Goodwillwrites@yahoo.com

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

12 June 2024

Notable events, 12 June 1630: J. Winthrop’s Puritans landed in Masssachusetts Bay Colony. 1963: Civil rights leader Medgar Evers was assassinated. 1967: SCOTUS (9-0) OK’s interracial marriages. 1964: Nelson Mandela (& 7 others) sentenced to life for committing sabotage against S. African apartheid regime. 1987: President Reagan in W. Berlin, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” 1991: Russians elected Yeltsin president. 2017: Huge anti-corruption rallies across Russia; thousands arrested. 2021: Federal judge struck down Covid vaccination requirement for the Houston hospital system.  

Denver’s Aztlan theater. This splendid example of an art-deco theater may face demolition unless the owner can raise about $37,000 to pay back-taxes. Over the years the building also hosted band concerts and other events. 

White buffalo. Reportedly this rare birth occurred in Yellowstone National Park. According to spiritual leader Chief Arvold Looking Horse, the Lakota prophecy of the birth is booth a blessing and warning for better times. The People are implored to protect the earth and its animals. (Chief Arnol is the tribe’s 19th keeper of the sacred White Buffalo Calf Woman Pipe and Bundle.) In 1994, a similar white buffalo calf was born in WI and named Miracle. 

Lakota legend says about 2,000 years ago — when nothing was good, food was running out and bison were disappearing — White Buffalo Calf Woman appeared, presented a bowl pipe and a bundle to a tribal member, taught they how to pray and said that the pimple could be used to bring buffalo to the area for food. As she left, she turned into a white Buffalo calf….And Somme day when the times are hard again, I shall return and stand upon the earth as a white buffalo calf, black nose, black hooves.” [Denver Post]

Nuclear power. Bill Gates has begun construction of a next-generation, sodium-cooled nuclear power plant in WY. Presently, Russia is the leading user of sodium-cooled generating facilities.  

Retail sales. Surprisingly, the demand for shopping center space is exceeded availability.   

DJT. George Will’s column (Wednesday, 12 June 2024)  is interesting, given the ongoing contention between DJT and the Manhattan DA.

Opinion Electing prosecutors is a terrible idea. Trump’s conviction shows why.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and his legal team hold a news conference in New York on May 30. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post) 

In his contemplative moments, if there are such, Alvin Bragg, Manhattan’s elected district attorney, should ponder a 1940 speech given by a U.S. attorney general. Before Bragg’s next pirouette on the political stage — at former president Donald Trump’s July 11 sentencing, where he will recommend a punishment — he should consider Robert Jackson’s thoughts on the role of restraint in the prosecutor’s profession.

Bragg campaigned in 2021 promising to continue trying to hold Trump “accountable,”noting that in the New York attorney general’s office he had sued Trump “more than a hundred times.” In 2023, seven years after a particular Trump misbehavior, but just in time to influence this year’s election, Bragg indicted Trump for “34” felonies. One dead misdemeanor (falsifying business records; the statute of limitations has long since expired) was resuscitated and carved into 34 slices. These were inflated into felonies by claiming they were done to facilitate a crime. (Bragg often has a progressive’s penchant for reducing felonies to misdemeanors — e.g., some first-degree robberies are now charged as petty larcenies.) Bragg says:

Trump used bookkeeping dishonesty in 2017 (about paying hush money, which is not illegal) to influence the 2016 presidential election. (A puzzling understanding of causation.) He was a candidate in the 2016 election he is accused of somehow illegitimately trying to influence. This violated a federal campaign finance law. (Enforcement of which Congress assigned to the Federal Election Commission, not to local district attorneys.)

The 12 jurors might give 12 different answers concerning what Trump is guilty of. But what sentence might Bragg advocate next month?

He is an elected prosecutor (a terrible thing; read on), with constituents to mollify — constituents mostly hostile to his defendant. (Manhattan’s vote went about 86 percent for Hillary Clinton in 2016 and for Biden in 2020.) He likely has higher political aspirations. He demonstrably seeks the limelight. So, he might be tempted to recommend incarceration.

