So, I’ve actually been busy working at my real job lately.
Since I’ve recovered from some illness this Spring I’ve had to do some catch
up. Busy is a relative thing, and other
people probably wouldn’t consider it too busy.
This is my excuse why since my April Fools’ Day post I’ve not written a
thing (and I promise the following is not made up) – or nothing I thought post-worthy anyway. Of course, the funny part is
no one has asked for an excuse. Even
today, I have to work most of the day, so I decided to do a quick post of random
thoughts, which, frankly, is a lot less time consuming than writing on one
topic. Ironically, it probably is more
fun for readers as I’m frequently told by readers that they don’t real all my
long-ass posts. That’s okay. I can’t say I don’t do a lot of skimming myself.
When superstition no
longer blinds the eye.
When I was young I had to go to temple on Friday nights
despite the fact that I was an atheist. I didn’t like it and it left me with a
lifelong discomfort going into temples even for a bar mitzvah or wedding. I almost always sit in the back so that I
feel like if I need to, I can escape. There are probably other reasons, but
that is one of them, however irrational it is.
Anyway, my strongest memory about sitting in temple all those years ago
is of part of a prayer they would say every week. Actually, it’s just a few
words. I can’t remember the rest of the prayer - “. . . when superstition no
longer blinds the eye. . . .”
It seemed to me at the time and still, that it was all superstition. The irony hit me every single time and every
once in a while it comes back to me. I
have to guess that the rest of them sitting there, or at least most of them,
didn’t see it that way. Being an atheist
was something I was, but by default. I
never saw it as a thing, just the absence of a belief most everyone I knew had.
When I was really young, I actually thought
I was the only one who didn’t believe, or, as I thought then, saw through the
giant conspiratorial hoax being played upon the word by some vague bad guys. As I got through high school, I realized that
others felt as I did about God, because a small group of people told me so,
although some privately. Not that many
though. As a 55 year old, I can tell you
that far more people have confided to me that they are secretly atheists than
have told me they are openly atheist. The reason is obvious. People disapprove of
atheists and they want to avoid that discomfort of feeling different or like an
outsider. I can understand the
reluctance to be open about it and there’s an attraction to keeping it to
myself, but I know I’d feel worse if I didn’t say it when someone asked me
about it or if it came up in conversation. There have even been times when I’ve told
people who were criticizing atheists so that they wouldn’t feel embarrassed
later on when they found out they were insulting me. That’s a little awkward,
but it always ended well enough.
Times change. The
past few decades have seen people coming out of the closet about other things,
mostly sexual ones. But, many atheists
remain incognito. Recently, however, there appears to be an upswing in people
coming out of the godless closet. Some of them are forming groups. I have no
interest in that. First, the idea of people who don’t believe something forming
a group about it seems odd to me. What do they talk about – what they don’t
believe in? I guess the topic is discrimination, though I believe in America
the actual consequences of acknowledging atheism are quite small. I can see the need to associate with others
of like mind in places where there is real persecution for it, but not here. Also,
I’m just not a joiner. But, if having
atheist clubs turns out to let more people out of the closet, I’m all for it. It’s
just not for me.
PLEASE STOP
APOLOGIZING!!
As you probably know if you look at the news, 2 hostages,
one American, one Italian, held by Al Qaeda, were killed a few months ago when
we used a drone to fire a missile at some militants (and we got them too). We
have a lot of protocols to avoid this type of thing, but sometimes it
fails. Our president apologized for it. I see this as self-defeating and foolish, but
very much in keeping with this president’s ideas about humility and expressions
of remorse. I wish he’d stop this when
it comes to our fighting abroad. I wrote
this in the NY Times comment section this past week in response to an article
on whether we should continue the drone program, which has apparently been very
successful in killing the bad guys (taking, as always, the opportunity to correct
my grammatical and similar mistakes in comments):
“I keep find myself quoting General Sherman lately - “Every
attempt to make war easy and safe will result in humiliation and disaster.”
Characteristics that may be very appealing and work in a largely open civil
society with enlightenment values like our own will get you wiped out in a war
against implacable, murderous and armed enemies. Even Gandhi understood this.
The idea that we can always talk with people who will only compromise or
surrender once they are pulverized is not working throughout the old world. It
didn't work before WWII, in Israel-Palestine, Afghanistan (how many talks there
with the Taliban) or most places outside of the west. Countries where there is
generally peace are those where the opposition has been subdued (e.g., China).
