Government |
25 August 2024Front Burner It was not for nothing that President Biden, taking himself off the ticket on July 21, on July 29 issued his statement regarding the Supreme Court. In the swirl of events in the Democratic Party, including the best political convention EVER, this statement is bound to get lost in the public shuffle, but you can be sure is received with its due urgency by members of Congress. We can guess that the MAGA Party, which has benefitted from the political and ideological corruption of the Supreme Court, will have nothing to do with Biden's statement. The Democrats are working on it right now on the back burner. The fundamental issue is whether the public sufficiently understands the gravity of the situation. It is an issue because it is a very complex problem involving the meanings of Article III of the Constitution. It is up to you to follow up on the clause-by-clause description of Article III. The third one on the list is "Marbury v. Madison and Judicial Review." Do not skip this one. Judicial review should have been on Biden's list. Judicial review is NOT a Constitutional power of the Supreme Court, as you will read. Professor of History at Princeton University, Sean Wilentz, has a must-read article in The New York Review of Books, "The 'Dred Scott' of Our Time", a piece that will bring you up-to-date about the immunity opinion and the rest of the pro-MAGA rulings of the Trump Court. There's a lot here to read, so I will be short, but it is my opinion that this is THE most pressing political issue of our time. There are plenty of social issues, of course, but we have to fix the Court! If you scan back through the essays in this Government section of Iron Mountain, you will find that there is a way to balance the three branches of government symmetrically, by eliminating any pretense that the Judiciary can legislate, by having the Supreme Court act as the Executive acts with respect to pending legislation ... contribute from the beginning ... work for the government not against it! Government
1 July 2024"During Good Behaviour" Suddenly, while we were asleep on our vigil, Joseph Robinette Biden the forty-sixth President of the United States of America became an autocrat, immune from prosecution — not unlike King George III, against whom our ancestors finally rebeled in 1776 — now President Joseph of the United States of America, is a law unto himself. It was the doing of six Justices, including the Chief Justice, of the United States Supreme Court. The President now can have Seal Team Six assassinate Donald John Trump or any other person presenting as clear and present and self-described threat to the security of the country, indeed the entire planet, as he does. He can arrest and detain indefinitely the 147 members and former members of the joint session of Congress who voted to overturn the 2020 Presidential Election. He can arrest these six sitting members of the United States Supreme Court and demand the resignations of each of them — Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett — as clearly acting against their oaths of office to the immediate detriment of the Rule of Law and imminent danger to the nation. He CAN and SHOULD, as the appointing authority, appoint ten (10) new Supreme Court Justices, each for a term of office "during good behavior," which more befittingly and certainly within his authority, he shall for all Associate Justices define as no more than thirteen (13) years, thus creating a Court with thirteen members, raising Associate Justice Sotomayor to be the Chief Justice and a term of fifteen years. The ten new Associate Justices will draw lots for staggered terms of no more than a standard thirteen years: two per year, i.e., 2-13, 2-12, 2-11, 2-10, and 2-9 years. Associate Justices Katanji Brown Jackson and Elena Kagan will be politely asked to accept reappointments of eight years 2-8, under the improved upon (albeit arbitrary but rational) definition of "during good behavior." (It certainly does not and never did really mean "lifetime appointment.") He SHALL predicate each of the above appointments to the Court on acceptance of the principle that the intention of the Framers of the Constitution was that there would be concord and efficiency among the three branches of the federal government in its work for the People, and that was expressed as "checks and balances," each of the same weight and value. Legislation, Article I, is given to Congress, Executive responsibility, Article II, is given to the President and Vice President and such agencies as may be provided for by Congress to meet the exigent and continuing needs of the People. Judicial responsibility is vested in one Supreme Court and lesser courts as provided for by Congress. The Judiciary at every level is Constitutionally responsible only for the final resolution of Cases according to jurisprudence and the Law as in each instance and Case acted within or against, and — by deliberate consideration by the framers of the Constitution — does not include determination of the Constitutionality of any Law or Equity or Treaty. Therefore, President Biden shall instruct that the Court shall select two of its members to maintain detailed and effective liaison with Congress to optimize the clarity and Constitutionality of all laws and statutes as they are under consideration by the Congress, just as the Executive Branch has done since 1787. The media, as Nicolle Wallace of MSNBC admitted today, has failed in its single mission to keep the nation truthfully informed about its federal, state, and local governments, about its culture and its subcultures, its enemies and friends, and to provide such information about the nations of the Earth and the state of civilization on this planet. When Claire McCaskill said "bullshit" on live television today, I am hopeful that she and the audience understand that the media have been mispresenting facts of all kinds, omitting information to protect individuals or to enhance them, and wondering how much entertainment value should be in the news. On the Friday after the first "debate" Nicolle expressed her chagrin over Biden's poor showing with the statement: "We are facing a dark choice in American Politics today." (paraphrased) I choose Nicolle to pillory because she knows better for the same reason as Jen Psaki does. It has to begin with Nicolle and Jen and Alex and Joy and Stephanie and Chris. Rachel does her histories and loses fewer of her audience than many think, but I doubt she converts many. Lawrence and his staff have an excellent position on the fulcrum of news and opinion. Keith Olbermann had the right idea and got hassled and canned after eight years. He should be brought back and given an apology. Here is the question that MSNBC hosts should ask themselves: Would I take a 50% pay cut to keep my spot in the world-wide conversation about where America is going?! Government
24 June 2024The Central Intelligence Agency The CIA: An Imperial History by Hugh Wilford is reviewed in the June 17, 2024, edition of The New Yorker paper edition under the title "Everything In Hand" and online "When the C.I.A. Messes Up", written by Daniel Immerwahr, dated June 10th. The reviewer was a member of the History faculty at U.C. Berkeley and now at Northwestern University. Wilford's work is interpreted by Immerwahr by the process of "selective" review. The review piece is interesting because Professor Immerwahr is interesting ... and an historian. Neither one of them are willing to admit the obvious problem with CIA exposés, namely that the successes tend to remain secret, while the screw ups often end up in the media. Moreover, neither one of them is likely to tell us what motivates them to take a hatchet to the one agency of the US government that has the remarkable job of knowing something true about every unfriendly political and senior military person and group in the world, the more the better. Wilford's tell is his book's title. "Imperial" indeed! Immerwahr is interested to give Wilford a wider audience ... at a minimum. All of which is to say, of course, that approaching a blue-ringed octopus is fraught. It will reduce you to permanent immobility whether you kill it or not. The fumbling beginnings of intelligence gathering by the US Government are an old and horrifying story. The problem was obviously that the early leadership was incompetent, but also that it was given an impossible job to do from a standing start and yet asked to comment on reality immediately. The incompetence of leadership is not restricted to CIA. Competence and leadership do not always coincide in those chosen by formal or informal means. Of the six commanding officers under whom I served, all were in command of their first, probably only, deep-draft command. Three were competent mariners, of those, only one understood that he was fallible and conducted himself that way, the others made terrible mistakes, and survived them. Being skipper is a "heady" job and can trick one into believing underlings do not really understand the big picture. The Dulles brothers represent a classic case of aggressive public spirited endeavor undergirded by private, personal self-serving political opportunism. John Foster became Secretary of State; Allen Director of the early CIA. Both were raised to be fierce competitors and disciplined managers, but their "big pictures" did not include true respect for points of view that did not contain opportunities for them. A step-mother of mine worked for CIA and later in the White House staff. Uncle Joe Stalin was not the most intellectually active person in Lenin's retinue, but he did understand from his early clerical training in the vassal state of Georgia that the HR function in any large organization has more power than anyone realizes—in time to save their souls. CIA had no understanding of this and were quickly and easily penetrated—right there in HR—and compromised sufficiently that thousands of them were sacrificed to our enemies, as Wilford and Immerwahr vividly deplore. There is no perfect solution in our epoch for an airtight HR function. Certainly Senator Frank Church and Senator Dianne Feinstein could not and did not provide a reasonable substitute. But, if we are about to enter a new stage in CIA bashing, some hoping to disarm completely, it would be good to remember that HR must be organized and monitored so that leadership is properly conditioned and trained in humility and actual leadership, and that there be multiple checks on key personnel all the time, including on HR personnel. Government
