Author: Ex-PH2

  • Corey Booker Does Not Know Spartacus

    Mr. Booker made a scene, which some of you may have witnessed if you were watching the hearings for Judge Kavanaugh’s SCOTUS appointment. As Mr. Kavanaugh was leaving under his own power, Booker jumped up and hollered something about ‘Spartacus’, demonstrating both his ignorance of history and his desperate need for attention.

    The Hill has a good article about this, and why it was so important to realize that Mr. Booker is now a genuine twit.  I have copied it to this post, but you can find it also at the link.

    From The Hill regarding Corey Booker’s “Spartacus” episode:

    http://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/405685-the-spartacus-moment-in-senate-fuels-troubling-trend-of-theatrics

    It was a moment that would have made actor Kirk Douglas blush. During the hearings into the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, Cory Booker (D-N.J.) announced that he would defy the Senate Judiciary Committee by releasing a nonpublic “committee confidential” document, regardless of the consequences. “This is about the closest I’ll probably ever have in my life to an ‘I am Spartacus’ moment,” he declared, recalling the memorable line spoken by Douglas in the 1960 film.

    First, and foremost, the key to having a “Spartacus moment” is not to declare your own Spartacus moment. Second, you actually have to expose yourself to a lethal threat. It turned out that the document in question already had been released and Booker was informed that it was public before the hearing. However, Booker was right on one point.

    The hearing procedures were questionable and this really was a Spartacus moment. It was just not the one Booker thought it was. He and other Senate Democrats have had a legitimate gripe about the unusually high percentage of material withheld from review and the unilateral use of “committee confidential” markings to control documents. It is troubling to have a largely unknown private lawyer removing hundreds of thousands of documents based on a privilege assertion that has not actually been formally made by the White House.

    Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) also had a good point about the Democrats failing to ask for the release of documents and possibly engineering the confrontation in open committee. Yet, in the end, Democrats had the better case about the hearings being substantially different from past hearings in the method and the scope of withheld material. If Democrats had the better argument, it was lost in the atmospherics of the hearing. Indeed, for those lost in the theatrics, the story of Spartacus is instructive as suggested by Booker.

    In history, gladiator turned rebel Spartacus was pursued by not one but two Roman senators turned generals, Marcus Licinius Crassus and Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, who wanted to be the next consul of Rome. The point of the war was not just defeating Spartacus and his gladiator army but to be the one credited with defeating him. Crassus succeeded and proclaimed his victory at Capua. Magnus, however, claimed the honor by reaching Rome first, illustrating the danger of Crassus stopping to crucify 6,000 prisoners on the road to Rome as a statement.

    The Kavanaugh hearings were like watching a contest to be consul of Rome. Booker and Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), who sat next to each other, are viewed as leading contenders for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. Like their Roman predecessors, they knew that whoever slayed or injured Kavanaugh would be a celebrated Democratic hero. Harris effectively accused Kavanaugh of perjury, collaboration against special counsel Robert Mueller, and other unsupported misdeeds. Not to be outdone, Booker jumped up to declare himself Spartacus.

    The problem is that someone actually did kill Spartacus. In this case, Kavanaugh walked from the hearing on his own power with a presumed Senate majority of support. It is certainly true that Republicans prevented access to information that might have undermined him, but neither Booker nor Harris made a convincing claim as future consul of the Democratic Party. One moment, however, did leave Booker looking a bit like a consul wannabe. In an uncharacteristic move for the usually mild mannered senator, Booker had a confrontation with reporter Byron Tau, who asked if his Spartacus moment was a political stunt. Tau said Booker told him he was “violating the Constitution by being in his way.”

    That comment was unlikely meant as a real threat, as it is neither within the character nor authority of the senator. Presumably, Booker was referring to the fact that he was on his way to a vote and the speech and debate clause under Article I states that members of both Houses of Congress “shall not be questioned in any other place” when going to and from Congress. However, this is meant to deter the government, not reporters, which is why there is an exception case of “treason, felony and breach of the peace.” Given the grilling over the uncertain constitutional interpretations of Kavanaugh and support of imperial presidential authority, it was a sharply discordant moment. If you are Spartacus, you should not be denouncing reporters like a Roman consul.

    Booker later went on television, trying to reinforce his Spartacus bona fides. He struggled to establish that he was actually breaking Senate rules by releasing other documents. He has now released more than 20 documents uncleared by the Senate Judiciary Committee. It was like claiming to be a retroactive Spartacus after the battle. That could subject Booker to admonishment after a Senate Ethics Committee investigation, still far short of staging crucifixions between on the way to Rome.

