Archive for November 14th, 2005
Homocide
Posted by Bob in How Things Work, Musings about Life on 11/14/2005
The Senate has passed Hate Crimes legislation.
What this means is that there a difference between homicide, and homocide, a much greater crime.
If someone goes on trial for homicide, it is very important that the person he killed was straight, and that the killer KNEW he was straight.
If the person is homosexual, the prosecutor is going to go for the much more stringest, and Federal, Hate Crime punishment. Even if you are acquitted by a local jury of homicide you can be retried for the same crime in Federal courts under the Hate Crimes legislation.
If the establihsment doesn’t like you are routinely tried three times for the same crime. First there is the state or local trial, then there is the Federal trial, then there is the civil lawsuit. No matter how they come out the legak fees will break and the civil award will still on you.
We used to have a joke that under American law a man was innocent until he was proven guilty, under the Napoleanic Code a man was guilty until proven innocent.
Under Soviet law a man was guilty.
If American law is after you today, you’re guilty.
The Idealists
I said that I gave away my tickets to the Reagan Inaugurations.
Had I gone, I would have heard everybody there talking about his part in getting the Reagan Democrats on board, the vote that caused the Reagan Landslide.
We all know that everybody was For It When It Counted.
I remember that all of those who were For It When It Counted had a secret meeting with a governor asking him to run on our ticket for Republican nomination. We were trying to influence national policy, but he was the governor of a small state who needed to get reelected.
By “all of us” I mean a group of people who, with the governor, his aide and a bodyguard, fit nicely into one hotel room.
So listening to people saying how they were always for it did not entertain me.
In 1933, tens of thousands of people lined up to get appointments inthe new Hitler Administration because they had Always Been For It. In 1945 those people lined up for appointments with the Occupation because, despite their apparent support, They Had Always Been Against It.
It is when the crowds are all howling that they were always For It that Well-Known Writers announce who the Idealists were, the people who Made It Happen.
If you want to get credit for being an Idealist, you have to concentrate on positioning yourself for it, being the one the writers pick.
If you want to make things happen, you have to concentrate on THAT. Nobody who makes things happen is going to a Recognized Idealist.
To make this perfectly clear, notice that no war hero ever made the slightest difference in world history. Now notice that we are supposed to thank veterans for our freedom.
They made no difference and they are the heroes.
That is routine and, as Joe says, nobody will ever notice.
None of this BOTHERS me. If I sound irritated, it is because it is always hardest to explain the obvious. I am not irritated at humans being human. My BUSINESS has always been understanding humans being human.
It’s called politics.
In a huge society like ours, there are different groups specializing in different things.
A person like me comes up with a concept. He pushes it and pushes it until a fringe character on the outside fringe of the inside takes it up. So Pat Buchanan acted like he had finally discovered that the white race was disappearing by writing The Death of the West.
I am critical. But what is far more importantis something only I can know: I am also unique.
The PatBuchanans are critical, but they are not unique. The writer who takes Pat’s ideas and makes them more mainstream is critical, but not only is he not unique, he is just the first one to get to it.
Then a President makes Great Decisions based on the parameters we set down. He is a Great Man, and he is the commonest of the lot.
The woods are absolutely crowded with potential presidents who would have done that.
The further down the chain of ideas you go, the less you matter.
The farther down the chain of ideas you get, the more important you are, the more you get paid.
And that last sentence is the key to my whole world view.
That sentence, the one before last, is the one I have devoted my entire life to.
Another Answer to Joe
Posted by Bob in How Things Work on 11/14/2005
Joe says he is still stuck thinking about what I said about the important things are not noticed.
I wish other people reading the blog would, well, NOTICE things that I say like that that are really basic.
What does the average person want?
He wants to be financially secure. He wants people to think he’s good and that he’s smart.
He also wants to do the right thing.
Do you see a pattern here?
How do know you are doing the right thing?
You quote somebody. It could be your priest or a national columnist, but it’s a real SOMEBODY.
And that, boys and girls, is ALL people want.
No one notices what is right because it doesn’t MATTER what is right. It matters what SOMEBODY, a REAL SOMEBODY, TELLS you is right.
You pay a stock market analyst to tell you what stocks to buy because he is SOMEBODY.
I just said that the people who actually determine mankind’s long-term fate are so few that all of us and our cats could get into a matchbox with the matches still there. But there are THOUSANDS of staffers on Capitol Hill, even on the minority side.
Their whole lives are devoted to what they call “policy.”
Bill Clinton found that the way to be president was to “triangulate” between liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans. In my terms, this gave him no power, but it made him president.
Twice.
Why did he have no power, in MY terms? Because he was triangulting between position people like me had put in place.
The left is dying because it no longer has anybody like me or Pat or Kevin. Everybody in their huge establishment is trying to fit in, not too liberal, not too conservative, what are the latest opinion polls?
Or they are trying to fit in the with the “real liberals.” Those died out moons ago.
They are chasing their tails. Everybody thinks somebody else has “a position,” and they are trying to fit in with it.
They don’t.
