Memorial Day Messages from National Leaders

Past President Bill Clinton posted a simple message about the enormous gratitude we feel toward those who served our country.

Past President George W. Bush posted a gracious message about the sacrifices of those who died defending our country, expressing the intense gratitude we feel toward each of them.

Past President Barack Obama posted a beautiful message about the sacrifices of those who died defending our country, and how we can express our tremendous gratitude.

Current President Donald Trump posted a message about the sacrifices of those who died defending our country, and the profound gratitude those fallen heroes would feel toward him for all he is doing as President.

America, Your Children Aren’t Special

found online by Raymond

 
From North Carolina pastor John Pavlovitz:

America,

Your children are beautiful.

They are original, once-in-the-history-of-the-planet human beings with a near limitless capacity to do and be extraordinary. They are wild and bright and funny and lovable.

But they aren’t special.

The fact that your children were born here, doesn’t endow them with greater worth or deeper humanity than children who weren’t.
It doesn’t make them more deserving of defense or protection or advocacy.
It doesn’t make their fear more valid or their wounds more grievous.
It doesn’t make their needs more pressing or their disappearance more outrageous.

Or at least it shouldn’t.

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Catch-All Bible Verses: I Will Set No Wicked Thing Before My Eyes

found online by Raymond

 
From The Life and Times of Bruce Gerencser:

Last week, I wrote a post entitled, Catch-All Bible Verses: Is the Human Body the Temple of the Christian God? Today I want to deal with another catch-all Bible verse, Psalm 101:3:

I will set no wicked thing before mine eyes: I hate the work of them that turn aside; it shall not cleave to me.

Evangelical preachers love this catch-all verse because it allows them to demand of congregants abstinence from seeing and using things or having contact with people, churches, and ministries they have deemed “wicked.” Whether something is wicked is determined by the pastor’s personal interpretations of the Bible, social, cultural, and religious experiences, and personal preferences. In other words, something is wicked because the pastor says it is, end of story. Since he is the man of God, the one chosen by Jesus to lead and teach the church, congregants are expected to believe and follow his “Biblical” pronouncements. If he says a certain behavior or inanimate item is wicked, then congregants are expected to nod their heads up and down and say, Amen brother, preach it!

Things labeled “wicked” are considered off-limits — Kryptonite to true Christians. Congregants, wanting to be obedient to God and his man, the pastor, bow — at least outwardly — to the subjective pronouncements of church leaders.

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Heartbreaking: Racist Uncle Not Racist Enough To Go Viral

found online by Raymond

 
From The Onion:

This is truly the worst of both worlds. The only thing more painful than listening to a relative spew ignorant, hateful views is not being able to leverage those outbursts for online attention.

Twenty-five-year-old Zack Daley has tried over and over to film his uncle Dave when he starts up on a thinly veiled racist rant about how “immigrants are stealing American jobs,” but the tirade never gets quite toxic enough to be the kind of thing that would get hundreds of thousands of retweets and end with his uncle’s address getting published on Reddit.

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Not Fitting the Narrative, School Schooting Ed.

found online by Raymond

 
From our favorite Earth-Bound Misfit:

I haven’t seen much from the Parkland Children’s Brigade about the recent school shooting in Santa Fe, Texas. My guess is because that shooting doesn’t fit their narrative.

The gun-banners want a ban on “assault rifles” and large capacity magazines. Their claims, all along, have been that such bans would make them safer.

The Asswipe of Santa Fe has shown that their claims are false.

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On Beyond Belief

found online by Raymond

 
From M. Bouffant at Web of Evil:

Remember Republicans having fit after free-market fit when that Obama guy bailed out the Chrysler Corporation? An American corporation that hadn’t violated sanctions, lied to Federal investigators, yada yada? Now where’s the outrage?

President Trump said late Friday he had allowed embattled Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE Corp. to remain open despite fierce bipartisan opposition on Capitol Hill, defying lawmakers who have warned that the huge technology company should be severely punished for breaking U.S. law.

