Category Archives: Miscellaneous Ramblings

True or False: Entertaining Write up found while roaming the Net.

The storming of the Capitol: America’s Reichstag fire?

The media are already spinning a narrative around the events in Washington DC. One that bears no resemblance to reality, does not hold up to any kind of scrutiny and will have massive, far-reaching consequences for all of us.

By Kit Knightly | Off-Guardian.org

They’re calling it “one of the darkest days in our nations history”, a day that will “live in infamy”. It will likely be memed into a shorthand date – 1/6/21, like 9/11 and 7/7. It will be the day “American democracy was attacked and prevailed”, the day the nation nearly fell to “fascists”.

It will become just one more grand sweeping illusion upon which the teetering structures of US Imperial power are built.

The story we are being told goes as follows:

Yesterday, as congress was preparing to pass the vote endorsing Joe Biden’s election victory, thousands of violent right-wing thugs stormed the Capitol building.

Acting according to Trump’s wishes, and with his endorsement, these domestic terrorists overran the police barricades in an attempt to overthrow the senate and preserve Trump’s presidency.

Fortunately the police were able to secure the situation, drive the violent rioters out and the democratic process was able to continue.

Not one single part of this story is true:

  • There was no “storming”
  • There was no “incitement”
  • There was no “violence”
  • And the riot effectively ended Trump’s presidency.

Let’s tackle them one at a time.

1. There was no “storming”. Rather videos show police opening barriers to let the “rioters” in.

In the entrance hall, the “violent thugs” respected the velvet ropes and kept in orderly lines, took a few selfies with the copsposed for the press and – when the main events were over – they were quietly allowed to leave.

Compare and contrast the police’s treatment of those people inside the capitol, with their later treatment of protesters breaking curfew on the streets.

2. There was no “incitement”. All of Trump’s social media posts on the subject instructed people to “go home” “with peace and love”.

Is that inciting violence?

Twitter and facebook took the totally unprecedented step of completely removing those posts, and blocked him posting any further. They claimed to be preventing further violence, but it looks more like they concealed Trump’s denunciations of violence.

3. There was no violence. Indeed whether or not Trump “incited” anything is moot, because there was no violence. Disregard the reports of chemical weapons, pipe bombs or IEDs – none of which ever appeared. None of the “rioters” are as yet shown to have hurt anyone.

The only person reportedly killed or injured was a protester allegedly shot by the police. Compare and contrast the attitude of the media to this “violence”, vs the “fiery but mostly peaceful” protests all last summer.

4. The riot ended Trump’s presidency. Although the Congressional session was widely described in the press as the “confirmation vote” for Joe Biden’s election victory, it was actually rather more than that.

VP Mike Pence was chairing a joint-session which intended to allow full speeches from those opposing the election and maintaining there had been fraud.

The violence brought this session to an end prematurely, totally undermined Trump’s legal and procedural challenges and killed any chance he had of overturning the electoral college vote. No sooner was the “attack” over, than many of the Republicans in both houses who were planning to oppose Biden’s election backed-down.

More than that, it seems Trump’s “incitement” of the rioters means he may well be removed from office by enforcement of the 25th amendment, which would end not just this term, but make it illegal for him to run again in the future.

Facebook and Twitter have outright banned him from posting. The press and television pundits are openly accusing him of treason and sedition.

So, who has really benefitted from the “chaos at the Capitol”? Because it surely isn’t Donald Trump.

One should always be wary of any event which “accidentally” achieves the exact opposite of its stated or apparent intent.

* * *

In the title, I refer to this as America’s Reichstag fire, and that’s not just emotive language, the parallels are pretty clear: A staged attack on a political building, deliberately misattributed to political enemies and used to consolidate the power of a freshly installed leader.

Even the media coverage is similar, the Nazi government and their tools in the press talked about it in the same exact terms as the US establishment is describing this farcical “coup attempt”. Aiming to terrify people into thinking they were on the verge of an all-out civil war.

