October 3, 2018
I found this letter to Americans
advising them to take the November vote seriously and to check out the
candidates to be voted for so that you get the right people. Here is the
letter.
Open letter to American voters: Think carefully about the serious choice
you will soon make
By J Brooks
Spector• 1 October 2018
United States President Donald
J. Trump speaks to supporters during a rally at the WesBanco Arena in Wheeling,
West Virginia, USA, 29 September 2018. EPA-EFE/DAVID MAXWELL Less
107
Reactions
Americans will soon be voting on the
House of Representatives and a third of the Senate. Their choices will
determine if Congress fulfills its constitutional mandate... And if the US
should continue to be lead by the Republicans.
My dear fellow Americans:
ADVERTISING
In the past several years I have
written the occasional open letter to leaders in South Africa of various
parties on important issues of public policy and — less frequently — to
American officials, such as to presidential adviser Ivanka Trump. But this time
around, I write to all of my fellow citizens.
As some readers know, after retiring as
an American diplomat serving in Africa and East and Southeast Asia over some
three decades, I now live rather permanently in South Africa. Nevertheless, I
remain an American citizen with an active, even obsessive, interest in what
happens in my country, and in observing the national temper from afar through
reading newspapers, popular publications and a variety of more specialized
periodicals, watching the newscasts and by staying in touch with a circle of
friends and relatives in the US.
Usually our writing tries to analyse an
issue such as the latest international trade proposal for an overseas audience.
But this time I want to look at the larger shape of American political life
through the lens of an imminent choice by the country’s elected representatives
as well as the broader population’s upcoming participation in the midterm
election. On that, I want to offer my “two cents” on what it all means for my
fellow Americans.
This matters now, of course, because
America faces a crucial, probably defining election in just a few weeks that
could shape the nature of America’s engagement with the rest of the world for
years to come. True, a midterm election is one in which the presidency will not
change hands. That can likely only come about via the general election in 2020
— unless an unexpected event such as a resignation, impeachment, or the use of
the disability clause of the 25th amendment to the country’s constitution
should occur. But depending on how much support or opposition a president has
in Congress will have a real impact on how a president can carry out his plans
unhindered or subject to more aggressive evaluation and review.
As a result, the issue before American
voters is the potential for a rebalancing of strength in the US Congress
between the two major parties. Or, in not doing so, and thus choosing “to go
with the horse that brung you”, as Americans used to say.
Moreover, the past several weeks have
given the world a vivid, even startling demonstration of the importance of the
choices that can be made in Congress (specifically, this time by the Senate) —
and thus the voters’ ultimate choices about the membership of that Congress
after 6 November. For as the millions of Americans who have been closely
following the debate know, the Senate Judiciary Committee has been considering
the nomination by Donald Trump of a current federal appellate judge, Brett
Kavanaugh, to become an associate justice of the Supreme Court, replacing the
retiring Anthony Kennedy.
During his years on the court, Kennedy
had often been the deciding vote in a body frequently split four-four between
liberal and conservative views. As a result, Kavanaugh’s nomination has been
widely seen as a way to craft a permanent conservative majority for a
generation — especially if Donald Trump eventually gets to fill Associate
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat before his time as president finally draws
to an end.
After Kavanaugh’s nomination was
announced, a number of women began to come forward, claiming Kavanaugh had
carried out sexual assaults in his high school and college years. Eventually,
the Senate committee was bulldozed into having one of Kavanaugh’s accusers
testify before the Judiciary Committee, live on international television,
followed by the nominee himself.
It became riveting, astonishing
television for millions of Americans who followed it. But I must tell you that
millions of foreigners were similarly transfixed by this broadcast as well.
While the open, public nature of this real political drama led some to applaud
this live autopsy of a man’s life and behavior, it has also led others to
question how in the world Americans could even be considering a man with
Kavanaugh’s obvious flaws in judicial (and personal) temperament, his sharply
phrased political values in support of a quasi-imperial presidency, and his
forcibly expressed political bias, to a lifetime appointment to our nation’s
highest court.
As things stand now, all Americans —
and the rest of the world — will be waiting impatiently for the results of a
new FBI review of Brett Kavanaugh’s past, presumably to be completed by the end
of this week. And depending on the results of that review, the full Senate will
take its final vote — yea or nay — on Kavanaugh. With the ultimate positions of
three Republican senators and several Democrats still in the balance, it is now
a real-life, but thoroughly made-for-television drama without a final act as of
yet. But it will have major consequences for American jurisprudence and
politics, either way.
And here is where the choices my fellow
Americans will make on 6 November will matter enormously.
A very brief review of America’s
constitutional history is important here. As we all learned in our American
history and civics courses in high school (unless like a certain Georgetown
Prep student, our minds were totally preoccupied by football, brewskis and
girls), way back in 1787, the failure of the Articles of Confederation had
become obvious to everyone in the newly independent nation.
As a result, men like Alexander Hamilton,
Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Ben Franklin and James Madison had come together
to build a more effective, more lasting, more supple government before the new
nation had fallen apart completely. These were men who had held responsible
jobs in their lives — commercial farming, business, publishing, the law (and
yes, some of them were slave holders too).
While they shared the prejudices of
their time, they were both careful thinkers and intensely practical men. But
they were not abstract, theoretical academics and philosophers. They saw the
crisis and sought a solution.
They carefully studied the eventually
unsuccessful experiences of most republics throughout history, from the fates
of the Roman Republic and Periclean Athens, to the more contemporary Venetian
and Dutch Republics. And from that review, they concluded, among other lessons,
that too much power in the hands of one part of a government or one office
almost inevitably brought down the entire structure or generated
system-destroying revolts. But too little in the way of effective government
was not much better. Division and a descent into chaos were no answers either.