    Putting all of the theatrics aside, the Kavanaugh hearings left a troubling and damaging precedent for a process that already lacked substantive content. I have been a critic for years of the modern confirmation hearing, which is largely about senators rather than nominees. The hearings drained what little substance remained in the process. The unilateral denial of documents and theatrics of the opposition left the hearings as little more than a stunt by both parties. There was not a Spartacus to be found but, instead, an overabundance of would- be Roman consuls.

    Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. You can follow him on Twitter @JonathanTurley.

     

     

  • Monday AM Feel Good Stories

    Dave’s not here, man. He’s probably out getting plywood for the windows. Whatever happened to storm shutters? Did those go out of fashion? So here’s what I have:

    A  Waukegan man has been charged with murder in the death of a mother of three who was found after an apartment fire in Englewood last month.   http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-met-murder-charges-taandra-hall-20180831-story.html

    Wess Arnold, 35, is accused of killing Ta’anda Hall and setting her second-floor apartment on fire in the 1300 block of West 57th Street around 12:10 a.m. on July 12.

    Hall, 38, was discovered in a bedroom. An investigation determined her death was a homicide.

    Arnold was arrested in Waukegan on Wednesday and the charges were approved on Thursday, acording to Officer Michael Carroll, a Chicago police spokesman. Arnold has two prior convictions. One from 2011 for aggravated battery and another in 2004 for aggravated unlawful use of a weapon.

    I won’t say this is “open and shut”, but I hope he gets to go to the Big House for this episode of violence.

    This is from 1999, but it’s direct from Belfast, which makes it more interesting. It seems that Brendan “Speedy” Fegan met his demise in a bloody battle.https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/imported/bloody-end-to-reign-of-highliving-drug-dealer-28261540.html

    Brendan ‘Speedy’ Fegan has become the latest drug dealer to die in Northern Ireland. Chief Reporter DARWIN TEMPLETON examines his life of crime and the theories surrounding his death.

    BRENDAN ‘Speedy’ Fegan spent his life trying to stay one step ahead of an assassin. Yesterday one group of enemies finally caught up with him.

    As a major player in the drugs trade on both sides of the border, there were a lot of people who wanted him dead.

    Rival dealers eyed his extensive empire enviously. There were many criminals eager to step into his designer boots.

    Then, there were the faceless money men whose cash helped Fegan finance the huge consignments of cannabis and Ecstasy he smuggled into Ireland.

    Over the last year (1998-1999), Speedy had suffered heavy losses at the hands of the Gardai and RUC drug squads. A lot of money had been lost and there were rumblings that Speedy was in trouble with powerful backers.

    His latest setback may have come on Friday, when Gardai seized £800,000 of cannabis in Balbriggan.

    And of course, the paramilitary godfathers were keeping a watchful eye on his activities.

    He had been warned to stay out of his home town of Newry and had personally threatened local republicans during flare-ups.

    Security sources suspect he may have been prepared to pay up to keep them off his back.

    In the background, there were always whispers that Speedy was in cahoots with the police.

    Only 24, Fegan entered the drugs underworld as a henchman for drugs baron Paddy Farrell, who was later shot dead by his mistress.

    The man who earned his nickname for his manic driving during high-speed car chases with police on one occasion driving the wrong way down the hard shoulder ofthe M1 had contacts with the gang who murdered Dublin journalist Veronica Guerin in 1996.

    It’s thought that members of the gang who fled to Amsterdam after the killing kept open the supply routes.

    But Fegan knew well the possible consequences of his involvement in drugs.

    Weeks ago, he was shot during a failed murder bid in Belfast’s Golden Mile, which was blamed on a rival dealer.

    Last February, his pal Brendan Campbell was shot dead in Belfast, a month after he had survived another murder bid.

    Both had watched with unease as the IRA, under the guise of Direct Action Against Drugs, launched a bloody purge of alleged drug dealers in 1995 and 1996, murdering eight people.

    But with reported profits of up to £50,000 a week, Speedy was hooked on the cash and the lifestyle it brought.

    He had a string of properties; police had a baffling list of addresses for him and he was fond of the trappings of the high- life.

    The only picture in circulation of Fegan shows him in the back of a hired limo with Brendan Campbell, on their way to the races. Around his neck is a chunky gold necklace and the key tool of his trade, the mobile phone, is lying on his lap. Both men enjoyed the fruits of their ill- gotten gains, but have since paid the ultimate price. –  Source: Belfast Telegraph

     

     

     

  • Copycat Recruiting Sites?

