Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Restoring Honor to the Office of Commander In Chief

The American Military today is a solidly built ship with a good crew. Unfortunately, the captain is morally bankrupt. Without leadership that the crew can count on, all hope for the crew is lost.

Most people are familiar with the story of ancient Sparta, not least of all through the popular movie "300" which dramatizes the story of the 300 Spartans who held off Xerxes' Persian army against overwhelming odds.

Sparta has throughout history been synonymous with military fidelity. Every Spartan soldier and officer knew without the slightest doubt that every other Spartan soldier and officer - from the least to the greatest - would accept the responsibility of fidelity without hesitation, without a moment's consideration to the consequences to themselves.

This level of fidelity is what is necessary to command people in battle. The soldier who goes into harm's way knows little else than that he or she is not aware of the greater complexities of the situation and must carry the complete faith that those responsible for him or her are simultaneously responsible to him or her.

At least this is what the Spartans believed. This is what great military historians and strategists believe. This is what Colonel Charles F. Kriete (Ret'd), Distinguished Fellow, US Army War College believes.

Colonel Kriete and I have been discussing this for some time. We agree that the current administration has failed to provide that fidelity. We agree that Senator McCain's adherence to the philosophy of Total War - the philosophy that the current administration has followed and which has lead to both the macro failures of Iraq and Afghanistan and specific failures such as Abhu Graib - indicates that he will also be unable to restore that lost fidelity.

We also agree that Senator Barack Obama is the only person available who can restore that fidelity to the office of Commander In Chief.

The conversation started with a piece the Colonel had written on the necessity of miltary fidelity.

When civilians hear the word "commander" they mostly think of someone giving an order to subordiates. And, of course, commanders do give orders. But "command" as a concept has far greater meanings and implications than ordering folks around. It is in fact the basis of the claim that military service is a profession. The military's real purpose is "to control the violence of war in a way that permits the outcome to be some useful social outcome" (Morris Janowitz).

The key sentence in the army regulation which defines command says: "The commander is responsible for everything his unit does or fails to do". This statement forms the basis not only for the operation of units, both in combat and peacetime, but also the ways those units are organized, and how they relate to one another and the enemy. It is that legal structure which creates a purposeful organization out of an uncontrollable, destructive mob.

When the trial of one of the offenders began, a subpoena was issued to Maj Gen Geoffrey Miller (who was in charge of the interrogation of the prisoners) by the legal counsel of one of the Warrant Officers conducting the investigations who was the defendant at the trial. This General Officer took the Fifth Amendment (against self-incrimination) rather than testify, on the grounds that if he told the truth in his testimony he would be incriminating himself. There is no record that he ever did or said anything to acknowledge any of his responsibility for their behavior. This Major General had also supervised the interrogation of inmates at our prison in Guantanamo.

Maj Gen Miller's refusal to take any responsibility for the outcome of his instructions he may have given at Abhu Graib is just one of the instances in which the army doctrine of command responsibility has been flouted in our invasion of Iraq. What is at stake here is not the relatively trivial problem of actions which violate both the letter and the spirit of the Army Regulation governing the performance of the command function. Not one senior officer connected with our invasion has stood up to take responsibility for any of the reprehensible activities so far disclosed. And those who planned and executed that invasion, failing to anticipate what chaos would develop there after the Iraqi army was disbanded, have been completely silent. None has stood up to take responsibility for the plans they prepared and the orders given to execute their provisions.

They have been completely silent.

This is about as egregious a breach of honor as one could find. Loyalty up starts with loyalty down, and if that is not the case, the army is falling apart at its seams.

I have many concerns about the lack of integrity (honor, honesty, forthrightness, saying what you really think instead of pleasing the Sec Def) at the three and four star level of the army. Gen Shinseki (Army Chief of Staff when Rumsfeld took office) said publicly when asked about Iraq that it would take over 400,000 troops for the invasion. Rumsfeld thereafter neatly bypassed him by naming his successor. This was about a year before his term was up, and all the brown-noser Generals now had to please the named successor, who had the power to move them around to more and less influential positions, which he did. The 400,000 figure was not accidental - the size of the army in total at that time was, if memory serves well, 467,000. He was actually telling Rumsfeld that the invasion was folly, but politely.

Those of us who love the army, and respect the command structure, and who have given it our best efforts in Vietnam and elsewhere, are ashamed at what its commanders have now done and refuse to take responsibility for, in and after our invasion of Iraq. That invasion, condemned by Pope John Paul II in an encyclical issued before that invasion took place, was based on lies and false intelligence. "We, the People", now need to hold them accountable for their lack of honor.

Extremely well said, Colonel.

It has been my fortune to provide leadership in business and other efforts in my life, and while not always the common practice, I believe that the most ethical and effective manner to perform the tasks associated is very similar to what you describe and what I understand of the military leadership methodology.

In Plato's Republic, Socrates has a debate with Thrasymachus about the focus of the art of leadership. He makes several examples, as follows:

o When a sculptor is performing the art of sculpting stone - not when he is concerned with making a profit, or advancing his career, but when he is purely and truly focusing on his art - the concerns that he deals with are what is best for the stone, not what is best for himself.

o When a doctor is performing the art of medicine - again, not concerning administrative, monetary or professional issues, but purely performing his art - what he must concern himself is what is good for the body of his patient. Any other thoughts or interests he may have fall clearly outside of the art of medicine.

o When a leader is performing the art of leadership, then, what is the focus of his art? It is clearly not in any fashion what is good for himself. Rather, it is entirely and without restriction what is good for those he is leading.

