Sunday, July 28, 2013

The Cluster Box

 
Here’s an informative column, written with a smile.
 
Goodbye, Mail Carrier; Hello, Cluster Mailboxes
By Bob Greene, CNN
Sun July 28, 2013
 
Just a two questions:
 
1.      If the cluster-putzed Congress won’t allow the end of Saturday delivery, how are we going to get to cluster boxes?
 
2.      If all this saves $4 billion a year and they’re losing $16 billion a year, shouldn’t we just shut their doors now?  Or maybe keep the USPS and close down Congress?

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Stand Your Ground

 
Recently passed stand-your-ground legislation is no doubt mostly motivated by the political grandstanding of legislators.  Never the less, I would stress that we should remember these few things:
 
1.      The primary mainstream objective of this type of legislation is to protect the law abiding both from prosecution for defending their home and themselves – “failing in their duty to retreat” – and from law suits brought by criminals after they were injured during the commission of a crime.  These are damned worthy objectives.
 
2.      Many states have versions of these laws including California and Massachusetts so it’s not really just about the NRA crazies. 
 
3.      And it’s not just about guns either.  If you hit a home invader with a bat, a carjacker with a tire iron or mace a purse snatcher or rapist – anywhere – you don’t want to be either sued or prosecuted no matter what happened to the perp.
 
4.      There is zero evidence, of any kind, that stand-your-ground legislation is about blacks in any way.
 
But here’s the rub as I see it.  Our legislators – mostly lawyers – don’t seem to have the competence to write laws any more. 
 
·         In Florida, drug dealers are able to shoot it out in the streets and claim immunity from all harm done, even to bystanders.
 
·         In South Carolina, a man murdered a home owner during a home invasion.  He admits to all of this but wants immunity from prosecution under the state’s stand-your-ground law because he was afraid the homeowner would kill him.
 
The SC State Supreme Court says he has a right to be heard in this argument.
 
Wouldn’t it seem obvious to you that there is no immunity for those committing a crime?  Doesn’t it seem equally obvious that we retain responsibility for all harm we do to bystanders?  It’s fine with me for drug dealers and gang bangers to kill each other and then go free to kill some more evil doers but if they harm innocents, that’s at least manslaughter and innocent victims should be able to sue them and maybe take away their gold teeth and Uzis.
 
Shouldn’t a legislator – let alone a lawyer – be able to get that into the law in the first place?
 
I hate bringing Martin/Zimmerman into this;  it was the South Carolina Supreme Court that got me to the keyboard.  But given the heat of the moment, it seems impossible for me to write this and avoid that case.  Consider this:
 
·         If your daughter maces an attacker, with no witnesses or cameras around, and the guys dies of an asthma attack or allergic reaction, what process and penalty do you want to apply to her?  Make it your son, who is white, and make the dead guy black.  Same question. 
 
·         We don’t know what exactly went down with Martin/Zimmerman but a jury has decided and some people would be very upset if Zimmerman was now headed to 30 years for manslaughter.  Innocent until proven guilty and the state has to prove things beyond a reasonable doubt.  No witnesses means plenty of doubt and no way to convict.
 
·         If Zimmerman was not armed, I doubt that anybody would be dead.  But this is America.  Bad guys have guns and there is nothing anyone can do about that.  Good guys have guns too.  Personally, I like the line from a favorite movie called “Nobody’s Fool”.  A judge says that if we arm one moron, we have to arm them all.  That seems right.  Suck it up and focus on the things we can change.
 
·         The press and the activists made this case what it has become.  If it was just another case of black on black, nobody would take any notice.  Oh yeah and in Florida, the black neighborhood watch person would never have been prosecuted.
 
If you look at my Martin/Zimmerman comments, you’ll see that the majority have nothing to do with stand-your-ground legislation and the one that does suggests an important need for such laws.  How did we ever get to a place where self defense could be a crime or liability?
 
So let’s get the laws right and move on.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Syria is a Serious Problem

 
Any conservative worth the label should be against intervention in another nation’s troubles. 
 
Today’s sham version of conservatism seems to include only Bible thumpers yearning to bring democracy and Christ to the savages at the point of an armed drone and the near-anarchist libertarian wing nuts.
 
Meanwhile, traditional American liberalism has been overrun by the pinko-commie progressives – AKA the DDGs [delusional do-gooders] – who must forswear all combat when they undergo the lobotomy required for ordination in the hydra-cult of progressivism.
 
Completing the political soup in which the nation currently simmers is the least capable President in a lifetime and a nearly lone advocate for Syrian intervention [John McCain] who has almost no remaining credibility whatsoever.
 
If you are trying to ignore the Iranian bomb and Assad’s Syria, good for you but I think these two situations are as critical to the nation as any of Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan 1, Iraq 1, Bosnia, Iraq 2, or Afghanistan 2.  There are barely two American choices in those examples that don’t seem to be folly today.  Perhaps the easiest path regarding Syria now is resigned apathy but if you have an interest, I offer two excellent opinion columns.
 
Can Iran be stopped?
Economist, Jun 22nd 2013
 
After 150 Years, the Choices Made At Gettysburg Still Reverberate
By George F. Will,   Washington Post, June 30
 
George Will, true conservative, is against foreign engagements and says so often.  He also points out that we are powerless to prevent an Iranian bomb – the Economist agrees – and that the evils of involvement in Syria cannot possibly be offset by any plausible reason for such – the Economist disagrees.  Still I cannot help wondering whether this Will column about Gettysburg argues, by inference, for Syrian intervention.
 
“Studying history serves democracy by highlighting contingencies: Things did not need to turn out the way they did;  choices matter.”
 
The only thing I can be sure of in the moment is that politicizing foreign policy is as detrimental to the nation as it can get. 
 
Intervention in Korea created yet another shining example of capitalism over communism but should we have stopped before winning?  On the other hand, is America better off with the Korean situation today than we are with the current capitalists in Vietnam?  What did helping Afghanistan against the Russians get us?  Perhaps the collapse of the Soviets?  Booting the Taliban from power was necessary and painless but everything after that in Afghanistan 2 is a waste.  Iraq 2 is obviously a disaster – that nation hates us, is an economic and political mess and is now allied with Iran.  Of course we finally finished Iraq 1;  we're out the no-fly zone business there and Saddam is no longer paying Palestinians to blowup Israeli children.
 
Russia, Iran, Hezbollah and Syria are at war and they intend to win.  American is as unserious about that as we could ever be.  Handing a military victory to Iran, Hezbollah, Putin and Assad cannot be a good thing for America or peace or democracy.  But is a better outcome from our involvement plausible?  Such decisions should be made by experts without input from the partisans, crazies and populists.  The sausage-making should be conducted behind closed doors with the conclusion explained to the nation afterward and without dissent – think of how the Fed works.
 
If the conclusion is to make war, then the Congress should declare it and support it.  Bombing, drone attacks, arming rebels and serious sanctions, let alone invasions, are all acts of war.  The government should follow the Constitution and put war making Presidents back in their box.  And when we declare war, we should fight to win and leave the political bickering for other topics until it’s over.  We need the boys and girls in the Congressional kindergarten to grow up.  If only there were some competence in the White House to lead us.