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Solo: A Star Wars Story Review

found online by Raymond

 
From John Scalzi at Whatever:

Solo is a film you can watch without having seen any of the others, because it takes place before all of them. So if you’ve never seen Star Wars but think this one looks kind of good, go ahead and see it, you won’t be lost.

This movie is seriously jam-packed with action. Chase scenes, battle scenes, more chase scenes, gun fights, high stakes heists, etc. It is like 90% action and 10% talking scenes. This is not a bad thing, in my opinion. In regard to the fights, I think everything was choreographed amazingly; the camera work was really on point. If there’s one thing I hate, it’s a fight scene where I can’t even tell what’s going on because the camera is shaking around wildly.

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My Hero the Thief, and the Role Model for My President


 
More than 40 years later, it still makes me kind of sick to think about it.

I didn’t know that much about Marvin Mandel when I campaigned for him in 1970. I just knew enough. His kind of political figure was the answer to the Nixons and Agnews and Mahoneys dominating the political landscape in those days.

George Mahoney was the last rancid blast from Strom Thurmond days. He was a Dixiecrat who made it possible for Spiro Agnew to get into office. He ran for Governor of Maryland in 1970 and got the Democratic nomination by running against Fair Housing laws. His slogan was simple.

Your home is your castle – Protect it.

It wasn’t hard to hear from what menace white folks needed protect their homes. It was black people who might want to buy a house.

In 1966, Mahoney became the Democratic nominee with 30 percent of the vote. Seventy percent voted against him in the Democratic primary, but that vote was divided, broken up among other candidates. He won the primary by one third of one percent. Non-bigots in Maryland voted Republican that year and Spiro Agnew became governor.

Yeah, Spiro Agnew was Maryland’s anti-bigot in 1966.

A year and a half later, when Martin Luther King was killed, Governor Agnew was furious about the riots that tore through Baltimore. Black leaders had walked through the streets all night long, confronting angry teenagers, trying to calm things down. When Governor Agnew called them to a meeting, many were still wearing clothes stained by soot and sweat from their all night efforts. Governor Agnew called them cowards.

And you ran.

He told them that they themselves were the cause of rioting, that they had cowered in fear.

You were beguiled by the rationalizations of unity; you were intimidated by veiled threats; you were stung by insinuations that you were Mr.- Charlie’s boy, by epithets like “Uncle Tom.”

Richard Nixon read about the tough talk and was impressed. Agnew had really told off those black leaders. So Governor Agnew became Vice President Agnew. Later on, convicted criminal Agnew.

Maryland had no Lieutenant Governor to take the place of ex-Governor Agnew. The legislature selected Democratic leader Marvin Mandel to be a sort of caretaker until a real Governor could be chosen in the next election.

But Mandel was no caretaker. He got into the nuts and bolts of government. He streamlined the way departments were organized. Efficiency was the word of the day. He got Maryland’s first Metro-rail system going. Pollution went down as commuters could leave their cars at home. Employment went up as hard working city residents found it practical to get to jobs outside their limited areas.

But most interesting to me, he stood up to all kinds of pressure for the sake of a medical theory. A close friend had almost died in an automobile accident. He should have died, but he didn’t. Mandel wondered if the fortunate fact that the accident had occurred very close to a hospital had something to do with his friend’s good luck. And that’s how Mandel came into contact with an American medical officer who had served in France just after World War II.
Continue reading “My Hero the Thief, and the Role Model for My President”

Corruption, Obstruction, Succession, Korea, Racism, Guns, God, Oh My!

  • This week’s note in Trumpian ‘Alternative Facts’ comes from Nancy LeTourneau at Washington Monthly as Giuliani wants his client to refuse a lawful subpoena because the President lives in a universe of alternate truth.
     
  • Ted McLaughlin at jobsanger presents indications that my President has made racists bolder. That evidence is anecdotal but there are so so many anecdotes. Surely anecdotes must eventually aggregate into data.
     
