Sunday, July 30, 2023

Bronny James. And Elon Musk. We Are At a Disadvantage.

Bronny James (son of Lebron James and his wife) is a student athlete (basketball player) at the University of Southern California.  Last week, James (Jr) suffered what has been publicized as a "cardiac arrest" while playing basketball.  He was resuscitated, and appears to be recovering well.

Elon Musk, who is an entrepreneur in various fields, has opined that James' cardiac arrest was due to James' having been vaccinated against the coronavirus, which Musk says is associated with various cardiac problems, including cardiomyopathy, which can cause cardiac arrest.

No one has said James did not receive a vaccination against the coronavirus, and most people with brains have been vaccinated, so we can assume that James was, in fact, vaccinated.  But the question is about James' heart, and what could affect it, and how Musk knows what could or did affect it.  Cardiomyopathy is a very uncommon, but not at all unknown, condition, it has existed long before the coronavirus vaccine, and rarely, athletes die of cardiac arrest, from one cause or another, very possibly including cardiomyopathy.

So, to phrase the question a little differently, for how long has Dr Musk been treating Bronny James, what methods of evaluation has he employed, and what were the results?  I have not heard that Dr Musk has made public the medical records he keeps of James, were there any murmurs, what were James' blood pressure and pulmonary artery pressure (which I have every confidence Dr Musk would have checked, if James had had any relevant symptoms), and what Dr Musk found James' echocardiogram showed.  I'm assuming here that Dr Musk is either a cardiologist or at least a knowledgeable general internist, and would naturally have pursued these areas of concern regarding his patient.

The unwelcome alternative is that Elon Musk is not a doctor, and is just blowing smoke out of his ass.  In all honesty, it was not my understanding that Musk is in fact a medical doctor, and we'd all have to think back to see if there has been a pattern of his blowing smoke out of his ass.  If there has, he should keep his ass blocked, and his mouth shut.


Saturday, July 29, 2023

"To Quote Adolph Hitler"

There's a colloquial "rule," generally used by people who would be most disadvantaged by the act, that says that if, during an argument or debate, anyone likens his or her opponent to Hitler, then the argument is over, and the person who used the Hitler reference loses.  It's kind of a dumb manipulation, or rhetorical trick, but I've encountered people who trot it out.

I bring this up, because I got an e-blast from some group called everylibrary.org, and it included the title of this post.  Specifically, it talked about another group called "Moms for Liberty," which was described as a "well-funded dark money organization," and the quote (supposedly from Hitler) was "He alone, who OWNS the youth, GAINS the future."  "Moms For Liberty" used that quote.  No one manipulatively interpreted them as being like Hitler.  I included the upper case letters, because that's what was written in the e-blast.  If this really came from Hitler, and it was something he said, then there were no upper or lower case letters.  If it was something he wrote, then there would have been.

And then, everylibrary tells you terrible things about "Moms for Liberty," wants you to sign a petition, and wants you to donate money.  (No matter what anyone says, doesn't say, does, or doesn't do, someone wants you to donate money.  As I always say, if I donated the minimum requested amount to every organization which I myself consider very worthy, I'd go broke fast.  So I pick the ones I pick -- which I realize are arbitrary, I donate monthly, I don't donate to the others -- not because they're unworthy -- and I don't increase the donations every time any of the organizations to which I donate says they have an emergency, which all of them always do.  I don't have that kind of money, and I just can't do it.  As it is, most of my credit card bill every month is donations.)

Anyway, let's think about the quote attributed to Hitler.  Assuming Hitler said that, which he very well might have (I looked it up on Bing, and it was "attributed" to Hitler in 1935.  But there were no upper case letters in the attributed quote, so if it came from Hitler, he must have said it, not written it.), he wasn't the only person to have recognized the critical importance of capturing the youth market.

The tobacco industry very famously hit upon the same approach.  My favorite Kevin Smith movie is "Dogma," and when a group of the good guys were trying to appeal to George Carlin's character, Catholic Cardinal Glick, and mentioned the tobacco industry, Carlin's character said "If we only had their numbers."  It's certainly true that the religions recognize the same importance of capturing the youth market.

In fact, whether it's religion, politics, or any of a number of things, people tend to stay with what was in their upbringings.  I know of some exceptions, and so do you, but that's the tendency.  As I have said a million times, we don't call childhood the "formative years" for nothing.

Whether or not anyone has "gained" the futures of young people depends in part on how much they "owned" them when they were young, and how much these erstwhile youngsters achieve independence.  One of the things all or almost all of my patients have heard me say (some repeatedly) is that it is the job of children, from as soon as they're old enough to start doing their job, to become capable and independent, including independent of their parents, and it is the job of parents to permit and even encourage their children to become capable and independent, including independent of them.  And I tell them that if they have no other way of thinking about this, they should realize that if everyone gets his and her wish, the offspring will outlive their parents.  If the offspring are not capable and independent, including independent of their parents, by the time the parents get old and die (and the offspring are now in their 40s, 50s, 60s, or maybe 70s), the offspring are in deep trouble.

I never owned my children.  I never wanted to.  I set an example for them.  If it appealed to them, and they wanted to follow it, fine.  If not, they found their own paths.  I'm not they, and they're not I.  That's as it should be.

Hitler would be very disappointed to find out that the German people have come to agree that they made a terrible mistake in the 1930s and WWII, they've been remorseful, they've paid reparations to the people Hitler told them were the antichrists, and they're doing vastly better now.  Germans today insist that students learn about the Nazi years.  Hitler may or may not have "owned" their youths, but he did not "gain" their futures.


Wednesday, July 26, 2023

My Daughter Doesn't Get It.

My daughter and I have a close relationship.  But it got strained last year, because I moved up to Massachusetts for five months, as she asked me to do, it was a huge disruption and expense, it didn't turn out as I expected, I sold the apartment I bought (this was supposed to happen every summer), and I think she got mad at me.  But we're still close.

I have solar panels, and my daughter got solar panels.  (My son's are on order.)  I have an electric car, and my daughter and son-in-law want an electric car.  We don't agree about various things, and that's fine.  They parent their way, and I parented my way.

Some weeks ago, I got an e-mail from some company that is auctioning off a new electric car.  There are choices, and two of them are trucks.  My son has agreed to accept my Tesla sedan, and my daughter and son-in-law want a truck.  The auction tickets were $200 each, and I bought five of them.  Yesterday and today, I've gotten e-mails saying that fewer than half the tickets have been sold, with about four weeks to go before the auction, and they're urging people to buy more tickets.

So I called my daughter to ask her if she'd like me to buy some more tickets.  No.  She wants me to save my money.  I asked her, in effect, for what.  Whatever I have is for her and my son anyway, and if they're more likely to get a new electric car of the type they want if I spend more money, then I'm inclined to do it.  Still no.

My daughter wants me to be able to take care of myself, and she's worried I'll need more money than I have to do it.  (The alternative, of course, is that if I get in trouble, I'll call my son and daughter, and ask them to help me.  Which maybe they don't want to have to do.)

But I told my daughter to forget about that, and forget about me.  My interest is my offspring, not myself.  I manage.  I suggested my daughter think of me as garbage that can be disposed of.  (I'm 73, my offspring are in their 40s, I work because I like to, and because I'm good at it, not because the world needs more psychiatrists.  My "job" is done.)

My daughter said "yeah, you're a piece of shit, and we don't want you."  I corrected her, and I said "no, I was successful with you, and you don't need me."  

If I reared two successful offspring who are entirely independent of me, then I did exactly and completely what I should have done as a parent.

I outlived my parents.  My offspring will outlive me.  My grandchildren will outlive my offspring.  That's the way it goes, and that's the way it's supposed to go.  That's actually what everyone wants.  That's why hundreds and thousands and tens of thousands of years ago, there were other people, and hundreds and thousands and tens of thousands of years from now, there will be different people.  Unless we continue to fuck up each other, and the planet, and interfere with the whole process.  We're supposed to care enough not to do that, but at the moment, it's not looking good.  But I'm still going to do my part.


Monday, July 24, 2023

Ronnie DeSantis Needs to Be Less Clumsy About Making His Point.

I'm not sure how I escaped this.  My birthday is in March, and during the three years I spent in junior high school, there must have been at least one day I was in school, and in PE, on my birthday.

One of the coaches made it his business to find out who had a birthday on a PE day.  He would snag that student coming out of the shower, and he would paddle the student, naked and wet, to the beat of "Happy Birthday."  The paddle was covered in formica, and it had holes in it, so it had maximum effect.  Maximum effect included that the student had very red buttocks after this paddling.  At the end, the coach smiled at the student, shook his hand, and asked him what do you say when someone gives you something: "Thank you."