18 May 2024Reasonable Judgement Stephen Breyer is a retired Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court, generally perceived to be on the liberal side of what used to be considered an apolitical body. In the May 23rd issue of The New York Review of Books he has written another article, "Choosing Pragmatism Over Textualism. It is a medium-sized essay, but lucid, but also dealing with concepts not in the same kinds of categories. So, this introduction will be as short as possible. The problem is that we are all individuals, arriving in the world squalling and leaving it at best not yet foggy. We have unique experiences, which nevertheless we assign to categories and types as if "unique" does not actually mean "unlike anything else." And, therefore, we have different "takes" on events as we perceive or participate in them. We share "takes" with others, but not always the same "others," as Breyer explains the way the Supreme Court agrees and disagrees. We have, in fact, many ways of "approaching" an understanding of human events. In SCOTUS we have "Originalists," "Textualists," and "Pragmatists," like Breyer was. In actual fact, these three ways of looking at cases in the Court are a little like ideologies, because the individuals in the Court may find Truth using all of them, and do, but may concentrate their written decisions in the vocabulary of just one. Full disclosure: my family motto from the dim past before "1066 and all that" is "Velis id quod possis" ... "Wish for the possible!" All of which is to say that this writer favors pragmatism. Originalism refers to the founders of the republic, not the writers of legislation now at issue in the Court. Breyer mentions that George Washington knew nothing of the internet, and a slavish devotion to the concepts originally embedded in our Constitution quickly runs one aground on absurdities and anachronisms, and yet we must understand the framers' purposes, which were to boldly go where no one had gone before in establishing a nation as a democratic republic, designed to survive in a world of late medieval or early modern, often despotic, monarchic empires. Textualism refers to what the words in the law and the Constitution meant when written and now in a new context. The history of this way of thinking shows individual members of the Court taking advantage or taking cover by expansive or strict reading of terms like "proper and necessary" and clauses like "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,..." Breyer sees this kind of reading as as unreliable as it is sterile. It is, of course, where anyone must begin. It should not be where the argument ends. A Pragmatic reading of the law and the Constitution places the most interest on purposes, accepting that contexts evolve and migrate and that a quarter millennium of legal slavery was immoral and in that case stare decisis is not only irrelevant, but utter cowardice. Breyer shows how the national bank issue of the toddler nation was decided by reading the Text very Pragmatically, and how Roe was as well, but overturned by the absence of Text in the Original, written in a time when married women were essentially chattel. You may come away from Breyer's analysis with the distinct feeling that the interpretation debates are tendentious and artificial. I agree. The human brain does what it must to understand, but the political mind chooses tactical advantage. The Court is no longer simply trying to understand and sort things out for the benefit of the nation. It is choosing to rule by principles no longer shared by we the people. America is the paradigmatically pragmatic nation. It had to be. At the same time, though, Americans have chosen religious orthodoxy as their shield and solace. It must be, then, that we better understand the paradox embedded in our thinking. Government
8 May 2024Portentous1 Federal Judge Aileen Cannon of the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida has made a very wrong decision about the case of the People of the United States v. Donald J. Trump regarding his stealing top secret classified documents, some of which were so secret as to be "compartmentalized," mishandling them, then obstructing the recovery of these documents by the government. She has postponed indefinitely setting a date for the trial on the pretext that there are matters of motions by the defense which require extensive consideration. Perhaps one such matter is the equally bogus consideration being given by the US Supreme Court to the question of whether the President or former President has automatic immunity from prosecution for actions taken while in office or which begun in office continue into his civilian life thereafter. There is something horribly wrong about a system — supposed to have been designed as an "administration of justice" system — that can be completely perverted by a single individual. This raises the general question of whether a single individual official actually has such latitude of authority, and that presumes that better decisions are made by multiple officials, and that presumes that multiple individuals who rely solely upon their own separate wits and are, therefore, acting as impartially as possible without partisan influences, as somewhat less assuredly would single individual officials. This is the Logic established within an understanding of human behavior in our loosely conceived doctrine of Human Nature. In other words at some point in the logic we posit ideals about honor and integrity to the purpose of Justice. Our faith in these doctrines has existed with only slight provisionality over centuries of constitutional government here and in other nations. The case against Donald J. Trump is not complex, except for the bending over backwards we afford to defendants, which when we are dealing with national security matters requires that we protect the nation not less than we protect the judicial rights of defendants. Judge Cannon, presumed by most observers to be grateful to Trump for appointing her to the court — which he did officially on the advice the the Federalist Society, not his own experience with the Judiciary anywhere in the country — seems to have not understood that the law on classified materials is independent of the Presidential Records Act, or she accepts the notion that Trump did not understand that the Presidential Records Act does not allow him ownership of government documents, and therefore, she feels bound to protect his ignorance. Most observers are confident that she has misunderstood her role and has acted injudiciously, in fact, improperly, shamefully, and unethically. Neil Katyal, former Principal Deputy Solicitor General of the United States, and Acting Solicitor General, said on MSNBC yesterday that he thought there is little that Special Prosecutor Jack Smith, who has brought this case and the case about the January 6, 2021 Insurrection against Trump, can do about Judge Cannon's "indefinite postponement" of the classified documents case. This remains to be seen. The Judiciary itself may recognize the grievous damage Cannon has done to the system and may demand her recusal. We certainly hope so. The supporters of Trump have thrown down the gauntlet. They mean to exonorate him, and if not, tie the system into untieable knots. It should be completely obvious and yet "unthinkable" that this theatre of our Second Civil War can be allowed to be lost.
1 To my surprise, the American Heritage Dictionary says: Usage Note: The last syllable of portentous is properly pronounced (-təs). However, under the influence of words like contentious and pretentious, sometimes this word is pronounced (pôr-ten-shəs), as though it were spelled portentious. Both the (-shəs) pronunciation and the spelling with the i (which is occasionally seen in print) are widely considered to be mistakes. Government
26 April 2024Justice or Corruption Recently, a fascist, misogynist acquaintance of mine asked me if I thought the Constitutional Order was being abused or perverted. They! frequently suggest that we are on the same path, but of course, this is their devious affect — affinity — which took me a year, at least, to untangle. I obviously said yes and asked what in particular was currently annoying them. Their answer was very vague and began, I think, with Congress passing huge spending bills like the infrastructure one and the computer chip one. Very quickly we got to the nubbin of their discomforture, or at least the tipping point where their speech became louder and more profane: Women in Society. Their issue here was about women's pernicious effect on judgments of needs versus desires, and women's effect on the pursuit of Justice regarding Donald J. Trump. The news yesterday from Washington was that the Supreme Court seems to be headed toward a 5-4 split favoring the notion that the Presidents of the United States do NOT have immunity from prosecution for felonious acts made during their term of office, or before or after. The idea that 4 Justices might see a reason after 240 years of history, each moment of all those years demonstrating that Presidents do not need now the immunity they have never had, is very disturbing. Conservative Justice Barrett may join with the liberals Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson tying it up for Chief Justice Roberts to rule. The very notion that Presidents need immunity is a supporating boil on the Court, indicating how politically corrupt half of it is. Moreover, Thomas still has not recused himself, which calls into question any Trump-related ruling in which he is in the majority. It is amazingly clear that the presence of women in the Court has changed the Court, and there is that word again — change. Conservatism postulates that a citizen has the right to having the "rules of game" remain intact while that citizen exploits them. The history of the world, indeed the entire universe as we currently understand it, tells the opposite story. Animate and inanimate must endure change. The universe is an exceedingly complex process even at the level of human lifetimes and careers, and it is all about contending with change. Liberals contend that there is a better way (than any available) to position ourselves to respond to change — democratically established rule of law. Progressives agree and position themselves to anticipate change, even choose the path the process should take. Meanwhile in Arizona the State has brought a case against the "fake electors" that forged false certifications of the electors for Trump, a plot that failed when Vice President Pence carried out his pro forma duties in the wee hours of January 7th, 2021. And also meanwhile there are criminal charges against Donald Trump for falsifying business documents — hush money payments — to cover up Trump's dalliance with a porn star, to unlawfully influence the 2020 Presidential Election. This trial is underway and proceding against a tide of Trump's published comments about witnesses and jurors, these designed to force the judge into a contempt charge, which would be subject to appeal, thus continuing Trump's primary strategy of Delay and more Delay. At stake is, however, is the question of whether a rich person with a large following can be brought to justice at all. The US Department of Justice unit in the Southern District of New York relinquished the hush-money suit when US Attorney Cyrus Vance decided that the case was insufficiently important for all the hazards it contained at the Federal level. The Attorney General, Merrick Garland, was responsible for not pursuing the January 6th insurrection at the Capitol for about two years, thus putting the two federal cases in jeopardy as the Election of 2024 may take place before the cases are resolved. Again, this amounts to another failure to bring to justice a rich man with a strong following. It is probable that President Biden will not reappoint Garland in January 2025, but the damage is done and the edifices of Justice and Jurisprudence in the United States are broken. Lisa Monaco may be chosen to replace him, if so, this essay can end on a positive note. Government