I have found in business and other efforts that this is not only philosophically correct, but functionally as well. Not only is it incorrect for a leader to allow themselves to make decisions that serve themselves and which are not purely in the best interest of those they bear responsibility for, it in fact leads to less positive outcomes by the measure of the purpose of the group (economic success, typically, in a business environment) than if he or she makes every effort to put out of mind any concern for personal interests and focus instead on what will serve the best interests of those under his or her care.

This plays out in many ways and often leads to an effective leader intentionally making choices and taking actions which seem counter-intuitive to those who take a more self-oriented view. Quite often this approach leads to greater success for the person in the leadership role, as well. When it does not, it quite often leaves that person in a better position to be successful in future efforts, so in fact the true measure of the success of this approach is in the longer term than the more self-oriented approach. In that timeframe it is quite likely that the overall effective success is greater than the more transient goal of seeking personal success in the short term.

One of the things that a Socratic leader may well find necessary is to specifically and intentionally "take a bullet" so that those he is responsible for do not. This may well be a fatal bullet. In the military sense, this obviously has greater personal implications than in realms of lesser physical risk, but in every case the team being led is more likely to go on to success with this example of fidelity even if the leader in question is not there to personally experience it.

In the less dramatic realm of business and politics, it is much simpler (and, in my opinion, less frequently seen) than the military realm. A business leader who chooses to take the fatal bullet for his/her team, knowing that this is the most likely means given the choices at hand for the team to go on to success, achieves the goal set out much more effectively than the leader who betrays one of those he carries responsibility for to save his own position.

The Abhu Graib situation was overwhelmingly such a situation. Immediately upon learning of it, I called into a talk radio show and stated that case. This was such an egregious failure of military command that there was no doubt in my mind that the responsiblity had to be personally borne by the top of that structure - Donald Rumsfeld - and moreover George Bush.

To be clear, while my own view of the Iraq war was and is complex, I was not one of those at the time who was completely and in all manners "opposed" to the conflict nor to Donald Rumfeld's leadership (which is not the same as being in "favor" of it, either, but I leave that to a separate dissertation). Despite the myriad complications and failures of the conflict - including the premise and execution of the entire thing - I had felt that Mr. Rumsfeld's apparently laudable work ethic and support for and defense of the troops showed him to be an ethical leader.

When it became apparent that not only would Mr. Rumsfled not choose to take the bullet that was his responsibility - but that he and every other person in the chain of command capable of doing so would step out of the way to allow it to pass to the least able to defend themselves - all respect I felt for the man vanished and has never returned.

This is not an act from which a leader can recover, it is a final and perpetual damnation of their fitness to lead. An honest and outspoken admission of this failure at a much later date would be perhaps enough to feel human compassion for a person who sees their own humiliation in hindsight, but there is no gaining back of the respect required of the role.
Yours is a very insightful essay on leadership - it also matchs neatly with mine. The military is in some ways unique because of its comprehensively corporate nature, and in one other way also. I worked in industry as an organization develpment manager. My experience there was that in industry there is very little corporate ethos. It is every man for himself. Loyalty to the organization is much talked of, but there is little incentive to practice it.

Our culture generally supports that ethos. We tend to believe that each individual is responsible for his own success, and we glorify those who make lots of money. We do not ever, or hardly ever, villify those who take advantage of persons who are less capable than they, mentally or emotionally.

In this respect, the military is different, and we need to recognize that. It is a corporate culture from the first day you enlist to the last. You spend lots of time waiting in line, waiting for stuff, waiting for others to get ready, waiting to use the latrine, waiting for orders to move out, etc. You eventually come to think that the individual means nothing at all.

We are definitely in concordance.

My career in information security and life in general has brought me into contact with a large number of military people. There is a need for dealing with these philosophical issues at a very pragmatic level in military life, and the honesty and honorability of the real-world application of these ideals by military people struck me early in adulthood and has never been diminished by futher experiences and contemplation.

In the business world I have long had a "maverick" label that many who believe as you described discount. It is not with personal pride but simply as an experiential proof that I point to the fact that my approach has led to more sales of security products than any other individual in the industry. Most of the actual credit for the actual work goes to those who I have worked with who have done the real building and the real selling, but significantly the small input of philosophy I have been able to add to change the manner with which it has been handled has apparently been a core reason for the measure of success as a differential from all others in the field.

This allows me to - and moreover obligates me to - make this point publicly. Personally I am often discomfited by how I say these things since they can easily be taken as self-aggrandizement, but this is a risk I have to take because when I manage to get the point across I believe it can positively influence the manner with which others approach similar situations This is, I believe, a critical value that I can offer to my industry, business at large and ultimately to society in general.

The approach of the current administration to owning the responsibility to our military not only fails to meet the standards I set for myself but actively negates the very fundamentals of American culture. "Truth" is not "just a word", it is an actionable value that is more effective at achieving the evolution of the human condition. The intrinsic intelligence, fairness, honesty and capacity of every individual is not simply a Grand Idea set down by some dead white men to form a More Perfect Control Structure, it is the most foundational aspect of the liberation of our species from our animal roots that allows us to achieve the potential that is laid out in our most optimistic philosophies and religions.

