So here's the deal.
It could go one of two ways.
The first is how almost everybody is hoping it will go. Trump takes over, and turns out to do a far more reasonable job than can humanly be expected.
Let's say this happens, and he doesn't ban Muslims from entering the USA, and doesn't try and get his Mexican wall built. Let's say he just cuts billionaires' taxes to the bone, raises the age on Social Security benefits to 75, halves Medicare, and a few other things like that. Let's say he doesn't even screw up foreign policy.
What would happen in the long run? Well, his base will feel betrayed, but even so, in four years he'd stand a very strong chance of re-election.
The other, much more likely scenario, is that it is bad; really, really bad.
He will immediately take over the Supreme Court by appointing some legally-blind right-wing fanatic into the current opening, and will keep doing so throughout his term.
He, along with a Republican Senate and Republican House will disassemble Social Security altogether, and Medicare, and Obamacare, and Planned Parenthood. They will strip public education, and veterans' benefits, and keep cutting taxes on the rich, and cutting, and cutting.
Minimum wage will freeze, at best, and perhaps even vanish altogether. Entire swathes of the population will have their rights stripped away.
New wars are started, and many will die..
Some are pinning their hopes on the Democrats taking the House away from the Republicans, but the entire system is so Gerrymandered that regardless of the will of the people, it will be an uphill battle. The Republican majority is so massive, that they will likely retain control in 2018, giving Trump a totally-free hand for his entire 4-year term.
It will be bad.
However, this is perhaps exactly what the American people need to see; rampant racism, Wall Street unregulated, incompetent foreign policy, with the aged forced to work until they drop, and privatization run amok.....every nightmare.
Let's assume this is how Trump's four years go.
Then, he either runs for re-election in 2020, or some other radical right-winger does, along with every seat in the House and 1/3 of the Senate.
I can see a ground-swelling of anger striking hard. I see a nation getting behind whoever is running against him in a way unseen since 1932.
You see, back then, the Republican Party ruled supreme. Harding had won the presidency in 1920 with 404 electoral college votes against the Democrats 127, followed by Coolidge in 1924 with 382 as opposed to the Democrats with 136, and Hoover in 1924 who won by 444 against 87. There really was no wing other than right wing. It didn't seem to matter that the Republicans made up the people in power who sought to legislate morality in an unprecedented manner called Prohibition, or that it almost destroyed law-and-order in the US, or that they were eventually forced to repeal it. What did matter is that the rampant, unregulated, stock market had collapsed, ushering in the Great Depression.
It also mattered that President Hoover, and all the right-wing government types, could do when the entire economy collapsed was to wring their hands and say that the same system that had destroyed itself, and the economy, would magically reverse and all would be well. It was a pity, they said, that so many were destitute, and were starving to death.
The voters rebelled.
Franklin Roosevelt, a Democrat, won the 1932 presidential election with 472 electoral votes over the incumbent, Hoover's 59. He promptly went to work trying to inspire the nation, and implementing programs in an attempt to do something, anything, to help; right-wing wisdom be damned.
Back then, it seems, people had longer memories than they do now. Now, they think the economy sucks, and that it's Obama's fault. Back then they knew who had caused the grief, and how those same economy destroyers had not even tried to help fix it.
When election time rolled around again after four years of effort, Roosevelt won re-election with 523 electoral votes; failing to carry only two states, Vermont and Maine, and their 8 electoral votes. In fact, the people continued to hand Roosevelt two more impressive wins in 1940, and 1944, making him the only man to ever win the presidency more than twice.
That's what needs to happen. The American people need to get so motivated for real change that they reject the fallacies foisted on them by antiquated right-wing thinking.
What they should have done this time if they really had wanted change was to have thrown out every single incumbent in both House and Senate, and to NOT have elected a loose cannon as President.
The problem is, they still seem to think that the right-wing nonsense somehow still makes sense. "Trump will stick up for us." Really? Have you seen pictures of where he lives? He has absolutely nothing in common with working folks, or the middle class, or even with most rich people. He thinks he's the Emperor Caligula. He travels with a security team, and a cloud of go-fers, and lackeys. Do you think he carries a wallet with cash in it, and maybe a visa card? I seriously doubt that. He's more like the Queen. Things are done around him and for him. I doubt he dresses himself.
