#1151 – Dick Bernard: Why I’m Supporting Hillary Clinton for President of the United States

I have been and continue to be public in my enthusiastic support for Hillary Clinton for U.S. President.
I have supported her as a leader since before the Minnesota Precinct Caucuses in February, 2008. She is a leader I have long admired.
More on that “below the fold”….

This is a very long post (over 5000 words) because of comments, and it could be much longer still. Thus, the items are presented in sections (1, 2, etc.). Section 2 relates to my personal endorsement. I’d also recommend Sections 1 and 4. Also, #6 “A FINAL THOUGHT” is at the very end of the post.
Related Post: The Newspaper; Government by Twitter here.
(click to enlarge photos)

Hillary Clinton, St. Paul MN, Feb 12, 2016

Hillary Clinton, St. Paul MN, Feb 12, 2016

1. First, here’s an invitation to do a brief personal inventory of yourself:
Pick one personal imperfection that you have.
Pick one mistake that you made that may have impacted someone else.
(Then, take these two – call them “failings: – strictly basing them on your own perception of what “failing” means.)
Now, imagine that an enemy gets a hold of one of these imperfections and decides to use it against you, “no holds barred”. The attack doesn’t have to be true. Still, a microscope is focused in on it, and it is broadcast relentlessly, with an intention of destroying your reputation.
And, if you have a spouse or partner, imagine that spouses or partners alleged faults are used against you as well. [NOTE Aug. 4, 2016: Just today, from a far left wing friend, comes a picture of Chelsea Clinton smiling with Ivanka Trump, Donald Trump’s daughter, as if there is a presumption of guilt by association. The message at the beginning: “please share widely”. There is, as usual, no words of where this forward originated, or context, or anything else…. Apparently the photo was published in People magazine, though that is likely not the originator of the “forward”. It is not only the right wing (see #5 below) that is into the character assassination game.]
This has been the fate of Hillary Clinton for at least the last 25 years, and the technique has worked well.
What has been and is being done to Hillary Clinton is classic bullying, and there are surprising participants in that bullying of a respected public figure.
(I once saw bullying play out with good friends, whose middle school daughter was so relentlessly bullied by some of her “friends”, through vicious e-mails, that they finally sold their house and moved to a different city. The “friends” could still persecute their target from a distance – it was e-mail, after all – but, being young teens, sooner or later they lost interest: the daughter has since graduated from college, and is a great credit to her generation and her parents, but still bears the scars.)
Bullies derive their power from bystanders who in various ways enable outrageous behavior.
Keep this in mind when your “trust” needle changes when talk turns to Hillary because of something you heard, or “feel”…. You, too, can be a carrier of a vicious disease which would be, if you were in public school as a student, be a punishable offense. Bullying is not entertainment.
2. MY SUPPORT FOR HILLARY CLINTON.
My support for Hillary Clinton does go back to February 2008 when, at the Precinct Caucus, I wrote on my piece of paper, “Hillary Clinton”, for 2008 Presidential preference, and publicly said it.
The other major choice was Barack Obama, later elected as President.
I had seen Barack Obama in person three days earlier, on Feb. 2, in Minneapolis.

Candidate Obama February 2, 2008, Minneapolis MN

Candidate Obama February 2, 2008, in Minneapolis MN

My story of my choosing Hillary is in three e-mails, from early February, 2008, written to my e-mail listserv at the time. You can read the e-mails here (three pages), and they speak for themselves: Hillary Clinton 2008001.
Succinctly, I felt Hillary Clinton was better prepared for the brutally challenging office of President than Senator Obama. She already had seven full years of service as U.S. Senator for the state of New York; and at the very beginning of her first term, 9-11-01 happened on her watch, and in her own state.
And that was just for starters.
She was (and is) without any question competent and courageous.
The gender issue was no issue at all for me: as a former executive director, I had worked regularly under women Presidents since 1975.
Of course, we now have had over seven years of the presidency of Barack Obama who, I believe, will go down in history as one of the most outstanding and transformative presidents we have ever had. He will be very hard to top.
The agenda of the opposing party was to make President Obama fail for the entirety of his presidency. They failed at their failure agenda; nonetheless, they damaged severely particularly our middle class.
Rather than treat Hillary Clinton as a vanquished rival; Barack Obama appointed her to the nation (and probably the worlds) top (and most demanding) diplomatic position: Secretary of State of the United States. And in that post, she supervised near 70,000 employees who are posted in every nation of the world. She performed admirably.
The bullies have transformed her role into words: think “Benghazi”, and “e-mail”…and all the other assorted insults that get lapped up like delicious food for gossip….
Hillary Clinton is extraordinarily competent, and with a positive toughness rarely seen in men or women.
She remains consistently the worlds most admired woman.
The 2016 campaign will rage on for the next 100 days. If you’ve got the “trust issue” hang-up about Hillary, I hope you give it up.
Get off the Bullies team.
Oh, and by the way, that young woman whose parents had to move to another city to get away from the teen age girl bullies?
Some years later, October 13, 2008, to be specific, (photos below) she was called on to introduce Michelle Obama at a Twin Cities campaign stop at Macalester College. She did a wonderful job. We were honored to be there.

I’m sorry I need to leave out her name and her image below, but that is her, hugging Mrs. Obama…that’s sort of how it goes in this world. My young friend was a powerful witness to resilience.

October 13, 2008, Introducing Michelle Obama in St. Paul

October 13, 2008, Introducing Michelle Obama in St. Paul

Michelle Obama October 13, 2008, Minnesota

Michelle Obama October 13, 2008, Minnesota

And where does this leave Bernie and the Progressives.

