Tuesday, October 12, 2021

What's Wrong with Loudoun County?

 

Loudoun County, Virginia has become the epicenter of the “cold civil war” between the woke/progressive movement – the latest incarnation of the revolution -- and people who are – or who at least consider themselves to be -- “normal”, i.e. ordinary American citizens who ask nothing more than to be left alone. But the question arises, why there, and why now? I believe I can shed some light on the subject, since I lived there for all of 24 years.


First, a bit of geography. Look at a map of Virginia which highlights counties. Working out from D.C., you first come to Arlington County, which was, long ago and far away, part of D.C. (which explains why it's the other part of the 10x10 mile diamond). Arlington, which up until World War II was a scattering of small settlements, got a shot in the arm with the war and the building of the Pentagon and became what is known as a “bedroom suburb”. Over time, Arlington got filled up, so the cancer which actually began with the New Deal spread to Fairfax County, which over time became an even larger and more sprawling bedroom suburb. But like any malignant growth, the government blob needed ever more space, so by 1981 the cancer had spread across the county line into Loudoun – not far, mind you, but enough to constitute a significant “fringe”, beyond which all was still bucolic and green (in the traditional sense). (I used to joke that the suburbs on the eastern edge of Loudoun County were the servants' quarters for Fairfax County. True up to a point, except a lot of the hapless Loudoun residents had to commute all the way into D.C. on a daily basis, a process so brutal that it could be compared to the Trail of Tears. And even so, we spent a lot of time “pitying the fools” who commuted from places even farther away, like Harper's Ferry, Gettysburg, and the Eastern Shore of Maryland. You look hard enough and you can always find someone more miserable than you are.)


So, taking a snapshot circa 1981, Loudoun County was still, by and large, rural. We settled in one of the “borderline” developments, and right across the main road there were horses grazing. And from where we lived to Leesburg (the county seat) it was all horses. Now it's all developments. In fact, the developments have oozed around Leesburg, which is protected by ironclad ordinances, not to mention political pull – in order to preserve its colonial-era, quaint, and picturesque features. (You can't move a brick or prune a tree in “old” Leesburg without getting a permit from the authorities. Needless to say, real estate prices there are comparable to those on Martha's Vineyard. But who can argue with a place that has more boxwood hedges than anywhere else in the U.S.?)


The last time I checked, which was 15 years ago, the suburban sprawl had reached all the way to the first ridge west of Leesburg, and was quickly crawling up said ridge in search of new worlds to despoil. But that was not the only trend of note, by any means. The social history of Washington, D.C. and its suburbs has one overriding theme, which is that people come there in order to get good-paying jobs. And who wouldn't? Problem is, they bring their – in some cases “traditional” – points of view with them. Why, many of them have intact families! And they “cling” to guns and Bibles! And so on. This is because they generally come from farther west or farther south, which means from “the hills”, from “God's country”, and all of that feisty Scotch-Irish DNA doesn't always take kindly to the New Deal/enlightened/progressive/liberal/socialist/woke-ism that emanates out of D.C. like fallout from an atomic blast, except over a much longer time.


So even way back in 1981, there were already signs of trouble. The “Billy Bobs” from up in them thar hills who attended the Evangelical and Fundamentalist churches had to confront, on the job and occasionally right next door, the opposing force – namely big-government socialism and all of its attendant annoyances and persecutions, not to mention its true believers, who considered the outer suburbs as a kind of mission field – the thinking being something along the lines of  “We will enlighten these knuckle-draggers and mouth-breathers, at the point of a gun if need be, and turn them into citizens of the New World Order whether they like it or not.”


Not only that, but the first notable entity in Loudoun County to succumb to the new New Deal mind set was the county government. So you had, basically, a county with a suburban fringe on one end, a “hunt country” elite on the other end (quickly moving on to greener pastures in order to escape suburban sprawl - after cashing out handsomely, needless to say), and in the middle a county government that was indistinguishable from what one might find in, let's say, Sweden, but with even more of an animus toward religion, “family values”, and conservatism of any kind.


“You say 'mayter', and I say to-mah-to”. The ruling class of Loudoun County were NPR listeners, everyone else was into country music. It was BMWs vs. pickup trucks with gun racks. It was polite Episcopalians vs. charismatic Fundamentalists who spoke in tongues. It was gourmet shops vs. BBQ joints. And so on. But, all in all, despite these canyon-like cultural differences there was a kind of peaceful coexistence – the two sides tended to stay out of each other's way most of the time (except when the “regular folks” wound up in court and were confronted by prosecutors straight out of Stalin's show trials).


And – bringing us up to the present day – all was, at first, more or less quiet on the public school front. The “agents of change” had yet to flex their muscles in that venue, and although the county education officials had definite totalitarian tendencies, this had not yet trickled down to the grass roots. Besides, many of the serious traditionalists already had their kids enrolled in church-based schools – all across the spectrum from Evangelical to Fundamentalist. So the public schools were an accident waiting to happen – and sure enough, it has now happened, much to the amazement and puzzlement of all. But if you understand the social history of the place, you understand exactly what's going on. The traditionally-minded, family-oriented people saw nothing terribly wrong with sending their kids off to the public schools, assuming that the “3 R's” were still being taught. Which they were, up to a point – and that was the point at which the agents of change... the vanguard of the revolution, of the culture war... decided to shift into high gear and start introducing... well, you know... all the garbage that is now – whether virtually or in-person, masked or unmasked -- being dumped on public school kids without the knowledge or consent of their parents. And ironically it's the very incidence of the pandemic that has helped bring things to a head. As has been pointed out any number of times, remote, at-home learning necessitated by the pandemic enabled parents to see, for the first time, what their kids were being taught in school, and the response was indignation, outrage, and an urge to not only speak truth to power but to topple that power from its throne. And this was at the same time CRT came along – along with transgender bathrooms and athletes – sex education at a fever pitch (“sex ed” has been with us for decades, but it has now reached escape velocity) – and any of the thousand varieties of race- and gender-shaming that are now everyday business in the public schools. Not to mention masks! Another way of putting it is that the pandemic was supposed to have served as a rationale and as a cover for an escalation of the culture war, in spite of any new level of awareness on the part of the parents. (Or – to put a finer point on it – no one expected the parents to notice that their kids were being brainwashed by Marxists, so when they did notice it caused great consternation and dismay. Busted! And now that sleeping giant known as “parents” is speaking up, and getting in the way, and disturbing the traditionally tranquil atmosphere of school board meetings.)


So imagine if you're a parent with kids in public school in Loudoun County. You moved there to get closer to the cornucopia of unlimited cash and jobs that is D.C. – who wouldn't? And you, innocently, expected the values and attitudes you grew up with in East Overshoe, West Virginia to be reinforced, or at least not actively opposed, by the schools you were sending your kids to. Then came the “reveal”, and now parents are standing up in school board meetings and demanding to know what in hell is going on – and the school board members just sit there stone-faced, like Soviet officials standing on Lenin's Tomb during the May Day parade on Red Square. Yes, they've been “outed”, they've been exposed, but hey – they have all the power, the law is on their side, they represent the dominant culture, and, basically, the parents can just stick it where the sun don't shine. This is their attitude. But I say that this attitude has been building up for nigh unto 40 years now; it's just recently that it has come out into the open through repeated confrontation. And, by the way, it's also a subset of the broader premise that the government owns your children, and all you are is a caretaker at best. And, that the real work – the work of creating a new type of citizen for the servile state – is done away from the atavistic and suffocating atmosphere of “the home”.


