WELCOME TO OPINIONS BASED ON FACTS (OBOF)
&
THINGS YOU
MAY HAVE MISSED (TYMHM)
YEAR THREE
|
Published
|
OVERVIEW
|
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 14
|
Dec 18, 2012
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 15
|
Jan. 02, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 16
|
Jan. 08, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 16
EXTRA
|
Jan. 11, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 17
|
Jan. 15, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 18
|
Jan. 22, 2013
|
Gbtre OBOF & TYMHM PART 19
|
Jan. 29, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 20
|
Feb. 05, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 21
|
Feb. 14, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 22
|
Feb. 20, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 23
|
Feb. 27, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 23 SPECIAL
|
Mar. 06, 2013
|
saOBOF & TYMHM PART 24
|
`
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 25
|
Mar. 12, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 25-EXTRA
|
Mar. 14, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 26
|
Mar. 19, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 27
|
Mar. 26, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 28
|
Apr. 02, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 29
|
Apr. 08, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 30
|
Apr. 17, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 31
|
Apr. 23, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 32
|
Apr. 30, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 33
|
May 07, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 34
|
May 18, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 35
|
May 21, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 36
|
May 30, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 37
|
June 05, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 38
|
June 11, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 39
|
June 18, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 40
|
June 25, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 41
|
July
02, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 42
|
July
09, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 43
|
July
16, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 44
|
July
23, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 45
|
July
30, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 46
|
Aug.
06, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 47
|
Aug.
14, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 48
|
Aug. 20, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 49
|
Aug. 27, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 50
|
Sept. 05, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 51
|
Sept. 11, 2013
|
OBOF & TYMHM PART 52
|
Sept. 18, 2013
|
I have no idea why the index is screwed up like this. Actually, rather unimportant anyway.
IN THIS ISSUE
1. Opening thought.
2. Obama - Putin & the idea of World Order.
3. U. S. shambling toward political -
financial crisis.
4. American Fascism - - accurate or misleading.
5. U. S. record on chemical weapons.
OPENING THOUGHT
I have been
trying to think about where we, as a country, are, where we have been, and
where, the heck, are we going. The later
is the biggest subject to get a handle on.
I guess I shouldn't be to upset with myself when I can't get much of a
handle on it, because, as is stated in the first article below, the
commentators, experts, and news analysts are all over the lot trying to see
where we really are and where we are going.
All the
articles in this posting address these problems in one way or another. The things that are on our country's plate
are humongous and why anyone would want to President is beyond me. I do think that Obama has more on his plate
than any President since Roosevelt .
What are all
the items he is going to be facing in next few weeks? First and foremost at this moment is Syria . The whole world is watching to see what he does,
which can telegraph to the rest of the world our strength or weakness. Then, right on top of us is the end of money
to operate on. Sept. 30 is the dead line
and the Republican House is doing nothing except to plan on leaving town. That is going to be a big crisis. Next, the debt ceiling is about to be
reached, so here we go again with that problem.
Obama has said, rather forcefully, that he will not negotiate with
Congress on the debt ceiling.
And of course,
there is immigration, more gun violence.
All of this is just scratching the surface. Oh yes, there is an upcoming election in 2014
and it is very important. If Obama
doesn't get a full Congress of Democratic control, his second term is over as
far as getting anything accomplished.
This is a very
critical time in the scheme of things and we as citizens and Democrats need to
do all possible to help in anyway possible.
Financially of course is a big item to help with the election, but just
as important is getting the word out about the accomplishments he has made even
without the help of the Republicans.
I think you
will find the following to be very interesting and some real food for
thought.
~~~
Power
and Morality: Obama, Putin and the ‘Crazy’ Idea of World Order.
NationofChange
/ Op-Ed
Published: Friday 13 September 2013
The headline in The New York Times reads: "As Obama Pauses Action, Putin Takes Center
Stage."
The article goes on to detail where things
stand in the current political-military-diplomatic crisis over Syria .
It's been a tense and fascinating few days, of course, and the "experts"
and news analysts are all over the lot.
For what it's worth, I was part of a three-person team
that led the first group of U.S.
senior military officers from the Air War College
on a get-acquainted trip to Moscow as the USSR
was collapsing in the fall of 1991. Here's my take on the larger meaning of the current
crisis:
First, President Obama's "red line" in Syria
has placed US-Russia relations at the center of international politics in a
manner reminiscent of the Cold War. Second,
it has raised the stature of the Kremlin and, in particular, Russia 's iron-fisted, steely eyed,
sometimes half-naked president Vladimir Putin on the world stage. Third, it has turned a spotlight on the vital
importance of a world order (aka the "international community") in
the Global Age.