    I admit that I am puzzled by the idea of a 3rd party acting as a recruiter for the military, when all you have to do is look up recruiting offices for the various military branches and go see the people there.

    https://www.militarytimes.com/pay-benefits/2018/09/06/feds-shut-down-alleged-copycat-military-recruiting-sites/

    From the article:

    The government has shut down at least eight “copycat” military recruiting websites run by companies accused of using deceptive practices to entice potential recruits into providing their personal information, then selling the information to post-secondary schools.

    According to the Federal Trade Commission’s complaint, the companies’ websites appeared to be official recruiting sites — such as  army.com, armyenlist.comairforceenlist.commarinesenlist.comnavyenlist.com,coastguardentlist.comairguardenlist.comnationalguardenlist.com and armyreserves.com. The companies agreed to give up the domain names and stop the alleged deceptive practices.

    “Those who are considering a military career deserve to have confidence that the recruitment site is legitimate and their personal information will not be misused,” said FTC Chairman Joe Simons, in an announcement about the FTC action. “The FTC will take action against any party in the lead generation ecosystem — from sellers to purchasers — that fails to comply with the law.”

    As I said, I’m puzzled by this.  There are military recruiting offices within a very few miles of most of us. In fact, if you’re near NAVSTA Great Lakes, you could probably just call the MEPs people there and apply to join the Navy over the phone. They might even send a driver to pick you up. They graduate recruit classes every week now, from what I’ve been told. Or if you’d rather get the literature and discuss your possibilities, you can find the real recruiters online and pick up the phone.

    For example, call one of these, if you’re really interested:

    Marine Corps Recruiting –

    934-N N Green Bay Rd · (847) 662-0947

    Closed ? Opens 8AM Mon

    U.S. Army Recruiting Office

    932 N Green Bay Rd · (847) 662-5260

    Closed ? Opens 9AM Mon

    US Naval Reserve Recruiting

    2834 Green Bay Rd B · (847) 688-7100

    Or you could simply drive there. There might still be a place downtown in Chicago. Used to be one on South Clark Street, but that’s gone now. They’re scattered all over the place. But the REAL recruiters are the people you should be talking to, not some questionable 3rd party who, as the FTC has indicated, is asking for your personal info and selling it.

    As I said, I cannot imagine what would possess anyone who is even thinking about going into any branch of the military to go through a 3rd party, at all. The real recruiters are the people you should talk to.

  • 24th Marine Expeditionary Heading to Norway for NATO

    https://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/your-marine-corps/2018/09/06/24th-marine-expeditionary-unit-will-head-to-norway-to-join-40000-troops-strong-nato-exercise/

    Marines with the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, or MEU, are slated to participate in one of the largest NATO exercises later this fall hosted by Norway, according to Marine officials.

    The exercise, dubbed Trident Juncture, is one of the largest for NATO in more than a decade and will feature nearly 40,000 troops, over one hundred aircraft and dozens of allied ships — all in close proximity to the Russian border.

    But the extent of the 24th MEU’s participation is currently unknown. Marine officials cited operational security concerns and would not provide any further details. – Article.

    Per the article’s author, the presence of several thousands of US Jarheads appearing in Norway for a joint NATO MEU exercise is likely to upset the digestive systems of the Russian people who occupy the highest seats in the Kremlin. That would be Vlad Putin, and whoever his upper level military officers may be at this time.

    I’m sure they will be watching closely with the best binocs they can get from China. Doesn’t China also make long distance visual equipment for US troops and sailors and GIRines? Maybe we should move manufacture of that stuff home now. I can’t tell, for example, if my glasses are made in Beijing or in the back of the Lenscrafters shop, but I’m sure there is an Oriental connection there somewhere, because plastics!!!

    Just glad to know that they announced it so that we know that they know that we know that they know that we know that they know!!!

  • Thursdays Are For Cooking….

    Yes, that is the Honorable Morel.  Almost looks like a duckbilled dinosaur. The head was about 6 inches long, sticking up out of the forest floor. At that size, it’s probably too woody to be very good, but they are delicious when used properly.

    There are other fungi in the woodlands. The truffle, for instances, is exclusive to France, is sold at auctions by weight, can grow to any size, and is found by pigs whose capacity for finding fungi is legendary. The white truffle is less flavorful than the black truffle, but still worth something to truffle connoisseurs.

