A Reply to Booman’s Post "Trump Has No Plan for Central America"

Booman wrote in his post “Trump Has No Plan for Central America.” (http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2019/3/31/133030/315) :

I’m not going to argue that our country has a good track record of combating organized crime in Latin America…

True, of course.

But looked at through reality-focused eyes, how good has “our government”…if of course the word “our” can possibly be logically attached to the word “government” in the U.S., considering the over-the-top amount of totally Big Money-driven legislation and elected officialdom that has been imposed on us here during the past 50+ years or so…how good has “our” government been at combatting organized crime internally!!!????

Read on for more.
“Organized crime?”

A definition, please?

We have been in the midst of a drug epidemic that has literally shattered many of our our various cultures and areas/neighborhoods during that same 50+ years. Heroin, cocaine, crack cocaine, the various other opioids and speeds…I mean, really, Booman!!! If we cannot clean up our own “organized crime” problems…and do not refer to the ongoing decline of the Italian mafia as anything other than an easily expected result of the climb into the working and middle/upper middle classes of the formerly slum-ridden Italian population…if we cannot clean up our own South/Central/Caribbean cartels, our Asian, Russian and Middle European crime organizations, our home-grown Southern Mafia/biker gang/black gang/hispanic gang/white supremacist group gangs etc.

Further…is corporate crime not the very essence of the word “organized?” I refer you to the ongoing Wells Fargo Bank debacle, just for starters. There’s more dirt for the digging on every level of the corporate world if anyone cares to look.

So…not to excuse Trump, who is and has been for over 40 years part and parcel of the overall U.S. failure to combat “organized” crime considering his own extensive connections to old-line mafiosi, his crime business guru Roy Cohn and the Russian/Central European gangs (and while we’re at it, let’s not forget the Israeli/Mossad-allied gangs in that lovely grab bag of thieves and murderers, and the various criminal elements that have been used and protected by the intelligence forces of the U.S.)

Not to excuse Trump, but really…

What the fuck did you expect!!!???”

I disagree with your title, as well.

Trump has no plan for Central America!!!??

Of course he does!!!

He wants it to be part of the same wide-ranging kleptocracy that he now represents as President of the United States!!!

Suffering human beings?

No “law and order for the people?”

Trump:

Perfect!!!

They’ll be easier to control and exploit.

I fervently hope that we can manage the same thing here!!!

Considering the events of the last several days?

He’s well on his way to similar success at home.

Who’s gonna stop him?

The lying media?

Fat lot of good they’ve been!!!

The self-protecting, self-interested fools, tools and cowards…not all, just most…on both sides of the imaginary “aisles” of Congress?

Please!!!

The dithering DNC and its (at last count) 20+ long list of declared and/or possible presidential candidates?

Right down Trump’s alley.

He’ll pick most of them off one at a time, just like he did with the similar number of fools and weaklings in the Republican primaries leading up to 2016. Then he’ll leave the survivors to squabble amongst themselves…that’s already happening and it’s just going to get worse…and end up splitting off the one segment of the U.S. electorate that could conceivably defeat him.

Who’s that?

The non-voters who…if they were to vote…would comprise signifiant part of a potential supermajority that would sweep him, the dedicated RatPublicans and DemRats…right out of DC.

I grow tired of all of this misplaced foofaraw.

Go after the motherfucker with all weapons possible or start memorizing the following poem:

First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out–
     Because I was not a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out–
     Because I was not a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out–
     Because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me–and there was no one left to speak for me.

(Written by the German Lutheran pastor Martin Niemöller, incarcerated by the Nazis in 1937.)

God be with you…

You gonna need some help!!!

Bet on it.

Later…

AG

Trump Has No Plan for Central America

In order for President Trump’s new plan to curb Central American immigration to be effective, the governments of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador will have to respond to the loss of $450 million in aid by making drastic changes to improve the basic security and employment opportunities of their people. One reason to doubt this will happen is that they are not the primary recipients of our aid. Most of it goes to non-governmental organizations. Those organizations are clearly no match, even with our aid, for the deteriorating conditions that prevail in these countries, and that’s largely due to poor and corrupt governance. However, even if the NGO’s aren’t stemming the decline, they surely aren’t contributing to the problem. Without the work they do, things would be even more dire.

