Category: Opinion

A Diverse Family

In the recent past, it really did not matter if a person was a Republican, or a Democrat, or which party controlled the Congress or who was president.  They were all Americans first, joined by one thing, a belief in that wrinkled old Constitution, respect for the laws and faith in the agencies of government.  They could argue about politics because if you presented someone with facts that you could document they would listen and in some cases, learn.

Not one member of our family would tolerate allowing foreign powers to interfere with our elections.  There was occasionally an attempt by other nations to sway public opinion but that almost always backfired.  The idea that any nation would even try was repugnant to us all.  There was sometimes a feeling that one agency or another might be exceeding its powers, but they all trusted that could be rectified through the processes and the system of checks and balances that had served us so well for so long.  We believed that if by some chance an agency such as the CIA, ATF, DIA or FBI erred, that error would be corrected reasonably fast because the agency was trusted and trustworthy.

And there had never been a party that nominated a serial adulterer, a sexual predictor, a person with multiple bankruptcies, or who had run a scam such as a phony University and was known for a habit of skipping out on his debts to contractors.  Anyone who was discovered to have done any of those things was quickly dropped from consideration.

And no president ever staffed his administration with individuals so aligned with a foreign power.  Not just one bad choice or two but almost twenty who have been charged, or have pleaded guilty to the crimes they are accused of.

Today this nation is in danger of collapsing as a democracy.  Some see it and are upset. Some seem to be capable of closing their eyes and ears to the perfidy, the mendacity and the distortion of the truth.  We are in the hands of the most corrupt administration that ever held office.  I am sure that most of our family would recognize treason for what it is. There seems to be no way today to reach those who are blind to the danger and it is infuriating to those who recognizing evil do not understand how apparently decent people can actively endorse it.

© 2018, Charlie Jensen, All Rights Reserved

A Civil Crisis

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New York Times Front Page 8/10/1974

When Nixon resigned and left for California, the country was tired of the years of charges and recriminations and Jerry Ford rightly decided to just end it with those convicted where they deserved to be.  As for Nixon, he felt that being forced to step down and leave both the White House and politics was a significant punishment. So to avoid further national trauma he issued the famous: “Our long national nightmare is over.” pardon.  Subsequently, there was an investigation and some laws were changed to prevent a reoccurrence.  This will not be possible for Trump because his collusion with the Russians is a form of treason.  His continued violation of the emoluments clause demands restitution.  He and his family’s long history of criminal dealings will require a trial and a series of economic penalties as well as the possible incarceration of some of the principles.

Trump’s violation of international laws and abrogation of signed treaties and agreements will have to be examined to determine what if any harm was done and to whom?  Since Trump’s supporters seem to have an equally poor opinion of laws and they appear to have a fondness for violence, they will have to be neutralized, probably disarmed and possibly re-educated.  Whether that can be accomplished without some kind of civil struggle is at this time unknown.  But for some time a portion of our citizenry will have to be considered traits and in rebellion against the lawfully constituted government.  Some laws will need changing to ascertain that the executive power can never be placed in the hands of someone so unprepared and mentally unstable as Donald Trump.

The right to vote in elections and the opportunity to serve in Congress may be subject to a system of tighter qualifications and education.  The intrusion of certain religious cults into political affairs will need to be prevented in some way.  And that old bugaboo control of firearms addressed.  I suspect that military grade weapons will have to be collected and some means of limiting handguns and hunting weapons to responsible parties.  One way is by passing laws requiring weapons be insured just as motor vehicles and motorcycles are presently done with insurance companies setting premiums and standards since we are as a nation adverse to the federal governments overseeing such a program.  Violations would follow a similar path that motor vehicles violations do with repeated violators being sentenced to actual jail time.  This can be done within the boundaries of the current Second Amendment.  A commission may need to be appointed to examine the increasingly vast difference between an acceptable middle-class income and the millions gathered by an ever-growing Royalty class and some adjustment made.

© 2018, Charlie Jensen, All Rights Reserved

Above the Law

I simply cannot believe that the subject of the difference between the unlimited powers of a King, or Emperor, are being compared and discussed with the limited powers of the people’s elected representative.  Almost every school child is exposed to some part of the roots of this nation which are embedded in the Declaratanthony-garand-500755-unsplashion of Independence and of course our Constitution.  The contention that one person is above the law, and superior to his fellow citizens was dealt with in the very first line; “… We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, ….”.  Note the expression “All men” and its simplicity, not some men, or except the president.

