Trump is the Candidate

The View From Chaos Manos, Wednesday, May 4, 2016

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Today was devoured by computers: the D Drive, which is the data drive for Alien Artifact, my older but very reliable main machine, Windows 10 now but Windows until not long ago, seems to have failed. It seems no longer to exist. Alien Artifact is behaving wildly. The C drive remains, with all the programs; and of course I have backups of all the important files, and a several days old backup of outlook.pst and all the mail I have received on other machines. It’s not a huge disaster, but it’s going to be a pain.

I’m doing this on Swan, a Windows 10 system in the back room. Swan is fast, but will stay here. I’ll convert to Eugene, the newest system in the house, as my main machine, and probably start construction on a new barn burner. And I may have later backups of outlook.pst; if not I’ll import all the Input files from another system, probably this one, and use rules to deal with that big food. It’s about time for all that anyway. I’ll report as I do it.

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Dentist again today. Took the same route getting there as I did Monday, passing all the public works sites, and I have to say, at every site all the people were working; moreover, in the place where I saw 19 people doing nothing, today they were distributed among a good half dozen sites and digging holes at each, so I probably did see a planning session. I have to apologize for my remarks Monday. Not entirely; the local TV stations have been finding a number of public workers napping, or drinking, on the job and delight in publishing the incidents, so some do go on, but I obviously caught a statistical anomaly Monday. On the way back, they were just closing up for the day on the yearlong work site, and once again I saw no one goofing off. Good work, guys.

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Cruz, and now Kasich have withdrawn; Trump will be the Republican candidate. When he started as one of a group of seventeen, no one I know thought he had a chance. I myself thought he was in in for a lark: he could afford it, he’d learn something, and he could obviously influence the direction of the debates; but everyone thought he wasn’t serious and hadn’t a chance even if he were.

A year later he’s the last man standing. Cruz, who ran him a hard campaign, was also anti Republican Establishment, a bona fide candidate, US Senator, serious, not thought of as a clown. Now he retires, defeated. If you add their votes together it comes to well over half of the Republicans voting in this year’s primary election going against the Republican leadership and establishment. Even the Stupid Party ought to get that message. They’ve had the purse strings yet the budget grows; bunny inspectors and other needless government workers remain; the size of government grows exponentially; there are more regulations all the time; 20% of American families now do not have one employed person in them; real unemployment as opposed to the artificial “official unemployment rate” is over 20%; the Depression continues; and nothing whatever has been done about unemployment. Jobs go overseas never to return, cheap goods flow in to be paid for with borrowed money, corporate profits and the Dow go up as employment stagnated; the public school system is in ruins – and the Republican Establishment wonders why no one trusts them.

And now there are mutters from otherwise intelligent people that they might have to vote for Hillary –first time I ever voted for a Democrat, and a left wing Democrat at that, but at least she’s not Trump. And yes I actually heard an intelligent friend say that.

My answer was simple. With Hillary you know it will be more of the same as we’ve had for the last 8 years. More Depression, and with it you will get a Liberal majority on the Supreme Court. Obama has already nominate the first one. Do you think the rest will be better?

“No, but—“

“I’m not through,” I said. “Trump has already said – said within hours of Scalia’s death – that he would appoint someone as much like Scalia as he could find: a scholar, original intention, literal black letter constitutionalist. He has already said he wants to make America great again. Maybe he can’t. Maybe he can’t build a wall and control the borders. But at least he wants to and will try. Hillary and Obama don’t even want to. Like Jimmy Carter and his national malaise, Hillary and Obama don’t think America will ever be great, doesn’t even deserve to be great. I don’t know what Trump can do, but at least I know he wants the same things you and I want, and I damn well know Hillary doesn’t want them.”

“I think I’ve been listening to the media too much.”

“Maybe you have. I repeat: Trump wants what you want. He may be able to do it. He doesn’t know how to build a wall, but then he doesn’t know how to build the Trump Towers. I’d rather have someone who at least wants what I want that Hillary who says she wants what I don’t want.”

“Ok, OK, OKAY. Enough”

And I suppose it is enough.

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What would I have done if I’d been running Cruz’s campaign? First, I note, he’s anti District of Columbia Beltway Establishment. He says so. Of course he doesn’t attack them much. He attacks Trump, to the delight of the Establishment.

“Whoa,” says my friend the Cruz supporter. “He attacks them plenty”

“How do you know.”

“Come on, I read his web site.”

“Sure, I have so much Free Time. Do you think you become President by having a great web site? I learn what the candidates say by watching the news.”

“Yeah, but the media aren’t going to report anything but his attacks on Trump. They won’t be fair to Cruz!”

“Oh, you know that do you.’

“Sure, don’t you?”

“Oh, I know it all right. Why doesn’t Cruz?”

And that’s the point. If I know that the media are going to report the most vicious things I say about Mr. Trump, then I intend to be known for saying them or I am so stupid that I shouldn’t be running for office, It’s no accident I’m all over the TVB saying bad things about Mr. Trump

I also ought to know that he’s going to strike back, and he’s a lot better at that than I am. So my first rule for Cruz would have been, avoid going negative, and hope that Trump won’t start the billingsgate. He says he won’t. I can think he’s just being cynical hoping that I’ll start it, but I have better reasons not to start the mudslinging than he has.

So what do I do? I agree with nearly everything he is for, but I’m better qualified to make it happen. I avoid some issues, but I go for his most popular ones and say, yeah! Want that! And I can make it happen better than he can. I’ve got the experience of working in government, but I’m not the establishment any more than Mr. Trump is. Heck, I’ll offer him a cabinet post. I could use his energy in my administration.

And other words to that effect.

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Election 2016

Jerry,

We now know who the Republican Presidential Candidate will be.

We know that the Democrat Candidate will likely be either Clinton or Sanders.

(Likely because Clinton may be under indictment before the Election and the Democrats may choose someone else.)

It really doesn’t make much difference who the Democrat Candidate is. The real issue in this Election is getting the Federal Government out of the way of the Economy. The onerous un-legislated Regulatory State will continue under a Democrat President. While it is not completely clear where Trump stands on this there is hope that some of this might be rolled back if he wins.

The choice is clear for those who love and cherish our Country.

Bob Holmes

I completely agree.  A majority on USSVC is at stake.  Suppose that goes to Hillary?

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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A day of frustration. And other matters. Trump sweeps Indiana

Chaos Manor View, Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

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A day of frustrations, and now I’m off to the dentist. They’ve made government more important than the governed, and we no longer have a local Lord or Justice of the Peace or some other feudal institution they have to listen to, to plead to. The Iron Law prevails. But we shall persevere. First, though, the dentist.

Back. No problems. But on the way I passed three separate road repair crews. One was quite large, 19 workers, in colorful luminescent vests to prevent accidents. Of the 19, not one was working; 7 were assembled into a group and may have been receiving instructions from an eighth, but it certainly did not appear that way to me. The others were merely talking. This was 2:45 PM, not likely to be break time. Further on the way I saw two more work crews, one on a job that has been going on for more than a year. Two were moving something, so that could be counted as work; the others were doing nothing. In fairness, there were not many present; possibly this job is done mostly in early mornings and other times of low traffic. The third work site had four workers, none actually working at the moment.

Coming home by a different route (because of the year-long project on my normal route) I spotted a group of four city street repair vehicles. There were no workers in sight, but the yellow emergency lights of one of the trucks were blinking.

This was hardly a random sample, but it reminded me of Moscow in 1989.

I was mindful of all this because the morning was consumed with a trip to Kaiser for feet inspection and toenail clipping; I do that every 3 months. There was no parking near the building I was going to, but I had brought my walker in anticipation of this and went into the parking structure. On the third level up there was a handicap spot just at the elevator; perfect. I drove straight into it, got my walker out, locked my car, and there was an elevator coming so I hurried to catch it. I got into Podiatry ahead of my appointment time as they advised us to, and discovered my handicap placard in the basket of my walker. Too late to go back and display it. I had a feeling of dread, but there was nothing to do about it.

