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We must take a serious look at our laws and how they are enforced

We must take a serious look at our laws and how they are enforced


Most people are for law and order, and most obey the laws that keep society functioning. And most have great respect for the men and women who have the sometimes-dangerous job of enforcing those laws.

That said, some laws are just plain dumb and should be done away with, and what is more important, there are so many laws, rules and regulations today that no one can know all the decrees from the federal, state and local governments that affect him or her, and therefore it is impossible to obey them all. This over-regulated environment puts each of us in the position of likely being in violation of one or more of them at any given moment.

What's worse than so many decrees from so many sources, however, is what seems to be a growing tendency of law enforcement agencies at all levels to imagine that even tiny infractions warrant the most dramatic responses.

Case in point: After making a purchase at a Charlottesville, Va. grocery store one night, a 20-year-old University of Virginia student and two roommates were approached in their car by a group of six men and one woman in street clothes. "They were showing unidentifiable badges after they approached us, but we became frightened, as they were not in anything close to a uniform," she recalled in a written account of the incident.

Police say one of the group jumped on the hood of her car. The girl said one drew a gun, and they tried to break out car windows. Unsure who they were, the girl tried to flee the dark parking lot and called 911. Given the circumstances and stories of people being assaulted by phony police officers, who could blame her?

It turned out to be a squad of plainclothes state Alcoholic Beverage Control officers who suspected the girl had purchased beer in the store – she hadn’t – and was under-age. She spent the night in jail as a result.

Question: Who at the ABC thought this procedure actually made sense? Is it reasonable for a squad of plainclothes agents to approach three female college students in a dark parking lot, fail to adequately identify themselves, point a gun at them, jump on their car and try to break out the windows because they think one of them had bought beer that she might not be old enough to purchase?

Prosecutors dropped charges against the young woman, describing her as having panicked at the sight of plainclothes agents who approached her and her roommates.

Case 2: When the Leander, Texas police wanted to serve a warrant on Bradly Simpson, they sent officers to his home. When no one responded to the knock on the front door, a couple of officers walked around the side of the house toward the back yard whereupon they saw two German Shepards coming toward them. One officer pulled his gun and fired three shots. The police said the dog was growling and aggressively coming at them. Fortunately, the officer’s aim was not good and only one of the dogs was hit, but only wounded.

After that spectacle, the police were unable to serve the warrant because they were at the wrong address, and in the wrong neighborhood. Worse than that, not far from where the dog was shot the home owners’ terminally-ill six year-old grandchild was playing.

Worse, yet, the home owners said neither dog was aggressive, that they were merely curious about who was visiting their home, and had never behaved the way the police claimed. And, as it turns out, the lady of the house is a professional dog trainer, and therefore knows about dog behavior, and furthermore noted that there are routinely customers visiting her home, so strangers don’t spook her dogs.

And what heinous crime prompted the police to go to Mr. Simpson’s home to serve the warrant? He had an expired vehicle registration.

Leander police officials say what happened was "an unfortunate accident." Wrong: What happened is that the police screwed up.

The number of rogue law enforcement personnel that intentionally abuse their authority and position is surely very small. Nevertheless, instances of over-aggressive law enforcement action and plain dumb mistakes like these are indefensible and intolerable, and there appears to be a growing attitude toward over-aggressive behavior.  

To maintain the public trust and respect government and law enforcement are going to have to stop doing stupid and dangerous things like these examples, and even worse incidents that have caused serious injury and even death for innocent citizens.

Solutions? Do we really need so many law enforcement officers that seven of them can spend nights sitting around in one store parking lot waiting to catch an under-age person buying beer? Does an expired registration really justify armed police visiting the vehicle owner’s home?

What about accountability? Officials that exercise bad judgment or act rashly must be disciplined, encouraging them to carefully consider how to properly and safely do their jobs, and also demonstrating that public officials really take seriously their duty to adequately serve the people they work for.

Something must be done, and the sooner, the better.


The Road Not Taken


Click to enlarge.

The Road Not Taken

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less travelled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Source Data:
St. Louis Fed: Custom Chart
The Road Not Taken, by Robert Frost (1916)

Missile Parts Confiscated From North Korean Ship In Panama

North Korean ship had large containers of missile parts and was trying to smuggle the parts through the Panama Canal.