And if that weren't enough, now the school boards have called in the FBI to protect them from indignant parents. If you're looking for a Soviet Union starter kit, seek no further – this is not the first battle, nor is it the last, but it's the most consequential. The revolution has always known that the next generation is key – not the grandparents, not the parents (AKA “deplorables”), but the “young skulls full of mush” as Rush Limbaugh used to say. Win the hearts and minds of the next generation and you've won, and the old folks can go to hell; that's the attitude. And the thing is, this works! Or, it works if it is unopposed. Right now the revolution holds all the cards... it has all the political power... it has most (but not all) of the guns... so prospects are not good. But to not oppose would mean to capitulate, to be less then men, less than human... and is this the legacy we want to pass on to the next generation? I fervently hope not.


To paraphrase an old political saying, as Loudoun County goes, so goes the nation – if people do not speak the whole truth to the real power. If they do and fail anyway, it will usher in a long night, and many of us may not live to see the dawn. The Soviet Union lasted 70-plus years before the Russians finally came to their senses and reasserted themselves as a culture – a very traditional and religious one at that. This will take patience, but it will take faith even more.


Friday, August 13, 2021

Things Are Going Swimmingly -- Some Pool Observations


Being an amateur anthropologist and a bit of a people watcher, I've turned my attention of late to our community pool, which is large enough to hold pretty much every species and sub-species of human being. I've come up with a typology – a work in progress, if you will – but wanted to share it now, in hopes people can make their own contributions. See if you recognize any of these types! (But first, get in the mood. Think sun. Think soothing breezes, and the cloying scent of chlorine... )


The Bobbers: They just stand there, bobbing up and down. Up and down. Up and down. Hour after hour. (singly or in groups of 2 or 3)

The Conversationalists: They also just stand there, but don't even bob. Instead they talk, in groups of 2 or more. Talk about pretty much anything. Hour after hour.

The Floaters: They lie on one of those inflatable mattresses and let themselves be carried along by the current. They usually appear to be sound asleep. (I never see any of them either getting into or out of the water. I assume they're there all day. Maybe they never leave.)
The Odd Couple: How on earth did they ever find each other?

The Serious Senior Citizen Lady who typically uses the lap lane, and who was probably a varsity swimmer in her college days. She typically wears a bathing cap, which is a rarity these days.

The Serious Senior Citizen Man: See above. (minus the bathing cap, and usually minus hair)

Les Amants: This would be a young (or not so young) couple that just stand there in an embrace, looking dreamily into each other's eyes and smiling. (I don't know what's going on under the surface. Maybe I don't want to know.)

The Olympians: They churn through the water doing the Australian crawl, and heaven help you if you get in their way.

The Lap Swimmers: They stay in their lane and focus on endurance. Hats off!

The Muscle Beach types: There's no one like that in Pittsburgh.

The Shouters: These are the people who spend five or ten minutes trying to get someone else's attention by screaming at the top of their lungs. Either they're in the water and the other person is on the side, or vice-versa. They operate on the assumption that sound carries better over water – problem is, they're competing against 50 kids all yelling at the same time, and against Bob FM coming out of the P.A. System at 100 decibels.

The Nerds: This is 2 or 3 skinny teenage boys who engage in half-hearted horseplay with no girls in sight.

The Biggies: These are the folks who go in the water to get the weight off their spines and legs. I don't mean just mildly overweight people; I mean Really Big People, like the large-helping-of-fries-at-every-meal kind of big.

The Cool Kids: They aren't in the water. They're hanging around the snack bar.

The Sunbathers: They're out there frying themselves to a toasty brown. I don't sense much sunscreen in use. Hope they have good health insurance.

The Mystery Colors: People who already have a deep tan on the first day of the season, and people who are still a pasty white on the last day.

The Intellectual Loners: They find the most secluded spot in the place (on land, I mean) and just settle in. They're often reading a book. A big book. With no pictures.

The Day Care Ladies who are shepherding a platoon of toddlers and pre-schoolers. (I don't know how they keep their sanity. Maybe they don't.)

The woman wheeling an industrial-size baby stroller which is brimming over with tote bags, towels, pool toys, and assorted bits of clothing. (I assume there's a baby in there somewhere, but lots of luck finding it.)

The Harried Lifeguards who blow their whistle for five minutes hoping to get the attention of someone who is breaking the rules. Problem is, no one thinks they're breaking the rules so no one thinks the whistle is for them.

The Lady at the Entrance who has to explain the Byzantine rate system (age, residency, single, family, daily, seasonal, etc. etc.) about 50 times a day.

The Great Migrators: The people (usually families) who walk out at 4:30 on the dot. This is a legacy of the old days when all the factories let out at the same time and the wife had to be home in time to prepare dinner so it would be ready when the husband got home from work. Heaven forbid dinner should start even a minute past 6 PM! Don't yinz know it's bowling night?

The Ice Cubes: These are the folks (typically pale, thin young women) who take forever to get in the water, and are shivering the whole time. (They're always accompanied by a husband or boyfriend who, with great patience, tries to encourage them.) (Needless to say, if they should dare to splash the woman, the engagement is off!!)

The Water Cannon Kids: Usually boys. OK – always boys, never girls. You do the math.

The Head Lifeguard, who marches up and down like a drill sergeant keeping the troops in line. (He'd love to have a riding crop, but it's not standard issue.)

The Water Hogs: These are the guys who play toss and catch (usually 2 to 4 players) and try to see how much of the pool they can monopolize with their game. Of course, you can try and swim across their playing field, but then you risk being whacked by a missed catch. (This is the only activity which I feel should be entirely banned. Some of the others are annoying, but unlikely to lead to serious injury.)

So... there you are, and I'm sure there are a few I've missed (or that are found in pools other than the one I frequent). Please feel free to add your own observations!

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

The Five-Ring Circus – Some Olympic Impressions

 

I managed to watch the Olympics on and off over the last couple of weeks, and came up with some observations (bearing in mind that, being one of the least athletic people on the planet, I have no “standing” to make comments):


  1. The Olympics, although they are called “games”, seem more real, authentic, solid, and honorable than pretty much anything else that is happening in the world right now, particularly in politics and in the crushing load of propaganda that is imposed on the citizenry every hour of every day on pretty much every issue or subject. We are, it's said, living in a post-reality era – which is true, since everything is politicized (therefore subjective) and we can't take anything for granted, including much of what is happening (or seems to be happening) right in front of our eyes. Of course the Olympics are politicized to some extent as well, and always have been... but they are still ultimately about natural talent, discipline, practice, and coaching. While perhaps not “pure”, they are as close as we can reasonably expect anything to come. (And things have improved considerably since the Cold War era, when you could always count on those stone-faced Russian judges to boost the scores of Russian athletes, and perhaps shave a bit off American scores.)

  2. Also noted, and not for the first time – every sport, and every event, has its ideal body type – and there is very little variation within a given sport or event. This is, of course, the result of a kind of natural selection – as practiced by coaches, athletic directors, and so on... and reinforced through competition, training, conditioning – diet and nutrition as well, surely. A person's natural genetic potential will, hopefully, lend itself to one or more athletic endeavors... but surely it can never be that anybody can become anything in the world of sports (although we have had some pretty amazing people who came close – Babe Didrikson Zaharias and Jim Thorpe come to mind). What's intriguing is the possibility that, by the time anyone gets to Olympic level, all the DNA factors have been sorted out, and then it becomes purely a matter of conditioning, discipline, coaching, and raw determination. (And of course we can't discount a bit of randomness either. When outcomes are determined down to the hundredth of a second, or a centimeter, it would be a bit strained to claim that the winner was a significantly better athlete than the runner-up – especially when you could run the same event the next day and possibly get the opposite result.)