    Me, I just like mushrooms, period. They contain, among other things, potassium, and are used medicinally to fight cancer and enhance and modulate immune responses.

    To the fungus among us: Salute!

     

  • Desperation….?

     

    And we wake to the news that the Trump administration is either in Turmoil, or – well, WHAT?????

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/09/05/wh-official-pens-anonymous-ny-times-op-ed-calling-trump-anti-democratic-petty-and-ineffective.html

    The allegedly anonymous 0p-ed piece, allegedly written by a White House staffer, appears to be another attempt on the part of the media to discredit someone they don’t like because he isn’t The One and he isn’t The Other One.

    Here goes, with Fox News quoting the NYT article:

    “From the White House to executive branch departments and agencies, senior officials will privately admit their daily disbelief at the commander in chief’s comments and actions,” the official wrote.

    “Meetings with him veer off topic and off the rails, he engages in repetitive rants, and his impulsiveness results in half-baked, ill-informed and occasionally reckless decisions that have to be walked back.”

    The author specifically noted Trump’s reluctance to take action against the Russian government after a former Russian spy-turned-double agent and his daughter were poisoned with a nerve agent earlier this year in the U.K.

    “He complained for weeks about senior staff members letting him get boxed into further confrontation with Russia, and he expressed frustration that the United States continued to impose sanctions on the country for its malign behavior,” the official writes. “But his national security team knew better — such actions had to be taken, to hold Moscow accountable.”

    WH Press Secretary Sanders has this to say: “We are disappointed, but not surprised, that the paper chose to publish this pathetic, reckless, and selfish op-ed. This is a new low for the so-called ‘paper of record,’ and it should issue an apology,” said Sanders, adding: “The individual behind this piece has chosen to deceive, rather than support, the duly elected President of the United States. He is not putting country first, but putting himself and his ego ahead of the will of the American people. This coward should do the right thing and resign.”

    In my view, it is made up out of wishful thinking, dust bunnies, and fishnet stocking (lots of holes) in a very vapid attempt to unseat a legitimately elected President who is an independent thinker.  I realize that the libertreds don’t like him because he didn’t stay on their side of the political fence. But I do feel that they are scrambling now, grasping desperately at straws and making up scheisse to do so.

    If this person exists, I believe it is either a NYT staff writer trying to make a name for itself, or someone like Bob Woodward concocting this bag of air.

     

    If it is someone on the WH staff, like this**: 

    s/he/it should quit her/his/its job now and go write books before s/he/it is indicted for security violations.

    Unfortunately for these weasels, dTrump has hinted at another run after this one.

    People, The They are desperate when They stoop to this kind of trash. Remember when your mother told you to stop slamming your head on the wall?

    If you can find the entire article online without having to fork over some donuts and coffee to the NYT’s coffers, do a copy/paste to Word, with the date and the news source included. Apparently, that newsrag is losing advertising revenues because their online access used to be free.

    **Sorry, could not resist!

  • 1974 Redux? Not Remotely

    SecDef J. Mattis is calling Bob Woodward’s new book about Pres. Trump a work of fiction.

    https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2018/09/04/mattis-calls-revelations-about-president-trump-in-woodwards-new-book-fiction/

    Among the revelations in veteran journalist Bob Woodward’s new book, “Fear: Trump in the White House,” Trump allegedly called for the assassination of Syrian president Bashar Assad after the 2017 chemical strike.

    “Trump called Mattis and said he wanted to assassinate the dictator,” according to a passage from the book, which will be released Sept. 11.

    “Trump called Mattis and said he wanted to assassinate the dictator,” according to a passage from the book, which will be released Sept. 11.

    “Let’s f**king kill him! Let’s go in. Let’s kill the f**king lot of them,” Trump said, according to Woodward.

    Mattis told the president that he would get right on it.

    But after hanging up the phone, he told a senior aide: “We’re not going to do any of that. We’re going to be much more measured.”

    The national security team then developed options for the more conventional airstrike that Trump ultimately ordered.

    “The contemptuous words about the President attributed to me in Woodward’s book were never uttered by me or in my presence,” Mattis said in a statement. “While I generally enjoy reading fiction, this is a uniquely Washington brand of literature, and his anonymous sources do not lend credibility.”

    Retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly, the White House chief of staff, is quoted as saying the president is an idiot, and that it’s the worst job he’s ever had.

    Kelly issued a similar denial through the White House.

    “The idea I ever called the President an idiot is not true,” Kelly said in a statement.