Read this quote, and ask yourself if it couldn’t be lifted almost completely from the front page of the Washington Post or New York Times today:

The burning of the Reichstag was intended to be the signal for a bloody uprising and civil war. Large-scale pillaging in Berlin was planned for as early as four o’clock in the morning on Tuesday. It has been determined that starting today throughout Germany acts of terrorism were to begin against prominent individuals, against private property, against the lives and safety of the peaceful population, and general civil war was to be unleashed…

Within 24 hours of the Reichstag burning, the German President had passed the Reichstag Fire Decree, which declared a state of emergency that totally reversed every civil right the Weimar Republic had guaranteed its citizens:

Articles 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124 and 153 of the Constitution of the German Reich are suspended until further notice. It is therefore permissible to restrict the rights of personal freedom [habeas corpus], freedom of (opinion) expression, including the freedom of the press, the freedom to organize and assemble, the privacy of postal, telegraphic and telephonic communications.

While these freedoms have already been severely undermined in the US by the Patriot Act and its successors, those few rights left to American citizens will definitely be under threat once Trump is finally removed and Biden (or Harris) is put in his place.

Although there is not yet any talk of legislation, it’s certainly true there are whispers of purges and other measures to “protect the constitution”.

Some prominent voices are calling for all lawmakers backing Trump to be expelled from office. The Washington Post claimed “seditious Republicans must be held accountable”.

The anti-social media campaign has begun again in earnest too, with Parler and GAB already being blamed for allowing “violent language” on their platforms.

As Twitter and Facebook limit discussion, alternative platforms will be shutdown. Enforcing a corporate monopoly that cooperates with the state…the very definition of fascism.

All this in the name of protecting the nation from “neo-nazi thugs” or “white supremacists” or other phantom threats. In the name of “protecting the constitution”, they are tearing it to pieces. In the name of “preventing a coup”, they are carrying one out in front of our eyes.

It puts in mind Huey Long’s famous quote when asked if fascism would ever come to America:

Sure, we’ll have Fascism in this country and we’ll call it anti-Fascism.”

 “The storming of the Capitol”: America’s Reichstag fire? – [your]NEWS

Been saying this for years!

Super Bowl Sunday from a Marine Corps Colonel in Afghanistan:

“So with all the kindness I can muster, I give this one piece of advice to the next pop star who is asked to sing the national anthem at a sporting event:

Save the vocal gymnastics and the physical gyrations for your concerts. Just sing this song the way you were taught to sing it in kindergarten – straight up, no styling “Sing it with the constant awareness that there are soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines watching you from bases and outposts all over the world.

Don’t make them cringe with your self-centered ego gratification. Sing it as if you are standing before a row of 96-year-old WWII vets wearing their Purple Hearts, Silver Stars and flag pins on their cardigans and you want them to be proud of you for honoring them and the country they love – not because you want them to think you are a superstar musician.

They could see that from your costume, makeup and your entourage. Sing ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ with the courtesy and humility that tells the audience that it is about America, not you. And please not everything needs to be spunked up! We’re getting a little weary of that. Francis Scott Key does not need any help.

” Semper Fi

Today’s Walk About – From the Air and on the Ground!

 

Paw Paw Lake (beginning to ice up) and Watervliet Airport (40C) below. Great place to visit in the summer but the grass strip is not so great when they have had heavy rain.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dowagiac, Mi: Round Lake is beginning to ice up – you can see the shallow sand bar in the ice line. Its part of the Sister Lakes chain of Lakes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marina Island between Saint Joseph and Benton Harbor. All the boats are tucked in for their winter nap.

 

 

 

 

Saint Joseph river bank on the Benton Harbor side. Waters cold but not hard yet! Surface visibility was about 3 feet today.

 

Boat house along the river by the Whirlpool Campus. Not floating now but the surrounding land is still quite soupy!

 

 

From the Lions Park area breakwater pilings. Not a great place to swim today and way past being just a tad chilly!

 

 

 

 

 

Rip rap installed along the shore as you approach the Lion’s Beach Park.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tonight’s sunset at Lions Park. No clouds to reflect the rays. Still pretty though!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Response to Red Flag Law Opinion (on Facebook)

The Red Flag laws are more complicated than usually discussed in the press. Depending upon the state, anyone from a family member, intimate partner, ex, house or apartment mates, or even the police can file a complaint.

An example is a Colorado’s proposed law, where anyone can make a phone call to the police. They don’t even have to be living in the state. There is no hearing. All the judge has before them is the statement of concern. Little certainty is needed. Some states allow initial confiscations on just a “reasonable suspicion,” which is little more than a guess or a hunch. Others, at least, mandate “probable cause” that the individual is dangerous. These standards allow a judge to take away the person’s right to self-defense when there is significantly less than 50 percent chance of something bad happening.