Bernie Sanders, St. Paul MN, Feb 12, 2016

Bernie Sanders, St. Paul MN, Feb 12, 2016

Many, perhaps most, of my core beliefs have always fit with the progressive mindset though I am, as I self-describe on this page, a “moderate, pragmatic Democrat”. I do feel alienated from the progressive movement. There has been too much of a “my way or the highway” approach by progressives to working within and thus with the much larger and more dynamic political system. Too often they are against, not for…
In an odd sense, they are too often identical twins to the Tea Party radicals – the ones who dominate the Trump rallies, and this years Republican Convention – albeit with much less publicity and strength. Their strength is too often buried under righteous anger: war hasn’t ended (and won’t, unfortunately), etc.
As anyone knows who has an “other half”, or lives next door to someone, or in some neighborhood, society is not perfect.
Too many of those with a progressive point of view seem to have forgotten how to work together for incremental change, replacing it with demands.
The progressives, this time, thus far, have achieved a great deal within the American political system, making their views known in the platform of the Democratic party. When I first noticed Bernie Sanders rally in Minneapolis back in May, 2015, I was skeptical that the progressive movement could come together. (See the final portion of that post.)
The progressives did make a strong showing at the Democrat National Convention. But as anyone who works in particularly the political field knows, success at a Convention is really just the beginning, not the end. There is about 100 days to go, and there are far more important political races, local and state and national, than simply the nominee for presidency of the United States.
Then comes the years which follow the election….
I hope the progressives build on their success by working as part of, rather than seeking to dominate, the conversation going forward.
Unfortunately, I think if Donald Trump wins, it will be because too many progressives “join the parade”, by not even voting in November, or sitting on their hands.
I hope I’m wrong.
3. COMMENTS:
3A from Norm:
Excellent, Dick!
Yes, anyone who has been in public office and/or in the public eye in important positions as has Hillary will always be easy to attack for this or that position or vote take or whatever. That is just too easy to do if that is what one wants to do to justify his/her support for another candidate.
It is interesting to note that Sanders was not a Democrat in spite of the accommodations that the DNC made on his behalf to include him in the debates as well as to give him lots of face time while in the city of Brotherly Love enjoying a steak sandwich or two.
Sanders has also made it clear that he plans to return to the Senate as an independent just as he was before and where he was an ineffective senator getting only one serious piece of legislation passed during his tenure there, a bi-partisan effort on behalf of veterans with Sen. McCain.
Bloomberg BusinessWeek recently noted that many of the progressive liberal senators elect to that august body at the same time of Sanders have been much more effective in terms of moving the progressive agenda forward let alone getting some of it adopted than has Sanders.
Thanks again, Dick.
3B From Peter:
I look at this in a larger context (larger doesn’t mean “better” although we ordinarily frame it so unconsciously). The system in which Hillary Clinton is so well-qualified to function as President is bankrupt, corrupt and stuck in relentless boom-and-bust cycles that are NOT simply “the way it is”; these cycles are built into “capitalism” as it is practiced today. The poor, marginalized and disenfranchised are helpless and inevitable victims of this system. It is NOT the only possible system, and not even the only possible “realistic” system. None of the alternatives are the “opposite” of “capitalism”, as many would argue. And I don’t see how the present one is going to be changed other than by collapsing from its own inherent instability. That will be one of the worst ways to get rid of it, but one way or another it is going to end. Scale is key to this. A subject for another article.
I am among those who see that none of the three viable candidates so far will ever be able to deliver on what they promise: they will be riding a much bigger wave of cultural imperatives than they even perceive, and are as helpless to make substantive change as the poorest, starvingest, doomed-est among us. They are all part of the system that must be changed.
And it must be changed, or our grandchildren will very likely not survive at all. We face the most certain and dreadful future imaginable, and yet there doesn’t seem to be the usual violent rebellion brewing anywhere at a scale that could do much about the status quo; and I doubt that such a cataclysm could do anything positive in any category of “success”. It is a new kind of problem that requires a completely new way of being, and not just a Great Man or Great Woman to ride in and save us.
I recommend reading Howard Richards on the subject, and will forward his latest article. [read it here: Howard Richards001 Meanwhile, I will probably hold my nose and vote for her, knowing that the other candidate is also a logical result of the times, and may very well win, and then everything will go to hell much, much faster.
Vote in hopes of a Supreme Court that won’t revive lynching and witch-trials.
3B1. Dick, in response: I admire Peter (see his recent post at this space here). I always wonder, though, about a not unusual response about voting, “hold my nose”.
Maybe Peter didn’t notice that my comments about Sanders/Progressives (here) were in a blog post about “The Commons”. My understanding of our society is that it is a motley crew, indeed, and any leader, particularly President, has to be profoundly aware of that reality, which is far from the perfection demanded by idealists of any stripe. There’s the old saying, “the enemy of the good is the perfect”, or some such. If one holds out for the perfect, and only “hangs” with those who have the true faith, disappointment is guaranteed.
The Democratic party is a motley crew, and I like that. The Republican party of Lincoln long ago disintegrated and is for the time being at least the party of Trump.
3C. from Joyce comes an interesting commentary from “The Weekly Sift”, a New Hampshire Blogger: Why Bernie Backed Hillary.
3D. from Nancy:
I appreciate the attached column that will be in the next YES! magazine issue from David Korten. This expresses succinctly my current thinking.
David Korten is worth knowing about. I first heard of him as the author of When Corporations Rule the World written 20 years ago. He is the editor of YES! magazine. Here’s a good link to read more. When one speaks of “Bernie progressives,” he fits the bill to a T, and has for as long as Bernie has.
Here’s a link to the YES! article.
The most essential “revolution” is “human revolution.”
In these politically charged times, I reflect on these words from Ben Okri, Nigerian author and poet.
You can’t remake the world
without remaking yourself.
Each new era begins within.
It is an inward event,
with unsuspected possibilities
for inner liberation.
3E. From Peter (2nd comment, Aug 3)
From the comments to my bit of verbiage, it appears that the popular narratives are covered well. I just want to put in a word for something Bernie represents that I think is being overlooked. The popular discourse lumps him dismissively with Nader and – um – the Republican candidate, which only diverts attention from his clear and widely-supported message. And after all, the man did concede and support Clinton.
Being he is my Senator, I know a little about him. He’s a WYSIWYG [What You See Is What You Get] kind of guy. And what he’s done is to speak quite widely understood truth of the kind that the robber barons and despoilers and war profiteers cannot survive if it is not repressed. And it resonated with the conversation going on off-camera out in America – because they were already painfully aware of what he was talking about. Were it not for corporate money, Bernie would be the nominee hands down. This does have a real impact in our real lives. I’m glad for him, that he did not get nominated, because I really like the man. But his promises were not empty, and I’d have loved to see a Sanders Presidency. I think we still may end up with a Ryan.
Ralph Nader is often invoked as an example of the perfect-as-enemy-of-the-good. This is interesting, qualifying Ralph as the “perfect” part of that equation. But it isn’t a balanced equation. Like Bernie he is clear-eyed and honest about what really matters to most people, which boils down to being good stewards of our world, in which we are at best transients. Both Ralph and Bernie walk their talk all the way, and it’s discoverable in the public record. This cannot be said of the others, and not just from “bullying”.
But the argument is always reduced to whether one should go-along-to-get-along, or hold out on principle at all cost (losing the election). That is an unanswerable question, and a false dichotomy. It favors, heavily, the triumph of mediocrity, or worse, the lowest common denominator. And it is refuted only if everybody musters up the courage to vote as they really think. I’ve seen it happen locally (I take the Minutes for five school boards and a town) (and take the Bernard teachings to heart!), but on the national scale I’m not sure it can be brought about.
If a Ralph or a Bernie does not stand up once in a while and articulate the bald truths that we all know (maybe under various layers of resignation or denial), we will be much the worse for it. And these two have done that: they have not painted a slanted picture, they have pointed to what is easily verifiable experience. Neither of them stands to gain personally from this effort. And the counter-arguments are shoot-the-messenger, or fear-mongering, or just louder; never engaging with the message.
Democracy is predicated on people voting their conscience. This is often thought of as “unrealistic”. So we profess what we do not act upon. The logic of voting “strategically” instead of conscientiously is much like a search engine that shows you more and more of what you “want” based on past behaviors. There is no possibility in past-based predictions, only more of the same. And stuff gets sold. Including us, sitting there “browsing”.
I said “hold my nose” because there is no other candidate who is not the Republican Nominee to vote for, and I think that individual is a true psychopath. More of the same will be much, much better than what that individual would surely bring down on us. He has already done real harm.
I am quite sure that Clinton will continue (and enhance) the war and financial and corporate policies of all her predecessors. She is not a visionary by any measure. Clinton has long experience comparable to being the captain of the Titanic. A good technician, highly skilled and no doubt well-intentioned. But the machine is a war machine, a feudal machine, and it will not operate another way without a major overhaul.
Some tiny fragments of the quite realistic vision so well articulated by Sanders and others will at least force lip service from the next administration – yes, even that one. The Supreme Court might be moderated a smidgin, but only if Congressional gridlock is broken in the House and Senate elections; it can also go horribly wrong. I don’t believe we will see any decrease in the resource wars, the mass displacements of millions, or the targeted extra-judicial killings (by drone). And those, unlike many of the horrible prospects we face, are within the purview of the American President. On “Day One”.
Why are we not demanding this? That’s another story.
3F. From Jeff: [Possibly responding to #5 from “John”, below] My favorite and I have seen it often, is the hard virulent anti Clinton folks (who are also anti Obama in a big way)
Who always list the parade of half truths and outright lies fed by the extreme right wing media. And
Then tell you to “Educate yourself” (honestly I have heard this one many times from these people)
Using the term educate in this case is always ironic to me.
I think the most important thing that Mr Khan has brought to the public arena is the word and term “empathy” as it concerns leaders in general. I find that not only folks like Trump, but for the most part the pushers of virulence and their believers all are lacking in empathy.
Of course “empathy” is a “soft” virtue, and America needs strong hard leadership for them.
3G. from Carol: This has been posted on the WaPo [Washington Post?] comments:
“The Hare Psychopathy Checklist includes the following: Grandiose sense of self worth, crudely insulting, refusal to accept blame, superficial charm, need for stimulation, constant bragging, pathological lying, lack of remorse, feeling victimized, emotionally shallow, impulsive, desire for attention, Machiavellian, aggressive, narcissistic, lacking empathy, sensation seeking, arrogant, multiple marriages, promiscuous, and poor behavioral control. Having half of these identifies one as a likely psychopath.”
Then there’s this, which you’ve probably seen, which I sent to my cousin:
from https://justabovesunset.wordpress.com
“All of this leads Robert Kagan, one of the original neoconservatives…, to suggest that there is something very wrong with Donald Trump:
One wonders if Republican leaders have begun to realize that they may have hitched their fate and the fate of their party to a man with a disordered personality. We can leave it to the professionals to determine exactly what to call it. Suffice to say that Donald Trump’s response to the assorted speakers at the Democratic National Convention has not been rational.
Why denigrate the parents of a soldier who died serving his country in Iraq? And why keep it going for four days? Why assail the record of a decorated general who commanded U.S. forces in Afghanistan? Why make fun of the stature of a popular former mayor of New York? Surely Trump must know that at any convention, including his own, people get up and criticize the opposition party’s nominee. They get their shots in, just as your party got its shots in. And then you move on to the next phase of the campaign. You don’t take a crack at every single person who criticized you. And you especially don’t pick fights that you can’t possibly win, such as against a grieving Gold Star mother or a general. It’s simply not in your interest to do so.
This is not normal:
The fact that Trump could not help himself, that he clearly did, as he said, want to “hit” everyone who spoke against him at the Democratic convention, suggests that there really is something wrong with the man… If you are a Republican, the real problem, and the thing that ought to keep you up nights as we head into the final 100 days of this campaign, is that the man cannot control himself. He cannot hold back even when it is manifestly in his interest to do so…
Imagine such a person as president. What we have seen in the Trump campaign is not only a clever method of stirring up the anger in people. It is also a personality defect that has had the effect of stirring up anger. And because it is a defect and not a tactic, it would continue to affect Trump’s behavior in the White House… His ultimately self-destructive tendencies would play out on the biggest stage in the world, with consequences at home and abroad that one can barely begin to imagine.”