  3. On the lighter side – I noticed that the later I stayed up to watch Olympic events, the more likely I was to see an event, or a sport, that I never knew even existed. (Cue expression of incredulity: “THAT's an Olympic event??”) I fully expect, some time in the future, to see sack races and three-legged races included (maybe not for medals, but at least for “demonstration”). (Well, why not? At least those are events I actually competed in in grade school, on “field day” – my introduction to abysmal failure, by the way.)

  4. It should have been a lesson in geography as well. I've heard of all the countries that attended, but I'll bet many people haven't. There are some interesting entries way down on the participation list that should send people running to their atlas. (And yes, I had to look up ROC. My first thought was Republic of China, but that's out of fashion.)

  5. And by the way, how often do you get to hear the national anthem of Fiji? Or Qatar? Don't tell me that isn't fun.

  6. And then we have this phenomenon of athletes who weren't born in a given country, and didn't grow up there, winding up on their Olympic team. How long has this been going on? I don't remember that in the old days. Back then, everyone on the Swedish team had to be a Swede... and everyone on the Botswana team had to be Botswanian... etc. I guess it's kind of like the draft system in the NFL – it's a way to level the playing field a bit. But still... (I can see San Marino becoming an ice hockey powerhouse. Hey, if Jamaica can do bobsledding... )

  7. And speaking of which, I loved the way the commentators for the women's basketball game between the U.S. and Japan were going on and on about the “size” issue. Well duh! But even so, the Japanese managed to get to the gold medal round which means they had to beat plenty of other tall people. (Even so, I spotted what appeared to be some “ringers” on the Japanese team. See previous item.)

  8. The most enjoyable, i.e. least boring, event in my book: Skateboarding (Uh-huh, I know, it's not a classic – Avery Brundage would turn over in his grave. Well, tough!)

  9. Most boring: Water polo (mostly a lot of splashing, and headgear that makes them look like extras from a cheesy 1950s sci-fi movie)

  10. Most riveting: Shot put. Yes! The sight of those incredible hulks whirling around that ring before letting fly was mesmerizing.

  11. Most gratifying: Everyone took the mask mandate in stride.

  12. Second most gratifying: I didn't see any medal award “demonstrations”. Maybe I missed it, or just maybe the activists weren't quite up to medal level.

  13. Also noted – the absolute perfection (at least to the untrained eye) of all the venues and the surrounding area. I didn't get the impression, as I have with some of the more “third world” sites, that the Olympic Village was also a Potemkin Village.

  14. And thank goodness the summer Olympics can all happen in the same area – unlike the winter Olympics where some events can be 100 miles from other events, and where so much depends on the weather. (I do have to give the women runners credit for racing in the pouring rain. That had to be a good test of traction (shoes vs. track surface).)


Thursday, July 15, 2021

On Identity, and the Lack Thereof


One problem with what is called “identity politics” is that it erodes our view of other human beings as individuals. If the main thing, or the only important thing, about other people is the group or groups they “identify” with, or that we identify them with (with or without their consent), then we have, in effect, declared that what distinguishes them as individuals is not important – not only not important, but even dangerous to talk about because doing so might call into question the importance, or even the validity, of their group identity – not to mention the worth – and real agenda -- of the entire identity movement.


A related issue is that with our obsession with identity politics we find the idea of people taking themselves seriously as individuals almost quaint, if not actually un-”woke”. The thing is that throughout human history (and pre-history as well) people took themselves seriously. They were individuals, and they had distinct and complete lives – and they knew it. Yes, they were inevitably part of a racial/cultural/religious/language/ethnic group; nearly everyone is – there are very few true “lone wolves” among humanity. And they learned ways of thinking, and ways of being, from being brought up in that milieu – again inevitably. But self-esteem kicked in as well, based on instinct and survival needs as well as the need to establish and maintain status within the community. It wasn't “all about me”, but it wasn't all about the group either, even in very close-knit and – some would say – “provincial” or isolated cultures.


There's nothing heroic about lack of self-esteem. Raw egotism, pushing your weight around, being obsessed with power – yes, these are universally (or nearly so) regarded as negative traits. But so is the opposite, which is not having your own will, and constantly bowing to the world view and demands of the culture – what Ayn Rand referred to as “social metaphysics” – the idea that society is always right and “I” am always wrong, which is the same as saying that there is no “I”, and one should apologize and do penance for even imagining such a thing. (But then if there is no “I”, who is it that is doing the apology and the penance? I guess that's one of those impolite questions.)


And yet this is what the “woke” crowd – liberals, progressives, and projects like Critical Race Theory – attempt to do – elevate some people based (only) on their (real or alleged) “identity” while devaluing, minimizing, and shaming other people – again based on the identity attributed to them (whether they agree or not) – to the extent of declaring them non-persons. And when a totalitarian or slave state decides you're a non-person, your life expectancy as an actual physical being is at risk, as we've seen many times, especially during the 20th Century but also in the present day.


What are some of the instruments and techniques used in this process? One, of course, is stereotyping – all people in Group A think, believe, and act in a certain way, and they're unlikely to ever change, short of being incarcerated in re-education camps. Another is robbing them of their identity as persons by insisting that the only important thing about them is the group they were born into, and because that group is bad, it means they are bad. Another identity-robbing technique is to assign people numbers, by which they will be known from that point on, and which (again) will be the only important and useful thing about them, because names notoriously reflect culture – race, ethnicity, language, religion, and so on – not to mention gender! (Notice that the first thing parents provide to their children is a name – and the first thing government applies to people is a number.)


A subset of stereotyping is what was termed, during the Vietnam conflict, “cartoonization”, by which people are reduced to two-dimensional stick figures who, really, aren't people at all, so they have no standing and we can treat them any way we like. This has vicious results in wartime, but it has also come into play throughout history, as during the Age of Exploration, the period of colonization, and more recently – albeit benignly, although many will argue otherwise – in entertainment (film, TV, radio, live shows, etc.).


Are stereotypes always “damaging”? I would say not intentionally, but to the extent they cause us not to take people seriously as individuals – as seriously as they take themselves – it causes some erosion in our ability and willingness to show empathy, charity, compassion, and even common courtesy. We can mouth all the words we like about “The Golden Rule”, but it's almost amusing at times when we see how shocked people can be when it's actually applied. “What if that person were me?” It's a radical point of view, when you get right down to it. And yet we see that current trends are in the exact opposite direction – never mind who or what that person is as an individual, or who or what they are in their own minds; all that counts is their skin color, language, accent, religion, etc. (It's small wonder that people react to this by inventing more and more radical modes of dress, hair styles, piercings, tattoos, genders, non-genders, and so on – the need to assert oneself, even if it's highly imitative, will always be expressed in some way.  And, I daresay, the level of nonconformity will tend to correlate with the level of oppression. The outliers in any culture are the distorted mirror image of that culture.)