Ronnie DeSantis' newest suggestion was that slavery was actually a benefit to slaves, because it taught them skills they could "parlay" into trades (if and when they ever got freed from slavery).  Clearly, at first blush, this comes across as, oh, I don't know, heartless, cruel, and completely lacking in human feeling and decency.  But I think we have to consider the possibility that DeSantis was more inept than necessarily strictly wrong, per se.  So, here's how I think Ronnie can do a better job of making his point.

We can enslave the DeSantis family, and everyone they know.  They can pick oranges or strawberries or something.  We can do this for 400 years' worth of generations.  We can control their lives completely, flog them when they do something that doesn't completely satisfy us, and arbitrarily break apart their nuclear families, selling off a younger and stronger male, or the young'uns when they're capable enough to do something useful, or a female, if anyone thinks she'd either make a good brood "mare," or at least be appealing enough to rape.  (If she gets raped enough, she'll learn how to please a man.  That could be a good skill to know.)

And then, at the end of 400 years, we'll let all of these slaves go, although we'll continue to make their lives difficult in as many ways as we can.  Maybe we can brand them, so we'll know which ones are DeSantises, etc.

And if we find out that during 400 years of generations, any of these DeSantises, etc, have learned any kind of skill that will be of any value to anyone, or to them, we'll reassure ourselves that we not only did the right thing by enslaving the DeSantises, but that we actually did them a favor.

For which they should naturally thank us.  Ronnie just hasn't learned about teaching people gratitude.  We should probably teach him, and his wife, and their children, and everyone they know, for many generations.  I'm sure Ronnie, his extended clan, and their heirs, will be deeply grateful.

Sunday, July 23, 2023

"Sicko"

I'm generally a big fan of Michael Moore's documentaries.  The only one I hadn't seen, and one of the two I don't own, was "Sicko."  Both lapses have now been corrected.  It's as great as all of them, except "Fahrenheit 11/9," which was somewhat disorganized, and not as perfect as the rest.

"Sicko" is about American "health care," or the lack of it.  Moore hits every note perfectly, and he compares American "health care" to health care in other/real countries.  He focuses on Canada and France for his information about real countries.

Here are the essential highlights: in real countries, everyone has access to health care.  Even visitors/tourists do.  They're not charged money when they get treated.  (Moore at one point asked about a sign that said "Cashier," that seemed to belie the assertion that patients don't pay.  It was explained to him that some patients arrive at the hospital on an emergency basis, and when they get released, like from the ER, they have no way to get home.  The "Cashier" doesn't charge them money.  It gives them money, to cover the cost of the ride home.  The fiscal structure of the country pays for everyone's health care.  And it's good care, too.  (Medical care in this country costs far more than it does in any other country, and our results are worse than many.  We just pay too much, and we don't get our money's worth.  Do you know that the commonest cause of personal bankruptcy in this country is and always has been an inability to pay medical bills?)  People/patients in real countries don't get care they don't need.  (I might have told this story some years ago, but I have a right wing cousin who worked on Wall St -- one of the many VPs of whatever -- and part of his benefit was luxury "health care."  Whenever he had a cold, he marched himself to his PCP, and demanded an antibiotic, which his PCP dutifully prescribed, even though antibiotics don't do anything for colds.  Once he had made so much money that he couldn't think of a reason to bother to go to work any more, and he retired, he had pedestrian "health care."  Now, he had to pay a co-pay for doctors' visits, and for prescriptions.  He quit going to the doctor every time he had a cold, and he quit taking useless antibiotics.)   Importantly, doctors in real countries are not doctors so they can feed at the money trough.  They certainly make enough to live on, but they don't get rich inventing and treating conditions that aren't going to get any better with pretend treatment, and for which this superfluous activity serves to enrich the doctor.  And most importantly, people in real countries actually care about each other, and they want each other to be well, so they pay taxes.  That's how the real countries get the revenue to support their health care systems.

And no, real countries don't only control the costs of having doctors.  They also control the costs of medications and everything else in health care.

Real countries have a huge advantage we don't have, and it makes this kind of societal evolution possible.  In this country, campaigning lasts a really long time, and it costs a huge amount of money.  Candidates who need that much money are very beholden to whoever gives it to them.  In France, for example, the campaign season lasts two weeks.  In the UK, it's about five weeks.  In Canada, it's 36 days.  In Italy, it's 45 days (about six weeks).  In Spain, it lasts a long time -- up to nine months.  But when you have to hurry up and get your agenda out there, and not rely on drowning the voters in exposure, it just doesn't cost that much, and you don't need that much, and you don't owe anyone (except the voters) much.  That's why in real countries, electeds focus on the wishes and needs of the public, and in this country, candidates only care -- only have to care -- about the wishes and needs of their real constituents, which are the donors (not the voters).  Many of those donors and paid lobbyists come from the "health care" industry.  When candidates take that money, which they generally feel they have to, they've been bought, and are owned, and have to deliver.  And what they're required to deliver is not what's in your or my interest.

If you have a DVD player, you're welcome to borrow my "Sicko" DVD.  I just want it back.  You can also borrow my copy of "Un Traductor," which is based on a true story of a Cuban guy who was an academic, and studied Russian, and got assigned to a children's hospital which was treating Russian children who had been damaged by the Chernobyl disaster.  It's a different focus, but a great movie.  I want that back, too.


Thursday, July 20, 2023

"No Labels" Sounds Good, If You Don't Think About It.

There's a new third party out, and they call themselves "No Labels."  There are a couple of ways of understanding this brand.  One is that the public shouldn't get distracted by "labels" (Democrat, for example, or Republican).  Another, which seems to be "No Labels'" scheme, is to blend the major parties, so that the result will be what they call "moderate."  Not "extreme," one way or the other.  Occasionally, they've talked about running a presidential candidate from one party with a vice presidential candidate from the other party.  As if they would sort of average each other out.

"No Labels" won't reveal essentially anything about its intended platform.  And this concealing has led to speculation about what "No Labels" is really about.  And who funds it, which they also won't reveal.  Frankly, the predominant suspicion is that it's a right wing stealth group.  Which it might be.  Or maybe not.  Although they're also generally loath to name names, they have let slip that Joe Manchin could be a headliner, or even, perhaps, their presidential nominee.  (They also won't reveal what process they intend to use to choose nominees.)

Here's an article about "No Labels," and it might shed some indirect light.  One fact it mentions early on is that third party candidates don't do well.  So they're skating on thin ice.  No Labels Board Member: If MLK Were Alive, He’d Be a Centrist (theintercept.com)

But here's the real problem with "No Labels," and with American politics.  If you take away the boatloads of "dark money," and the tortured gerrymandering, and the conspiracy theories, and the lies, and instead, you honor what survey after survey says the public wants, we'd have a left wing or center left government.  You don't need to invent a hypocritical or dishonest right wing, or a "No Labels" kind of compromise. This, of course, is not in any way to say we all want the same thing, and that everyone would vote the same way.  But the right has had to work very hard to confuse or distract people from voting for what they want.

Lately, I've seen lots of petitions urging abolition of the Electoral College.  The Electoral College is a conglomeration of ways of not giving the people what they want.  In Alabama, right now, there's an effort to gerrymander the hell out of voting districts, so that only one district will represent African-Americans, even though African-Americans are much more prevalent than one district's worth.  The SCOTUS told Alabama they couldn't do this -- the very far and supermajority right wing SCOTUS! -- and Alabama is resisting.  They just don't want African-Americans' votes to count much (didn't we turn away from that discounting of African-Americans and the values of their votes 150 years ago?), which means they don't want the people, assuming Alabama considers African-Americans people, to have what they want.

But that's sort of our whole point.  That's why this country was established in the late 18th C: why we have a democracy, or republic, or whatever you want to call it.  It's why we have presidents, and senators, and congresspeople, and all other electeds: so the people can have what they want.

And if Joe Manchin, or anyone else, doesn't feel like a representative of the Democratic Party, or the Republican Party, he can run as an independent.  He wouldn't be the first.  And not all of them have lost.  We just don't need this mysterious pretense of a "No Labels" party.  Whatever it actually is.


Saturday, July 15, 2023

Harvard, Huh?

Ronnie DeSantis graduated from Harvard.  So did Teddy Cruz.  And Clarence Thomas.  Little Joshie Hawley graduated from Yale.  Either these universities are dramatically careless about whom they admit, or they're actually looking for kids like these.

Florida is hurting as it becomes 'where empathy, decency and kindness go to die': columnist (msn.com)

This article talks about the damage Ronnie DeSantis is doing to this state, and how "younger Floridians" are high-tailing it out of here.  I'm not a younger Floridian.  I was born at Jackson Memorial Hospital in 1950, and I, too, want to leave.  The "younger Floridians" have the advantage of being younger, and for me, I feel too old, and it feels like too much trouble to find a real place to be, pack up my stuff, and get out of here.  I didn't much mind dealing with ill-tempered children when my offspring were adolescents.  It was part of the deal, part of the process, and I could assume they'd grow out of it.  Ronnie DeSantis isn't growing out of anything any more.  He's a somewhat younger version of Donnie Trump, who also isn't going to grow up any more.

