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Showing posts from August, 2024

Choosing Autocracy: What Do We Lose?

“What’s all this talk of threats to democracy about?  Why should I care?  Elections don’t mean anything.  Elected officials work for the wealthy, not me.  Racism against people like me is everywhere and our so-called democracy does nothing about it.  Irresponsible people ignore God, engage in perverse relationships and dispose of inconvenient unborn children as just so much garbage, undeterred by a government that hypocritically uses ‘In God We Trust’ as a motto.   I obey the law and work hard.  I want the government to worry less about democracy and more about inflation, the cost of living, the right to life, and America first.  We don’t need ineffective democracy.  Instead, we need a strong leader who fights for us for a change and who has the power to do that.” Many Americans feel this way.  We have all experienced enduring anxiety from living in a troubled nation since 2001.  The 9/11 attacks, two failed wars, economic upheaval in 2008-2009, climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, i

Service Over Self

      Speaking to the Brigade of Midshipmen of the United States Naval Academy on August 1, 1963, President John F. Kennedy stated: This country owes the greatest debt to our servicemen. In time of war, of course, there is a tremendous enthusiasm and outburst of popular feeling about those who fight and lead our wars, but it is sometimes different in peace. But I can assure the people of this country, from my own personal experience in the last 2 1/2 years, that more than anything, more than anything, the fact that this country is secure and at peace, the fact that dozens of countries allied with us are free and at peace, has been due to the military strength of the United States. And that strength has been directly due to the men who serve in our Armed Forces.   He goes on to say:   I can imagine a no more rewarding career. And any man who may be asked in this century what he did to make his life worthwhile, I think can respond with a good deal of pride and satisfaction: &

A Stolen Election

        Make no mistake, Donald Trump intends to steal the 2024 Presidential election.  He will do this by exploiting the vulnerabilities of a nation-wide electoral system that embodies fifty different, independent state systems; none of which is truly accountable to any other state or to the federal government.  The irony is that this complex system was designed to protect the republic from tyranny, not undermine it as is being done today.          The Constitution of the United States was designed to make a stronger federal union more palatable to states with smaller numbers of citizens and large numbers of slaves.   These states believed that their cultures and prosperity, which, in most cases, were bound up in the institution of slavery, would be overwhelmed by the states that were in the process of industrialization and had rapidly growing populations of free citizens.   If political power were left solely in the hands of a majority of the total national population, then the cul

Alliances II

        Alliances are important because they promote their members’ diplomatic and military effectiveness.  Diplomatic effectiveness is founded upon establishing a degree of mutual trust necessary to accomplish common goals on the international stage.  Military effectiveness is a measure of the application of military means and ways, to achieve the goal of peace, at least a peace that is beneficial to the victor.  A successful alliance promotes mutual security by solidifying diplomatic relationships and aggregating each member’s military effectiveness into a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts.  These permit the alliance to better use diplomatic and military power in the service of its strategic objectives.       The diplomatic value of alliances was most recently illustrated in the multi-state agreement to exchange NATO-nation citizens, including three Americans, with Russians held by NATO countries.   By far the most significant demonstration of trust among allies was G