And this depersonalization with an agenda is bad enough when it happens on the person-to-person level. When it infects a political movement – or becomes a political movement – things get even worse, up to the point where it becomes official, overt, and explicit government policy, as is happening now. And along with this depersonalization comes the idea of collective and multi-generational guilt – a curse, if you will, on all the living and on all future generations for the past sins (real and alleged) committed by that group. No apologies are sufficient... no form of reparations is enough... it's a permanent blot on the name and reputation of the group in question, and, what's worse, they are expected to accept this as fact, and slink around like lepers, eyes downward, mumbling “unclean, unclean” from that day forward.



People in past times were as real as you and me. They weren't cartoon characters or “It's a Small World” puppets at Disney World in colorful ethnic costumes. Many of them were deep thinkers. And they had a much better intuitive, experiential sense of the natural world and natural processes than most of us do. (They spent most of their time outdoors! How many of us can make that claim, with our addiction to central heating and air conditioning?) And when you see what they were able to accomplish given the resources and technology at their disposal, they seem pretty darned impressive. And yes, these accomplishments were achieved by individuals, but also by individuals acting in groups. Individual genius, to be successful, had to interface and develop a symbiosis with the needs and desires of the group – which is what we mean when we describe an idea that came before its time (note the revival of interest in Nikola Tesla as an example). The advances of civilization were not achieved by people browbeaten, intimidated, and shamed into denying every trace of their individual identity and submitting to the will of a totalitarian, impersonal state and its operatives. (And what, for that matter, has the impersonal state and its operatives ever contributed to human advancement? Nothing, as far as I can tell. Its main function is to suppress, hinder, censor, and cancel. And its goal is a gray, undifferentiated mass of humanity whose only function is to serve the ruling elite.)


We are moving, much more rapidly than anyone imagined up until recently, toward slave state status – but the slavery may turn out not to be the traditional kind, with literal chains, leg irons, and slave collars, but the psychological kind as in “1984” and other dystopian novels. Stereotyping – depersonalization – shunning – “canceling” – shame... these are all tools with which the ruling elite seeks to achieve its ends, while all the time mouthing words about “fairness”, “justice”, and “equity”. And the worst part of it may well turn out to be that while we are slaves, we will still imagine we are free – and that will be the ultimate victory of the totalitarian state. 

Sunday, May 30, 2021

UFOs Are Back, Ho Hum

 

I'm not a UFO expert, and I don't play one on TV either. But for some reason, UFOs are in the news again, and this time it's not just the usual suspects – you know, the stereotypical tinfoil-hat wackos who claim to have been abducted and subjected to bizarre surgical procedures, etc. – but, arguably, establishment types like the U.S. military, which has quit referring personnel who claim to have seen a UFO to the post psychiatrist but is now, apparently, taking these things seriously. Of course there's a long and colorful history of the whole UFO matter which, among other things, has inspired great numbers of sci-fi movies and TV shows – and the military, especially the Air Force, has always been depicted as the “bad guy” – skeptical, dogmatic, conservative, secretive, and so on. And the popular culture – not limited to sci-fi fans – has generally assumed that whenever the Air Force denies that something exists, that automatically means it does exist, and that the military is “hiding something” – advanced weapon systems or actual aliens, or both – from the American public and from our enemies.


One overarching theme over the years (decades) has been that UFOs, in some mysterious way, were part of the Cold War. This notion was supported by the fact that most even semi-credible sightings were in the vicinity of military installations, test sites, military aircraft, or warships. So the idea was that UFOs were, indeed, either data-gathering instruments or advanced weapon systems – but whose? If ours, the military wanted to disguise the fact, understandably. If someone else's, the military wanted to keep whoever it was from realizing that we had detected their advanced systems... or, the government wanted to keep the public from being upset by the thought that the Russkies might have weaponry far superior to ours. So in that sense, the “little green men” thing may have been no more than a red herring (so to speak) – a harmless diversion that was allowed to run its course, and an excuse to shut down all inquiry and speculation (because “only a nut would believe...” etc.). (Now why the specter of being invaded by Martians is less scary to the public than the notion of the USSR having weapon systems far superior to our own is another matter. But that depends to some extent on one's view of what aliens from another planet represent.) (See my post, “Jonesin' for Aliens”, July 25, 2015.)


But then the Cold War ended – or so it was assumed – back when the Soviet Union broke up. But did UFOs disappear? Apparently not. They keep coming back, like those cohorts of locusts – they're in the news, then they aren't. They generate societies, meetings, publications, then the whole thing fades away. Pop culture gives us “The X-Files”, then ratings fall off and the show closes. And then the whole thing starts over again. And so on. So yes, the UFO thing comes and goes, and the military can never seem to make up its mind as to whether they're real or just a symptom of Air Force pilots suffering from oxygen deprivation leading to hallucinations. So years go by when they don't talk about it, and then you get the kind of revival of interest we're seeing now.


But then we run into another interesting angle – one that has been part of the story since the first “flying saucers” were sighted soon after World War II. And that is what I'll call the quality of evidence. Now, it was easy enough to understand, in the early days, how photos or films of alleged UFOs were always grainy and blurred (not unlike photos of the Loch Ness Monster or Bigfoot) – whoever was taking the pictures (and they were nearly always photos, not radar captures) was probably using a Kodak Brownie or 8mm home movie camera, and was trembling with excitement (or fear) (or dreams of collecting big bucks from the National Enquirer for exclusive rights to the footage).


But that was then. Nowadays, the military has optics so advanced that they can read someone's poker hand from 50,000 feet (or so I'm told). Add high-speed cameras, digitization which yields extremely fine-grained images, and other improvements – and yet the imagery we see in the news is still as grainy and blurred as anything that came out of the 1950s. There's obviously something wrong here. And this is just traditional optics – hasn't radar made just a few advances during that time as well? And then you have infrared optics. And so on. And yet, the level of ambiguity of UFO images (whether moving or still) doesn't seem to have advanced much beyond, once again, the Loch Ness or Bigfoot stage. Are you really going to declare a national emergency based on images resembling first-generation arcade games? Hopefully not.


Then we have the “noise” factor when it comes to electronic systems. Yes, they are sensitive – almost too sensitive at times. They pick up everything, the way microphones used to do in movies before voice-over and Foley artists took over. Now, you might say, isn't static just the same as white noise – i.e., chaotic and incapable of generating anything resembling an actual image? Not necessarily. (I commented to someone recently that I can see stuff resembling UFO footage when I drive with a dirty windshield (especially at night).)


And what if... just what if somebody or something is “trolling” us and generating signals made to look like supersonic, ultra-agile UFOs when in reality it's coming out of some guy's garage in Lubbock, Texas? I mean, there are plenty of geeks out there with time on their hands – what could be more fun than coming up with something that will freak out the military? Not actual physical objects, but signals aimed at the electronics of military aircraft (or ships, in some cases)? Or -- any chance that the Russkies are back to their old tricks and just want to distract us from focusing on whatever they're up to in their own weapon development programs? Make us distrust our lyin' eyes and radar, in other words? And as far as our “system security” goes, well... if you can hack into a system in order to steal information, you can hack into the same system in order to generate fake information.


And now Congress, waking from its usual slumber, is demanding – OK, asking – OK, politely requesting – the intel community to tell them all it knows about UFOs. Riiiight. When's the last time the intel people told anyone in Congress all that it knows about anything? I mean, would you? Might as well relate your history of STDs to the town gossip. The intel people have been down this road before – they'll blow smoke up the appropriate butts, toss out a few bones, and we'll wind up with a bigger nothingburger than the Durham Report. And so it goes. “Nothing to see here, dumb asses – go back to your silly power games.” And the amazing thing is, everyone in the establishment will be satisfied. Another round in the endless game, now let's head for the nearest watering hole.