By H. Nelson Goodson
July 16, 2013

Panama - On Friday, Panama officials confiscated containers of missile parts from a North Korean ship trying to go through the Panama Canal. The ship had left Cuba and authorities in Panama believed it was attempting to smuggle drugs after they noticed that the ship captain became angry and the crew rioted.
The ship was taken to an inspection section in the canal where officials discovered the missile parts behind a sugar cargo. The ship captain tried to commit suicide and the crew is being held in custody.
On Monday, Ricardo Martinelli, President of Panama posted several photos of the missile containers on his Twitter account and announced that the military parts were found inside the cargo ship. It's illegal to try and smuggle missile parts through the Panama Canal.
Martinelli says, drug enforcement officials had spotted the ship after it left Cuba and supected it was carrying drugs. No drugs were found in the ship.

Trayvon Martin Peaceful Marchers Accused L.A. Police Of Brutality

July 16, 2013

Los Angeles, CA (HNNUSA) - L.A. Police beat and shoot rubber bullets at unarmed Trayvon Martin marchers on July 14, 2013. Police in L.A. have a history of brutality against Blacks and Latinos.
Police were trying to breakup an unlawful gathering and march. Video link at  http://bit.ly/147Spnj

Zimmerman Free Because Jury Understood "The Fear" ... J. D. Longstreet

Zimmerman Free Because Jury Understood "The Fear"   ...   J. D. Longstreet
Zimmerman Free Because Jury Understood "The Fear"
A Commentary by J. D. Longstreet

*****************

I was walking to my car in the darkened parking lot of one of America's Big Box stores when I suddenly realized why the jury found George Zimmerman not guilty. Fear.

No.  I mean REAL FEAR.  The kind of fear ingrained in ones bones.  The kind of fear that has been with us so long we no longer know we are even a host for it.

During the days of slavery in America, the slave owners lived with this same fear.  Once slavery was rendered illegal in America then the entire country fell victim to the same raw fear.

Some 700,000 Americans died in a civil war fought in the name of that fear, if you believe accepted history.  I don't.  But that's a different story for a different article, on a different day.

All the American Civil War proved, if it proved anything at all, is that -- you cannot GIVE a people freedom.  It has no value as a gift.  It is not cherished because it was not earned. 

One hundred and fifty years down the road from that war and the descendents of those freed slaves are little better off than they were when they trailed behind Sherman's army begging for morsels of food as Sherman smashed and burned his way through the southern states.  The mold for the next century and a half was set at that moment.

Nothing much has changed since.  The only thing of substance that HAS changed is that now, rather than being thankful for freedom, the descendents of those freed slaves, despise white Americans for, as I believe THEY see it, FORCING them to feel beholden to white America.

Understand:  There will NEVER be an open and honest debate in America about black and white racism.  NEVER.  Neither side can handle the truth.  Neither side will face the truth -- and neither side wants the debate. 

White America is fed up. We long since gave up the notion that the black community wanted equality and justice.  White America is now convinced that black America wants nothing less than to punish white Americans for something for which they (Today's white Americans) bear no guilt. 
        
White America has shut its ears.  We are tired of the nagging, the bitching and moaning, the weeping and wailing, the refusal to take personal responsibility, the continuous demands that America owes them something, hell, EVERYTHING,  the continuous complaining, and repeated threats, the unruly, uncivilized, conduct of a people who insist on remaining apart, even to hyphenating the name of their race to accentuate and perpetuate their "apartness."

One hundred and fifty years has been squandered.  It is gone.  A century and a half just tossed aside while the remainder of the country scratched and clawed its way to, at least, some level of success.

In the middle of the 20th century America tried again to jump start the black community with every kind of social program and entitlement program it could afford -- and a few it couldn't -- to, hopefully, get our black brethren and sisteren into the mix so that they, too, might become upwardly mobile.  It didn't work.  It was not enough, it STILL is not enough --  and now we are convinced it will never BE enough.
The expression:  "riding a good horse into the ground" seems apprapo to this situation.  But this horse is about ready to throw its rider.

That fear I mentioned at the beginning of this commentary is what was. long ago, thought of as the fear of a slave uprising.  These days we call it by different names: riots, race riots, civil disobedience, mob violence, etc.  It amounts to the same thing.   It is a deep seated fear that should such an "uprising"  occur,  it will be seem, by both sides as an opportunity, and an excuse, to take out their frustrations on the other side while reducing the population of each side by generous numbers.

Police will be quickly overwhelmed.

