Monday, January 23, 2017

Trump Brings the House Down, at the CIA: Wild Applause

Did you watch Trump at the CIA, standing in front of that wall with the names  and stars of dead CIA agents? 


I would have served, but I had these heel spurs.

Did you wonder who was doing all that raucous and enthusiastic cheering, especially when he said the "Media" consists of the world's most dishonest people?
 You could not see more than the tops of a few heads but you could hear the laughing and clapping.


No faces. Just laughing heads. Very Spooky.

And I thought: Wow!
I knew dozens of CIA employees during my years in Washington, and I never knew any who would allow themselves that sort of display.
It's true, I did not know any of the CIA "ops" people--all those I knew were analysts, who tended to be bookish, very analytical, open minded, sophisticated, worldly types who tended to smile faint, economic smiles, to betray moments of private amusement, and you often didn't know what you had said to amuse them.
But belly laughing, raucous types, no. These were more Smiley types than James Bond types. But even Bond would never carry on like that. They sounded like a bunch of drunken Russians who just discovered and washed down the agency's secret stash of Stolichnaya. 
Some FBI agents might be like that. 
FBI agents were more like cops, when they weren't bookish accountant nerd types. 
But CIA?
Our fearless leader.

That scene simply baffled me.
I've read on the internet that crowd standing in front of the podium were a group of Trump's own White House entourage.
That would make sense, although it seemed like a rather large entourage. I suppose a dozen men, amplified with microphones, could sound that thunderous.
This is the first mystery about Mr. Trump's first day I'd like to see resolved. 
Why doesn't the media ask about who those guys were who were stomping and cheering? 
Are there not any crowd shots?
Might not be, of this particular crowd. 
Even the stars on the wall do not always have names attached. 
The Spooks want to remain unseen, unidentified.
But, really, who were those guys?
If they were not CIA employees, but were, in fact Trump stooges and plants, is that not a story? Is this not a bit of manufactured news, Trump style?

Trying to Understand America

We live in a marvelous age, the information age.


Grief and History, Washington, D.C.


So, trying to understand the Trump election, I googled a map of the country which showed a map of the country with counties which "flipped" from Obama to Trump in 2016.




Counties which flipped from Obama to Trump

Then, having some names in hand, I went to each county and entered: Newspapers for ...whatever county.
Counties in Red, for Trump
Scanning through these, I found stories about the annual chili cook off, auto wrecks, bizarre local crimes--one, in Wisconsin, involved a beheading--auto accidents involving police officers or fire department officials, all sorts of local color, but almost no stories about Washington, D.C. and the national news. Trump's name appeared nowhere.

I will have to refine my technique apparently.
But, if I push this more and find there really is little national news in these papers, it might help understood how "low information" voters put Trump into office.
They really do not have information, from newspapers at least.  Where are they getting the opinions which drive decisions in the voting booths?
Does anyone know?
Here are the counties I found:
1/ Fayette County, Iowa
2/ Eaton, Michigan
3/ Shiawassee, Michigan
4/ Juneau, Wisconsin
5/ Itasca, Minnesota
6/ Luzerne, Pennslyvania
7/ Bladen, North Carolina


This is a first step, but I do think we need to think about how to find and learn about our countrymen.
So far, looking at the on line papers from these areas, it is not an encouraging sight.
I understand, my scan was superficial. Had I done the same for the Portsmouth (New Hampshire) Herald, I would have missed the "Daily Police Log" the best thing about that paper. But even the Herald has stories about national politics.


If you are feeling particulary masochistic, go google any of the names on this list , then, as an exercise choose one:  key in "Newspapers for Juneau, Wisconsin" for example, and read what people there are reading.


Looking at the images of Americans in these places is startling. They do not look like New York City people. They do not look like people you see in commercials on TV. They look, well, you go look. Tell me what you see. These are the people who listen to Donald Trump speak, and they are smiling.