There are always exceptions, but in a civil war it is usually only after one
side is defeated. We and our allies have to realize that if we want peace there
(and sometimes here), sometimes only force works. And if we don't, more people
will start thinking it’s safer to join the bad guys. It is, of course, more
complex than can be covered in a comment, as it is very hard in some countries,
where everyone seems like a bad choice for an ally.”
I was stunned at an article in the NY Times this week where
it was actually proposed that we have a special court determine when we should
make drone strikes. The idea that we can
fight a war without killing innocent people is either crazy or naive. Decent
countries like our own and many of our allies do their best, but sometimes to
the point of paralysis. Of course I
would not like it if I or someone I knew was collateral damage, but it’s sad no
matter who it happens to. But, unless we want to give up or surrender, we have
no choice but to keep doing what we are doing. People should read some of Rick Atkinson’s
wonderful books about the American experience in WWII, particularly the second
one. The numbers of people who died from friendly fire - our own soldiers,
pilots and sailors as well as citizens - was enormous. Sometimes you’d read it
and just cringe. It actually happens far, far less now because we learn from
experience and our weapons are easier to control and aim (“smart”). But, it has to happen sometimes.
There has been a cultural change since WWII where we and our
allies don’t seem to want anyone to win a war for fear because we are so
fearful of genocide or mass slaughter of innocents. What this has accomplished
is the realization of those fighting us is that massing tanks or having an air
force is not a good idea, but that terrorism works best. Note the decrease of
the former and the increase in the latter. This is particularly why they now mix
with citizens and take hostages - so that we have to be careful and hesitate in
attacking them. And it works. The wars go on forever. It costs us a fortune and them far less. I’m not suggesting we stop caring. I’m
suggesting that we take into consideration that how long a war will last if we
don’t fight hard enough and how it lets militant groups take root, expand and
survive against vastly superior forces. And stop apologizing.
Yes, let’s rush to an
uninformed opinion.
If you collected all the comments I have made online in the
past few years (certainly hundreds), and you put them in categories, you would
find a ridiculous number of them dedicated to two issues – anti-partisanship
and NOT RUSHING TO JUDGMENT. I’m
focusing on the latter today.
It doesn’t seem to matter how many times we learn our lesson
about rushing to judgment, people really do never seem to learn. When the GermanWings plane went down, people
were immediately saying it was terrorism. Some people I know were positive
about it. Then came the guessing about
the co-pilot’s mental state.
My online comments about rushing to judgment usually follow
the same pattern – I make a sarcastic plea about waiting just a little
while. I ask how many times have we
learned our lesson that first reports are often wrong, not to mention second,
third, etc. I acknowledge that is
possible the popular guesses were correct and suggest that sometimes we never
really know. I should really just have a generic response. It would save me
time.
It can take years to learn what really happened with a news
story, if ever. Have you read that the
FBI now acknowledges that almost all its forensic evidence for the last 20
years was tainted? How many people were wrongly convicted because of it? This
is hardly the first time information like this has come out about them either. Another
example - years ago, everyone assumed that Matthew Shepherd was killed by gay
bashers even though from the beginning it was reported that this was just made
up by the killers (and, they do apparently have the right killers) who thought
it would help them. This past year a book
came out by a writer who has interviewed all the participants many times, not
to mention their friends and families and has studied it for ten years. He is
certain he wasn’t killed because he was gay and documents why. In fact, one of the killers was bi-sexual and
a lover of Shepherd. It was, instead,
about crystal meth. You might think this was written by a FoxNews
correspondent. But it wasn’t. The writer is a self-described gay liberal man
who set out to write a different book. He
tells us that to show that he has no reason to twist the facts to make it other
than about being gay. Despite his book
having been around for a while, it gets almost no coverage. If you ask almost anyone who Matthew Shepherd
was, they’d likely tell you that he was a young man who was tortured and killed
because he was gay. These are two examples.
Right now most everyone is also certain that the GermanWings
co-pilot took down the plane because he was depressed and had thoughts of
suicide. Certainly there are reports
(that we assume, at our own risk, are true, but we don’t really know) that lead
to these beliefs. And maybe it’s true.
For me, even if we accept the consensus of “fact” about it, it still doesn’t
add up. People who are depressed and suicidal don’t usually go out and kill 150
people with them absent some sick political, religious or other agenda that
just seems absent here. He apparently left no note. There doesn’t seem to be
anything showing he was psychotic, which is what such an act like this, without
some ulterior motive, would seem to require. I don’t know what happened. I am subject to the same forces as everyone
else that makes judgments almost automatically. It’s part of being human. And,
at some point, we had better make judgments or we will be sorry. I just think we should fight the tendency as
best we can. Doubt is usually wiser than
certainty.