That's the man who will save the common people? Sure he will.
It has to get so bad that the voters need to reject this kind of stupidity forever. They need to see how critical it is that people earn a living wage, and receive proper medical care, and can retire with dignity, and have control over their own bodies, and are not persecuted for their ethnicity, or gender, and to have access to quality education.
It needs to get so bad that the voters scream for what they have in Germany, and France, and Norway, and Canada, and the rest of the western industrialized world.
A wave needs to sweep this all into being, for now and for always.
Strangely, Trump just might bring it all about.
Sunday, 13 November 2016
Sunday, 23 October 2016
Just Short
I am pretty darn
proud of myself in overcoming my petty, little problem.
You see, my wife and
I travel quite a bit, and I have had a few injuries, and that all
plays havoc with the mandatory minimum attendance requirements. There
is also a number of months a student has to remain in rank as well.
For me, the time was
going to be up 3 days from today, on October 26th. With
nearly perfect attendance, the minimum of 100 appropriate classes can
also be attained, and boom, new rank is qualified for.
My total, however,
was not looking good.
I didn't notice how
very bad it was until a few months ago, and I started taking steps to
tighten things up. If I hadn't done so, I wouldn't be ready for
promotion until February 1st; over three months late.
I moved some travel
dates around to be less disruptive, attended a Vancouver training
seminar, and did a number of private lessons. This changed the very
ugly February 1st date up clear to December 5th.
I reclaimed almost two months.
There wasn't really
anything else practical that I could have done.
I could have
cancelled some travel plans altogether, or added travel to someplace
that has more training that would have counted, such as the main LA
school, or even to Vancouver.
To save the last
month that I am short by doing something like that didn't make sense.
Take the nearby
Vancouver school, for example. To attend, I would have had to miss
sessions here at home. Perhaps I could have collected more that would
have counted on my card, but would have had to give up equally
valuable training here.
You see, I train far
more than the 100 class requirement suggests. If everything counted,
I would complete the total attendance requirement in no time, as I am
on the mat, on average, for 9 sessions a week. Of these, only 3
“count.”
For example, the
easiest out-of-town class to get to is on Saturday morning in North
Vancouver. I would have to get up by 5am to catch the early ferry,
hang around at some coffee shop until the class, attend for an hour,
race for the ferry back, and get home around suppertime, all at a
cost of well over $100. A hidden cost would be that I would miss
about 2 hours of training at my home school. All this just to get to
an hour of training that comes with a little check-mark on a card,
instead of two hours of training that does not.
So I've done what I
can so far. It also looks like soon, a few more private lessons might
be possible. It looks like my current December 5th date
might sneak up a little more to around November 28th; yet
another week shaved off.
I do what I can, and
won't let this happen again.
Monday, 17 October 2016
Petty Delay
It was going to be
close getting all my requirements for Jiu-Jitsu promotion completed
on time, but it was just possible. I'd moved some holiday dates
around so they would less interfere with my attendance, and arranged
for a number of private lessons.
Just possible, with
not even a single class absence to spare.
Then I had a minor
surgery, and then my bicycle decided to try and kill me, and then I
came down with the flu.
Thinks didn't look
so rosy anymore.
So why does it
matter? That all has to do with being old. I am currently 60.
All is fine right
now. I don't get hurt all that much, and for an old fart I heal
pretty fast. Been managing to keep up with the young folks. The trick
is that on my road through the Jiu-Jitsu ranks I will be facing two
more major evaluations. They will judge me to pretty much the same
standard as the youngsters, and it all has to do with rolling
ability. To be ready to go on those test days, years from now, I will
have to have accumulated all the requisite skills, and honed them
over hundreds of hours of rolling.
I'm doing it at 60,
but how much longer can I keep it up. No sweat for a few more years,
but how about more than just a few, and there are so very many
intermediate levels left to get through along the way.
Realistically, I
will have to slow down at some point due to the ravages of time, but
that then exposes me to more of that same ageing to reach the same
levels. It's kind of like trying to improve at gymnastics when old,
with people trying to rip your arms and legs off.