    He called the book passage “another pathetic attempt to smear people close to President Trump and distract from the administration’s many successes.” (All passages are from the Miitary Times article, at the link above.)

    Okay, I get that Woodward doesn’t like Trump. A lot of people don’t like Trump. So what? Is this supposed to be news? But putting words in his mouth? Should I put some words in your mouth, Woodward?

    Bob Woodward did his best to get Nixon removed from office and with his coauthor Carl Bernstein, the two of them succeeded. But Woodward is still living on the glamour from those Glory Days at WaPo, the intrigue of Deep Throat, and exposing classified information about the war in Vietnam from Ellsberg, who should have been thrown into jail to share a cell with Nixon, for what he did. And frankly, both Woodward and Bernstein, and Kathryn Graham, who ran WaPo back then, should all have been thrown into jail for publishing that stuff.  It heinously jeopardized American lives over there in Southeast Asia. It was inexcusable.

    Watergate has become a metaphor for dirty dog doings in Foggy Bottom. I get that. I was there, watching that crap transpire on live television during the Congressional hearings.

    But this ain’t 1974, Woodward, and you don’t have a story. Try to understand that, for once.

    There is no collusion going on in WDC. There’s no interference from the Soviet Union, now known as Russia but still the same old-same old Spy vs. Spy game. There is none of the conspiracy to make Trump look bad that you want so desperately to invent, no matter how much you want it to happen. As much as I’d like to go back to gas prices at $.50/gallon for regular (there was no unleaded at that period in history), unlike you, I have no desire to live in the past on faded glory, and watch a non-story turned into nothing more than some bored, retired reporter’s notion that he can again destabilize this country and create trouble where there is none.

    There is NO Watergate here, you sap.

    Get over yourself, Woodward. There is nothing – zero – zilch – nada – rien going on here except what you’ve tried to cook up out of whole cloth in your pissy mind. If you don’t have anything better to do than create a Tall Tale From Foggy Bottom out of dust bunnies, leftover bubble gum and stale soda crackers, then I suggest you retire to your domicile away from Washington and get over yourself.

    Making up fictitious quotes alluded to people whom you did not interview means that you have nothing. Either provide their information or admit that you’re lying.

    You have nothing.

    You couldn’t write a believable novel if your life depended on it. How do I know that? Because you just had this one published, you sap. As for people in the administration (like John Kelly) calling dTrump an idiot, you should know most of us have said similar things ourselves but we’d rather have Trump in the Oval Office than whatever it was that ran against him.

    You have nothing.

    What’s the big deal? Trump’s smarter than you are. And while he is a lot of things, he is NOT Richard Nixon, who was also smarter then you have ever been.

    I have spent a good deal of time cleaning horse stalls. I know horse shit when I see it. You’ve created quite a pile of it, Bob.

    Enjoy the sales while they last, Bob, because – well, while even baloney has a market as sandwich filler, after a while, people want another flavor in their lives. And Watergate means nothing to the generations which are following mine.

    And, no – your wishful thinking is not going to get this President unseated. This ain’t the 1970s, like I said. You should pay attention to such things.

    What a maroon…..

  • The US Navy’s ‘Fat Leonard’ Case Implodes

     

    With the close of the Navy’s first “Fat Leonard” court-martial trial, the defendant is going to the brig but he escaped the most serious charges and potentially jeopardized future federal fraud cases against a string of past and present sailors.

    https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2018/09/01/navys-fat-leonard-case-implodes/

    Cmdr. David Morales was found guilty of only two of the five charges he faced — conduct unbecoming an officer and failing to report foreign contacts on his security clearance renewal.

    “Someone stood up to Leonard Francis and he was found to be untruthful,” said Frank Spinner, a retired Air Force attorney who represented Morales during his court-martial trial. “There’s now a crack in the prosecution dike for the remaining defendants awaiting trial in San Diego.”

    According to this article from November 2017, 60 admirals were being scrutinized for involvement with Francis.  https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2017/11/06/more-than-60-admirals-being-looked-at-in-fat-leonard-probe-report-says/

    The Navy has 60 admirals? That sounds like an overload of brass to me. Modern times, I guess.

    So how much of what Fat Leonard said was simply to get out of being prosecuted further? Hmm…. Inquiring minds want to know. This is $35 million he overbilled the Navy. That’s your tax dollars and mine.  That could pay the cost of a lot of recruits being trained properly.

    And since the article indicates that the Thai SEAL team has prostitutes, were they on the Thai Navy’s payroll, or were they just TAD to Fat Leonard?