I see in Senator Obama a belief in these same values, and I see in him the same struggle to embody them that I feel in myself. This is not simply a matter of electing a party member to a given office, it is a notably significant part of our effort to evolve as a species.
Thanks for the great post - I think I understand what you are about. I get the feeling listening to Obama that he does understand himself better than Senator McCain. McCain is a hopeless egoist - he is a typical fighter pilot. I have much experience with pilots - earned a German glider pilot license on my first tour, soloed down in the Alps at Unterweosen, where my instructor, a german fighter pilot, had 1,014 hours in FW 190's, shot down four times and survived. He was a great instructor because he knew I couldn't get the glider into any situation he couldn't correct, so there was never any back pressure on the pedals or stick. But he was, personally, a wild man, drinking and carousing every nite, not good company for a clergyman.

The lead story in yesterday's NYT was based on McCain's National War College thesis, and it basically defends the "total war" concept. This theory of war has been thoroughly discredited in a book called "The American Way of War".

The basic point of the book is that "total war" always, no matter what the political implications, defines victory as the destruction of the enemy's will to resist. This concept is not only foreign to the classical concept of war, developed by a German general officer at the Kriegsakadamie after the Napoleonic wars (he commanded a Russian Division in the siege of Moscow, which was the beginning of the end of Napoleon) - it is also counterproductive in the nuclear age. Worse, it is the dogma that the generals chosen by Rumsfeld to lead the military hold. Apparently, General Shinseki did not share that view.

It was during my tenure on the Army War College faculty that we (about four of us faculty, including Dr. Hal Deutsch, now deceased, an internationally known strategic scholar and an authority on the plot against Hitler - we were close friends) insisted on the study of Clausewitz. We prevailed, and fifteen years after I retired, was elected to the War College Hall of Fame for my part in establlishing the study of "On War" (Clausewitz's major work) as a major part of the Army War College curriculum.


It is too bad that President Bush has not read Clausewitz, or Kriete, or Weigley or Plato. It is unfortunate that John McCain agrees with President Bush and the honor-destroying philosophy of Total War.

But it is fortunate that we have the chance to restore the honor to the office of Commander In Chief that has been lacking for so long.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

New "Yes We Can" Song

Hi folks!

This is a really rockin' song I just found today.



Enjoy!

-chris

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Obama Endorsed by Former Clinton Labor Sec. Robert Reich

Robert Reich, a former labor secretary during President Bill Clinton's administration, endorsed Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on Friday.

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Friday, April 18, 2008

The R Word

The word "racist" has been used a lot of late.

I would just like to say a few words about that - and other - nouns.

In German there is no word for "Heroin Addict" - the best it can be translated is "Heroin Seeky".

I like this way of looking at people. Someone is not an Object/Noun ("Addict", "Racist", ...), they are a Person with an Adjective modifying them ("tending to seek a drug", "having a behavior").

The whole disturbing trend of using the "r-word" is not much better than the other-consonant-word. When you do that you objectify the person - you turn them into a noun that identifies them as something other than a person.

I remember a good Canadian friend telling me, when I was in my 20s and had just moved down to South Carolina from Toronto, that she was a "bigot bigot" (iow - "intolerant of intolerants"). I had a desire to agree with her - so I did, out loud - but I was beginning to learn that the "bigots" that I had expected to meet in SC were usually people who I got to know and like before I discovered their "bigotry". Even then I was having a hard time reconciling my view of these nouns called "bigots" and the people I was getting to know and appreciate in their complexities.

Words matter.

"person" is the noun. Other words describing a person need to be adjectives. People can often choose to change their adjectives.

-chris

Rev. Karl Lutze, Martin Luther King, Bobby Kennedy and the Legacy we Carry for All of Them

Apil 4, 2008

Hi folks,

My Step Father is here today, he was in Selma and much more before that. Rev. Karl Lutze began his civil rights work in 1945, organized many of the voter registration efforts in the south and did so many more things I can't list them. He still does.

Karl still lives across the street from Valpraiso University, still writes, still speaks and is still a part of all that legacy. It's always strange for me, because he is just Karl - the wonderful man who makes my mom and my children happy. But when we talk about all of this it is hard to imagine and hard to forget that he has bridged the gap between where we were and where we are.

When Karl Lutze arrived in Oklahoma in 1945, he stepped into another world. A newly ordained clergyman born in Wisconsin, he was a young white man assigned to minister among Muskogee’s African American community. He soon found that in the South, crosses were as likely to be burned as revered. His recollections of postwar Oklahoma provide a compelling testament to the era’s racial conflict and some steps taken toward its resolution.

Awakening to Equality offers a unique perspective on an often-violent era that witnessed the gradual dismantling of segregation. Serving congregations in Muskogee and Tulsa, Lutze encountered a cross section of both communities—from the white and black power brokers to the most disempowered black and biracial families—and a stratified society buttressed by intimidation, cross burnings, and bombs. His activism in the Urban League and other local civil rights organizations gave him firsthand experience with forces moving toward change, as well as with the more entrenched forces resisting it.