I've known Harvard students, and there was nothing wrong with them.  There were some who attended Harvard undergraduate and Harvard Medical.  We used to call them "Preparation H."  But the ones I knew were good people and good doctors.  For a long time, I thought I made a mistake by going to Tufts.  It was a very nice and small campus in Medford, it was easy to get to downtown Boston, or Cambridge, or anywhere else, and all the classes were taught by professors, instead of by graduate students as they would have been at Harvard.  But it was so small that they didn't have enough choice of classes.  Now, though, I'm glad I went to Tufts.  Who knows what kind of inane riff-raff could have been my classmates if I'd gone to Harvard?  My Tufts girlfriend, who later became my wife, had been accepted at Tufts (Jackson) and Harvard (Radcliffe), and she chose Tufts.  I never asked her (or I don't remember), but I now wonder what instinct she might have had to have led her to go to Medford instead of Cambridge.  They're only a few miles apart, and she and her parents could have visited each other either way.

It's not just the students they choose, either.  Bernie Madoff ripped off a lot of people.  One organization he suckered into "investing" with him was Harvard University.  Harvard makes more seriously bad choices than anyone would automatically expect they would.

I suppose one way to explain the problem is that Harvard is a sucker for self-assured people.  People like Ronnie DeSantis, and Bernie Madoff.  Nobody would argue that Harvard is not self-assured.  When I applied for psychiatry training, I applied in the Boston area.  Two of the places I applied were Harvard Medical School affiliates.  It's been a long time, and I don't remember what vibe I got from them, but I chose the Boston University system instead.  In my opinion, I made the right choice.

So, Ronnie DeSantis is now running people who are not haters and dimwits out of Florida.  I really can't say I'm surprised, or that I don't understand it.  Frankly, he's got me thinking again about leaving.  In the past year, I've interviewed for jobs in Georgia (I know), Texas (I know), and California.  But my sister desperately needed a place to live, she asked if she could live in my house, and she's a higher priority to me than is escaping Florida, Ronnie DeSantis, and the selfish dimwits.  Ronnie and his legislative stooges, who it appears are afraid of him, are turning this into a dysfunctional and two-bit state.  If my sister gets settled down somewhere other than my house, and I get out of here, I'll try to remember to say goodbye to you.  My daughter lives in Massachusetts, which is way too cold, my son lives in Colorado, which is probably too cold, and I was very recently watching "Peter Tosh: Stepping Razor/Red X," which reminded me how much I wish I lived in Jamaica, where I think I could do some good.  And the extra good news is that there are probably few Harvard graduates there.


I Don't Think Rep Anna Luna Understood the Correct Point She Was Making. She Backed Herself Into the Wrong Argument.

House Democrat LOSES IT On Matt Gaetz During Floor Speech: ‘You Are Exhausting!’ (msn.com)

Rep Anna Luna (R, Fla) doesn't appear in this video until 4:36.  By that point, Steven Horsford had complained about Matt Gaetz's amendment, Gaetz demanded a point of order, because Horsford addressed him directly, which is not permitted, instead of addressing the Chair, and Gaetz then described Horsford's argument as childish, which is an ad hominem criticism, which is also not permitted.  (Gaetz is selective about which impermissible kinds of interactions he objects to.)  Then, Gaetz yielded to Luna.

Luna, like Gaetz, is very opposed to Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion.  Even more than that, they're extremely opposed to initiatives that promote DEI.  To illustrate her point about how unnecessary, and ridiculous, DEI initiatives are, Luna offered a sort of personal example.  

She began generally by pointing out that everyone of whatever race or ethnicity bleeds the same (color).  Boy, was she right about that.  And to bring her point home, she mentioned her husband (Luna is Caucasian, and she didn't say her husband wasn't also Caucasian) who was stationed in the middle east, got wounded, and most certainly didn't concern himself with the race or ethnicity of who evacuated him to safety, evaluation, and treatment.  And that's great, that he didn't have to worry about the race or ethnicity of the people who saved him.

If Luna's husband is in fact Caucasian, it might not have occurred to her that not everyone can make the same assumption about being evacuated that her husband could.  The sense of camaraderie might depend on more than the uniform.

Luna's husband, and Luna, can confidently assume, for example, that if they have a tail light out, and the police notice it, the problem will be brought to their attention.  It's possible they'll get a warning, and unlikely they'll get a citation.  Luna might not realize that some people will get assassinated by police over something like that.  And whether they do or they don't will depend on something a lot more superficial, and immediately obvious, than the color of their blood.

I think Rep Luna makes a good and important point: we're all in this together.  But if she gets too glib and careless about it, and forgets how many people don't look at it that way, then she's really just encouraging antisocial behavior.

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

The Failure(/Refusal?) to Assimilate

I'm still stuck in the middle of James Kirchick's The End of Europe.  I just get busy, and I don't give myself enough time to read.  Actually, I'm essentially exactly in the middle of this 230 page book, and the section where I'm bogged down is called "The European Union."  The immediately preceding section was "Germany," and Kirchick isn't done talking about Germany, even though he's switched to a new section about the EU.  Kirchick's writing is gorgeous, although somewhat dense.

At the moment, he's talking about emigration from middle eastern countries into the EU.  Frankly, he's describing some bad behavior on the parts of the immigrants, and he's parsing the possibility that it would be unfair and inaccurate to ascribe this bad behavior (mostly misogynistic, but also represented by unemployment) to the Muslim culture, instead of just to comparatively uncivilized individuals.  The theory he's challenging is that Muslims are misogynistic and possibly lazy people, who want everyone else to adopt Muslim customs, and they impose their cultural deficiencies on the people, and countries, around them.

This got me thinking about experiences I've had, personally and as a citizen of this country.  On a personal level, I was born into a Jewish family, but I have never believed there is such a thing as "god," so I eventually gave up thinking of myself as Jewish, since I don't have the entry-level criterion: thinking there's such a thing as "god."  And I have no affection for or connection to the non-religious cultural features of the "community," so there was nothing to hang on to.  Am I a "mensch?"  I certainly hope so.  Am I a "goniff?"  I certainly hope not.  But this is because I care about other people.  It has nothing to do with religion.  And even if I did care about religion, what's that got to do with anyone else?  The fact is that I have never known any religious person who was true to the tenets of his or her religion.  They always manipulate, so they can do what they want, and find some excuse for it.  Among the Jews, which is what I know best, it's called "rabbi-shopping," where someone wants to do something the rules of Judaism tell them they're not supposed to do, so they ask enough rabbis until they find one who tells them the rule can be interpreted to permit the person to do what he or she wanted to do, and that becomes their permission to do it.  As best I can tell, the religions are sort of all like that.  Unless the supposed adherent doesn't even bother to shop for an accommodating cleric, and they just do what they want anyway.

Anyway, to get back to assimilation and Kirchick, as of Kirchick's data as of publication (2017), he started this part of the discussion talking about how terribly women are treated in the middle east, then extending to some of the residual bad ways EU women are treated, seemingly by middle eastern-origin men.  Kirchick, for his own reasons, is careful to try to propose that the ways these men/boys treat women may be unrelated to their Islamic culture.

But what if it was?  What if people, in their "formative years," learned a number of things, including how to treat other people (they unquestionably do: that's my metier), and that's why they treated women in the EU the ways they and their families treated women back in the middle east?  This raises much broader, and frankly more provocative, questions.  If Muslims, for example, feel free to expect the world to function as if it were a Muslim place, why would we not say precisely the same thing about Jews (the more Orthodox, the more insistent), or about Christians?  Muslims, Jews, Christians, or anyone else are welcome to live their own lives as they wish, but they seem unable to resist demanding that everyone else live as they themselves wish to live.

In various parts of various countries, Orthodox Jews live in relatively tight communities.  Part of this is logistical, because they walk to synagogue on Friday nights and Saturdays, so they can't live far enough from the temples, and from each other, that they couldn't walk there.  And maybe it's no big deal if you can't get a cooked lunch at an Orthodox-owned restaurant on a Saturday, because they don't cook on their Sabbath.  You can eat somewhere else.  But there was a time in parts of Israel where if you were driving during the Sabbath, the Orthodox vigilantes would stone your car.  You have to live the way they want to live.

What's in many ways worse is the United States, where we anticipated this kind of problem, and we very explicitly separated "church" from state, and specified that there would be no government-backed religion.  You can talk yourself blue in the face explaining that to the Christians.  There's a population of them who will tell you this was always intended to be a Christian country, and it is one, and it should be run according to Christian tenets, as those tenets are massaged.  That is very forcefully to say that you should behave as a Christian person might wish to behave, whether or not you're Christian.