Watching the 1960 Election Returns at Valley City (ND) State Teachers College

Watching the 1960 Election Returns at Valley City (ND) State Teachers College

4. The Quandary of the Republican Party (which extends to every one of us)
Back in October, 1996, I was watching CNN, as I usually did in those days, and Cong. Newt Gingrich was commenting on something or other. Whatever it was, I remember that I knew it was a flat-out bald-faced lie, and he was looking me square in the eye through the boob-tube.
It so incensed me that I turned off the TV (I was single, then, and didn’t have to seek permission!) and deserted the wasteland of television for a number of years.
After the 1996 election, I sat down and wrote a piece on politics, as I saw it, then, comparing it to politics as I remembered it in the 1960 presidential election – the one between Kennedy and Nixon. You can read the entire reflection here: 1996 Political Campaign001.
Re-reading that 20-years ago reflection, I am struck by how naive I was, then.
What caused me to turn off the television then was kind and gentle compared to today, and the nasty stuff for this election season is just beginning….
The “quandary” for today’s Republican party (which is mostly in exile at the moment), is that Donald Trump, and the yet-to-be-officially named Trump Party, represent the achievement of the goals of the Republican times of Lee Atwater, Carl Rove, Tom Delay, Grover Norquist, Ralph Reed and their ilk. They were turned loose to do whatever it took to win.
The problem is that they were too successful. It is sort of like creating a Frankenstein monster which doesn’t stay within the boundaries set for it. It just runs amuck, leaving its creators to scatter in all directions and try to figure out what to do now.
From my amateur (but very interested) vantage point, there were some recent turning points where crass (and potentially catastrophic) decisions were made by the Republican leadership.
For just a single example (and, of course, none of this is provable, but pretty obvious to me):
Hillary Clinton was viewed early on as a formidable future opponent, and since the very first, about 25 years ago, perhaps even longer, she was targeted for smear after smear after smear.
She just wouldn’t fall.
I remember in the relatively recent past when Sen. Lindsay Graham, himself a possible candidate for President, but already an also-ran, looked the camera in the eye as Newt had in 1996, and declares his revulsion for, if I remember right, Donald Trump, but nonetheless had to add the nutgraf of the party that Hillary was a liar. It was a distinct mixed message. His party enemy was subverted by the official loathing of Hillary Clinton.
Then came the more recent time when virtually the entire Republican party leadership structure, after publicly loathing Trump through the primaries, conceded that he’d won, and essentially swore allegiance to his candidacy.
My “spin” on this: they thought they could garner more votes by lassoing this wild horse and keep him in control while in the White House.
Now, my guess is, they are doing the “devils dance” of “what do we do now?”
The dance will not be accompanied by openness and honesty, of course.
And in the meantime every single one of us will be victims, not only to the farce of the campaign, but to the results afterwards.
All of us share the blame. We need to figure this out.
5. From “John” (not his real name), an example of the virulent anti-Hillary argument presented unburdened by defensible evidence. This is from a person we befriended and helped when he needed help, who has apparently now found religion and “flipped” almost in an instant. This is presented as received, without editing. (See also comment 3F above)
Dick Bernard,
After reading your blog about the basis of your justification in the Democratic Party and how you form your political views of Hillary R. Clinton, I can justly call you a uneducated, main-stream biased, mind-controlled victim of historical factual democratic Alinsky tactics learned by both Hillary Hinton and Barack Muslim Brotherhood Obama’s war on the USA a state double-dipping t0 enrich the billion already obtaind via voices or POTUS, and Secretary of State right under the medial ignored bias non -journalists and influence peddling.
I find it incredulous that you speak about the Democratic Party with such admiration
despite the history of it’s founders, under the guise of social justice for our Black Lives Maters uneducated members forefather’s plantation’s slave labor force were moved from the servitude to the new plantation i,e , ghetto of the freed slave migration to the ghettoes of the new cities containment areas,
Flask Dick!!!!!!! Obama is a self proclaimed hater of the USA, it’s constitution, for which he shows little regard and his secretive Presidential decrees/directives espousing Agenda 21, common core, and the ill-legal boarders policy. Parents of communists leanings, a homosexual that denies it for political gain with a ” wife of the same gender as himself”. His mind control handler is a Syrian- Valarie, Jarret. Co instantly, Hillary has a love interest In Huma Abedin, who is also a Syrian. What are the odds.husband has done and is proud of this fact,She has slept with more women than her, smooth, Happy cocaine induced slick Willie
Go see the highly documentary. ” Hillary’s America ” and see what is in store for you and Cathy! You might learn something who use the KKK for enforcement agenda, and how it contuse today. You won’t be so self edifying and self-righteous in calling yourself a Democrat anymore. Fact Dick- no Republicans owned or abused slaves.
EDUCATE YOUSELF FOR ONCE AND ALL. However, I bet you will vote for Hillary “Goldie Sacs” Clinton just because your family has always been DEMOCRATIC
Hillary Clinton’s agenda is clearly going by her close connection to the history of the Democratic Party’s strict adhesion to the 1. Political agnosticism 2. Lack of any strategy beside a brutal attack, denial, forgetfulness in the Akinsky (playbook of rules)
Hillary is a good pupil of this communist community activist, so much so, Her college thesis was the admiration enough to devote an entire Thesis entitled.”This is the Only Fight”. The Clinton Foundation has promoted the group as a tax exempt,philenthropic agend. Ask any Hatian it they sent the money they promised.
as also a money laundering operation of Interests of the Billions of donations for political beneficial influence exchange of foreign political deals, especially with the Soviets, Uzbekistan’s, uranium dealings,The worst is that she has shared national security with the War ready Communists (she affectionately calls then the progressives of the’great push of the uS into the Goblal Family of the non-associated green house gases that is causing such a worrisome scenario.
I will say that your blog is of little relevance as to the important events of the present age. I stand with the patriotic Americans that would vote for a loose lipped American
patriot than a lying, closeted ledbian whose relationship was fomed years before the marriage was agreed to be one of convienence, One who beats her opponents with her fists as is the case with Bill Clinton’s black SHINNERS, OR HAS THEM diposed of after then were bullied and shot themselves in the White Houseand moved for the sake of getting in the way of her megalomania.
Like mother like daughter, Chelsea is a basard whose real father is obvious from her
quite remarkable Rose Law firm lawyer father,
Any first Lady that has a profound hatred for her secret servive defenders protecting her and the condisending manner she talk down to those”little people “of the white staff tells me see is a demonic person that all that deal with her have little good to say for just being the dirt under her self gandious status of there 40+ years of politiacal hatred of the uSA.
I hope the mole/ possible oral syphilis leasion on her tongue, or brain damage to noy come outl fainting is a sign that she dies before turning over the prize she has achieved in nearing God help s all)
You are the product of writing xgrandpop to grandchild family history, your rembrances, of the by gone , happy memories of a typical self-trubador of North Dakota minutia, that you should be written in a journal and not babble on like the senile grandpop who feels his life had some sembulance of history, and reason for your 77 years of rural farm life messaging, only important to a decline old man! Take a walk in the morning and continue
of the time it reminds you of your younger years in NO, Dakota!
PEACE WILL NOT BE ON THE WORDS THAT OBAMA CAN”T UTTER,”I ALLOWED MORE IHADIST MUSLIMS IN TODAY . TRANSPARENCY STILL WORKS ON THE BRAIN_WASHED!
6, A FINAL THOUGHT FROM DICK:
Our apparently former friend, “John”, above, has caught the wave of the long-time Republican strategy to effectively “kill” people like me. He symbolizes the currently awful state of the current American political conversation, and there are a lot of outliers like him at the Trump rallies. For a long while he has depended on the exact same government he truly seems to despise. It isn’t rational, but it’s how he obviously sees things.
The “American people” are not like John – just look around you – but we seem to consciously put up with vicious winner-take-all politics, where political advertising is intended to manipulate our behavior.
The Congress of the United States, which rarely gets even close to a 20% approval rating from the public it is elected to serve, and dips to almost non-existent levels, in a weird sort of way represents who we want in our “leaders”, especially the Tea Party crew on the far right. We always tend to reelect Congressional incumbents. Our own Congressperson, I guess we say, is different.
Cathy and I once sat in the gallery of the House of Representatives on an evening just before the election of 2000. Even then, it was so bad that a then-Congressman from southern Illinois came up to the Gallery to talk with the few of us who were sitting there, to apologize for the behavior of his colleagues below. He was leaving the Congress he said. He just couldn’t take it any more.
That was 16 years ago. It has only gotten much worse, since.
I am mostly around people who would be characterized as “left” wing, though I’m on the very moderate side. I can’t recall ever running into someone as bizarre as “John” has turned out to be. He’s the “canary” in the contemporary Republican coal mine.
If you’re Republican, and want to clean up the party, oddly, you need to consider strongly not voting Republican for any office this time around.
And I say this as a strong believer in the two-party system.