21 March 2024The Judiciary: Background The March 21, 2024 paper & online editions of The New York Review of Books contains an interesting and provocative review of University of Chicago law professor Gerald Rosenberg's third edition of The Hollow Hope, 713pp, $105.00, the review titled "Social Progress & the Courts," by Linda Greenhouse, President of the American Philosophical Society, and meanwhile, the Knight Distinguished Journalist in Residence and Joseph M. Goldstein Lecturer at Yale Law School, who strangely writes As a result, he [the author Rosenberg] said, law professors "routinely make absurd claims that would be rejected out of hand by any political scientist familiar with the literature in the field." Being neither an empiricist nor a political scientist of any sort, I cannot evaluate that generalization. This is mentioned to warn you that, although the 77 y.o. reviewer, Greenhouse possibly has a protracted argument going on with Rosenberg wherein her credentials as a keen observer of judicial politics and, indeed, her ability to induce generalizations and hypotheses from arrays and disarrays of facts already has been challenged, by Rosenberg or one or more of his surrogates. I am confident that she must be an empiricist and that the thicket of her side of the argument was laid down long before now. At stake in Greenhouse's review are the genealogies of such decisions by the Supreme and lower courts in cases like Roe, Dobbs, Obergefell v. Hodges (same sex marriage), Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Griswold v. Connecticut (birth control), that is, whether the DNA of the Judiciary includes chromosomes for "courage to promote social justice." Rosenberg's steady, but initially "scandalous" — now "iconic" thesis is NO, on historical review the courts have generally followed, not led public opinion. Naturally, Linda Greenhouse dissents. What follows is a trek through the weeds. It may be that, because recently I have in the Iron Mountain "Select Bibliography" under the rubric of "Agenda" just proposed amendments to the Constitution of the United States, including specifically to this essay Article III. Section 1. to make it plain that the Supreme Court is not a legislative branch of the government. I am especially annoyed with Greenhouse that she blithely entertains the idea that that Court may legislate. I have discussed Chief Justice John Marshall's ruling in Marbury v. Madison endlessly, empirically, and with the political science available to Historians. He was wrong, and she is wrong. The government is divided in principle into three only semi-autonomous branches. "Semi" because their separate activities include "checking" and "balancing" the activities of the other two branches AND they are meant (despite all the furor over egregious authoritarianism, the likes of which the colonists had experienced from their monarch and his lords), to coordinate with one another, as follows: The nation requires laws of all kinds. The needs arise from the People, communicated to their Senators and Representatives, also from agencies of government, and from principles enunciated as Civil Rights in the Bill of Rights and other constitutional provisions, as well as, from the Judiciary as it discovers conflicts, ambiguities, and omissions in existing Law. The President may establish policy by presenting a legislative agenda to Congress. Congress will act according to the will of the majorities and according to agreements reached with other branches in the writing of bills, send the bill to be signed into Law by the President whose duty of signing is to see if the provisions of the bill can be faithfully executed, and then, having signed, seeing to it that the provisions of the new law are executed through the departments and agencies of the Executive and faithfully, especially by the Department of Justice and the Judiciary. At present two-thirds of the legislative process is coordinated. Although lower courts coordinate with judicial committees in the House and Senate, the Supreme Court seems to believe— since John Marshall —that they need not. They believe that when they have parced the Law and judged an instance of "unfaithfulness" (violation, confusion, vagueness, malpractice, etc.) that their decision is final, BUT it is not! The Rule of Law depends on law-making, the legislative process, being maintained continuously by the Legislature, by definition, so that the only authority and responsibility the Supreme Court has is to refer conflicts in the Law to the people who make the law. The Judiciary are bound by the principle of "the Rule of Law" to adjudicate situations according to the written law at the time the actors acted, for it must be that citizens may take for granted that the law is the law, until it is properly expunged, amended, or replaced by more perfect law by the Legislature. Clearly, James Madison demurred in Marbury and when he lost, perhaps he believed himself to be outgunned politically and perhaps intellectually by Marshall's assertion of the Power of Judicial Review, which had been discussed at length in and around the Constitutional Convention — and rejected. Madison did not rise to the protection of a CRUCIAL principle of the fledgling government — the Rule of Law. I am confident that he was persuaded by other slave-holding plantation owners that a Supreme Court with that kind of authority might come in handy soon. Since then, "judicial review" by SCOTUS has been continuously neglected as a political matter, because 1) the newborn nation did not understand the gravity of the consequences of inserting judicial authoritarianism into the Constitutional order, 2) the Congress was even less "responsible" or attuned to the nature of authority in a representative democracy, including the essentially collaborative principles intrinsic to the architecture of the new government, and 3) the issues of the day were the western frontier (the evolution of Manifest Destiny) and the kinds of people out there, settlers and indiginous, and the rapidly increasing issue of human slavery, which hopefully would be solved politically, but it was not. A case can be made that if SCOTUS understood that its role was ONLY to advise Congress (and the Executive) that there were problems in some parts of some laws, then the process of dealing with the issues of human slavery would have been dealt with differently, perhaps more incrementally and peacefully. Government
4 March 2024Trump v. Anderson, et al: The Impossible Decision—Expanded 2nd Edition 5/3/24 I can understand the naive anxiety all nine members of the US Supreme Court have about 50 States, acting more or less independently, having the authority1 to declare for their own states and general election ballots ANY "federal officeholders and candidates" ineligible for office under the Section 3. provision of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, to wit: No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or an an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof.2 That anxiety is not only misplaced but, equally, in error Constitutionally. Would it really matter if 37 States allowed a purported insurrectionist on their ballots, but thirteen States together with all the voting territories did not? In fact Lincoln was not the ballot in all the US States at that time. Moreover, the Constitution gives over to the States control of elections for their own State governments AND FOR FEDERAL OFFICES (President and Vice President, Senators and Representatives as well). In a five to four decision (with Barrett voting with the three Liberal justices) the Court believes "the Constitution makes Congress, rather than the States, responsible for enforcing Section 3."3 Now go back to the amendment itself and see what Section 3. of the Amendment says, to wit, "But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability." According to this wording the sole power of the Congress over Section 3. is to remove the "disability" (or otherwise understood as: bar to eligibility) for specific persons, since removal of the entire "disability" would require an amendment process involving the States. But hold on: Section 5. of the 14th Amendment says: "Section 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article." Today's majority decision hangs its hat on this strange provision. What is the meaning of the word "article?" This is an "Amendment," a revision to "Articles" in the original Constitution as previously amended or an addition to the Constitution by the amendment process. Article?? Is this the VIII Article of the Constitution? No one in Washington seems to think so! The 14th Amendment is both a revision and adds new ground to the Constitution. Scholars might be right to say that it resembles an addition to the first ten amendments, the Bill of Rights, but it is more than that, AND it clearly does not specify any original or amended original Article or any other previous amendment of the Constitution to amend. It is possible that Section 5. refers to the content and meaning of Section 4, although it should have been then the 2nd sentence of Article 4. So, is there appropriate legislation, signed into Law, since the adoption of the 14th Amendment? My understanding is that there is NO legislation about insurrectionist presidential officers or candidates. What then? Well, what we have is a double, double problem. If Congress is remiss in fulfilling its obligations under a reasonable reading of the 14th Amendment, it is just as inappropriate for them to be the Section 3. adjudicator of eligibility of its own members of the House and Senate. This violates the principles of checks and balances and separation of powers, certainly much more important t than the hash SCOTUS has erected as solution to a Constitutional question by not noticing that States are MANDATED by the original and amended Constitution to manage all election processes, even the age, birth citizenship, and oath-keeping-behaviors eligibility standards. If I were Anderson in Colorado, or the people of Maine and of Illinois, I would tell the five in SCOTUS that they have grievously erred and cannot Constitutionally be obeyed; and that Colorado and the other states have made up their formal legislated rule-governed minds rationally, as authorized by the Constitution; and the four qualified members of this bare five-justice majority have not understood that the reason Congress has not legislated per Section 5. regarding Section 3. of the 14th Amendment, is that Section 3.— like the "No person ..." original eligibility requirements (age, place of birth, citizenship and residency tenure),— are self-executing and in each case attended to by the States and so declared when presented in the Congress or Congress Assembled as the Electoral College. The silence of Congress affirms this; and that Justice Clarence Thomas has been urged and instructed by members of the other branches of government to recuse himself from any and all cases and hearings of matters in which his wife Ginny Thomas was involved, i.e., the 2020 campaign of and insurrection by Donald J. Trump, and has failed to do so, to a moral, ethical, and legal certainty, the decision of the Lower Court in Trump v. Anderson, Secretary of State of Colorado, stands, and the Supreme Court decision is null and void!