Twenty minutes later I was finished, and five minute after that I was reading a LA City traffic ticket for $363.00, complete with detailed instructions on how to pay it. There was no indication of how I might go to the issuer and explain that I had a placard. There was no Kaiser office to talk with: this was already registered in City Court. There was other fine print on the ticket, but the light wasn’t good enough to read it.

Got home, and called AAA. The Auto club has a robot answering; none of its choices are “Talk to a human” nor were any relevant to my problem. I punched buttons for a while and was always returned to the same irrelevant list of choices. Finally I pushed O. It kept offering me the same list of choices so it could give me an agent who understood what I wanted. Of course most of the choices involved selling me something, or sending roadside assistance, so I kept pressing O. After a while it gave up, and a human operator asked me for my zip code, told me to wait, and I waited. And waited. But in a quarter hour or so I got someone who wanted my Membership Number. I gave her my Premium number, and again my zip code, and explained what I wanted: a chance to explain that I had a handicap placard with a unique number on it. In fact I had gotten it through the auto club after getting my physician to sign off.

All a waste of time, of course, and apparently the girl thought I must be demented to think they could do anything. I had to request a court appearance. She could find out the fine…

That wasn’t needed The whole ticket was optimized to let me just pay $363, but if I used a Visa card it would be $365. It didn’t tell me how to arrange a court appearance, but the Auto Club could tell me how to do that.

Well, that would take a full day, all told, if my previous experiences – admittedly long ago — just to get a court date, and that might or might not be the trial date; it depends on their convenience, not mine. Considering that there are never anywhere near enough handicap parking spaces near the Van Nuys Courthouse, it’s an adventure for someone with a walker to get there. I’d have to get someone to drive me – it’s pretty tricky and grueling, not simple like going to Kaiser – and infested with cops manqué also known as Parking Enforcement looking to double down on how much the city can make off each citizen. Not worth it. Not worth it at all.

So I called the number that let me pay by Visa. Three hundred and sixty five dollars is hardly chicken feed, but the alternatives all seemed worse. I had in fact parked in a handicap spot without displaying the placard, so there was no legal reason to let me off, and up to now my experience was that the city was willing to bend and make it easy to pay, while not even mentioning any way to explain or plead. $365 seems a heavy fine for absent-mindedness, but the likelihood was that I’d pay it, and trying not to would result in losing at least a day to boot.

The Visa-pay number was a robot. It repeated every instruction twice. If it asked for a number, it repeated what you had done and asked for confirmation. There was redundancy and more redundancy; but it worked perfectly, told me not to hang up, trundled, and gave me a confirmation number. About nine digits. If I wanted it repeated, press 1. After enough iterations of that to let me be sure I had the number, I could hang up to “terminate this conversation”.

That ended the morning. Dentist in the afternoon, and watching how the City is spending my money, paying people to – so far as I could see – stand around waiting for something to do. Certainly a robot could do any of the work I saw being done…

This is democracy?  And in Detroit, where 91% of public schools are failures, the Teachers Union is conducting a sick-in, i.e. an illegal strike, for higher pay.

 

And it’s 1730 and coming up on dinner time.

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Fox News declares Trump the big winner in the Republican primary in Indiana. It is still too close to call the Democratic vote.

More later on all that.

 

Later: Cruz gives up.  Trump later said of Cruz, “I don’t know if he likes me or doesn’t like me, but have to say he’s on heck of an opponent”, or words to that effect: i.e., I’m willing to forget that we were rivals; now let’s beat Hillary.  We’ll see if Cruz takes him up on the offer.

Meanwhile. Hillary could not carry Indiana against a Socialist, who only joined the Democratic Party to run for President, in a Democratic primary. She has the delegates, but only with the superdelegates.  Now she needs Bill to charm them. Charm is not her strong suit. They haven’t abandoned her yet, and the wrath of the Clintons is to be feared, but the Democrats aren’t a real Party: they’re a coalition of factions, an uneasy alliance. It must be held together. Probably; but it takes work that isn’t being done. We’ll see.

Can Trump win?  Newt Gingrich thinks so.  He led the Republicans to  victory in the House against what most thought were impossible odds.  He’s usually the brightest guy in the room; and he thinks so.

 

 

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WOW!!!!

<http://jalopnik.com/this-hoverboard-actually-flies-and-it-just-set-a-world-1774106777>

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Roland Dobbins

I say wow, indeed. This needs thought. Flying car, no, but flying skateboard?

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‘We don’t need an all-out trade war, but a little bit of protectionism can go a long way.’

<http://blog.cnccookbook.com/2016/04/28/truths-lies-china-manufacturing-rant/>

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Roland Dobbins

Agreed. Tariff may well be needed to protect some industries. As Lincoln said, if I buy a shirt fro England I have the shirt, but England has the money; if I buy it from New England, I may pay more but the money stays in the United States. He meant that Free Trade may be a good thing in some cases; in others we need to consider it.

Lincoln didn’t have to worry about entitlements.   If I buy from China I may pay less, but I still have the obligation to pay into the fund that the unemployed American (citizen or merely resident) is now entitled to; and I may have to pay for those entitlements for a long time. It might be cheaper to buy more expensive goods and not have to pay entitlements. Economists do not have entitlements in their models; those are political externalities, not part of economic models I have seen

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The Presidency of Barrack Hussein Obama

The Presidency of Barrack Hussein Obama has been both seminal and monumental. It has been a presidency of historic firsts too obvious and numerous to mention in detail, but most importantly he is the first president in history not to see a 3% increase in the GDP during at least one calendar year:

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2016/04/simply-worst-obama-first-president-ever-not-see-single-year-3-gdp/

This makes me scratch my head when he talks about what an economic master he is during a New York Times interview:

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/01/magazine/president-obama-weighs-his-economic-legacy.html

I look back and wonder where 28 years went (counting back to Reagan) and I wonder if we’re going to have four or eight of Trump or Clinton, H. We’re on the hook for what may become 32 to 36 years of regress.

We can only pray that Trump or Clinton surprises us in positive, helpful, effective, and miraculous ways. And my miraculous, I mean exactly that. I’m talking immaculate conception, resurrection, rapture type miraculous.,

I hate to say this, but this country may be about to learn why no atheists seem to exist in foxholes.

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Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Actually, we can grow our way out of this, over time, if we can stop the bleeding; another doubling of the debt would be quite serious. Neither the Republican Establishment nor the Democrat Free Stuff Party seem concerned. Perhaps they know something I don’t.

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Police Power to Detain Drivers

[Pournelle’s comment] And this is all right with you? I need€™d need time to think about this. Is this not exonerating false arrest? Now true, if the car is full of contraband, the officer will probably not be punished, but will the drugs be admissible?

I do not have a problem with this decision. To the extent I have a problem, my problem lies back in Terry v. Ohio (1968), where the Court held that an officer can temporarily detain a subject where there is no probable cause but where the officer has a reasonable suspicion of criminal behavior based on articulable facts. The court held that where a reasonable person/officer would believe a brief investigatory detention was appropriate, the subject was not being “unreasonably” detained. That’s what happened in the recent 9th Circuit case. The police had – as a result of a wiretap – reason to believe that a person (matching the subject) would be driving a car (matching the subject’s) at a specific time and place and would be transporting illegal drugs. Upon seeing a matching subject in a matching car in a matching time and place, the police had a reasonable belief that the subject was engaged in criminal behavior. Based on Terry v. Ohio, the police had the power to briefly detain the subject to investigate whether criminal activity was present. While the subject was being detained, a drug dog arrived and alerted to the presence of drugs in the car. At this point, the officers seized the car to preserve evidence while a search warrant was obtained. The car was searched after a warrant was obtained and illegal drugs were discovered. The only wrinkle discussed in the opinion – and which incensed your original correspondent – was that after the police pulled the subject over, the police falsely told the subject that he had been pulled over for a traffic violation. The defendant claimed that the drug evidence should be excluded because he did not actually commit a traffic violation. The police claimed that the evidence should be admitted because the stop was valid based on Terry v. Ohio. Given that police have always been allowed to lie while investigating a crime, the Ninth Circuit’s ruling is not really novel. My concerns regarding the Ninth Circuit opinion revolve around an issue not discussed in the opinion — how long the subject was detained before a drug dog was brought to the scene. Although there is no firm limit of how long a Terry stop can last, the likelihood that the detention will be found unreasonable increases the longer the stop lasts.