This, even though it is obvious that no one other than Trump would have been prosecuted under Bragg’s rickety scaffolding of quasi-legal theories. And even though no first-time offender not named Trump would be imprisoned for committing a felony that, even were it plausibly concocted, ranks among the least serious (Class E) felonies. Now, note Jackson’s 1940 warning, before he became a Supreme Court justice and chief U.S. prosecutor at the Nuremberg war crimes trials.

“The prosecutor,” he said, “has more control over life, liberty, and reputation than any other person in America,” and “his discretion is tremendous.” He can have people investigated, perhaps with “veiled or unveiled” public intimations. He can order arrests, present cases to grand juries in secret sessions and secure indictments “on the basis of his one-sided presentation of the facts.” If his targets are convicted in trials, he can recommend sentences.

“While the prosecutor at his best,” Jackson said, “is one of the most beneficent forces in our society, when he acts from malice or other base motives, he is one of the worst.” This is why federal district attorneys have been presidential appointees, requiring Senate confirmation. This process is designed to produce executive and legislative branch expressions of confidence in prosecutors’ characters — “the spirit of fair play and decency.”

Jackson noted that federal prosecutors have “now been prohibited from engaging in political activities.” A prosecutor should have “a detached and impartial” view of those in his community because law enforcement “isn’t blind.” The prosecutor has discretion to pick their cases; therein lies their “most dangerous power.” The prosecutor should select cases “in which the offense is the most flagrant, the public harm the greatest, and the proof the most certain.”

The law books, however, contain such a vast assortment of crimes, a prosecutor can pick a man “he dislikes or desires to embarrass,” Jackson wrote, and ransack the law books for a crime to pin on him. “It is here that law enforcement becomes personal, and the real crime becomes that of being unpopular with the predominant or governing group, being attached to the wrong political views, or being personally obnoxious to or in the way of the prosecutor himself.”

“Reputation,” Jackson said in 1940, “has been called ‘the shadow cast by one’s daily life.’” Bragg has chosen a flamboyant life in electoral politics. He probably is impervious to Jackson’s wisdom, for a reason Jackson understood: “The qualities of a good prosecutor are as elusive and as impossible to define as those which mark a gentleman. And those who need to be told would not understand it anyway.”

Monday, June 10, 2024

7 June 2024

Notable events, 7 June 1712: PA colony voted to end importation of slaves. 1776: VA colony’s R.H. Lee said colonies are and ought to be free. 1892: Holmer Plessy arrest for not leaving whites-only dining car. 1929: Vatican City deemed sovereign nation.1965: SCOTUS, struck down CT birth control law. 1981: Israeli jets destroyed Iraq nuclear facility. 2016: Hillary Clinton and DJT claimed their party’s nominations.  

8 June 1864: Lincoln nominated for 2nd term. 1953: SCOTUS ended segregation in Washington, D.C., restaurants. 1967: Israel’s mistaken attack on USS Liberty killed 34 USN sailors. 1968: MLK, Jr’s assassin J.E. Ray captured in London. 2008: Regular gas hit $4/gal. 2015: SCOTUS (6-3) Americans born in Jerusalem could not list Israel as their birthplace. 2017: Former FBI director Comey said President Trump fired him to end investigation of Trump’s ties with Russia. 

9 June 1732: James Oglethorpe got charter to found GA colony.1969: Warren Burger confirmed as SCOTUS chief justice. 1978: Mormon church ended 148-year-old policy excluding Black men as priests. 1986: Rogers Commission found fault associated with failed Challenger launch. 2017: President Trump said FBI director Comey lied to Congress. 2020: Funeral in Houston for George Floyd. 2022: U.S. House panel laid blame on President Trump for Jan 6, 2021, insurrection, calling it an “attempted coup.”  2023: Felony indictment of DJT indicted for improperly storing classified documents in his home.  

10 June 1692: First Salem witch trial hanged Bridget Bishop. 1935: AA formed in Akron, OH. 1963: President JFK singed Equal Pay Act. 1971: President Nixon ended trade embargo on China. 1967:  Six Day War ended; Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Iraq accepted cease fire. 2012: Shanshan Feng first Chinese player to win LPG title. 2020: Protestors toppled statue of Jefferson Davis in Richmond, VA; NASCAR banned Confederate flag at all races & venues. 2021: OR House of Rep voted to expel Nike Newman who led violent protesters into OR Capitol building.  

