Let's Fix This Country

Suggested Milley Execution Brings Up Trump’s Mocking of the Military

Donald Trump is under indictment for what he did before, during, and after he was president. That is a staggering load to bear which may help explain his recent lashing out at the world, even more than usual.

No sooner had he given an 80-minute interview with NBC’s Kristen Welker than he turned on the network with threats to investigate NBC-owner Comcast if re-elected. The company “will be thoroughly scrutinized for their knowingly dishonest and corrupt coverage of people, things, and events”. Its “one-side and vicious coverage by NBC NEWS, and in particular MSNBC… should be investigated for its ‘Country Threatening Treason’.” He resumed use of Stalin’s phrase, calling the media “the enemy of the people”.

But of more immediate alarm was his post of a week ago that Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley should be executed. His sin: loyalty to the country, not to Donald Trump.

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In October of 2020 and again two days after the January 6th insurrection, the four-star Army general had spoken to his Chinese counterparts to assuage their apprehension about what the then-president might do next, considering his erratic conduct and ultimately his attempted coup. The calls were not surreptitious. A number of officials, including from the State Department and CIA, were listening in on the calls. They had been authorized by two defense secretaries at the time.

For Trump, contacting the Chinese was “an act so egregious that, in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH.”

Trump readily defaults to violence. We saw this what now seems long ago at his rallies in the 2015-2016 campaign where he reacted to protesters in the audience with “I’d like to punch him in the face”, “Knock the crap out of him”, “Throw him the hell out”, “They’d be carried out on a stretcher, folks”. But now he is directing his threats — his suggested violence for others to carry out — to prosecutors, jurists, witnesses, election workers and everyone else with his general pronouncement, “If you go after me, I’m coming after you!”.

He leads what can only be called a cult. How can the millions who, lacking any evidence, believing only what Donald Trump says, still thinking three years after that their leader won the 2020 election, be deemed other than a cult. Among his “very fine people” are fanatics by whom Trump writing “in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH” was not mistaken “for a historical observation”, as Brian Klaas quipped in The Atlantic. They would take it to be a suggestion as from a Mafia boss of what he would like done. And so Milley, as his tour as chairman of the chiefs ends October 1, like so many threatened by the violence Trump suggests, must be assigned security as he enters retirement — Trump’s vengeance for 43 years as an Army officer.

Losers and suckers

Donald Trump is reflexively called a bully by the Left but cowardly is a better fit for his actions. He obtained five draft deferments that kept him out of Vietnam, ultimately by a doctor attesting that he had a bone spur in his foot. When asked by a reporter which foot, he couldn’t remember. A narcissist of his extremes cannot abide thinking himself a coward so imagine how redeeming it was for Trump to tell himself he had become commander in chief over all the military, even with the gall to call it “my military”.

Even that was not enough. He needed to denigrate the military, push it down a peg, belittle those who serve. Joseph Dunford, another four-star general, in his case the Marines, preceded Milley as Joint Chiefs chairman and as commandant of the Marine Corps before that. After one White House briefing by Dunford, Trump said to his aides, “That guy is smart. Why did he join the military?”

About Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona, shot down over Hanoi flying for the Navy to become a prisoner of the North Vietnamese from 1967 to 1973, Trump infamously said,

“He’s not a war hero, he’s a war hero because he was captured? I like people who weren’t captured, okay? I hate to tell you”.

We were warned; that was the month after he announced his candidacy in 2015.

When McCain died in 2018, Trump was furious to see the flag at half staff. “What the f**k are we doing that for? Guy was a f**king loser,” the president told aides.

Trump called former President George H. W. Bush, a Navy pilot in World War II, a “loser” for being shot down by the Japanese. His two crewmen died in the attack. Pilots in the Pacific were shot down in horrifying numbers. This was bravery far beyond what Trump can understand.

Trump went to France in 2018 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I. That entailed visits to cemeteries where Americans troops were buried. On the morning of the visits he questioned why he had to go to two cemeteries. “Why do I have to do two?. Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers”.

Claiming “the helicopter couldn’t fly” because of rain nor could the Secret Service drive him, he washed out on a visit to the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery outside Paris. Neither reason was true. Four people with firsthand knowledge said the ex-president was concerned that the weather would blow his hair askew.

On that same trip, at Belleau Wood, a battle that is part of U.S. Marine Corps lore where some 1,800 lost their lives, Trump referred to them as “suckers” for getting killed. And he asked, “Who were the good guys in this war?”

Trump has shown that his idea of the military is pageantry with marching troops and tanks. He stipulated that wounded veterans be kept out of military parades. “Nobody wants to see that.” After being awestruck by France’s Bastille Day parade, he planned a 4th of July parade in Washington D.C. but nixed the inclusion of wounded veterans. “That’s not a good look. Americans don’t like that.”

Gen. Milley corroborated. He had chosen a severely wounded Army captain — Luis Avila, who after five combat tours lost a leg to an IED in Afghanistan — to sing “God Bless America” at the ceremony welcoming him to lead the Joint Chiefs. Avila had suffered two heart attacks, two strokes, and brain damage as a result of his injuries. Trump walked over to congratulate him, but then said to Milley, within earshot of several witnesses, “Why do you bring people like that here? No one wants to see that, the wounded.” Never let Avila appear in public again, Trump told Milley. Milley has invited Avila to sing at his retirement ceremony, writes Jeffery Goldberg in a profile of Milley in the current issue of The Atlantic.