1 "The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, ..." to wit, Article I, Section 4, Clause 1 However, ... "Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors ..." who will vote in the national Electoral College for the Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates they are firmly (or less firmly, depending on State rules) pledged to vote for stated on the ballot: Article II, Section 1, Clause 3 3 The Decision document courtesy of the Washington Post Post Script: Section 3. of the 14th Amendment actually says that electors may not be insurrectionists or aid or comforters. It does not actually say that the President and (or) Vice President cannot have been an oath-breaking insurrectionist, only that the persons in each state chosen to vote in the Electoral College not be. Clearly, as the unsuccessful "fake electors scheme" shows many were or intended to be insurrectionists. But, moreover, the Electors, once elected, are pledged in most States to vote as instructed for the candidate named on the ballot. If this is confusing, more confusing is why we have not disestablished this ridiculous and poorly maintained and conducted process of disenfranchising sometimes a clear majority of the People. Post Post Script: The US Constitution has been amended twenty-seven times and yet the Congress and the National Archives has not provided an amended version of the document that includes new provisions and those stricken shown lined through, annotating the original text with the words of the amendments, adding new rights to the Bill of Rights, which 10 amendments are original to the document and were necessarily so to achieve adoption. If Jefferson's comment that every 19 years the document should be rewritten to accord with the sentiments and wisdom of ensuing generations and the advancements in science and enterprise, we would not have the dismaying mess we have now. Government
29 February 2024Mistakes v. Misconduct We are at a critical point in the governance of our country. There are people in government (all three branches) working tirelessly to overturn the principles upon which our government is created and continuously recreated, thus to destroy our government. There are people in government who are not yet aware of the intensity of the situation, because it has not happened since 1861, and so they are doing almost nothing. There are people in government who are incapable psychologically of responding to the threat with sufficient effort, whose inadequacy, therefore, becomes a negative situation all its own. In the Executive Branch the President (and that almost always means the Vice President as well) has believed that his role was to be an exemplar of the normal presidency, and he believed his strength is his vast experience of the politics of the Legislative Branch, and therefore, he has been reticent to (maybe less capable of) taking the role of the CEO rather than merely presiding. All but one of his department heads are doing their jobs the way they should. The one that is not is Merrick Garland, Attorney General. Garland, the media tell us, has tried to reestablish the "independence" of the Department of Justice, which is an ideal, rather than an established tradition of that department. Garland is responsible for perhaps the gravest MISTAKE in governance by avoiding, putting off, and paying poor attention to the criminal conspiracy of former President Trump to overturn the 2020 Presidential Election, thus allowing three years to pass before taking legal action against Trump and his enablers in Congress and in his own department among the FBI and the US Attorney corps. In the Judicial Branch only the US Supreme Court stands out as problematic. The court was packed by Trump with three proponents of over-turning Roe v Wade. This was a MISTAKE by Trump because 85% of the public did not want Roe overturned. It was MISCONDUCT by Senator McConnell to refuse the confirmation of Merrick Garland to the Court and to push through the three new members. And, the MISCONDUCT has been fairly well established that Justices Thomas and Alito are on the take from wealthy partisans, that Ginny Thomas is a MAGA Trumpist and was frequently "in the room" as the Trump conspiracy was under way, and BLATANT MISCONDUCT that Justice Thomas refuses to recuse himself from cases involving the Trump conspiracy. In the Legislative Branch MISCONDUCT occurred on January 7th very early in the morning when VP Pence, CORRECTLY refused Trump's demand to invalidate electors from "battle-ground" states (in which Trump believed he could get recounts of the vote that would favor him or at least throw the vote into the House of Representatives, where he would have a majority vote of the states), BUT 147 members of the Republican party voted to not accept the Electoral College vote, VIOLATING THEIR OATHS, and continuing to serve in Congress despite their MISCONDUCT. AG Merrick Garland is in continuous MISCONDUCT for not citing these 147, and especially the ring-leaders. They must be brought to justice, which means they must be summarily ejected from Congress, forfeiting all pay and allowances since January 7th, 2021. Now, the US Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case of Trump's assertion that the President is immune from prosecution for any acts done when he alleges they were done as President in furtherance of his duties, DESPITE the ruling of the DC Appeals Court that the assertion is without merit. It seems remarkable and sometimes unreal that one man could have cause so much havoc in our government. The stark truth is that has taken many and that most will go unpunished. Trump was the accelerant, the gasoline for the tinder of our over-stressed politics and the malfunctioning parts of our government, including these: the Electoral College System of Presidential elections; the unconstitutional conversion of "serving in good behavior" to "life terms of office" in the Judiciary; the Senate's fillibuster rule; the decline in ethical behavior and rules; the intrinsic impossibility of amending the Constitution when the need is most vital; and others. Trump is likely to be convicted in New York of election interference in the so-called Stormy Daniels case. The classified documents case is a jumble of due process rules regarding classified materials, but open and shut as a matter of the intent of the Espionage Act. The federal case the insurrection of January 6th may not be concluded by November 5th, the election. Most people believe that all other things remaining steady, Trump will be soundly defeated in the popular vote and will probably lose in the Electoral College as well. BUT, things will not remain steady as long as government does not recognize that Trump and the fascists among us will do everything they can to assure that Biden is not reelected and that Trump is. It is up to President Biden to disabuse AG Garland of his independence. Justice is an Executive function and must be carried out with utmost devotion to the people and our democratic form of government. Government
29 DEC 2023Espionage Three months ago David McCallum, who played Illya Kuryakin in "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.," passed away. That 1960's series was of a distinctly similar time. Russia was our principle enemy. In the December 18, 2023 issue of The New Yorker Magazine Amy Davidson Sorkin (AB Harvard College) wrote a review, retitled online as "The Troubled History of the Espionage Act," of the book "State of Silence: The Espionage Act and the Rise of America's Secrecy Regime" (Basic), by the historian Sam Lebovic, Professor of History at George Mason University in DC-suburban Virginia. This institution has been considered well "right-of-center" since its inception in the 1950s. The review is interesting and reveals that espionage and other offenses against the security of information thought to be vital to the national defense and, more broadly, the functioning of government have been more the result of executive rather than legislative actions and concerns. President Harry S Truman established the classification system that grew into what we now have and which we will defend sometime in my lifetime against the machinations of Donald J Trump. Sorkin begins one of her early paragraphs with the multipurpose allegation that "Classification is now an overbearing companion to the Espionage Act, rather than a clarification of its limits." "Overbearing" is obviously a loaded word and synonyms like "autocratic," "dictatorial," and "oppressive" are not the strongest. As a former Classified Material Control Officer and Top Secret Material Control Officer on two shipboard duty stations, it is plain to me that Sorkin has not understood the reasons classifications are applied to such mundane information as when and where, for instance, the skipper of the USS Gerald Ford will be away from the huge aircraft carrier he commands. Not having a "need to know" is bothersome to some, probably to many, but once you're inside the loop the problematic nature of classified information becomes clearer, and with modest reflection most of the time also laden with possible disaster. Stealing (one way or another) classified information is a crime under the Espionage Act, about which the politics is nearly as complex as the subject itself. Yes, the very act of classification is an abridgement of freedom of speech. Every parent and some children understand the reason for withholding information from those who are developmentally unprepared to deal with that information. Once all the Sorkins of the world find they cannot get over the adult version of withholding information, they should begin to "get over themselves," as the saying goes. Very bright people sometimes believe that their ideas of the context are better informed and more crucial than the originators' and custodians' and users' of withheld information. They are not! They may be different and being so, based on differing perspectives. Typically, national defense information is literally about life and death, whereas civilian points of view hover around important principles and ideals. Being bright does not confer exemptions or righteousness. Yet, of course, the classification system is a human construct and has faults and abuses. Why that is so is a matter of human nature, but in terms of government, a matter of problems and flaws in both the establishment of and governing of classified information systems. The Espionage Act needs to be rewritten for our very fraught times. The US Congress has very little to do with the classification system, seen most of the time as a thankless matter of perilous housekeeping. Since it is an abridgement of freedom of speech, though, you would expect there to more interest in it. The key idea here is that the Espionage Act of 1917 is still on the books over a full century of technological and real politic evolution since. Sorkin tells us about Lebovic's research into the Judicial impact on classification and espionage, but only hints that the Legislative branch has deliberately neglected the subject. Why? The state of mind of the Congress over the first fifty years of the Espionage Act—until the Korean War—and through the last fifty-five can be described as first existentially and then politically unprepared to deal with matters affecting the "lost cause" faction in Congress or those they represent in the unreconstructed South. Nikki Haley just the other day proved again for those of us at the bitter end of 2023 that the "lost cause" refuses to die a natural death. Instead those born and reared in the "lost cause" enviroment continue to appropriate well-meant civil rights protections for their purposes of remaining ready to demand of us the kind of personal liberty and skepticism about the national government that might well be rejected by force of arms again. This is to say that the "lost cause" rebelliousness, especially that one energized by Trump is as if theirs were a separate nation already! The "lost cause" affiliates are supported, knowingly or not, by the likes of the late Senators Frank Church and even Dianne Feinstein, each of whom pulled the pigtails of the precariously pregnant CIA, an institution of national security deliberately burdened to accomplish a mission these senators only understood in civilian innocence, in the self-righteous smokescreen of political chastity. It turns out that classification and espionage and its methods are literally disgusting to Congress, and accordingly even in the calmest of times they are not able to agree on anything except that we must defend ourselves somehow. Now the world has turned colder and more warlike. This is no time for posturing or invigilance. Government