It may be few people actually read local newspapers any more. It may be this is the wrong place to look for opinion formation.
Maybe I should simply turn on Fox News.

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Voices from the March

Joan Baez was nowhere to be seen. If Bob Dylan was there, he wasn't visible.
But Elizabeth Warren was in Boston and Gloria Steinem was in Washington.
What is clear is that neither Donald Trump nor his liberal opposition thinks the election settled things.
Mitch McConnell famously said, after Barack Obama's election the main thing Republicans had to do was to be sure President Obama was not successful, and was limited to one term; after 2 years, McConnell and the Tea Party now nominally the Republican Party succeeded.

Yesterday Senator Elizabeth Warren, 68,  rattled off a list of goals she hoped the aroused crowd will take action to support: raising the minimum wage, supporting the unions which built the middle class, opposing building "that stupid wall," opposing a Supreme Court which overturns Roe v Wade and effectively outlaws abortion, and so on. I love Ms. Warren, but she is not a young 68. 

I wondered, as President Trump remarked: where were all these people on November eighth?

Notably diminished, if not absent, were non white faces in the crowd. To be sure, there were some, but did crowds turn out in inner city Philadelphia, Detroit, Milwaukee, Cleveland and Pittsburgh?  Had those people turned out on November 8, we would not have President Trump today.

Gloria Steinem, now 83, referred repeatedly to her long life. She is old now and her voice is an old lady's voice. But she has not lost a single neuron; all synapses were firing and many a ringing phrase sang out. She mentioned a message she got from her "sisters in Berlin" saying, "We, here especially,  have found walls do not work and they do not last." She referred to Bernie Sanders (now 75 years old) as a man who would carry forth the torch.

She noted, as bad as facing Trump as President, a man who has narcissistic features, who harbors delusions of grandeur, who is detached from reality, we have seen worse times in our country and got past them.  She noted she had seen the murders of Martin Luther King, John Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, and she said the loss of these men cleared the way for Richard Nixon and extension of the war in Vietnam, the bombing of Cambodia, but in reaction to that progressives rose up and progress was made. She reminded us how we feared Barack Obama would be assassinated, and how grateful we ought to be he was not. 

Disturbingly, President Obama is the youngest leader among liberal Democrats, and he is no longer in the game. Michelle Obama may yet emerge as an energetic, young voice, but are we really ready to risk another former first lady running? Personally, I would be. Of all the speakers during the last election and since, she struck me as the best, clearest and most resounding voice. 

Time will tell. We have less than two years until the election of 2018. 

Trump Care Naming Contest

Repeal and Replace has such a nice ring to it.
Republicans have always been masters of the phrase: So the estate tax (which sounds like a good thing, sticking it to those wealthy enough to have "estates") became the vile "death tax."  End of life panels became "death panels." Union busting laws became "Right to Work" laws. Oh, they are good, those Republicans.


But how to describe the plans for health insurance with which the Republicans propose to replace Obamacare?

Of course, we do not have clear details, so it's tough, but among the broad outlines of some which have been floated resurrect the old idea of "health savings accounts." Here the citizen can set aside dollars which get subtracted from his or her taxes in an account to pay for whatever health expenses might arise. So, if you set aside say, $14,000, it's there for you, untaxed, to spend on unexpected health expenses, like, say that $500,000 heart surgery, or that $1,000,000 kidney transplant, or that cancer therapy, including all the radiation therapy, chemotherapy and multiple hospital admissions.
Oh, the health savings account, well, that ought to take care of the housekeeping and bed linens for your heart surgery hospitalization. 
We might call this "Bare, naked insurance," or "Phantom Care," or "Evaporating Care" or "Trumped Care."
Perhaps the New Yorker ought to run a naming contest, like its cartoon caption contest.

