A disappointing press corps
Reducing tragic police encounters
Some have described the deaths as indicative of a broader pattern of rampant unjustified police violence by white officers motivated by racism against black men. They call for a national conversation on race and the overhaul of police departments. Others question the linkage of the events with a broader pattern motivated by racism and increasingly reject demands for redress of past oppression. In the end, making race the focal point of discussion will generate a great deal of emotion, but may be ineffective and even counterproductive in reducing violent civilian-police contact.
The pathway to preventing such incidents for Americans of all races is through better policing and the transformation of a mindset, often concentrated in dangerous neighborhoods, that is hostile to acceptable social norms.
Thank you officer
Thank you to your loved ones who must worry about you responding to danger each and every day.
Thank you to the 126 families of police officers killed in the line of duty in 2013 for the sacrifice your family has made on my behalf.
Thank you for the restraint you show every day as you confront the worst among us.
Invest in Gateway Cities: Thinking Out of the Box Car
The Commonwealth designates 26 municipalities as Gateway Cities that serve as regional economic centers. Governor Deval Patrick and his Secretary of Housing and Economic Development Greg Bialecki deserve credit for initiatives that directed strategic investment in infrastructure, job creation, and affordable housing to these cities since 2008.
Economy disappoints voters
The dichotomy can be explained, at least in part, by the need for more anti-poverty entitlements, a decline in labor participation (those who have given up looking for work), the predominance of part-time work in the jobs that have been created since the Great Recession, and by a growing income gap and more pronounced wealth gap that began opening in 1989 and continues to the present.
Mid-Term Election Opportunties
Even Massachusetts elected a Republican, Charlie Baker, as its governor. Though the bluest of blue states retained a 100% Democrat congressional delegation that will have little influence in the 114th Congress.
Vote for "Balance of Power"
Executive power expansion is enabled by the failure of congress to assert its authority. A modern shift in congressional loyalty from the institutions of the House of Representatives and Senate to political party has permitted an uncontested expansion of executive power. In the past, the congress, in a bipartisan manner, rabidly defended its constitutional authority and prerogatives from encroachment by the executive branch.
Moonbats and haters no more
In 2000 Robert D. Putnam provided an excellent description of the decline of “social capital” in Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. Bowling Alone documents the decline of social engagement and civic life in traditional community groups such as churches, Elks Clubs, PTAs, and bowling leagues. The precise cause of the decline is not clear, but it appears generational shifts, social upheaval, and increasingly technology, are major contributors.
The president and his family are not safe
The take away from this hearing is that the Secret Service is not prepared to protect the President of the United States and his family.
It was clear that the Secret Service is headed by a bureaucrat. It needs a hard nose field agent who will take whatever action is necessary to protect the president and his family and suffer no fools in the pursuit of duty. Director Pierson should be immediately fired.
Muslims must defeat the jihadi ideology
Remember those who fight and die
Officer Darren Wilson deserves justice too
The shooting of Michael Brown by Officer Darren Wilson must be thoroughly and fairly investigated. Every American has an interest in ensuring that police use appropriate force when executing their duties. In cases where the use of force is fatal that requirement for scrutiny goes up. When the victim is unarmed the standard is even higher in determining justifiable or unjustifiable homicide.
Climate change thoughts
A serious effort to better understand the issue through a review of related literature makes it clear that the science is not as open and shut as some believe. That does not mean there is not climate change, or that we should not act to address it, but there are too many failed predictions and unanswered questions to conclude the “science is settled.” For example, the first Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report of 1990 predicted temperature and sea level rise that has not come to fruition.
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) reports in the “The Sun and Climate” report that the Earth has warmed .99° F since 1860, and about half of this could be due to increased solar radiation. However, .648° F of the .99 F° increase occurred from 1970 – 2000. Solar radiation change can only account for .198° F of the .648° F increase; “the rest could be due to greenhouse warming or some other cause.”
Crippling our children with debt
The national debt is made up of two components 1) debt held by the public (foreign an d domestic) in the form of Treasury securities and 2) IOUs held by the federal government that are owed to other federal government accounts such as Social Security. The principal on debt held by the public is about $13 trillion and the annual interest payment is $218 billion. The principle on IOUs held by the federal government is about $5 trillion and the annual interest payment is $146 billion.
The unholy alliance of concentrated power
Political leaders of both parties seek financial support for election and personal enrichment. It is about them – not the American people. The combination of concentrated power in government and corporations, and the alignment of interests between the two are a significant danger.
The expanding mass of government in its physical bureaucracies and the body of laws and regulations it propagates, increasing centralization to the federal level, and growing power within the executive are clear threats to liberty. Corporate consolidation through mergers and acquisitions has created behemoths of economic power and political and social influence that also threaten liberty in a manner that often goes unnoticed by the public.
Following the Great Recession of 2008 there was an outcry about banks that were “too big to fail.” It was expected that the issue would be addressed through legislation commonly called Dodd-Frank, but today more assets are held by fewer banks. The too big to fail banks are in fact bigger today. The five largest U.S. banks (JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and Goldman Sachs) have assets in excess of $11 trillion. Five banks hold 56% of all banking assets in the United States.
Less like a president than a king
Executive power expansion began soon after the republic’s inception and accelerated in recent decades to a new level. The core constitutional “balance of power” principle may be at risk.
Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. authored “The Imperial Presidency” in 1973 and coined a phrase that is increasingly used to describe presidents since Reagan. A Google search for “imperial presidency” returns 84,000 hits for Reagan; 130,000 for Clinton; 188,000 for Bush (may capture both); and 225,000 for Obama.