There are so many possibilities here, but the main point is that if the military, or anyone else, wants to convince anyone in the public, or in Congress, on this point they'd better come up with something better than a handful of glowing green Fritos floating around against a noisy black and green background – or a black jellybean dropping into the ocean. But this isn't going to happen, because – for whatever reason – those in charge prefer to keep things ambiguous and mysterious – interesting, a bit scary perhaps, but not enough to cause mass hysteria like Orson Welles' “War of the Worlds”. In this sense, it's like everything else in government – if you're being paid to solve a problem, the very last thing you want to do is actually solve it.


There are political games – and mind games as well – being played around this issue, but there's nothing really new about it and we don't seem to know any more than we did 70-plus years ago. Or if we do, no one can be bothered to tell us.


 

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Toward a Gender-Free Military


Maybe you can make some sense out of all this; I sure can’t. What I do know is that the military -- and the Army in particular -- has been walking a thin, wobbly, and vaporous line between “readiness” and social policy -- including gender issues -- since at least the late 1970s (just to show you how easy it is to solve a problem once you set your mind to it). At that time, in response to political pressure – which was, in turn, a response to the feminist and women’s rights movements (overlapping but not identical) – the Army gradually expanded the role of women from "combat service support" to "combat support" to combat, i.e. actually carrying a gun and being willing, able, and allowed to engage the enemy. And without detailing the myriad issues that came up in the process, I’ll mention a single issue, which was, if you will, the rock which the good ship Women in Combat inevitably ran into -- namely upper body strength. Try as they might, the Army just couldn’t do much about that issue beyond basic physical conditioning. (And don’t bother me about women boxers, wrestlers, and body builders -- #1, there aren’t enough of them to go around, and #2, how many of them are interested in joining the Army? And also, don’t bother me about the heroines in Quentin Tarantino films. That’s fiction. Say it with me -- fiction. OK?)


(And by the way, the upper body strength problem, as obvious as it might seem to the layman, is something the researchers and “medics” hesitated to bring up at first, due to the political atmosphere at the time. It was “close hold” – not to be published or, heaven forbid, briefed to the press. Eventually the Army had to, grudgingly, admit it was for real, and that it wasn't going away. We see the latest iteration of the overall problem in this article.)


So yes, there has been an ebb and flow of this issue for over 40 years now, and guess what, the human body -- of both the male and female varieties -- has not changed, morphed, or evolved in all that time, despite the best efforts of “science”, experts, political activists, politicians, Olympic coaches, Big Pharma, and anyone else with an interest in the matter. The pendulum has swung, basically, between combat readiness and all that it entails, and social change (either keeping up with it or being in the vanguard) -- usually depending on the political party of whoever is president at the time. The social change agenda never really goes away, but it occasionally takes a back seat to the outlandish idea of actually winning wars -- or at least being ready to. At other times, the senior military is required to, with one voice, preach the urgent necessity of social change (of whatever variety is in fashion at the moment), and anyone who dares speak up in favor of war fighting capability is instantly squelched (and relieved of duty if they persist).


So to return to the present iteration exemplified by this article (and I’ve long since lost track of the number of iterations over the decades), the Army is clearly in a new and more extreme dilemma than in the past. It now has to respond to a new gospel, promoted every minute of every hour by the liberal/progressive/”woke” community (you know, the people who are running the government now), namely that not only are there no significant differences between men and women, but that gender doesn’t even exist -- that it has no scientific basis, and that it’s no more than a “social construct” devised by men in order to keep women down and in their place.


But wait -- if gender doesn’t exist, then neither do “men” and “women” -- so who is it that is keeping whom down? It must be people who “identify” as men keeping people who “identify” as women down. But if so, where did these outlandish “identities” come from if there’s no basis for them in reality? Did millions of people all have the same dream? Or did they all drop bad acid?


So we see that the headlong rush to absurdity is already “mission accomplished”. But apparently the Army hasn’t thought these matters through as thoroughly as they should. So let’s, for now, stick with their frame of reference, which is that “men” and “women”, although they are fictional creatures, still have to be factored into policy considerations.


So what the Army seems to be saying, according to this article, is:


  1. Gender neutral” fitness tests are a good and necessary thing. BUT…

  2. Men and women (those words! Pass the smelling salts!) need separate ranking systems to account for basic biological differences (heresy!). But don't separate ranking systems cancel out gender neutrality? How can you have both?

  3. Equal opportunity is important, BUT…

  4. So is ability to meet combat requirements. And when these two values come into conflict – which they have done repeatedly over the years – it is typically “solved” on a political basis, i.e. one value is promoted and the other is forgotten – at least until the ruling party changes, or there is a Congressional investigation (spurred on by the media).

  5. Fitness of men and women will be measured on the same scale, BUT…

  6. Each sex (I guess they mean gender) will have its own tier. How this differs in any significant way from each sex having its own scale is beyond me.

  7. A “baseline standard” that applies to both men and women is needed, BUT…

  8. It should not force men and women to directly compete. So obviously, different baselines are needed, which means there is no single baseline, which means there is no baseline standard. BUT...

  9. Problem solved! A minimum score of 360 will apply to all genders (no matter how many official genders there are now or are in the planning stage). That sounds eminently fair. BUT…

  10. Biological reality (heresy!) kicks in and requires that a five-level system be brought into play. This “separates the top-performing women from the men”. How? This is where the discussion drifts off into La-La Land. What they may mean is that, even though 360 is the minimum fitness score for any gender, the assignment of levels will be based on a percentage within gender.

  11. So let’s see… 360 is the minimum, which applies to all. But there is a separate tier system for men vs. women, based on percentage? This is kind of what we used to call, in college, grading “on a curve”, which means that rather than absolute grades (A, B, C, etc.) based on the number of correct answers, you decide that a certain percentage of students are going to get an A, or a B, or whatever, no matter what. And as you might guess, the arguments as to the fairness of this have been going on for decades, if not lifetimes.

  12. But to return to La-La Land: If levels are defined by percentages, how can it be that “the respective percentages of male and female soldiers across the five levels could be significantly different in terms of actual fitness test scores.” In other words, the levels defined by percentages may turn out to have different percentages. Huh ??

  13. And yet… and yet… “men and women are technically scored the same”. And “it is still age- and gender-neutral”. (How did age get into it all of a sudden?)

  14. Oh, and then we have the sidebar item dealing with body fat and pregnancy. (Wait until they find out that men can get pregnant!)

  15. BUT... it turns out that none of this matters, because soldiers of the future will not be doing battle on a muddy, dusty battlefield or in a mosquito-laden swamp using hand-held weapons. Instead, they'll be sitting in air-conditioned bunkers operating robots by remote control. That's what it means when someone says “some so-called 'cyber warriors' may not necessarily need to meet the same requirements”... and “we're not really worried about their physical capabilities”... and “wars of the future are not going to be fought like wars of the past.” (That last statement is the ultimate truism. No war has ever been fought precisely the way prior wars were fought. There have been incremental advances in the technology of warfare throughout recorded history.)