That's why I want to
go progress as quickly as I can now, and get as far as possible
before any slowdown occurs. It is my intention to push as close to
the theoretical limits to promotion rate as I can, and hope to
maintain at least the pace I've been able to achieve so far.
That's why the
classes missed due to my tiny surgery, my bike crash, and my flu are
so annoying. I was on track for theoretical-speed stripe promotion a
couple of weeks from now, but now it looks like a one-month, or even
a two-month delay.
I don't want any delays at any level.
Wednesday, 12 October 2016
Pea Brains
The USA has nuclear
weapons, and it's very important that whoever is running things there
has a good idea of what their use would mean.
In total numbers,
they have 1790 deployed (sitting on fuelled and ready ICBMs), and
more than another 5000 piled up, but that would need a bit of
preparation prior to use. The active ones are currently all aimed at
Russia. These have to be ready to go at a moment's notice, as an ICBM
launched from Moscow towards Washington would arrive in between 20
and 30 minutes. If they wait until after incoming missiles actually
arrive, there ability to strike back will be hugely compromised. The
USA maintains fleets of spy satellites constantly watching Russian
missile silos for evidence of a launch, and also watching world
trouble spots for evidence of nuclear weapon use. So do the Russian.
To give you some
idea of how deadly the US nuclear arsenal is, detonation of 100
average-sized nuclear weapons would be enough to extinguish all human
life. They wouldn't need to go off over any particular target. That
many going off anywhere on earth would paint the planet with
radiation, and eject enough material into the atmosphere to trigger a
blocking out of the sun world-wide. This is called nuclear winter,
and would destroy all the crops on earth. Even those not killed by
the explosions or radiation would starve to death in the cold and
dark, which would last for years. The USA could do this easily 17
times over with their deployed warheads, and 50 times more with their
stockpiles. They could kill us all 67 times over.
So could Russia.
They have 1790 deployed warheads and 7300 in reserve. I bet somebody
reading this will compare the Russian numbers to the American and
say, “The USA is behind. They should make more.” What are you,
stupid? The USA can kill us 67 times over, while the Russians can do
it 90 times over, but that doesn't matter. Once you are comfortably
past the ability to kill everyone on earth, no greater capacity makes
any sense at all.
Next on the list is
France. They can kill us all almost 6 times over. Britain can do it
almost 4 times over. China could kill us all more than twice.
Then come the more
recent members of the nuclear club. India can kill us all (110-120
warheads), as can Pakistan (120-130 warheads).
Israel is the only
secret member of the club, although it's a very open secret.
Estimates put their pile at anywhere from 60 to 400 warheads.
The newest and
wackiest nuclear power is North Korea, with most likely less than 10
warheads. A strange thing about the North Koreans is that the world
is worried about their ability to produce long-range missiles. The
world is missing the point. If they just set the warheads off where
they are, within North Korea, they would pretty much devastate Japan
with the resulting clouds of radioactive dust. Japan is down wind of
North Korea.
But I diverge, and
will get back to the thesis of an American president needing to
understand things about nuclear arms.
New presidents have
lots of people who try to get them to understand, and so far they all
have. None have threatened to use nuclear weapons, let alone used
them other than the two atomic (small) bombs dropped on Japan in
World War Two.
The USA and Russia
(originally the Soviet Union, but the policy continues in Russia)
keep their missiles aimed at each other and have made it abundantly
clear that should either launch even one, it would be met with full
retaliation. What that means is that if Russia launches a single shot
at the USA, every available American nuclear weapon would be fired at
Russia in response, and vice versa. They have also made it clear that
a nuclear weapon used against an ally would be considered a direct
attack against the USA or Russia. If Russia launches missiles at, say
Italy, it would be met by complete US retaliation.
This policy is
called Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) and has keep the nuclear
powers too afraid of destruction to use their arsenals at all.
Every so often there
is some crisis somewhere in the world, and somewhere in the USA some
pea-brain will suggest nuking the bastards.
