Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

July 14, 2004

NGOs

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 8:09 am

Last night I watched an interesting show on Discovery Times Channel about starvation in Ethiopia. I was interested to see it having spent a couple of weeks there some years ago.

I was impressed with the Ethiopian people. They were all very friendly (except for the security officials of the Marxist government of the time), and seemed to be a positive group. Once Mengitsu was ousted and the Soviets disappeared, I tried to follow the growth there as best I could on the internet. They seemed to be going in the right direction, with the education system geared toward agricultural research and computer system development–the old A&M mix of Ag and Engineering.

People in Ethiopia are still starving, but the show never really got into why. The story followed a man as he lived in a rural village for a month, living the life of the locals. The area looks like great farm land, yet everyone lived on wild cabbage, grass, an occasional chicken, and a 12.5kg ration of grain from the government each month. And the grain wasn’t always forthcoming.

Flies and bedbugs thrived, which highlighted a major problem in undeveloped nations: sanitation.

President Kennedy established the Peace Corps for just this kind of thing. I support the concept, and only wish it could do more. But there are significant cultural changes which must accompany any such efforts, and those changes take not years, but generations to take root. The old saying, “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime,” is valid, but the man cannot simply be taught then left on his own when he has been accustomed to receiving all his fish from the government his entire life. He will revert to depending on others unless fishing for his own food becomes a habit.

All the non-governmental agencies in the world are no help if they simply show up in a village, build a communal outhouse, dig a well, and leave. During the Mengitsu regime, Ethiopians depended on the government for everything, which is why starvation was rampant. Famine is the most effective and enduring weapon of mass destruction ever wielded. Every despot in history has used it, and they are using it today. When people spend generations learning to starve, and live only on food provided, they need generations to break the habit.

One man said he couldn’t plant because he didn’t have a draft animal to pull a plow. I immediately thought about one garden I planted for myself. I used a shovel to turn all the soil before planting. My garden was only about 1000 square feet, and I turned it all in a day. 1000 square feet won’t provide food for an entire year, but a week of shovel work will, especially in an environment like Ethiopia which has a year-round growing season.

Sanitation prevents disease. Building outhouses is easy. Getting people to use them requires cultural change. The man highlighted in the show got tired of being a meal for bedbugs, and went to the local stream to bathe. Locals watched in amazement as he used soap to lather up. The locals all showed off their scabs and sores for the camera, but wouldn’t take part in using a bar of soap. Cultural change required.

Digging a well, clear of sanitation issues, requires only a few days of effort. But the well must be maintained. If left on their own, people who aren’t used to getting water from a well will revert to whatever they did before if it breaks down. They must be involved in the construction to know what needs to be done to maintain it, and they must be given time to acclimate themselves to its use by habit. A one-year mission by a Peace Corps volunteer doesn’t create the changes needed. The effort must be continual to allow a new generation to grow up in the new environment and see it as the norm.

Then we have to hope a new regime doesn’t come in and turn a breadbasket into a basket case. Zimbabwe.

July 13, 2004

My Education Rant

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Education — Bunker @ 3:34 pm

Education is the foundation for success in any endeavor. If you can’t read or write, if you can’t speak clearly and coherently, and if you cannot do basic math, the odds of success in life are slim.

Bill Lear didn’t have a full formal education. Neither did Tom Edison. That does not mean they were not educated. They took things into their own hands. They learned what they needed to learn early, and were life-long learners. And they were both the rare type that has the audacity and patience to chase down an idea. Most of us don’t have that. Yet every year students graduate from high school thinking they do.

I was the Commandant at a private military school for a few years. What that means is I was the disciplinarian. At that school we had students from seventh through twelfth grade and a junior college. Many of the high school students were kids that the public schools couldn’t, or wouldn’t, deal with. I had some brought to me in shackles by police or sheriff’s department personnel. We actually managed to save some of them. Those that were on drugs continued to try and get drugs. The most popular was Ritalin. It had become the weapon of choice in the public schools for unruly children.

The junior college students were mostly football and basketball players. They had spent their high school careers doing nothing but preparing for the NFL and NBA. Not life. They were good athletes, but couldn’t score high enough (17 composite) on the ACT to get into a Division I college to play. So they were banished to junior college for two years, after which they would be eligible. If they went no further, life offered them little except dead-end jobs. I told them I wanted every one of them to make it, and expected free tickets to every game. But, just in case, let

Summer Camp

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 11:20 am

We have the television on at work during lunch. Just now, MSNBC had a report about “militant” training camps in Palestinian areas. Training camps for children.