It's not only religion, either.  Many years ago, I was the Psychiatric Medical Director for a Community Health Center in what had become the traditional Italian section of downtown Boston.  There were enough patients who didn't speak English, despite having lived in this country for decades, and translators were sometimes too busy, that I took Italian lessons in night school so I could communicate with the patients.  I had a job to do, I couldn't not do it, and I couldn't always get a translator.  In our area, there are loads of people who have been here for several decades, and still really only speak Spanish.  Several people have suggested to me I learn Spanish, so I can communicate with them.  Because they can't be bothered to learn English.  About two nights ago, I was having dinner at the restaurant of a friend of mine, and I delivered one of my more common flirts to the waitress.  She managed to ask how the food was, and I told her it was the second best thing in the restaurant.  Usually, they smile, get the joke, or ask what's the first best thing.  She was blank.  My friend, who knows I do that, explained that her English is not very good.  And she's a waitress in a restaurant that welcomes people like me, who don't speak Spanish.

Kirchick also talks about unemployment among immigrants.  As I said, in the chapter I'm reading, he focuses on the EU, but he offers illustrative comparisons.  "Across the EU, 15% are [were in 2017] unemployed," which he says is 5% higher than the unemployment rate of native born Europeans.  Interestingly, he compares this to the US, where "just" 5.8% of immigrants are unemployed.  This is/was 1% lower than the unemployment rate for native born Americans.  So with respect at least to employment, immigrants seem to do better here than do Americans.  They find ways to assimilate better, at least regarding employment.  (It would still be nice if they learned English, but many of them do, and all of their offspring do.)

It's a mixed curiosity, then, about people and assimilation.  As it turns out, Americans assimilate poorly, even in the US.  They can't accept their own Constitution, they are tenacious about insularity, and they appear not to work as hard as do immigrants.  And this is in the country where even born and reared Americans will boast of the promised fruits of work, and the endless possibilities.  They can say it, but they can't bring themselves to do it.  Not as well as can immigrants, who assimilate in whatever ways they can.  Which is why they come here.


Monday, July 10, 2023

"A Soros Judge"

‘What Happened?!’ Fox’s Maria Bartiromo Confronts Ron DeSantis On His ‘Failure to Launch’ in Blunt Exchange (msn.com)

Maria Bartiromo of Fox "News" started her interview of Ronnie DeSantis sounding tough, challenging, and dismissive.  By the end of this interview, she seemed more content.  She seemed to like Ronnie's tough talk, and his reassurance that he had the ambition and the means to beat everyone else up.

She pointed out that a Politico poll showed 56% support for Donnie Trump, only 22% support for Ronnie, and 5% or less support for each of a few other declared candidates.  Chris Christie was not listed, for some reason no one addressed.

But Maria wanted to know what made Ronnie so confident.  Well... Ronnie did make clear his schoolboy bully style, he happened to mention that he has $150M in thus far untouched donations, he reminded Maria that he had dismantled Charlie Crist in the last gubernatorial election, and he listed his Rep/con bona fides.  He didn't use the phrase "drain the swamp" up there in DC, but that's what he meant.  Oddly, he didn't mention that Donnie did use that phrase, and, according to Ronnie, failed to do it.  So he sort of left as an unanswered question how he, the next Rep/con non-DC denizen, was going to do what the last Rep/con non-DC denizen couldn't do.

But he did give as examples his view of cleaning up messes in Florida.  It was during that discussion that he talked about having gotten rid of "a Soros judge" from Tampa.

I don't know a lot about George Soros, apart from that he's one of the Reps/cons' favorite effigies (along with Hillary Clinton and Hunter Biden), but I looked him up.  He is described in Wikipedia as being "Hungarian-American," although his family first fled the Nazis by going to the UK, and having worked typical kid jobs until he figured out a better way to earn money, through investing.  He got himself an advanced degree, too.  I assume, because he's referred to as "Hungarian-American," that he lives in this country now, but I don't know where.  He's said to have a worth of $8.6B, which is far more than most people, but far less than the wealthiest.

So, for one thing, what does Ronnie think he means when he refers to a judge in Tampa as a "Soros judge?"  Soros has nothing to do with nominating or confirming judges.  Soros appears to have liberal leanings.  Is Ronnie whining that the judge in question made a ruling that would appeal to liberals?  Or is this just a dog whistle intended to provoke the mindless people who are susceptible to dog whistles?

For another thing, if Ronnie thinks Soros has any kind of influence over some judge in Tampa, and he thinks that's a bad thing, is he so enraged as to be in orbit over the gross and blatant influence pedaled to SCOTUS Justices?  He didn't mention that.

And as for his independence and swamp-cleaning, by which he seems to mean that he's not anyone's agent, from where did he get the $150M he hasn't used yet?  That wasn't a whole lot of $5 bills.  Does someone expect something for donations like that?  Has Ronnie reassured them that if he's elected, they're going to get what they paid for?  That's the swamp Donnie and Ronnie propose to drain.  If you depend on the swamp for your welfare, it's unclear how you're going to drain it, or why you'd want to.

Then, Ronnie goes on to some other rant about "censoring."  He won't have it, and he specifically refers to Hunter Biden.  Ronnie seems to think that Hunter Biden did something wrong, but that his misdeeds were covered up (that, presumably, is the censoring).  Setting aside the mindless fixation on Hunter Biden, I agree with Ronnie here.  Anyone who does something wrong should be held to account for it.  Donnie Trump almost made a career of threatening to "lock [Hillary Clinton] up" for some imagined misdeeds.  He had four years to do it, and he didn't do a thing.  I'm guessing Ronnie doesn't emulate Donnie's failure to hold the supposedly guilty to account.  But setting aside that incoherent crusade, what, exactly, is Ronnie's complaint about "censoring?"  We're talking here about Ronnie DeSantis, who bans books, and won't let teachers teach their curricula.  He proposes not to let people say "gay," and he makes fun of anyone who is concerned about an epidemic, urging/coercing them not to wear masks.  This is the kid who doesn't like "censoring?"

And then, there's this: DeSantis’ Iowa gaffe is indicative of a bigger problem (msn.com)  It seems that the population of people who think Ronnie is an inept loser with no social skills is growing.

I'm not sure where Ronnie thinks he's going with this, but no one except him thinks it looks promising.


Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Are You Planning to Have a "Happy Fourth of July?"

A long report this morning on NPR talked about the problem with the US Constitution: the "all men are created equal," and related parts.

Last night, I had dinner with long time friends, and the wife asked me what I thought about the SCOTUS' Affirmative Action decision.  I told her it was theoretically a good idea, but we weren't ready for it.  So we debated about that for a while.

On another topic, there's this: 

                             The Second Amendment

 

“A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

 

If attention is paid to the founding documents of a state, it is perhaps more so of comparatively newer states.  Likewise, there is typically a special reverence held for the revolutionaries, visionaries, and others who were most responsible for the founding of the new state.  We in the United States are much closer to our founding documents, and our “founding fathers,” than our British ancestors are to theirs.  We sometimes quote them liberally even today.  We rely on their words and the spirit behind them.  We are of course limited, in that even those more recent “fathers” are long dead, and we sometimes have to work to re-imagine what their intentions might have been.  It’s also true that the 230 years that separate us from our founders are a vastly more complex and consequential 230 years, in terms of evolution of society, than perhaps any other such interval in history.  Our concerns today are far different than they were then, except for the underlying humanistic concerns that have been on the minds of humans at least for millennia.

Among areas of attention and concern, and of ongoing discussion and disagreement, are some of the specific concepts elaborated in our Constitution.  One of those points of debate, for a collection of reasons, is the “Second Amendment.”  Of the 27 Amendments to the US Constitution, the first 10 are unique in that they were proposed very quickly after the Constitution was adopted, and they were offered by some of the same people who produced the Constitution itself.  They are given the nickname “Bill of Rights,” and they are held, at least emotionally, in higher esteem than are the other Amendments.

The second of those first 10 Amendments has often received very special consideration, and perhaps this attention has become more prominent and even pressing in recent decades.  The Second Amendment reads “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

This is a short Amendment, being comprised of one sentence.  The sentence has two clauses.   It is written in late 18th Century style, and for a very formal purpose.  The same content of the same sentence might equally have been constructed as “Because the safety and security of a free State necessitates well-regulated militias, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”  Or “The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed, because of the necessity for well-regulated militias to secure a free State.”  Any of these says the same thing.  As the late US Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia reminded (we will return at length to the late Justice), the Constitution, and its Amendments, were intended for everyone.  They were composed in language any then American would have understood.  The only thing future Americans might lack would be a sense of the historical perspective, but this has been provided for us by the Federalist Papers, which demonstrate some of the considerations leading to the early decisions about positions taken and the language used to present them.  The Federalist Papers, too, were penned by the “founding fathers,” most of them by Alexander Hamilton.