#1150 – Dick Bernard: The Latest Deadly Nutcase.

This mornings headline in the Minneapolis Star Tribune: “The Gunman’s Rampage At German Mall Kills 9”
This latest killing strikes me even more than most because just a few hours before the murders happened, I was visiting with my friend from Paris, who has friends and relatives in Nice, France (none of whom were in harms way during the Bastille Day truck massacre on the boulevard.)
Nice, and the earlier attacks in Paris and Brussels, Belgium, impact her powerfully, of course.
I asked a question: “what is the population of France?” I think she said 69,000,000.
In general, I said: are the people of France to be immobilized by essentially random acts of violence, perpetrated by assorted evil actors, impossible to stop?
Now we have the Munich disaster. (Munich urban area: 2 1/2 million people; Germany, 82 million; Paris urban 10 1/2 million; Minneapolis-St. Paul MN urban 3 1/2 million)
Are we to stop living every time one of these things happens? Are we to arm ourselves to the teeth to avoid the really infinitesimally tiny possibility that we’ll be next? Not for me.
I recall our dear friend, Annelee, describing being under the allied bombs when Munich was bombed nearing the end of WWII – she and her fellow prisoners, all of Munich, essentially, underground basically were waiting to die – a lifelong consequence for her was losing her hearing; my brother-in-law, Mike, an Army man, was in Munich for part of the 1972 Olympics when the terrorist hostage situation occurred there.
Recently I did a post about the 100th anniversary of the battles of the Somme and Verdun in France. My friend Jeff, in my July 7 post: “consider 100 years ago now, two ongoing battles, ending in stalemate, with 1,200,000 dead on both sides, and another 1.2 million casualties over the 6-8 months each battle lasted.”*
And now we are transfixed over yet another nutcase out to do damage: in the Munich case, killing himself rather than surrender.
Unfortunately, in the greater scheme of things, historically, Munich is hardly “news”, much less front page.
I think it was the Oklahoma City/Murrah Building disaster(April 19,1995) which began my informal inventory of such catastrophes. Afterwards came places like Columbine (in the near neighborhood of which school my son and family lived) in April 1999, etc.
I never wrote anything down but:
1. who were the killers?
2. why did they kill;
3. what did they use to do the killing;
4. etc.
Lots of the murders were school related; virtually all of them with an accomplice: one or more guns. We tend to forget that the mass murder by bomb in Oklahoma City were two anti-government white guys who were, if I recall, both military veterans, lifelong U.S. citizens.
Terrorism is something of a recent innovative term, and even more recently automatically and instantly attached to some scary “them”.
Even more recently, we have become perpetrators: authorized torture in Iraq and Guantanamo; celebrating talk of violence or imprisonment against a candidate for President of the United States just this week…
The enemy is ourselves, folks, till we get a grip, and understand our cause in this matter of being civil to each other..
My condolences to every member of every family who has lost someone to a killing, like Orlando, like Falcon Heights, like, now, Munich.
We need to keep this in perspective.
* Some months ago I did a bit of research to give some context to “war” as we in the U.S. have experienced it. It is here. Today we Americans and most others as well are in very safe times compared even with recent history.
(click to enlarge)
Human Cost of War001

#1149 – Dick Bernard: The Maestro gives a Shout-out

POSTNOTE JULY 23: Munich.
My plan a few days ago was to watch the Republican Convention on TV… (continued after “shout-out”)
The Shout-out.
Two weeks ago, Saturday July 9, we took Don, our neighbor across the street, to Sommerfest at Orchestra Hall.
The hall this particular evening seemed packed, even though the featured soloist on piano, Andre Watts, had to cancel due to a back injury. Conductor and long-time Sommerfest Artistic Director Andrew Litton, did his expected magic; and substitute pianist Zhang Zuo was wonderful with Beethoven’s Concerto No. 1 in C major for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 15.
After intermission came a full hour of Rachmaninoff’s “Symphony No. 2 in E minor, Opus 27”.
Sommerfest tends to be more a casual than formal event, though the quality of music is always the same: first rate.
Before beginning, Maestro Litton, gave us an impromptu recollection from his own life.
He began with piano at age 5, he said, and at age 15, in 9th grade, in 1975, something happened in class that triggered a response from his teacher. (We’ve all been teenagers…we can imagine….)
The next day the teacher brought Andrew a vinyl recording of the Rachmaninoff symphony and suggested the youngster listen to the third movement, which became the basis of the popular song “Full Moon and Empty Arms” (many renditions are on YouTube); and which Litton has conducted many times in his career.
Quietly and offhandedly, Andrew Litton made two points for us that stuck with me: the teachers class was 9th graders; and the teacher was African-American.
Neither sub-point was necessary or dramatized, but in a short phrase Andrew Litton spoke volumes to all of us: The African-American teacher made a big difference in his life.
The single quiet encounter in a real sense helped inform his life to follow.
But there was more:
For myself, listening, I thought of the ongoing tensions related to shootings and race. Indeed, just a few short walking blocks from Orchestra Hall, some protestors were gathering in a continuing response to the Philando Castile shooting 3 days earlier in nearby Falcon Heights, his apparent crime, “driving while black”.
Castile was a highly respected cafeteria worker in the St. Paul public schools. As any teacher would attest, school employees like Castile are teachers of children in all senses.
Andrew Litton, before turning to the Orchestra to raise his baton, was, I think, saying “thank you” to a teacher, an African-American teacher, from his youth.
And perhaps causing more than just myself to think about who we are, really, people together, here to occupy the same space for a short amount of time. Included, not excluded, or singled out….
Thank you, maestro. More on Castile et al after the following on the RNC.
*
The Republican National Convention (continued)
…I didn’t have the stomach for watching the RNC. The speakers and particularly the delegates I saw were angry at, terrified of, and despise people like me. (I am sure that there were delegates in that hall who felt extremely uncomfortable with the actions of the speakers and the people around them, but who would have the courage to say anything, either at the time, or publicly afterwards.) For the time being, it is the Trump Party, not the Republican Party, that is holding sway.
I wrote once about the Convention, “The First Night of the RNC”, Jul 19.
Since, I have chosen to read about each day through my favorite blogger. Here’s my choice, if you wish, for your weekend:
“The One Man” (Jul 21);
“Another Opening, Another Show” (Jul 18);
“Closing the Deal” (Jul 19);
“The Cruz Missile” (Jul 20).
I highly recommend this blog. Mostly, I recommend getting on the political court in the numerous ways available to each and every citizen.
Nobody, even his worshipers, deserves Donald Trump as President of the United States.
The 2016 RNC was no usual “political cheerleading”. Most of the delegates were willing participants in what was a hatefest.
We are better than this; and our country stands to be much worse off should he succeed, and his main victims will be the dispossessed who support him and who think he’ll make THEIR OWN LIVES “great again”, when the opposite will more likely be true.
*
Which brings me back to Castile and “Black Lives Matter”
Much is made of the protests in the wake of the tragedies of recent weeks, including those in support of Philandro Castile.
It is a difficult issue to talk about, across racial bounds. But the efforts are important.
I have noticed some things:
I was 27, teaching in suburban Blaine MN, when the 1967 Minneapolis North Side riots occurred; I drove through part of Washington DC after the 1968 riots there. I watched, with most everyone else the 1992 Los Angeles riots after Rodney King was beaten.
What has truly struck me in the recent events is that the African-American community has, with very few individual exceptions, avoided the violence of the past.
Even the most horrific circumstances, like the killing of the nine South Carolinians in a church by a white man, did not bring an explosion of vengeance.
There is a change of tone by the body politic at large, that is very refreshing, a sign to me of hope that there is progress. While there is a very long way to go, and we’ll probably never truly get there – we are, after all, a slave nation to our roots, and we can never deny that – in individual and group ways we seem to be turning a corner – which some find very uncomfortable. Violence, after all, sells.
(The night that maestro Litton gave his little talk from the stage at Orchestra Hall, a demonstration was gathering a few blocks away at Loring Park. I wondered if it would wander our way to make a point. It did not.)
Change is happening.
*
But nothing is easy.
Except for occasional disastrous happenings, we live in relatively peaceful and, in America, prosperous times.
The current and continuing disaster in the Middle East was largely created by ourselves (through the Iraq War). That will never be admitted. That same war caused the near collapse of our economy, which at this moment, eight years later, is robust. Eight years ago I could not have imagined how thoroughly we have recovered.
We would be further along had not the Republicans chosen to make sure President Obama would not succeed.
There have always been and there will always be disasters, and people to exploit them. Now we hear about them instantly, and endlessly, and they stoke our most dire imagination of what they might mean to ourselves.
Recently, it is France that has borne the brunt, it seems, of the ad hoc killings: the disasters in Paris; and most recently the horrific carnage on Bastille Day in Nice come to mind.
There are nearly 70,000,000 people in France. No, France is not going up in flames.
In mid May a plane enroute from France to Egypt went down in the Meditterranean Sea, and the suspicion immediately was terrorism, though no one has taken credit for such. The cause of the crash remains unknown. The black box has been recovered, and to my knowledge there has been no report, still, on what happened aboard that plane.
In our own country (which is more violent than most), an apparently lone wolf vigilante from Kansas City killed policemen in Baton Rouge; similarly, another lone wolf gunned down policemen in Dallas. In some quarters, race was made to be a matter in both.
We will never rid ourselves of these probably planned but still random acts of violence.
We cannot govern our lives by these kinds of possibilities.
*
Now comes the Democrats National Convention, and Hillary Clinton
I have long been a very public supporter of Hillary Clinton. In 2008 I thought she was the best person for the job of president. She is far more qualified now, than she was then.
She has been the subject of demonization by her enemies for over 20 years. None of us could survive such personal attacks as she has had to endure. It is bullying and character assassination on steroids, masquerading under the guise of “just politics”.
I will have more to say about her, and that, after her expected nomination.
*
Thank you for reading. I welcome comments at dick_bernardATmsnDOTcom. This screen will be dark until July 30.