15 SEPT 2023Good-Faith Actors It is a time of feeling one's way forward, but amid a welter of seeming contradictions, of deliberate trouble-making, propaganda, tests of one's own resolve, and casting about for signs of allegiance. It is not bewildering, but it is uncomfortable and full of real and unnecessary anxieties. The sides are taken, except there are huge numbers of citizens disoriented and unsure if they should wait a bit longer to get an idea who is going to win. Such is the nature of allegiance these days. The media must be going out of their minds, knowing that the Trumpists are not good-faith players, but are demanding their rights as if they were. This central fact is the pivot point of most anxieties. On the political right there is a steady trickle of pale apologies for not risking life and limb and a lifetime of accumulated position, but instead forswearing oaths and sacred honor. Mitt Romney is the poster-boy for wearing historically Republican garb well into the Halloween witch's wardrobe time of Trumpism. The emperor's clothes metaphor extends as he bows out of the fray, nakely, still hoping not to be mugged and strangled by the supposed mob. The Trumpist actors in Congress are 1) sure that the man will prevail and give over the gavel soon enough that they benefit and the 1890's are restored—that glorious Gilded Age of MAGA where White was the only Reality and Male was unopposed, or 2) are not so sure, but dare not risk their careers, given that so many others are silent, scared witless. In the hustings, White Christians wonder whether their ascendency can be maintained, or whether the demographics are inevitably going to dispossess them of power—power to tell others "how it is gonna be." The wisest among them know that it is just a matter of time, the real question is how long. Those at the round top of the Gaussian Curve, the mean, having little enough control of their own lives anyway, are betting that History can be made now, just as those holding onto the Confederacy's "lost cause" hoped for vindication or retribution or revenge. Been to Atlanta recently, dude? What makes this about "government" is that the far right and slightly-less-far right are both committed to abrogating the US Constitution, understanding fully that the democracy it creates is not their friend, that they are a distinct minority opinion under this system. Some are oligopolists, favoring a government of the "select few," maybe as many as there are White Christian Nationalists across the land, others are less sure of their fellow man and favor instead a tighter Fascism, evolving from the likes of the US Chamber of Commerce, the Federalist Society, and the ethos of Boss Tweed, Huey Long, Joseph and Kevin McCarthy, and the Godfather. What is especially "preliminary" right now is the seeming complexity of the judicial system, especially Georgia's. The United States finally realized in middle years of the last century that criminal gangs and corrupt conspiracies had to be recognized as real and as threats to the entire nation (not just to big cities like Chicago and New York City). So they created judicial means, the RICO acts, like the federal one and like the one in Georgia. We don't see them in such vivid detail very often, and so they are more than slightly confounding. The only thing you need to do is trust in them to be managed by competent good-faith people and assailed and battered by criminal minds about to lose everything. Buckle up! Government
14 August 2023Judicial Supremacy The August 17th issue of The New York Review of Books contains a substantial essay by Lawrence Tribe of Harvard Law, who, as Lawrence O'Donnell of MSNBC always introduces him, says: "he taught constitutional law at Harvard for five decades." Professor Tribe's piece is titled "Constrain the Court—Without Crippling It." At one point near the middle, Tribe quotes one of the five authors he is reviewing: ... judicial supremacy—the idea that, beyond being responsible for reviewing and resolving the competing legal claims of the parties before it in any particular controversy, the federal judiciary in general and the Supreme Court in particular bear ultimate responsibility for authoritatively interpreting the Constitution and laws of the United States—has been incompatible with the advancement of individual rights. And shortly thereafter quotes another of the books under review: As a matter of historical practice, the Court has wielded an antidemocratic influence on American law, one that has undermined federal attempts to eliminate hierarchies of race, wealth and status. Tribe's essay goes on to enumerate scores of cases, some well-known, others not, that were adjudicated under undemocratic principles and conceivably as part of a common understanding among the justices that whatever they do, it is also done as maneuvering for power within the frame of the Constitution, which they have arrogated to themselves the power to exposit (as Tribe writes), to interpret and define. Tribe's essay is lengthy, so this introduction to it must be brief. It is clear that previous of my essays decrying the power of the Court to legislate under the pretext of "judicial review" (Marbury) are vindicated and that young lawyers, who think my position is a distinctly minority view, have not yet understood it well . To be clear, judicial supremacy is neither woven into the Constitution's text and structure nor discoverable in the history of its creation—a reality that today's supposedly "textualist" or at times "originalist" Court conveniently ignores. (Tribe, ibid.) With Justices Thomas and Alito and Kavanaugh and Gorsuch enjoying their perks of power and their freedom to cheat and revel in the wealth of others, we see that human nature is constant and that power corrupts. Without restraints it corrodes its purposes. But, it does provide us with an honorable and appropriate justification for dealing with it. And so we must! The election of 2024 is all about this constitutional issue. JB Government
14 June 2023
Options: Then and Now (slightly revised 15/6/23)
In the essay of May 26th (in this Government folder) we saw that at the time of the creation of the Constitution of the United States that the factions, each with its own primary concerns, were inexorably grouping into political parties, the Federalists and the Democratic-Republicans. "Grouping" was a difficult process of compromise until the members of the groups more clearly understood and agreed about their mutual underlying principles, axioms supporting their preferred pathways, especially toward resolving serious long-standing issues, among them the herd of elephants in the room: human slavery. The Federalists quickly understood that they, the existing leadership, were already in power at the national level and, therefore, were probably the most likely to get their way as the new one-of-a-kind nation was wobbling to its feet. Conversely, however, the slave-holding states, were aware that in the states that mattered to them, theirs and the those bordering them, they and their fellow slave-holders were in charge, so their interest was to hold onto those positions and to improve their grips on power. As noted several times earlier, the single over-riding concern was protecting themselves from the well-established, prosperous, militarily strong European powers, particularly Britain and Spain, an idea which quickly led them to believe that binding the states together would better assure survival, but if divided, over time they would inevitably fail. This concept was also predicated on the immediate fact that twenty percent of the population were declared Tories, who might, if their states remained separate, choose to make alliances with Europe for commerce or protection. At this time the European sentiment against human slavery was still a generation (twenty years) away from anti-slavery legislation. Federalists were the more centralist party, but laboring under the burden of what the "centralist" British Parliament had been and seemed to be evolving toward in the British monarchy. So, they earnestly wrote into the Constitution "checks" and "balances" to counter the explicit apprehension they had about how the negative aspects of human nature affects those in power. Many were particularly apprehensive about the relationships between civil government and religous authority over the hearts and minds within the proposed democracy. In other words, while framing the muscle and sinew of the central government they deliberately provided it with internal discord. The Democratic-Republicans took them another step. Democratic-Republicans were "decentralists." They saw the principle of a functioning citizens' democracy applying to and only within each of the constituent states (miniature republics, if you will). Fearing the opinions of the unpropertied masses in their own states and even less the appetites of semi-literate and unpropertied citizens arising from alien and therefore untrustworthy cultures in other states, they insisted that the states be semi-"sovereign" with respect to the implementation of democracy. There was not to be (and there still is not) a direct democracy furnishing the central, national goverment with presidents, vice presidents, or until 1913 (Amendment 17) senators. Six score and twenty-six years later, after 1913, the whole Congress was directly (popularly) elected, but entirely under the rules for elections established by each individual state, but the Executive remains indirectly elected via the Electoral "College" System provided for in Article II, Section 1, as amended by the 12th, 14th, 15th, 19th, 20th, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th, and 26th Amendments! What power the central government has to control elections carried out in the states rests precariously with Article IV, Section 4 of the Constitution: [Please read "The Meaning" of Article IV, Section 4 at the link.] The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature can-not be convened) against domestic Violence. It is painfully obvious that the American Constitution has not yet found the way to elect the national Executive. Only Maine and Nebraska apportion their Electors in proportion to the percentage of the vote, rather than winner-take-all obtaining in all other jurisdictions. This effectively silences the minority vote—and is, therefore, literally undemocratic. Under more propitious circumstances Article IV, Section 4 would be invoked. So the question is: How is this working for us now, here in the third decade of the twenty-first century within a handful of years of our 250th year, now the third largest nation in the world with the third largest population and far and away the largest and most dynamic economy in the world? The answer is that it was working just fine for the corrupt, those who could control something as unwary, credulous, and unvigilant as a state, and who wanted to continue slavery, and then for those who wanted to overturn Reconstruction into Jim Crow, and those today who see themselves vastly outnumbered and unlikely to win elections as the complexion of the nation has changed dramatically and as women and descendants of slaves and ag-workers now vote their mutual interests, overwhelming the caste of white privilege doubled-down with the remnants of Christian humility. The answer also is that once again the hotter heads are headed toward major violence, the kind that make J6 look like one stone in the walls of Fort Sumpter. Article IV, Section 4 is the Constitutional pathway to resolve all of this. I doubt President Biden sees it that way. The pathway is right there, along with the rules of engagement established already. You have to wonder why, specifically, that Article IV, Section 4 (containing the so-called "Guarantee Clause") has not been implemented. A moment's consideration brings us to the conclusion that those in power in states have done everything they can to perpetuate the notion that states are really little republics, "laboratories of Freedom (completely ironic)!" And so, that legacy originating in the days of slavery must be overcome. It may take the likes of a Congress full of Jamie Raskins to accomplish anything. It would take a second term President with an avid Vice President to carry it out. There would be consternation and probably some violence, but remember: Eisenhower integrated Little Rock schools with the 101st Airborne Division! And Arkansas Governor Orville Faubus saw his whole life pass before his eyes. The lesson is that the original Constitution deliberately organized the American nation as a slaveholding country with a weak central government run by states. To be sure, it has evolved since, preserving the privileges of the industrial and finance tycoons, and in the south, those who held and bred slaves with their own seed. It is on rational close inspection due for fresh start—no less often than every 19 years (by each succeeding generation), Jefferson said. The Democratic Party should dedicate itself for the remainder of this century to that purpose. JB Government
10 June 2023
Espionage