But that is only a part of the underlying fear.  The remainder is that once the blood lust is up there will be nationwide genocide.

Now, I know I am going be be vilified for having the temerity to actually make public the thoughts of millions of Americans today.  There's not much tolerance for truth these days.

The rage on both sides of the racial divide is bubbling just below the surface and a small prick can, and most likely will, release the toxins of hate an anger into our national atmosphere.

I think the members of the jury in the Zimmerman trial understood WHY Zimmerman was suspicious of a young black man, wearing a hoodie, and strolling the avenues of a residential community late at night, a community that had suffered a number of burglaries and break-ins in the recent past committed by young black men.  Anyone NOT suspicious would, of necessity, have to be mentally detached from reality.

Consider this from Bernie Goldberg: " ... but he was looked upon with suspicion because, as painful as it is to acknowledge, he looked like too many other black kids in hoodies who do bad things.  Black people know this better than anyone else. They’re the victims of most black crime. Remember what Jesse Jackson said several years back.  “There is nothing more painful to me at this stage in my life than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about robbery. Then look around and see somebody white and feel relieved.” Does that make the Reverend Jackson a racist – or a realist?"  SOURCE:   http://www.bernardgoldberg.com/zimmerman-is-not-guilty-what-about-the-media/?utm_source=BernardGoldberg.com+Newsletter&utm_campaign=fc74eee89b

I think the jury may have felt,  as did so many,  the Zimmerman trial was a "show trial" designed as an attempt to placate the black community into not burning down the city.

I suspect that those women had, on occasion, seen young black men strolling aimlessly through their communities and hastened to check the locks on their doors and windows and clasp their phones in fear moistened hands waiting to dial 911 at the first sound.   How many people living in today's cities and urban centers have not felt this fear in recent years? 

Most of us today live behind closed and locked doors in our homes, even though we know, deep down, that those locks provide no real deterrent to those set upon smashing their way into our place of refuge and taking everything we have -- including our lives and the lives of our loved ones -- without a second thought.

I believe all this was coursing through the mental process of those jurors as they decided the fate of Mr. Zimmerman.

We may also find that the "Neighborhood Watch" program is ended.  Who, in their right mind, will want to subject themselves, and their families and loved ones. to the denigration Mr.Zimmerman and his family have suffered for some eighteen months -- and -- the probability of living under a death threat for the remainder of their lives as Mr. Zimmerman is sure to do?

It struck me recently, that America is beginning to look more and more like South Africa. Consider this:  "In my opinion,America’s future will not resemble its past, but will look more like today’s South Africa. As the number of whites declines, loss of power will follow, leading to aggressive legislation pushing whites out of jobs and most positions of power.  Many whites will emigrate or move to the remaining red states, just as South Africa’s whites have emigrated since 1994. But ultimately there will be no place to go, as the global demographic decline of whites means that even European countries suffer the same fate of dispossession." SOURCE:  http://www.amren.com/opinion/2012/11/will-the-us-follow-south-africa-down-the-path-of-white-decline/

The article continues:  "... The United States is such a military and economic power that the battle now taking shape within its borders could well determine the fate of the West. ... " SOURCE:  http://www.amren.com/opinion/2012/11/will-the-us-follow-south-africa-down-the-path-of-white-decline/

So -- here we go again, lurching from one crisis to another as we wait for the federal government to find some excuse, any excuse, to inject itself into this mess making it ten times worse. 

OK.  So we have touched on some things that are simply not talked about in public by polite society today.  But being polite is getting us steamrolled!   At some point one must drop the socially accepted facade and defend one's self -- or -- face a tragic end.

“The moment we begin to fear the opinions of others and hesitate to tell the truth that is in us, and from motives of policy are silent when we should speak, the divine floods of light and life no longer flow into our souls.” ― Elizabeth Cady Stanton

I think Ms. Stanton had it about right. 

© J. D. Longstreet

The Softer Side of Department Store Sales


Click to enlarge.

As disturbing as that chart looks for owners of department store stock, I have something even more disturbing to point out. It's not even adjusted for inflation! Am I done disturbing you yet? Not even close. It's going down as the population grows! Here's a crazy thought to maximize the discomfort. Let's chart where we are relative to that long-term trend in red.


Click to enlarge.

Hey, that looks an awful lot like I'm charting business cycles. We're more than 2% below the declining trend again (just like we were in 2002 and 2008). Third time's the charm!

