16. BIDEN TAKES COMMAND
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| THE RUSH FOR THE AMERICAN BORDERS |
Not surprisingly, America is a very attractive
destination for those Central Americans – and a huge number of Haitians – wanting
to escape the poverty, crime, horrible hurricanes, and more recently the
Covid-19 pandemic. But is America itself
ready to accept a flood of such people, a flood that would certainly change
deeply the very social-cultural character of the nation?
Biden, in his
run for the presidency, made it very clear that he and the Democratic Party
were strongly in favor of opening its doors to just such a flood of people …
claiming humanitarian motives in doing so.
The Republicans, backed by a strong Trump resolve, were highly opposed …
advocating instead more walls and tighter restrictions designed to slow up and
possibly even halt an apparent flood.
And of course
this supposedly placed Biden and the Democrats on superior moral ground as the
more "humane" party … in comparison to the "inhumane"
nature of the Republican position. But
in fact, those that understood the politics behind both positions in this
debate also understood that the Democrats were looking forward to a grand
increase in their electoral support by bringing these immigrants into the
American political process – probably with quick amnesty for them as "illegals,"
followed up by an equally speedy naturalization process.
It is well
understood by both parties that these immigrants come from a culture that
promised welfare (socialism) in return for their support … and that these
immigrants, by political instinct, would certainly be receptive to the same
offering in their newly adopted homeland.
In short, they are most likely to vote Democrat if given the choice …
and both parties know this.
But one fact is inescapable, namely, that it is
the supposed humane character of Central American Socialism that is the reason
their economies failed, most cruelly in Honduras … but bad elsewhere in Central
America. And with this economic collapse
has gone the collapse of the moral foundations of these societies… as the
people scramble for whatever material support they can find, even if it comes
violently. Thus an exploding crime rate
has also accompanied this economic collapse in those countries.
| THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF THE AMERICAN VOTER |
Trump
even went on to claim that he had lost the vote in a number of states because
of the ease by which fraud was brought into the new voting dynamic ... although
he could offer no actual evidence for this claim. But it did raise the question: what can be done to preserve the integrity of
the vote?
Republicans
want the vote to be done the old way: at
a voting station, by a person on record as eligible to vote in that district,
and with proper identification, usually just a driver's license … although
identification cards are supposedly available everywhere for non-driving
adults. Democrats answer that such
restrictions are designed merely to discourage the nervous voter (supposedly a
Democratic Party voter) and thus should be disallowed by law, which the
Democrats are working on getting put through (again, principally by way of the
federal courts).
This
became such an emotional issue that even corporate America jumped in on it …
with the state of Georgia finding itself at the center of a deeply emotional
battle over its tightening the disciplines of voting in that state. Georgia's new standards were actually no more
restrictive than, say for instance, New Jersey's … except that New Jersey is
generally considered to be a reliably Democratic Party state, whatever the
disciplines, and Georgia is something of a critical swing state. Thus there was a call by Democrats to boycott
Coca-Cola and Delta Airlines, headquartered in Georgia … in order to bring
pressure to bear on Georgia to back down on its new identification requirements
for voting in that state. Likewise the
All-Star baseball games were pulled out of Georgia as punishment for the
state's new rulings … and American Airlines and Dell went on record in their
loud opposition to the Georgia voting issue.
Congress of course jumped into the issue with its "For the
People Act" (H.R.1), passed in the House along purely party lines, 220-210
… but held up in the Senate, not able to secure a majority there, The idea of this bill was to take away from
the states their constitutional right to determine their own voting procedures,
and give that right over to a federal commission … as if federal commissions
were never politically partisan! Also,
it eliminated all identity checks … making it possible for even illegal
immigrants to vote. It is easily
understandable therefore why the Democrats supported this measure and the
Republicans opposed it.
And ultimately, it would be yet another step in ending the checks
and balances system of the American Constitution, giving federal authorities in
Washington yet another major piece of power by which to govern the country.
MAKING WASHINGTON, D.C., A NEW "STATE"
"REFORMING" THE SUPREME COURT
THE DEBATE OVER HIGH-TECH'S CENSORING OF INTERNET COMMUNICATIONS
This in turn
raised some deeply serious questions. As
anyone should know, a person, group, society, or whatever, can easily find any
reason it wants – and justify it morally any way it wants – in order to
manipulate and control the public voice.
In short, these major sources of the public voice are completely free to
shape and control that voice any way they want.
But such unlimited power inevitably leads to self-justifying
tyranny. And for a free society such as
America has proudly seen itself to be (relatively so, anyway), such control
raises all kinds of questions … and fears.
And questions and fears can go in most any direction.
What can America do to keep the public conversation open – and
within bounds – and without the conversation referees (Facebook, etc.) deciding
which part of the conversation they are going to allow and which part are they
going to shut down?
This is only going to be an even more important matter in the
fast-developing world ahead of us. And
yet no one seems to have any good ideas on the matter. All that is heard is just more ideology,
supported by clever moral argument. But
it needs clarification and broad agreement in America … before such unashamedly
authoritarian powers as China and Russia take a larger hand in the world of
internet communication.
THE FEDERAL STATE'S GROWING SHARE OF THE AMERICAN ECONOMY
Also, there has been
much contention over the word "infrastructure," which Biden's new
programming was principally all about.
The Republicans tend to see government infrastructure in traditional terms: mostly just roads and bridges (that indeed do
need repair), which the Republicans are willing to support. But the Democrats see infrastructure in far
broader terms, everything from a government-supported change in American
lifestyles (carbon-free energy and a "greener" approach to domestic
development), education of the young, and increase in welfare support … the
latter at the time quite urgent because of the flood of immigrants coming to the country. In short,
"infrastructure"was/is about ideology and politics … and not just about
material development of the nation by the federal government – which itself had
only very limited constitutional support prior to Roosevelt's New Deal and
Johnson's Great Society.

Go on to the next section: America's Left-Right Split Deepens
Miles
H. Hodges