Saturday, October 26, 2019

They aren't hypocrites. They're stooges.


In 1998, Lindsay Graham spoke out against President Clinton stonewalling Congress by repeating the words used against Nixon during his Impeachment stonewalling. “....‘You’re taking impeachment away from us. You’re becoming the judge and jury. It is not your job to tell us what we need. It is your job to comply with the things we need to provide oversight over you. The day Richard Nixon failed to answer that subpoena is the day that he was subject to impeachment because he took the power of Congress away from Congress and became the judge and jury.’” 

He made a strong argument even if the words were not his own. His 2012, another country boy, Trey Gowdy made the same argument during one of the—there were many—Benghazi hearings.

The notion that you can withhold information and documents from Congress no matter whether you are the party in power or not in power is wrong. Respect for the rule of law must mean something, irrespective of the vicissitudes of political cycles.

Today both men are taking drastically different approaches as they attempt to defend Trump’s refusal to provide information to Congressional oversight committees. Naturally, their previous words are being held against them and they are being portrayed as hypocrites. This is too easy and overlooks a more serious problem.

My understanding of hypocrisy is when you stand for something and then, in a moment of weakness or convenience, or whatever, you turn on yourself and your own values. This seems to be what’s going on with Graham and Gowdy, but I think we are missing the bigger picture.

In the initial examples, when Graham and Gowdy appeared to be standing up for something, what they really were doing was grandstanding. Today, they are merely grandstanding for something different. They haven’t flipped on their values, but rather boarded another showboat.

This makes them habitual stooges, not hypocrites.

By 1998, Republicans had been trying to get Clinton on something for six years and weren’t having much luck. When they finally got something on him, rather than represent a high crime or misdemeanor, it looked more like petty crime and misbehavior. Still, he lied about it and Republicans felt they had the goods on him. Clinton fought back, which eventually led Graham to pretend to be a patriot.

In 2012, when Gowdy was going through his “I could have been a founding father, but I was born too late” period, Republicans had been going after the Obama administration since the day he took office. Turns out he was born in America and wasn’t a secret Muslim and giving more people health insurance wasn’t his attempt to destroy America.

Nevertheless, when Benghazi happened, Republicans breathed a sigh of relief. Finally, something was working in their favor. Again, after it was proven numerous times that there was nothing there, the Obama administration and Clinton (this time Hillary) fought back, giving Gowdy an opportunity to do his best imitation of Graham doing his imitation of the Watergate impeachment panel.

One can believe both men are lying now or that they were lying then. I chose to believe that just like the president, they lie every time they open their mouths.

Grandstanding is grandstanding. Graham and Gowdy may be spouting hypocritical drivel, but the bottom line is they never stood for anything except: Republicans good, Democrats bad. They haven’t lost their way. They’ve simply lost their minds.    


Friday, October 25, 2019

Republicans Hoping for a Flag

 Republicans running out of way to defend Trump - NBC  News
Congressional committees continue to expose bad, corrupt, and often illegal behavior by the president and his cronies. Just to be clear, illegal means criminal.

President Trump’s effort to withhold military aid from Ukraine until they provided him with dirt on his potential political opponent, Joe Biden amounted to no less than inviting a foreign entity to interfere in an American election. This is a crime.

This crime was committed in part during a phone call between Trump and the newly elected Ukrainian president. It was made worse because the Mueller Investigation, just a few months earlier and Robert Mueller, himself, just a day earlier speaking before Congress had condemned Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election.

No one in Trump’s circle, no Republican in Congress has made any effort to refute the accusations. The case appears to be very open and shut.

While not condoning his behavior, they are questioning the Democratic Congress’s method of investigating him—essentially attack the process. Questioning the motives of the whistle-blower, the closed hearings, and anything else.

This is not new. Crooks have been crying foul for as long as crooks have been committing crimes.

So what are they hoping to accomplish?

Muddy the waters is a common defense maneuver on par with comparing apples and oranges. It is not, however, a legal term although it is often a legal strategy. Attacking the process is the Republicans strategy to muddy the waters so to speak.

In a court of law, no judge would allow this, but impeachment is not a legal procedure. It is government’s answer to government misconduct. In fact, muddying the waters, comparing apples to oranges is practically the definition of how government works. In government, it is always about this with that in the background versus that with this attached. Politics is nothing if it is not muddy waters.

This still doesn’t tell us what Republicans hope to accomplish by arguing process in their defense against substance. To better understand what is going on in Washington, it would be helpful to look at what goes on in a football game.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Trump and McConnell—two ‘fraidy-cats

Trump got a doctor, one of his dad’s tenants, to say he suffered from bone spurs to keep him out of the military during the Vietnam War.