Let's say there is
just such an event, in some country Russia cares nothing at all
about, and American President Pea Brain launches a single nuclear
missile at that country's capital city. It is kept secret. The
Russians detect the launch, and in the handful of minutes available
to them for analysis, they have to wonder about possible undetected
parallel launches, and almost undetectable launches from
ICBM-carrying submarines. Is it an American launch against them? The
most likely result will be full retaliation, by Russia, met by a full
launch by the USA.
Same scenario, but
this time the USA says they're going to do it. Very likely the
Russians will say that if they do so Russia will launch full
retaliation. If they don't get the USA to back down, the genie is out
of the bottle and will never go back in. Will the USA back down and
not launch? If President Pea Brain was stupid enough to do this in
the first place, there is an excellent chance he will push ahead. The
most likely result will be full launches by both Russia and the USA.
A very realistic
version of the scenarios would be regarding Iran. Elements within the
USA are so afraid of the Iranians getting nuclear weapons that they
want to stop them militarily. The unspoken threat has been American
use of nuclear weapons. Let's say they make some kind of prior deal
with the Russians, and blow up the Iranian capital of Tehran.
Neighbouring Pakistan panics and launches all of theirs, which are
currently aimed at India, who launches back. The world dies a couple
of times over.
Or another one.
President Pea Brain decides to go after North Korea's nuclear
capability with nuclear strikes. They try and get Russian agreement,
and also neighbouring China. Why on earth would either of them give a
green light to the USA nuclear bombing North Korea? The most likely
outcome would be the world dies again.
And if, in any of
the scenarios, if the world doesn't end, is there an upside? Let's
assume the USA uses a nuke on somebody small, and nobody launches
anything else at anybody else.
The result would not
be even slightly good. The only countries safe from President Pea
Brain's treats of power would be those with nuclear arsenals.
Countries may be stupid, but they are smart enough to see that. It
might mean that, say, Jamaica would have to put up with a new
reality, but many countries wouldn't. How long to you think it would
take any of the western industrialized countries to go nuclear if
they wanted to do so in a hurry? Japan? Germany? Canada? Within
months the number of nuclear powers would grow from 9 to dozens. How
lovely would that be, especially in a world where use of such weapons
has become the status quo?
Fortunately, in the
real world the genie is in the bottle. Use of nuclear weapons has
been off the table for over 70 years.
Best to keep it that
way.
Friday, 7 October 2016
Tax and Spend
You probably are
aware that the USA has the lousiest social programs of all the
western industrialized nations. Were you also aware that most
American citizens consider themselves to be incredibly highly taxed?
Let's look at all
this.
How heavily taxed
are Americans really? According to the Central Intelligence Agency,
the total rate of all income taxes, fees, payroll taxes, excise fees
comes to 8.46% of GDP. That seems like a lot of scratch, but how does
it compare? Certainly it is higher than Burma's 3.27%, but also less
than Algeria's 45.26%. Perhaps it will make sense if we only include
in the comparison western industrial nations.
35.05% Denmark
31.67% New Zealand
28.46% Britain
28.20% Norway
25.55% Belgium
24.17% Australia
23.61% Hungary
22.91% Ireland
22.78% Netherlands
22.62% Italy
22.13% Portugal
21.44% France
21.39% Finland
20.17% Austria
19.83% Greece
19.00% Sweden
18.59% Turkey
15.81% Brazil
14.82% Czech
Republic
14.20% Argentina
12.93% Canada
11.94% Japan
11.79% Germany
10.71% Spain
10.00% Switzerland
8.46% United
States
Interestingly, the
figure for the USA would be quite different and more realistic if it
were to include fees for things that are not charged for in the other
countries on the list. For example, a university education carries no
fee in the Netherlands, but is incredibly expensive in the US. In
Britain there is no fee for medical care, but in the US there is. In
a very real way, medical care does carry a fee either by taxation, or
by user fee, or by payment to an insurer who then pays the fee.
Interestingly, in the United States when people complain about the
high tax rate they are talking about their 8.46% of GDP, and not what
they pay as individuals for education, health, and such.
Of course, it
doesn't seem like only 8.46% to them, as that is not what it feels
like to the ordinary joe. Taken in this way, it most likely seems to
them that taxes take about 1/3 of their income. However, even with
this illusory point of view, their taxes are still nowhere near the
highest of the industrialized western nations.