  • tengrain at Mock Paper Scissors has a complete online interview carried by the Toronto Star on the Korea cancellation. About a 10 second read.
     
  • Yellow Dog at Blue in the Bluegrass suggests that, for the 2018 elections, there is one and only one decisive issue.
     
  • Frances Langum considers the weird DOJ meeting to review the ongoing investigation into the Russia-Trump connection, and invites us to join in watching as Anderson Cooper demands to know why Trump representatives were there. Video courteously included.
     
  • Jack Jodell at The Saturday Afternoon Post gazes into the wild brush along the road and glimpses a prowling Vice President patiently waiting for his Trump to bumble, stumble, and fall.
     
  • Tommy Christopher publishes, on his own website, his research from 5 years ago that remains valid today.
     
  • @bjork55 at Bjork Report agrees that guns don’t kill people, and tells us who does.
     
  • North Carolina pastor John Pavlovitz explores the two most scary words most often heard in reports of school shootings.
     
  • In The Life and Times of Bruce Gerencser, Bruce proposes from personal experience in his previous existence as a preacher that pastoral confidentiality is not as sacred as we are taught. He suggests that ministerial gossip is widespread.
     
  • At The Onion, God has harsh words as He flees from the universe with $250 in cash.
     
  • Our favorite Earth-Bound Misfit presents a new logical result born from the notion that life begins at conception. Fortunately, the reasoning is judicially rejected.
     
  • At an online discussion, I once suggested that those on the left often understand more about the positions they oppose than those on the right. I offered, as an example, the pro-life position on abortion. The basic premise is that human life begins at the moment of conception and can be protected by the right set of laws. That leads to pretty much every aspect of that position. Could conservatives faithfully present any argument from the left?
     
    A pro-life friend acknowledged that my summary was about on target, and insisted that those on the right could do the same thing in reverse. He was not snarking or writing from any sense of irony. He sincerely believed he was accurately restating a liberal position. The premise of the pro-choice argument as he understood it: we think it’s okay to kill babies.
     
    My longtime conservative friend, T. Paine at Saving Common Sense, offers what passes as conservative humor about political positions he opposes. Not exactly nuanced, but instructive. He inadvertently reveals how he sees his opposition. He also reminds those of us who might have forgotten that he is hilarious.
     
  • M. Bouffant at Web of Evil seems to be having a really bad day. Downer. Maybe my friend, the uproarious Mr. Paine, can jolly him up.
     
  • John Scalzi at Whatever explains how a typical blog site (which is to say his) is affected by new privacy regulations in the European Union (which is to say it isn’t). Unless said website egregiously abuses the rights of its participants. Did I say Facebook? Come on, I didn’t say Facebook.
     
  • Every blog site gets a periodic tsunami of spam, bot driven comments constructed in the mechanical hope that some small percentage will find its way to the eyes of some small percentage of readers, some small percentage of which will take the bait and click. We on those sites sigh and delete. The Journal of Improbable Research is no different, but has found a use for one piece: generating an article about it. Mildly entertaining, too.
     

Trump Lashes Out Again at DOJ’s Independence

found online by Raymond

 
From Jonathan Bernstein:

During the Watergate investigation, the Justice Department made sure that the White House was updated on every development, which White House Counsel John Dean then used to prepare the false testimony of the campaign and White House staffers involved, and otherwise keep Justice from learning the truth. It was the revelation of this situation that eventually produced the first Watergate special prosecutor, and the universal demand that he be replaced by another independent prosecutor after Nixon had him removed.

The outcome of all of this was a set of rules and norms about the independence of Department of Justice prosecutions from presidential and White House involvement. A lot of Watergate-era reforms have been either useless or counterproductive, but everyone up through the Barack Obama presidency agreed to abide by them, and they became an important component of how the U.S. system produces the rule of law.

It’s those rules and norms that President Donald Trump is bulldozing when he demands prosecution of his political opponents – a demand he’s making when there is, remember, already an inspector general investigation.

That’s not even counting the recklessness involved in outing intelligence informants.

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