Rene

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Amazon Quietly Removes Encryption Support from its Gadgets

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/amazon-removes-device-encryption-fire-os-kindle-phones-and-tablets

“With great power comes great irresponsibility.”

Cordially,

John

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Are our Progressive Agitators the new Brown Shirts

“Bill” Whittle thinks so. He makes this assertion and pretty decently proves it in the following video. I’m glad I’m no longer the only person noticing this savage resemblance between the behavior of the Progressive movement and that of Hitler’s SA, his Brown Shirts. If they win no good can come from it.

AMERICAN FASCISTS

https://youtu.be/VeEPSjOBzRA

{^_^}

Fascism is a form of Socialism, according to Mussolini and Count Ciano. Marx said class warfare was inevitable. Lenin solved by that by eliminating all classes but proletariat. Mussolini decreed that the classes need not be eliminated – indeed were inevitable – but could be forced by the State to work together. That makes the trains run on time. He added some old fashioned Roman Imperialism, but had not the skills of his Roman ancestors. He died proclaiming the inevitability of Socialism.

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Autonomous vehicles

Dear Jerry,

One problem I’ve uncovered with current autonomous vehicle tech is a large part of the navigation is done via onboard maps.

Of course the maps are highly detailed, and supplemented by LIDAR, but they are still maps and as Alfred Korzybski taught, “The map is not the territory.”

More than once I’ve had online mapping services literally tell me to drive through a brick wall or other inaccessible terrain to arrive at my destination. While I would imagine Google will undertake the Herculean task of preventing such FUBAR events, I still believe Murphy has a rule that applies here.

Here’s a thought experiment that might apply: a half ton vehicle moving at forty K pH as more kinetic energy then, oh, let’s say thirty rounds from an AK – 47. Are we ready to have autonomous security guards with AK – 47’s roaming our neighborhoods?

I would personally benefit greatly from autonomous vehicles, since I’ve been unable to drive for the better part of a decade. I’m just not sure it’s a good idea, yet.

Petronius

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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Immigration, Amnesty, and other matters; There Will Be War Volume XI open for submissions; clarity on amnesty

Chaos Manor View, Sunday, May 1, 2016

The Chaos Manor Mail Box

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

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This will catch up on mail, particularly that in response to items from Saturday’s lengthy items including “amnesty”; it will likely make no sense to those who have not read that View https://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor/noonan-on-trump-trump-and-america-first-conservatism-on-immigration-and-other-matters/   Very likely it is at the end of this in the window you are already looking at this with.

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There Will be War Volume XI

Now open for submissions at twbw@castaliahouse.com. Publication will be in late November or early December of this year. Reprint anthology, but original works are eligible; three original fiction stories in Volume X were nominated for Hugos; winners will be announced at MidAmericon II in August. Although unpublished works will be considered, there is no additional payment beyond payment for reprint rights, and first publication rights remain with the author (until, of course, they expire at publication of this volume).

Payment is $200 on acceptance. This is an advance against royalties. Royalties are a pro rata share of 50% of all royalties due from the publisher (the other 50% is to the editor). We buy non-exclusive anthology rights.  Publisher is Castalia House, which will make advances and royalty payments directly to the contributors. Again, payment is the same for previously published and previously unpublished works. Story selection is by me (the editor).  Editor’s contribution will include a volume introduction and introductions to each contribution, and may include more as I judge necessary.

Submissions can be fiction or non-fiction of under 20,000 words relevant to the future of warfare.  Previous volumes have included stories of ground combat, interplanetary and interstellar naval engagements, “space opera”, terrorism, a major essay in asymmetric warfare by a professor of military history, and articles from military journals. Most works to be included have been previously published. Submissions accepted until October, 2016, or until announcement that the volume is filled. Two classic stories by well known award-winning authors have already been accepted, others are expected. I emphasize that payment of an advance against royalties is on acceptance.

 

 

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Jerry,

A few comments regarding minimum criteria for addressing the immigration problem.

1.  Stop the flood: Do everything possible to prevent new illegal immigrants from entering the country. If there must be a focus in this prevention due to resource limitations, make particular efforts to identify any who have nefarious motives (e.g. ISIS sympathizers, drug cartel “mules” – through drug legalization might go a long way towards rending that problem irrelevant, it’s beyond the scope of this note, etc.)

2. Stop the subsidies: Verify that federal cash benefits are limited to US citizens only. Verify that no US government funds – federal or state – are sent as payments from US residents – legal or not – to persons in other countries. It can be done – I know of one person who recently had a background investigation in which twenty year old international wire transfers were questioned.

3. Stop the criminals: Any immigrant with a criminal record in the US is sent back – at the end of their sentence if currently incarcerated, upon discovery if returning to the US. That certainly includes identity fraud (e.g. stolen social security numbers) if knowingly used by the immigrant to pretend to legal status.  (Any domestic enablers to such actions should also be persecuted for – for accessory after the fact to criminal actions, for actual identity fraud, etc.)

4.  Stop the vote fraud – Criminalize illegal immigrant (or other non-citizen including legal foreign residents) voting in US federal elections, and treat as any other illegal act. (Also criminalize their domestic enablers.  State elections would be the responsibility of the states to clean up, but the consequences are on their heads.) Yes, this means positive voter ID, coordination between states and within states to prevent voting in multiple jurisdictions, etc. And it may be a matter of enforcing laws already on the books.

5.  No citizenship by fiat, decree, or amnesty. Adults and minors entering the US as illegals are only permitted to become citizens by going through the entire five year wait and naturalization process, including the oath of citizenship and renouncing of their original citizenship and fealty. This is an irreducible minimum; additional conditions might apply and should be debated – ranging from Trump’s “go home and come back if you want to be considered” to some nominal fine for the illegal action, and prohibition of any convicted violent criminals from ever being considered for citizenship. Cruz has expressed the opinion that Birthright citizenship is the only way to interpret the Constitution, Mark Levin has disagreed; that needs to be resolved, but clearly it would only apply to the actual child or children born in the US; the rest of the family would need to apply for legal resident status or for citizenship as appropriate.

I respectfully submit that application of those five principles would solve 80%+ of the problem, frequently by self-redeportation.

J

This represents the view of most Trump supporters, and in the abstract the ideal situation. Whether or not it is practical is another matter. Certainly any attempt to deal with the situation must stop the bleeding before anything else. The borders must be controlled, and until that is done, any adjustment is an amnesty; Mr. Reagan was induced to support his amnesty on condition that the borders would be closed, and the result was an enormous increase in the traffic across the border; as could be expected. Until the borders are effectively under control, including a much better handle on visas and those overstaying them, with some form of disincentive to overstay: stiff fines at a minimum, collected under conditions such as wearing an electronic locator while earning the money to pay the fines, and other tolerable but not attractive inconveniences – the point being to stay within reason while being effective. A twenty dollar a day fine for the first thirty days overstayed might be reasonable. We are not trying to make tourism in the US a frightening experience. After the first thirty days the fine per day doubles monthly for a period and then begins to double weekly? Something like that.