And even if most of the money goes to NGO’s, there will be consequences for these governments’ ability to maintain law and order.

The decision turns American policy in the region on its head. Not only will it cut development and humanitarian assistance, but it will also halt joint law enforcement efforts, such as anti-gang units vetted by the United States, that had been supported by Republicans and the Trump administration until now, said Juan S. Gonzalez, a former deputy assistant secretary of state in the Obama administration.

Indeed, just a day before Mr. Trump made the comments, the United States signed a border security agreement with the three Central American governments intended to increase cooperation against human trafficking and organized crime.

The timing of Trump’s announcement clearly isn’t coordinated. This is one more example of his fly-by-the-seat-of-the-pants style. We lock down an agreement on combatting gangs and human trafficking one day, and our president basically severs relations the next.

I’m not going to argue that our country has a good track record of combating organized crime in Latin America, but if our efforts were going to have any impact at all, they would have tended to reduce people’s motivations for pulling up their roots and heading for our southern border. If dialing our law enforcement cooperation back results in more gang activity and violence, then migration levels will tick up.

In theory, I could get behind an effort to focus the attention of the governments in these Central American countries. They are corrupt and ineffective, and making our aid contingent on changes of behavior is a tool in the box that we can always consider using. The problem is that we have one part of our government that is trying to address the problems and another in the White House that is undermining their efforts.

The primary problem is that the societal structures have broken down and no one can provide law and order for the people. This isn’t an easy thing for Americans to solve, especially in light of our extraordinarily checkered history in this region. We’ve often been a source of the problem, and never more so than when we overthrew the Guatemalan government in 1954. Here’s a reminder of how that worked out for the Guatemalans:

Democratic elections during the Guatemalan Revolution in 1944 and 1951 had brought popular leftist governments to power, but a United States-backed coup d’état in 1954 installed the military regime of Carlos Castillo Armas, who was followed by a series of conservative military dictators. In 1970, Colonel Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio became the first of a series of military dictators representing the Institutional Democratic Party or PID. The PID dominated Guatemalan politics for twelve years through electoral frauds favoring two of Col. Carlos Arana’s proteges (Gen. Kjell Eugenio Laugerud Garcia in 1974 and Gen. Romeo Lucas Garcia in 1978). The PID lost its grip on Guatemalan politics when General Efraín Ríos Montt, together with a group of junior army officers, seized power in a military coup on 23 March 1982. In the 1970s continuing social discontent gave rise to an insurgency among the large populations of indigenous people and peasants, who traditionally bore the brunt of unequal land tenure. During the 1980s, the Guatemalan military assumed almost absolute government power for five years; it had successfully infiltrated and eliminated enemies in every socio-political institution of the nation, including the political, social, and intellectual classes. In the final stage of the civil war, the military developed a parallel, semi-visible, low profile but high-effect, control of Guatemala’s national life.

It is estimated that 200,000 people were killed or “disappeared” during the conflict. As well as fighting between government forces and rebel groups, the conflict included, much more significantly, a large-scale, coordinated campaign of one-sided violence by the Guatemalan state against the civilian population from the mid-1960s onward. The military intelligence services (G2 or S2) and an affiliated intelligence organization known as La Regional or Archivo – headquartered in an annex of the presidential palace – were responsible for coordinating killings and “disappearances” of opponents of the state and suspected insurgents and those deemed by the intelligence services to be collaborators. The Guatemalan state was the first in Latin America to engage in widespread use of forced disappearances against its opposition with the number of disappeared estimated at between 40,000 and 50,000 from 1966 until the end of the war. In rural areas where the insurgency maintained its strongholds, the repression amounted to wholesale slaughter of the peasantry and massacres of entire villages; first in the departments of Izabal and Zacapa (1966–68) and later in the predominantly Mayan western highlands from 1978 onward. In the early 1980s, the killings are considered to have taken on the scale of genocide. Most human rights abuses were at the hands of the military, police and intelligence services. Victims of the repression included indigenous activists, suspected government opponents, returning refugees, critical academics, students, left-leaning politicians, trade unionists, religious workers, journalists, and street children. The “Comisión para el Esclarecimiento Histórico” has estimated that 93% of human right abuses in the conflict have been committed by government forces and 3% by the guerrillas.