Middle East. A successful Israeli hostage rescue raid resulted in at least 274 deaths. 

Native American news. A dispute has surfaced between tribes and the Denver Art Museum over the retention/return of artifacts of artworks and artifacts. The DAM has extensive holdings  related to Native Americans.

Ukraine. The Ukrainian army has scored a hit on one of Russia’s most advanced jet fighter planes about 370 miles from the border.   

Thursday, June 6, 2024

6 June 2024

 Notable events, 6 June 1844: YMCA formed in London. 1912: 20th century’s most powerful volcanic eruption began in AK Territory. 1934: SEC was established. 1939: First Little League game played in Williams Port, PA. 1944: The D-Day invasion on the beaches of Normandy began. 1977: SCOTUS, divided, struck down LA state law imposing auto death sentence for killing a police officer. 1982: Israel invaded Lebanon. 2004: SCOTUS, (6-3) smoking pot for medical reasons violated federal law. 2020: Worldwide demonstrations supporting George Floyd, BLM movement. 

Denver pollution. Suncor refining is being sued for repeated violations. 

Normandy, 1944. Postal clerk Maureen Sweeney in Blaksod Point in northwest Ireland sent a series of weather postings to the Allies’ chief meteorologist who  persuaded Gen. Eisenhower to postpone D-Day from June 5th with its full moon and low tides.   

Gun control. CO Gov. Polis signed a bill requiring new gun owners to undergo 8 hours of in-person instruction, including live-fire and written examination. County sheriffs will certify permits of firearm instructors, effective 1 July 2025. 

Boeing. Amid its considerable bad press, the company launched two NASA test pilot astronauts for the first time in the Starliner capsule. The capsule will rendezvous with the ISS and descend to a remote site in the U.S. southwest on 14 June. 

Middle East. Amid Israeli raids on suspected Hamas sites, thousands of ultranationalist Israelis marched through a sensitive Palestinian area of Jerusalem on Wednesday. It is little mentioned that Palestinians have their Hamas, but Israelis have their ultranationalists. 

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

3 June

Notable events, 3 June 1621: Dutch East India Co. given monopoly trade charter. 1888: “Casey at the Bat” published. 1965: U.S. astronaut E.H. White to first space walk. 2016:  Muhammad Ali died (age 74). 1989: PRC began to clear pro- democracy demonstrators from Tiananmen Square. 2018: Guatemalan volcano erupted killing > 100. 2020: Sec of Defense Esper took issued with president Trump on using military to quell protests. 

4 June 1812: U.S. House OKd declaration of war against Britain. 1919: Congress approved 19th Amendment (gave women the vote) 1939: MS St. Louis & its > 900 Jewish refugees turned away from FL coast. 1944: USN captured German sub in the south Atlantic. 1986: J.J. Pollard [former USN intel analyst] pleaded guilty to spying a for Israel. 2018: Saudi Arabia issued first female driver’s license. 2022: Ann Turner Cook, Gerber’s iconic baby face, died age 95. 

5 June 1794: Congress passed Neutrality Act. 1950: SCOTUS outlawed racially segregated railroad dining cars. 1968: Sen. R.F. Kennedy assassinated. 1975: Egypt reopen Suez Canal. 1981: CDC reported first deaths from a rare pneumonia, AIDS. 2004: Former president Reagan died of Alzheimer’s. 2006: U.S. National Guard deployed along U.S.-Mexico border. 

Borowitz Report. The new president of Mexico warns of letting remorseless criminals from North of the Border come south into Mexico. [The Report is an obvious jab at DJT’s constant dismissal of valid news stories as “fake news.” The short, daily, tongue-in-cheek pronouncement of “fake news” is available free on line.] 

Denver sidewalks. The new ordinance mandating sidewalk repair is on hold, again; city officials say ~ 40% of the city’s sidewalks are in need of repair. 