Under persuasion from Madison, together
with several of the others, at a new constitutional convention, they contrived
a constitutional arrangement that deliberately designed a more powerful central
government. But it was also one where power was distributed between three
distinct branches of government and where many aspects of those powers were
shared as well.
The chief executive appointed federal
judges and senior officials, but the appointments of those same individuals had
to be confirmed by the Senate. The chief executive was required to see that the
nation’s laws were faithfully carried out, but where those same laws had to be
passed by both houses of Congress — including the government’s budgets. The
Founders were deeply fearful of an all-powerful, authoritarian ruler ruling by
decree and fiat and so they assumed Congress would debate all proposed laws
vigorously and fully before acceding to the wishes of a president.
Back when the Constitution was
initially proposed, and then adopted, the great divisions in American public
life — in a nation of fewer than five million people — were between the more
commercial centers of New England and the mid-Atlantic port cities versus the
Southern agricultural world and the newly opened up territories of the
then-West beyond the Appalachian Mountains. In fact, the current, familiar,
overarching division of American political life — political parties — did not
yet even exist. But fear of authoritarian rule ran deep and so the idea that
Congress represented the will of the voters and that it was the core body of
government was given tangible expression by the fact it was defined in the Constitution’s
Article I, rather than the chief executive.
And this is where the matter of the
nomination of Brett Kavanaugh and the election this November draw together. In
about five weeks’ time, you must make choices about who will represent you on
the national level, in accord with James Madison’s famous argument that there
would not be any need for government at all if all men were angels; but, sadly,
they are not.
Instead, the nomination of a rancorous,
vengeful, problematic nominee with an apparently troubling past like Brett
Kavanaugh helps make the case for a Congress that takes seriously its
responsibilities to weigh carefully any presidential appointments. But in the
same way, this national legislative body must also take on the role of serious
oversight of executive decisions, plans, programs — and, crucially — to
investigate potential criminal activity by officials, just as those founders
had envisaged Congress’s role over two centuries ago.
It cannot take on the supine role of
mindless political support of an equally troubling presidency — simply out of
party loyalty. What this means — in less than six weeks’ time — is that voters
must weigh the willingness of candidates to challenge the executive branch
whenever it becomes necessary — and to exert judgment and a sense of loyalty to
the nation writ large, rather than just to narrower, immediate partisan
interests.
This kind of choice is far beyond
mindless expressions of unswerving party loyalty or to the sub rosa appeals of
prejudice and “dog whistles”. The choices, district by district, all across the
nation, will be in your hands, come 6 November. Think carefully, research the
candidates and their ideas fully, and only then vote with a full knowledge of
the consequences if you take this responsibility too lightly.
With best regards and respect,
J. Brooks Spector
J Brooks Spector
Spector settled in Johannesburg after a career
as a US diplomat in Africa and East Asia. He has taught at the U. of the
Witwatersrand, been a consultant for an international NGO, run a famous
Johannesburg theatre and remains on its board, and been a commentator for South
African and international print/broadcast/online media, in addition to writing
for The Daily Maverick from day one. Post-retirement, Spector has also been a Bradlow
Fellow of the SA Institute of International Affairs and a Writing Fellow of the
University of Johannesburg’s Institute for Advanced Studies. Only half
humourously, he says he learned everything he needs to know about politics from
‘Casablanca.’ Maybe he's increasingly cynical about some things, but a late
Beethoven string quartet, John Coltrane’s music, and a dish of soto ayam (one
of Indonesia's great culinary discoveries) will bring him close to tears.
October 2, 2018.10.01
Today is the feast of St. Therese of Lisieux, the patron saint of the
parish we are trying to get built with a real church. I prayed to her today to
please lean on our municipality to hurry up and give the go ahead to our plans
to start building. They have already passed the plans but the bureaucracy is as
slow as molasses in winter.
But, I just want to make a
quick comment about the circus that is taking place in DC right now.
I am really tired of hearing about Ford and Kavanaugh’s testimonies.
Going all the way back to high school and college. I am glad that I was in the
seminary for high school because, otherwise, I am sure that I would have been
one of those who gave “grass” a try. Then 50 yrs. Later I would have to confess
that my ordination was invalid because I didn’t mention that before I was
ordained. Ha.
But, to be serious, there are
two things that I would like to put before you. If I were president, I think I
would like, for the sake of the American people, to choose the most neutral
person I could find for the job, to avoid, what we see here, the partisanship
that is destroying any semblance of common sense and ability to work together.
That would be number one.
As for Kavanaugh being the
right choice, one of the reasons I would hesitate is referring to his outburst
in his hearing when he accused to Democrats of purposely trying to destroy him.
He has always been a Republican, and showed his partiality to the Republican
party by his outburst, which, to me, foreshadows how he could easily make
decisions that favour his party rather than decisions that are for the common
good of the Americans as a whole. In other words, he is far from the neutral
person, I think, should be chosen for this weighty job. It is my bed time now
so I will close here and see you another time. We also have our problems here
with divisions in the government and in the ruling party, the ANC, which is no
longer the ANC that I was chaplain of when we were in exile in Zimbabwe and
Zambia. Good night. Cas.
Sept. 27, 2018
I am tired of hearing Nikki
Haley at the UN castigating Iran for its support of “terrorism” all over. What
hypocricy. Here are a few things you and she can think about in that regard.
No comments:
Post a Comment