#1148 – Dick Bernard: The First Night of the RNC 2016

POSTNOTE: A new friend, a retired North Dakota farmer my age, linked me to Ken Burns 2016 Stanford University Commencement address: The address is pertinent, and well worthy of your time, here.
My intention was to watch the RNC this year. I lasted part of the first hour last night. I left about the time of the Duck Dynasty guy, and after the distraught lady who lost her son at Benghazi said Hillary belonged in prison in stripes. (Watching the lady as a speaker, she didn’t seem like she wanted to be there, and didn’t really know what to do while there, but somebody thought she’d be useful because she’d blame Hillary for something even the obsessed Congressional Benghazi Committee couldn’t succeed at doing: finding Hillary Clinton culpable of anything relating to the tragic events at Benghazi.)
Nonetheless, the lady cut a tragic figure, ironically speaking before the Party who Reveres War, and considers those who work for peaceful resolution of things as wimps or worse. “Making Us Safe” means having bigger guns and using them quicker….
Succinctly, even watching a piece of the action on television, I felt like an enemy alien – somebody, if they knew who I was, would publicly pillory me…even though they didn’t know me at all.
This is a nasty “red meat” bunch at the RNC Convention this week, notwithstanding all of the reverence for God.
This morning I had a rude awakening when a dear friend, on the doorstep of 90, and I’d say Democrat as they come, who sent an e-mail that more than a little suggested that she’d been sucked in by the Benghazi Mom’s tale about Hillary. How could she possibly believe this crap? But she apparently did…at least enough to write me about it. (She’s one of those women who for some reason have never liked Hillary.)
This led to a thought: months ago, I heard of Trumps fascination with how the Nazi’s could manipulate people simply by communication. Seems it was from a deposition given by one of his ex-wive’s when they were divorcing. Hitler or someone’s work was his bedside reading, then.
But last night and this mornings communications brought to mind an unbelievable quote I’d seen back in the early days of the Iraq War: It goes like this, and it was attributed to Nazi Reichmarshall Herman Goering, who committed suicide before he could be hung for WWII war crimes:
“Why, of course the people don’t want war. Why should some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece?
Naturally, the common people don’t want war, neither in Russia, nor England, nor for that matter, Germany. That is understood, but after all it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simpler matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.

Even then I was skeptical of quotations, so this one I decided to track down, and when I found one of the versions including the probable source, I went to the University of Minnesota Main Library, up in the old book stacks, found the book, checked it out, and read it till I found the specific reference.
Yes, it was true: Quoted in the book Nuremberg Diary, p. 278, Gustave Gilbert, Farrar, Straus & Co., 1947. Gilbert was psychologist assigned to the Nazi prisoners on trial at Nuremberg, and this came from an interview he had with Goering himself.
I doubt I’ll watch the rest of the week. The several thousand delegates can scream with delight at the speakers. I’ll take the easy road, and read the accounts the next day, as this one, from Day 1: “Another Opening, Another Show”
POSTNOTE: I looked up the Wiki on the U.S. State Department. Look at the sidebar at the top of the page. The State Department has, as I count, 69,000 employees in (likely) every country on the planet. Still, the buck stops at Hillary Clinton’s desk?

#1147 – Wendell R. Anderson, Minnesota Governor, World Citizen, Feb. 1, 1933 – July 17, 2016

Today’s local news will be full of news about Wendell R. Anderson, Governor of Minnesota, 1971-78; Minnesota legislator from 1959 forward.
I will be hoping for mention of the Governors key role in Minnesota’s Declaration of World Citizenship, signed March 26, 1971, by Governor Anderson and the entire range of Minnesota’s political and civil leadership; followed in early 1972 by a 30 minute film, Man’s Next Giant Leap, which featured a great many prominent political and civic leaders of the day, including Governor Anderson, speaking publicly of achieving World Peace through World Law and Justice to the citizens of the state of Minnesota.
The film and Declaration feature a literal “Who’s Who” of Republican and DFL (Democrat) leaders of the time, as well as civic, education and religion leadership. Gov. Anderson was doubtless a key person in moving the bi-partisan initiative. Singer John Denver, who donated his time, is prominently featured in the film.
You can view the Minnesota Declaration of World Citizenship, and the 1972 film, Man’s Next Giant Leap, here.
If you’ve not heard of the film or the Declaration, you will be amazed at how a state’s political and civil celebrities could publicly come together around a common theme of World Peace through World Law during the most heated and polarized national time of the Vietnam War.
Gov. Anderson is at peace.
He made a big and very positive difference.
My thanks to him for his service to the people of Minnesota, particularly to the children, and to our future.

#1146 – Dick Bernard: The 2008 Republican National Convention. Remembering Peace Island and other things.