Blending personal anecdotes and recollections of key players in this unfolding drama, Lutze puts a human face on historical and journalistic accounts of social change during the crucial early years of the civil rights movement. He takes readers back to small-town and urban Oklahoma in a time when African Americans were beginning to challenge segregation in Muskogee’s public transportation and a handful of liberal whites were trying to move their communities toward desegregation. Throughout this rich memoir, we meet actual people creating a future—one that involved the very redefinition of America.

More than a view of an earnest young clergyman trying to grow beyond the racial and social limitations of the church of his day, Awakening to Equality also depicts the struggles of Lutze’s own denomination to overcome its earlier accommodation of racism. Lutze’s success in his ministries made his achievements a model for mission work among African Americans and led to his appointment in 1959 first as field secretary and then shortly thereafter as executive director of the Lutheran Human Relations Association, a pioneering civil rights organization. Simultaneously, he taught classes as Associate Professor of Theology at Valparaiso University.

Lutze not only witnessed important events but also participated in them and found that his entire career was shaped by the experience. Awakening to Equality is a moving story that captures the real-life education of a prominent clergyman during a critical period in American life.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCg05pTYt0A Bobby Kennedy, April 4, 1968

Seeing that video sitting here in Key West, Karl sleeping upstairs, all the current foolishness being said in today's media, the amazing speech Senator Obama gave that I watched again with my brother last night... It's hard to comprehend the magnitude of where we have come from, hard sometimes to reconcile where we are, and impossible to allow us to not go to where this all leads.

Recently I do and say a lot of things because I want us to get there, and part of it is helping Barack Obama become president. Not because I care that he's black but because I don't care and I'd rather no-one else would, either. I don't want my children to even think about such things. He's an immensely qualified man and the fact that it is even mentioned shows that the ice hasn't melted entirely. Not just yet.

So if the price we pay today is a scrimish of words to chuff the last of the ice off the windshield it's so very worth it, and it's nothing at all to do.

It's nothing compared to the price Bobby paid, or his brother. Nothing compared to what Dr. King paid.

Sleep well, Karl. I've got the torch.

-chris

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/4/4/14316/24086/227/489961

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Priest Takes on Fox News

I love this priest!

Some FOX News pundit wants to make this Catholic Priest use the Media words of "hate" and "racisist" and the Father lets me have it at length.

Great Stuff!

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Clinton's Pastor Backs Reverend Wright

While Mrs. Clinton says she would have quit Senator Obama's church, her own pastor expresses support for Rev. Wright. Rev. Matthews said that "Rev. Wright's sermon was "a totally different animal when you look at its full context," rather than the minute-long clips widely circulated on the Internet and played nearly on a loop on cable news."

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Obama Wins Backing of 9/11 Commission Chairman Lee Hamilton

Considered his party's top foreign policy figure, Hamilton said he was impressed by Obama's approach to national security and foreign policy. "I read his national security and foreign policy speeches, and he comes across to me as pragmatic, visionary and tough." He also sided with Obama's foreign policy stances that have been criticized by rivals.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Bosnian Vet Accuses Hillary of Valor Theft

A veteran of Bosnia who was at the event in Tuzla where Hillary Clinton falsely claimed to have landed under sniper fire is accusing the Senator of theft of valor. I would like to see Sen. Clinton stand up and explain herself to Tammi, her comrades and the Bosnian people. To build yourself up - smugly smiling with an air of cavalier bravery - on the backs of people who risked their actual lives to help those who suffered horrible loss...Frankly, it staggers me to find words for how low an act of self-serving disrespect this is.This is a moving story. Read it and consider whether you want the Senator from New York to lead your children.-chris

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2GETHER by DANIEL for Obama

This is a beautiful song, written, produced, arranged, performed and video edited by the artist DANIEL. What a song and what a message! It's the perfect song for the millions of American's who support Barack Obama's campaign and believe in the spirit of togetherness.I remember one of my college English professors saying that the biggest thing the Civil War changed was that before the war the people said "The United States *are*..." and after the war we now say "The United States *is*..."Plural became Singular.The United States *is* the home of Unity.-chris blask

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Saturday, March 15, 2008

Chicago Tribune: Obama Addresses Rezko in Uncommon Detail

"The most remarkable facet of Obama's 92-minute discussion was that, at the outset, he pledged to answer every question the three dozen Tribune journalists crammed into the room would put to him. And he did."

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Obama's Remarks: "We are one America!"

"I just want to say to everybody here that as somebody who was born into a diverse family, as somebody who has little pieces of America all in me, I will not allow us to lose this moment. ""Let me just close my initial remarks by talking about bringing this country together. You know, Bobby Kennedy gave one of his most — gave one of his most famous speeches on a dark night in Indianapolis. Right after Dr. King was shot. Some of you remember reading about this speech. Some of you were alive when this speech was given. He stood on top of a car. He was in a crowd mostly of African Americans. And he delivered the news that Dr. King had been shot and killed. And he said, at that moment of anguish, he said, we’ve got a choice. He said, we’ve got a choice in taking the rage and bitterness and disappointment and letting it fester and dividing us further so that we no longer see each other as Americans but we see each other as separate and apart and at odds with each other. Or we can take a different path that says we have different stories, but we have common dreams and common hopes. And we can decide to walk down this road together. And remake America once again. And, you know, I think about those words often, especially in the last several weeks - because this campaign started on the basis that we are one America."