That paragraph got away from me: the point of it all was to say that until the borders are under control – not just “going to be controlled” – it is gross folly to have “comprehensive immigration reform” or anything else; the alternative to “control the borders first” is a draconian “Deport them all, deport them now, and do not be gentle about it” policy.  We’re not going to have that; but the pro-migrant faction will always delay, halt, protest any border reforms while the migrants who do not intend assimilation pour across in anticipation of “reform” which is always amnesty if there is no border control. We should halt all immigration; every jot and whittle of it; until the borders are controlled.

As for those who have already illegally crossed the border, surely there ought to be a penalty beyond deportation, although I may be underestimating the misery of present detention conditions.

As to conditions for remaining in the US, I would certainly add honorable discharge from the armed services – not general or anything but honorable – as a giant step toward not only a green card, but eligibility for citizenship; indeed I have no objection to overseas enlistment, as the Navy used to allow in the Philippines after that nation’s independence.

As you state: until the borders are closed, none of this is worth discussing.

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On Amnesty

 

One rhetorical ‘trick’ that those who seem to oppose Trumps horrifying rhetoric on immigration is to constantly bring up the logistical difficulties of deporting ‘twenty million people’.

This is a cheap ploy to take ANY deportation off the table. There are nuanced views to illegal immigration, starting with ‘let’s staunch the bleeding’. Then you can add a layer of ‘and if you fall into our boat, we will get rid of you.’ Instead, to discredit the very idea of deportation, we get the constant box car analogy with Fascist overtones.

If you oppose deportation, say so. If you strongly support amnesty, say so. I do like the idea of ‘legal but not a citizen’ but very much on a case by case basis. Assimilation is very important and reading your works, you should get that there is such a thing as unsustainable amounts of immigration.
If so, it is not coming across in your recent comments.

Perhaps I have been unclear, although I think not to all my readers, so I’ll try again.

First, I do not think I have ever been unclear on this, but I’ll state it straight out:   any illegal immigrant convicted of a felony should be deported; I’ll leave it to a cost-effectiveness analysis whether before or after serving sentence for the felony, although perhaps no discretion at all about serving time in a maximum security institution for violent felony. If he “migrates” back after that, he serves the sentence if he had not previously done so, plus a punitive addition, and serves it again if he has not. We really want to discourage such people from coming here.

As to amnesty, nothing until the borders are actually under control including better control of those overstaying visas. Once that is clearly done, we can discuss the twenty million who are already here but who do not appear to be engaged in criminal activities. That is a matter worth discussion, and I for one believe discussion is desirable.  If you did not read my previous essay – and I suspect you did not – I refer you to the question, do we want police routinely asking for “your papers, please?” How will they determine who to ask? Must everyone obtain, from the bureaucracy, documents proving they are legally here? Must we all produce “our papers” when asked by local or federal police upon demand simply because they are demanded?  Do we want that kind of police?

Same with mass deportation of non-criminal (other that illegal status) persons.  You say that use of boxcars makes you think of Fascists; of course.  I intended that phrase to make you think of forced movement of millions of people. How is it to be done? Railroads are probably the best way, and it will be expensive to move ten or twenty million people, by force, several hundred miles. It can be done, but it will not be cheap; and once again I will remind you that it will be done in full view of the media, which will daily feature no end of stories about Maria, brought here at age five, now an honor graduate of Andrew Jackson High and recipient of some kind of civic award, now locked in a railway day coach  or a leased Greyhound Bus and headed for Laredo to be conducted across the border by armed men. If you think the media will not run that story and a thousand like it, I suggest you rethink the question.

And I will again ask you: do we want police who will bring Maria to that day coach or bus and thrust her aboard, then go home to his family and sleep peacefully? If he will not sleep peacefully, do you want to do that to our policemen who guard us while we sleep?  I ask seriously.

I do not favor amnesty for violent criminals. I do not favor amnesty for recent migrants, if only because amnesty encourages others to follow their example. I also do not favor ignoring some laws while enforcing others, for obvious reasons; while I think there are cases where police need a certain amount of discretion, giving them blanket permission to overlook some laws until it is convenient to enforce them is, in my judgment, not wise.

I do not favor empowering police to demand our papers and otherwise harass our citizens at will for no obvious reason other than they want to do it while stating that “they may be” illegals.

In other words, the cost of deporting the otherwise law abiding illegal aliens already here may be higher than I am willing to pay. As to what to do about them, apparently any attempt to discuss that will be termed a trick; and thus we can have no serious discussion. For those who genuinely seek a rational remedy, there are many suggestions.  Mr. Gingrich has suggested a path to legal status but not citizenship. It would be open to those who have been here a reasonable time – say as a beginning ten years? – and have no record of law breaking.  The path to citizenship would be much more difficult.  Non-citizen residents would have different and fewer entitlements than citizens.  I do not intend to draft a bill here.

I do intend to emphasize that “Deport them all, and deport them now, by any means necessary” sounds simple but requires measures that may be highly undesirable; and that rational discussion of an issue is not “a trick”; it is the foundation of a reasonable answer to real problems.

 

I do not know how to say more clearly that immigration, legal or not, without the intent of assimilation is invasion.

 

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Amnesty

I was just wondering if the 20 million illegals were allowed to stay without penalty of deportation, how long would it take for that number to reach 50 million or even 100 million? Wouldn’t that get out of control quickly?

Phil

Not long, as the Reagan amnesty proved. Without control of the borders, any “general and complete” immigration reform is merely an invitation for more “migration”. I doubt that any intelligent person could think otherwise, but I find some still do. The this time for sure theory.

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Deporting XX million Illegal Aliens

Dr. Pournelle:
The hundreds of thousands of unneeded TSA “workers” could be TDYed to the ICS or any other agency to forward the deportation prior to their termination if they want a few more months at the federal manger to stuff their retirement nest and suck up some benefits before returning to reality.
Instant Army sized semi-trained law enforcement,(key shakers) E-1-3 rank MPs/SPs.
The soon to be unemployed Pro Standing Around former ‘workers’ would be highly motivated to to clear the labor of millions of competing job candidates….
Congress could purchase a wing or two of new USAF transport planes, Or just lease some aircraft. Maybe a call up of pilot veterans and logistical staff if needed to assist the Homeland Insecurity failures.

Offer the early self deportees a bounty if they leave after getting a Biometric I.D. and checked against open criminal cases, a DNA sample for criminal and family issues of course. And short affidavit regarding who employed them, Big Data being used to fine the large and long term Criminal employers to pay some of the deportation War effort.

After a short time, a small escalating botany could be at first to LEO and their employing organization for arrest of alleged illegals. The second stage could be offered a small sum to decline any administrative hearing and of course seizure of any funds earned while working illegally.

Again honest testimony listing the aliens employers combined with IRS data should yield billions of $ of fines and unpaid taxes.

At some time when numbers are low in system, Any unemployed non-felon US citizen ought to be granted Illegal Alien bounty hunter status similar to existing law, where the bounty hunter would get 10-20% of the deportation cost, the Bounty Hunters privilege to be suspended if he or she detains with out probable cause a legal resident….

I think 95 % could be cleared out in year with less then one in thousand erroneous deportations, allowing for the Iron law 2 to 3 years might by required.
The first million deported will force labor prices up nationwide, the full Monty would eliminate any need for minimum wage laws for a decade or more.

That a very simple version. but the base ideas are sound.
Illegal immigration like any other type of invasion while cost a lot to reverse to the status quo.
Sincerely, Peter

Well I suppose it is something to think about, but again. Realistically, do you think this realism?

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Illegal Aliens

Fairly simple answers:
Felony to hire them(employer not the poor innocent illegal aliens)
Felony to house them (Landlords not the precious illegal aliens)
No Government Aid at any level of Government.
NO WORK, NO HOUSING, NO WELFARE—-Go Home Like You Got Here!!

A fairly simple solution. I wonder why it has never been tried? Constitution, perhaps?