In very recent times, the most salient reason for debate over the Second Amendment has been what many understand as an explosion of gun violence.  There seems a profusion of guns in society, and what is made to appear as an epidemic of their use, often for anti-social purposes.  Because of this, there is a population of Americans who react by concluding that if gun violence is increasingly common, then there should be the further conclusion that efforts at self-protection should be increased, leading, according to the logic of it, to the even greater prevalence of privately held guns.  Obviously, one way to see this is as a “vicious cycle,” and some people do see it that way.  Those who make this viciously cyclical argument fundamentally rely on what they understand the Second Amendment to guarantee as their support.

There is considerable debate here, and fierce disagreement, about guns in society, and the Second Amendment is treated as a kind of linchpin in the debate.  Gun advocates cite it as the Original basis upon which the importance of guns, and the right to keep and bear them, is based.  But the Second Amendment has nothing to do with guns.  It is about the safety and security of communities, and States, in late 18th Century America: in frontier times.  The first four words of the Amendment—“A well regulated militia”—make clear what was the central technique of concern to the founding fathers.  The next two words—“being necessary”—make further clear how important were the words that preceded them.  And necessary for what?: “the security of a free State.”  This is what the Second Amendment was about.  What comes later, in the Amendment’s second clause, was incidental and was simply an offer, considering the resources of the day, as to how to operationalize the concern in the first clause.  No one writing the US Constitution, or the Amendments, today would make such a citation.  Personally held firearms—pistols, rifles, or shotguns—would do nothing to provide for the security of a state or narrower locality, and no one would pretend to recommend the importance of their availability for such a purpose.  And providing for the security of the State is the purpose of the Second Amendment.  The Amendment states this theory in the clearest and cleanest possible terms, right from the outset.

History

For a frame of temporal reference, the Federalist Papers were written in the run-up to the Constitution.  Federalist Paper #29, for example, was written in 1788, and the Constitution was ratified in 1789.  The Second Amendment was proposed in 1789, and it was ratified in 1791.

The spirit behind the “right” preserved by the Second Amendment harkens directly and specifically to the historical efforts of some of the British monarchs to control their subjects, and to the tactic of disarming them first.  The colonists who formed and incorporated the United States were very much mindful of this kind of potential abusive power of governments, and they were on their guard to protect US citizens from such a development on the part of their own government in the future, as well as to empower them to protect themselves and their country from outside malevolent force.

Federalist Paper #29, written by Hamilton, gives a relatively clear sense both of the intention of militias, and of the difficult balancing act required of them.  The purpose of local militias was very distinctly two-fold.  They were intended both to prevent localities—the “States”—from being overpowered by the federal government, and they were intended as an important tool of that government in repelling outside (the United States) aggression.  The trick was to create a system of local militias that were available to the nation, for its unified military needs, while preventing the nation (federal power) from taking command of and dominion over the states and localities.  Again, the founding fathers had not for an instant stopped thinking about the potential for abuse by a nation or a government over its own citizens.  The local militias, then, were almost literally on the fence, as both an aid to the federal government and a check against it.

As the introductory clause of the Second Amendment makes clear, this—the necessity for militias-- was the over-riding consideration behind the protection of “the people” to “keep and bear arms.” 

It should be acknowledged at this point that we in the United States, being so comparatively close to our founders, and having the advantage of a relatively considerable collection of documents reflecting their thinking about various things, have been able to recognize not only a great and considerate seriousness on their part, but also a very distinct intelligence and wisdom in their approach.  Many of us go further, and we attach to that conclusion of intelligence and wisdom, and the unique perspective they had regarding their initiative, a kind of deep reverence for them.  It would not be unfair to say that many of us treat them the way religionists treat the authors (Author?) of their scriptures.

It would therefore be foolish, not to mention breathtakingly disrespectful, bordering on heretical, to disregard some of their most carefully constructed and agreed-upon conclusions.  The “conservatives” among us are so-called in large part because of their sometimes almost extreme devotion to what originally was.  It is this that they seem to want to conserve.

Our founders, the authors of our Constitution, and of the Bill of Rights, could very simply, for whatever might have been their reasons, said “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”  It’s a straightforward statement, and it communicates, as the late Justice Scalia reminds us, very clearly to anyone who can read English at even a rudimentary level.  We have no reason to assume that the founding fathers would have been embarrassed to have made such a “short and sweet” statement, and that they thus padded it with gratuitous chatter, so it would be longer or more majestic.  No, we have no choice at all but to understand that they chose the first clause, the condition, the explanation, the premise, carefully and for a reason.  And considering the weight and the moment of the occasion, we should assume their reason was a very good one.  They could have said no more than “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”  Or they could have said “the personal safety of citizens being necessary for security in society, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”  Or they could have said “the pleasure and nutritional value of hunting prey being necessary to the fulfillment and physical health of humans, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”  The founding fathers had choices.  They made one.  We should assume they knew what they were talking about, and that they had something in mind that was important to them, and which they concluded would be important to their heirs.  What they told us, after careful deliberation, was that it was a vital guarantee that “the people” have an uninfringed right to keep and bear arms, because it was “necessary” that there be local militias.  The founding fathers could not have made themselves clearer.

Hamilton explained this further in his Federalist Paper #29 discussion, exploring the necessity, and the complication, of local militias.  He was careful to remind his audience of the critical importance of the militias being under the direction of the States, not of the federal government, in important part because those militias might have to protect the local population from the federal government. 

As such, these local militias were a real fraternity.  They were truly of the locality.  Hamilton even discusses the complication of training them, noting that extensive and more or less frequent training exercises would interfere with their “day jobs,” as farmers, tradesmen, or professionals.  He settled on the idea that trainings twice a year would be sufficient.

But the trainings were to be according to the regimentation of the federal government, and Hamilton also foretold, in anticipation of the “well regulated” requirement, that “It requires no skill in the science of war to discern that uniformity in the organization and discipline of the militia would be attended with the most beneficial effects, whenever they were called into service for the public defense. It would enable them to discharge the duties of the camp and of the field with mutual intelligence and concert an advantage of peculiar moment in the operations of an army; and it would fit them much sooner to acquire the degree of proficiency in military functions which would be essential to their usefulness. This desirable uniformity can only be accomplished by confiding the regulation of the militia to the direction of the national authority. It is, therefore, with the most evident propriety, that the plan of the convention proposes to empower the Union to provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, RESERVING TO THE STATES RESPECTIVELY THE APPOINTMENT OF THE OFFICERS, AND THE AUTHORITY OF TRAINING THE MILITIA ACCORDING TO THE DISCIPLINE PRESCRIBED BY CONGRESS."  Hamilton points out how important it was that the militiamen be appropriately armed and regimented, and that the “Union” (the federal government) would determine what arms were most appropriate for the anticipated tasks, and would provide them.

He further understood and anticipated the necessity that militiamen be local “brothers,” who were beholden to each other, and devoted members of their own local communities.  These were people who knew each other, presumably did business together, likely worshipped together, and could implicitly and completely rely on each other.  It’s unlikely Hamilton invented the argument to which he responded, when he reassured that the local area, or the particular state, should have nothing to fear from the militias.  It’s likely that this concern was explicitly raised.  He responded as follows:  There is something so far-fetched and so extravagant in the idea of danger to liberty from the militia, that one is at a loss whether to treat it with gravity or with raillery; whether to consider it as a mere trial of skill, like the paradoxes of rhetoricians; as a disingenuous artifice to instil prejudices at any price; or as the serious offspring of political fanaticism. Where in the name of common-sense, are our fears to end if we may not trust our sons, our brothers, our neighbors, our fellow-citizens? What shadow of danger can there be from men who are daily mingling with the rest of their countrymen and who participate with them in the same feelings, sentiments, habits and interests? What reasonable cause of apprehension can be inferred from a power in the Union to prescribe regulations for the militia, and to command its services when necessary, while the particular States are to have the SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE APPOINTMENT OF THE OFFICERS? If it were possible seriously to indulge a jealousy of the militia upon any conceivable establishment under the federal government, the circumstance of the officers being in the appointment of the States ought at once to extinguish it. There can be no doubt that this circumstance will always secure to them a preponderating influence over the militia.”

 You’d have to be an idiot, Hamilton offered, to think you had anything to fear from these men.  These are your neighbors, your friends, your relatives.  They’re on your side.  They’re not rogues.

So Hamilton thought, and the others of our founding fathers agreed, that militias were important (they were the only stated reason for the Second Amendment guarantee), that they could be trusted by the federal government and by the state, and they were such sons of their localities that they were no threat to them, either.  He also reassured that they would be formally, if not intensively or frequently, trained by the federal government, and that their guns would be provided to them, so that their “Arms” would be consistent and reliable.  Also, although gun ownership was very commonplace during the colonial and revolutionary period, the importance (“necessity!”) of militias meant that there should be no obstacle to able-bodied men’s possession of suitable guns.