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Media Hold McCain, Obama to Different Standards

The press has devoted significant time to raising questions about Obama’s associations or connections with various public figures, but it is something the press seems far less interested in doing with John McCain.McCain actively solicited John Hagee's support, and did not initially repudiate Hagee's intolerant remarks. On February 29, McCain stated that Hagee "supports what I stand for and believe in." He added that he was "proud" of Hagee's spiritual leadership. Hagge called Catholicism: ‘A Godless theology of hate that no one dared try to stop for a thousand years produced a harvest of hate.’ Hagee stated that Hurricane Katrina was an act of God, punishing New Orleans for "a level of sin that was offensive to God".For tax year 2003, Hagee received almost a million dollars in compensation for his work for GETV that year, which amounted to approximately 16 hours per week. (The GETV Board of Directors, which determines his pay, consisted of John Hagee himself, his wife, his son, and a Cornerstone Church member.)

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Friday, March 14, 2008

Obama Denounces His Pastor’s Statements

The statements played are outliers, taken out of context, and that he is not anti-white. The United Church of Christ, the denomination of the Chicago church, is overwhelmingly white. And Mr. Wright is an equal opportunity critic, often delivering scorching lectures about black society, telling audiences to improve their educations and work ethic.

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Obama wins A+ in Middle Class voting record

The non-partisan DMI evaluates Members of Congress based on how their votes help the US Middle Class. They have issued an A+ grade for Senator Barack Obama's role in helping middle class America.

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Clinton-backer Gov. Rendell: OBAMA WOULD BEAT MCCAIN

Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell, a staunch Clinton supporter, said that he believes Obama would defeat McCain in the general election.

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Clinton Delegate Caucusing for Obama In Seattle

"Sen. Clinton, I can no longer count myself in your ranks. I've decided that, barring some stunning revelation, Barack Obama has earned the Democratic nomination, fair and square. More importantly, I've decided that your campaign's tactics have crossed a line that should never be crossed. I no longer want to be associated with your effort..."

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Geraldine Ferraro on Superdelegates - and the Rush Factor

Hi folks!

I am still trying to decide what Ms. Ferraro is saying about Superdelegates. Let's see what I can make of this, the (paranthetical) comments are mine:

Geraldine Ferraro, in an article in the New York Times on Feb 25, 2008, explained the reason for the superdelegate process that she helped create.

By. Geraldine Ferraro
New York Times, Feb 25, 2008

It gets a little bit long, so let me see if I can parse out the pertinent points:

o Ms. Ferraro: "That decision, (who to nominate in a close race) they say, should rest with the rank-and-file Democrats who went to the polls and voted."

OK, I can follow that. I suppose "they" is me and everyone else who went to the polls and voted. Go on, I'm on the edge of my seat.

o "But the superdelegates were created to lead, not to follow."

....?

Like, "follow the will of the voters?"

o "..the delegate totals from primaries and caucuses do not necessarily reflect the will of (the) rank-and-file"

Er. OK, let me try to get with you here. You are saying that maybe not all Democrat voters would come out to the primaries and caucuses? And *that* would invalidate the vote?

Uh, well, have you seen the percentage of voters who turn out in the past general elections? Does that mean, since the majority of potential voters did not vote in the past general elections, that the will of the "rank-and-file" of the American population was not represented in the general elections? Should we then, um, have a set of Super-Duper-Delegates who can decide whether the "rank and file" of the American public are right or wrong in November?

There has to be more to this, let's see what comes next.

o "More important, "

Oh, good! Glad we're onto the More Important issues than voters repesentation and such!

Sorry, didn't mean to interrupt. I mean, not to say you are volatile and likely to lash out or anything, just didn't mean to ... er... Sorry, go on. please?

o "although many states like New York have closed primaries in which only enrolled Democrats are allowed to vote, in many other states Republicans and independents can make the difference by voting in Democratic primaries or caucuses."

AHA!! You *were* right! That was the *much* more important point!!

What you *mean* to say - correct me if I'm missing something here - but what you *mean* to say - what the "superdelegate system is setup to do "Most important"ly, is to correct for any OUTSIDE INFLUENCES that SUBVERT THE WILL OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY!!!!

I am *so* with you on this one!!

I mean, just imagine if some Evil Outside Influence - say some Extremist Radio Talkshow Host for example (just a strawman you know - just a thought exercise - kinda going out on a Limb, augh [sorry, phlegm]) with a "ditto"ing horde of millions of slavering listeners, some Far Right Fanatic, were to - I dunno how to put this - RUSH into the middle of a highly contested Democratic Primary and try to get his listeners to switch their voter registrations to Democrat and go and actually *vote* for one candidate or the other - *that's* what superdelegates are for!!!

So, if it were to come to a Convention, and it were - like you said - a close thing, and one of the candidates could be shown to have gotten a sudden (let's just pick a number) 100% increase in Republican votes in (say) - Texas, just to pick one out of the air - *right* after this theoretical RUSHing talk-show host urged his listeners to go vote for her (wouldn't want to be sexist - candidates can be women, too) - THAT'S where superdelegates would step in and say: "Hey! That's just not fair play!" and OVERRIDE those votes!

That is *so* *cool*!