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Again, a comment on yesterday’s publication, incomprehensible if you have not read it. https://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor/noonan-on-trump-trump-and-america-first-conservatism-on-immigration-and-other-matters/

National review parties

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I read with interest your comments on the national review party which you did not wish to attend.

I would like to point out that the column Frum wrote was written in

2003 – 13 years ago. Frum himself has been gone from the magazine since 2008 – 8 years ago.

So far as I can tell National Review has never repudiated the Iraq War, and Victor Davis Hanson continues to write articles and books explaining why it was a a good idea. But I think most conservatives now recognize that Iraq was a mistake on a number of levels and you did have a point.

For some reason , reading this, I am reminded of Legolas and Gimli’s scene in the original book “Fellowship of the Ring”, in which past crimes made it difficult for them to band together against Sauron.

Gandalf responded that if all the past crimes of elves and dwarves were to be brought up now, they might as well end the council immediately.

I’m not saying National Review doesn’t have problems and I’m not saying they didn’t do you and your fellows wrong — they did. But I am saying that when you’re proven right it might be wise to give them a chance to eat humble pie and reconcile, rather than continue to remain at odds which serves no one but the liberals, I should think.

What was it Ben Franklin said? “Hang together or hang separately?”

Respectfully,

Brian P.

First, note the date on the story of the party and my comment on it. It was years ago. I continue to subscribe to National Review, and I read their reviews, and most of their political commentary; I no longer feel compelled to take much of it as seriously as I did when Buckley was in charge. In particular, I note that they seem often indistinguishable from Weekly Standard on many of their policies regarding the middle east. I do not urge anyone to cancel their subscription, and I would probably go to that party today. I do not consider them the enemy, but I do not believe the United States should go to war over ideologies. We should as Disraeli urged, enter into wars not from passion, but from reason. It is reason to defeat a Caliphate that has declared war to the knife on us. It was passion to destroy the only active opposition to Iran in that region, and it was folly to declare all those who did not support that action anathema.

I note that Buckley himself regretted going into the Iraq war.

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Who Will Debunk The Debunkers?

Jerry

Who would have thought that the story of the persecution of Ignaz Semmelweiss was a nationalist myth promulgated by the government of Hungary in the late 19th century? And other bits about the myths of debunkers:

http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/who-will-debunk-the-debunkers/

It makes critiques on Snopes to be a little tame.

Ed

Astonishing. I never had any doubts about the Semmelweiss story. I am not sure I do now, but doubtless there is more to be learned.

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China Awakens

This Rand article on China and Xi’s designs with the People’s Liberation Army is confirmation of a wake up call given time and time again from the 1980’s. Well, now we’ll reap the whirlwind. China has the strongest leader it’s had in decades, this articles points out the

details:

<.>

Importantly, despite some speculation to the contrary, Xi’s assertion of control over the military in the form of the anti-corruption campaign and organizational reforms is more likely to enhance than it is to impede the PLA’s ongoing modernization efforts.

Part of Xi’s “China Dream” is to produce a strong military capable of deterring, or if necessary taking on powerful potential adversaries, including even the United States.

Xi wants a PLA that demonstrates utmost loyalty to the party, but he also wants a far more competent and operationally capable PLA by 2020, one that is commensurate with China’s status as a major world power and capable of protecting China’s regional and global interests.

If his aspirations are realized, Xi’s reformed PLA will soon be capable of posing an even more potent challenge to China’s neighbors, and to U.S. objectives and strategy in the region.

</>

http://www.rand.org/blog/2016/04/xis-purge-of-the-military-prepares-the-chinese-army.html?utm_source=t.co&utm_medium=rand_social

And we’re looking at Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump after 28 lost years, politically. I can just feel Russia, China, and others sharpening their teeth.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Another monster to destroy? Certainly this is no time to disarm.

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Dinosaurs

Jerry:

My theory on how the dinosaurs were wiped out is simple.

First, some Proglodyte invented a time machine.

He then went back to the age of dinos, because a place where the dominant form of life has a brain the size of a walnut is the perfect place for the spread of “Progressivism.” He immediately formed a committee, elected himself Chairman, and got to work creating his Utopia.

After a few years of the benefits of “Progressive” policies on the environment, diet, hunting, defense, etc., the only life form which would likely survive would be the cockroach.

Keith

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“I am a senior civil servant, and I should really be a defender of Norway, and normally I am, but here it is something extremely wrong.”

<http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-36026458>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

Yes, There is. See The Road To Serfdom. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0048EJXCK/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?ie=UTF8&amp%3B%3B%3Bbtkr=1&amp%3B%3Btag=chaosmanor-20

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West of Honor

Thanks for a great read!

http://www.amazon.com/WEST-HONOR-Jerry-Pournelle-ebook/dp/B005Z5IGHY?tag=chaosmanor-20

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http://venturebeat.com/2016/04/28/samsung-and-ibm-show-how-watson-has-improved-conversational-speech-recognition/

Samsung and IBM show how Watson has improved conversational speech recognition

IBM has made a big leap forward in the ability of its Watson artificial intelligence computer to recognize conversational speech. Last year, IBM was able to hold conversations in which the AI recognized English conversational speech with an 8 percent word error rate. Now IBM’s Watson team has been able to knock the word error rate down to 6.9 percent.

Above: IBM Watson logo

The achievement shows that AI is getting smarter and smarter — and that we’re all going to be replaced by robots some day. IBM Watson general manager David Kenny announced the breakthrough in Watson’s conversational capabilities for developers at the Samsung Developer Conference in San Francisco today.

The Watson team included Kenny, Tom Sercu, Steven Rennie, and Jeff Kuo. Watson had its finest moment in 2011 when it beat the reigning human champion on the “Jeopardy” television quiz show.

To put this result in perspective, back in 1995, a “high-performance” IBM recognizer achieved a 43 percent error rate. Spurred by a series of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency evaluations in the past couple of decades, IBM’s system improved steadily. Most recently, the advent of deep neural networks was critical in helping achieve the 8 percent and 6.9 percent results, Kenny said. The ultimate goal is to reach or exceed human accuracy, which is estimated to be around 4 percent on this task, dubbed the Switchboard.

IBM said it made improvements in both acoustic and language modeling.

“On the acoustic side, we use a fusion of two powerful, deep neural networks that predict context-dependent phones from the input audio,” Kenny said. “The models were trained on 2000 hours of publicly available transcribed audio from the Switchboard, Fisher, and CallHome corpora.”

Kenny added, “We are currently working on integrating these technologies into IBM Watson’s state-of-the-art speech-to-text service. By exposing our acoustic and language models to increasing amounts of real-world data, we expect to bridge the gap in performance between the ‘lab setting’ and the deployed service.”

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Further thoughts on republic and democracy

Dear Mr. Pournelle,
As I understand it, most 19th century political philosophers were convinced that a free representative government, whether republic or democracy or pink with blue spots, was an unsustainable fantasy. Lincoln’s question at Gettysburg was by no means rhetorical: “whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.” The prevailing notion at least in England was that the government with the best chance of stability would be “mixed”; combining monarchy, aristocracy, and the commons. That is, much like England. We saw how well that worked out in France.
I’m not persuaded that the Founders imagined that *any* form of government was in itself free from suicidal tendencies. One interesting argument from that era was that creating and maintaining a free government (of any description) required a population with widely distributed civic virtues; but that a free government was likely to nurture prosperity, which would in turn tend to *undermine* these civic virtues.
Autocracies, I fear, can have a very long shelf life indeed. Egypt, China… That does not mean I want to live in one. As St. Augustine observed, “without justice, what else is the State but a great band of robbers?” I do not believe that any form of government, in and of itself, automatically ensures justice, liberty, or anything else I value.
Neither a republic nor a democracy ensures liberty or justice. I suspect that a free, representative government will be either a remarkable accomplishment of human virtue or else a miraculous gift of Providence. In either case, maintaining that a particular *form* of government will do the job is likely to be a distraction. Freedom, I think, is somewhat more like riding a bicycle. Stable only from moment to moment; and likely to fall over if you don’t pay attention.
Yours,
Allan E. Johnson

The commonwealth, or “mixed form” of government was present in everyone’s mind; they had all read Cicero, generally but not always in translation. They settled on an elected executive, but not one appointed by Congress; sort of monarchical. Hamilton wanted an actual hereditary element in it, but had not enough backing for it.