And that is what was behind the Second Amendment.  “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

A Well-Regulated Militia

There is no question, and the Second Amendment makes explicitly clear, that in the late 18th Century, at least in the frontier of America and its new United States, militias were considered important.  Alexander Hamilton has given us a reasonable description of the range of important meanings a militia had then.  It was very well known that nations had their own formal armies, and that local militias were distinct from those armies.  Soldiers were full time professionals, living their army lives, and local militiamen were part-timers; people who could be called upon in the need of emergency “military” help.  The local militias had their own officers and directors, and Hamilton very strongly reminded that local control was critically important.

If early Americans had trouble with Indians, they probably needed a militia.  If the country was at war on US soil, militias could be called upon to confront the foreign intruders.  But militias might also be needed if the federal government itself was the intruder, pressing federal ambitions on states or localities where such ambitions were unwelcome.  Militias had to be prepared to go both ways.  And the force that chose which way they would go was the state government.

It seems likely that there were to be two forces regulating the militias.  Primarily, the organizers of the militias were the states and localities.  Officers were locals.  Militiamen were certainly locals.  But the “Union,” too, had a regulating responsibility.  Hamilton’s proposal, so as not to interfere too much with the normal lives of the militiamen, was that the Union not require the attendance of local militiamen at larger training exercises more often than twice a year.  And as the late Justice Scalia recalled, militias were to be comprised of men, 18-45 years of age. 

The Union was also seen as responsible to provide arms for the militiamen.  The idea, clearly, was to be sure that everyone had good quality and serviceable weapons, and that trainers could make the same assumptions about capacity regarding anyone’s gun.

The fact is, the concept of local militias no longer has meaning in this country.  We have a federal armed force, and we have Reserves.  We have a National Guard.  There are some state militias.  Sometimes, in an emergency, local citizens help out, but not to attack anyone, and certainly not with a weapon.  Under conditions of local “combat,” like when unhappy citizens are rampaging in the Watts section of Los Angeles, or other similar conditions, we don’t rely on local armed private citizens.  We literally “call in the National Guard.”  If a private citizen, not “well regulated” by the Union or the locality, offered to get his or her gun and help out, police would vigorously decline the offer.  In reality, we should understand the concept of local militias as an anachronism.

But despite the seeming conclusion, we have had militias in this country.  Because let’s not forget the other critically and equally important necessity of militias: to protect the local jurisdictions and the people from the excesses and excessive imposition of the federal government.  It might not be hard to envision the need of a local militia for a purpose like that.

The largest and most organized of the “local” militias was the Confederate States of America.  Considerably smaller and slightly less organized and local was the Ku Klux Klan.  Other militias included the Weathermen, maybe the Black Panthers, Randy Weaver’s followers, and Cliven Bundy’s followers, to name some.  All of these resented and resisted what they saw as the unfair and oppressive impositions of the federal government on local matters.  Although they’re probably not militias per se, it could be argued that in some areas, those individuals who certainly have the vigorous encouragement of at least small groups to stop abortions, even by such means as killing the doctors and staff who perform them, could be carrying out a militia-related function.  It’s not hard to understand that in reality, the United States—the “Union”—has neither wanted nor tolerated militias, that it has invariably defeated them, and that in retrospect, few people today wish any of the militias had succeeded.

These days, gun “rights” advocates talk in terms of what would amount to militias of one.  They ask that their countrymen imagine that the presence of a gun, openly carried or concealed, will either have a deterrent effect on would-be criminals, or that these gun-carrying citizens will be able to use their power to interrupt a crime in progress.  There is little to suggest that this is other than a fantasy.  It is increasingly common to hear stories of individuals or very small groups of assailants who shoot crowds of people, killing some or many.  That any of these possible victims, or anyone else other than the assailant, turns out to have a gun, and uses it to interrupt the crime, is almost unheard-of.  In a recent episode, a man with an assault weapon entered a nightclub and started shooting.  An armed security guard who was an off-duty policeman was able to do nothing.  The event occurred in Florida, which has the most permissive, or nearly so, laws in the country with respect to bearing arms.  Apparently, no one in the nightclub, other than the security guard, was armed, although they were welcome to have been.  At some point, the nightclub put on its facebook page an alert as to what was happening.  It took three more hours until a police SWAT team arrived and eventually killed the perpetrator.  But during those three hours, no one who had access to the facebook page, or who was able to learn of the incident in any other way, came to the nightclub to intervene.  The perpetrator killed 49 people and sent more injured people to the hospital, over a span of more than three hours.  And in all this time, with public alerts and the perpetrator himself having called 911, no militia or even militia-of-one arose.  And this is in a state in which almost anyone can have a gun, and the state’s laws permit using it if the carrier feels in any way threatened.  If that episode didn’t raise some sort of “militia,” then there is clearly no militia to raise.

Hamilton’s other important point about militias is that they are “of us,” so to speak.  They are of the people, and of the community.  These are the people we know and can trust, and they’re the ones in whose names we consequently would not infringe a right to keep and bear arms.  If the purpose of ensuring a right to keep and bear arms is to sustain the value of local militias, which is what Hamilton and the framers of the Constitution and Bill of Rights very clearly and explicitly said, then we would certainly insist upon including upstanding citizens, and not loners, misfits, and people without real and vital ties within the “community.”  But in so many of the examples of murder and mass murder in this country, it is precisely people who come to be understood as loners, misfits, rogues, and people with “mental problems” who are the perpetrators.  These are exactly the people Alexander Hamilton and the framers and founders envisioned would not have a “Second Amendment” guarantee, because they are in no way the people who would be part of the brotherhood then called a militia.  Hamilton could not have been clearer about this, and the other founders voted in agreement with him.  “Second Amendment” advocates, however, are unable to recognize the complete incongruity of their advocacy, and their resistance to withholding the Second Amendment guarantee from people for whom it was never intended.

This concern raises further questions as to which people are not, in a sense, covered by the Second Amendment, and how they could be identified.  Most recently, in what is the largest mass murder episode in the history of this country, a lone gunman took a considerable arsenal of weapons to an upper floor of a hotel, and he shot almost 600 people, killing 58 of them.  No one who knew the man has thus far been able to describe anything peculiar or questionable about him.  In fact, it may be that the most questionable thing about him is his acquisition of such an arsenal, all apparently bought legally.  These were high powered and high discharging weapons, modified by the further legal acquisition of appliances to function as fully automatic weapons, which are illegal in most or all jurisdictions.  But because of an atmosphere of permissiveness about gun ownership in this country, no one gets to ask questions about why anyone would want such appliances, or so many guns, or any gun at all.  It turns out not to be easy to identify all of the people who would not qualify for the Second Amendment protection, and thus should not be allowed to acquire, keep, and bear arms.

It’s not hard to see what the problems are.  We don’t have ad hoc militias.  Those we have had in the past, even the recent past, have not been a credit to the country, or even a reasonable proportion of it, and they have not prevailed in protecting their constituents.  To the extent that we have anything approaching militias, they are not “well regulated,” except for the CSA.  We are not reassured about having protectors (that’s what militias are for) who are connected to us and care about our welfare, and we are not protected from having gun-toting citizens who are distinctly “anti-social.”  When we have had anything like militias in our time as a country, we have as a union declared them wrong, faulty, or illegal, and we have defeated them.

Strict interpreters of the Second Amendment, and the theory of militias, might say that that’s just the problem.  It is the purpose of militias not to be defeated, but to protect the local jurisdiction or the state from improper federal intrusion.  And this raises the question of what arms could and should be kept and borne by those who would man militias.  In this age of modern warfare, if citizens and localities are to be protected from the federal government and its military resources, the locals can only have a chance to succeed, as the Second Amendment implies, if they are equipped as the federal government is equipped.  Today, local militias, if they existed, which they don’t, should have military rifles, hand grenades, bazookas, flame-throwers, tanks, submarines, fighter jets, aircraft carriers, and surface-to-air missiles.   It’s possible they should have nuclear weapons.  We locals don’t stand a chance without weaponry like that.  But even the fiercest proponents of the “Second Amendment” don’t advocate for these kinds of weapons and ordnance, so it’s unclear what, exactly, is their goal.  They appear, by not fiercely advocating for expansion of “gun” rights to include whatever weaponry the federal government has at its disposal, to have conceded a completely overpowering advantage.  If they’re not going to act on behalf of the federal government or the locality, and they can’t reasonably challenge the federal government, then they have no mission or meaning, at least if their “defense” is the Second Amendment.

Modern Day Militias

Militias are an old concept in organized societies.  The word militia dates from the late 16th Century, and the phenomenon is presumably older than that.  Militia came to refer to an ad hoc collection of non-regular army soldiers, called up from the civilian population to supplement the regular army.  Militias were used in this way in Europe, and the use and implication was continued by the European colonists of the New World.