The Facebook album with 120 photos I took at and around the time of the Republican National Convention (RNC) in St. Paul in 2008, Aug 30 – Sep 4, are accessible here. If you access through this page, I believe you do not need a Facebook account to view these photos.
The program for the Peace Island Conference Sep 2-3, 2008, also in St. Paul, can be read here: Peace Island Sep 2-3 08001
(click to enlarge)
IMG_2218
The coming Republican National Convention in Cleveland (more at the end of this post) reminds me of my own close call with the RNC gathering in St. Paul, Sep 1-4, 2008.
That was the year of Sarah Palin; the time of public recognition that Iraq War was a disaster for us and everyone; of the no-show of President George W. Bush at the Republican Convention; of the death’s door economy which was about to hit rock bottom less than two weeks after the Convention; of candidate John McCain’s admonishment of a near distraught Lakeville resident railing about Muslims….
It was eight years ago, and it almost seems quaint, even though it was the year the police state came to the Twin Cities; police prepared for riots, al Qaeda, and peaceniks descending on St. Paul…. Yes, it was quaint.
*
We learned that St. Paul would be the venue for the 2008 Republican Convention in the fall of 2006. At the time, I was President of a group called the Minnesota Alliance of Peacemakers (MAP).
I think it was in November, 2006, that I was at a conference at which the keynote speaker was Rabbi Michael Lerner of Network of Spiritual Progressives. At a break I saw my friend, Dennis Dillon, and a lady who I came to know, Susu Jeffrey, huddling about Susu’s idea: let’s have a Peace Island event at the time of the RNC, to highlight Peace, over the war which was then raging in Iraq and doing very serious damage to our country in so many ways.
Susu’s was a wonderful idea. I joined the committee, and for the next 20 months or so, a group of about eight of us met almost weekly to plan what became a major conference, which we called, “Peace Island: A Solutions Driven Conference”. We emphasized solutions.
Near the end of my last year as MAP President, October, 2007, I believe, I was invited to be part of a panel, along with two members of law enforcement, to talk about the policing matter at the Convention.
For MAP’s annual meeting in December, we invited the Chief of the St. Paul Police Department, Bill Harrington, to speak at our meeting.
At the meeting, several – “our own” – picketed; I invited one of them to speak before Chief Harrington was introduced; two uniformed members of the Minneapolis Police Department were at the back of the room. Nobody knew why they came….
The meeting went very well.
Chief Harrington gave a very good presentation, and was well received.
*
Planning for the Peace Island conference continued for the next year. MAP became the primary sponsor.
There were other groups with their own agendas forming outside of our own, some including some MAP members. We were later to learn about infiltrators (“intelligence”) for the police in some sectors.
I’d be disappointed if there was not a dossier about me rattling around in some data base somewhere.
Just before the RNC week, I was asked if we would host overnight a small group of peace activists who were walking here from Chicago. We accepted this positive task for Kathy Kelly and group.
The next week my particular gig was exclusively the Peace Island Conference which, by the time it convened. had perhaps 250 registrants, and about as strong a faculty as had ever been gathered together for such a conference.
Preceding our conference was a separate peace demonstration from the State Capitol area to the RNC. I was one of the participants. It was one of the most peaceful (read: non-eventful) marches I’ve ever experienced. We gave positive witness to peace.
Those Transformer-appearing police in the riot gear didn’t even have interesting duty. Off and on you’d hear about some incident or other, but apparently even the anarchists were subdued.
The next two days our own Peace Island conference got no news coverage that I know of. Even those I would consider allies didn’t cover us. They were out looking for the action somewhere else. We offered peace and an excellent program, that was it! Violence sells, and we just didn’t have it. From a news perspective, peace is boring; conflict or disaster is in. It is easier, on all sides, to emphasize problems, rather than deal with the messiness of real solutions….
*
The last day of the RNC week was a separate Peace Island Picnic on Harriet Island, across the Mississippi from the RNC. I attended the entire event.
It was a chilly, but festive afternoon. Excellent music. The attendance was dampened a bit by the temperature.
Even there, though, the police were vigilant, those peace people were not to be trusted. A parade of un-marked cars made a point of driving by, as if to say “don’t mess with us”. On the river was what I call a “gunboat” “protecting” St. Paul from the rabble on “peace island”. Were we going to swim across? I didn’t see any canoes….
Elsewhere the news media found the occasional trouble they were looking for, but never very much, and nowhere near where I was. Sometimes I wondered if there were the famed agent provocateurs planted to throw a brick or two, but, of course, they don’t publicly announce such things.
Inside the Xcel the delegates anointed John McCain and Sarah Palin, and the rest is history….

A peace kid and a gunboat at the Mississippi River, St. Paul, September 4, 2008

A peace kid and a gunboat at the Mississippi River, St. Paul, September 4, 2008


Closer view of the gunboat on the Mississippi Sep. 4, 2008

Closer view of the gunboat on the Mississippi Sep. 4, 2008


NOW, CLEVELAND:
It is hard to predict what will actually happen in Cleveland at the RNC next week. There has been immense and measureable and positive change in this country in the last eight years. We came back from the brink of catastrophe in 2008, no thanks to Republican congressional initiatives to block and delay.
Most likely the RNC will anoint Trump/Pence, though Donald Trump has only a single interest in the matter: himself. And Pence represents a fringe of his own party.
The Republican establishment largely despises Trump, but thinks he’d be useful as President…at least more useful than President Hillary Clinton. If Trump tires of the job or otherwise leaves, the new President Pence will also be useful.
There will be nothing about “we, the people” at the Convention, except for the small minority who are continuing to seek to take control of the government for their own ends.
I’ll be like everyone else, and just wait and see.
I do have some advice for the Peace and Justice Movement: now is a great time to be on the Court for positive change, but there needs to be very serious discussion of how better to impact in these days.

#1145 – Peter Barus: A Reflection following tragedies: I lost friends to violent murder last year…

PRENOTE: In the wake of Falcon Heights and Dallas last week, Peter sent the following reflections. We agreed I would post this on return from an out of town trip. Dick
*
Been a long time since. It’s always good to read your writings. Feel free to post this response. You have a way of inspiring people.
Here is all I really know, summed up by the late peace activist, A. J. Muste: There is no way to peace. Peace IS the way.
I lost friends to violent murder last year. No firearms were involved. A baseball bat and a sword and a can of gasoline were found to have been used in the killings.
My late friend happened to be the most highly trained martial artist I have ever known, and I know this because I helped to train him for 25 years. I would have said it was impossible for the person accused of this multiple torture-murder to get close enough to this man to hurt him, and certainly not without dying in the process. But he, or most likely they, got to the wife and child first. In the 19 hours that followed, duct-taped to a chair, in a final act of courage my friend got on the phone, and in a calm and matter-of-fact tone, gave his cleaning staff the day off. He saved their lives.
As to “Security”, the family lived within about half a mile of the Vice President of the United States, so among the first responders on the scene after the fire department were the Secret Service, the ATF, the FBI, and the D.C. Police. The big house and the exclusive neighborhood were as highly protected by high-tech systems and personnel as it is possible to be.
Now, to the point of this awful story: “security” is not merely a myth, not only a delusion. Actually it is a stupendous con.
It’s a goldmine. A product that exists only in the customer’s brain. This would qualify it as art, except its purpose is not expressive of the human spirit, it is insidiously detrimental. And I bet you have never heard of a starving Security Expert.
America is not hysterical. I don’t know any hysterical people. There is hysteria, though: it’s all happening on the corporate entertainment feed, which is committed to selling, selling and selling. They sell products, and they sell anything that enhances sales. The selling itself is a product they sell.
To boost sales, they sell fear. That sells a lot of drugs, alcohol, politicians and real estate. Ever notice how much cars look like those white-armored Star Wars robo-troops lately?
All of that sells wars. And the wars sell more weapons than ever. And now the weapons are coming home, along with the awful damage done to human beings. And who’d a thunkit, more fear.
All “security” is false security. Airport security is ineffective at providing safe travel. Its effectiveness in other areas leads one to think it has another purpose entirely from that which is foaming from the media feeds every day. And of course that would be the creation of – no. still more fear? Yes.
The function of police is law enforcement. Not “crime prevention”. They actually cannot do much (legally) before a crime is committed. If you know somebody intends to hurt you, the Police will tell you to call them if they do. If that person says they are going to hurt you, call the police, and they will arrest the perpetrator for the crime of “terroristic threats”. A different crime, but a committed one. See, they only are supposed to respond after the fact.
Like anybody, the police can commit a crime, and there is some doubt these days whether they are treated equally before the law – they need to be treated more equally, but instead the supposed danger they are in at work is invoked as extenuating circumstance, and a lot of them seem to be getting away with murder.
Police are seen in two completely different contexts, depending on where one lives, and one’s physical appearance. Human beings see other human beings through a lens of expectations born of mythology. And that mythology, again, comes from the corporate entertainment industry. Thus some people run to, and some run from the police, when bad things are happening; and both are entirely sensible in this behavior. It is reality in both cases. The same cops exist in two completely disparate worlds. That certainly complicates the conversation in the entertainment feeds, where more than one idea is way too many.
The hundreds (!) of mass shootings we hear about are far are more likely to be the result of badly managed prescription antidepressants than “Radicalization”, the utterly fictional infectious plague we are being sold nowadays. The drugs in the dead shooters are not mentioned, we’re told, out of respect for their privacy. Eventually the pharmacology does emerge, and from what I have read of those since Columbine, it seems almost every shooter was on something with a warning label about violence and suicide. Since research into this might impinge on profits in some quarters, don’t look for it on your “news” channel any time soon. But it well could be that the entire mass-shooting phenomenon could disappear overnight, if a relationship could be established between these savage acts of violence and the things we put in people’s brains to make them peaceful.
Getting rid of guns could only help; but I don’t think it would begin to address the root causes. While we’re waiting for some progress on that, we can attack the natural habitat of terror, though, that’s simple enough: better distribution of wealth, and a restoration (or maybe implementation for the first time ever) of electoral integrity for starters. And free public education, remember that? I got that. That’s how I learned to think this way.
Fear and violence form a cycle that goes around and around until some other influence or friction stops it. This means you have to stop being violent, and/or you have to stop being fearful, if you want to end the cycle. There are no guarantees in this life, but those are the access points, and they are both within reach of every person, because they arise with perception, and perception is language. Violence and fear are both interpretations of the world we think we see. They may be the life-blood of Capitalism, but I’m willing to take a chance on that…
It might help if we could apply something else when we get fearful. Respect might do. We have bears and packs of coy-dogs here in Vermont, so we are careful with the garbage and the bird feeders and so on. We’re not careful because we’re afraid of these creatures: if it were so, we would shoot every last one. But we recognize their part in life. We’re careful because we respect them. We respect fire, and weather events, and floods. We respect people who are not like us.
And by the way, woe betide the rookie officer who shoots a bear in a trailer park after somebody’s open garbage can! People around here really get upset about that.
Love
Peter

#1144 – Dick Bernard: The "Incident" in Falcon Heights MN July 6, 2016

NOTE: Responses welcome, to: dick_bernardATmsnDOTcom. Indicate if you are willing to share your reponse; it and others will be included in a later post at this space.