It is certainly the case that they knew that most governments were not stable over long periods of time; that is why a Union, not a nation. One model they looked at was Venice, still in 1787 a Republic and the oldest known Republic at that. (It was not destroyed until the French revolutionary army destroyed it as they invaded the various territories making up what is now Italy. They would say they liberated it, which is how so much Italian Renaissance art ended up in Paris; liberation came at a stiff price.)

It may well be that the days of our Republic are numbered, as government grows larger and stronger. See The Road to Serfdom. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0048EJXCK/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?ie=UTF8&amp%3B%3B%3Bbtkr=1&amp%3B%3Btag=chaosmanor-20

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Russia and Russians like Trump’s foreign policy speech

http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/28/politics/donald-trump-russia-putin/

Phil Tharp

They generally favor realism.

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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Noonan on Trump; Trump and America First; Conservatism; On immigration; and other matters

Chaos Manor View, Saturday, April 30, 2016

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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“Those conservative writers and thinkers who have for nine months warned the base that Mr. Trump is not a conservative should consider the idea that a large portion of the Republican base no longer sees itself as conservative, at least as that term has been defined the past 15 years by Washington writers and thinkers.” http://www.wsj.com/articles/simple-patriotism-trumps-ideology-1461886199

That’s how Peggy Noonan concludes today’s column in the Wall Street Journal. I don’t expect that column has won her any friends on the Journal’s editorial board, but she’s been around a long time; not as long as me, but at least long enough to remember Nelson Rockefeller gleefully tearing up a Reagan supporter’s placard in the 1976 Republican National Convention, when Reagan opposed the Republican sitting President, Gerry Ford, for the nomination. Ford won the nomination, and Reagan supported him in the general election, and urged all his supporters to do so. Jimmy Carter won the Presidency. The high point of Carter’s Presidency came after he had lost the 1980 election to Reagan, when Iran finally released the American hostages taken when they stormed Carter’s American Embassy and led them away blindfolded.

It’s unlikely they would have ever come home had Carter won re-election. After the US November election, the Muslim Revolutionary Guard hastened to get them out of their country before Carter left office, and Reagan became Commander in Chief; probably the most intelligent thing they ever did.

In the body of her essay, Miss Noonan observes:

“In my continuing quest to define aspects of Mr. Trump’s rise, to my own satisfaction, I offer what was said this week in a talk with a small group of political activists, all of whom back him. One was about to begin approaching various powerful and influential Republicans who did not support him, and make the case. I told her I’d been thinking that maybe Mr. Trump’s appeal is simple: What Trump supporters believe, what they perceive as they watch him, is that he is on America’s side.

“And that comes as a great relief to them, because they believe that for 16 years Presidents Bush and Obama were largely about ideologies. They seemed not so much on America’s side as on the side of abstract notions about justice and the needs of the world. Mr. Obama’s ideological notions are leftist, and indeed he is a hero of the international left. He is about international climate-change agreements, and leftist views of gender, race and income equality. Mr. Bush’s White House was driven by a different ideology—neoconservatism, democratizing, nation building, defeating evil in the world, privatizing Social Security.

“But it was all ideology.

“Then Mr. Trump comes and in his statements radiates the idea that he’s not at all interested in ideology, only in making America great again—through border security and tough trade policy, etc. He’s saying he’s on America’s side, period.”

And that, I think, is precisely the key to Mr. Trumps astonishing rise from a clown no one took seriously to the presumptive Republican nominee, and quite possibly the Presidency of the United States. Yes: he’s divisive. But he’s not divisive along ideological lines; he ignores ideological lines. Many of his policies are conservative, but that’s hardly surprising: many conservatives believe their policies are best for the United States. But Mr. Trump is opposed to ideological wars.

John Quincy Adams, echoing a sentiment that had prevailed from the founding of the Union, said of the United States: “But she goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own.” This sentiment has been forgotten since the end of the Cold War.

The First Gulf War by Mr. Bush may be argued was in fulfillment of obligations to our Saudi allies, although the notion that Saddam, engaged as he was in a seemingly endless war with Iran, could mount an invasion against a forewarned Saudi Arabia or even another Trucial State is not very plausible; mostly Saddam wanted more funding for his war with Iraq, and his plundering of Kuwait would provide it at little cost to the United States.

Then came the Balkan interventions under Mr. Clinton and Secretary Albright. There was no discernable US interest involved, and although the media demonized the Christian Serbs and made innocent victims of the Muslim Bosnians, the actual evidence shows there were atrocities in plenty on both sides; while forcing Serbia to give Kosovo to Albania: a province that as late as 1921 was known to have a Serbian majority, had never admitted a legal Albanian immigrant, and the insurgency was certainly supplied by Albanians in their sanctuary state of Albania. The US motive in all this was ideological, destroying monsters; of course it also had the effect of earning the disdain – even hatred – of pro-Slavic Russia; hardly an American interest at all.

The Second Gulf War saw us invading Iraq in response to the al Qaeda attack on New York, although there was zero evidence that Saddam had anything to do with it. Then came Afghanistan. In each case we sent just enough to do the job, but not overwhelming force to achieve victory – likely impossible in Afghanistan unless we were prepared for decades of occupation, and given the Soviet experience even that was likely to be arduous. All of this seemed to be destroying monsters, not protecting the liberty of the American people.

Some of us said so at the time. The response from National Review, once (when under Bill Buckley) the voice of the American Conservative Movement, was to feature the Egregious Frum reading out of the Conservative Movement all those who did not enthusiastically support the invasion of Iraq. Since that time I have not been “a conservative”. Paleo-conservative, perhaps; one who believes Edmund Burke and Russell Kirk have much to teach us; yes. But officially not a conservative according to National Review. Since I am not one of them by their own account, having been read out of their movement, I have no obligation to defend their policies – not that I ever defended all of them; after all, they did read me out of their ranks because I opposed the long war in Mesopotamia, did not think we could build democracy in a “nation” composed of Kurds, Shia majority, and Sunni, and ruled by Baathists, and thought we had no business expending blood and treasure when we had no describable national interests.

Trump’s people think the same way: patriotism trumps ideology. That is, of course, a very conservative principle, or was when I was teaching political science; apparently it is not so now. Miss Noonan sees it; I doubt the neoconservatives who have become to leaders of the conservative Movement will understand, or care; but perhaps the American voters will. Reagan was no ideologue, and he won. True: Trump is no Reagan; but you know, Mr. Reagan was not always Ronald the Great either. But he was always a patriot.

I urge you to read the entirety of Miss Noonan’s essay. http://www.wsj.com/articles/simple-patriotism-trumps-ideology-1461886199

I am reminded that Senator Cruz is also on record in favor of being friends of liberty everywhere, but guardians only of our own; I doubt his and Mr. Trump’s foreign policies would differ much. It is a pity that they did not debate real issues much in the debates.

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From View 380 September 19 – 25, 2005 http://www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2view/view380.html

Why I Missed the National Review Party

My friend Cat held a big National Review party up at her house about a block from here. I was a charter subscriber to National Review, back when paying for it wasn’t easy; but I didn’t go because not long after the Iraqi War started, National Review had the egregious Frum write an editorial denouncing all those who weren’t enthusiastic about our invasion of Iraq. “As they turn their backs on us, we turn our backs on them.”  Then they had “rebuttals” in which Frum got to insult Stephen Tonsor, something I still have trouble understanding given Tonsor’s stature. So I declined to go up the hill, even though I was assured that the egregious Frum wouldn’t be attending.