Paul Ryan has spoken vaguely of coupons with which citizens could purchase insurance from the HUGE, YUGE, GIGANTIC array of choices which private insurance companies will rush to offer, now that the dreaded Obamacare ogre is gone.  
Problem is, before Obamacare, before the government started providing subsidies for premiums, there were very few health insurance policies and few companies offering anything at all beyond Catastrophic insurance--which paid up if you needed that heart surgery, but not if you got diabetes or hypertension or if you broke a hip and needed multiple visits to the doctor.
Of course, the problem the Republicans are having with health insurance is that old problem of any insurance policy, the problem every insurance company faces: The one customer you want to avoid is the customer who actually needs you. So every commercial insurance company of any sort will do anything to eject from its roles the person who might demand a payment. Auto insurance, home owner's insurance--the first claim you make will be your last. Your rates will sky rocket, as if the company is determined to make back in your premium payments all the money it just shelled out. 
Health insurance companies, of course, are no different. They want only young, healthy people who have never been sick, do not plan to be sick and, if at all possible, will never be sick. The ideal health insurance company customer is 18 years old, has never been ill, stays healthy his entire life, pays premiums for 60 years and then is hit by a truck crossing the street at age 78 and never makes a claim. For that customer, every company competes.
But if that 18 year old has diabetes or a congenital heart disease, or asthma or is a smoker, he need not apply. 
If the Marines want the few, the proud, the Marines, then what these health insurance companies want is the few, the proud, the dropped dead before they could be hospitalized.
Maybe that's the tag line: Drop Dead Care. 
Or maybe Don't Call Us Care.

Stay tuned--once we have the details on the table, the names may suggest themselves. 


Personally, right now, I'm leaning toward "Donald Don't Care." 

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Million Women Mush or ...Movement?

Listening to coverage of the Million Women March on the radio and watching it on TV, I was discouraged.

Reporters were interviewing marchers and they were saying all sorts of things: they were afraid their daughters would be molested because the President seems to enjoy molesting women; they were worried teachers would be fired; they were angry because Trump is intolerant of Muslims; they were angry for inchoate reasons; they were fearful it would become a crime to be LGBT; they were fearful Trump would bring on a new age of racial division; they were angry because, well just because.

Alicia Keys came on stage and sang, "This Girl's on Fire."

They carried signs saying, "Make America kind again." 

Then Scarlett Johansson spoke and she was more focused: She was worried about government funding being denied to Planned Parenthood and Roe v Wade being reversed. That, at least was a coherent set of issues.

Of course, it's not likely Trump has thought much about this. His first response to the North Carolina bathroom law was a person should be able to use any bathroom he or she chooses. Then somebody talked to him and he reversed that. 

When he was asked whether women who had abortions should be punished, he said sure. Then he thought about it and wasn't so sure.

Michael Moore got up and told the crowd to call their Congressmen and Senators daily and to call their state representatives as well. That was practical advice, although all he was really saying was "Resist." It remains to be seen what needs to be resisted.

I am looking for the speeches by Gloria Steinem and Elizabeth Warren. They are usually coherent. 

Of course, during the 60's these marches were more focused: Stop the war in Vietnam. Pass the Civil Rights Voting Act.  End legal, institutionalized racial discrimination.

But there were always the hangers on who had their own agendas. The problem watching today's marchers is they did not seem to have coalesced around any clear set of demands. They struck me as a crowd throwing a tantrum, not really sure why. 

They are simply offended by Trump for being...well Trump. But Trump is simply Joe Sixpack. Trump is a Zelig, a man who reflects those around him without having a central essence.

A friend told me it wouldn't matter to her if Trump wound up naming a liberal to the Supreme Court, getting a government sponsored infrastructure spending law through, employing all those out of work Rust Belt voters, shut down the coal mines and shifted government spending to windmills and solar, signed a law to make state colleges tuition free, passed meaningful Wall Street reform and strengthened Glass-Steagall, signed a Medicare for All law into effect. She'd still hate and him and vote against him because of his imitation of a disabled journalist.