Trump has the sociopath’s void of compassion for human feeling. Gen. John Kelly, a Marine four-star, served as Trump’s second chief of staff. His son was killed in combat in Afghanistan in 2010, making him the highest ranking military officer to lose a child in Iraq or Afghanistan. On Memorial Day, presidents pay homage to the military dead by attending ceremonies at Arlington Cemetery. Standing alongside Kelly at the grave of his son, Trump turned to Kelly and said, “I don’t get it. What was in it for them?”. A friend of Kelly who is also a four-star general told Goldberg:

“Trump can’t imagine anyone else’s pain. He can’t fathom the idea of doing something for someone other than himself. He just thinks that anyone who does anything when there’s no direct personal gain to be had is a sucker. There’s no money in serving the nation.”

for those for whom the nation comes first

Trump expected “my military” to be loyal and subservient to him. That their loyalty was to the Constitution to which they had sworn an oath was an exasperating obstacle. ForTrump idolaters Milley’s contacting the Chinese without Trump’s approval was treasonous.

Those of a different mind and old enough remember their relief when they heard that Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger reportedly ordered in the tense days leading up to Richard Nixon’s resignation that certain presidential orders — especially those related to nuclear arms — first be cleared by Schlesinger personally or by National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger.

It reminded Goldberg of a story from the 1970s which he relates in the Milley profile. An Air Force officer named Harold Hering was training to become a Minuteman crew member after serving in Vietnam, where his crew would be expected to launch nuclear-powered intercontinental ballistic missiles unquestioningly on receipt of a command originating from the president. One day in class, he asked, “How can I know that an order I receive to launch my missiles came from a sane president?”. The Air Force discharged him.

There’s the dilemma. In 2018 we ran a story titled “One Finger on the Button. Are We Crazy?”. With over 330 million at risk in this country, we need leaders such as Milley who will break out of the robotic obeisance to the single individual in the Oval Office who might be — to use a favorite word Trump applies to others — deranged.

Milley was not alone. According to the Associated Press, Kelly and James Mattis, Trump’s first secretary of defense, made a pact with each other that one of them would remain in the country at all times so their president would never be left unmonitored.

To Confront Climate Change, Progressives Are Coming for Your Lifestyle

On August 1, the ban against incandescent light bulbs took effect. That LEDs (light emitting diodes) now cost little more than Thomas Edison’s creation of the late 1800s, last years longer than incandescents, and require far less power such that $3 billion a year is expected to vanish from American consumers’ utility bills — none of that holds weight among conservatives who were appalled that article illustration
Farewell to an historic invention
with the stroke of a pen President Biden had simply decreed the end of incandescents by executive order.

“No law was actually passed anywhere…Congress did not vote. There was no consensus for any such thing. A staple consumer item has disappeared from store shelves everywhere”,

wrote David Lanza at “American Thinker”. But if the progressives’ green dream wins out, the loss of “that ineffable and as yet irreplaceable glow” produced by incandescent bulbs, as Tom Scocca rhapsodized in New York magazine, is only a modest beginning. The crusade to do away with fossil fuels has a long list of sacrifices planned for our future.

Foremost is the nearly-mandated conversion to electric vehicles. As with light bulbs, the Biden administration has set pollution standards for new cars and trucks so high that as soon as 2027 67% of a carmaker’s production will need to be EVs for the overall gas consumption of its fleet to meet the standards. Biden’s goal is net-zero emissions by 2050. article illustration
For that to happen, research outfit BloombergNEF says the last internal combustion vehicle must roll off the assembly line by 2038. California Governor Gavin Newsome is ahead of even that, having banned the sale of gasoline-powered cars in California starting in 2035.

Conservatives seethe at the notion that choice can simply be taken away from we the people. They can perhaps take heart that a multitude of logistical challenges stand in the way — primarily that we don’t know how to make batteries and China largely controls the mineral resources they require even if we did. There’s the Woody Allen quote, “If you want to make God laugh, tell Him your plans”.

But even if the EV revolution does happen, the vast American public may be less than thrilled. They may be earnest about halting climate change but not when they discover that would affect their own lifestyle. In our article in March, we saw a consumer backlash coming:

Filling up at a gas station is quick and for the average auto will buy you close to 400 miles. But filling up (80% recommended as the last 20% takes forever) takes 20 to 30 minutes at a Level 3 fast-charger to yield something under 200 miles for a modest-size vehicle. That says the time-per-mile that we’ll spend at a charging station is over 25 times what we spend at a gas pump. One easily imagines the pile-up of autos waiting at the public stations and an angry public quickly fed up with the whole idea.

Add range anxiety and Americans will come to realize that the freedom and fun of hitting the road has become an ordeal. “So no more cross-country road trips”, Varad Mehta laments at the conservative publication Washington Examiner.