As Americans, we’re partial owners of all of that, and the people of Guatemala know it. So, it’s not a situation where we’re trusted or even in which we have much right to trust ourselves. Yet, if we have a human rights concern for the people of Central America and we also want to reduce the level of people turning up on our border asking for asylum, we have to try to do something.

I’m open-minded about what to try, and I certainly am willing to entertain new ideas that overturn existing efforts that have clearly been inadequate at best and often counterproductive. If threatening their governments or withholding aid would get them to do a better job, I’d be all for it, especially because it’s definitely more of a hands-off approach than we normally employ.

But I have two main problems with Trump’s approach beyond the fact that I know it is motivated by his racism. The first is that it is premised on a faulty idea that the migration can be stemmed by the same governments that are causing it if only they would just try a little harder. Things have deteriorated beyond the point where that’s realistic, and now we’re asking them to do it with less help.

The second is that we’re talking about a big change of approach, and the proper way to try something new and different is to do a lot of preparation. Everyone in our government should be rowing in the same direction. We shouldn’t be working our asses off to build a new plan for combatting organized crime and then be undercut the day after everything is nailed down and in place.

Trump isn’t going to give us a humane or a well-prepared plan in any sphere of foreign policy. That’s clear now. But just because he’s doing this in a haphazard way for all the wrong reasons doesn’t mean that the status quo is acceptable or that the migration problem isn’t something that needs to be addressed. If nothing else, we should want these countries to be livable places where people can thrive rather than the murder capitals of the world from which sensible people are fleeing.

Congress can begin thinking about new approaches and maybe Trump’s unorthodox and idiotic style can ironically provide an opening for a new start. Unless we’re doomed, he’ll be gone by 2021, and this will be a problem for a new administration. There are a lot of people who take the announcement by Trump as an impetus to get cracking on policy proposals that have a prayer of helping.

Democrats Talking Antitrust and Agriculture

My brother helped set up the Iowa Heartland Forum which you can stream at Huffington Post.

HuffPost is teaming up Saturday with Open Markets, as well as the Iowa Farmers Union and the Storm Lake Times, for the Heartland Forum, a discussion with 2020 candidates on rural issues. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Art Cullen of the Storm Lake Times will be the moderator, along with HuffPost reporter Zach Carter and me. We’ll also be taking questions from members of the Storm Lake community.

Tune in to our livestream on HuffPost at 1 p.m. Central Time/2 p.m. Eastern today to hear from four 2020 candidates ― former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro, former Rep. John Delaney (Md.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) ― as well as Rep. Tim Ryan (Ohio), who has been considering a bid, about their vision for rural America.

Related to this, check out our new feature, Meet the New Trustbusters, by Eric Cortelessa. It includes some information you’ll want to know about Cory Booker.

SPP Vol.711 & Old Time Froggy Botttom Cafe

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be starting a new painting.  It is a house in Pocomoke City, Maryland.  The photo that I’m using is seen directly below.  I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 6×6 inch canvas.

I started with a pencil grid on both a print of the photo and the canvas.  In this way I was able to transfer the elements to the canvas in an accurate pencil sketch.  I added a little blue paint to get things started.

The current state of the painting is seen in the photo directly below.

I’ll have more progress to show you next week. See you then.

Earlier paintings in this series can be seen here.

What the Sacklers Deserve

This family shouldn’t just be left penniless. They should become the most indebted family in the world.

Here’s a man who has over 200,000 deaths on his hands who has nothing but contempt for those he slaughtered.

In early 2001, Purdue Pharma LP executives discussed how to respond to abuse of the company’s five-year-old prescription painkiller OxyContin.

Richard Sackler, an owner of the powerful opioid’s maker, saw two clear groups of OxyContin users: legitimate patients and reckless criminals, according to a newly amended lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James. He objected in an internal company email to “criminal addicts…being glorified as some sort of populist victim,” the lawsuit says.