I do have some words of encouragement for those who believe that the economy is virtually guaranteed to accelerate to the upside soon though. Good luck on that theory! Nothing is impossible if we all set our minds to it (and nobody panics at the first sign of things becoming unglued again)!

I'm known for my undying optimism you know, and/or my sarcasm. Mostly my sarcasm I guess. ;)

Have I mentioned lately that I have no desire to embrace "risk on" assets? Seriously. Sigh.

This is not investment advice.

See Also:
Third Time's the Charm (Musical Tribute)

Source Data:
U.S. Census: Monthly & Annual Retail Trade

Zeta 40 Arrested By Mexican Marines Near Nuevo Laredo

Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, Abdón Federico Rodríguez García and Ernesto Reyes García

Photos: Semar

Mexican Marines captured el Zeta 40 on Monday during an operation to bust the Zeta drug cartel in Nuevo Laredo.

By H. Nelson Goodson
July 15, 2013

Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico - On Monday, the Mexican Secretary of Governence (Segob) and Marines (Semar) announced and confirmed that Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, 42, aka, "El Zeta 40" had been taken into custody in the early hours of the day by Mexican Marines. The Marines were conducting operation "Surprised" when they encountered Treviño Morales and arrested him. Treviño Morales is the leader of the Zeta cartel.
Treviño Morales had seven warrants for multiple homicides, including the murders of 265 victims including South and Central American undocumented immigrants in San Fernando, torture, kidnappings, having illegal weapons, organized crime, drug trafficking and laundering money. He was taken into custody around 4:00 a.m. in the municipality of Anáhuac between the state borders of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas, according to SEIDO.
Along with Treviño Morales, two other suspects were also taken into custody. They were identified as Abdón Federico Rodríguez García, 29, and Ernesto Reyes García, 38, one was the Zeta accountant and the other a body guard. At least $2M in cash and several weapons were conficated along with a truck the suspects were travelling in, according to Semar.
So far, 37 Zeta suspects have been implicated and arrested in the 265 mass murders, including 16 municipal police officers from San Fernando. Some of the victims were identified as Elvis Martinez, 33, Gonzalo García Casanova from the state of Matamoros and Feliciano Tagal Ovalle, 44, of Guatemala. The rest of the bodies are considered to be Mexican nationals. Authorities in 2010 identified 40 victims of the 72 bodies undocumented immigrants found in San Fernando in August from ID documentation the victims were carrying. The PGR confirmed that 13 were from El Salvador, 15 from Honduras, 5 from Guatemala, 6 from Ecuador and 1 from Brazil.
Rodrigo Archundia, spokesperson for the Mexican federal Attorney's General Agency of Organized Crime and Delinquency Investigations (SEIDO) said, Treviño Morales had no drugs on him when he was taken into custody. Treviño Morales was immediately transported from Nuevo Laredo to Mexico's Siedo installations after it was confirmed that they had El Zeta 40 for a presentation later to media outlets, according to Archundia.
A mugshot of Treviño Morales that was released showed signs of being beaten.
The U.S. government had offered a $5M dollar reward and the Mexican government had also offered a $2M dollar reward for any information leading to Treviño Morales' capture.
Treviño Morales took over the Zeta Mexican cartel and drug operation after Heriberto Lazcano, aka, "El Lazca" was killed.
The Mexican Attorney General's Office (PGR) wanted Treviño Morales for ordering Zeta members to burn the Casino Royale in Monterrey killing 52 victims on August 25, 2011 after the casino owner failed to pay extortion money to the Zetas. He was also the mastermind for the murder of 43 prisoners and the escape of 37 others from a prison in Apodaca.
Treviño Morales also ordered the murder of José Eduardo Moriera, the son of the former Governor of Coahuila Humberto Moreira, according to the PGR.
He is also wanted in Texas for a double homicide in 2006. Treviño Morales was born in Nuevo Laredo and later grew up in Dallas, Texas where he joined the Tejas gang in 1999, but later returned to Mexico. 
He joined the Zetas and then Lazca and Treviño Morales decided to break away from the Gulf Cartel and form the Zeta Cartel. The Zetas were the armed enforcers for the Gulf Cartel. After Osiel Cárdenas Guillén the leader of the Gulf Cartel was taken into custody in 2007 and then extradited to the U.S., convicted and sentenced to 25 years, the Zetas became independent. They made a pact with Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman Loera, the Sinaloa Cartel druglord that sparked the bloodiest cartel drug wars in Mexico.
In May, José Treviño Morales, the brother of El Zeta 40 was convicted in Texas for money laundering, running a 400 horse breeding ranch that owned several championship race horses. José was convicted for laundering and spending at least $16M from Zeta proceeds within 30 months to buy, train and race horses. The U.S. government auctioned the horses netting the government at least $9M.
José's wife and daughter pleaded guilty to lesser charges.


