Easy Way to Stop It

Let us say we want to stop the sale of a foreign made product in the United States. Historically we would do what we could do to stop people from buying the product. We would talk about the terrible conditions and the abuse of the workers making the product. If that didn’t work then we would pass laws to prevent the product from being bought and used. This has always worked with one exception — “illegal” drugs.

For years we have been doing a half-way effort to stop the drug use in our country. As I watch Clear and Present Danger, which was based on Tom Clancy’s book, it shows we have been fighting this war the wrong way. We have spent billions and billions in the Latin Countries fighting the growers, processors, transporters, importers, wholesalers and the retailers. We have killed and locked up tens of thousands here and abroad and yet each year more drugs enter our country.

Long ago we arrested the drug users but that became politically unfeasible when the “good” people started using heroin. It became fashionable when the drug of choice was cocaine and used by the rich and influential, thus penalizing the users was out.

If you want to stop the use of illegal drugs, quit going after the replaceable people involved in the drug trade and stop the use. Arrest the hard users and the recreational users. Put them to work cleaning toilets in bad weather, picking up trash along highways and rivers, etc. for an increasing amount of time each time they are caught. If that doesn’t work, lock them up in a special jail or camp.

If Trump wants to get serious then he must give the local and state governments directions to arrest the poor, middle class, rich, his political base and even his friends. That’s the only way to end the problem.

Sanctions against Russia

Many people are being duped by the administration and the subversive social media sites into believing Trump is tough on Russia. The real facts are very different.

The sanctions Trump has supposedly placed on Russia are those Congress mandated last year after Russian interference in the election. In fact he has only imposed some of those sanctions and those that have been announced have not yet been enforced.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is under the Secretary of the Treasury. As such, it is run by Trump appointees and as of October 1, has only imposed one fine since Trump took office. It was for Erickson’s deal with Sudan and it was self reported. Their fine was for $140,000. For all of his rhetoric, Trump’s enforcement arm has done nothing. The evidence of sanctions violating with Russia is public record, yet OFAC has done nothing. In past administrations the OFAC people who fined hundreds of violators for billions are quitting or transferring to departments that enforce laws and not overlook violations.

President Teddy Roosevelt said, “Talk softly and carry a big stick.” Trump yells at the top of his voice and carries a twig. No wonder more and more leaders and companies are starting to do what they want.

Suspicious Character Checks

I pride myself on trying to learn as much as I can about everything and how history repeats over and over. Some things are obvious on the surface but a little digging shows something else.

When I hear what an FBI check on a person looking at being appointed to a federal job is actually, I was astonished. It seems to me to be no more than a job application many of us may have done before. They do a simple criminal check. Not all states participate in the national register. To see if the person has committed a crime, who do they contact for background and character? They talk with the people the person uses as references. If the FBI is only able to talk with the people given to the FBI, then every report is suspect. Yes, they do thousands of these every year. But why do the checks if they are half-assed?

Judge Kavanaugh went through six of these checks. If they are of this caliber then a seventh was warranted. However, when the President limited the research in scope and time, the report was worthless. No wonder so many of Trump’s people are gone and many arrested. Does the CIA, FBI, etc. do such a rudimentary investigation on their people?

When I was in college a friend asked if he could use me as a reference. I said yes and lived in fear of an FBI agent knocking on the door–they never did.

I now feel no better about Kavanaugh than I did before and am concerned about the checks on Trump’s advisors, cabinet, and other appointees. Being a news junkie can keep a person awake at night. There’s too much ignorance, stupidity, and greed at all costs running local, state, and federal governments. I wonder if someone who is elected gets any more than an FBI cursory check. Did the President? More sleepless nights….

World Order Damaged

Richard Nixon split the U.S.S.R./China Pact and every President since has kept them apart until now. Trump has actually gotten them to overcome their distrust for each other.

Over 3,000 Chinese soldiers went on joint military training maneuvers with Russian troops. Russia is selling them the SU-35, their highest tech fighter plane, and the S-400 system, their best anti-aircraft missiles. Neither of these has ever been sold to outsiders with their full capacities.

For more than four decades we managed to keep hundreds of Russian and Chinese missiles aimed at each other. Thanks to President Donald Trump’s driving them into each other’s arms, his splitting with NATO, and creating tensions within the United Nations, we no longer lead the free world. Instead of leading we will probably stand alone in any conflict. No one wants to follow someone who isn’t trustworthy, abrogates treaties on a whim, and constantly criticizes the leaders and their countries. It will take another President and years of diplomacy to hopefully repair the damage. I hope the world order can be restored.

He was laughed at and not with by the entire United Nations. He accused China of interfering with our upcoming elections because of some ads they have taken out in the legitimate press. He said nothing about the ongoing Russian involvement in continuing to support Trump and his party.