They do, however,
get the least return on their dollar in terms of tangible benefits.
What they do get is a bloated military.
The following are
the ten countries with the largest military budgets; USA, China,
Russia, Britain, France, Japan, Germany, India, South Korea, and
Saudi Arabia.
Did you know that
the highest spender on the list is the United States, and that they
spend 12% more than all the other countries on that list combined?
(in 2011 $682 billion versus $608.5 billion for all the other
countries)
Beyond the top ten
list of spenders, there is really no serious threat. The remaining
186 countries of the world have a combined military budget of $385.5
billion.
Do they really need
to spend that much? Let's just play another little numbers game, and
add up all the world's military budgets other then the USA, and then
remove a few that it would be ridiculous to consider a potential
enemy to the United States (long-time NATO allies, Australia, New
Zealand, Japan, South Korea and a couple of others). You then have
three piles of money to compare; USA budget at $682 billion,
super-friendlies at $540 billion, and the
entire-rest-of-the-freaking-planet at $454 billion.
Can you even think
of a fictional scenario whereby the USA has to fight the entire
planet that movie goers could swallow? Neither can I, but if it were
to happen, leaving out the super-friendlies, the USA has almost a 50%
superiority over the rest of the world.
Let's devise a
non-batshit-paranoid-level of spending for the USA to maintain and
call it just regular-paranoid spending. Let's take the top ten
spenders who are not on the super-friendlies list (four countries),
and then have the US match that amount. It comes to almost exactly
half of what the USA is spending now.
That implies a 50%
slashing of the US budget with no real-world weakening of the US in
terms of world power, at a saving of over $1000 for every man, woman,
and child in the United States per year, forever.
That could easily
mean improving government programs, along with bitching tax
reductions.
Say, for a family of
four. A few thousand more in their pockets to spend, and the kids get
to go to college free.
Sunday, 2 October 2016
Draft
I think I've come up with a solution to a pile of the world's woes.
What we need is universal conscription; you know, a draft.
I bet that isn't something you'd expect to hear from a left-leaning, freedom-loving, liberal kinda guy. Let me explain in more detail before you click off to someplace else on the internet.
Our young people head off to school from the ages of 5 to 18. This used to be considered enough, but with shrinking job markets, it rarely is. Typically, kids head off to years of trades training, or college, or university after they finish their regular schooling.
I would suggest that between completion of grade 12, and any further schooling, that our young people be universally required to serve their country.
A key to this cunning plan is that this service should be truly, universal. None of that nonsense about deferments for married folks, or for parents, or for those not perfect physically. The only exceptions should be for those who are truly incapable of serving in any way. The system would need to be designed to be as immune from gaming as possible. Political influence, and family wealth should not be able to buy the conscript into either a cushier spot, or out of the system altogether.
For the majority, this should be military service, but not for all. When my wife's German cousin was required to do his service many years ago, there is no way he belonged in the army. He did his time working in a regular, civilian hospital. He was required to serve for a little longer.
This service should be done as far from home as possible, and with a minimal sort of wage. All needs must be met for the conscripts; food, shelter, training, clothing.
You might be recoiling in horror at the expense, but you shouldn't. Every one of those young people is already being fed, sheltered, and clothed.
Let's look at a couple of examples.
The USA currently produces about 23.3 million 18-year-olds per year. Let's say that 90% of these are able to perform service of some kind, and that half of those are suitable for military service.
Let's adopt the Austrian model. They are one of the few western countries to currently have conscription. Their young people are inducted for 6 months of training, and then placed into reserve status for the next 8 years (they go home and resume their lives, but can be called up in an emergency)
That means that a country the size of the USA would have 2.5 million draftee soldiers at any one time serving, and 2.5 million or so people doing other service.
Currently, the American military consist of 1.37 million men and women. This professional core would need to be re-purposed to become a training cadre for the young recruits, rather than as the nation's primary combat force. They would provide the officers and NCOs, rather than the riflemen. They would also occupy specialist roles that short-term recruits could not.