This doesn’t make him a coward because a lot of people didn’t want to fight in Vietnam for a lot of different reasons. And the fact that he used his father’s wealth and privilege only makes him a scoundrel.

What makes him a coward is his inability to stand for anything, his lack of fortitude, his willingness to blame others and make excuses. Cowards are a dime a dozen. What makes Trump’s cowardice regrettable is that he is also president. His weakness and cowardice puts the nation at risk.

Weak presidents are nothing new. In the past, strong Congresses have made up for weak presidents. Unfortunately, Congress is also weak because it is hamstrung by a weak Senate being led by a man every bit as weak as Trump, and every bit a coward.
Nothing brings McConnell and Trump’s shared cowardice to light more than their failure to address the gun issue.
The vast majority of the country wants something done, but Trump is waiting for McConnell to make a move while McConnell waits to hear from Trump what that move should be. Of course, all Republicans are afraid of the NRA.

McConnell stonewalled a Supreme Court nomination because he controlled a Republican Senate also composed of cowards. He refuses to put issues on the floor for a vote because he can’t risk the vote going the wrong way and incurring the president’s wrath. Republicans in the Senate are okay with this because they fear losing the little status they have. They aren’t strong enough to be bullies themselves, so must concede to the two bullies in leadership roles.

The meanest party in history are a bunch of cowards being led by two cowards.
Any middle school student will tell you that being a coward goes hand-in-hand with being a bully.

Bullies aren’t cowards in the same sense that fair-skinned men are often blue-eyed. Their shared qualities aren’t coincidences. One actually derives from the other. A bullies is a coward first and after somehow arriving at a point where he has some authority, either physical size or position, and be it real or imagined, the coward becomes a bully.

Being a bully is a defense mechanism for those weighted down by fear. Because they fear a fair fight, and usually cannot win one, bullies use other means to tip the scales in their favor.

We have seen Trump throw his weight around against those he perceives as weaker than him to cover for his cowardice. Gold-star mothers, immigrants, Congresswomen, allies, movie stars, journalist, athletes, and everyone else who he perceives as having crossed him have all been attacked by the little man with the big mouth. His weapon is always words because talk is cheap, even more so for a man who only lies, and he doesn’t venture far from where those lies are accepted as truths. He admires dictators, the real strong men he wishes he were. His fear of them prevent him from ever crossing them.

The two most powerful men in Washington, in terms of the positions they hold, happen to be the biggest bullies and cowards, and they have surrounded themselves with cowards who fear them.

Being fearless is the only defense against a bully, even as bullying a heroic man is the only way a bully will fight. Because they are not fighting on common ground, the fight is often drawn-out and ugly. The winner is rarely determined through surrender, but rather by observers who must themselves choose between cowardice and fortitude, right and wrong, good and evil.

Trump and McConnell will never see the light and become honorable men because they are blinded by their own egos. Bullies must be knocked down—and remembered by history for what they were, not what they pretended to be.




Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Trump and Parades

What Americans celebrate


What dictators celebrate








  


    Again,  I am amazed by what Trump—a genius with a great brain—does not know.
    His planned Fourth of July extravaganza is designed, in his words, to display “the strongest and most advanced military anywhere in the world.”
    If he had an inkling of what the holiday commemorates, he’d understand that we are celebrating our declaration of independence from, and the eventual victory over, the strongest and most advanced military in the world at the time.
We did so by uniting in a common cause and standing for something other than self-gratification. In fact, Americans have always seen our shared values as being our strength against nations that promote their military and offer little else.
That movement was led by statesmen who understood it wasn’t about them, and it was promoted by a free press that brought the words of the Declaration of Independence into every household.
Who doesn’t love a good parade?
However, who doesn’t—except our president—understand that military might is not what makes us strong?
    Happy Fourth of July.


What a show-boater who doesn't get it, does 

Sunday, May 19, 2019

No Illusions About Collusion

Image result for trump
The fish was huge
Image result for att. gen. barr
The fish was this big




                                                                            


    Mueller’s report stated that, “the Russian government interfered in the 2016 presidential election in sweeping and systemic fashion.”
It also stated that, “the Russian government perceived it would benefit from a Trump presidency,” something Putin has admitted publicly and Trump has agreed with.
It also stated, “Russia could assist Trump’s campaign through the anonymous release of information damaging to Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton,” something Trump publicly requested.
The report also talked extensively about the secret Trump Tower meeting between Trump’s senior campaign manager, Trump family members and a Russian lawyer promising to produce “dirt” on Hillary Clinton. It also reported on numerous other meeting between Trump operatives and Russians.                                                             The report cited initial statements by Trump and his family denying the meeting and its purpose as lies.