In another exchange included in the lawsuit, Mr. Sackler said: “I’ll tell you something that will totally revise your belief that addicts don’t want to be addicted. It is factually untrue. They get themselves addicted over and over again.”

When I say he has 200,000 deaths on his hands, I’m referring to the number of people who have died over the last 20 years from using prescription opioids. There’s another 200,000 who have died from using street opioids and opiates, many of whom got addicted to the pills before moving onto cheaper options like heroin and fentanyl.

These are just the fatalities. For everyone who has died there are dozens whose lives were ruined, whose brains were chained and morals were shattered.

How many of these people “wanted to be addicted”? How many of their loved ones wanted them to be addicted?

It’s true that there are some people who just want to numb everything out, either because they’re depressed or they’ve suffered trauma or they were just born that way. But what percentage of people who took a Oxy-Contin pill for the first time do you think wanted to end up a heroin addict? How many wanted to turn to prostitution or theft in order to satisfy the pain of withdrawal?

For the Sacklers, these people were supposed to be following the advice of the doctor, and there were pharmacists and drug distributors who were supposed to watch out for abuses of the system. For the Sacklers, these latter groups were a threat to sales. The doctors were deliberately given bad information. The oversight function was deliberately undermined.

And when people who took their medications for the pain suffered after injuries or surgeries and they became addicted, the Sacklers called them “glorified victims.”

This family shouldn’t just be left penniless. They should become the most indebted family in the world. They can pay restitution and instead of building libraries and sponsoring museum exhibits, they can provide the millions of beds we need to house the people struggling to stay alive because of their greed and immorality.

 

Friday Foto Flog: Vol. 2.22

0329191527_HDR

Greetings photography enthusiasts. It’s Friday, and I thought I’d try something out. Let’s see how this goes as a weekly feature. It is definitely springtime in my little corner of the world. Looking forward to having some time to walk along my favorite urban trails and get some photos (and some much needed exercise).

Please note that this is a reboot of a series that went to seed a few years ago. I know that there are some photo hobbyists like me who post here already. As always, I am hoping to incite a bit more “community behavior” in our community blog. AndiF and BobX used to curate the old foto flog. Others contributed quite regularly. Folks like Hurria, JimF, KNUCKLEHEAD, dada, olivia, ask, tampopo, Man Eegee, and a whole host of others posted photos at one time or another. I am sure I have missed someone in that list.

I don’t use anything especially fancy. My Samsung Galaxy S6 finally died after a very long life. I had it for a fairly long time. Currently, I am using an LG ThinQ40. It has some nifty features that I am still playing around with. One of my offspring has commandeered my old 35mm film camera, so I don’t get to use that one very often. At over 30 years, finding replacement parts when something goes bad on it gets to be a bit tricky. That’s another story for another day.

Some of our regulars have actual professional equipment, and before Photobucket turned into such a drag, we were graced by some absolutely stunning landscape shots, close-ups of flowers and insects, and some abstract photography. I’ve often marveled at the creativity of the folks who have meandered in and out of this community over the years. I use flickr to host my photos for the time being, although given some changes at flickr, that may soon end. I have tried out imgur as well. So far, so good.

Consider this series as a homage to its predecessor, and dedicated to the spirit of its ancestors. Enjoy.

Wanker of the Day: Sen. Mike Lee

The associate attorney general position is the number three spot in the hierarchy at the Department of Justice. There has not been a Senate-confirmed person in that job since February 2018, when Rachel Brand left the administration for a much better-paying job at Walmart. Somewhat surprisingly based on his gender and racial attitudes, President Trump appointed an Asian-American woman to fill the post. Jesse Liu has been the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia since September 2017. She went to Harvard and got her law degree from Yale. During the administration of George W. Bush, she served in the DOJ as deputy chief of staff in the National Security Division, counsel to the deputy attorney general, and deputy assistant attorney general in the Civil Rights Division. When Samuel Alito was nominated to the Supreme Court, she joined dozens of other Yale Law graduates in signing a letter of support for his confirmation.

Nonetheless, Trump has just withdrawn her nomination. Some are saying it is because a group of Republican senators don’t trust her to be anti-choice, and the position of associate attorney general has responsibility for health care-related issues among many other things. It’s not clear why these senators don’t trust her, but it’s probably not the reason her nomination was spiked.