For a country the size of Canada, the numbers would be even more staggering. Our small population would be producing 250,000 military and 250,000 non-military conscripts every six months. Our current goal military strength is only about 59,000.
For any country, the 6-month mobilization of their youth seems incredible, and daunting, but it shouldn't.
Think of all the high schools in your area. Every kid in there is, in effect, conscripted into school. Nobody thinks anything of that. My suggested program would be somewhat similar to having every student spend an additional 6 months in school, except it wouldn't be in school.
There is a lot of moaning about how the current generation of young people has been spoiled by over protective parents. A stint in service would likely both eliminate any such tendencies, but likely also shut up the complaining from an older generation that was sparred any such service.
Suppose you had a small business, and had a choice between two job applicants. One had only finished high school, while a second had also served 6 months of service in the army. Based on nothing else, which would you hire? How about a grade 12 grad, or somebody who had also done 6 months of janitorial work in a care home?
If you are picking the same as I would, we are already in agreement as to the positive effects that such an experience would have on those people.
Would it hurt the conscripts in any way during normal times? I can't see how. They leave home, are sent someplace new to live, are taken care of, given a little money, and hang out with same-aged people in an adventure.
Could it hurt them in non-normal times; say during a time of military conflict? Here, you've got me. For those doing military training, it could easily cost them their lives.
I contend that isn't a bad thing. In a true emergency, such as the Second World War, it would mean that a country such as Canada would be able to recall up to 8 million trained individuals (500,000 per six month period who could be recalled along the Austrian model for up to 8 years). This is far more than would ever be required. In the USA, it would mean up to 80 million. In either case, that would be over 1/4 of the population.
In a lesser, and much more likely event, it would still be a good thing. There is altogether too much military adventuring these days. The reason that governments are able to get away with it is that the fighting and dying is all done by the country's professional forces. Under my system, it would be conscripts nearing the end of their training who would be sent, and if more were needed, then reservists from previous groups would be pulled from their lives and sent.
It would be much harder to get a nation's voters to accept sending people off to kill and die if they might be the voter's own kids, or might even be the voters themselves. That is also why it is necessary that the system be universal. I wonder if George W Bush would have been as keen to invade Iraq for no reason if either of his own twin daughters were likely to be sent off to fight.
Citizens, however, would be willing to support realistic and understandable military intervention. After 911, the citizens of the US were clamouring for action in Afghanistan, and likely would have done so even if citizen soldiers were put in peril. Canada, too, sent troops into that conflict and it was widely supported by the citizenry. It seemed important, and worth doing.
In the case of a military intervention overseas, it wouldn't be more people dying, just different ones. Far less regular soldiers would be put in peril. In their place, a random cross section of the nation would be doing a fair share of the suffering. As this would discourage that type of activity, it would mean less death overall.
So I say, draft them all, and put them to work. If they are not right for the army, put them into alternative service. Give them an adventure away from home. Then, if needed, they would serve in time of war.
They would not only be there to serve their country militarily, but to discourage their country's use of force.
What we need is universal conscription; you know, a draft.
I bet that isn't something you'd expect to hear from a left-leaning, freedom-loving, liberal kinda guy. Let me explain in more detail before you click off to someplace else on the internet.
Our young people head off to school from the ages of 5 to 18. This used to be considered enough, but with shrinking job markets, it rarely is. Typically, kids head off to years of trades training, or college, or university after they finish their regular schooling.
I would suggest that between completion of grade 12, and any further schooling, that our young people be universally required to serve their country.
A key to this cunning plan is that this service should be truly, universal. None of that nonsense about deferments for married folks, or for parents, or for those not perfect physically. The only exceptions should be for those who are truly incapable of serving in any way. The system would need to be designed to be as immune from gaming as possible. Political influence, and family wealth should not be able to buy the conscript into either a cushier spot, or out of the system altogether.
For the majority, this should be military service, but not for all. When my wife's German cousin was required to do his service many years ago, there is no way he belonged in the army. He did his time working in a regular, civilian hospital. He was required to serve for a little longer.
This service should be done as far from home as possible, and with a minimal sort of wage. All needs must be met for the conscripts; food, shelter, training, clothing.