You'd want to be really really sure that you weren't jumping the gun, of course. There'd have to be other evidence. Lemme see if I can make up another one. I dunno, let's pick Mississippi just for kicks:

OK, then comes Mississippi, and this same Democratic Candidate, who hadn't been getting many Republican votes prior to Texas and this Evil Radio Show hosts call for Repulicans to Rush out and vote for her, say she suddenly gets - pick a number? - why not 24% of her votes from people willing to call themselves Republican.

NOW you have a case for the superdelegates to step in!

Case Closed!

Strip the candidate of a whole pile of credibility, the Democratic voters didn't make her a close match to the other candidate at all! It was a *subversion* of the will of the rank-and-file of the Democratic party!!

Wow! You did a *great* job setting up that superdelegate system!

Sure, this is just a wild thought exercise. A situation like this wouldn't come up in a million years! It's crazy!

But it sure is good to know that you and the other Democrats put a system in place two decades ago so that if anything so far fetched ever *did* happen, we can count on those superdelegates to make it alright.

Whew!

Thanks for setting that all straight, Ms. Ferraro. You always have such a level-headed way of explaining these complex issues.

Thanks.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-k-wilson/mississippi-limbaugh-ef_b_91112.html

A Letter to Ms. Ferraro on Behalf of My Children

I sent this letter to Ms. Ferraro on March 10.

Dear Ms. Ferraro,

I am personally hurt by your recent words. As a young man I watched your candidacy with youthful hope that I was watching the change from the Old Ways of judging people by their skin, by their gender, by their biology.

Now I am a father of two girls and a boy. Your words make me flinch with the fears and the guilt that I have gotten over as an adult. They make me want to protect my children from the accusations and sick memes that refuse to die off – the sick memes that you just inserted back into the public consciousness on behalf of a politician who cannot seem to do enough to ensure that my children integrate those thoughts, that they too suffer as their parents did.

I want to apologize for my skin. For being male. But I can’t.

You see, my children are “white”, too, whatever that word even means to them. Not much, really, unless you and I make sure that they carry the burden of guilt you wish to gift them.
One of my children is male. He is a boy.

I regret that at twelve he has already picked up some of the guilt that your generation and my generation were so eager to accept, so eager to share. To inflict on one another.

So you see, I cannot apologize for myself because if I did I would have to apologize for my children as well.

And they are still innocent. Do you see?

I do not support your candidate because I disagree with her qualifications to lead my children’s path to adulthood. Not because I want my girls to have a Woman or my boy to have a Man as president – because I want them not to have to think along those lines, but to think about whether the person is good at their job, and I can’t see your candidate being as good at the job as the one I support.

I do not support my candidate because I want my children to grow to adulthood with a leader who matches their skin, nor to see how gracious Daddy is in supporting one whose skin does not match theirs. I want them to not understand that this is even an issue that Mommies and Daddies think about.

And I don’t think about these things, except for the boy inside me that was excited when *you*, Ms. Ferraro, ran for Vice President. That boy lived in a world defined by race and gender differences. He wanted you to win – to break down the barriers of biology. That boy would be happy to have anyone win who wasn’t a biological match for all his predecessors.

But that boy is grown up now. The man that boy became knows that it is more important to elect qualified – even, when we can, *great* - leaders than it is to elect leaders because we want them to break barriers that have already dissolved all on their own.

You helped begin the dissolution of those barriers – can’t you see that you won? They are gone! Margaret Thatcher, Nelson Mandela and many others attest to that already, and so long as you and your candidate don’t succeed in destroying Senator Obama and with him the Democratic party, another proof will be at hand that biology is off the table in choosing the leadership of our species. The leadership of our children.

Please, Ms. Ferraro. Not only do I think you should publicly renounce your own words – words that are doing more to perpetuate the sick thoughts you stood against many years ago than anything your opponents of that day could hope for – but I ask that you repeal your support for Senator Clinton. You are both feeding the dragon you once sought to slay, and it will come out of its cave and damage my children if you don’t stop.

Best Regards,

Chris Blask

Poem/message: The Experience of Me and We

Mar 8th, 2008 at 2:27 pm EST

(In response to a previous Poem/Message by Sue Shields)

Sue, that is a poem well read.

I, like you, worked in the Internet Adolescence to create the Boom of the 90s. Those frenetic years that stretched like centuries where the accomplishments of a month were achieved in a week, where the work of a lifetime was the matter of lunchtime and the team never slept.

We did not require a President and First Lady to lead us tothe Gates.

We were on the path - we built it, painted the signs and carved out rest-stops and restaurants along the way - Just In Time as the people wandered, then jogged, then rushed down in a fray.

It is to question the value of all of us who spread the gravel and planted the shrubs to assume that we would not have achieved our goal had it not been for the magnanimous Few - or Two - who, deigning to gift us their wisdom granted us their permission.

We are the Experience we seek - take a peek inside and you will find that what we need is all of our MEs, and that wehave had Us all along.

To say it was Them is to take away our pride in our workand allow us to shirk the responsibilities that came with changing the world. There is no one else who did what we did nor deserves either the fame or the blame for the fallout. It is time to callout Ourselves and to stand up to our burden. We cannot allow the past or the present to remove what's unpleasant without giving up life and the joy of the future, which I, for one, plan not to squander for my son or my daughters.

Now is the time for a leader who follows, who cheers us togo where we know shows the promise of prosperity and the wealth for posterity.

Our riches are We, and we are already here.