Thursday, I posted about the 100th anniversary of the end of the awful carnages in 1916 at the Somme and Verdun, France.
Jeff, who recommended the reminder of the horrors of 1916, mentioned almost off-handed what had just happened just hours before in the Twin Cities suburb of Falcon Heights (my home address about 30 years ago). I had not yet heard of the killing of the African-American by a policeman during what seemed a routine traffic stop Wednesday night, but I had included something of a footnote to the main post, and called the killing in Falcon Heights an “Incident” in my headline.
My friend, Christine, Parisienne, was first to respond: “You would be crucified in France to call [the killing in the St. Paul suburb] an “incident”!!!
I asked her for an alternative, and her comment, and my response follow Andrena’s below.
Jeff, again, in suburban Burnsville, sent a comment yesterday from a business person in his circle: “I got an email today regarding business, the guy is an Italian ex pat who has lived in Ethiopia over 30 years. He has an agricultural cleaning and exporting business. He is in his early 70’s.”
At the end of the Italian-in-Ethiopia’s email was this comment:
“St. Paul is very near to Burnsville [Jeff’s home area]. When the police asks for the driving licence do they ask at gun point?”
But today’s commentary, about how it is to be black in this country, in the raw, came on Friday from Andrena, a good friend of mine and others. Andrena is a professional woman, and gave her testimony about being black in St. Paul sometime a week or so earlier.
At the end of the post, I will add my own two cents. But first, Andrena, with her permission:
“I can’t deal with any of this today. I’m back in the crying and anger mode. Why? Because white folks are pissed off about [MN] Gov. Dayton’s comments yesterday when he stated, Philando Castile [who was the man killed by the policeman in Falcon Heights] wouldn’t have been stopped if he were white.
Also, they (white folks on WCCO radio) were questioning, the authenticity of the tape and wondering ‘what happened before the tape was rolling’. Well, it seems, Philando Castile was pulled over because he had a ‘wide nose’ not due to a busted tail light. And now, with the sniper killing in Dallas, those perpetrators will be punished to the fullest extent of the law (which they should be) but, more often than not, police are not held to the same standard when they murder innocent citizens especially, with a 4 year old in the back seat.
I wasn’t angry yesterday but I felt extremely sad and helpless as I do today.
What I didn’t post on FB [Facebook] last week is I was almost pulled over by St. Paul police last week.
I was leaving the Franciscan house after my rosary prayers located [at] Hamline and LaFond avenue [St. Paul]. I was headed to Cathedral Hill to meet a friend for a late dinner at Red Cow restaurant located [in] Selby/Western Ave. I took Thomas Avenue and crossed over Dale. As soon as I passed Thomas Ave and Kent Street which is the corner of St. Agnes Catholic church, the St. Paul police car spotted me and turned onto Thomas Avenue from Kent Street. The time of day was approx. 8:50 pm., nearing dusk. A black woman driving in Frogtown.
I looked in my rear view mirror and noticed the squad car was extremely close on my bumper, I purposely slowed down without hitting my brakes. As fate would have it, I saw the pastor of St. Agnes Catholic Church walking down the street as I was approaching a stop sign and the cop was literally on my bumper, I stopped, rolled down my window and spoke to Fr. Moriarity, waving my hand at him. Fr. Moriarity stopped and we talked for approx. 30 seconds while I was at the stop sign with the cop behind me.
I wanted the … cop to know, I’m not a bad person and I know this priest and he addressed me by my first name.
I then took Thomas Avenue to Western Avenue crossing over University Avenue and 1-94 while still on Western. … cop followed me on Western Avenue until Marshall. The point I’m trying to make is I knew I was being followed aggressively and yet, there wasn’t anything I could do about it.
I’m a professional woman with a high level…security clearance and yet, none of that made any difference. Why? Because in that officer’s eyes, I was a black woman, driving through Frogtown at dusk in a decent looking SUV who he felt was suspicious, probably up to no good, probably trying to score drugs. I’m certain he ran my tags and wanted to know [what] someone with a Woodbury address was doing in Frogtown. I don’t hate the police and they serve and protect us. The only problem is they serve and protect some of us.
Enough of my rant. I’m still weepy and pissed off today………………”

Dick: I responded back to Christine’s initial “incident” comment: “Perhaps I’ll be crucified here, too. Not really. What would it be called? I might change the word, if you give me a good alternative.
We are a basically decent country – you know that. But until the gun issue is dealt with, these outrages will continue. We are accustomed to people being killed by guns every day. It leads our news every night. The death in Falcon Heights has all sorts of different elements, which might make it more effective to demand change.
1) An apparently Innocent African-American who had a legal right to have a gun, which he said he had beforehand, was blasted away by what appears to be a frightened policeman.
2) He was a school worker who was popular and well liked in his job at an elementary school in St. Paul.
3) His killer was a young policeman whose name sounds Hispanic, but likely was 100% American. You can bet the policeman’s ethnic background will be talked about.
4) Most important, the victims girlfriend broadcast the entire incident live on Facebook and it will be seen worldwide, and people like you and I can talk about it.
I presume you saw the amended version of the post (I put up about 2 a.m.).
On July 2, in my usual understated way, I talked about the pre-eminence of gun violence in this country.”
Christine responded: “We would simply call it a mortal police blunder. I am not sure whether blunder would be strong enough…. accident might be better…
Une bavure policière mortelle
I am not trying to correct you but just comparing the way we would speak…The word incident would be understood as a non important event…and will bring millions of comments and threats and insults…”

Summary, from my personal point of view: Those of you who read these posts regularly know that I like “Just Above Sunset” to summarize the national scene, and the Friday night post, long as usual, does so well.
Personally speaking, we are all victims. We are held hostage by those g*ddamned GUNS which some insist should be almost completely unrestricted. Imagine a scenario in Falcon Heights in which a gun wasn’t a player. In the civilized world, restriction on guns works. Here we are less than civilized, too many of us.
I feel some empathy for that young policeman who did the killing in Falcon Heights. He was not a rookie, but nearly so, and he was probably scared, too. He had a wife and a kid, and now everything is gone for them. As I say, “imagine a scenario…in which a gun wasn’t a player.”
In my U.S. Army days back in 1962, we had a basic training drill with fixed bayonets on our old M-1 rifles. As we thrusted our rifle forward, in response to the chant, “what is the purpose of a bayonet?”, we said in unison, “To kill.” Yes, it sounds barbaric, but even back then, in the very early 1960s, the presumption was that you may have to do the evil deed of killing someone with an actual knife, hand-to-hand, person-to-person. That was also true in WWI.
By the mid-sixties we had the sniper in Texas picking off a dozen or so university students in Texas, and on we go. Our societal reverence for guns is insane.
Still, Andrena’s message is the one which most resonates with me. We have, we Americans, a major problem with relationships: the racial divide is real, and it is disgusting.
I don’t think we will ever get past racism: it is ingrained in everyone of us.
But I do think that there is potential for better, and as catastrophic as the last few days have been, we are making progress.
Yes, we are making progress.