The run-up to the American revolutionary war, and the early parts of that war, included militias, and the attempted use of them was not without significant complications.  Militia members were only theoretically enthusiastic, and they turned out not to be reliable.  They were not at all disposed to the task of fighting a sustained war.  George Washington and other revolutionary generals complained greatly about the unreliability of the militias.

But early militias had also been of substantial temporary and initial use and value to the forming union, and there was reluctance to turning away from the idea of them.  Article 1, section 8, clause 15 of the Constitution preserved the idea of militias, and it specified that they were to be used “to execute the laws of the Union, suppress insurrections, and repel invasions.”  The Militia Act of 1792 specified that militias were to be composed of “each and every free able-bodied white male citizen of the respective states, resident herein,” from ages 18 through 44.  No one who was a local citizen, male, free, able-bodied, and white was exempt.

After the war, there was continued ambivalence about militias.  They were still considered unreliable, and George Washington and others favored at least extensive training.  One use for them in the early to mid 19th Century was to chase and capture run-away slaves.  But even for this purpose, militias were unruly and unreliable.

The Civil War was fought by an extreme number of Americans; many more than were in the formal armies of either side.  Militias were used extensively, and with the same complications and problems as had been noted before the war.

In modern times, since the Militia Act of 1903, we have two kinds of militias.  One kind, the National Guard and the Navy Militia, are national militias.  The other kind are state militias.  The state militias support the US National Guard during peace time, and assume the military duties of the individual states, if the US National Guard is called up externally during wartime.  A final designation is the “unorganized militia,” which is all able-bodied citizens of the states, from age 17 to 44, and who can be called up for service, if needed.

All of these actual and potential militia members act for the purposes of the state and the federal government, and they are under the auspices and control of the governments, local and federal.  Except for the unorganized militia, they are trained, uniformed, and equipped.  This includes whatever guns are considered by the armed forces to be appropriate and necessary for the tasks.

 

Tests of the Second Amendment

There have been remarkably few US Supreme Court cases that hinged on interpretations of the Second Amendment.  One of them was United States v Miller 307 US 174 (1939).  In 1934, following the “Valentine’s Day Massacre,” a federal law was passed requiring the registration of certain types of firearms, including, but not limited to, fully automatic weapons and short-barreled rifles and shotguns.  Miller, described as a “known bank robber,” and his co-defendant, owned just such weapons--“sawed-off shotguns,” perhaps de rigueur for bank robbers—and perhaps understandably, did not want to have to register them.  The District Court judge ruled in favor of Miller’s assertion—that having the otherwise unheard-of burden of registering his weapon was a violation of his Second Amendment right “to keep and bear Arms.”  The federal government appealed and prevailed, in part because of the argument that the sawed-off shotgun was not a military weapon, had no military or militia-related application, and was therefore not protected under the Second Amendment.  So we see that in 1939 at the US Supreme Court level, there was still full respect for the intention of the Second Amendment and for Alexander Hamilton’s reasoning.  What is somewhat interesting about the Miller case is that the District Court judge was described as actually having been in favor of the gun-control law Miller challenged, but also having realized that Miller, who had testified against confederates, would have to go into hiding and could not appear in DC to testify, thus surrendering his case.  It is not explained why the District Court judge did not simply rule against Miller in the first place, though, citing exactly the conclusions of the Supreme Court. 

After the Supreme Court made its decision, some people asserted that it had erred, in not apparently recognizing that in fact, at that time, the US armed forces did utilize the equivalent of sawed-off shotguns.  Had Miller been present to contest this matter before the Court (he was hiding from the other criminals he ratted out, and he was later found murdered, presumably by them, even though he retained possession of his sawed-off shotgun), perhaps he would have known this and introduced it.  But even if he had, and even if that argument would have allowed him to prevail in 1939, we don’t use sawed-off shotguns in the military any more.  Today, he would have to insist on having a much more extensive arsenal, and not having to register that, either.

Miller’s argument to the District Court, by the way, was an interesting and complicated one.  He complained that the requirement that he register is sawed-off shotgun was an infringement on his “Second Amendment right.”  The requirement technically imposed two infringements on him.  One would have been the cost of registering the gun, a cost that would not have been incurred, if he had wanted to keep and bear a gun that was perceived as less likely to be found in criminal hands.  If the proposed registration fee had been exorbitant, let’s say with respect to the cost of the gun, Miller might have had a good point.  The applicable law did not make it illegal to have a sawed-off shotgun or a machine gun.  It only required registration, presumably so the local government would know who had these weapons, and where the owners could be found.  The other infringement, which is related to the presumptions about the purpose of registration, is that people who were considered likely to use a gun to commit a crime (Miller was certainly considered a very good example of such a person) would then be more in the official public eye (at least the eye of law enforcement) than would people who wanted to own weapons considered less concerning, if they had to register the gun.  It reduces your effectiveness as a criminal, if you have to go public about having the tools to commit crimes, and let the government know where to find you.  But if we recall the suggestions and reassurances made by Hamilton in his relevant Federalist Paper, these are exactly the people whose “right” should not have been protected.  They are in no way the fellow citizens from whom the rest of us would have nothing to fear.

The other important “Second Amendment case” is District of Columbia v Heller 554 US 570 (2008).  The Firearms Control Regulations Act of 1975, a local DC law, required personally held firearms effectively to be disabled for emergency purposes in the home, to reduce the chance of misuse or careless or impulsive misadventure.  Heller argued that disabling his handgun would prevent its appropriate and intended use, too--for self-protection--and he resisted the requirement.  The DC sued him in the Supreme Court.  Heller prevailed, winning what was perceived by some as a purely partisan majority of Justices, including Anthony Kennedy, who is often considered a “swing vote.”  The stated grounds for Heller’s victory, written by Justice Scalia, were the most permissive possible interpretation, and citations, of the Second Amendment.  Scalia, writing for and joined by the rest of the majority, essentially disregarded the first half of the Second Amendment, focusing only the second clause, citing the uninfringed “right of the people to keep and bear Arms.”  What is interesting, among other things, is that Scalia, who opened his explanation recalling that the Constitution and the Bill of Rights were deliberately written so simply that any American could easily understand them, then undertook the most impossible semantic contortions to attempt to make his point.  Where Justice John Paul Stevens in his dissent describes Scalia’s approach as “strained,” it is perhaps more properly described as impossibly tortured.  And where Stevens offers to consider Scalia’s argument potentially “acceptable advocacy,” the word “acceptable” is beyond breathtakingly generous.  The word “abusive” would have been more consistent with Scalia’s approach.  Scalia also chided dissenting Justices and their arguments as seeming to require a “through the looking glass” suspension of reason, all the while seeming himself implicitly to caution his audience to “ignore the man behind the curtain.”

The late Justice Scalia would be considered, by anyone’s estimation, to have been an extreme right wing ideologue.  Many considered him highly intelligent, and he was often described as charming and in possession of a delightful sense of humor.  But as a matter of “business,” he was invariably about as far right as possible.  His discussion in Heller was a plain and patent demonstration of all of this: his ideology, intellectual prowess (at least insofar as his ability for rhetorical gymnastics was concerned), and his attempts to engage, often with a humorous, if equally often mocking, tone.

Scalia began his discussion by doing some major surgery on the actual Second Amendment.  First, he bisected it, cleanly severing its first clause from its second, so he was able to present them as having essentially nothing to do with each other.  He then did a cosmetic surgical adjustment, naming the first clause the “prefatory” one and the second clause the “operative” one.  That is to say, he demoted the first clause to a status in which it was easy, and efficient, simply to amputate it, and he promoted the second clause, so that he presented it as all the Second Amendment really meant to say.  He declared the first clause an irrelevant and inconsequential appendage, which he then excised and discarded.  As we considered earlier, it would have been inescapably easy for the founding fathers to have written the Amendment the way Scalia read it, if that’s what they had meant.  Although we can’t technically ask them what they think (Scalia was able to rest very comfortably on everyone’s inability to do that, and he cited almost everyone except the founding fathers), they’ve left us enough, in terms of the Amendment they proposed and ratified, and Hamilton’s careful and detailed discussion, that we probably don’t need to ask again. 

Scalia turned the Amendment around, proposing to make its dependent and contingent clause the “operative” one, and the independent premise clause only superfluous and “prefatory.”  It would be a normal reaction to suggest that Scalia made a mistake, except that his analysis was not honest, and was never intended to be so.  Scalia and the rest of the majority he represented set out only to affirm their own idiosyncratic view of the Second Amendment, and they were unconcerned with what shenanigans they had to commit to do it.  The most glaring example is Scalia’s dismissal of the primacy of militias, which were the only basis for the part of the Amendment he liked and wanted to support.  If you just like bread, you can order a BLT, and ask that the bacon, lettuce, and tomato be held.  It misses the whole point, but you wind up with what you wanted.