Currently, only one state’s law mentions mental illness. Individuals can identify anyone who they think are dangerous do so on an “I will know it when I see it” standard. In practice, a person’s criminal history, gender and age help decide who is a danger. But we already have laws that say felons, even non-violent ones, can’t own guns. And we know how well that is working.

Even misdemeanor violations can cost you your right to own a firearm. Gun control advocates want to take firearms away from people arrested but not convicted of crimes. Their unwillingness to make that explicit indicates that they are afraid that courts would strike down such laws.

It has always been possible to take away someone’s firearms, but in all 50 states it required testimony by a mental health expert before a judge. Hearings could be conducted very quickly in urgent cases, But gun control advocates argue that it’s important to not even alert the person that his guns may be taken away. Hence, the 5 a.m. No-Knock police raids.

With that in mind, what would you do as an ordinary citizen in response to someone breaking down your door in the early morning not having a clue to who or why they are breaking into your house. Can you see the danger to both parties?

When people pose a real & clear danger to themselves or others, they should be confined to a mental health facility. Simply denying them the right to legally have or buy a firearm isn’t a serious remedy. If you think that you are any more likely to stop criminals from getting guns than illegal drugs, good luck. The same drug dealers sell both and are a major source of guns.

Past experiences have shown there are no benefits from these laws. Looking at data from 1970 through 2017, Red Flag laws appear to have had no significant effect on murder, suicide, the number of people killed in mass public shootings, robbery, aggravated assault or burglary. There is some evidence that rape rates rise. These laws do not save lives and in fact can result in loss of lives.

Benton Harbor Walkabout

As often as I drive thru downtown Benton Harbor going to the Benton Harbor Regional airport I realized that it had been a long time since I had actually walked around the downtown area. So today, being a great blue sky day, meaning lots of sunshine, I decided to walk down town and photograph the streets and buildings. By the time the walkabout was completed I had taken several hundred shots.

Since I am not that good of a photographer it takes me at least 100 shots to get a “good” one, least ways that’s the way it seems. I sorted the pictures into folders labeled Arts District, looking down 5th St., looking down Main St., Round About #1 and Round About #2, and last Territorial St & road.

Between 1970 and 1985 thousands of jobs were lost in the Benton Harbor area due to closing or downsizing of local manufacturing plants. Retail activity downtown evaporated. The Liberty Theater and the Vincent Hotel were closed in 1975. The Fidelity Building, onetime business hub of the city, was closed in 1976. The Orchards Mall, situated on Pipestone Road near I-94, opened in 1979 and delivered a final blow to downtown retail business. Various efforts to revitalize the downtown area are still in progress.

With the exception of the area around the newer Whirlpool Campus and the “Arts” district the majority of down town Benton Harbor is rather deserted and run down.  The new Whirlpool Campus on Riverview Drive opened in April of 2012 and was designed to consolidate 15 Whirlpool properties into three centralized campuses. Those being the Administrative Center, Technology Center, and Riverview Campus.

The new three buildings of the Riverview Campus cost 70 millions dollars, contains over 245, 000 sq/ ft on about 12 acres and can house approximately 1,100 employees. Of those 1,100 employees it has been said that a good number of them actually work from home remotely.

Here are a few pictures of main street coming in from St.

A-Round-about-Riverview-Dr-Main-Facing-the-bridge-too-see-Whirlpool-Campus-

Looking-left-down-Riverview-Drive

Looking-right-down-N-Riverview-Dr.

Now-looking-down-Main-St.

Driving thru Saint Joseph

Today, as I was driving thru St. Joseph from the Benton Harbor Airport, I decided to see what the lake looked like from the bluffs.  Just driving by the bluffs, seeing the tents, the colors, and the crowds of people were enough to peak my interest  to stop and look around a bit.

If you live around St. Joseph have not been doing much on the weekends or you are wondering what there is to do take a look at https://www.stjoetoday.com/.

You just might be surprised at the variety of events available and many at little or no cost.  And more than likely you will find something that peaks your interest.

St. Joseph Michigan Farmers Market on Lake Bluff Park

Lake Bluff Park – St. Joseph, MI