National Public Radio is reporting that Senator Mike Lee of Utah had some sort of shouting match with Attorney General William Barr over Ms. Liu’s nomination. Lee chairs the antitrust subcommittee in the Senate, and Samuel Alito’s son Philip serves on the staff. Apparently, Philip has a problem with Ms. Liu.

Four lawyers familiar with the matter said the stumbling block for Liu was a broader concern about her conservatism — specifically, her stance on women’s reproductive rights. Interest groups had begun drafting letters to senators about their fears that Liu would not support restrictions on abortion. Another key factor: Earlier in her career, Liu had an affiliation with the National Association of Women Lawyers, which sent a letter opposing the nomination of Justice Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court.

It looks like the Alito family remembers very well which organizations did not support Samuel’s nomination the Supreme Court. So, once they found out that Liu once had “an affiliation” with one of those organizations, it was an immediate World War Three to deny her the position. They probably didn’t bother to look deeper and discover that Liu had personally endorsed Alito for the Court.

This is a petty and stupid reason for denying her the position. Also, it shouldn’t be legal to deny a woman a job because she doesn’t support restricting her own constitutional rights.

In any case, it doesn’t look like the third in command is going to be a very well-qualified Asian-American woman.  They’ll probably find someone with a law degree from Pat Robertson University instead.

The GOP Doesn’t Care About Your Health

One way to determine if a political party cares about people like you is to see if they have any interest in whether you have access to quality, affordable health care. If they’re indifferent to whether you live or die, that’s a good indicator that they’re not on your side. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is a member of the Republican Party, and he could not be more clear that he has no interest in health care as a topic other than for its potential as a political weapon against the Democrats.

This week began with news that Trump’s Justice Department had filed a legal brief arguing that the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional. But if anyone thought that meant that twenty million or more people were newly at risk of losing coverage, Trump was ready at the Twitter machine to reassure them.

The rest of the week has been made up of congressional Republicans scurrying around trying to figure out how they’re supposed to fulfill the promise that they’ll become “The Party of Healthcare” after a judge presumably strikes down all the provisions in Obamacare that make it work.

When the Republicans were in the majority in both houses of Congress, they tried to keep their promise to repeal Obamacare without eliminating coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, but they could not accomplish that task because it’s basically impossible.  They’re still unwilling to threaten coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, which means that they have a new problem. They now need Trump to lose in court or they’ll have to find a way to mandate that healthy people buy health insurance so that insurance companies can hope to afford to cover people with cancer, diabetes and other unprofitable health conditions.

Mitch McConnell wants absolutely no part of this.

Mitch McConnell has no intention of leading President Donald Trump’s campaign to transform the GOP into the “party of health care.”

“I look forward to seeing what the president is proposing and what he can work out with the speaker,” McConnell said in a brief interview Thursday, adding, “I am focusing on stopping the ‘Democrats’ Medicare for none’ scheme.”

…Now in divided government, with the Senate majority up for grabs next year and McConnell himself running for reelection, another divisive debate over health care is the last thing McConnell needs. But that’s exactly where Trump is taking Republicans after his administration endorsed a wholesale obliteration of the law in the courts earlier this week.

So the Kentucky Republican and his members are putting the onus on the president to figure out the next steps.

There are some senators who have shown some willingness to take up the president’s challenge and work on a Republican health care bill (I’ve seen Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and John Barrasso of Wyoming mentioned) but McConnell is not going to task his committee chairs with doing any serious work on this between now and next November. He’ll sit back and let the White House work out something with Nancy Pelosi.

While the GOP leader has endorsed efforts to protect pre-existing conditions, McConnell told his caucus on Wednesday he will stick to a message of asking the administration for a plan and focusing on making Democratic measures unpopular, according to attendees.

The Republicans have already proven that they have no answers on health care. They love scaring people who have health coverage that they like by telling them that the Democrats will cause them to lose it or have to pay substantially more for less quality and longer waits. What they aren’t willing to do is to go back to the pre-Obamacare days when people could not buy health coverage at any price because they had a pre-existing conditions. And since they won’t contemplate taking that step, they’re now appalled that Trump has taken it by trying to get the law thrown off the books by the courts.