Interestingly, Scalia’s having unceremoniously disposed of the first clause of the Second Amendment, he later cited William Rawle, in order to make an unrelated point.  In that citation, he quotes Rawle as having referred to the first clause as “the first [principle],” and the second clause as “a corollary, from the first position.”  Everyone except Scalia seems to understand how to read a simple sentence.  Scalia was casting desperately about trying to construct some concept of what the Second Amendment meant, what he or anyone else he could find would be willing to claim it meant, because he didn’t want to acknowledge what it said.  “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”  It’s not complicated, and it’s not abstruse.  Scalia’s many other citations, from the Supreme Court and other US Courts, also replaced the clear language of the Second Amendment with whatever arguers wanted to impose instead.  In Scalia’s case, as in the cases of the other interpreters he cites, British tradition and laws, and various state and other laws and interpretations, are offered to suggest that the clear language of the Second Amendment did not mean what it clearly said.  None of these interpreters confronts the fact of what the Amendment said, and why its authors said what they are subsequently imagined not to have meant.  Had they meant what Scalia and the others want to say they meant, it would have been easy for them simply to have said it themselves.

And Scalia became almost single-mindedly preoccupied with the dissenting opinion presented by now retired Justice John Paul Stevens.  In reading Scalia’s opinion, which reflected the prevailing consensus, and had to do no more than articulate the considerations that were concluded by the majority to support Heller’s position, it is not really possible to see Scalia as other than obsessed with Stevens.  Whether the constant references to Stevens are ad hominem, or the attacks are simply incessant reactions to what Stevens wrote, Scalia is barely able to make his own point, because he cannot stop trying to contradict Stevens.  Any endeavor to read Scalia’s explication for what it simply is leads to almost constant annoyance regarding Scalia’s self-contradictions, ridiculous and futile attempts to avoid the obvious, and childish semantic manipulations.  It seems likely, assuming Scalia was as intelligent as people say he was, that he knew it, too, that it was as obvious to him as it is to his readers, and he was frankly embarrassed.  The best defense…  He had his ideologically-driven pre-conclusion, he carried it to victory, and it seems he had to have seen his product for what it was.

In their separate and contrasting arguments, both Scalia and Stevens generously cite statutes of various of the States of the new Union.  Scalia misrepresents these citations to suggest that the federal Second Amendment should be understood to have meant the same thing that the State statutes meant, and for the same reasons.  Stevens properly affirms both the right granted by some of the States, as well as their clearly stated reasoning, which had explicitly to do with personal protection and hunting.  He makes clear, however, as it should have been clear to Scalia, the majority for whom he wrote, and everyone else, that the federal Second Amendment was written differently from the State statutes.  It was about something entirely different, and the difference was wholly deliberate.  The framers of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights did not get confused or forgetful.  There were very active and sometimes acrimonious debates among representatives of the States, regarding what concepts should be included in the federal Constitution and the Bill of Rights.  If the latter had been no more than “me, too” documents, the authors would have composed them that way.  Their colleagues in the Continental Congress would have made sure they did.  Scalia’s argument would suggest that the framers of the Constitution were either lazy, stupid, or timid, and there doesn’t seem to be much of a real basis to conclude any of those possibilities.

Scalia also takes a special and seemingly gratuitous or otherwise unnecessary opportunity to address points made by Justice Stephen Breyer.  These points must have been made during verbal arguments, since Justice Breyer did not author the dissenting opinion.  Scalia was essentially just as dismissive of Breyer as he was of Stevens, but he was a bit less derisive and venomous.

The question of Heller’s Second Amendment rights might have been addressed in this hearing, but the majority did him and the country the disservice of providing him a reverse kangaroo victory.  He got his judgment, but the country was deprived of a fair hearing.  It should be recalled that not only is the Amendment very straightforward and frankly unambiguous, as is the relevant Federalist Paper, but an earlier Supreme Court opinion (Miller) was faithful to it.  Stare decisis might well have provided the only real path to a decision in Heller.  If a different Court wanted to consider the matter from another vantage point, which it had the authority to do, it squandered that opportunity by producing such a goofy caricature of supposed judicial reasoning.

It is inescapable, and almost unbearably intriguing, to note that Heller happened to be a licensed special police officer for the District of Columbia.  For the performance of his job, he carried a gun in federal office buildings.  Had the Court simply dealt with Heller’s issue as it related to the Second Amendment, it could have pointed out that Heller was in some ways just the kind of person who might be conscripted into, or participate in, a militia, except that in 2008, he was 67 years old, thus not of an age that would still have qualified him for service in a militia, according to the founding fathers.  He needed a gun for his day job, and he would have needed one for participation in a militia.  But perhaps the majority in Heller realized that Heller’s gun would not have met the criteria of capacity to confront an invading army, and certainly not the power of the US government’s war-making resources.  It would also not have interfered with Heller’s ability to do his job, or his ability to participate in a militia, if his gun was disabled in his home, but fully enabled as soon as he left his home.  So the majority, as represented by Scalia, chose a distorted, and not reality-based, affirmation of the Amendment.  In fact, the Court could not have found for Heller simply on the strength of the Second Amendment, because the Amendment does not support Heller.

In a non-decision matter, the same US Supreme Court that ruled in favor of Heller refused to hear a challenge to statutes from New York and Connecticut.  The statutes followed episodes of a particularly egregious crime committed with “semiautomatic assault weapons,” and each of the consequently drafted statutes banned such weapons.  The challenges—the ones the Court refused to hear—were brought by gun groups.  What is notable, if not remarkable, about the Court’s (in)action is that if the dedication was to the Second Amendment, the Court should have heard the challenge and ruled in favor of the challengers.  A modern-day militia, whether it had to confront foreign invasion or the oppression of the federal government, would need assault weapons, and much more.  The Court which included Scalia was thus being inconsistent, incoherent, and self-contradictory in refusing to hear this case.   This Court had much more reason to hear this case and rule in favor of the plaintiffs than it did to hear and uphold Heller, if the Court’s effort was to protect the common misconception of the Second Amendment.  That was certainly and explicitly this Court’s intention in Heller.

There is a long enough controversy in this country regarding the possession of firearms.  Never does a debate on the topic occur without mention of the “Second Amendment.”  The Amendment is seen by many, at least by all gun enthusiasts, as the definitive indicator of the right of citizens to keep and bear arms.  Part of the Amendment states so very clearly.  But as the Second Amendment and its permission to keep and bear these arms is invoked without fail in the debate, the clearly stated intention of the Amendment, and the implications of that clearly stated intention, are never mentioned.  It is simply a matter of dishonesty to omit them.

Conclusion

There might be a fair argument to be made in favor of possession of firearms by private individuals and civilians.  Some people like the security of having a gun.  Some are genuinely concerned about crime and personal and/or home safety.  Some get entertainment from shooting inanimate objects, like targets.  Some like to kill non-human animals, for whatever are their reasons.  But the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution has absolutely nothing to offer them as an argument as to why they should be allowed by their country and their countrymen to possess these objects.  Guns represent extreme danger.  That’s what they’re for.  They have little use but to hurt and kill.  If gun owners argue that they know how to use guns so that the guns are not harmful to them themselves, then they’re welcome to make that argument.  In that case, they have to be right, unlike the woman whose toddler shot and killed her in a Walmart two years ago, while she was shopping, and her toddler was playing with her purse, which contained the gun.  And they have to provide some guarantees that the guns with which they are so careful don’t get stolen (one of my friends many years ago had that story to tell), or they themselves don’t get overpowered by an assailant, so the guns become everyone’s problem, once they hit the street. 

In this country, we carefully regulate and restrict things that are a lot less dangerous, and have a lot more general application, than firearms.  It’s our way of being careful for ourselves and for those around us.  If there’s an argument as to why we should be far less careful about firearms, that argument will have to be based on something other than the Second Amendment.  It simply does not in any way say what its pseudo-adherents want to claim it means.

The Second Amendment has no modern meaning.  It has been meaningless for a very long time in this country.  It is an anachronism, and it needs to be repealed.  The most we can say for the Second Amendment is that it was a very honest mistake, or that it had meaning for a while, but that that meaning eventually, or soon enough, was lost.  The Second Amendment is about something, it’s about something very specific, and it was composed in a way to make very clear what that was.  Its aim long ago became irrelevant, as the Second Amendment is now irrelevant.

I wrote this paper some years ago, and tried to get it published, but no one would take it.  Either it's too long, or it's not good enough.


And, in a related vein, there's this: He spent a career helping others after shootings. This is what he thinks will stop them. (msn.com)


And a million other examples, including racism, sexism, capitalism run rampant, "health care" that's not at all good enough, and way, way too expensive, and loads of other problems.  Ask Colin Kaepernick how the "free speech" proposal works out.  And read Frederick Douglass' "what to the slave is the fourth of July?"


So, if you're planning to have a "Happy Fourth of July," consider what you're celebrating.