It is fun, if you are one of the few like me, to listen in at parties. Everybody is trying to nail down what “the position” is.
Everybody knows that when a stock market expert or an ex-President, ex-Secretary of State, ex-everything, is lyingon his death bed he knows thaqt hislife was a zero sum game. If he hadn’t done it, somebody else would have.
You can write a book that is important OR you can write a book that gets published. Every book I wrote was ground-breaking and a commercial failure. But it got published.
And I never wrote a book or an article that evenvaguely resembled anything anybody else would have published.
Which is what I am doing right now.
But within a year or two of each of my books, other people were writing the same thing. They watered it down and didn’t follow it to its logical conclusion the way I did, but the cat was out of the bag.
I made the cat. I let it out.
That is POWER.
And nobody noticed.
Which was my secret. And it will stay my secret because no one will ever NOTICE.
Why does nobody notice?
Duid you know that many, many Indians saw the gold in California before the Gold Rush. A thousand years before. They noticed it beause it was where they were looking for food.
Why SHOULD the average person, REAL people, NOTICE what I see? What would they get out of it? All knowing what I know would get them would be the realization that THEY are helpless. They don’t WANT to see it.
They want to make a good living and be told by a SOMEBODY that they are doing good. There is nothing odd about this. It is all they have, all they want, all they can do anything about.
Most of the people who know what I know are making paper dolls in nuthouses.
It reminds me of a sitcom when the parents finally realized that their son was a person without a conscience, a psychopath. They told him about conscience and his reply was,
“You mean me to feel bad when other people feel bad? WHY SHOULD I WANT TO DO THAT?”
Great question.
Unanswerable question.
Nobody becomes a junkie and an alcoholic because he has a really swell life. I notice because I can do something about it. Somehow I can inject my ideas into the stream which leads on to general acceptance.
I am also a genius and a lonely drunk.
Why should anybody want to do that?
Knowing “Everybody”
Posted by Bob in How Things Work on 11/14/2005
If you are at a science fiction and you don’t know names like Hessenberg and Dyson, you will be considered rather odd.
If you are at a political convention and you don’t know the difference between the 435 congressmen and the 3 delegates in the House of Representatives, you might be asked to catch up on your reading.
But if you are the average party and don’t know Dyson, Heissenberg or that there is such a thing as a delegate inthe House, peiople are not going to gather inthe corner and gawk at you.
So when it comes to people who in on making national political strategy for decades, there were very few of us. The others who did this needed to know me, and I needed to work with them, so we knew each other.
So today people get the impression that I “knew everybody.” In 1976 National Review did a front page article attacking those who were know through the years as leaders of the movement for the Republicans to abandon its pursuit of the black vote and go for what were referred to as “Wallace Democrats.”
Since the 1980 election they have been referred to as “Reagan Democrats” and every Republican will tell you he was always for going after them.
So when I picked up National Review in one week in 1976 I had one of those problems that someone at at a scifi convention who never heard of Heissenberg has.
There was a cartoon showing the Evil Conspirators who after the filthy old working class vote. Cartoons always assume you know who is being cartooned. Ihad been reading NR on and off since its founding in 1955, so I was pretty savvy on the things one was supposed to know.
I instantly recognized Pat Buchanan, Kevin Phillips, and NR’s own publisher Bill Rusher. But I didn’t recognize the other guy.
I went to the next office and asked them and they thought I was showing of.
The other guy was me.
You would think that made me Somebody.
It certainly wasn’t that way at the time. I remember one guy at a party in 1972 that I didn’t know who Nixon’s Deputy UnderSecretary of Defence for something was.
We both knew in 1972 that if you volunteered the name of the guy was Deputy Undersecretary of Denense was in 1972, people would wonder what time warp you had walked out of. But Being There, being somebody with a big title, was all the buzz when a nee administration came in.
Actually, when it comes to real general national strategy, almost nobody matters. If it hadn’t been Bush it would have been somebody else.
Pat Buchanan, Kevin Phillips, Bill Rusher and me were the Without Which Nothings of the Reagan Revolution.
But by the time the revolution we caused happened, we were elsewhere.
In fact, I gave away my tickets to BOTH Reagan inaugurations.
I get more joy out of saying that than I could ever have gotten out of going to them. For me it would have been like an office party.
While everybody else was jostling to Be There, I was putting together The New Right Papers. And the whole point of THAT was to make a point on immigation which has become critical since.
When I sat with Pat or anyone else in our tiny group, we almost never even mentioned what was the Big Rage at the moment. Remember that Pat Buchanan and Joe Sobran , to mention names you will recognize, made his living writing columns about the Deep Philosophical Implications of whoever the latest nomineee for Deputy Assistant Secretary of Something were.
Let me give you one more example to give you a picture of how TINY the world of people who make national policy is.
When NR did its cover article with my cartoon, it led off with an attack on Wallace Democrats by attackinging George Wallace.
In the very first or second paragraph was a quote about how Wallace was not a REAL conservative. The quote was from another long-time discussant of national POLICY. In fact, this man’s quote was used in direct opposition to something I had said.