On Thursday, 8 June 2023, the US Department of Justice Special Counsel, Jack Smith, without objection or any necessity for public comment from the Attorney General, Merrick Garland, charged Donald J. Trump with crimes relating to the government documents he stole from the White House, retained, and obstructed the retrieval of which, well over three hundred of them bearing markings as highly classified national security information. Today, Friday, June 9, 2023, the Indictment has been unsealed and is available here from the Washington Post. Trump is the first, hopefully the last, US President to be chiesrged with criminal conduct felonies under the US Code. Media voices reported the event with relief after years and months of wondering whether DoJ had the fortitude to do this, and some media voices said it was the beginning of a new day in America after 49 years of living with the embarrassing mistake of letting former President Nixon off the hook for his crimes—for which Haldeman, Erlichman, John Dean, and many others did time. One voice said, in the context of the overwhelming long-term historical and current public evidence, including confessory outbursts on television by citizen Trump, that the problem in America is that he was ever raised to the highest officalin the land, certainly the most forboding evolution of politics in a very long time. This is the problem the best minds in our country must face and solve. Special Counsel Jack Smith spoke briefly about the Indictment, stressing that (1) it is a NATIONAL SECURITY matter, and (2) that everyone should read the indictment to see what kinds of evidence DoJ has and the extent of the criminal behavior of the former President. Click on the boldface, underlined word "here" in the first paragraph to print out the indictment document, or if your printer is low on toner, bookmark the link to the document and read it online. As Rachel Maddow and Brandon Van Grack and several others at MSNBC said in their coverage today, Friday: "the damage is already done." And, indeed, the reliability of the United States among our allies and friends regarding the security of classified materiel is now in SERIOUS question. You will read about where Trump had put stored classified documents during the period from roughly February 2021 (as he left office) to the present day (as there are still missing documents for which DoJ has no precise explanation), such as next to a toilet that certainly must have been used by some among the thousands of guests to Mar-a-Lago during this period. The national security is also in peril now from supporters of the former President. At this writing at least two members of the US House of Representatives have issued military-style orders to the general MAGA public and one declaring that "this is war." It remains to be seen whether the response will be like that after the Manhattan indictment, that is, very minor and certainly very, very embarrassing to Mr. Trump. There will be violence, to be sure, but it may be restricted to lone gunmen or small groups acting locally. In south Florida, the matter is extremely serious, and you should avoid the area if you can. No one among us knows how the MAGA extremist domestic terrorists will act. No one knows how long it will take to clean up this entire situation, best guesses are at least a generation, maybe more. There are people whose actions have contributed to the situation who will be very difficult to bring to formal justice, people like Mr. Jim Jorden, et al, who it is alleged in the media had active roles in the events of January 6, 2021, and who will probably squirm free, but maybe not. The thing to remember is that pardoning Richard M. Nixon was a huge mistake, and letting the Jordans and Greens and their like off scot free or simply defeated at the next election will populate the country with the same kind of people who overturned Reconstruction into Jim Crow extending White Christia Nationalist Dominion to various degree all across the country for a century! JB Government
26 May 2023
If Not Annexation, Protective Custody
Article IV, Section 3 of the United States Constitution is about the formation and inclusion of states and territories into the nation. Section 3 (in toto) New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress. [Emphasis added] The Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States; and nothing in this Constitution shall be so construed as to Prejudice any Claims of the United States, or of any particular State. We shall see, shortly, that a new state was formed, but not by the consent of the relevant legislature. To understand these two Constitutional paragraphs it is enlightening to first realize that the people writing the Constitution were (or would soon become) Federalists (more centralist) or Democratic-Republicans (who saw the democracy applying to and only within each of the constituent republics/states, hence the Electoral College). These Framers were land and business enterprise owners; they were against human slavery or they were slaveholders themselves; and they were jockeying to create rules for being included in what from the outside would certainly appear to be a slaveholding nation, and from the inside the Union that would protect the personal investments of people like themselves, considering especially, as the value of all slaves seventy-four years later in 1861 is now estimated to have been $2,400,000,000 or $4 billion if each slave person was valued at $1,000. The value of all factories, railroads, and banks in the US at the time is estimated to be less than either of those slave value numbers. As stakeholders in the creation of the first independent and hopefully viable new country in the New World, the Founders had just one all-important consideration, and that was to avoid further fragmenting the British-born colonies, and rather to create a binding union of them wherein the economic and ethical issues of the day would be peacefully resolved while presenting to Atlantic Europe a large and united and thriving nation not to be misunderstood as prey for monarchs or merchantry. Clearly, the ability of the nation to resolve its ethical differences over human slavery was lacking and, yet, this continuously unresolved point of contention factored into many decisions made by the government of the United States and its citizens, culminating in the decision in the slave states to fight for the right to hold one's preferred moral code, as if it were not dictated by one's economic system. So Fort Sumpter was fired upon, anticipating the federal government under President Lincoln would emancipate the human beings enslaved. Six hundred thousand Americans died in the fight. And in the midst of the war a new state was born, West (by God!) Virginia. As the southern states seceded from the Union to form the Confederacy in what the US Government called The Rebellion—rebellion, as if declared sovereignty over the rebel territories did not hang on whose military forces were actually in control,— both the Confederacy and the Unionists maintained "governments" of the territories, neither of which had complete control of the territories they claimed, and what was lawful was a matter of exigent choice. According to the U.S. Archives statement about West Virginia statehood, the following decisions were made : 1861 April 17 Virginia legislature passes the Order of Secession 1861 May 23 Virginians ratify secession 1861 June 17 Pro-union Virginians voted to form a second government, the Restored Government of Virginia (which attempted to control the NW part of the Commonwealth, but also to "govern" the state as a whole, which it did not physically control for the Union) 1861 August The Restored Government of Virginia voted to approve the creation of a new state, West Virginia, per Article IV, Section 3 (above). 1861 November 26 West Virginia Constitution ratified by voters 1862 May Senator Waitman T. Willey (Unionist VA of the Restored Government of Virginia submitted bill to Senate for admission to the Union of West Virginia with an amendment that provided for emancipation of slaves in the state 1862 July 14 The US Senate approved admission of West Virginia to the Union 1862 December the House of Representatives approved the admission of West Virginia to the Union 1862 December 31 Lincoln signed he Bill admitting West Virginia 1863 February 4 Citizens of Berkeley and Jefferson, the two most eastern, counties voted to join West Virginia, which was also approved by the Restored Government of Virginia 1863 June 20 Lincoln announced official recognition of West Virginia statehood 1865 December 5 reunited with the Union, the Virginia Assembly repealed the legislation (of the wartime Restored Government!) ceding the counties to West Virginia 1866 March the US Congress officially recognized the transfer of counties to West Virginia 1871 in Virginia v. West Virginia, the US Supreme Court affirmed that the counties were part of West Virginia. And now to the real point of my vexation, what does the uncertainly legal West Virginia statehood tell us about the plausibility of What!? Well, it tells us that if enough people, especially those already elected to or willing to declare themselves the rightful legislatures at the county, state, and federal levels want to do something like this during mass civil uprising, they can! And will! The audacious inconsistencies of the West Virginia process, now a matter of legal "precedent," open wide the opportunity to rescue counties being confined by their state legislatures against their wills, their fundamental rights taken from them, and otherwise not being protected by the Constitution and the federal government. The 4th largest city in America is Houston, TX, which is in Harris County where our NASA has planted immense resources that cannot remain subject to the "benevolent auspices" of the Texas government that is now considering peremptory removal of Harris County election officials and the protections of democracy there. It is time for The United States to exercise its Article IV, Section 4 obligations. Clearly, the current Texas legislature will not be ceding Harris County to any other state, but the Texas government must deal with the overwhelmingly Blue Harris County, respecting the rights of Harris county voters to disagree with the 18th and 19th century politics out in the rural and White Christian Dominion hills and prairies of that state. The US Constitution says "The United States shall guarantee to every State a Republican Form of Government ...." (Article IV, Section 4) Messing with Houston is unconstitutional and is like attacking a human population (4.728 million) equal to the total population of Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Delaware represented by over 10% of the US Senate, in other words, an act of war! We went to war with Spain for a single Navy ship! JB Government
16 April 2023
What Does "Good Behavior" Mean?
I have asserted here many times that the terms of service of the US Constitution's Article III judges aee justices does not literally or figuratively or by some sort of "default" mean "for life." It manifestly means something having to do with the behavior of judges and justices. Behavior is "what a person does" as premeditated by a person or unpremeditated. When a parent says to their child that their behavior must improve for them to be given a bicycle, for instance, the term "behavior" takes on two meanings: 1) as described above premeditated or unpremeditated, or 2) what the person appears to do (have been doing) by an observer, like the parent. The concept in the US government has been interpreted variously. Congress, we are told, thinks it means "indefinitely," and "for life" is the reasonable clarification of that word. Obviously, Congress is wrong again! But why? Behavior, as what one actually does, has cultural and legal boundaries. Improving one's own behavior to achieve the respect necessary to be given or pehhhrmission to buy a bicycle means doing things that are inside the boundaries as understood. Parents instruct as to the boundaries, persons learn about them from the other people around them, from news, literature, teachers in school, and from friends. Consciences develop within people based on the understanding of why it is bad, wrong, illegal, or otherwise prohibited to steal, kill, and all the other things society agrees are pernicious to the culture. The culture embodies these boundaries. An important point at stake currently is the doctrine of "separation of powers" intrinsic to the organization of our political culture, indeed, our government within respectful terms of the Constitution of 1787 as amended. There is a notion that each of the three branches of government are independent and sovereign. They are NOT. Sovereignty is like virginity; either you are sovereign or you are not. Sovereignty in the United States of America rests with the People and exercised through representative bodies like the Congress and the Executive. The national Judiciary is not directly representative, however, so we may posit that whatever sovereignty is exercised by the representative bodies is not exercised by the members of the Judiciary. Separation of Powers is moderated and effectively diluted by the facts that a) the Executive Branch nominates all federal judges and justices, and the Senate approves or disapproves these nominations, both conceived as representative bodies of the People. Importantly, each step considers the nominee's past and likely future behavior. It is the essential fact of each step that behavior is the key concept, and not to be swept into the underbrush by either branch, (but apparently has been by the Congress.) Why would Congress do such a thing? Well, Congress knows very well that the judges and justices can be impeached, so in the simplest sense they see impeachment as the only proper mechanism for checking the power of judges and justices. At the same time they also know that impeachment is not a judicial process. It is a political process in reality, meaning that as Congress is political, what it does is political, which in turn means that "good behavior" is automatically addressed politically, rather than on the face of the facts of that behavior as would be discerned in a judicial proceding. By reading "good behavior" politically, Congress grants to itself powers not stated or intended in the Constitution. Good behavior then means Congress determines the lifetime of judges and justices, not one word of which is in the Constitution, which was written when disagreements emerged from factions and political parties did not exist. Meanwhile at the Supreme Court centuries of behavior have taken place without reference to any written agreement among the justices of how to behave ethically or how to deal with infractions of rules governing all federal employees, particularly rules about gifts and financial benefits received. And, over time several justices have reasoned very poorly, taken the point of view of slaveholders and corporations, for instance. And, only rarely did SCOTUS contain liberal majorities, this fact being the result of political shenanigans, the most recent of which was demonstrated by then Majority Leader in the Senate, Sen.