Here's what I think...

Monday, September 4, 2017

Governing by Executive Order is a Bad Idea

Donald Trump's presidency has sharply highlighted the treacherous  instability resulting from attempting to legislate by Executive Order. There were good reasons for designating Congress to write the laws and the Executive to enforce them.

Social order relies on stability. Justice cannot exist without stable, thoughtfully legislated, codified law, applied equally to all members of a society. Just note how difficult ending Obamacare is compared to DACA. The first was legislated. DACA was created by Executive Order.

Under a system that changes its executive at least every eight years, Executive Orders can quickly become problematic. Close to a million young people trusted that Obama's DACA gave them a secure path to their future. Every single one of them is about to learn whether that trust was misplaced. If it was, the price will be frighteningly steep for those individuals; it will be catastrophically destructive - in economic, social, political and global terms - to the United States.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Abolishing Medicaid - First on the List

The goal is not health care for the American citizens.

The goal is the abolishment of "entitlements" - Medicaid, Medicare and (ultimately) Social Security.

They are coming to take you away, old friend(s). They are coming to take you away.

Monday, June 19, 2017

McConnell-Ryan Coup d'Etat

They are playing with a stacked deck and they are loving it. The House. The Senate. The White House. All in their camp. Revolutionizing our Democracy has become a slam dunk. Despite some troubling indications all is not well in the White House, Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan are riding the waves of Republican control to the limit. The substantial Democratic minority has been sidelined by unprecedented partisanship. Republican discipline of its members has formed an impenetrable front. No prisoners will be taken. No action against the White House will be pursued - no matter how grievous the offenses against our Democracy. The current power structure offers too many rich rewards to be sacrificed for ephemeral concepts like patriotism or honor.

My heart hurts.

Sunday, June 11, 2017

What Good is a Professional Civil Service?

Why arbitrary firing of civil servants is ill-advised:

I suspect many of the businessmen who think government should be run like a business lack a basic understanding of what government is; why we even have a civil service; how proud the tradition of professional civil servants is.

Professional civil servants - teachers, policemen, firemen, bureaucrats, scientists, regulators of communications, nuclear energy, air and water quality, on the job safety, roads and bridges, the environment... .

We love to disparage the lazy, obstructive government workers. But do any of us really want to see the FBI, CIA, military, our local fire departments, police departments, sanitation workers disappear? I don't think so.

I doubt anyone would like to return to the spoils system of political cronyism that existed before a professional civil service was established to PROTECT the public good against capricious dismissal of trained professionals and their replacement with political stooges.

No system designed by human beings is perfect. A system based on entrance examination scores and merit generally is much preferred to one based upon the venality of self-interested political hacks.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

IMO Philip E. Redmond (1840-1863)

Was he a good man or a bad man? A hero or a coward? I do not know. I only know he existed because he cropped up in several places while I was researching my great, great-grandmother, Bridget Hill Redmond. Bridget had five children listed in the Massachusetts State Census for 1855. Philip was the oldest. He was listed as 16 with the occupation of mariner.

By the 1860 census, his mother was listed as a widow with the occupation of washerwoman and 20-year old Philip was now a Currier in the leather industry, a position his father Edward had held before his death. The next mention of Philip to come up in my research was of his death in September, 1863. He died of Typhoid Fever in Washington, DC. The death notice stated he was married, but did not give the name of his spouse. I do not know if he had any children.

Further digging revealed that Philip entered the Union Army into the 9th Regiment, Massachusetts Infantry as a 2nd Lieutenant and left as a 1st Lieutenant. I do not have dates.

The above was the first concrete evidence I ever saw that a member of my family fought in the Civil War. I believe the manner of death indicates he also died a casualty of that war. In the event that other family descendants are as unaware of Philip as I was, I have chosen to memorialize him this Memorial Day.

Rest in Peace Philip Redmond. Your great, great niece.

Notes:
1. His siblings were Mary E. and Catharine (twins born 1842); John (1847); Joanna (my great-grandmother, 1850-1892).
2. His mother Bridget evidently remarried. Her last name on his death notice is given as Culliton.
3. Both his parents were born in Ireland. All their children were born in the United States.

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Hot Time on Old Mother Earth Tonight

Our planet is warming to uncomfortable levels. It is probably caused, at least in substantial part, by human activity. It threatens the planet's lifeforms, including our own.

Is the trend reversible? Unknown. Can it be slowed? Possibly. Is there any way to insure the survival of our species? Unknown.

Ignoring or denying the problem will not make the problem go away. Another century or two before facing this crisis would have been useful. We do not have them.

The choice is stark. The options are straightforward. Pour every ounce of creativity, knowledge, technology, intelligence into trying to solve this challenge in the desperate hope we can reverse this trend or at least slow it until we have the means to survive it. Or let it run its merciless, unstoppable course.

The laws of physics do not ask for permission. The laws of science are. Whether or not we believe in them is not relevant.

Perhaps the evolutionary assignment of humankind always was to prepare and transport our beautiful planet to the next geological age.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Right Hand / Left Hand

I'd rather be a libtard or a snowflake than a teeny weinie afraid of my own shadow.

A cabinet jammed with a con man's bagmen is a dismal prospect.