Just look at this video. I ask you: Who did Mr. Trump damage more, the man he was trying to humiliate or himself?  Could he have been more exposed had his toupee blown off and his own pants fallen down?






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIotH8dKMwg

What struck me about this Day of Protest was how counterproductive this is.

If I were in control of all this, I would say here is the list of our complaints, our Declaration of Resistance:
1/ If you attempt to make Medicare voucher care, we will fight you.
2/ If you attempt to "privatize" Social Security, we will fight you.
3/ If you appoint a Supreme Court Justice who is committed to reversing Roe v Wade and making abortion a federal offense, we will fight.
4/ If you cut taxes for the rich, we will fight you.
5/ If you attempt to round up every undocumented immigrant, we will shelter them and we will fight you.
6/ If you attempt to place a ban on Muslims visiting the country, we will fight.
7/ If you repeal Obamacare and replace it with some lame excuse for health insurance, voucher care, whatever, we'll fight that, too.

Then there is the current issues of defunding Planned Parenthood. 
I'm not exactly sure how the government funds Planned Parenthood. Is there a direct payment or simply payments for services rendered? 
If it's the former, well, as far as I'm concerned, you can keep your money. We can raise funding without your bloody Tea Party money. If the government refuses to pay for services, well then there's the courts. 
I think Planned Parenthood is too important to be left in the hands of politicians like Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan. Take it into the hands of people who have an ongoing commitment to its mission. I'm not sure, but I wonder if Planned Parenthood wouldn't be better off without government funding.

We'll only know with time whether what we see today is the beginning of something or the dying out with a whimper.




Friday, January 20, 2017

Joyful Thought On the Inauguration of Donald Trump

Feeling down today? 
Feel embarrassed for your country?
Think the nation is sliding down a chute toward oblivion?
Here's something to cheer you up.
Try this mind game.
Below are photos of some Americans.
How many of these men can you identify?
How many of these men mattered?



So who are these guys? Presidents of the United States, one and all.

 Did any of these guys really matter? If I gave you a list of their names, could you match any to their photos?

 Can you name a single act or law or principle for which any of these men can be remembered?
And the big question, from all this, should be, how much does the President really matter?

Obama mattered to people because he was a symbol. 

For some people, he was, like Kennedy, urbane enough, cerebral enough to allow them to say, "See this is what our country is capable of."

But are you any better because Tom Brady, a great quarterback,  plays for your team?

Where does this sense of identification come from? 

He's just a President, this Donald. He doesn't really matter.
 I'll give you a hint, one of these guys is Warren Harding, who was, by his own admission completely unqualified to be President and a dissolute failure in office.
 One of these guys is Zachary Taylor, who was a decent general. I bet you can guess who he is. But can you say anything about anything that actually happened during his Presidency? 

Here are some names: James Polk, Millard Fillmore. These are names you wouldn't want to visit upon any relative or descendant of yours.

 Then there are the names which sound very "American" which is to say, white bread: Andrew Johnson, Rutherford B. Hayes, William Harrison.

Tell me what you know about any of them. 

Will you even be able to remember, 10 years from now who the guy who replaced Barack Obama was? 

Trump Semi Haiku Contest

Here's a game for you.
Try to speak like President Trump.
Use all the best words.
Keep your sentences simple: no ifs and's or but's.
Be able to say each sentence in one breath.
Make people feel really good about themselves.

It's not as easy as it sounds.

Here's a sample. It's sort of like Haiku.


You will all be winners.
There will be lots of winning.
You will not be ignored.
The bad stuff stops now.
The good stuff starts now.
China is bad.
America good.
You  good.
I  good.
Muslims are maybe bad.
Radical Islam  bad.
We will destroy Radical Islam.
Mexicans bad.
Wall good.
Trump good.
Trump make you feel good. (Especially if you are a woman.)
Happy.
Happy.
Good.
Burp.