then rewarded his base by cutting the taxes of the exceedingly wealthy, and then spent the first eight months of his presidency on vacation at his “ranch” in Crawford, Tx.

Then came 9/11.

I risk the ire of every person who ever reads this as it is probably the most UN-politically correct thing anyone has said about 9/11… but I’ve said this since that day: The 9/11 attacks on the USA were a strategic failure. They had, in retrospect a very small impact on the United States. They did not materially damage our economy. They did not materially damage to our infrastructure. They did not in actuality do great physical harm. Four aircraft lost, three buildings destoyed (WTC 1, 2 & 7), one building damaged (The Pentagon), ~3,000 people dead. This in a country of vast infrastructure, hundreds of millions of buildings, and 300 million people. I’m sorry Mr. bin Laden, it is going to take more than that to materially injure this country, and a whole lot more to destroy it!

What the attacks did succeed in doing was shock us. They shocked the world. And from that shock came the sympathy and support from the vast majority of the planet. The United States of America had spent 225 years showing the world how to create the best country in human history. Carefully built over two centuries by men of courage and integrity, such as Madison, Monroe, Lincoln, Roosevelt, and Eisenhower. We had lead by example, especially since Europe had spent the majority of the 225 years at war with each other, and the USA had become the shining beacon of peace and prosperity to the world. We were “the good guys.”

Osama bin Laden has never been captured and brought to justice. A task well within the capability of the most powerful nation on earth… especially in the aftermath of 9/11 when the world stood shoulder-to-shoulder with us. Instead we have let him go free and we’ve been chasing already captive bogeymen elsewhere in the Middle East – all the while swelling the ranks of potential and actual Islamic terrorists. We allowed the moment to pass, that could have removed the threat of future 9/11s. We had the will, the power, and the global support to do it.

Our current leadership has squandered that goodwill, within the space of five years. They have betrayed the armed forces, and to a greater extent every US citizen by giving up and never finishing the job they started in Afghanistan. They have betrayed the armed forces again by sending them into Iraq with no clear strategic goal or plan. They have betrayed their fiscal Conservative backers with rampant spending and debt. They have betrayed their social Conservative backers with no real movement beyond lip service to their causes. Worst of all: They have betrayed the very Constitution they swore an oath to preserve, protect, and defend.

With the suspension of Habeas Corpus, the creation and maintenance of secret prisons, the use of torture as a legitimate act of the State… our current administration has crossed the line. They are using fear. Fear of an opponent they could have easily destroyed and brought to justice FIVE YEARS ago, to destroy instead the foundation this country was built upon, the US Constitution. The most important part of that document, the one where the founding fathers said: “to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers … and as extending the ground of public confidence in the Government” has been clearly violated. It is a quick read, so here, refresh your memory.

There are two methods within the rule of law for US Citizens to change the course of the current administration. The first one is to vote. Tomorrow is an election, though not a presidential one. We are electing some portion of our members of Congress. Think about the track record of the current administration and of the current Congress when you cast your vote. A change is clearly needed. The Constitution hoped to establish balance of power within government by providing each of the three portions of government power over each other. The system is DESIGNED to be inefficient. The government’s power MUST be held in check by the designed ineffectiveness of the system. The political parties have circumvented that concentrating power in themselves instead of the branches of government, and then taking over those branches one by one. Nothing will destroy this country faster than any one party in control of all of government. If anything the American experiment has proven it is that absolute power does indeed corrupt, and imbalanced power conversely leads to peace and prosperity. Our country has been at it’s best when different political factions have been in control of the different branches of government. In fact, name any great President, and I bet you find that he had a Congress whose majority was Opposition, or he himself was a contrarian to his own party. As such, I’m sorry to say to my Republican friends and family, it is time to throw Congress to the opposition. Apparently even some hard-core conservative Republicans
share my views
.

I’ll explore the second method tomorrow. I’ll also explore my loathing of political parties. I hold both the Republicans and Democrats in equal disdain, and I’ll explain why. I will finally get back to Maxim Gorky, and his prophetic wisdom concerning politics, and I promise I’ll never talk politics again.

Good Guys and Bad Guys

I grew up in the 70s and 80s, and witnessed the end of the Cold War as the 80s became the 90s. It was truly a great time to be alive, because the cause of the western Democracies was validated by the collapse of the eastern Communist states, especially the Soviet Union. America was the “Leader of the Free World.” We lead by example as much as action. We had a strong economy, the rule of law, and citizens imbued with guaranteed, inalienable Rights. Our government was formed upon the very idea that the power of government MUST be limited, and that the individual’s rights took precedence over governmental power. These conditions created and maintained a populace whose rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” were the catalyst for progress, wealth, and over two hundred years of stability.