So which is it? Is combat readiness about physical fitness or is it about “what's between their ears”? Can we relax about physical fitness because all the really important jobs in future conflicts will be done by people double-timing it on a keyboard? And for that matter, why can't the “cyber warriors” be morbidly obese, if all they are required to do in the way of physical exertion is sit in front of a screen all day?


So... if you're head's spinning about all of this, join the club. Frankly, I feel sorry for the military leadership at times like these, because they are answering to just too damn many people – a president, an administration, a secretary of defense, a secretary of the army, Congress, the media, the public, ordinary soldiers who never tire of complaining about things... and think, this is just part of their job (in most cases). They also have to think about little things like weapons procurement, logistics, training, strategy and tactics, regulations, inter-service rivalries... and, at the top level, politics and foreign relations. The list is pretty much endless. And this is all while, unlike other citizens, the military leadership is hesitant to come out and publicly opine that the people setting the ever-morphing and conflicting priorities are idiots and fools. This has to have a negative impact on their blood pressure, cholesterol levels, blood sugar, muscle tone, and what not. But hey, they volunteered for this – “You're in the Army now, you're not behind the plow”, etc. No one now in the military joined at the point of a gun (so to speak).


I imagine that there are plenty of military commanders who wake up in the middle of the night and think, “Of course men and women are different! Who are these maniacs who think they're the same – and who put them in charge of the government?” But then they reflect that if they go to work the next day and express this thought out loud to anyone, it's bye-bye military job, hello trailer park in Ozark, Alabama. (Or – maybe the ones who figured this out have already bailed and taken a job with a firmer grip on reality.)


And to call this particular dilemma intractable is hardly an exaggeration. It's been going on for decades now – let's say two decent military careers' worth of time – and it's no closer to being solved than it was back when hippies quit burning draft cards because the draft had been suspended. A cynic might say “If there's no solution, there's no problem” – true in one sense, but then why does it continue to be such an obsession, not only within military ranks but in Congress and the media (whenever it comes around in the endless whirlpool of Section B stories). So with or without a solution, the amount of sheer waste and stress cannot be dismissed, and continues to eat away at real readiness – and rest assured that many eyes around the world are watching, and in between chuckles are plotting ways to take advantage of our collective neuroses.


So anyway, here it is – and good luck making any sense of it:


PressReader.com - Your favorite newspapers and magazines.





Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Thinking About Open Borders

 
First let us define our terms.

1.  A “border” is a boundary -- a dividing point -- between… what?  States, countries, empires, kingdoms, tribes, clans… in short, between the eternal “us” and the equally-eternal “them”.  It can be a natural border like an ocean or sea, a river, a mountain range… or, on the other extreme, it can be a purely imaginary and arbitrary line -- and I would offer the way the colonial powers divvied up the Middle East and West Africa as prime examples.  Those lines were drawn for convenience and for administrative purposes as much as anything else, typically with little or no attention paid to the more traditional territories of the native tribes.  (In fact, it has been argued that, in some cases, borders of “new” nations were drawn in order to intentionally split single ethnic and religious groups into two or more parts, thus robbing them of cohesion and thus of political and economic power.)  Some of these lines are so arbitrary as to be, basically, meaningless -- a line extending off into the desert, turning into a dotted line and then disappearing altogether.  (How upsetting for the map buff with OCD!)

2.  What, then, is an “open border”?  Is it simply a border that is not closed, i.e. is not like the border between East and West Berlin during the Cold War?  That’s one possible definition, but it’s not particularly useful.  I think most people correctly think of an open border as one where anyone intending to cross it is not impeded by either the authorities of the place they are leaving or those of the place they are crossing into.  And by “impeded” I mean not only by direct intervention by border guards and the like, but by man-made barriers like walls, fences, mine fields, moats, barbed wire, and so on.  So in dealing with the present case -- our border with Mexico -- any border that one can cross, in many areas, by simply wading ankle-deep across a narrow river, or by climbing over a nonexistent fence, or going through a gap in an incomplete wall, is an open border.  Oh, but wait -- you might say -- what about all those who are met, encountered, or “apprehended”?  Can you say “catch and release”, class?  Or catch, keep in custody for a few days, then release?  Or catch, fly to some other part of the country, then release?  So yeah -- it might not feel like an open border right away to everyone who comes across, but if their chances of being released and allowed to go their own way are much greater than their chances of being held for any significant amount of time, or even returned to Mexico or their country of origin, then we have an open border, for all intents and purposes.  (And if you don’t believe me, believe President Biden, who started welcoming any and all comers into the U.S. with open arms when he was still a presidential candidate.) (And if you don’t believe him, then believe the thousands of migrants who are convinced, based on what they’ve been told or heard on TV or the Internet, that all they have to do in order to enter the U.S. is to show up at the border, preferably sporting a Biden T-shirt which puts them on the fast track to citizenship.)    

Discussion:  If you look at the world map these days, there are very few areas that are unaccounted for or “disputed”.  Every major war includes, as part of its follow-up, some sort of “claims” commission that sorts things out, almost invariably in favor of the winners.  But that usually does not mean that large numbers of people have to be forcibly evicted from one place and transplanted to some other place --- notable recent exceptions being the establishment of the State of Israel and the division of India.  And of course there are hard feelings all around, since it’s almost instinctive that anyone occupying a piece of land of whatever size -- including the most unproductive patch imaginable (I think of the rocky coast of southwestern Ireland, when the only crop that will reliably grow is gorse (think “kudzu“ except in Ireland)) -- considers it “theirs” by right (either because “we’ve always lived here”, or by right of conquest, or by having been granted the property by a benign conqueror -- or, in modern times, by treaty).

But as for borders per se, well… other than those of the natural kind, I don’t think people in ancient times, or mapmakers in Medieval times, spent a whole of time worrying about, or creating, precise artificial lines separating one group from another.  Most of the maps from back then will show names of empires, countries, and ethnic and racial groups without including lines in between.  A bit later on you can see empires, countries, tribes, etc. designated by different colored blobs, and there are almost always spaces in between -- and this is important!  Those in-between spaces have served throughout history as buffer zones… as a form of intentional ambiguity, if you will, in order to provide a bit of flexibility and avoid squabbles.  And those in-between spaces -- no man’s lands -- have a reputation, over the millennia, for being wild and dangerous -- places for robbers and brigands -- and the part of a given country that is close to these spaces is called the “frontier” -- still wild, and only a bit less dangerous.  (Note that the United States is exceptional in that its frontier moved continually from the establishment of the original thirteen colonies until the official “closing of the frontier”.  (That was the point at which the settlement from the East met the settlement from the West, in a kind of virtual golden-spike event.))

But a funny thing happened about the time “civilization” evolved, i.e. that was more than just scattered castles, forts, and strongholds with surrounding peasant villages, fields, and forests.  These clans and tribes started bumping up against one other on a regular basis, hence the need developed for better-defined boundaries… borders… lines.  I always think of Germany before the unification, with its scattering of kingdoms, dukedoms, and independent cities, with boundaries carefully demarcated so that everyone knew exactly where they lived and who their ruler was -- no more “wilderness” in other words (kind of like Washington, D.C., where there are no vacant lots because the land is too valuable, and no free parking).