Presidential Action Recommendations for the Border Crisis
I have researched the foundations of Secretary Kobach’s comments and recommend them as further action the President could take to resolve the crisis at the border without legislative action, but has not:
1. Issue a Section 212F Proclamation using the authority vested in the President and expressed in a previous proclamation on August 4, 2011. That Proclamation stated, “NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, by the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 212(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, as amended (8 U.S.C. 1182(f)), and section 301 of title 3, United States Code, hereby find that the unrestricted immigrant and nonimmigrant entry into the United States of persons described in section 1 [DESCRIBE CRISIS POPULATION] of this proclamation would be detrimental to the interests of the United States. I therefore hereby proclaim that: The entry into the United States, as immigrants or nonimmigrants, of the following persons is hereby suspended: [DESCRIBE CRISIS POPULATION]
Is the Unemployment Rate Meaningful?
A look beyond the headlines reveals that unemployment and under-employment remain in an unhealthy state. The BLS “U6” report is a broader measure of unemployment that includes those marginally attached to the labor force. The U6 unemployment rate was 12.1% in June and may represent better the condition of the job market.
The labor participation rate in June was a disappointing 62.8%. The labor participation rate is the percent of the working age population that is actually working or seeking work. In June, 156 million of the 248 million people of working age were working or seeking work. 146 million were employed and 9.5 million were unemployed – generating the unemployment rate of 6.1%.
They must go home to Central America
It is not violence in Central America alone nor is it border insecurity that caused the crisis. It is a combination of both: the conditions in Central America and poor U.S. policy that provided the conditions for the surge to the border by unaccompanied minors.
Central Americans are being pushed from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala largely because governments there are corrupt, opportunity is rare, and violence is high. When these conditions deteriorate to a point where people feel desperate, they take desperate action, such as the journey to the border.
The Push and Pull to get to the border
Central Americans are being pushed from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala largely because government is corrupt, opportunity is rare, and violence is high. When these conditions deteriorate to a point where people feel desperate, they will take desperate action.
Balancing Borders and Brotherhood
Any resolution should extend mercy and compassion to the migrant – legal and illegal – consistent with the history of a generous nation, but in a manner that does not jeopardize national security or subject citizens to undue economic and social burdens.
The 2013 U.S. Senate “Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act, S.744” was an initial step toward resolution; however, like most such expansive proposals, S.744 is highly flawed.
Afghanistan Withdrawal: President Obama gets it right
Sgt. Bergdahl Prisoner Exchange
Threats to Liberty - Expanding Government
Threats to Liberty – Federalism Diminished Through Aid
Federalism is the concept of shared sovereignty whereby constituent parts (states) join with a central governing authority (U.S.) in a union. There was great debate among the Founders about how much power the federal government should have. They knew it needed to be more than it was under the Articles of Confederation, but they also did not want a unitary state where all power is held centrally and distributed to lesser administrative units as the central authority sees fit.
The federal government, though intended as limited and specific in its powers, has grown exponentially since the founding of the United States, particularly in the 20th and 21st centuries. There are differing opinions about the value of a dominant federal government, but it is clear that the structural check on the growth of federal power – Federalism - is substantially diminished and the United States is de facto becoming a unitary state.
The federal government was envisioned by the founders and framed within the Constitution as limited in its powers. The federal system itself, whereby power was divided between the national government and the states was a mechanism to check the power of the national government. The Tenth Amendment to the Constitution affirms specifically this principle, stating, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”
Over the course of the last 100 years relative power has tilted to the federal government. State governments are growing in size, but they are weakened relative to the federal government in large part by dependence on federal aid and submission to the coercion of the strings attached to it. The states have largely become an extension of the federal government.
For example, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts adopted the federal Common Core educational curriculum in 2010 despite the clear success of a curriculum and assessment system implemented in the 1990s that has led to Massachusetts ranking at the top of educational performance for decades. Why - because access to federal education funds were contingent on adopting the Common Core.
The diminution of the states began in earnest in 1913 with the passage of the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution that established the income tax. Unprecedented growth spawned by the inflow of revenues and creation of aid programs for states expanded further in the New Deal of the 1930s, the Great Society programs of the 1960s.
According to the non-partisan State Budget Solutions, “states received $5.27 trillion from the federal government since the start of the 21st century. Since 2001, 34 states saw over 30 percent of all their collected general revenue come from the federal government” and the trend is of increasing dependence. The federal system is at risk when states are dependent on the federal government and must accept the strings that accompany those funds.
The Foundations of Liberty
Until the 17th century, when the age of reason took hold, human beings were no more than the chattel of pharaohs, emperors, kings, czars and caliphs, supported often by popes, bishops, and imams. It took millennia to establish the basic foundations of our innate human rights and centuries more to define them fully and create mechanisms to protect them in constitutions and law.
Pharaohs enslaved whole populations to die at the whip building pyramids in their honor. The Roman Emperor Crassus lined the Appian Way from Rome to Capua with over 6000 crucified men to make the point that he would not abide any rebels. Throughout the many empires and invasions from West to East and East to West there was horror, torture, and death to accompany the imposition of a new ruler. Those who survived the killing were often enslaved.
The Population Reference Bureau estimates that 108 billion people have inhabited the earth across the history of human existence. Only about one percent of all human beings who have ever lived have experienced liberty as experienced by citizens of the United States. It is only very recently that the value of the individual human being, constituted with rights, has emerged.
The philosophers and scientists of the Enlightenment, such as Francis Bacon, Isaac Newton, and John Locke, led a redirection of human history. Bacon introduced the scientific method of inquiry into the natural world. Newton, an English physicist and mathematician, led the scientific revolution and is regarded as one of the greatest scientists of all time. John Locke was an English philosopher who later in the 17th century built upon the ideas of Bacon and other period philosophers to introduce the concepts of “natural rights” and consent of the governed as the basis of “political legitimacy”.