I had thought I had pretty good conservative credentials, at least of the old school. Possony and I wrote books together, Russell Kirk was a very old friend and godfather to one of my sons, etc. I was, true enough, more Cold Warrior than political philosopher, I did manage to be campaign manager for Barry Goldwater Jr.’s first campaign for Congress, and more than one conservative congressman knows who I am. I have a few credentials and can claim a few accomplishments in slowing the mad rush to Jacobinism. But Frum made it clear, those who weren’t for the war from the start are to be ignored. Without discussion or debate: “We turn our backs on them.”

Incidentally I note that Buckley now says “If I had known then what I know now, I would not have supported the war.” Which is fair enough, but National Review read out of the conservative movement all those who did know then what he knows now: that invading a secular regime in Mesopotamia is not the way to curb militant Moslem fanatics; that killing terrorists in Mesopotamia while allowing the hotbeds and breeding grounds of the madras system to flourish is futile since for each one killed there will be at least one more to avenge him; and that while it is easy for the Army to conquer these places, pacification requires constabulary, not Army, and the tasks of soldiers are not those of constables; that Saddam was largely deterred; and that the argument that if we do not fight them over there we will have to fight them over here is true only if you continue to allow open borders and unrestricted travel to the US.

And finally, that $300 billion is better spent on energy independence for these United States than on breaking things and killing people in Iraq; or even trying to pacify the old Turkish Empire provinces welded together into a compensatory kingdom for the Hashemites. Well, some of us knew all that then, and now presumably Buckley does as well; does Frum get to read him out of the party? I confess I almost went up the hill to Cat’s house just to ask him, but I didn’t really want to be the unpleasant guest at what Cat tells me was a pleasant party.

Now it remains true that we can’t just cut and run. The neo-conservatives have got us into a pickle, and if we cut and run now we hand the jihadists a victory of great value and magnitude. That can’t be the right way out of that place. But it also remains true that we need to look very hard at how we got into there; at what arguments induced us to believe that democracy can be exported on the points of our bayonets; at the Jacobin assumptions that seduced us into going abroad to seek monsters to slay. We need to look very hard at the notion of expanding the standing army with foreign recruits so that we can avoid conscription, and at the price of both conscription and a large standing army; and we need to rethink the requirements of a global war on terrorism. There are far better ways to wage that war than putting the flower of our youth into Mesopotamia, disrupting the National Guard and Reserve systems, and generally reorganizing for waging of overseas war of long duration. Those are more the skills of empire than republic, and any student of history, particularly our history, should know this. We need to learn from our own history — but then, until recently, that is precisely how America did learn. By studying the New World Order we created one hot summer in Philadelphia.

William Buckley once notably said that America was unique in that anyone could study and learn to be an American. That was before “diversity” was elevated to the chief goal of the land. Now we aren’t sure what it means to be an American although sometimes events like Katrina demonstrate some of the best of what that used to mean. Is it not time that we turned our attention to what we had all during the Cold War and are now losing? Would it not be better to pay attention to the fading republic rather than seeking overseas monsters to slay? But of course Adams warned us that losing our own republic might well be a consequence of going abroad to slay dragons. I suppose Frum turned his back on Adams as well — assuming that he ever heard of him.

Ah well.

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Another essay from the past: I see no reason to change it. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/view/2011/Q2/view675.html#immigration

On Immigration

From my mail:

more Gingrich!

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/19/
us-usa-campaign-gingrich-idUSTRE74C3UV20110519

He’s advocating amnesty now.

Time for you to admit you’re wrong about him. And no, that does not mean hemming and hawing and talking vaguely about how maybe he has a point. He does not have a point. It is entirely within DC’s power to enforce the law and make it unacceptably difficult for them to remain here; that DC does not is plain treason, and anybody enabling and supporting such treason is going to get caught in the crossfire when the shooting starts. Amnesty is the best way to trigger that.

They are invaders and will be treated as such if this country actually has any future at all. They all must go.

I don’t know what it is that I am supposed to have been wrong about, and this interview doesn’t change it. What Newt said:

Gingrich was asked a question on a different hot-button issue — immigration — on Thursday in Iowa, the Midwestern state with a key early contest in the race for his party’s presidential nomination.

He preceded his response by acknowledging that he risked sparking another controversy.

Gingrich recounted how World War Two-era U.S. draft boards chose who would serve in the military, saying a similar system might help deal with the millions of immigrants living in the United States illegally.

“Because I think we are going to want to find some way to deal with the people who are here to distinguish between those who have no ties to the United States, and therefore you can deport them at minimum human cost, and those who, in fact, may have earned the right to become legal, but not citizens,” Gingrich said.

That is not my definition of amnesty; and it does raise a question that must be answered. There are about 20 million illegal aliens living in the United States. Suppose that Congress and the President decided tomorrow that “they all must go.” How would that come about? Merely transporting Twenty Million People is a non-trivial task. Assume that of the 20 million aliens in the US, ten million will require transport of 1,000 km (621 miles). That is ten billion passenger/kilometers. The total annual rail passenger traffic in the US, including commuter travel, is about 17 billion passenger/kilometers. They would have to be fed. Many would have medical needs. While many of them could be transported by rail to the Mexican border — in boxcars? or must there be at least day coach transport? — many would have to go elsewhere, some to Latin America, but many to Asia and Africa, and many to places that will refuse to accept them.

A non-trivial task, even assuming that we could identify them all, and assuming there would be no expensive legal actions required: just identify, apprehend, and transport. It would take an enormous budget to accomplish.

Now add political realities. It’s all very well to grab some thug with a long criminal record and say “Enough! Out!” to the general applause of a vast majority, but even then there are going to be problems with the ACLU as well as various immigrant rights organizations. Assume that it can be done: what fraction of the 20 million will that account for?

Of course advocates of amnesty or the dream act like to show the example of a teenage girl brought to the US at age five, brought up to speak English and assimilate to American customs, earning a high school diploma with an A- average, and in general an all-American girl who ought to be college bound. Or the young oriental boy with much the same record. We don’t have to concede that people with similar stories will be a very great fraction of the 20 million, but it is not zero, and every one of those will be paraded by the media as soon as apprehended. Who is going to throw Marie into the boxcar headed for Tijuana?

Incidentally that is not a trivial question: an operation this large will require a lot of police agents. Do we insist that they all be capable of handcuffing teenagers and putting them on the train to the border? Do we want a lot of people with that attitude to have police power? And what of illegals who have joined the Armed Forces? Veterans? Active duty soldiers? An operation this large may well require action from the Legions: will they pay more attention to the orders of their officers or the appeals of their comrades? Of course that’s a silly question, but my correspondent did talk about crossfire and punishing treason, which probably means civil war, and the Legions, both Regulars and various reserves and militias and National Guard are certainly not going to be idle while that happens.

But suppose that all the questions of how to do it are answered, and there is magically a black box with a button: push the button and all 20 million of the illegal immigrants will be magically teleported to their country of origin. If we took a national referendum on whether or not to push that button, what would be the outcome?

It’s no good saying that conservatives ought not think about such matters. Of course they must. The problem of the illegals amongst us will not go away simply because we don’t think about it.

Note, incidentally, that Newt distinguishes between the right to be a legal resident and citizenship. This is not brought up in most “amnesty” discussions, but it should be. Citizens have rights, including the right to sponsor other immigrants. The Supreme Court has held that illegal immigrants have rights very similar if not identical to citizens, but that is not the plain language of the Constitution. A sane immigration policy will make that distinction — including entitlements.