(R) from Kentucky, Mitch McConnell, by refusing to "hear" the nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court, or by the body itself to hear obvious confirmation lies and prevarications about their judicial points of view as if they were truths. Good behavior is the sum of what parents and the law require and of what the overall culture of the Republic expects of each of us. Culture is an organic concept and evolves. Giving terms of office longer than the pace of evolutionary change is self-destructive. Harboring a person like Clarence Thomas who is up to his eyebrows in actual conflicts of interest and the fact and vivid appearance of unethical behavior and is alleged to have said that he hopes to be on the Court for 40 some years, to get back at the fucking liberals who tormented him, goes beyond stupidity to something approaching treason. JB Government
16 April 2023
CT Scan
The media, especially the political journals like Bulwark, Politico, and several others have done good work scanning the finances of CT, also known as Clarence Thomas, the lone Black male Associate Justice on the US Supreme Court, whose confirmation hearings years ago became a whitewash of his sexual harassment of Anita Hill and a deliberate misogynous humiliation of her at the hands of Senator Joe Biden, Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee and his fellow Senator Arlen Spector, dismissively discounting the allegation that Thomas had referred laciviously to her large breasts, among other things. It was an inauspicious beginning to Thomas's tenure, decided in advance apparently that it was time to have a Black man on the Court, and how much bad trouble could conservative Black man cause, anyway? The televised history of the confirmation makes obvious that the Senate erred grievously in its process and its judgment. Thomas apparently is a rogue Justice, oblivious to and neglectful of the simplest forms of ethical behavior, even those prescribed for ALL government appointees, and a written code of ethics for all of the Judiciary, except the Supreme Court. Thomas should be impeached. He probably will not be, because the case against him would have to arise in the GOP's slim majority in the House of Representatives where insult to the Democrats, the government in general, and especially to Joe Biden trump all else. Since it is significantly unlikely, he must be removed from office by other means. President Biden must talk to Chief Justice Roberts about the Court's ethics and specifically about Thomas. His message must include the fact that if Thomas resigns more or less quietly, the imposition of an Ethics Code on the Court can be achieved with fewer sharp elbows. If not, and if Roberts remains on his high horse about it all, then he should be asked to resign as well. Biden should indicate that the chances of the GOP holding a majority in the House after the 2024 Presidential and General Election are vanishingly small, likewise the chance of any contender to Biden winning is equally unlikely. The upshot is that a Democratic government will at last enlarge the court to perhaps 15 members and provide it with Ethics and, perhaps, some internal organizational principles to which they are expected to attend. The reasons for doing so are independent of the disproportionate number of conservative justices currently in place. The Court does not function swiftly enough to insure actual justice. The Court does not have a systematic way of reviewing and guiding and chastening the jurisprudence of the federal circuit courts of appeal or the federal district courts. It needs more members! As this process unfolds it must be made plain by the Speaker of the House, the Majority Leader in the Senate and the President that the Supreme Court does not have the right, privilege, or any other conceivable power to grant to itself the power of judicial review of the constitutionality of any law, statute, or ruling by any part of the federal or any state's government. Marbury v. Madison was wrongfully and arrogantly decided. In fact, declaring anything unconstitutional by anything less than a unanimous decision is an embarrassing oxymoron, in addition to being unconstitutional, since it is DELIBERATELY not provided for by the Constitution. Biden and the Congress must tell the Court and the nation that until a process for referring legislative matters back to the Congress for legitimate legislative review, or to the Executive for legitimate review of rules and procedures, the Unanimity Rule will prevail and so failing unanimity the Court's decisions will be considered entirely relevant to only the case at hand. The Chief Justice will, pro forma, inform the Speaker of the House and Majority Leader in the Senate of the decision taken, if a majority of the Court believes constitutionality is questionable. Legislation by the Court is intolerable in a democracy! JB Government
9 April 2023
"Checks" and "Balances"
In my last short essay on "Tennessee" I introduced very quietly a concept that may turn out to be revolutionary. Here is Article IV, Section 4 of the US Constitution again in toto The United States ntee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened), against domestic violence. What is interesting about this particular statement is the grammatical subject of the sentence. It does not say "the Congress," "the President," "the Supremea Court", or any other agency of the our government headquartered in Washington, DC; it says "The United States"! Think about that for just a second, why did the drafters of the document choose to express their design this way? It is clear that in the 1770's and '80's the appeals of the Enlightenment were fully in the minds of the formal and informal leaders of the 13 colonies. Historians have shown that the works of the Frenchman we now know as Baron Charles de Montesquieu (1689-1755) author of he Spirit of Law, was the central person and author of what we now call classical liberalism. Among his thoughts were that governments should separate the powers given to them by the people so that one man or group could not dominate the whole, that human slavery was wrong, and that political institutions reflect local conditions, local society, local geography, local economy, and so forth. As you read this you instantly see how influential he was here in Philadelphia in 1776 and 1787. The Framers of the US Constitution incorporated "separation of powers" in the first three Articles of the document creating the Legislative first, the Executive second, and the Judicial third. The framers drew from Montesquieu and Rousseau and Locke and Burke and several others the sad truth that men would try to accumulate as much power as available, because of hubris, arrogance, greed, and other unpleasant aspects of Human Nature. Accordingly, they wrote into their document checks and balances whereby one branch of government could be called to account by another branch. In the case of the Legislative they took the additional measure to separate the legislature into two bodies, each checking the other. They did not include Judicial Review of the Constitutionality of Laws for the Judicial Branch, but John Marshall, finding himself in a good position to do so, did, hubris and arrogance not aside. My first question about this came many years ago, but as inchoate as my mind and concepts were I did not have the words to express it back then. I can now say "How is all this working for you now?" (pauses to consider that back then he would have lit another cigarette and further damaged his chances of getting all the way to 2023) In animal anatomy, including ours, musculature is arranged to compete with other musculature. So we have the triceps checking and balancing the bicepts on the upper arm. Similarly, all over the body skeletal muscles are arranged in opposition to one another, but smooth muscles like those in the gut and uterus and arteries act alone, contracting or not, same with the cardial muscle which contracts automatically whether it is in a human being or a petri dish. As Man is the Measure of All Things, the Framers adopted the Montesquevian idea, understanding it to be natural, probably invented by God. To recap for a second: we began with the idea that guarantees of constitutional, democratic representation refers that responsibility to all of the US not simply its central government or parts of it. We have just noticed that the root metaphor for the Constitution is primarily about establishing opposing forces, given perhaps that no one believe(s) that human nature will change, which notion, however, is precisely the foundational notion in the predominant religion of the nation, by the way! What both of these ideas suggest compellingly is that oppositional structures need to have a higher imperative: COOPERATION. (That single word is usually the cue for some veal-faced jerk in the back of the classroom to mutter "commie" to himself.) Article IV, Section 4 is that sort of statement, but did you know there was such a statement there and what it means? Probably not. The history of the founding of the nation begins with the 16th century beginnings of the modern world in England and Scotland and Italy, France, and parts of what later became Germany, and parts of Spain (although the rapine conquest of the Aztecs, Maya, and Inca of the new world provided Spain with a glut of gold and all of the bad parts of human nature for several more hundreds of years.) The Renaissance and Reformation and Enlightment periods in Europe did not affect everyone or anyone all at once, except at Oxford, Cambridge, Padua, etc. But, if you had been there with what we euphemistically call a high school education, you would have been thrilled and frightened. For their part the Framers, some of them in the New World for four generations in the previous and then four more in the 18th centuries, were settled in locally, but not at all pleased with the significant world view differences among and within (some) colonies. Rhode Island was New England's "naughty" piece, but nothing compared to Maryland's large Catholic Pope-facing majority, and slavery there and on industrial scales further to the south. Cooperation among the colonies was a daunting concept, yet, in Philadelphia the conclusion was easily reached that, given a hostile frontier to the west and British north and more distantly the Spanish south (except that Florida was Spanish, but mostly swamp), agreeing to be one country together was imperative. If they tried it as two countries N & S there were sufficient reasons to believe they would be at one another's throats in no time. The decision for Union was along the lines of the world-wise "Keep your friends close; keep your enemies closer!" You will not get this interpretation in high school in Florida, by the way. I believe that the young learn much from their parents and their friends and enemies without being formally taught, although clearly there are points made and principles enunuciated. If you grow up in a God-given regime of checks and balances and the imperatives to cooperate are only softly spoken, what will you become? You will be instinctively hesitant about cooperation, lest you be made a fool. It turns out that the reverse is also true. If you cannot buy into cooperation as the mainstream of community and national life and governance you will always wonder why things are so continuously dishearteneing and often so hideously wrong. JB Government
23 February 2023
While We Have the Senate (rev.)