-chris

Letter to the Author - Refutation of Article: "Obama’s Communist Mentor"

Mar 1st, 2008 at 6:46 pm EST

My letter to Mr. Kincaid:

NOTE: In this letter and elsewhere I voice my criticism of left-ish politics. I am sincere with these opinions but simultaneously realize that some of you would likely disagree strongly with me on some of them. Please be aware that my opinions are *not* a condemnation of you or your intentions. It is my opinion that virtually everyone shares the same goals (peace, prosperity and the improvement of the Human Lot in Life), we only differ on the best path to achieve these ends. Happy to debate all those points offline... ;~)

-cheers!

-chris

http://www.aim.org/aim-column/obamas-communist-mentor/

Hello Mr. Kincaid,

I read your recent article with the aforementioned title. For beginners, I appreciate every opinion (which is kinda the point of this entire letter), and commend you for speaking yours regardless of my – or anyone else’s – opinion of it. Hopefully you share this view on free speech and the consideration of opposing views, which from your stated stance should be the case.

For my part, I disagree fundamentally with your article. If I understand the positions you espouse, you are stating that 1/ the media is “giving Obama a pass” on his political past, and 2/ that Sen. Obama has a hidden agenda of communist/socialist subversion of the United States government.

As a preface to my opinions, first let me explain my background.

• I am a registered Independent who has voted right-of-center for most of my adult life.

• I have been a vocal opponent of “modern liberalism” and socialism for more than ten years.

• I am a supporter/volunteer for Sen. Obama.

Born in 1965, I grew up in Colorado, Chicago and Toronto being a firm supporter of Left-ish ideals. In my late twenties in Canada I spent a lot of time working around politicians (TV production crew) which, combined with other evolutions drove me far away from the nanny-state superior condescension I perceived among Liberal politicians. Since then I have been a frequent debater on the side of personal freedoms and responsibility and against the actual socialism in place in Canada and Europe and latent in American Democratic positions and leaders (like Sen. Clinton, in my opinion). Today I live in Florida, but have lived as an adult in many regions of the country (SC, UT, IL, WA) and have travelled the world extensively and always engaged in discussion on all of these topics wherever I go.

Sen. Obama first crossed my path in the early 2000’s when my mother (a staunch left-winger with whom I have spirited debates ;~) brought him to my attention. Since then I have followed his career with skeptical interest, looking for the signs of left-wing demagoguery that I find so common among members of his party. It is specifically the lack thereof that has drawn me to support his campaign for President. While I certainly do not know everything about the man, I have consumed a great deal of data about his actions and positions. Not only do I not come to the conclusion implied by your article, the position you take strikes me as a set of points that could be used against myself should anyone choose to question my views – and this is what spurs me to write this note.

I, too, have had a varied background.

I, too, have and continue to seek conversations with all sorts of people – particularly those I disagree with.

While I cannot speak for Sen. Obama, I have inhabited several posts along the political perching-line in my life. Some, perhaps, a reflection of my age at the time, others due to ongoing examination of issues and ideologies. Today I will describe myself as “Libertarian” if forced to pick from the limited selection of political party labels, but in reality my views are a more complicated matrix including an absolute belief in individual independence and a pragmatic insistence on moving forward by available means rather than ineffectual circling around ideological totem poles.

If I for one moment believed that my choice for President actually embodied the beliefs that you appear to claim, then I would not support that person. However, based on more diligence than I have ever pursued in determining my choice (and I’m a tad obsessive about these sorts of things at the best of times), I cannot begin to agree with your assessment. Neither the plans put forward by Sen. Obama nor the words and intent displayed by his statements support the types of Big Government socialism I have seen firsthand in several stints of living in Canada. Nothing about his actions in government indicate the kind of extreme-left leanings that I identify with his Democratic opponent.

In contrast to the picture your article paints of an extremist fifth-columnist communist sleeper, the Barack Obama I see is a pragmatic effective diplomat who combines the positive social values of the left with the results-oriented personal responsibility of the right. Given my own not-insignificant successful use of these traits to attain global capitalist aims (I built a ~$3B business unit for Cisco Systems, for example), I see the pragmatic application of the opportunity to leverage this man’s own complex capabilities to be in the best interest of those of us who wish for the advancement of this country and its founding ideals.

I hope your stated position as a questioning individual will lead you to an examination of the data that brings you to a similar conclusion. For my part, I look forward to a point in two or three years time when we will all have more current and empirical evidence to prove one of us correct. I am betting more than the value of a simple sporting wager that neither of us will be disappointed with the real actions of a President Obama by that time, and look forward to debating this issue with you then.

Best regards,

-chris

A Betrayal of Conservative Fundamentals - Republicans Voting for Clinton to Beat Obama

Mar 5th, 2008 at 11:27 am EST

Hi folks,

Sen. Clinton won the Texas Primary (but lost the state, in the end) in large part due to Republicans following Rush's advice to insincerely vote for Sen. Clinton "because she will be easier to beat in November." Sen. Clinton got 10% of her vote Tuesday from Republicans, and while many of us right-wingers are supporting Obama based on actual support for him, I dare say there are few (if any) to right of center who are supporting Clinton.

Within a ten-minute period on the Sean Hannity show last night (around 7:10pm ET), two out of three callers bragged about switching and voting for Clinton to help bring Obama down and thereby win the general election for Sen. McCain (one in Ohio, one in Texas). The third caller was debating it.