The people who wrote these lines were upset by the actions of King George III and delineated the things that they felt he had no right to do, or cause his government to do, so they listed many of the objections that they felt were beyond his powers to do; ” … The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states…”

allan-ramsay-92247_1920For those who never really paid attention in school to the details that incited so many of our ancestors take arms and risk their lives, their liberty, their wealth and the safety of their homes and families, they took the trouble to point out the actions that they felt were King George’s illegal seizure of powers, here are a few of some of his illegal actions that apply to the current discussion; ” …. He has obstructed the administration of justice, ……. He has made judges dependent on his will alone, …… He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people. …”

There are some forty other specific violations of English and Colonial laws and customs which, taken in sum indicate that even the King does not have unlimited powers, and justify their actions of rebellion and institution of a newly independent nation, a nation where there would be no King who believed he had unlimited powers. Fifteen years later, after a long bloody struggle these same patriots constructed a government of laws, not men putting an executive at its head, whose term and powers were limited and subject to indictment and removal by the Congress should he be convicted of; “…. Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors…”

Now we have a president in power who may have committed treason by conspiring to tamper with our election procedures, a man who seems to have accepted funds and favors from foreign powers and domestic entities, a man who has repeatedly attempted to block, obstruct and derail the process of justice and investigation into potential criminal acts, a man who has surrounded himself with an assembly of foreign and domestic persons so unworthy of trust and office as to cast serious doubt on his capacity to govern.  And now he and his agents have proffered a legal theory that is inimacable to the wellbeing of the nation’s established rule of law.  It is plain to anyone who can read that our nation was founded and lived by the principle that NO Man, or Woman, not even King George III, is or has been above our laws.  It is time, perhaps past time, for our Congress and all its members to step forward and resume its rightful position as a willing and able participant of this government and not a dupe of an incompetent executive.

© 2018, Charlie Jensen, All Rights Reserved

Three Senses of “FAITH”

In casual discussions, and even often in formal dissertations, the word “Faith” is often used, somewhat loosely. It should be understood that it can be meant in one of three senses.

Faith as in Tenacity, as a belief despite evidence to the contrary.

Faith as in the Will to Believe, a belief in the absence of evidence either way.

Faith as Expectation, a belief based on previously observed evidence in the expectation that that evidence will continue.

The first is what sells Lotto tickets to people who know that the chances of winning are usually astronomically bad. In fact, I am quite sure that the majority who purchase Lotto tickets do so because they know that most weeks someone, somewhere, will win and just maybe one day the Gods will smile on them.

The second fills the pews at the corner church despite the failure of there being a shred of evidence that prayers will increase the chances of a favorable result to their requested outcome. Note the selective memory that is displayed when what they prayed for occurs. “God was looking after me.” But they never accept the logical conclusion for all the times their desired outcome failed to materialize; “God sure had it in for me when the tornado went through town.”

The last sense in which people have faith is what gets the seed corn planted in the springtime.

Because I might buy a Lotto ticket on occasion should never be confused with a belief in some imaginary good buddy in the sky who will bless the numbers I have chosen as long as I promise to tithe the local church, give up chocolate ice cream or mumble through the sixty odd rosary prayers every night for a week..

Nor should my plans to take my children on a picnic next Sunday be confused with anything deeper than that, for all my life Sunday has followed Saturday and the weather in Florida is usually quite amenable to such outdoor activity. It is reasonable for me to act upon that expectation without implying some metaphysical belief that Amun-Ra is personally interested in my tan lines.

Confusing the usage of one with an example of the other is careless if unintended and deceptive if intentional. It often makes logical discussion between well-meaning friends difficult or even impossible.

Substituting a contrived construct like “pre-supposition” for one sense or the other can be acceptable, but the intention of the user will still determine which of the three diverse senses controls the intended meaning. Conflation either way still leads to misunderstanding and confusion. That leads to debaters talking past one another and eliminates any possibility of compromise and agreement.

© 2014, Charlie Jensen, All Rights Reserved

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Rushing to Immediate Judgement.

A guest on the Chris Hayes Show, “Up”, (NBC 8AM to 10AM Saturdays and Sundays) today, who is supposed to be an expert on the facts surrounding the Columbine massacre and who wrote what appears to be the definitive account of the events and the participants actions, pointed out that virtually everything reported about the shooters in the first few days after the tragedy there, turned out to be rumor based on innuendo and factually incorrect reports.  As a result, intelligent people step back and allow the investigators the time to gather evidence and supporting facts, withholding rash judgments that are based on weakly understood and often misconstrued sets of reports.

I am reminded of other events of my lifetime that demonstrated a similar rush to misjudgment.