One scene showed kids throwing stones at a retreating tank. My thoughts were that that is a clever ploy for propaganda purposes. One of two things will happen. 1) The tank will shoot and kill the kids. 2) The tank will continue to retreat without shooting. Either way, the value of this footage in the Arab world is enormous. The first would allow them to show Israelis killing children. The second would allow them to show the Zionists in full retreat in the face of stiff resistance by Palestinian children.

My question is: What does the UN have to say about children being trained to fight? The silence is deafening.

July 12, 2004

Ken Lay

Filed under: Media — Bunker @ 2:28 pm

For those out there still convinced Enron was a Bush scandal, take a quick look at this from the Right-Wing Boston Herald.

DNC Convention Coverage

Filed under: Politics — Bunker @ 11:44 am

Wow! PressThink says there will be 15,000 people covering the Convention in Boston.

How many attendees do they expect?

Maybe it’s at the 5,000 or 6,000 mark–the number of delegates for the Democrats.

Politics II

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 6:09 am

I am a Constitutional Scholar. I have read and studied the Constitution and its history all my life. I am not a scholar of Constitutional Law. By that I mean I have not studied all the rulings on laws as they relate to the Constitution. At one time I considered going back to school to get a joint law degree and PhD in History, with my dissertation topic being how the Supreme Court ruled in violation of the Constitution over the years.

The main reason I wanted to write about the relationship between society, government, and politics is that they have now become so intertwined. And it was never the intent of the Founding Fathers for things to become so. The people who came to the American Colonies were trying to escape environments where the government, both monarch and governmental elites, contolled everything in society. In particular, Europe’s society operated in a very stratified caste system where you could not move from one to another. On occasion, someone might move up a single level, but there was no way a son of a pauper could become a landed baron.

The colonists were a pretty diverse group in their day, and settled in a colony of like-minded folk. Each of our thirteen original states reflected this social, religious, or cultural focus. There were, to be sure, some gentry in the mix, but they came seeking to expand their fortunes, or attempt to move up the European social ladder by some service to the King. Many were simply men who, by birth, could not inherit any family property. In the colonies, they could acquire land and wealth. None of these things were possible in the Old World. There society was controlled by the existing political structure. Even today, Europe lives by those rules, although they are far less pernicious.

Our Founding Fathers were not trying to establish a government to lift up others less fortunate than themselves. They wanted a government which would not interfere with someone’s determination to make something of himself. They were, themselves, the less fortunate of Europe, and wanted freedom from class and governmental interference in their affairs.

Government, as they viewed it, was to be a structure for protecting the population from outside forces, and for regulating interaction between the states as a group and outside agencies or nations. Period. Section 8 of the Constitution outlines precisely what powers Congress was to have:

The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

To borrow money on the credit of the United States;

To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States;

To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States;

To establish Post Offices and Post Roads;

To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court;

To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offenses against the Law of Nations;

To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;

To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;

To provide and maintain a Navy;

To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;

To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;

To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings; And

To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.

That is the limit of Congress’s powers.

Politics and government are not the same, although most of us view the terms as almost interchangeable. Politics is first cousin to diplomacy. Both involve deceit, negotiation, coercion, and compromise. None of those things have any place in good government. Government must follow principles, and not whims nor desires for power. For the United States, those principles are our Constitution. Politicians do not want to be hindered by principles, and neither do their most vocal constituents. And that is where the drive for governmental control of society comes from.

European governments still control society. They have Ministers of Culture, and other such agencies which determine what is good for the people. They have class structures, and the political class hand down their positions as inheritance as they have for centuries. Our government was established to be exactly the opposite, and serve the people rather than the other way around.

Yet we have a problem with our Constitution. It doesn’t allow the government to do some things we want it to do. Today’s answer to that little problem is to ignore it in favor of helping others. An ignoble idea. Because once the government gets what it wants, it wants more. And that is precisely what our Constitution was written for–to prohibit the government from doing more than it should. Every time the Constitution is violated under the guise of helping someone, somebody else is hurt. Because the role of government is to not help anyone without helping everyone. That is what “the general welfare” means.