The man was John Ashbrook. He was my boss and his desk was thirty feet from my desk. He had hired me specifically tohelp hiim get those dirty old Wallace, now Reagan, Democrats.
But what John said about Wallace was what he meant. It was also what I had said, Wallace was not a conservtive, he was a populist.
But my point is how SMALL the world of people who infuence national policy at any level.
I knew them all.
Hell, I knew their CATS.
Pets, children and all, we couldn’t have made up a decent-sized cocktail party.
Citizens
Historically most Indians fell into the constitutional category of “Indians not taxed.” They were not counted in the census for a state’s number of congressmen.
Many of these “Indians not taxed” were highly educated. The leader of the Cherokees who caused the “trail of tears” was only one-righth Indian, and his portait shows that he was blue-eyed and very Nordic-looking.
He owned a plantation and about a hundred slaves. But his identity was Cherokee.
A number of these “Indians” travelled abroad. Some of them went to Oxford. But they went abroad not as US citizens but as “US nationals.”
In fact, in the 1950s residents of some of the American colonies in the Pacific were still “American nationals but not American citizens.”
When the fourteenth amendment made a person a citizen of the state in which he resided, it did not include Indians. But until the fourteenth amendment, the United States could have done with blacks what almoswt everybody at the Constitutional Convention wanted to do: Send them “back” to Africa.
In 1857 the Supreme Court had declared, “A black man has no rights that a white man is bound to respect.”
So today we talk about the fourteenth amendment as if it was concerned with integrated schools or the right to eat at any restaurant. The average person has no idea of the CONTEXT that made that amendment so radical that it had to be cheated into the Consitution.
Today the Supreme Court says that illegal aliens have the same rights as any citizen, plus affirmative action, all because of the fourteenth amendment.
The Supreme could require states to declare that blue was pink and the United States Army would enforce it.
But that was only after the World War II Generation, the Obedient Generation, took over.
In December of 1865 the thirteenth amendment went into effect.
In December of 1865 General Grant had to free his own slaves. Asked why he had kept them as long as he could, Grant made a classic comment, “Good help is hard to find these days.”
Everybody thought that was cute.
Except maybe Grant’s slaves.
But there was another interesting situation between the feeing of slaves in December of 1865 and the adoption of hte fourteenth amendment in 1868. You see, some of the congressmen from the slave-holding border states who sided with the Union actually REPRESENTED slaves.
According to the Constitution, a slave state was allowed to count each slave as three-fifths of a white person in apportoning the House of Representatives. When Missouri, for example, sent its congressmen to Washington in 1867, it still had the number of representatives it had before, inclduing the ones it was given for its slaves.
But Missouri had no slaves, and blacks were not allowed to vote.
The fourteenth amendment SPECIFICALLY allowed states to ban blacks from voting. But it did so by punishing those who did not let them vote. States which banned blacks from voting were not allowed to count blacks as part of their population when it came to membes of the House of Representatives.
Today everybody says that the fourteenth amendment gave blacks equal rights.
It did nothing of the sort.
There is another testimony to the fact that teh fourteenth amendment did not give blacks equal rights, and, like that provision of the fourteenth amendment, it is right there in black and white in the Constitution itself.
It is called the fifteenth amendment.
That provision punished the border states, but it also made it clear in black and white that a state could deny the vote on the basis of race.
The United States is NOT a Republic
The Warren Court ruled that states could not do what the United States does. That is, a state cannot have an upper house which gives one senator to each county regardless of its population. The US Senate gives each state two senators regardless of population.
The Warren Court ruled that a state legislature had to apportion BOTH houses on the basis of population. Prior to that decision practically every state had done just that for a hundred and eighty years.
How did the Supreme Court explain this?
One provision of the Constitution requires that every state “shall have a republican form of goverment.” At the time practically every country on earth was ruled by a monarchy, so the term “republican” referred to the absence of a monarch.
Period.
But the Warren Court ruled that if a state apportioned one house on the basis of counties rather than on population, it did not have a “republican formof government.”
Not only does the United States Constitution have a Senate based on states rather than population, but THAT IS THE ONLY PROVISION IN THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION WHICH CANNOT BE AMENDED.
We could take out the whole Bill of Rights and the presidency with a constitutional amendment, but we cannot touch the Senate being accorded strictly by states.
The Supreme Court stated this very plainly: a government which has a house apportioned on any basis other than population is NOT a republic. Every state has gone along with this.
The United States is not only not a republic, but it CAN NEVER BE a republic under the Constitution that the Supreme Court is charged with interpreting.




Reply to Joe
Posted by Bob in Comment Responses on 11/14/2005
In my response to my article below on 1984 Joe Rorke wrote about his first-hand knowledge of torture and what it had done to him. He then apologized for letting go that way.
Here is my reply:
“Joe, your comment was right on the money.”
“Remember I spent my life fighting the Communists, often in the third world.”
“If all the liquor I drank to keep going were dropped in the ocean at once, it would take out the east coast. So when I read Orwell it is painful but also therapeutic. The same with Solzhenisyn.”
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