Attorney General Barr read, so he says, Mueller’s report including these quotes and concluded there was no collusion.
Trump didn’t have to read the report. If Barr said, no collusion, that was good enough for him. However, for those Americans who, like himself, had not read the report, Trump issued an official White House Twitter announcement stating that there was no collusion.
He then called Putin, the former head of the KGB, to inform him they had both been cleared—by the Attorney General. Bottom line: no conclusion, witch hunt, big hoax. They had both hinted at this outcome, but until Barr arrived at his conclusion of Mueller’s conclusion, they were both under a cloud of suspicion.
Both men are accustomed to operating under clouds of suspicion, even storm clouds of suspicion, but it’s always nice to have an umbrella when the rain does fall.
Trump and Putin congratulated each other for surviving the Democratic witch hunt, commiserating, no doubt, that the business of winning elections is not for the weak-hearted.
So where does this leave everyone?
Putin is ecstatic. He got the candidate he wanted and the American political system is a mess. True, 25 Russian operatives and three Russian companies were indicted for criminal activity, but as they say in Russia, “So what?”
Trump is feeling good, too. After saying, “no collusion” ten thousand times, it was nice to finally be vindicated by his hand-picked Attorney General, who before even reading the report had concluded that a president can’t be indicted, and possibly proven guilty of a crime because he’s the president. If you can’t be proven guilty, obviously you can’t be guilty.
But, where does this leave the American people?
I guess we will have to wait and see.
Wait for what? Look for what?
We will have to wait and see if in the months leading up to the 2020 election, Trump announces a summit with the Russian dictator, Putin, because as president he can do things in plain sight that he could never do as a candidate.
Wait and see if during that summit, they have a private conversation behind closed doors as they so like to do.
Wait and see if Trump opts to tell us nothing about what they talked about, other than to say it was very friendly and there was definitely no collusion, despite the obvious secrecy, before demanding we believe him.
Wait and see if, like with the Trump Tower meeting, this also turns out to be a lie.
Wait and see if when that happens, Republicans in Congress finally say, “Wait a minute. We don’t like what we’re seeing.”
Image result for trump
Who knows how big the fish was, All I know is it was a fish.
It could have been a fish story? Who knows?

Thursday, May 2, 2019

So, now we're banning Kate Smith?

   When I first read the story about the New York Yankees and Philadelphia Flyers discontinuing the playing of Kate Smith’s version of “God Bless America,” my first thought was God help America.
I understand the “Me Too” movement and its goals.
I understand the prejudices and racism that lingers in America, which has to be exposed at every opportunity.
I understand the concept of zero tolerance. That if we let something go unchallenged, the problem only gets worse, although zero tolerance has proven just as bad as the original problems.
Well, newsflash. We have another problem to worry about. We are fast becoming a nation with no common sense. It would be too easy to say, as we often do, that a lack of leadership at the top is the reason for all the stupid-ness at the bottom, but “too easy” is another problem we face in this country.
The reason for throwing Kate Smith under the bus was her 1931 recording of “That’s why Darkies were born,” written by Tin Pan Alley lyricist, Lew Brown.  Forget that the satirical song poked fun at whites. Forget that at the same time, in the real world deep south far from Tin Pan Alley, real whites were lynching real Negros.
Forget that Lew Brown also wrote “Don’t sit under the apple tree” and the “Beer Barrel Polka.” He also wrote “Shine,” which had racial overtones and was recorded by Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, and Anne Murray among others. He wrote most of his songs between the two world wars, a time when Negros couldn’t attend white schools, eat in white restaurants, or sit in the front of the bus.
These songs were written and recorded for one reason and one reason only. Audiences were buying them.
The lyricist were writing and the singers singing about a very real world that didn’t exist on records.
My point is, yes these were terrible times involving terrible laws and outrageous criminal behavior, but the music industry was only reflecting the world that existed at that time. The music industry didn’t create that world. In fact, the music industry has played a large role in taking us away from that world.
Individual American bigots and racist, those who are often given cover under the cloak of American Exceptionalism, gave us that world that we’d now like to expunge from memory.
Maybe, it’s time to take that picture of old granddad down from the wall.
Or, we can stop taking it out on individuals and start fixing a culture that has been bad for so long that all we can do is search for scapegoats.
    This in no way excuses statues of Confederate generals. They fought against this country. And their statues were only erected during the same period many of these songs were written, not to entertain people, or to honor the soldiers as their supporters claim. They were erected to send a message that the war might have been lost, but the fight was going to continue.
Whatever the issue that people think something needs to be done about, I suggest we attack the issue. Shakespeare may have been right when he wrote, “The evil that men do lives after them. The good is oft interred with their bones.” That doesn’t make it right. The good should count for something.
Attacking individuals, particularly individuals having nothing to do with the problem is getting tiresome, especially when so many real problems go unfixed. Playing the blame game and not doing the hard work is another problem we face in today’s world.
Blacks are having their voting rights attacked in North Carolina and other states. Republicans harp on voter fraud as if it were a real thing and are virtually silent about Russia attacking our elections.
None of this has anything to do with a song Kate Smith recorded in 1931. Descendants of people who listened to that song back then are guilty of racism today. White nationalists are still the problem. Kate Smith is not a problem.
A lot of what the entertainment industry has done in the last century is questionable, going all the way back to, “Birth of a Nation,” but everything they have done has been geared to their audiences.
If we stop using common sense, who knows what dumb thing we’ll do next? Let’s give entertainers a break and start shaping up ourselves.
    