I am still mulling my ideas on this issue. There is no easy answer. Libertarians claim to be strict Constitutionalists, yet want open borders. Democrats push for more socialization in direct conflict with the Constitution, and use the court system to advantage in getting the interpretation they desire (“interpret” does not appear in the Constitution). Republicans come closest in philosophy with the tenets of the Constitution, but bend as well to please certain constituencies.

Any or all of these political groups could have the Constitution read the way they want with a simple tool provided for, and used twenty-seven times: Amendment. But an Amendment requires approval by society, not just politicians. The hurdle seems too large because society doesn’t bend as readily as politics. The Equal Rights Amendment failed because it was unnecessary. The concepts already existed in the Constitution. Society understood that, even though politicians and advocacy groups didn’t. Its process, however, highlighted issues society needed to deal with, and we did. Although I’m sure not to the total satisfaction of everyone.

An Amendment to define marriage isn’t needed either. Marriage is not a governmental issue. Well, government has actually made it a governmental issue, but that is beyond the Federal Constitution’s authority. Anything not covered in our Constitution, in the governmental sense, falls back to the States. If a State wishes to restrict marriage in some way, I would have to say they have the authority. That assumes their State Constitution allows such interference. Unfortunately, because government has involved itself in a social and cultural issue, it must get more involved to attenuate the problems it caused. It cannot eliminate them.

I have already written about this issue several times here, here, and here. But I’ve done a little more research since then. I am not against gay marriage. I am not against civil unions. Check the links.

In a pamphlet available online, Pastor Matt Trewhella writes…

George Washington was married without a marriage license. So, how did we come to this place in America where marriage licenses are issued?

Historically, all the states in America had laws outlawing the marriage of blacks and whites. In the mid-1800

July 11, 2004

Politics

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 4:46 pm

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

I shut down for a couple of days to reevaluate where this blog is going. I have to say I didn’t like the direction it was taking. During the last few days I haven’t watched or read any news except that which came into my view by accident. I liked it.

I hate politics. What I mean by that is that I cannot stand the process. It has been even worse than before during the last three years. Some people in this country can’t grasp that Bush was not selected by the Supreme Court, or are unwilling to admit he was properly elected for their own reasons. Things like, “He didn’t win the popular vote,” are common themes. They ignore the fact that Clinton didn’t get more than 50% in either of his elections, and received a lower percentage than did Bush in 2000. Yet he won by electoral vote, and his presidency was no less legitimate than Bush’s. Something else is at issue.

I think it is important for us all to be involved in society and culture. Those things do interest me. The problem with that is many in this country confuse the government’s role. It has none.

I put the Preamble to the Constitution at the top of this post for a reason. It is something I was required to memorize in elementary school. I don’t know if that kind of thing is still done. It appears to me that it isn’t. The Constitution was written in simple language and most arguments in its writing had something to do with wording. The writers and other delegates wanted it to be easily understood.

Our government was unique in the world when these words were written. For the first time, a government was established which did not control society. Rather, society controlled the government. The First Amendment was emphatic:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

The Federal Government has stuck its sticky fingers in many places where they don’t belong, with terrible results. And still, many in this country want it even more involved. Government is not a social organization. Our Constitution clearly outlines the responsibilities and authority of the three branches, and they do not include many of the issues being debated during this electoral season. In the next few days I will address two which are at the top of many lists. One, Gay Marriage, is not in the purview of government in any way. In fact, marriage itself is not a government issue. The second, Education, has only gone downhill with federal involvement. An argument can be made that it falls within the “promote the general welfare” mandate, yet promotion and control are not the same thing.

What I’m saying is that almost everything being discussed as reasons for voting one way or another this year has no reason to even be on the federal table. And this is not a Democrat/Republican issue. It is a government vs. Society/Culture issue, and a decision we all need to make whether we want to continue being the only country where society runs the government, or become like Europe where the government controls society. I want this election to be done with, and I want to see the Federal Government doing only what the Constitution says it can do. Yes, there are some things not covered by the Constitution which may need federal involvement, but society must agree this is the case by passing an amendment.

In the interim, check out our Constitution on line, and other documents archived at The Federalist website. One quick hint: The word “interpret” doesn’t appear in the Constitution.

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