Bodies of 72 illegal Latin Americans from Ecuador, Salvador, Honduras and Brazil were found inside a Zeta ranch warehouse by Mexican Marines after one of two survivors that escaped notified Mexican authorities of the massacre in late August 2010. Luis Freddy Lara Pomavilla, 18, from Ecuador had escaped from a nearby Zeta Cartel occupied ranch in San Fernando and made his way to a military outpost to seek help and authorities went back to the Zeta ranch where Pomavilla had escaped.

On the Zimmerman Trial amd Outcome...

by: Les Carpenter
Rational Nation USA
Liberty -vs- Tyranny



Now that the second degree murder trial of George Zimmerman is over, with the jury's proper verdict of "not guilty", the nation begins the process of sorting out what it all means. As well as how the nation should move forward, if it moves at all.

View the following CNN video with Van Jones and Newt Gingrich... then, you be the judge. If reading body language helps pay close attention, it might aid you in making up your mind.



Now, some takes from your's truly...

This case is not about race. It is about a very stupid individual that acted stupidly in ignoring the police dispatcher's instructions on that fateful night.

The DA, as well as the prosecuting team botched both the indictment and the prosecution of the indictment. Place the responsibility where it belongs rather than screaming racism.

Bottom line, Zimmerman walked because an inept DA AMD prosecutors. It was not a case of second degree murder. Manslaughter or negligent homicide yes. And, that is how the state should have prosecuted the case.

Take 2 - The claim of racism has become so commonplace it clouds the ability to look beyond to find the truth.

Take 3 - I'm getting the feeling this whole affair might just have been planed.

1) DA brings wrong charges...
2) Prosecution could not make the case to get a conviction(intentionally?)...

3)In jumps DoD where it left off...
4) Federal civil rights violations charged...
5) Family brings wrongful death suit...

A repeat of the OJ fiasco... and both Holder and the President get some positive publicity.

Just sayin...

Really, Zimmerman should be made to pay some price for his abject stupidity (which by the way in and of itself is not a crime) that resulted in the untimely and unnecessary death of an innocent young man (not a child).

I'm not an attorney or a judge but I think 12 to 20 might be reasonable.

Stand your ground works when you have NO other alternative. Zimmerman had alternatives he CHOSE not to take.

Take 4 - Parents of any young man (or children as well given the drive by shootings and all in neighborhoods) should be concerned that things like this happen.

This is an issue of individual lack of judgement in Zimmerman's case as well as a systemic (cultural) issue.

If reason can prevail (on both sides) there is a chance the systemic (cultural) issues can be resolved.

The individual lack of judgement and respect for the rights of others will always exist. It is how we deal with these that determines who we are as a people.

Calm, following a storm almost always leads to the most appropriate implementation of safeguards.

There you have it. The takes by Van Jones, Newt Gingrich, and your's truly. What is important is your take.

What say you?

Via: Memeorandum

best of pinterest - curb appeal

Hey sunshine! Did you have a good weekend? Spend anytime on Pinterest? I did (follow me here) and I actually had an occasion to search for something on one of my boards. It got me thinking - I pin like a mad woman, but how often do I ever really go back and look thru what I've pinned?

Not often enough is the answer. Why am I pinning all of these wonderful images if not to use them for inspiration/daydreaming.

So I've decided I'm going to use Pinterest to create my dream house and today I'm starting with the outside.

Something a bit farmhouse like is striking my fancy.


Or maybe cedar shake. Either way, I want lots of windows and a nice big front porch.


 Of course this frankenstein house is on a grand lot with a long winding path,



which takes you to a front door with some major presence




and window boxes everywhere.


There is a courtyard in the back with a lovely pool


surrounded by perfectly manicured gardens that my tan house boy CoCo maintains.


Beyond will be an herb garden that would make Ina proud


and more hydrangeas that I can count.


There also needs to be a gate somewhere



And a carriage house/garage, for CoCo's apartment of course.