The situation in the American colonies was a bit different.  If you look at maps of where Native American tribes originally lived (before many were displaced and forcibly moved) you, again, see either just names on a map with no lines, or a bunch of blobs.  But enter the land companies and surveyors, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and now each tribe has its very own square, or rectangle, or polygon of some sort (again, often ignoring natural topography) because, well… it’s about property, see?  And ownership.  And pioneer settlement, hunting lands, trapping lands, cattle land, farm land, fishing rights, and so on.  And in the case of the Indian reservations, they had multiple purposes:  (1) Get the Indians out of the way of the European settlers; (2) “Civilize” the Indian tribes by providing them their own territory and, hopefully, eliminating intertribal conflict (not to mention attacks on the settlers); and (3) Imposing administrative and legal controls.  

Now, some of these provisions were, clearly, expressions of the conqueror  vs. the conquered.  Some were about grabbing all of the better land and access to waterways.  Some were about safety (for the non-Indians).  And some were, very possibly, benign -- such as the establishment of European-style schools and local (tribal) governments.  (There’s a lot of revisionism going on right now with regard to the schools -- but that’s a topic for another day.)

Borders in our time are, to a greater extent than at any time in history, firmly established, with lines drawn to a degree of precision only made possible by GPS technology.  This has its advantages, no doubt… but it also means that adjoining countries, tribes, clans, ethnic groups, etc. have no more buffer zones -- they confront each other “toe to toe” on a daily basis, and the border becomes a kind of fetish, as witness the elaborate daily gate-closing ceremony on the India-Pakistan border.  There is no wiggle room -- again with the exception of those dotted lines in the desert.  (The few remaining nomadic tribes do, indeed, tend to inhabit these “dotted line” areas, and couldn't care less which “country“ they happen to be in at any given time.)  (Back in the 1960s the Bedouins could move freely back and forth between Egypt and Israel, unlike anyone else.)  But in general even the most remote areas, such as the western Himalayas, are claimed, square foot by square foot, by someone -- and usually by more than one someone (hence conflicts in places like Kashmir).

So we see that while the concept of borders is age-old in one sense, the way in which it’s expressed can be highly fluid -- or at least has been in the past.  There is nothing at all unusual about our border with Mexico, which is part natural (the Rio Grande) and part drawn lines.  What is unusual is that the border is marked by a hodgepodge of fences and incomplete walls.  You can hardly call it fortified, but it is guarded to some extent, at least… and in this sense it’s the exception rather than the rule, both historically and even in the present day.  

The first fortified border (as opposed to a fortified city) we know about was the Great Wall of China, the remains (some restored) of which can still be seen today.  But the golden age, if you will, of fortified borders has to be the period starting with World War I and extending up to the present day -- and we all know whose borders they were and are, namely those of totalitarian (fascist or communist) states.  These also have the interesting feature of being designed to keep people in, as opposed to out -- the latter a feature of our border with Mexico.

But what is the essence of borders?  What do they all have in common?  Again, it’s the age-old question of Us vs. Them.  But it’s not just Us, it’s our cities, towns, villages, farms, homes, families, resources of all sorts (forests, waterways, lakes, trade routes, and so on).  These are all things that are -- or have been until just recently -- considered worth defending, and if they are not defended, or if the defenses are inadequate, the nation or culture in question is likely to perish at the hands of an aggressor (even if the “aggressor” is no more than an overwhelmingly great number of the “tired, poor, huddled masses yearning to breathe free“ -- or to breathe at all).

But what do aggressors -- invaders -- even migrants -- want?  They want what they don’t have, or more of what they do have.  So there is an economic basis for the whole border concept -- and the greater the disparity between the invader and the invaded, the more likely the invasion is to take place, and the more difficult is it to turn back.  (I won’t go into other factors like invasion for the purpose of religious conversion, which motivated much of the Muslim conquest of North Africa and parts of the Middle East, the Balkans, and Spain.  In that case the motivation was to provide the opportunity and privilege of being converted to Islam -- not that other factors were ignored, of course.)  (And by the same token, aren’t there fringe benefits when we invade a country in order to “spread democracy” and liberate people from whatever is it they need to be liberated from?  And if there aren‘t, why do we bother (some cynic might say)?)

But to return to the usual case -- whether you’re talking about an armed invasion by a modern army or people wading across the Rio Grande, it’s always about getting what you want, which basically means taking it from someone else, i.e. the people who already live there.  This is obvious.  In the short run, it’s a zero-sum game, although in the long run… well, who knows?  What’s not so obvious is what I’ll call the equilibrium point.  Just as water seeks its own level, so does poverty -- by which I mean that the poor, needy, and oppressed go from their native land to somewhere where they won’t be as poor, needy, and oppressed -- or (important point) where they think this will be the case.  And of course, human nature being what it is, people tend to be overly hopeful and optimistic in these circumstances.  They come here seeking the Gold Mountain, and instead find new and different kinds of poverty and danger.  But at least it’s not as bad as what they left back home -- or they tell themselves that (cognitive dissonance kicks in) and decide to stay and hope for the best.  

Now, in this high-tech and electronically/digitally-saturated environment, we can assume that once someone manages to penetrate our fraying border defenses and establishes themselves somewhere, they waste no time getting back to the folks back home and providing a progress report.  We can assume that this happens on a regular basis -- and that, given that it does, whatever they tell the folks back home isn’t enough to keep more of those folks from setting out on the same journey.  The people coming across the border with Mexico today aren’t pioneers, in other words -- they’ve been paying close attention for months, or years, and have decided to try their luck.  They come in waves -- contingent on weather, levels of poverty or strife back home, and, naturally, evolving expectations as to their likelihood of success.  These people are not stupid; in fact, I suspect they are among the more clever, resourceful, and courageous members of their respective societies (being at poverty level doesn‘t reflect badly on their abilities, in other words).  And now they are encouraged by various facilitators (AKA cartels) as well as by various NGOs and our own government.  They know things have changed, but they can’t be sure if the change is permanent (not being privy to all of the political nuances in play).  So many of them may feel that it’s now or never -- and if the “now” part lasts for weeks, months, or years, so much the better.  

So what would the equilibrium point be?  It would be the point at which conditions here -- in their new environment -- have degraded to the level of the environment which they left, or, once again, they perceive it to be such.  So… does this mean that the United States has to look and feel like the Northern Triangle -- like El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala?  Well, yes -- not the entire U.S. of course, but certainly the areas where the migrants wind up.  The turning point will be the day when the newest migrant calls home and says, in effect, forget about it -- things are no better here than they are down there.  Save your strength (and your money) and stay put.

So at this point, poverty will have reached its own level and equilibrium will be achieved -- and not only that, but all of the migrant advocacy groups and open-borders promoters at all levels (including in the government) will, hopefully, admit that “fairness” has been achieved at long last -- that Americans are no longer being selfish, exclusionary, prejudiced, bigoted, racist, etc.  We welcomed the world with open arms and, guess what, the world showed up!  (Of course this assumes that open-borders advocates will be happy and satisfied when the equilibrium point is reached.  They won’t be, of course, because they’re never happy -- “happy” is not on the life menu for them.  They will turn on a dime and find something else to be indignant about.  Professional activists are who they are for a reason, and it typically has very little to do with the supposed victim groups whose welfare they express so much concern over.)   

But will that golden day ever arrive?  Because there are people who seriously want this -- and some of them serve in Congress, some in the current administration, and -- I’m betting -- countless in the Deep State.  And of course “fairness”, “justice”, and “equity” are not necessarily on everyone’s mind either -- there are economic and political angles as well (cheap labor, reliable voting blocs, etc.).  Not every one of our problems can be solved with open borders, but it’s a start.  