Take a plane instead

But wait. Batteries are too heavy for aircraft. They’ll still be guzzling fossil fuels, or maybe biofuels that displace food production and deplete rapidly diminishing groundwater. Conservative commentators are increasingly ill-tempered at being told flying is bad for the planet, worse than cars, that airline travel should be a memory, and hair shirts would be appropriate penance for the past bad habit of popping onto planes. “Going someplace far away, we now know, is the biggest single action a private citizen can take to worsen climate change”, wrote Andy Newman at – where else — The New York Times in an article titled “If Seeing the World Helps Ruin It, Should We Stay Home?”

out of gas

There may be no place like home, but home will be different. A conflagration ignited when a member of the Consumer Product Safety article illustration
The steady gas flame is greatly preferred over the
alternating on/off coils of electric ranges.
Commission told Bloomberg that his agency was considering an outright ban on kitchen gas ranges to snuff out their contribution to greenhouse gas emissions. You can pry the gas stove “from my cold dead hands,” fumed Texas Republican Representative Ronny Jackson. “The last thing that would ever leave my house is the gas stove that we cook on”, said enflamed West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin.

“The reality here…is that when it comes to fighting climate change, attacking citizens’ lifestyles is still the Left’s preferred solution”…

…was the Washington Examiner‘s take. The movement to turn off the gas jets is already underway. California has banned the sale of new natural-gas-fired appliances starting in the next decade. New York state passed a law in May that bans natural gas in most new homes and buildings by as early as 2026. That ends gas water heaters and furnaces as well.

what to cook on those electric stoves

Not steak, climate activists reprimand. You will need to give that up because it comes from cattle, the world’s leading source of agricultural greenhouse gases. In a year, a single cow will belch about 220 pounds of methane, a gas that dissipates more quickly than carbon dioxide but traps about 30 times more heat.

Nor dairy, for the same reason. You’ll need to give up milk, cheese, butter, ice cream and switch to the synthetic protein substitutes industry is in a race to create to go with your faux burgers.

turn up the heat

With everything electrified, the demand for power might be so great as to mandate rationing, with the air conditioning that refrigerates our houses hardwired not to go below a certain temperature, if progressives get to set the rule. India, where only 10% to 12% of homes have air conditioning, surpassed China this year as the nation with the largest article illustration
Air conditioners at an upscale
apartment building in India

population. With temperatures in six Indian cities reaching 111°F or higher this April and heat records set globally, threatening survival, air conditioners have become a priority. Bloomberg estimates that the world will add a billion machines by the end of the decade. Faced with that, what sense do climate activists in the U.S. make, goes he counterargument, when they advocate setting our air conditioners to 80°F, and tell us we should switch to more efficient heat pumps?

Dishwashers of the near future will be required to “use 27% less power and 34% less water” and “no more than 3.3 gallons during their normal, default cycles.” “The likely effect of this rule would be to compel consumers to use more water by spending more time pre-washing their dishes”, predicts Noah Rothman at the hard-right National Review.

Yard work will take up more of your time. California has banned the sale of gasoline-powered lawn mowers and leaf blowers beginning next year. The town of San Anselmo has already instituted a ban on gas-powered landscaping equipment. The mayor says a leaf blower produces emissions equivalent to “driving from L.A. to Denver in a 2017 Toyota Camry”, but she forgot to say how long it must run to achieve that disrepute. Other blue states — New York, New Jersey, Illinois – are thinking whether to do the same. We’ll be back walking behind push mowers and raking leaves in the newly quiet neighborhoods where we’ll hear the birds singing again like decades ago.

Rothman summed up the libertarians’ nightmare:

“Possessed of an abiding faith in the idea that you must be coerced into altruism, the activists seem to be coming for almost everything you own”.

careful what you wish for

Suitable to their name tag, conservatives want to keep things just as they are and are dubious of the apocalyptic future progressives insist is coming. Libertarians are outraged that Big Government has decided on its own to diminish quality of life without proof of that future, never mind the increasing frequency of severe weather and the Great Melt, as we might call it. “Progressives’ ultimate goal is to reduce consumption — and living standards — because they believe humans are a menace to the Earth”, says Allysia Finley of the editorial board of The Wall Street Journal.

The safe bet is that a couple of hundred million Americans will come over to their point of view when they discover how much of their comfortable way of life they’ll have to give up to purportedly halt climate change, lifestyle unchanged, we will just let climate change run its course suffocated by rising heat and battered by storms. We will hear from them what we hear from Rothman about what progressives plan for us:

These campaigns against contrivances that improve the quality of daily life…are costly impositions on the time and resources of everyday Americans — downsides that their advocates apparently don’t worry about. If they find any inconvenience in their preferences, they subordinate that concern to their ideological goals…And you’re expected to bear this burden indefinitely. Or at least until you communicate your displeasure in no uncertain terms at the ballot box.

Which we expect will happen — as soon as 2025 if Republicans regain the presidency. “Project 2025”, the 920-page master plan developed by the Heritage Foundation intends to transform government, reverse all of the Biden administration’s climate initiatives, and promote the extraction and use of fossil fuels.

Why, maybe they’ll even bring back incandescents.

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John Darkow Columbia Missourian