Although more Democratic Senate seats than Republican are up for re-election in 2024 the chances are pro!bably good that Democrats can hold the Senate and retake the House, especially if "Speaker" McCarthy (what's in a name, "Charlie" or Joe) continues to "follow" his lemmings over the cliff. Americans are generally not stupid, but they are human and when overcome with grief and grievance are more susceptable to propaganda. Fox Noise has been outed as a fountain of falsity and the outflow from that will ripple outward for years. Rupert will die and the big three propagandists will convert their stock into resignation letters. Recently I filled out a Biden-Poll and listed the Supreme Court as my most urgent item, ahead even of Climate Change and the Ukraine War. The facts on the ground are quite clear. The Judiciary in the US is in trouble. Courts from top to bottom are overburdened, maladministered, and given that they are in service to and by human beings an unacceptable crap-shoot. It is not reasonable to expect the nation to progress or even hold its own if one of the three branches of government is malfunctioning Having said that: the Legislative Branch was and is thought to be the most likely to malfunction, and it is, but not completely. Trumpist and other forms of fascism have manifested there before, and moreover, bicameralism is one of the major checks on corruption. (Unicameral Nebraska does not prove the opposite. It is a rock solid conservative oligarchy.) And, lest we fall into a coma of some kind, the Executive Branch was malfunctioning for four seemingly endless years recently. It is a tribute to honest men and women that our government survives. It is not guaranteed, though. The US Supreme Court should be the leadership of the Judiciary in the nation, but it is not. Until the second half of the 20th c. it was indistiguishable from an old men's club—with notable exceptions. The current Court is corrupt and the Chief Justice inept. The worse part of it is that the Court sees itself as a Jedi Star Chamber, but act like so many Ayatollahs above the rest of us intellectually and morally. Nothing could be further from the truth! President Biden must screw up his political courage and appoint six new members to the Court. Each member should be encouraged to understand that the appointment requires them to accept the following: (1) publically, they are accepting the nomination and consent of the Senate for 15 year terms of office during and clarifying the Constitution's term "good behavior," that is to expose the flaw in "for life" notions, no member shall be required to serve until deceased, rather, as 15 years as the longest term of Senatorially approved tenure, thus achieving the practical essence of detachment from the passions of politics; (2) publically, they are accepting the code of ethics governing every other level of the federal judiciary; and (3) publically, they are taking under consideration the fact that "judicial review," as we have known it since Marbury v. Madison is actually a legislative function, specifically and deliberately excluded from (not included in) the Constitution, and so, that any case thought to be "unConstitutional" would require UNANIMITY in support of that decision. In all cases where there is an opinion about constitutionality, the case and opinions shall be referred initially to the US Senate for consideration as regular legislation. The SCOTUS currently hears somewhat fewer than 200 of the 7000+ cases it is asked to review. The expanded Court shall continuously monitor the lower courts of the federal judiciary for signs of maladministration, bottle-necks, and lapses of integrity. The US Senate and President shall make this clear to all Justices. JB
Government
19 January 2023
Unicorns and Cover-Ups
Today on MSNBC's "Deadline White House" with Nicolle Wallace we heard that the Supreme Court's investigation of itself did not uever the source of the leak of Justice Alito's draft of his decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. The panel on this subject were four persons, so with Nicolle five. The NBC Judiciary Reporter explained in earnest detail what the Marshall of the Supreme Court did to uncover the source. The urgency of discovering it was seemingly racheted upwards by Justice Alito stating that the leak very well could lead to assassination of Justices—presumably thest conservatives who would in a few weeks actually vote to over-turn Roe. The reporter bought that imperative and so did Nicolle. Frank Figliuzzi, former Deputy Director of Counter Intelligence at the FBI, quickly said that, if the Court had really intended to find out, they would have asked someone with training in investigations to do it and certainly not a person who is an employee of the Court. Former RNC Chairman Michael Steele agreed with Frank and pointed out the political side of the situation as a Court with a 25% public approval rating declining to show any more of its internal laundry. Then Dahlia Lithwick, who is sort of the dean of judicial journalists cleverly observed, as she already had in her recent book, that the Court is depending on its reputation as nine persons of unquestionable integrity who fly into work on unicorns and hope that that mythology holds tight. It was a telling moment, because Dahlia's bread and butter is the Court and she had just "impeached" the very essence of it. Everyone was polite, with Nicolle and the NBC reporter still believing that there would be further investigations, mainly because Alito had exclaimed how dangerous it—the leak—was for the security of the Justices. So, there are a couple of things that need to be pointed out about that. The draft opinion leaked was essentially unchanged when Alito presented his "final" opinion weeks later. Therefore, if the draft contained information that would incite assassins, then the actual opinion would do the same. Yes? At this point my pledge to myself to respect the intelligence of Justices racheted downward. Why did Alito assert that his (and others' of the conservatives') lives were now in danger. It seems at least possible, and in certain kinds of deception psychology, probable, that he was deflecting suspicion from himself. It is hard to say for sure, but the whole fracus today sort of hangs on the problems that no transparency in the Court creates, such that "leaks" are so "devastatingly" problematic. And, while you are thinking about that and knowing that only 25% of the public think the Court is doing an accepable job, and hearing over the past few days about how much rancor and distemper exists between the Justices, the "stench" described by Justice Sotomayor begins to suggest that we must do something about this Court and the Court as a reliable component of our government generally. As you know the Framers of the Constitution intended that the Supreme Court NOT be the body that considers the Constitutionality of legislation. Rather, it was to be the so-called court-of-last-resort, a place and composed of learned jurists, who would say "yay or nay" to how the lower courts handled themselves in carrying out Justice. It could happen that a majority of the Justices would agree that a statute might be so poorly written—and we already know that some are written by exceedingly partisan people who are not members of Congress,—that they would say so, without arrogating to themselves what the Framers deliberately denied them, the power of Judicial Review, the right to declare anything unConstitutional. If the Court believed that some law was in conflict with a provision of the Constitution OR that some law went beyond what the Framers intended, they could say so to the Congress, and Congress as the Legislative body could consider it. We learned in high school that there are "elastic clauses" that have been used to legislate things the nation needs: like an Air Force, which was clearly unimagined in 1789, like a National Institute of Health, like the National Science Foundation, like an FBI, like a Korean "police action," like nuclear weapons, like NASA, the Federal Reserve, and on and on. What powerful people in and out of government did not want: legislation prohibiting slavery. John Marshall was born in Virginia and held office in the Virginia House of Delegates before being selected to the Court. Overturning Roe was not like how Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas overturned Plessey v. Ferguson, which in 1896 declared that state-mandated segregation laws did not violate the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. Overturning Marbury v. Madison will not be like either of those overturnings. Marbury v. Madison (1803) was Chief Justice John Marshall's opportunity to invent and insert Judicial Review, as one of the checks and balances of our form of government. Yes, but the Framers specifically—and after considerable debate—rejected the idea. Let the so-called "originalists" chew on that for while. It is totally absurd to have the fate of deliberations of the two houses of Congress and the consideration of the President of the United States overturned by a simple or any other kind of majority of nine persons. It is ludicrous, and into the bargain the current Court no longer has the respect of the People. JB Government
10 January 2023
The US Department of Justice
It is possible that the news today, or at most these past seven days, will not be absorbed by the majority of those normally reading about or watching on television the distillation of what's-going-on by coexmporary journalists and opinion-makers who are not actually journalists. By absorbed we mean comprehend—to mentally grasp the complete nature or meaning of the news. To say "complete" is to exaggerate how well anyone does it, but most people take in the constellation of facts and assertions together with the logic customarily accorded those kinds of information, and whether they muse about the news or not, they generally file the pieces in memory morless correctly. Sometimes we encounter stuff for which we have no experience, so the comprehension is de novo, from scratch. One of the things we "news comprehenders" are experiencing nowadays is the deluge of information available by technical means that were not available 100 years ago: television and the internet. The question is: does this mean we actually comprehend less, because every news story competes with every other and so we triage our inputs. And, crucially, is this true of government, too. Particularly, it is obvious that the US Department of Justice was swamped by the insurrection of January 6, 2021 and had to hire on a lot more help. It may not be apparent, though, that the FBI or the equally far flung prosecutorial wing, the United States Attorneys—those who actually prosecute those who according to the evidence have broken the law—may well be victims of the onslaught of too much information. It should be said, first, that the FBI and the US Attorneys are generally more conservative than the nation as a whole. Members like Agent Peter Strzok, formerly of the FBI, has advised panels of discussants on various MSNBC news analysis shows of the inherent personal and possible political conservatism of the FBI and the US Attorneys. Yesterday, Representative Jim Jordon, (R-Ohio) said that the Left was trying to get rid of conservatives in the FBI. This comment suggests a certain political hypochondria on his and his fellow insurrectionists' parts. It also suggests a connection from DoJ to the politicals on the Hill. So, yesterday, in response to a query online about Merrick Garland, asking whether I approve or disapprove of him, I answered "no." I am in the good company of millions, but not a number sufficient to have forced Garland to have taken up the really tough questions about the January Sixth event and ALL its perps. We do not know what goes on inside DoJ, but the consensus is that they were pursuing only the foot soldiers of the Insurrection, not the politicals, the leaders, many of whom are members of the Legislative Branch of our government, to say nothing of the sympathizers everywhere. The reason I voted against Garland is that we need to hold all accountable for their parts in the Insurrection, include every part of it. And two years later, we have nothing, except a new layer of insulation for AG Garland in the person of Special Counsel Frank Smith, who may have relieved Garland of a job he is personally unable to carry out, or who may be simply a firewall person when it comes time for DoJ to take the "tepid" route and not charge Donald J. Trump with sedition for inciting and aiding an Insurrection. The thing the news shows do not say very often is what is behind the last 30 years of Republican incendiary behavior and their new insurrection-wielding behaviors. The "fact" is that the kind of people who traditonally, for 150 years supported the GOP are now a hard minority of American voters. Conclusion: Republicans will increasingly lose elections and then fade out of existence. Scratch Jim Jordon or Kevin McCarthy or Mark Meadows and you will hear that directly or enthymemetically, because it is so galling to them, and, more obviously, because they do not know how to change their program enough to inveigle voters to take their side. The situation is reaching a boil. How long does it take to boil a political agenda? It does not take two years. The policy of the Jim Jordans and MTGreens and scores and scores of others, say 175 in the House alone, is to disrupt and compromise as many Demcratic people and programs as possible. They will continue with alacrity until the guilty among them are brought to account for their sedition, and that hangs on Frank Smith and Merrick Garland. Last year I gave Garland a few months to get it together. He is now very much overdrawn at my bank. JB Government
2022 Essays
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