What about you? What would your Pinterest dream house look like?

the MAXI dress











                                                 Last week I wore one of my favorite maxi dresses, this printed silk Harlyn beauty. 
                                                                 Maxi dress= Maxim effect+ Maxim comfort at the beach!






                                                                  Dress: Harlyn, thanks to Caro Marketing/ Here 
                                                                  Sandals: Banana Republic/ similar Here , Here and Here  
                                                                  Cuff bracelet: vintage/ option Here 
                                                                  Sunglasses: Ralph Lauren/ option Here and Here 



                                                                                 

Third Time's the Charm (Musical Tribute)


Click to enlarge.

As I look at the chart, I can't help but ask myself three questions.

1. Has the Fed permanently put an end to recessions?
2. What are the odds that the economy will soon accelerate to the upside from here?
3. Is this really the best time in all of recorded history to put new money to work in the stock market?

If you've been reading my blog, then you can probably guess my answers.

For those just tuning in, this is actually an update to a chart that I created back in March of 2012. Unfortunately, we're pretty much right on schedule. Check out the link.

I do not believe that retail sales will hit 72% of wages during this business cycle. That's just a guess though. I suppose it could happen. What is more important to me is how low this percentage goes once the peak is in.



Retail sales for June will be released a few short hours from now. I'm hardly sitting on pins and needles anxiously awaiting the report though. Regardless of what the numbers show, one month does not make a trend. One data point will not dramatically impact what the chart in this post is trying to say.

Source Data:
St. Louis Fed: Custom Chart

Traitor or Patriot ... J. D. Longstreet

Traitor or Patriot   ...   J. D. Longstreet
Traitor or Patriot
A Commentary by J. D. Longstreet

***************

Whether Edward Snowden is a traitor or a patriot will never have a definitive answer.  At least -- that is my opinion.

No matter what happens from here on in, some will declare him a traitor and others a patriot.  It is the way of things.

I found it a bit disconcerting, to say the least, that he was supposedly laying bare secrets many of us had known from as far back as around 2006.  Heck, I thought everyone already knew the NSA was grabbing and storing all that data on us.  I just assumed they were filing every little jot and tittle of my e-mails away in some NSA dungeon somewhere for safe keeping in case I should ever get out of hand, so to speak.

Today, Snowden has set the world on fire spilling non-secret secrets.  How is that possible?  It just seems strange to me.

Is Snowden a spy?  I don’t think so.  I have no more information than anyone else living here in my swamp, but the feeling I have is that IF he is a spy, then he would be an “accidental spy” meaning that I don’t think he began by intending to spy on his country for a foreign power. That would make no difference in a court of law – nor should it.

As you can clearly see, I am torn. I am grateful that the curtain has been drawn back and now we can know, for sure, that our government IS spying on us. I am not happy about he manner in which that was achieved. 

In my family a tattletale was frowned upon.  I mean -- SERIOUSLY! It was considered dishonorable.  It was considered so bad that if myself, or one of my siblings, told on the other, the one telling to the parent was the sibling punished.  It was considered THAT dishonorable.

A whistle-blower IS a tattletale.

Then, too, I am concerned that a man of Mr. Snowden’s youth, education, and worldly experience could get so close to official secrets of the nation.  Seems to me that that, in itself, is a threat to national security. How did that happen?  Maybe there is something to the books we’ve read, and the movies we have seen, in which the government hires overly adventurous computer experts and hackers to work for various clandestine agencies of the government -- or go to jail. Maybe that’s the over-reaching of my overactive imagination, but it DOES make one wonder.

Ofttimes one can get a measure of the accuracy of a "whistle-blowers" report by the effort put forth by the agency having the light shone upon them to diminish the person blowing the whistle. There DOES seem to be a discernible effort by the US to do just that.  That, too, gives me pause and causes me to wonder.

Mr. Snowden denies being a spy for China. But it is not quite clear why, exactly, he fled to Hong Kong, of all places, and chose to surface there.  Hong Kong, does, in fact, belong to China, once again, after the British gave it back a few years ago.

You know, there is a chance that Mr. Snowden is everything he says he is.  It is entirely possible that he is motivated by love of country. Multiculturalism has so infected us now that we have difficulty recognizing real patriotism when it smacks us right between the eyes. Even my words here are strewn with doubt.