Self-styled political realists (myself included) often
dismissed talks of a world order as wishful thinking or pie-in-the-sky
idealism. But homo sapiens as a species
would likely not have survived the last half century without some sort of order
in a shrinking world bristling with weapons, constantly bombarded with the
propaganda of hate and the daily bearing witness to evidence of human depravity
on TV and the Internet.
For better or worse, the UN is the only vehicle available
to the international community, and what critics say is true: the UN is least
effective precisely when and where it's most needed—in the kind of crises
that threaten to plunge the world into a major war. For example, Syria .
The five Permanent Members of the UN Security Council—the
U.S., United Kingdom, France, Russia and China—have a veto and can thus
paralyze UN action against an aggressor—or alleged transgressor like Bashar
al-Assad, at any time. In Washington 's
version of reality, that's exactly what Russia
and China
are doing now, protecting Assad by preventing the UN from authorizing the use
of force against his regime.
Of course, there's
no denying that Russia
does, in fact, side with the Syrian government and that Putin wants to stave
off an attack against Assad. It
certainly looks as if Putin is succeeding and that we are on the defensive,
back-pedaling indecisively. And in the middle of a muddle that couldn't get any
messier (for us, at least), Putin has the gall to make a major bid for the moral high ground—in The New York Times, of all
places!
First reaction: What's the world coming to? Second reaction: Maybe
we ought to take what Czar Vladimir the Shirtless says seriously…
Putin: The United Nations’ founders
understood that decisions affecting war and peace should happen only by
consensus, and with America ’s
consent the veto by Security Council permanent members was enshrined in the
United Nations Charter. The profound wisdom of this has underpinned the
stability of international relations for decades.
Comment: It's often been
said that if the UN didn't exist it would have to be invented, but the people
who have said it are not ensconced in the Kremlin. It's remarkable that the ruler of this former
totalitarian state would see fit to go on record praising the UN founders for
anything, much less endorsing the idea that "decisions affecting war and
peace should happen only by consensus…" Putin not only expressed a certain reverence
for the UN Charter but also did it in the NY
Times, not Pravda or
Izvestia ("profound
wisdom…underpinned the stability of international relations for decades")
. Oh, there's more…
Putin: We need to use the United
Nations Security Council and believe that preserving law and order in today’s
complex and turbulent world is one of the few ways to keep international
relations from sliding into chaos. The
law is still the law, and we must follow it whether we like it or not. Under current international law, force is
permitted only in self-defense or by the decision of the Security Council. Anything else is unacceptable under the United
Nations Charter and would constitute an act of aggression.
Comment: Imagine that! Vladimir Putin lecturing an American president
on the need to respect the rule of law: "Under current international law,
force is permitted only in self-defense or by the decision of the Security
Council."
First reaction: That's outrageous coming from a guy who arrested
and jailed his political opponents, ordered Soviet troops to crush the uprising
in Chechnya
and invaded Georgia, all without getting permission from the UN. Second reaction: Why not take him
seriously? Why not hold Putin's feet to
the fire? Absolutely no use of force without UN authorization. Sounds
good, but…
Big problem: Moscow might not play fair.
Bigger problem: Washington has no clue how to do foreign policy without the threat
of unilateral military force.
Putin: It is alarming that military
intervention in internal conflicts in foreign countries has become commonplace
for the United States .
Is it in America ’s long-term interest? I doubt it. Millions around the world
increasingly see America
not as a model of democracy but as relying solely on brute force, cobbling
coalitions together under the slogan “you’re either with us or against us.
Comment: Putin has a point. We HAVE made a habit of using
military intervention as substitute for a nuanced foreign policy and patient
diplomacy. It's not at all clear that it's in America 's long-term interest to
depend so heavily on military force or to spend so lavishly on weapons. And whether we like it or not, he's
undoubtedly right about America 's
image in the world—we're admired as a model of democracy anywhere in the world
now.
We ARE feared and many Americans, Democrats and
Republicans alike, will continue to take great comfort in this fact, but there
is a downside—not least the costs. And
there are dangers. As the current crisis
illustrates, the U.S.
is more isolated and alone than at any time since World War II. Even the
British declined to follow Washington 's
lead.
Putin: And I would rather disagree with
a case [President Obama] made on American exceptionalism, stating that the United States ’ policy is “what makes America
different. It’s what makes us
exceptional.” It is extremely dangerous
to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional, whatever the motivation. There are big countries and small countries,
rich and poor… We are all different, but when we ask for the Lord’s blessings,
we must not forget that God created us equal.
Comment: There's no doubt that we tend to think God is on our side, but
forget about that; it's nothing short of remarkable to hear a
post-October Revolution Kremlin ruler talk about "the Lord's
blessings" and invoke God in a message to the American people. Come to think of it, that the "World
Socialist System" and the Soviet Union
itself would collapse and just disappear from the face of the earth is also
remarkable—in fact, it was unthinkable until it happened.