Right now people are rushing to judgment about Hillary
Clinton and there will be another this week. It is an endless story.
Star Wars refreshed?
Those of us old enough to remember the first Star Wars series
in the late 70s through 80s witnessed a great change in movie making. It wasn’t just the rapid development of
special effects but the glory years of the great film makers George Lucas and
Steven Spielberg, who also, as far as I know, have managed to avoid the
scandals that plague so many of their stature in the movie business. Although
both are married twice, that’s hardly unusual. And both, of course, are billionaires a few
times over. Lucas’s Star Wars and their
joint Indiana Jones trilogy (I do not count the most recent Indiana Jones movie
either - horrible) were two of the three great multi-part epics of all time,
Peter Jackson’s more recent Lord of the Rings being the third.
The original Star Wars, now renumbered IV, blew filmgoers’
minds at the time with its very believable effects, far surpassing even 2001: A
Space Odyssey, which won the Oscar in its year for visual effects and some consider
the best movie ever made. The effects got better and better over the next two
movies. But, I-III made many years later had even more amazing special effects,
if not as groundbreaking. What is the difference then between the movies? It’s the writing. People who saw the original three films when
they came out can recite so many lines and remember virtually every scene. “Never tell me the odds,” “Will somebody get
this big walking carpet out of my way?” “’I love you.’ ‘I know,’” “Strike me
down, and I will become more powerful than you can ever imagine,” “Help me
Obi-Wan Kenobi, my only hope,” and so many others, probably dozens. The
characters were great, the design was great, the creations of things like light
sabers and the Force, unforgettable. The music from the original, which carries
on in the theme song of the latter movies, was also wonderful. But, it wasn’t just the theme song either.
Touches like Darth Vader’s music and the bar scene band were unforgettable as
well.
My understanding is that the Star Wars franchise has been
sold to Disney and the last three films will be its product. Now, I have loved
some Disney stuff, but, let’s face it, this is not your grandfather’s Disney
anymore.
I’m going to have to wait and see. I did not like the prequels, known as I-III,
much with the original three now being IV-VI. . I can’t remember anything but a
few random scenes from the next three movies together, mostly a few fight
scenes. The last three will be VII-VIII
and will have characters from the original movies, like Harrison Ford and Mark Hamill.
I don’t know how much they figure in it or whether they are stars. C3PO and R2D2 were always destined to be in
all 9 that Lucas planned long ago.
Will I like it or will this be like the horrible Hobbit
series that was just horrible following the exceptional Lord of the Rings? I
don’t know. You can’t tell from the preview.
What a choice.
What a choice we have.
I was listening to a writer talk about ISIS today and he bashed our
government policies and shortsightedness. I agreed with most everything he
said. I realized at some point that it
was a talk hosted by a prominent member of a tea party. However, the writer,
while obviously hawkish and pro-Israeli (very tea partyish), seemed to address
everyone, whether they were in concert with the tea party or not. Then came the questions and one women in the
audience said, to applause, that she believed our White House was already
inhabited by a Muslim. When the author
didn’t shake his head and scream “No, that kind of thinking is why the tea
party became loathed in our country,” I turned the channel.
At the same time the other day I was listening to a civil
rights celebration and became disgusted and turned the channel as soon as they
started to talk about how Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown were murdered.
This is why I shake my head at the prospects for 2016. What
choices do we have? A group of conservatives arguing about gay marriage, for
religious privilege and sometimes against reasonable uses of government or a
group of liberals who can’t see anything beyond the reach of government,
believe we can absorb any amount of spending and are obsessed with identity
politics and a class society favoring minorities. I could have thrown in the rights obsession
with all forms of abortion at least starting an conception and the lefts
obsession with choice even when it clearly is taking a human life, such as in
late or even relatively late term abortion, but both sides have for the most
part left the abortion battles behind since the 90s.
Right now I have a favorite, who has long decided he would
not run – that’s Purdue University president Mitch Daniels, the former Indiana
governor. Of those who have either
announced or will announce, I have no favorite among the Democrats unless
Clinton actually gets a real challenger, and one among the Republicans, Carly
Fiorina, mostly because she doesn’t sound as crazy as the rest of them, but
also because she has not been in politics and isn’t tainted yet. But, like most people I prefer for office,
she has near zero chance unless there is a massive natural disaster in Iowa one
day when she is not around. After her,
I’m thinking about Rand Paul and Scott Walker.
