The New York Times article on Mayor Bloomberg's PAC names three personal PACs of billionaires that have been very active in this presidential campaign -- George Soros on the left, the Koch brothers on the right, and now Bloomberg in the middle. The Koch brothers are not Jewish, but they could easily have been replaced on the list by Sheldon Adelson, who is Jewish, and who has been one of the major supporters of conservative Republicans. So, you have three obscenely rich Jews who are driving this election.
I don't know the ancestry of all of them, except that I know Soros was born in Hungary and immigrated to the US. It looks like from Wikipedia that Bloomberg's grandparents came to the US from Europe well before World War II. Adelson, like Bloomberg, was born in Boston; his mother had immigrated from the UK. So, of the three, only Soros is a post-WW II emigre.
Of course, the candidates they are are supporting -- Obama and Romney -- are not Jewish, which shows there may still be some racial barriers for Jews. Joe Lieberman did not do well when he ran for Vice President. However, as a black and a Mormon, Obama and Romney do not represent the old, traditional WASP power structure, as George W. Bush did. Furterhmore, there is lots of gentile money in the political game, fromt he Koch brothers, for example. Nevertheless, the fact that the New York Times cites
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Romney and Amb. Stevens
The father of Amb. Chris Stevens has asked that his son's death in Libya not be politicized in the presidential campaign, according to Bloomberg. Romney and Ryan have latched on to Stevens' death like flies on honey, in an effort to make Obama responsible for it. Romney is dancing on Stevens' grave because he thinks it will help him become President. Stevens' death has been one of the best things that has happened for Romney in recent weeks.
But it's unseemly. Romney and the Republicans have no manners, no grace, no sympathy. Romney's joy at Stevens' death is like his contempt for the 47% of the population he said were just worthless takers of government largess.
The Republicans in general dislike the Foreign Service. I think it's because in general Republicans don't like smart people, such as professors at good universities. I had a professional run-in with Republican Senator Jesse Helms, when he tried to have HIV/AIDS declared a highly contagious disease for visa purposes, which would have meant that everyone with HIV/AIDS would have been denied a visa to the US. My office in the State Department was responsible for international health policy. The M.D. with whom I worked and I went to the doctors and scientists at HHS and other organizations to see if there was any scientific basis for that policy. The scientific consensus was that there was not. We got both assistant secretaries of State responsible for this policy, the Assistant Secretary for Consular Affairs and the Assistant Secretary for Oceans, Environment and Science to sign off on a reply to the proposed regulation saying that it was wrong, but it had to go through Secretary of State James Baker, via his Under Secretary Bob Zoellick. Zoellick sat on the memo forever. He was probably justified. Baker would probably have recognized that the Helms' position was incorrect and should not have been made HIV/AIDS an automatic bar to entry into the US. However, if he had confronted Helms, Helms would probably have cut the State Department budget by millions of dollars, and would have made life miserable in many ways. So, Zoellick protected him from having to make that decision.
In a similar story, the New York Times reported that the new senior envoy to Libya, Laurence Pope, retired from the Foreign Service in 2000 when Jesse Helms' office blocked his nomination to be Ambassador to Kuwait, because Pope would not espouse the Republican party line regarding our need to attack Saddam Hussein in Iraq.
So, Romney and Ryan carry on the Republican tradition, epitomized by Jesse Helms, of hatred of the Foreign Service. They may even relish making political hay out of the death of a patriotic Foreign Service officer who gave his life for his country. Romney has no conception of what it is like to give one's life for his country. He spent the Vietnam War on the French Riviera, and none of his five sons has served in the military, according to the Huffington Post.
But it's unseemly. Romney and the Republicans have no manners, no grace, no sympathy. Romney's joy at Stevens' death is like his contempt for the 47% of the population he said were just worthless takers of government largess.