Now I and others have to wonder what Putin has on him. All the sanctions on Russia were mandated by Congress and President Trump has yet to impose all of them. Trump talks tough about Russia, says Putin is a good guy, and doesn’t criticize his invasions of the Ukraine. Is Putin blackmailing Trump into splitting NATO? I really wonder.

Humanity’s Real Future?

Many of you will stop reading this in a few moments because it is too depressing. I have been concerned about the future of the human race since I was in college. I studied population demographics and growth, climatic change, agriculture, and several similarly diverse subjects in getting my masters in geography. If this sound contemporary, you are wrong. I graduated in 1971. That was 4 years ago and ever since, I have been gathering more knowledge about the future and positing a theory. It isn’t good for humanity.

Our planet’s resources are finite. We have gone through the high quality minerals and are now using lower quality that are more expensive to mine and thus more destructive to the environment. Examples are Minnesota’s iron ore is a third of the percentage of the iron being mined in the 1940s and gold miners are happy with grams per ton instead of ounces. Petroleum reserves peaked in March 2003 because we are using it faster than technology is finding new fields or increasing recovery methods in old fields.

Other examples are seafood. I remember one text stating the sea could supply enough food for the world indefinitely. Now we are down to eating the baitfish that was used to catch higher quality fish. Commercial fishing is totally banned in some areas, and fishing for some species is limited to hours. Forests, a natural carbon sink, are being cut down for immediate profit and farming. Four acres was lost in the time you read this sentence.

Perhaps the most important loss is fresh water. Less than 3% of all water, liquid and solid, is fresh. About 3/4% is surface (rivers and lakes), about 1%, and quickly being depleted, is underground. The remaining is in rapidly melting glaciers and icebergs. Less rainwater is staying on the surface because it is coming in heavier rainfalls causing floods which run off rather than soak in. Drought, deforestation, and development cause much flooding around the world. Former potable water is again being treated as a waste dump which negates it’s usage for drinking, ecosystems, and irrigation. Water rights are being treated as long term investments.

A less immediate but terminal danger is the decreasing level of oxygen. Oxygen levels are around 24-25% when our species started and now it is about 20%. We have known for a century that our current supply is produced by the remaining trees on land and decreasing protozoa in the oceans acting as carbon sinks. We owe our existence to the microscopic organism that filled the primordial oceans, pulling the carbon out of the air (bringing oxygen levels to 30% or more), dying and falling into the bottom to make oil. We are destroying the forests and jungles and recently scientists have found those little ocean creatures are rapidly decreasing in numbers. One estimate is oxygen levels could get to the fatal levels for many people (same as at the 15,000 foot altitude) in 200 years. 25,000 feet in 300 years, and 400 years would even kill off the rest of the mammalian life that had not adapted to the lower oxygen levels.

The last and most critical is population. When I was in college the world’s population was 3 billion. Now it’s over 7 billion and somewhere around 2043 it will be 9 billion barring mass starvation, lack of drinking water or war. Nuclear or biological war would be necessary since conventional with 1-2 million deaths wouldn’t make a dent in the curve. Projections on how to feed the growing population always seems to rely on some great leap which only accelerates the population growth problem. Incidentally the United States may be over 420 million by 2043 with 82 million over 65.

These are only a few of the problems that the human race faces in its future. Steven Hawking projected we could be facing extinction in 200 years. He gives climate change (read between lines above) as the major cause of our demise. I won’t argue with the world’s greatest mind, especially if he agrees with me.

The 140 million Chinese have already started to provide for feeding their future people. They have been buying up land around the world. Here they have bought up businesses which produce food. A recent purchase was Smithfield which is a huge meat processor. They see what’s coming, we don’t!

This planet will exist until the sun goes nova and destroys it in a few billion years. We will have long passed from the scene. Frankly, I think Steve Hawking is being optimistic. I think our way of life will be greatly depreciated by 2100 and the probability of a population crash to less than a billion is highly probable.

Finally a Smart Tax

I have never heard the Democratic nominee for Governor J. B. Pritzker say he wants to tax us a penny and a half a mile every Illinois car drives in Illinois. Oregon has been doing it for many years. I think they are rebated for the tax at the pump I pay when I visit their beautiful state.

Why the mileage tax and not the pump price? I think the last time our gasoline tax was raised I had a Ford van that got 14 mpg. Now I have a Cherokee that has gotten 33 mph on a trip from Southern Illinois. I drove on the road just as far but paid less than half the tax. (Gasoline tax is per gallon and not a percentage of the price.) Hybrids might use a gas like propane, hydrogen, or battery power as well as gasoline. They will wear down the roads just as much as my old van and pay little or nothing. Electrics will pay nothing.

I like to make trips to other parts of our diverse country so the GPS device would keep me from having to pay for the miles outside of Illinois. It would be a lot more honest than me trying to keep records. Most people might not be as honest. One of my friends drives to Michigan most weekends and takes longer trips a couple times each year. Without the device it would seem odd most of his mileage was out-of-state. In an average year, I may have about half of my miles out of state.