You might be recoiling in horror at the expense, but you shouldn't. Every one of those young people is already being fed, sheltered, and clothed.
Let's look at a couple of examples.
The USA currently produces about 23.3 million 18-year-olds per year. Let's say that 90% of these are able to perform service of some kind, and that half of those are suitable for military service.
Let's adopt the Austrian model. They are one of the few western countries to currently have conscription. Their young people are inducted for 6 months of training, and then placed into reserve status for the next 8 years (they go home and resume their lives, but can be called up in an emergency)
That means that a country the size of the USA would have 2.5 million draftee soldiers at any one time serving, and 2.5 million or so people doing other service.
Currently, the American military consist of 1.37 million men and women. This professional core would need to be re-purposed to become a training cadre for the young recruits, rather than as the nation's primary combat force. They would provide the officers and NCOs, rather than the riflemen. They would also occupy specialist roles that short-term recruits could not.
For a country the size of Canada, the numbers would be even more staggering. Our small population would be producing 250,000 military and 250,000 non-military conscripts every six months. Our current goal military strength is only about 59,000.
For any country, the 6-month mobilization of their youth seems incredible, and daunting, but it shouldn't.
Think of all the high schools in your area. Every kid in there is, in effect, conscripted into school. Nobody thinks anything of that. My suggested program would be somewhat similar to having every student spend an additional 6 months in school, except it wouldn't be in school.
There is a lot of moaning about how the current generation of young people has been spoiled by over protective parents. A stint in service would likely both eliminate any such tendencies, but likely also shut up the complaining from an older generation that was sparred any such service.
Suppose you had a small business, and had a choice between two job applicants. One had only finished high school, while a second had also served 6 months of service in the army. Based on nothing else, which would you hire? How about a grade 12 grad, or somebody who had also done 6 months of janitorial work in a care home?
If you are picking the same as I would, we are already in agreement as to the positive effects that such an experience would have on those people.
Would it hurt the conscripts in any way during normal times? I can't see how. They leave home, are sent someplace new to live, are taken care of, given a little money, and hang out with same-aged people in an adventure.
Could it hurt them in non-normal times; say during a time of military conflict? Here, you've got me. For those doing military training, it could easily cost them their lives.
I contend that isn't a bad thing. In a true emergency, such as the Second World War, it would mean that a country such as Canada would be able to recall up to 8 million trained individuals (500,000 per six month period who could be recalled along the Austrian model for up to 8 years). This is far more than would ever be required. In the USA, it would mean up to 80 million. In either case, that would be over 1/4 of the population.
In a lesser, and much more likely event, it would still be a good thing. There is altogether too much military adventuring these days. The reason that governments are able to get away with it is that the fighting and dying is all done by the country's professional forces. Under my system, it would be conscripts nearing the end of their training who would be sent, and if more were needed, then reservists from previous groups would be pulled from their lives and sent.
It would be much harder to get a nation's voters to accept sending people off to kill and die if they might be the voter's own kids, or might even be the voters themselves. That is also why it is necessary that the system be universal. I wonder if George W Bush would have been as keen to invade Iraq for no reason if either of his own twin daughters were likely to be sent off to fight.
Citizens, however, would be willing to support realistic and understandable military intervention. After 911, the citizens of the US were clamouring for action in Afghanistan, and likely would have done so even if citizen soldiers were put in peril. Canada, too, sent troops into that conflict and it was widely supported by the citizenry. It seemed important, and worth doing.
In the case of a military intervention overseas, it wouldn't be more people dying, just different ones. Far less regular soldiers would be put in peril. In their place, a random cross section of the nation would be doing a fair share of the suffering. As this would discourage that type of activity, it would mean less death overall.
So I say, draft them all, and put them to work. If they are not right for the army, put them into alternative service. Give them an adventure away from home. Then, if needed, they would serve in time of war.
They would not only be there to serve their country militarily, but to discourage their country's use of force.
Saturday, 1 October 2016
Political Teams
There is a term used
for serious devotees; they are called fans.
I would say that the
American people are the biggest fans on earth.
They have their
chosen teams; often having favourites in each of many popular team
sports. The root of the word fan, is the more intense word, fanatic.