But, even they are kowtowing to the religious crowd that controls the Iowan
caucus as hard as they can and at some point it will become revolting to me. Always does.
I ended up not voting last election because I had just moved
back to NY and didn’t realize I had to register a month before the election. As
the state’s choice of Obama was decided even if I could have voted 100,000
times, I was going to vote for Garry Johnson, the libertarian candidate, who I
thought the best man for the job. But, if I had been given a choice only
between Romney, who I never really liked as a candidate, but thought had the
best chance to defeat Obama in a general election, and of course, the president,
I would have voted for Romney. I look back at the things Romney was mocked for
by the left and the media – Detroit, GM, Russia – and it seems he was right and
Obama wrong every time.
Do I think that McCain and Romney, both often criticized by
the far right as being too moderate, even liberal, would have been better
presidents than Obama? Absolutely I do, though I have little doubt I would have
found plenty to complain about with them too.
But, though right now, given how unrealistic to expect a third party to
have any chance, I very slightly and generally (that is, it is still issue by
issue) prefer Republicans like them (that is, despised by their own party) to most
Democrats, because I think Republicans at least have more moderates, if too
few. That’s why there is rarely the Democratic equivalent to the Republican
RINO. However, I certainly don’t want
some candidate who basis his appeal on his religious beliefs, or thinks there’s
a war on Christians or Christmas in America (a country 75%-80% Christian and
with coast to coast Christmas celebrations for two months every year) or thinks
government can’t be the answer to anything.
One more terrifying
thing.
Speaking of presidents, I don’t think I’ve written here
about the astonishingly poor performance of the Secret Service. When I watched
the new director, Joseph P. Clancy, testify before congress about it, I
cringed over and over. It was the worst performance at a hearing by a government official
since Bush’s Attorney General, Alberto Gonzalez. Clancy has to be one of the
nicest government officials I’ve ever seen at a hearing. I’d take him as a friend, relative,
neighbor, co-worker in a second. But he seemed like the proverbial deer in the
headlights in front of the committee. Unfailingly polite, humble (too close to subservient) and obviously willing
to work with congress, he couldn’t answer very many questions and those he did
answer showed an almost paralysis of the system and an organization so weakened
that I can’t imagine that terrorists around the world aren’t lining up with
plans to invade the White House. You can watch his March 24, 2015 hearing yourself on
C-Span.org, but prepare to be amazed. Let me give him every benefit of the
doubt. He was only a month or so into the job – the Secret Service agents are
grossly overworked and understaffed – the Civil Service Law makes it very hard
to fire anyone – most of the agents are very dedicated and only a handful are
the “bad seeds.” Still, the revelations were stunning, particularly about
events in the White House on March 4, 2015. But, you watch the video if you
want.
Having watched the Clancy hearing twice, I eventually found
a library copy of Ronald Kessler’s new book, First Family Detail. Kessler is a
longtime investigator and author about government police type agencies like FBI
and the Secret Service. I’ve seen him
speak and he strikes me as someone who is interested in getting a great story right,
rather than having a partisan position he is espousing. I could be wrong, of course. In any event, his story about the Service and
the presidents, VPs and their families was as shocking as the Clancy
hearing. It reminds me again, people are
people, and every group, no matter how famous, wonderful or competent they may
appear, is riddled with problems.
The worst president,
but also the funniest.
I’ve written a series of posts about Obama being the worst
president in my lifetime (I’m definitely not alone in that opinion, though some
think him the best too). Despite that, he always seemed personable to me. In fact, in Kessler’s book, he writes that
both he and Michelle are well liked by Secret Service agents. In the 2009 best
seller, Game Change, about the 2008 campaign, they seemed far more normal and
collected than the other candidates and their families). But, I definitely think he’s the funniest. I
watched his performance at the White House Correspondent’s Dinner and he
knocked it out of the park. I’m not going to repeat the jokes here, but most
were hits and I don't think any misses. In fact, I thought he was better than featured comedian,
Cecily Strong, who wasn't bad. Obviously, he doesn't write his own stuff. I'm just talking about performance. I really can't think of another politician I think did it as well. You can find it on the web, of course.
Okay, that’s it. Everyone go to work.