COMMENTS:
from Jeff:
Well done. [The following is] worth a good read: (from MinnPost, here.)
from Larry: The woman [Andrena, above] who was followed by the police tells an eloquent story that’s quite relevant to the horrible behavior of the Falcon Heights police officer. This pathetic excuse for a police officer, obviously poorly trained and unsuitable to carry a loaded firearm, seems (from what I’ve read so far) as a reincarnation of the TV character, Barney Fife.
The Falcon Heights tragedy started with the hiring process and then the training. Clearly, both of these processes failed in this case.
from Mary: Always interesting to read perspectives but I hesitate to blame guns – there is a real intolerance for difference and an unhealthy appreciation for angry rhetoric. The very unfortunate reality in America is that it is deemed judgemental and politically incorrect to be respectful of others and there remains an unhealthy willingness to escape into the safety of firewalled technology to avoid the 70% or so of communication that is non verbal. I am with Christine…this is far more than an incident. This is disgusting no matter what your color or persuasions are……we must grow up and learn respect for each other.
Response to Mary: Thanks. I have no problem for what I call “farm guns” – the old 12 gauge and .22 and the like, and someone going hunting for duck or deer or such. We are long past those innocent old days. Now, with communication being as you well describe it, a gun is like a lit match over a can of flammable liquid. If people had to settle their differences with bayonets and machetes, hand to hand, there would be a whole lot less killing…though the killing will never end. It is now out of control, at least in our civilized nation.
from Bill: Two comments:
1. The policeman who did the shooting had on a previous stop of a minor traffic infraction pulled his gun on a woman driver. This may indicate a character flaw in his personality unfitting for a policeman.
2.One commentator on TV about this problem of how police approach a black person said “if you are afraid of approaching a person with a skin color different than yours you should not be in the police profession.”
from Bill: Thanks, Dick…nice job with all the comments….Mary started with “I hate to blame guns….” and then she went into intolerance, etc. Go ahead and include guns in the blame, nothing wrong with that! We just returned from Norway where – outside of a maniac (singular) a number of years ago, their gun violence is nil. Same with the U. K. Police there, as you know, do not carry guns. Ya, we “hate to blame guns” but there are WAY to many of them in the USA and too many of the wrong kind: the models that are only meant for killing people. Look at any weekly circular from Mills Fleet Farm…always a couple of pages of Bushmasters with 30 round clips. Really sick.

#1143 – Dick Bernard: WWI, a Dreadful One Hundredth Anniversary, and another Gun Incident Close to Home.

POSTNOTE 1 a.m. Friday July 8: When I posted the below less than 12 hours ago, I was hardly aware of the shooting of the African-American citizen in Falcon Heights, a town in which I used to live; at a location I knew well, along a walking route I used to take in the early 1980s.
Eight hours later, I know quite a bit more about the local “tragic incident” in a nearby town, and what is already the spillover effect. If what happened on that street yesterday is not a wake-up call to we Americans, nothing will be. Here’s something else I said in the July 2 blog referred to below: “The notable exception, and it is an important one, is that we in the U.S. are killing ourselves and our fellow citizens with guns at an alarming rate, well over 10,000 U.S. citizens every single year. Here’s one data source that seems credible.”
Get acquainted with the data at the above website, and get to work.
*
My friend, Jeff, reminds me that today is awful anniversary of the terrible battles of WWI:
Jeff: It seems as if things couldn’t be worse, but pause to consider 100 years ago now, two
ongoing battles, ending in stalemate, with 1,200,000 dead on both sides, and another 1.2 million casualties over the 6-8 months each battle lasted.
Seeing the first use of phosgene gas and armored tanks on the battlefield.
Watch here, about Somme; and here, about Verdun.
Germany plays France today in soccer in the semifinals of the European championship. The Brexiters and others in EU wanting separation always underestimate the value of over 70 years of peace between Germany and France (and England) is an exceptional thing given the history of Europe from about 1400 to 2016.
He and I had a brief exchange, as follows:
Dick: Yes, very good.
I tried to point this out, gently, in the July 2 blog (“There are great problems…but this is a pretty peaceful time, at least as far as war is concerned.”), and a friend basically suggested I was a “rose colored glasses” type. [Data here: War Deaths U.S.002
Jeff: It’s true, actually, actual violent death caused by malicious intent is low worldwide. We just hear more about it. Not that its any less devastating.
The randomness of terrorism, and of course what happened in Falcon Heights* [another killing of an African-American by police] last night make it more frightening.
I don’t think you are a rose colored glasses type.
Optimism is a good thing.
* I lived in Falcon Heights in the early 1980s, only several blocks from yesterdays tragic incident. It is a small community, suburban St. Paul, close by the Minnesota State Fair Grounds.

#1142 – Dick Bernard: The State Department E-mails, and a Personal Reflection Back

I write after FBI Director Comey has made his report on the Hillary Clinton e-mails a few hours ago. The assorted “spheres” will make of the report as they will, over, and over, and over, and over….
Permit me a moment to share a bit of historical perspective.
It happens that in the last few weeks I was tasked with writing an introduction to a near-1000 page publication entitled Chez Nous, whose contents will be 155 actual newsletters published by volunteers in a small organization in which I was long active, which existed between 1980 and 2002.
I had been volunteer editor of two thirds of these newsletters, and beginning about seven years ago I decided to make them potentially useful by creating an index of their contents. This required me to read every newsletter once again.
A few months ago a decision was made to publish the newsletters as part of the legitimate historical record of a time past, and here we are.
And so, an introduction (which quotes a few e-mails, by the way), was in order.
(For the curious, you can see and read everything here (click on the tab “library”, then on “Chez Nous”, then on the link to the newsletters.)
There are two sentences in the introduction to those newsletters which I wish to emphasize, and they are on page VI, as follows: “It wasn’t until Jan-Feb 1999 that an e-mail address appeared in the newsletter (p. 760)…We tend to forget how recently e-mail came to us common folks.”
It was 2009 when Hillary Clinton came to head the massive U.S. State Department with tens of thousands of employees world-wide. Some of these persons were originators of these now famous “e-mail chains” in which a few apparently “secrets” were referenced or revealed. Most, in a technology sense, were “common folks”, trying to figure out how to use this new way of communicating. My bet is that we can all tell our stories.
Of course, we commentators – all of us – will not know what these “secrets” were…they were, after all, secrets.
There is no need to invest more words. If you’ve read this far, you probably have already come to some conclusion about guilt or innocence of Secretary Clinton, or even if this whole business amounts to nothing at all.
It is part of history.
Six lines down from the statement I quote above, I say this: “Ten years in technology today is like 100 or more years in the older days. It can get confusing”.
Reflect on your own past with this technology thing, and remind others to do the same.
COMMENTS:
from Norm (himself a longtime and excellent volunteer newsletter editor):
Gees, Dick, and to keep things consistent with the predictable reactions to the FBI report on Hillary’s use of emails, are you sure that there wasn’t some sort of cover-up or whitewash in all of those emails that you have decided to index and categorize? Isn’t there a severe risk that upon reading and reviewing your compilations that someone will come forward with the claim that your purposely omitted some of them or “lost” some of them or put them into the wrong category?
I mean isn’t there a significant risk, Dick, that someone might claim…or perhaps a group could complain…that your indexing and compiling “clearly shows an obvious” North Dakota bias or something like that?
Gees, Dick, one or more of those disgruntled non-North Dakotans might even insist on a public investigation of your work to determine if such a bias exists as they, of course, are absolutely sure that it exists.
I mean, goodness, a feeling could develop or being suggested that there is always something with Bernard’s always good work that reflects that doggone North Dakota bias?
There isn’t a little Kenny Starr among those potential critics is there who would want to take such an investigation to the end no matter how much the cost, is there?
Just in an all out effort to trump your work, as it were?
Response to Norm: Egads! I’ll have to delete that blog before it causes me problems!
One of my worries, with the newsletter “book”, is inadvertently misstating a page number in the index, or missing a cross reference I should have caught. It does happen, of course, And finding it after it’s printed is too late.
I did the initial indexing, and some years later essentially re-indexed to fill in the blanks missed the first time (there were many such blanks). Even now, when I’m pretty sure I’ve caught most of them, I’m sure I’ll still find mistakes. But those 155 newsletters are more thoroughly indexed that, I bet, you’ll find anywhere!
As you know, as a newsletter editor yourself, mostly you’re so starved for news, that you take almost whatever comes in, fact-checking be damned. If you read my piece, when I was doing that newsletter for an ethnic group (French-Canadian) I gave priority to whatever came into my mailbox (and that was the U.S. mail, by the way), and, of course, like you, because I was editing something, I was always on the lookout for items which might be of interest to the readership.
One of my many “weaknesses”, I suppose, in these ideological purity days, is that I like to hear and share opposing points of view…so long as the writer identifies him or her self. This factors out those ridiculous “forward” that are anonymous and passed from e-box to e-box forever…and there will be a lot of those I can bet.
Thanks for the comment: I’ll add to the post.