If we want good roads we must pay for them somehow and a gasoline and mileage tax is the only fair way to do it. It isn’t fair for non-drivers to pay for my good roads. I have wondered for years when all states would smarten up and do this. I admire this forward thinking idea for Illinois.

Ethics and Patriotism First

The Chicago Tribune asked its readers what the next governor will need to do. The journalist picked out a few representative ones which have previously been cited in this letters section. They are as follows: Do what is best for all, compromise, talk with-not at-people, invest in all of Illinois, cut redundant government bodies, fix pension mess, freeze property taxes, take care of the less-fortunate, term limits, and, of course, income taxes.

Suggested fixes have been proposed here for many months and years, but those people we elect don’t implement them. Why do we keep re-electing them if they don’t solve, but increase our problems.

The state finances are a mess and I have proposed how to fix them within ten years. All the problems can be solved if the people we elect have the guts to fix them even if they might not be in office after the next election. Doing what is right can be called “term limits” and not going what is right is called “staying in office.” Doing what is right doesn’t get them re-elected.

I bet enough of the voters will keep those who blame the other party or governor for letting the state’s mess continue. Senator John McCain is dead and buried. Wouldn’t it be nice if his aisle crossing, ethics, and putting his country (not his voters) first be our main reason to elect a person?

Quit Protesting and Do Something

I watched on WGN Channel 9 the protesters trying to close down an I-294 Ramp. One was shouting “Instead of arresting us, arrest the gangs.” The police get smeared by the people they are trying to protect when they arrest a shooter. People say he’s a good guy even if his tattoos say otherwise. People know who the gang members are, who did what, and where the guns are hidden. People know the location of the drug sales, where it’s kept, and who is involved.

If people told the police all the above, these are some of the likely outcomes: The police arrest the people and clog up the Cook County jail with hundreds if not thousands more. The police arrest the leaders only leaving battles for leadership and more violence. We might see retaliation by the gangs of the witnesses. Another possibility is the police won’t do much at any one time to avoid a public backlash. And then, of course, what happens when they get bail or parole and return to the neighborhoods.

Protest marches are good for the leader’s egos and reputation and for the church’s congregation. What needs to be done can and should be done in their homes, apartment buildings and neighborhoods: Quit protesting and do the work. Quit blaming others. Quit hoping others are going to fix the situation and peace on the street will happen. People and businesses don’t invest in crime-ridden neighbors unless they are willing to take the risk and charge sky high prices to make it worthwhile.

It is up to the people in those areas to solve their own problems!

Seek Answers Before November

The average worker has had an 11% raise over inflation since 1977. The average CEO had that much last year alone. The average professional baseball, basketball, football, and hockey player got much more with the stars getting outrageous increases. Many CEOs make over a thousand times more than the median worker. Why aren’t the workers of America rightly upset?

The massive corporate tax cut that was to wend its way down to those median workers who desperately need sizeable raises didn’t make it. Less than ten percent have used the money to help their workers. Most directly or indirectly raised their salaries, increased their stock price using stock buy-backs, or purchased another company. Since almost 90% of our country’s wealth is owned by less than 1% of us, the massive tax cut did nothing for 99% of us.

The trickle down economic philosophy means the fire hydrant water floods into the fire hose but a trickle comes out the nozzle. If that happened at a fire people would demand answers. Why not now? If the economy is doing so well why are millions of workers getting little or no pay increases? Why are the workers on bicycles when the upper managers are in Ferraris? Newspapers, magazines, and TV have shown only a small interest in the situation. The administration and the Republican congress said their tax cut would help low and middle class Americans more than the rich before the cut and while campaigning. Why aren’t they asked why you aren’t being given raises like the upper managers and CEOs? Also ask who is going to pay for the massive debt and deficit of over 1.5 trillion this year. Those are good questions to ask. Let’s see if we get truthful answers.

Buy Now And Save

Why will your next vehicle cost more? The new trade agreement with Mexico may add a few thousand more to your cost. Every Mexican working on the parts or final assembly will have their pay at least doubled to $16.00. Many make less than $8.00 per hour now. Imagine a Mexican worker getting more than $30,000 each year. They will live like drug lords at the American consumer’s expense.

The agreement may cut back on the number of parts from other countries like Japan, Guam (American possession), China, and Eastern Europeans like Poland. If the parts were currently made cheaper elsewhere they will be moved to Mexico raising the vehicle prices more.

As of Thursday, August 29, the Canadians have our negotiators over a barrel since the negotiating power expires tomorrow night. The Mexican agreement goes away tomorrow night. Congress requires all three to agree. It is all three or nothing and the Canadians know it. Let’s see how far they can push their Canada first policy. Even Republicans in Congress are beginning to rebel against his tariffs.

If I was going to buy another vehicle, I would buy one setting on the car lot now to save the increase caused by the great new trade agreement.