Tiffany in Austin, after laughing at Democrats about it, went on to say that she was going to go out and caucus as well. She noted that her firefighter husband said he "couldn't bring himself to do it", for which I give him points for moral character.

Even Sean Hannity spent a good bit of time voicing his discomfort with the idea. "Ask yourself how you would feel if the Democrats were doing that to our primary," he asked the undecided election subverter in Ohio.

I think the entire episode is sordid. On the part of democracy-subverting Republicans - I'm ashamed of you. This is the antithesis of what core conservative political values are about. On the part of Sen. Clinton in supporting the action (and recommending McCain over Obama), the whole implication of turning on your party to serve your own ends is perhaps the lowest form of betrayal of trust.

I don't mind losing a fair fight, but this aspect of the contest makes me feel soiled and disappointed.

-chris

MyBO on CNN, and my "Obama Rapid Response" Rapid Response

Hi folks!

Below is my letter to CNN in regards to their coverage of MyBO.

Ironically, their little web-mail-response page barfed, so Lisa in Buffalo FAXED it to them for me (thanks, Lisa!).

As Charlie Brown would say: "Good grief." ;~)

-enjoy!

-chris

-----------------------------------------------
TO: Rick Sanchez - CNN
FROM: Chris Blask - Obama Rapid Response

Hi Rick et al!

I just watched your coverage of Barack Obama's Internet campaign. Bless their hearts, but your panel just embarassed themselves in front of the entire American population under 45 (and quite a few over) with their complete lack of understanding of modern communication. I got the impression of a group of county elders gathered on a porch trying to give comment on the New Fangled Teler-Fone down at Mable's place and how it "wasn't the same as just goin' down there and chawin' with a man".

barackobama.com is not a "new-fangled Internet thing" - it is a use of communications methods to promote messages and connect people. No different than a printing press and a coffee social - just a billion times more effective. To use geek terms you could say it is "an application of communications technology" - and frankly you folks are, too, so it shouldn't stump your Talent to discuss it - but that is to miss the whole point. I *am* a geek - but a geek who has moved more than $3B worth of hard goods - because I understand that all of this Internet stuff does not matter when it is all about geeks. It matters when my mother (and to her grave at 96, my grandmother) adopt it for *their* purposes - and that is what has happened with Barack Obama's campaign.

Let me give you an example. Obama Rapid Response (ORR) is a group of volunteers who monitor the media - we monitor you - and the opposition campaigns, discuss how to respond to spin we preceive in the media, attacks by other candidates and statements for/against our candidate around the country and around the world, and deliver our message effectively to appropriate venues and individuals.

Obama Rapid Response was setup by Neil in Vermont almost a year ago. Neil is not a technical person, but he wanted to get involved so he went to barackobama.com and created the group - everything was there for him to do it.

Lisa in Buffalo has trouble getting her caps-lock key off and her browser working, a fax machine and two cats. Lisa is passionate about her candidate, and despite the fact that she knows less about computers than you do about cold fusion, she was part of a team that picked up the Lord Trimble story (that I still haven't seen you folks pick up on) that hit the UK wire late Friday night ET and pushed it out to *every* newspaper, radio station and TV station in Wyoming before the polls opened (here's that story, in case you are still sorting through your lithographs for it: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/08/wuspols108.xml ;~).

This past week, the site got so much traffic that the email server slowed down. This impacted the ORR since emails were not able to get out to the membership fast enough. Without prompting from the campaign (who are understandably rather busy), I created a Google group (http://googlegroups.com/orr-backup), dropped the key ORR membership into it and got all of the activity up and going again.

Your panel pointed out how the MyBO site allows volunteers to organize shoe-leather activities - which is true and impossible to overstate the effectiveness of - but their handling of the story underlined the complete lack of understanding of what is going on with MyBO and in fact the entire Obama campaign.

It is not only about delivering bumper-stickers and T-shirts faster (the graphics of which are online and can be sent directly to the printers). It is not just about drawing people to coffee-socials (thousands of which are organized through the site for every primary day, as one small example). It is not even just about enlisting and organizing door-to-door and phone campaigns (those, too: 1.5M calls from people at home to Wisconsin voters, as another small example).
It is about doing everything you've even seen being done by the handfull of people in a campaign office in Docudramas recounting past campaigns with a cast of thousands instead of dozens. It is about creating a center-less operation that enables free people to assume responsibility for themselves and act on their beliefs. It is about implementing on the largest scale the fundamental and foundational beliefs of America, namely:

o That all people are created equal.

o That Freedom of speech and freedom of action are the key to personal, national and global success.

o That Free Enterpise in business and thought enable the Individuals who make up the Population to be more powerful than the established Powers that hold all the advantages out of the gate.

Obama's success is not "cheating" as you asked on the show. Obama's success is an acting-out of the basic principles that underly every success in American history. Obama's success is a re-enactment of the founding of the country, where citizens met and decided to stand up to massively disproportional powers and tradition based on their belief in themselves and in the strength of individual freedom. Obama's success is the tactical and tangible proof that this country is, in fact, based on the strongest set of ideals in human history.

-best regards

-chris

PS - CNN is, oddly enough, the least available media outlet online. All of your competitors provide actual email addresses - for example - not just these silly boxes.