Whatever the final outcome of all this, methinks it would be a grand idea to have a thorough investigation of all our national security agencies to determine if they are spying ONLY on those they are legally allowed to spy upon, and, we need to look carefully at the thousands of government "contractors" working for those agencies to learn how they get to be government contractors in the first place.  How, and to what degree, are they vetted? What are the educational requirements and the work experience required for employment as a government contractor in ANY of the US national security agencies?

And finally we, the American people, need to lean on Congress and tell them, in no uncertain terms, that we do not approve of the spying on US citizens in any program such as that called "Prism" or any other such program that eavesdrops on the lives of American citizens.  Let them know that we take the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution very seriously and we expect the government to adhere to it one hundred percent. 

In the end, it may turn out that whether Mr. Snowden is a traitor or a patriot will make no difference and, in fact be of little importance.  If nothing else, his actions have brought all this out into the light of day and ignited a national and an international conversation about governments spying on their own citizens. There can be no doubt this confab was way overdue, especially in the US.

I'd like to see, although I don't expect it, the "Prism" program shut down and the huge data storage center in Utah shut down and padlocked or even sold to a private company in any kind of business except the intelligence business. I'd also like to see the Patriot Act repealed as well as the NDAA, which establishes funding levels for the various agencies in charge of our national defense.

There MUST be a better way!  Surely we have learned people at the highest levels of our government who can formulate a superior method of gathering intelligence and paying for the expense involved.

Most importantly, the US government must recognize that it cannot continue to violate the constitutional rights of its citizens.  There are consequences to both the government and its citizens for the government's continued usurpation of powers.

It must stop -- and it WILL -- one way or another.

© J. D. Longstreet 

Zimmerman Acquittal Of Martin's Death Leads To USDOJ Civil Rights Violation Inquiry

George Zimmerman

Department of Justice reopens its investigation to determine whether Zimmerman violated Martin's civil rights by killing him during confrontation in 2012. 

By H. Nelson Goodson
July 14, 2013

Sanford, Florida - On Saturday, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) confirmed that it has reopen its investigation and is reviewing the Trayvon Martin, 17, murder case, which George Zimmerman, 29, was acquitted of second degree murder and a lesser charge of manslaughter. Since the case ended, the DOJ will now determine, if Zimmerman violated Martin's civil rights. 
Zimmerman killed Martin in February 2012, after he followed Martin who was unarmed, instigated a confrontation and killed the teenager and used the Stand Your Ground law for defense.
In a statement the DOJ says, "As the Department first acknowledged last year, we have an open investigation into the death of Trayvon Martin. The Department of Justice's Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division, the United States Attorney's Office for the Middle District of Florida, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation continue to evaluate the evidence generated during the federal investigation, as well as the evidence and testimony from the state trial. Experienced federal prosecutors will determine whether the evidence reveals a prosecutable violation of any of the limited federal criminal civil rights statutes within our jurisdiction, and whether federal prosecution is appropriate in accordance with the Department's policy governing successive federal prosecution following a state trial."

Linear Trend Failure of the Day


Click to enlarge.

Since I am a long-term believer in the long-term death of real yields theory, I am therefore willing to offer the following prediction.

Stick a fork in the chart's red trend line. It's over.

In my opinion, the peak was probably set on June 21, 2013 (the peak seen in the chart). That was one day after I made a purchase of a 19-year TIPS (with intent to hold to maturity). Thanks bond market! My patience has rarely been so rewarded. To think that I could have been stuck with 0.0% just 2 months earlier.

Those arguing that my linear trend failure prediction is wrong can mark October 16, 2013 on their calendars. That's the day Jeremy Siegel's mythical 3.5% real yields will arrive should the trend in red continue. I would not hold my breath for such an outcome though. At the very least, inhale extremely deeply before doing so, lol. Sigh.

Just opinions! This is definitely not investment advice.

Source Data:
St. Louis Fed: 20-Year Treasury Inflation-Indexed Security

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                                                    I hope you all had a great weekend so far!
 Here are a few photos from last week when we hit the beach one more time and the weather was just perfect for exploring the Island.
                                                                                                       Enjoy!





                                                                              Shirt: Ralph Lauren/ option Here 
                                                                              Denim Shorts: Levis (DIY)/ similar Here and Here 
                                                                              Espadrilles: Chanel/I also love these Here and Here ( great price) 
                                                                              Rings: thanks to Lulus.com/ option Here 
                                                                              Sunglasses: Foster Grant/ option Here