The Republicans in general dislike the Foreign Service. I think it's because in general Republicans don't like smart people, such as professors at good universities. I had a professional run-in with Republican Senator Jesse Helms, when he tried to have HIV/AIDS declared a highly contagious disease for visa purposes, which would have meant that everyone with HIV/AIDS would have been denied a visa to the US. My office in the State Department was responsible for international health policy. The M.D. with whom I worked and I went to the doctors and scientists at HHS and other organizations to see if there was any scientific basis for that policy. The scientific consensus was that there was not. We got both assistant secretaries of State responsible for this policy, the Assistant Secretary for Consular Affairs and the Assistant Secretary for Oceans, Environment and Science to sign off on a reply to the proposed regulation saying that it was wrong, but it had to go through Secretary of State James Baker, via his Under Secretary Bob Zoellick. Zoellick sat on the memo forever. He was probably justified. Baker would probably have recognized that the Helms' position was incorrect and should not have been made HIV/AIDS an automatic bar to entry into the US. However, if he had confronted Helms, Helms would probably have cut the State Department budget by millions of dollars, and would have made life miserable in many ways. So, Zoellick protected him from having to make that decision.
In a similar story, the New York Times reported that the new senior envoy to Libya, Laurence Pope, retired from the Foreign Service in 2000 when Jesse Helms' office blocked his nomination to be Ambassador to Kuwait, because Pope would not espouse the Republican party line regarding our need to attack Saddam Hussein in Iraq.
So, Romney and Ryan carry on the Republican tradition, epitomized by Jesse Helms, of hatred of the Foreign Service. They may even relish making political hay out of the death of a patriotic Foreign Service officer who gave his life for his country. Romney has no conception of what it is like to give one's life for his country. He spent the Vietnam War on the French Riviera, and none of his five sons has served in the military, according to the Huffington Post.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Follow-up Congressional Letter 2
Thank you for your letter. I appreciate your support for continued American engagement in
the Middle East. As the investigation into the attacks on American
embassies continues, please keep in mind the importance of the State Department
budget. I don’t know what factors influenced State’s decisions regarding
security for its embassies and consulates, especially in Libya, but I would
guess that budgetary considerations were near the top of the list. The
fact the whole United States Government budget is unsettled, including State’s
as part of that, has a terrible impact on the functioning of the
government.
A major factor in my decision to retire from the Foreign Service years ago was the government shutdown under President Clinton and Speaker Gingrich. I ended up being stranded in transit between the US Embassy in Warsaw and the Embassy in Rome because of the shutdown. As a soldier in Vietnam, I had already had a bad experience with the US government failing to support its troops. I didn’t welcome it happening again as a Foreign Service officer.
Once again, the US is failing to fully support its troops and its Foreign Service officers abroad. I saw on the news that Sen. Bennet is a member of an eight-member, bipartisan committee trying to resolve the current budget impasse in Congress. I hope that he and his colleagues will be able to work out some compromise to avoid the “fiscal cliff.” There are actually American lives at stake, both at home and overseas. There will be a lot of finger pointing over Ambassador Stevens’ death, and some of those fingers should point at Congress.
A major factor in my decision to retire from the Foreign Service years ago was the government shutdown under President Clinton and Speaker Gingrich. I ended up being stranded in transit between the US Embassy in Warsaw and the Embassy in Rome because of the shutdown. As a soldier in Vietnam, I had already had a bad experience with the US government failing to support its troops. I didn’t welcome it happening again as a Foreign Service officer.
Once again, the US is failing to fully support its troops and its Foreign Service officers abroad. I saw on the news that Sen. Bennet is a member of an eight-member, bipartisan committee trying to resolve the current budget impasse in Congress. I hope that he and his colleagues will be able to work out some compromise to avoid the “fiscal cliff.” There are actually American lives at stake, both at home and overseas. There will be a lot of finger pointing over Ambassador Stevens’ death, and some of those fingers should point at Congress.
Follow-up Congressional Letter 1
Thank you for your letter regarding US foreign assistance. I welcome your support for continued US engagement in the Middle East. However, as a retired Foreign Service officer, I am more concerned with the State Department’s operations
budget than the foreign assistance budget
I think that lack of funds or uncertainty about funds was a major consideration in State’s decision not to provide more security to the consulate in Benghazi, resulting in the death of Ambassador Stevens. The whole mess with the US budget and the “fiscal cliff” was a major factor leading to his death. In all the investigations into his death and all the finger pointing, some of those fingers should point at Congress
I think that lack of funds or uncertainty about funds was a major consideration in State’s decision not to provide more security to the consulate in Benghazi, resulting in the death of Ambassador Stevens. The whole mess with the US budget and the “fiscal cliff” was a major factor leading to his death. In all the investigations into his death and all the finger pointing, some of those fingers should point at Congress
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