I remember back in my high school days, critically studying the mechanisms of American Democracy, and those of the Soviet Union. Then, in that brief time after the Berlin Wall fell and when Putin came to power, historians were able to research in the vast files of the Soviet Union. The result was a torrent of excellent reading that emerged about five years ago. I again took up some personal study when I could.

When I was a kid, I remember being struck by the fact that Russians were essentially prisoners of their own country. Their freedoms were denied at such a high level that they could not even leave if they wanted to. Their government controlled their lives to that extent. I genuinely felt for them. Here in America we had no such restriction on our freedoms. We could say what we wanted, to whom we wanted. We could travel freely, independent of governmental oversight or restriction. We had choices. Choices in everything from our daily lives, to choices in who were our leaders. If we didn’t like things, we could change them. Move to a new place, buy a new car, or “throw the bums out” of Washington DC if they didn’t meet with our approval.

Even worse than a lack of freedom, the people of the Soviet Union, and its client states lived with ever-present fear. Their governments had absolute power over their lives. They were powerless and their governments were powerful. They had no true guarantee of Rights. No judicial oversight. No ability to defend themselves against the abuse of governmental power. Even being merely suspected of some imagined crime could land them in Lubyanka Prison or the gulag. The fear was also maintained by a collection of state intelligence agencies who could arrest without warrant. Hold without hearing or bail. The main tool of the Soviet justice system was the confession, and the confession was gained thorough torture.

Not so in America. We were “the good guys”. Good guys followed the rule of law. Good guys relied on a well regulated judicial system to use facts to determine guilt or innocence. Good guys believed in innocence until factual proof of guilt. Good guys lived by the rules. Good guys didn’t resort to torture.

Best of all, we had a system of checks and balances that prevented any one part of government have too much power. The founding fathers had but one fear, tyranny. Tyranny of any one person, political party, even of a Tyranny of the majority. They succeeded in that goal through the structure of the government via the US Constitution and Bill of Rights.

Then, we faced a crisis.

(to be continued…)

Maxim Gorky was right.

I am not a political person, and this is (obviously) not a political blog. I have always been one of those “swing voters”… the “undecided.” I have friends and family members who ARE political people, who are members of a particular political party. They frequently have a hard time grasping my politics. My Democrat friends assume I’m a Republican. My Republican friends are convinced I’m a Democrat.

I am neither.

I actually avoid political discussions… mostly because they are a bore… but really because they get in the way of day-to-day life. If I have to work with, or live with somebody, I don’t want their perceptions of political belief to color their perception of ME. I feel the same way about matters of faith. My beliefs, be they about politics or religion are mine, not yours.

I do however, ALWAYS vote. It is my right, and my duty as an American citizen.

A month ago, I almost wrote a blog post entitled “Wake me up when October ends”… the central idea of it being that I loathe politics and the political season that surrounds this month biennially. The title is a reference to a great tune by a modern punk band, Green Day. The content was to be about being assaulted by political advertising, spin, and media throughout the month of October, usually one of my favorite times of year. The process of voting, and the existence of government are necessary. I firmly believe however, that the system has been poisoned… or at least compromised to the point that I prefer to just ignore it. For any reasonably intelligent person, the noise far outweighs the signal. The “Party Line” becomes far more important than the actual act or process of governing. In order to retain my true independence from the political parties, I ignore them in the weeks running up to an election.

This year though is different. Things have been happening to this country, and in the parlance of a bumper sticker I saw, “If you aren’t outraged, you haven’t been paying attention.” I’m not losing my independence, but I am going to speak my mind for once. If you are my friend and you have been waiting for this moment to finally uncover my party affiliation, you will be disappointed. This isn’t about any particular political party, this is about the very fabric of our nation. I’ve decided I can no longer keep my proverbial mouth shut, and can’t sleep through October.

It will take me a few posts to outline what I have to say, and I’ll tag it with the “uncategorized” label so that my regular readers who would prefer I shut up about politics and stick to rambling about, or pictures of cars, can ignore me.

Oh, and what the hell does Maxim Gorky have to do with any of this? Stay tuned…

Letter From Iraq

Letter From Iraq.

A good read.

Remind me again why we’re there?

Oh well. I have a few friends over there. Guys *my age* if you can believe it. People pulled back into the military long after they’d left for civilian life. Either due to Guard commitments (two weeks a year and one weekend a month!… yeah… right. This Guard is not the same Guard that G.W. Bush used to escape duty in Vietnam. Thanks to… G.W. Bush!) or they retired as Officers and got “the call.”

Remind me again why they are there?

I think about these guys every day. I think about their families. I cringe everytime I hear about another US soldier getting killed, wondering when I’ll recognize the face in the newspaper, or on the TV screen.

Remind me again why we’re there?

Our “leaders” keep saying “stay the course”, but it seems to me like they don’t know what course they’re on! Like a kid taking apart mom’s toaster to see how it works, and now they have no idea how to put it back together again.

Insanity.