American sport fandom truly approaches the fanatical. Any loss can be
a cause of rage, and an important loss is a time for tears. They
scream at television screens across the nation on every game day.
They love their
teams with an incredible level of commitment. Often, they will follow
their team from cradle to the grave, longer than they are with any
spouse, parent, or child. It takes a lot for a team to break this
tie. Wins certainly don't do it, nor do losses. Criminal behaviour by
players is overlooked, as are cash grabs by management. About the
only thing that can end the affair is if a team leaves its home base
and relocates somewhere else far away.
I don't understand
or feel this kind of commitment to any sort of sports team, but I can
certainly see that it is a very real thing. One would have be blind
not to.
Even stranger to me,
is that Americans treat political figures and parties with the same
kind of fanaticism. They do it with the as much commitment and
intensity as they do their sports loyalty. This would be fine, except
that politics is a much more important endeavour.
Their 2016 election
is plagued by exactly this type of team loyalty.
The two sides are
called Republicans and Democrats. It is this way in every election,
and the outcome is largely decided by a very small category of voters
known as the undecided. This year it is quite different.
A while back, the
two teams picked their candidates, and they were Trump and Clinton.
The loyalty damage
hit right away. A lot of younger Democrat supporters had wanted
Bernie Sanders to be their party's representative, and in a huff
decided to vote for a third-party candidate. This would make some
sort of sense if the third-party choices were not
anti-everything-that-the-young-Democrats-liked-in-Sanders. Sanders
himself seems unable to convince them of this, although over time the
third-party candidates have been doing a pretty good job doing so all
on their own.
On the other side,
an even bigger split has been occurring. Typical Republican Party and
voter behaviour is to support their boy with pit bull-like intensity.
However, the candidate himself seems to be unlike any before. As the
months have gone by, a great many extremely stalwart Republicans have
felt themselves unable to support Trump. For example, there are two
living Republican former presidents. Neither publicly supports Trump,
which is unheard of.
Many other prominent
Republicans have also come out as not supporting Trump. Doing this
means that they are actually saying they want Clinton to win, which
is also unheard of. The list is growing constantly, and includes a
great many Congressmen, Senators, former presidential candidates,
Governors, party members, and other notables. There are likely more
than are known about, but who are doing so privately.
At the recent
debate, Trump did very poorly, and has since been acting very
unstable. He has been lashing out at irrelevant adversaries, and in
ways that weakens his own appeal.
It is becoming
harder and harder for Republican supporters, and even for Trump
fanatics to stick to the plan. Do you follow the official Republican
line that Trump is the one, or do you follow the significant part of
the party that says he isn't? Can you stick to Trump regardless, and
really think that you will be voting for an acceptable candidate?
It is like making
the decision to stop supporting a beloved football, baseball, or
basketball team, but also quite different. There can be something
noble about sticking with a team, and not abandoning them just
because they have been having major troubles, and have no chance of
winning. There is nothing noble about sticking with a candidate who
is having major troubles, wither they have a chance of winning or
not.
If the candidate is
turning out to be a horrid choice, sticking with them is exactly the
wrong thing to do. Doing so is even a worse decision if they actually
have a possibility of winning.
I think a great many
Trump supporters find themselves in just such a situation. I suspect
there is a great deal of soul searching going on right now, or at
least I hope there is.
There will always be
hard-core Trump fans who will vote for him on November 8th
regardless. They will do so even if it turns out he attends
Satanic religious services, gets arrested for rape, admits to incest,
is found to be on Russia's payroll, and is a drug addict, and
switches back to pro-choice, and to pro-gun-control, and admits he
actually isn't rich at all. “Trump all the way!”
It is the other
Trump supporters who are suffering right now. It is the ones who have
it in their DNA to stick with their candidate, but who are seeing too
many flaws in his behaviour and character. When do they pull the
plug? It certainly doesn't look like he's going to start looking
better between now and election day. When will enough be enough? What
if he is clearly the wrong man, they vote for him, and somehow he
manages to win? That would be the exact the opposite of an optimal
outcome.
I feel real empathy
for these people, and hope that they can reconcile everything in a
way that works for them, and for their country.
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