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Hoag Franklin


All of us are familiar with the names Kit Carson, Wyatt Earp, Buffalo Bill. Few of us know about Hoag Franklin. Born in 1830 in Illinois and raised in Lone Tree, Nebraska, he not only witnessed the Wild West, but he played an integral role in it. By the time he died in 1912 in San Pedro, he'd seen and done it all.

His story is my latest novel. Hoag's adventures will be illustrated by Danielle Grandi 

This introduction explains how I discovered Hoag Franklin.


The Discovery

I was shuffling around the squeaky-rickety-floor thrift shop. The kind, you know, where you can find everything, but you’re still surprised when you find anything. There were the familiar stacks of old Life and Look magazines, with mostly covers of the Kennedy’s and long-dead movie stars or astronauts from the 1960s—all packaged nicely in supersized plastic lunch bags. Any of them would make a lovely snack.

There were old vinyl records, and older vinyl records plus a lot of records that shouldn’t have been allowed to become old. Pictures hung everywhere and I could only wonder, had they ever hung anywhere else. I didn’t think so. Just like some movies go straight to DVD, I don’t think it is far-fetched to think some pictures go straight to thrift stores—especially those frightening portraits of the men and woman staring at me from every wall in the room.

I felt like a dog on a walk. Something would catch my eye and before I could zero in on it, something else grabbed my attention, and then something else, but nothing could hold my interest. I was bouncing from one piece of forgotten...neglected...abandoned memory to another.

Then I saw the box lying on the floor in the corner. A rag doll rested on top of it...I say rested and not dead but the dust covering it and the box told me it hadn’t moved or been moved so much as an inch since it was put there. Both the box and the doll reeked of that stale, musty smell...though how I was aware of that I can’t explain. My nostrils had been under siege of that mildewed stench in a losing battle since the moment I walked through the door.

I tossed the doll to the side and instantly felt remorse. It couldn’t have been the first time and I was sure it would not be the last. Still.

I picked the box up and surveyed the outside. There were no markings, no pictures, no writing to indicate what might be inside. It appeared to be a box a shirt might have come in, or some small towels. Maybe. It could and probably has held just about anything. I lifted the top to see what it was holding now.

Well. Well, indeed. I may have just found something. Wouldn’t that be a first? Inside the box lie a stack of papers, obviously from an old typewriter...possibly like the one I’d seen ten minutes earlier and two aisles over. A worn ribbon held what appeared to be a hundred, maybe more pages together.

The print was faded but certainly readable. The title, centered a third of the way down the first page read, THE LIFE, TIMES AND ADVENTURES OF HOAG FRANKLIN—INDIAN SCOUT, BUFFALO HUNTER, LAWMAN, and VAUDEVILLE ENTERTAINER.

Was I holding a long-lost, forgotten manuscript? Of course, I was holding a long-lost, probably forgotten manuscript. I sifted through the pages to be sure, but there could be no doubt. This was a story...someone’s story...Hoag Franklin’s story, obviously.

But, who the hell was Hoag Franklin? When were his life and times? Obviously quite a while ago from the title. There was only one way to find out.

I walked around a little more but I wasn’t really looking for anything else. In fact, I was anxious to see more of what I had. Before long, I walked out the door with the only copy in the world of THE LIFE, TIMES AND ADVENTURES OF HOAG FRANKLIN—INDIAN SCOUT, BUFFALO HUNTER, LAWMAN, and VAUDEVILLE ENTERTAINER.

Oh, yes. I took the doll, too. They just looked like they belonged together.

No sooner had I gotten in my car then I opened the box, unwrapped the manuscript and started reading.