If McConnell actually cared about your health care, he wouldn’t have been satisfied with the old status quo and he wouldn’t be furious that the president wants him to legislate a new comprehensive national scheme. He doesn’t want to improve access, lower cost, or do anything other than talk about the Democrats’ radical proposals. And he’s not alone:

“The president’s entitled to his opinions, so I don’t begrudge him that,” [Senate Majority Whip, John] Cornyn said. “But what they need to do now is tell us what their plans are.”

In fact, the broader Republican establishment is just baffled by the idea that the president would take away millions of people’s access to health care and then ask them to fix the problem.

A Quinnipiac University poll released Tuesday found 45 percent of Americans opposing Medicare for All and 43 percent backing the proposal.

“That’s the rhetoric that really scares a lot of voters – I would think a lot of independent voters, a lot of suburban voters, voters that Dems did really well with last time,” Doug Heye, a Republican strategist, said.

While Republicans had hoped to seize on public unease with such sweeping reforms, Heye said that the Trump administration’s legal shift on the ACA could complicate that effort by putting the onus on Republicans to stake out their own position on health care.

“It’s why the announcement from the White House was surprising,” said Heye, who also served as an aide to former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.). “If your opponent is running off a cliff, it’s best to stay out of their way.”

But this all stems for the decision to demonize the Affordable Care Act when it was a middle course, moderate reform designed to win bipartisan support and avoid the more radical changes some Democrats are now pushing on the campaign trail. Trump is trying to keep his promise to kill Obamacare and it turns out the Republicans are apoplectic about it.

The Republican Party does not care about you or your health or the health of your family and loved ones. They never have, and I doubt they ever will.

 

The Mueller Cliffs Notes Are Not Enough

The paperback version of Old Man and the Sea is 128 pages. The paperback version of The Great Gatsby is 180 pages. The paperback version of Catcher in the Rye is 240 pages. The Mueller Report is reportedly over 300 pages. Yet, our Cliffs Notes of the Mueller Report are only four-pages long.

The still-secret report on Russian interference in the 2016 election submitted by the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, last week was more than 300 pages long, according to the Justice Department, a length that raises new questions about Attorney General William P. Barr’s four-page summary.

As Steve M. of No More Mister Nice Blog points out, the public isn’t buying this whitewash. Public opinion surveys by Reuters/Ipsos, Politico/Morning Consult, and CNN have unanimously found that a plurality still believe Trump colluded with the Russians and obstructed justice. Huge majorities want to see the full report. And, according to CNN, “nearly 6 in 10 Americans want to see Congress continue to pursue hearings into the findings of Mueller’s report.”

It sounds to me like there is a lot of information in the report about both obstruction (which Mueller specifically said does not exonerate the president) and Russia’s interference in the election, which Congress needs in order to legislate.  It’s as if someone tried to explain three of the most iconic American novels by telling us nothing more about them than sharks ate Santiago’s marlin, Jay Gatsby died in his pool, and Holden Caulfield took his sister to the zoo.

By contrast, the Watergate “road map” sent to Congress by the grand jury investigating President Richard Nixon and his associates was only 62 pages. Sent to lawmakers in 1974, the court report was not unsealed by a federal judge and made public until last year.

Mr. Mueller probably collected and generated hundreds of thousands if not millions of pages of paper in his investigation. Congress has made clear it would eventually like access to all of them…

The key point with the Watergate “road map” document is that it was turned over to Congress. The road map contained “97 documents supporting…53 statements of information,” and the reason that the public did not see the document until 2018 is because the supporting evidence was all produced by a grand jury. There is no sufficient reason why Congress cannot see the grand jury evidence from Mueller’s investigation, and see it promptly after it has been scrubbed for any sensitive information that could put sources or methods at risk.

William Barr is like the guy who doesn’t want you to read F. Scott Fitzgerald’s great book because it’s crap. Just trust him, the hero is a bootlegging crook who doesn’t get the girl and, in his opinion, it’s just fine if Meyer Wolfsheim doesn’t gets punished for fixing the 1919 World Series.