Now, there are, of course, various objections to all of this, although I doubt if most of the skeptics have carried the logic quite this far.  But even the most basic grasp of history and economics will tell you that migrations -- mass movements of people -- happen for a reason, and as long as there’s a reason migrations will happen, which is the same as saying that as long as there are inequalities among people, they will be motivated to improve their lot.  (When expressed this way it seems totally obvious, doesn’t it?)  The world is not going to be suddenly set in stone just because some people would like it that way; things change, they evolve, they morph -- and yet human nature remains the same.  And as I said, the energy… the power… behind any mass movement of humanity is the desire for something better, and the greater the contrast, or gulf, between what they have and what they see (or think) that others have, the more energy and determination they will possess, and the more likely they are to succeed.  And it turns out, again historically, that the energy and determination of invaders is often more than a match for the determination of those who want to fend them off.  Human waves have, time after time, overcome the best defenses and the most advanced weapons systems.     

What our response is, or should be, to all of this is the question -- and again, we have the “fairness and equity” contingent saying, basically, we should let anyone in who shows up, no questions asked -- and any concerns about sustainability, or the political, economic, and social impact, are just symptoms of racism and selfishness.  People who feel this way to some degree but who aren’t as vocal about it might feel some hesitation about going all the way to the logical conclusion of open borders, but then one has to ask, where do they want to draw the line?  Because the true believers in our midst will say that no line should be drawn, and that you’re just being selfish if you try.  

On the other side of the political spectrum are those who repeat, as a mantra, “A country with no border is not a country.”  And while this is not strictly true from a historical perspective, as we’ve seen, in these times it seems more clearly to be the case.  But then we run into a paradox, as follows:  Again, historically, the Us vs. Them confrontations were based on traditional sources of identity -- race, ethnic group, religion, language, tribe, clan, etc. -- all those things which used to distinguish one people from another, because they were based on easily observable reality and human nature (in individuals and in groups).  The problem we have in the U.S. is that, “E pluribus unum” or not, we have never been united, beyond a certain point, along any of those traditional lines -- the ones anthropologists are so fond of studying.  The rage for “diversity” ignores the fact that we’ve always been diverse… mixed… hybrid… a “nation of immigrants” who are not always all that anxious to jump into the great American melting pot.  Traditional sources of identity survive, but they survive for those who value them and work to maintain them.  For the great number of Americans who have been -- voluntarily, in most cases -- “deracinated”, they may possess remnants -- family, home, hearth -- but otherwise all of the usual connective tissue that has held human societies together for millennia has frayed, decayed, and disappeared.  What’s left, for anyone who even feels a need for them, is ideas -- the American Experiment, the founding fathers, the founding documents, the flag, the National Anthem, and so on -- but these are only so consoling if the basic, organic culture is gone (or if it was never firmly established to begin with).  People down through the ages have fared quite well without all of these ideational trappings; they had their myths, legends, rituals, customs, and cultural features like music, dance, art, clothing, and so on… but again, these were rooted in reality, i.e. in the sort of reality that human beings need and instinctively respond to.  Not ideas, not abstractions, and certainly not politics as the be-all and end-all, but organic reality and a sense of place -- of belonging.  This is what is sadly lacking in our society, and the irony is that these hordes of migrants showing up at our border may well have a greater sense of all these things than we do.  And therein lies their hope, perhaps.  

Another way of expressing this is that organic culture builds resistance.  It’s a natural fortification against alien influences, especially those that are bent on attacking traditional customs or ways of thinking, watering them down, declaring them “outmoded”, “reactionary”, “racist”, etc. -- and, in extreme cases making them illegal and subject to punishment.  Among the many battle fronts in the culture wars of our time is that between those who value tradition, however expressed, and the globalists, who, despite their prating on about “diversity”, actually have as their goal the elimination of all differences and distinctions, and, ultimately, a totalitarian state composed of a ruling elite and a vast, gray army of serfs with no identity and no hope.  It’s no surprise, then, that when the globalists lay an axe to the root of any cultural tree, they always begin with religion, and then work their way up to race, ethnic group, family, and language.  All of these must be eliminated -- i.e., the idea of them must be eliminated -- the idea of them having value and being a source of identity.  Among the final acts in this drama -- the cherry on the top of the cake, if you will -- is language, and we see at this moment how language is being distorted, turned upside down, and “cancelled” of all rational meaning.  Language is the basis of thought, after all -- and a people without a functioning, reliable language is rendered incapable of rational thought -- or of any thought at all.  Try defining a value, or a tradition, without using words -- sure, you can point to things, but that’s not the same as describing them, declaring them to be of value, and adopting them as a mark of one’s own identity.  

And what about these globalists, after all?  What about the moguls of Silicon Valley and the mainstream media talking heads?  What about the denizens of the boardrooms of large mutinational corporations?  Aren’t they human too?  Well yes, in the strictly biological sense.  But somewhere along the line they opted out of any sort of traditional markers of identity and decided to be self-made -- which means that their only thing of value is themselves, and this is almost always expressed as a lust for power -- not only power over the physical world but over other people.  The natural human longing for the spiritual has, in them, been distorted to the point where we can say that power is their religion, and there is no other.  But they are not satisfied with being self-contained in their bizarre world where everything is its own opposite.  Perhaps on some deep level they realize they are living the most profound lie of all, but rather than give it up they defend it by hunting down anything that might expose it -- that might shed light on what it really is and how little it amounts to.  This is why they are constantly at war, and this, of course is what the “culture wars” are all about.    

The globalists’ weakness is not that their power is not real -- it is very real.  But it’s parasitic.  It cannot stand on its own, but needs a host -- and that host is, simply, the vast array of humanity -- confused, discouraged, and powerless though they be -- that follow orders because they haven’t a better idea, and that live always with some degree of chronic fear.  And yet they are a resource -- they work the land, if you will, whereas the globalists work… what?  Paper, electrons, images, illusions, fantasies -- all aimed at creating and perpetuating fear, mollifying it to some extent, then creating more and even newer and novel species of fear, in an endless cycle.  So any resistance to the globalists, their march through the institutions, and their assault on culture and the eternal verities must be based on that very culture and on those eternal verities, because that’s where the real power of the people resides.  Individual rights, ambition, initiative, creativity, etc. are all fine things, and necessary -- but those will not overcome the tidal wave… the onslaught… from globalists and their programs and instruments.  Only re-unifying in a solid, organic way will work -- but do we have the strength, motivation, and insight to do this?  A few seem to, but the bulk of the citizenry at this point seem to have already given up, capitulated, and retreated -- thinking, wrongly, that there is some place to hide, whereas in fact there is none.    

Just remember, the globalists fear us more that we fear them.  They may threaten our livelihood, or our very lives, but we threaten their view of the world and of their place in it; we threaten their reality.  I always imagine them looking down upon the simple folk and feeling a pang of envy and regret -- like, that’s what I once had, or could have had, but I gave it up for the proverbial mess of pottage.  So they react with blind rage, because they don’t realize that it’s not too late to repent.  

So with regard to open borders -- there are more ways to be conquered than by sheer numbers.  A weak and frail culture is ripe for replacement with something more vigorous and firmly rooted.  When we see these migrants trekking up through Mexico, making their way across the Rio Grande, and dropping from exhaustion in squalid holding centers, we may in fact be seeing our future.  Their lot will, eventually, improve -- and the resultant leveling may not be to everyone’s taste, but it will occur; it has to.