Sunday, June 2, 2024

31 May — 2 June 2024

Notable events, 31 May: President GW signed the first U.S. copyright act. 1859: London’s Big Ben chimed. 1889: 2,200+ died in Johnstown, PA, flood.* 1921: Race riot in Tulsa, OK. 1962: Adolph Eichmann hanged in Israel. 1970: 67,000+ died in Peruvian earthquake. 1977: AK pipeline completed. 2021: PRC’s communist party OK’d 3 children/couple. * A second flood in 1977 killed 78.

1 June 1812: President Madison criticized England’s actions re the U.S. 1813: Mortally wounded, Capt. Lawrence ordered, “Don’t give up the ship.” 1916: SCOTUS: Louis Brandeis became 1st Jewish justice. 2017: President Trump pulled U.S. from Paris climate agreement. 2020: Police violently broke up peaceful protest in Lafayette Park. 2021: Biden administration suspended oil/gas leases in AK’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. 

2 June 1953: Elizabeth II crowned (27 year-old). 1924: Full citizenship granted to all Native Americans. 1962: Troops in USSR killed 22-24 strikers. 1966: U.S. Surveyor 1 landed on the moon and began sending photos. 1979: John Paul II (Polish) became first people to visit a communist country. 1999: 2nd peaceful election in S. Africa. 2018: Volcano Mt. Kilauea erupted destroying 80 homes [soon 800]. 2021: NFL agreed to $1 billion in “race-norming” brain injury suit.   

DJT. (1) Washington Post columnist Jim Geraghty had a catchy (and appropriate?) tittle for his Friday column: “Wilie E. Coyote finally catches the Road Runner.” Guilty on all 34 felony counts of “cooking the books.” But, of course, it was the book keeper’s fault. One more time, sir, “blame it on the Stones!”  (2) A jury found DJT guilty on all 41 counts in the “Stormy Daniels” payoff scheme.  

The conviction does nothing to sideline his very probable nomination at the Republican National Convention on 11 July. 

Spell checker. A 13 year-old from Westminster, CO, placed 5th in the year’s National Spelling Bee contest. A 7th grader, Bruhat Soma from Tampa, FL, was the winner, his 4th  consecutive win. 

Vehicle towing in CO. CO’s governor Polis signed HB24-1051 which makes it illegal for towing companies to patrolling private lots. The law also prohibits property owners from using third party companies to authorize their tows. This latter was directly aimed at Wyatts Towing, CO’s largest towing operator. “Lawmakers, consumer advocates, and the CO attorney general have all accused the towing giant of skirting state statue as it build its vertically integrated conglomerate.” [Denver Post] Only property owners or their employees can mandate a tow.

CO highways. To construct I-25 through Denver, engineers moved the S. Platte River. In 2022, CODOT (CO Dept. of Transportation) halted plans for widening I-25. A new law denies funding for highway expansion projects that fail to demonstrate how they will reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Other states are holding up CO’s actions as the new gold standard for highway projects. 



Thursday, May 30, 2024

29 May

Notable events, 29 May 1765: Patrick Henry (VA) denounced the Stamp Act. 1790: RI was last colony to ratify the Constitution. 1953: New Zealander Hillary and Nepalese guide Norgay summited Mt. Everest. 1988: President Reagan and USSR’s Gorbachev met in Moscow. 2015: President Obama removed Cuba from U.S. terrorism list. 2019: Special Counsel Mueller said President Trump could not be charged, but was not exonerated. 2024: MLB added Negro League statistics/players to its record books and 13 year-old Westminster, CO, teen Aditi Muthukumar is among the 8 finalists at the  National Spelling Bee. (See below)

30 May 1431: Joan of Arc burned at the stake. 1922: Lincoln Memorial dedicated. 1935: Babe Ruth players last game. 1958: The Unidentified from WW II and Korea interred at Arlington. 1989: Chinese students erected “Goddess of Democracy” statue in Tiananmen Square. 2002: Solem, wordless ceremony ended cleanup at ground zero NYC. 

Weather news. Damaging storms swept many midwest areas on 29 May with winds, tornados, and hail. An earlier hail storm had swept the area with similar damaging winds and up to softball-size hail. Crop damage is still being assessed. The area’s very wet spring may have been a saving grace after all.  