I am not going to “solve” the illegal immigrant problem here, but I will say that denouncing as “amnesty” anything other than a policy of ‘deport them all and deport them now’ is not useful. We aren’t going to deport them all, and no Congress or President will do that, nor could even if it were thought desirable. The United States is not going to erect detention camps nor will we herd people into boxcars.  We can’t even get the southern border closed. Despite President Obama’s mocking speech, we have not built the security fence mandated a long time ago. We probably could get Congress to approve a moat and alligators, although there are likely more effective means. We can and should insist on closing the borders. That we can and must do. It won’t be easy or simple, but it’s going to be a lot easier than deporting 20 million illegals. Get the borders closed. We can all agree on that.

That leaves the problem of the illegal aliens amongst us. We can and should do more to enforce employment laws; but do we really want police coming around to demand “your papers” from our gardeners and fry cooks and homemakers? For if “your papers, please” becomes common practice, there will be demands for equality; for not profiling; for equal opportunity harassment — but you get the idea. Think about what goes on in airports.

Every time we bring up immigration policy, someone will bring up Angela and Maria and Alexa and Chanying, charming young ladies illegally  brought to the United States as children, all speaking perfect English and thoroughly assimilated into the American Way of Life, none with a criminal record, and now looking to the future. They will also bring up Felipe and Ramon and Sergei, all young men with flawless records, all brought here illegally when small children, and all willing and eager to join the Armed Forces (and perhaps some of them already have); and it will be demanded that we say what is to be done with them. Those making the demand fully understand that there will be no consensus, but there will certainly not be a majority in favor of putting them on an airplane back to their country of origin.

Of course when that happens we ought to bring up the others, the career criminals with long rap sheets, and insist that the amnesty advocates tell us that they would do with these. And perhaps, perhaps, there will come a time when there is an actual serious discussion of the subject, and we can come up with policies and tactics that have a chance of working and of actually being adopted.

But we will never get there so long as bringing up the subject for discussion makes you a traitor.

= = = =

I see no reason to change a word of that, although it was written long ago. It ought to be asked of every candidate: realistically what shall we do with the 20 million illegal aliens already among us?

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: ISIS, Trump, Mexican Cartels, National Security

As riots erupt among people waving Mexican flags, denying access to public spaces (disorderly conduct or disturbing the peace, I forget which), smashing police cars (vandalism), hurling rocks at motorists (assault consummated with battery), and committing other crimes, we see why border security, immigration enforcement, and law enforcement are important.

LAPD are outnumbered, according to news reports. This is a danger to national security and domestic tranquility. We have a small army of — what appear to be Mexican nationals waving Mexican flags — menacing citizens of the United States and interfering with activities related to the American body politic generally and the California primary specifically. Why isn’t this happening? Why can’t I travel in my own state without feeling menaced by foreign nationalist criminals? Why isn’t the National Guard stomping their guts out and letting LAPD mop up?

Recently, I emailed you a news article that reveals Mexican drug cartels helped Daesh (ISIS) terrorists scout targets in the United States and helped Daesh terrorists cross the border. Further, this cooperation between Daash and the Mexican cartels becomes personal — for some people — when you learn that 3,600 ordinary New Yorkers have been targeted by Daash hackers who encouraged terrorists to attack

them:

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/isis-hackers-release-hit-list-7864663

I have possible solutions:

First: We must take the fight to them and unleash Hell with free reign. We should have no compunctions about collateral damage. This is their problem, they didn’t deal with it and they must not like how we deal with it. This will encourage them to get their act together and keep it together next time. Vagaries in my use of “them”, “their”, and “they” are intentional as this is general policy.

Second: If this situation worsens it seems prudent to encourage, perhaps even compel, capable US citizens to carry a loaded firearm (or

firearms) at all times in case of a terrorist attack

Third: If the Mexican government cannot regulate the conduct of its citizens and criminals in such a way that it does not have an adverse effect on the United States, it’s people, and/or it’s politics then it may become necessary for the United States to take a more active role in governing Mexico.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

ISIS has declared war on us. We can wait until they can actually kill a lot of Americans, or eliminate them before they do; since we are at war, it seems prudent to strike when three divisions of Army (for Iraq/Syria), two regiments of Marines (for Libya), and the Warthogs will be enough for overwhelming force and thus fewer casualties will do the job; waiting means more opposition and more casualties. As to what to do with their territory after we have taken it: there may be parts of Libya worth keeping; I have not studied the map. We know there are parts of Iraq coveted by our Kurdish allies – any competent deal maker should find that easy. Some of Iraq is not Kurdish, and may be more of a problem; but there is oil, enough that we should be able to hire a constabulary. For the rest, once ISIS is destroyed, we can consider our options. We may even want a convenient base with acceptable climate suitable for our troops to bring their families for a year, just to make sure we can nip any opposition in the bud. Again: territory we take from ISIS is no longer Iraq or Syria; it is part of the as yet unconquered Caliphate which has declared war on us, and will no longer exist when we proclaim peace.

As to the ISIS threat on the Mexican border and the Cartels, we can do nothing until we have the will to do something. The power we’ve got. Wild idea: Quite possibly we have illegal aliens who would be glad to join the fight for the right rewards. Of course once ISIS in the Middle East vanishes, the situation south may change for the better.

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Amazon puts Microsoft away in the Battle of Seattle (USA Today)

John Shinal, Special for USA TODAY 7:55 a.m. EDT April 29, 2016

With Amazon raising its revenue forecast for the current quarter, the online retailing giant is leaving fellow Seattle-area tech giant Microsoft in the dust in terms of annual sales.

It’s also closing in on a certain Cupertino, Calif.-based seller of smartphones, the heavyweight in tech sales.

Amazon’s (AMZN) bullish prediction makes Wall Street’s full-year estimates more of a lock, and that view is a sweet one for growth investors. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is expected to boost the company’s top line 21.5% this year and another 20% in 2017.

For Microsoft (MSFT), however, the contrast is stark and a good illustration of how growth in the sector has moved from hardware, software and chip companies to Internet firms selling goods or advertising online.

The maker of Office and Word is expected to post a 2% decline in revenue this fiscal year, which ends in June. In fiscal 2017, it’s seen growing just 4% off that lower base.

The upshot?

By next year Amazon is seen generating $156 billion in sales, or nearly two-thirds more than Microsoft’s $95.4 billion.

So while Bill Gates helped put Seattle area on the map as a U.S. tech hub, Bezos now runs the largest tech company in the State of Washington, by far, in terms of sales.

What’s more, Amazon is also putting more distance between itself and two other fast-growing Internet companies, Facebook and Google-parent Alphabet.

While Facebook posted the fastest first-quarter growth, at 52%, and Google sales rose 17%  — a hefty number for its size — it was Amazon that added the most new business in the tech sector.

With revenue surging, Amazon won $6.4 billion in new business during the period, versus a year ago. Alphabet (GOOGL), meanwhile, added $3 billion in new sales and Facebook, $1.84 billion.

That means that while Google and Facebook (FB) began today valued by stock investors more than Amazon, there’s only one tech firm still larger than Amazon by revenue.

That would be Apple (AAPL), which in spite of its recent iPhone slowdown, is still expected to post revenue of more than $200 billion for this year and next.

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A House committee wants to know what the Obama administration is doing to remove illegal immigrants who commit new crimes. A Puerto Rico-born conservative voices reservations about the territory’s fiscal mess. Josh Siegel reports on both. Big businesses have some nerve pummeling a ballot question on religious liberty, Katrina Trinko writes. We’ve also got an excerpt from James Rosebush’s new book on Reagan; James Gattuso on requiring Congress to OK major regulations; and Genevieve Wood’s interview with a CEO for whom Obamacare is personal.

Analysis

A Way to Curb the Power of Unaccountable Bureaucracy

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Each year, regulators impose thousands of rules on the American people—over 20,000 during the Obama administration’s tenure alone.

Read More

We have not heard much from the candidates on this subject; we know Hillary will do nothing; Sanders will do nothing; Bush and the Republican establishment will do nothing. Someone might ask Cruz and Trump.

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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