Many of the reports that swirled around the Kennedy assassination in 1963 were equally mistaken and were drawn from people surrounding the shooting in Dealey Plaza who were excited and somewhat traumatized by what they saw or thought they saw on that fateful day.

The same thing happened after the Oklahoma bombing and worst of all, the World Trade Center attack. One of the very first reports from onlookers was that a small commuter plane had, at the last moment, veered off course and smashed itself into the first tower. That was picked up at NBC, uptown, and announced with varying degrees of confidence for several minutes until the second 727 came barreling in and crashed straight head-on into the second tower. It was only after the tape was rewound and played back at a reduced speed that some facts become more accurate than those eyewitnesses on the street who, by definition, ought to have provided the most true descriptions of what had just happened a few hundred yards from their vantage point.

These quick responses and distorted assessments of what had just happened before these witnesses very eyes are what led to the growth of most of the deeply misleading conspiracy theories that, to this day, cannot be debunked in the minds of those who, either have an agenda or are just gullible. As a result, these vivid conspiracy stories plague certain parts of civil and political discourse.

Eyewitness testimony has been long known to be almost as unreliable as statements from people who were not even present at an event. In law schools every year short drama’s are acted out during a class or seminar, themed on the lack of reliability of witnesses, in front of the students by members of the faculties that demonstrate this fact to the eager and willing lawyer candidates. They construct a traumatic event and during the discussion and questioning afterward, it becomes obvious that these well educated and attentive women and men not only miss key points but sometimes provide testimony of things that didn’t happen.

At a seminar with my wife several years ago the speaker asked his audience, fifty or sixty reasonably well educated and motivated behavioral care providers, to watch a short video clip and count the number of times the individuals in the video passed a basketball from one to another.

At the end of the clip the audience was polled and while I had counted seventeen exchanges most seemed to have found eighteen, which was supposed to be the precise count although there was one person who only saw nine may have been kidding., or asleep.

Once the correct number of exchanges was explained the lecturer, asked how many people had seen the gorilla in the clip. Virtually no one. What gorilla?

He re-ran the clip and it showed the six or seven people, dressed in white uniforms passing the basketball as a group of players might do while preparing to take to the courts for a game, when during the middle of the sequence an elevator doors behind them opened and a guy in a dark black gorilla suit exited the elevator, paused to look at the ball passers and then stepped out of view.

Neither I, nor my wife, nor the people in the audience had seen the big dark black gorilla suited interloper pass right through the middle of this group of men (?) who were by contrast dressed in what may have been white basketball warm-up sweats.

The point is that the sudden news coverage of excited possibly traumatized survivors, witnesses, and near witnesses is not a good accurate accounting of what took place directly in front of them.

Whether we apply this knowledge to this shooting in Connecticut or the attacks in Benghazi, the initial reports must be considered so likely to be inaccurate as to be statistically worthless. The best that can be said about initial reports by reports, both official, as well as those connected with the news media, is that they are incomplete and are subject to revision as real evidence is gathered, assembled and evaluated.

And if the witnesses so breathlessly interviewed outside the school in Sandy Hook are providing inaccurate or at the least suspect information what is the purpose of conducting the exercise as if something could be changed if only the people in South Florida and Kodiak, Alaska were provided with instant erroneous details.

One important point, such witnesses are neither lying nor consciously attempting to slant what they saw. In their mind, they may be telling the absolute truth as they see it, saw it and recall it. It is just that our brains have some interesting wiring that allows us to fill in what is visually missed and ignore what is not the subject of our concentration. That is where prejudices and previous experiences come into play, adding color and sounds and providing the details that while not actually seen, appear to be necessary to allow the images to conform to what we might call common sense.

Our judicial system provides, through the discovery of DNA and the advances in its testing, dozens of instances where supposedly rock solid evidence, by absolutely certain witnesses of a crime that, often after years of incarceration, is shown to be scientifically impossible to have been true.

An example of the problem with memory is that I often remind myself that I should do something important and I sometimes sketch out the details of the chore in my mind.

If I do that once or twice and, the memory bank retains the last memory best and it can become a distinct recollection of having done what was only contemplated.

That is why by the time a witness is called to testify about an incident seen first hand, the actual recollection has faded away long ago and the witness tells a very altered version.

That happens to soldiers in wartime who tell a story so often, or relive an incident in their dreams, that they may come to believe that they were at the forefront of some action when in fact they may only have had a peripheral involvement.

I recognize this phenomenon and try to use notes to preserve accuracy, but it becomes a struggle between remembered fantasy and reality, between recovered recollections and contemporaneous written notes.

Lawyers know that far too often eyewitnesses are the worst witnesses

© 2014, Charlie Jensen, All Rights Reserved