Health news. (1) Changes in how the military pays for health care may cause the closing of the cancer center at Children’s Hospital in Colorado Springs. It would tie military payments to what Medicare would pay. (2) The long-endured smell and now health concerns have caused Denver residents living near the Nestle-Purina pet food plant in Denver’s Swansea neighborhood to file suit in federal court over odors which exceed state standards. 

National Spelling Bee. The presence of a CO finalist will mean the contest’s official pronouncer, Jacques Bailley, will have to be a bit cautious with normally enthusiastic presence: he won the contest in 1988 as a Denver-area 8th grader. Bailley retells that his win resulted in a White House invitation to meet President Carter — where the staff misspelled his name: they’d never met a Bailley, only a Bailey or two.   

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

26 May 2024

Notable events, 26 May 1864: Lincoln signed bill creating MT Territory. 1865: Confederates west of Mississippi River surrendered. 1954: explosion on USS Bennington killed 103. 1972: President Nixon and USSR’s Brezhnev signed Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. 2009: SCOTUS President Obama nominated 2nd woman Sonia Sotomayor and CA Supreme Court upheld Prop. 8 ban on gay marriage. 

27 May 1861: SCOTUS ruled Lincoln (Lincoln ignored) had no power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus. 1935: SCOTUS struck down the NRA in FDR’s New Deal. 1937: Golden Gate Bridge opened to pedestrian traffic. (It held the weight of the thousands of strollers) 1942: USN seaman D. Miller first Black to receive Navy Cross. 1968: SCOTUS ruled destroying a draft card was not free speech. 1994: Returning Nobel Laureate Alexander Solzhenitsyn was cheered in Russia. 2024: Nation celebrated Memorial Day.

28 May 1863: Storied 54th Mass. Volunteer Brigade of freed Blacks left Boston. 1892: Sierra Club organized. 1918: First WW I battle fought by U.S. 1934: Dionne quintuplets born in Ontario. 1940: Belgium surrendered to Nazis. 1959: Successful suborbital flight of 2 monkeys in U.S. Army rocket. 1987: Young German pilot flew small plane into Moscow’s Red Square. 2021: > 200 childrens’ bodies found  buried at former Canadian indigenous school. 

Remembrance. The body of USArmy Technician 5th Class Clifford H. Strickland from Fowler, CO, has finally been identified from remains found in a Philippine cemetery, 82 years after his burial.   

American democracy. “The American system is the most ingenious system of control in world history. With a country so rich in natural resources, talent, and labor power the system can afford to distribute just enough wealth to just enough people to limit discontent to a troublesome minority. It is a country so powerful, so big, so pleasing to so many of its citizens that it can afford to give freedom of dissent to the small number who are not pleased…..[Madison] and his colleagues began the Preamble to the Constitution with the words, ‘We the people’ pretending that the new government stood for everyone, and hoping that this myth, accepted as fact, would ensure ‘domestic tranquility.’” (Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States, “Revolt of the Guards.”) 

The nation has had periodic rough spots, but except for the issue of slavery with the attendant Civil War, Madison has been correct. And, to paraphrase Winston Churchill, “Democracy is far ahead of whatever is in second place.” 

Clean and not so clean energy. (1) At least 10 counties have filed objections that have halted large solar projects are slowing progress. Ranchers and other land users are objecting. (2) Through a nonprofit foundation three teenagers in NC have adopted an oil well in OH and are raising funds to completely cap it. 

Mosquito season. It’s begun and so it’s time to consider what to buy. Look for DEET, IR3535 on the ingredients label. 

Jackie Robinson lives again. The statue in Wichita, KS, was stolen this past January. It is being replace by a company in Loveland, CO. 

Bandimere Speedway. Denver’s storied drag racing strip, backed up to its picturesque, eons-old Rocky Hogback, will soon become a vehicle auction sales hub. Because of its high altitude and “light air,” the NHRA (National Hot Rod Association) established a separate set of drag racing speed records.  

President Biden gave this year’s commencement address at the USAF Academy.