No, I'm not about to light a torch for World Government,
or suggest that universal peace is possible. Nonetheless, the idea of a world
order IS essential to survival on a small planet when anarchy anywhere (today: Syria and Egypt ;
yesterday, Libya and Mali ; tomorrow, Greece
and Spain ?)
poses a clear and present danger to peace everywhere. And given President Obama's evident confusion
in the face of tumultuous events he apparently can't understand much less
control, a strong case can be made for taking Putin at his word. And calling his bluff. Here's why:
a) all the Russians have to trade is oil and gas (a
finite resource)
b) the U.S.
GDP is officially put at around $15 trillion in 2012 and Russia 's is
estimated at about $2.5-2.6 trillion
c) Russia
has powerful (and historically aggressive) neighbors on both flanks and
unstable borders in three directions (only the north is a partial exception)
d) Russia 's
economy has yet to diversify to the point where (except for oil and natural
gas) it can be taken seriously as a major player in global markets like Germany , Japan ,
and China (as well as the US )
e) the potential for internal ethnic and religious
conflict in Russia is ever-present and that fact has been a major part of the
political calculations of every Russian ruler in the Kremlin since the
beginning of time (it would hardly be an exaggeration to say that it's an
obsession, part of the Russian DNA)
f) Russia 's
demographic profile (140-145 million) is small in comparison to others in the
neighborhood (China and India dwarf Russia ; at over 500 million, so
does the EU)
Fear-mongers typically take a blinkered view of the
world. For them, the ultimate nightmare is not that we have a formidable
enemy threatening our survival, but that we don't.
What would happen if a majority of Americans stopped
believing that the only thing standing between us and oblivion is a bottomless
money-pit called the Pentagon and a bloated military establishment that
outspends all real, or imagined adversaries by trillions of dollars every year.
What if we actually started to act like
we believe what we say about morality—that it's real and can move mountains?
The world as we know it might come to an end, right? Come to think of it, that might not be such a
bad thing…
ABOUT Thomas Magstadt
Tom Magstadt earned his
Ph.D. at The Johns
Hopkins University
School of International
Studies. He is the author of "An
Empire If You Can Keep It: Power and Principle
in American Foreign Policy," "Understanding Politics: Ideas,
Institutions and Issues," and "Nations and Governments: Comparative
Politics in Regional Perspective." He
was a regular contributor to the Prague Post in
1998-99 and has published widely in newspapers, magazines and journals in the United States .
He was a Fulbright Scholar in the Czech Republic
in the mid-1990s and a visiting professor at the Air War College in 1990-92. He has taught at
several universities, chaired two political science departments, and also did a
stint as an intelligence analyst at the CIA. He is a member of the board of the
International Relations Council of Kansas
City . Now
working mainly as a free-lance writer, he lives in Westwood Hills , Kansas .
~~~
U.S. Shambling Toward Autumn
Political-Financial Crisis
As best I can tell,
everyone's given up on following congressional politics, but the country appears
to be shambling in the direction of a new politically-induced budgetary and
financial crisis this fall.
The proximate issue is
that even though Republicans have a majority in the House of Representatives,
it's not a huge majority and
they've been consistently unable to come up with a strategy for funding the
government's discretionary functions that can pass the House. All Republicans are insisting on freezing
sequestration-levels of spending into place on the domestic side while easing
it on the military side. Democrats won't
vote for that. But the most strident Republicans won't vote for it either. They
want to insist on repealing or defunding or otherwise gutting Obamacare as a
permission for allowing the government to keep operating past September 30. So they keep not passing anything and taking
more days off even as the expiration of government funding keeps getting closer
and closer.
Most likely I think
this doesn't lead to a government shutdown. The optimal strategy for John
Boehner to ride the tiger of his caucus' nuttiness is to delay, delay, delay
and then at the last minute announce that there isn't enough time left for a
prolonged negotiation. Then he passes a
short-term extension of the current Continuing Resolution that relies on
Democratic votes to pass and promises his caucus that the real concessions will
be won when federal borrowing authority expires.
That, too, will
probably end with Republican caving and then set the table for another appropriations fight. But even under that relatively rosy scenario
where nothing shuts down and nobody defaults on any payments we're talking
about a protracted months-long period of political
Matthew Yglesias is Slate's business and economics
correspondent. Before joining the magazine he worked for ThinkProgress, the Atlantic , TPM Media, and the American Prospect. His first
book, Heads in the Sand,
was published by Wiley in 2008. His second, The Rent Is Too Damn High, was
published by Simon & Schuster in March 2012.
‘American Fascism:’
Accurate or
Misleading?
William Astore
NationofChange
/ Op-Ed
Published: Monday 16 September 2013
No comments:
Post a Comment