A request for signatures on a petition
to impeach Trump came up tonight. Apparently whoever is doing it has two
million signatures already. The problem is, no matter how many signatures they
get, impeachment is unlikely in the current atmosphere. In order to impeach a
president, a majority of the House of Representatives must vote for the charges
proposed. If that happens, the president is then tried in the Senate where a
two-thirds majority is needed to convict. As long as Republicans control
Congress that seems like a pipe dream.
To my mind what seems
better is a path through the criminal and if not that the civil courts. Robert
Mueller's investigation could lead to that as his investigators get closer and
closer to the president.
What I would like to see
and what would be more possible is indictments coming out of the investigation
leading to criminal charges to be tried in a state court. The Southern District
of New York (which includes New York City) where the US Attorney there is
already involved sounds like a good bet. Why a state court? Because a president
cannot pardon anyone for conviction in state courts, only federal courts. One
can hope that would lead to a conviction and prison time. At that point
Congress could not get away with not impeaching.
Leaving it all in the political
spectrum rather than the legal one makes room for all kinds of manipulation.
I am sure this is an
oversimplification of the process, but to me it seems a more likely course to
take if something needs to be done in the next year. The trick is not to be
impatient. Mueller has been described as a methodical investigator and the time
this is taking to me means he is being very careful and making sure everything
it discovers and develops is solid evidence and it takes that to make a
complicated case like this one stick.
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So it's fun to carry
impeachment signs and demonstrate and feel like we are contributing, but the
eventual outcome is going to be decided in the trenches of the legal system and
let's hope it happens in time to prevent Trump and his gangsters from destroying
the Republic. #fakenews It's so easy anybody can do it
For lack of a coherent
thought train these days, offering up some incoherent random thoughts about life
and other matters.
What a treat to wake up
and go through my morning Internet routine and not end up depressed and angry.
Yesterday's elections (Nov. 7, 2017) seem to indicate the American electorate
is regaining its intelligence. However in politics victories can be short-lived
and major battles to rid the country of the Trump/GOP scourge remain. With that
in mind, I am offering the following as a rallying cry for the coming year
leading to the mid-term elections next November:
"TAKE IT TO THE
HOUSE." Go!
I swear nuthatches must
be the pickiest eaters in the bird world. I watched one today land on a hexagonal
bird feeder then hop around to each of the six perches, picking and tossing
away two or three seeds at each stop then flying off. I'm not sure she took a
seed with her. At least she was feeding the grosbeaks who seem to prefer the
ground.
From Introverts are Awesome facebook page
I have ended up once
again, sitting here in November waiting for enough snow to move to the East
Pole for the winter. I've seen posts saying moving is one of the five most
stressful situations people face. No doubt but I had never applied that to the
annual trek to the cabin. But sitting here waiting with everything but
perishables purchased and packed, I go up and down, anxious to go, but dreading
the actual first moving day. Then this meme came up on facebook today. A gentle
comment on the favorite Alaska pastime, always getting ready. Amen brother.
A couple of days ago a
fellow came by to check the well water (and sell me a $2,000 filtration
system). Very friendly social sort, who never stopped talking.My favorite kind of person, right? :=D.
He asked several questions that to me seemed a little too personal and made me
a little uncomfortable. I finally told him I had to get back to work just to
get him out of here. Perhaps it was the question he asked that made me do that.
He asked where I was from originally. I told him and then he asked what did I
miss most about the place where I grew up. That question stopped me. I finally
answered "nothing." He looked surprised. There's nothing you miss
about where you're from?" I thought for a moment and said, "nope, I
belong here." He gave up then. But later my response bothered me a little.
Why wouldn't I miss something from the place where I lived for the first 25
years of my life? I thought through it and there was a submarine sandwich shop
I liked and then when you think of my home country and sandwiches, roast beef
on Kimmelweck rolls might count. But nothing else really comes to mind. It's
not that there aren't memories of good times and bad, and people recalled with
fondness, but I came to the conclusion that I'd rather be here than there and I
can't think of anything I miss enough to want to go back. Have to wonder if
this might be personality flaw.
We all have signs that winter is upon us. I became aware of a new one this year, something I just realized though it has happened almost every year of my life. You know winter is coming when you have to fight your way through at least three layers of clothing to whiz. It's a man thing. And that's all I have to say about it.
Now, speaking of waiting for winter this list crossed my mind. Kind of a
reverse bucket list
Alaska things I've done:
Drove the Alaska
highway and on entering Alaska asked them to close the gate.
Built a cabin in the
bush and lived in it
Lived on a boat
Faced down an approaching
grizzly bear.
Fished commercially for
king crab
Drove a dog team.
Drove a boat through
the Inside Passage (several times)
Crossed the Gulf of
Alaska in a huge storm in a 40-foot sailboat.
Sailed Alaska to Hawaii
Split cords of
firewood.
Wrote books about
Alaska. (5)
Twice made it through a
whiteout in a small airplane
Operated a fishing
charter boat
Experienced several 7+
earthquakes
Caught all five species
of Alaska salmon. Aware there are a sixth and seventh species (not counting
farmed) but not in Alaska.
Hit a moose with a car
(twice, though the second one hit me)
Traveledhundreds of miles on snowmachines.
Was in Nome twice for
the finish of the Iditarod
Survived life in
Anchorage
Fell through the ice on
a snowmachine into the Talkeetna River
Served as editor of the
Nome Nugget newspaper
Hit icebergs with a
boat (well, burgey bits anyway)
Built three houses
mostly by myself,all three of
them in winter.
But keep this in mind.
No matter what you have done in Alaska, somebody has done it better, gone
farther or higher or deeper, faster and under tougher conditions than you have.
OK now I thought this was titled Take it to the House, but it's not. The song with that title is a rap with lots of objectionable language. This is from the old Tim Allen Show Home Improvement, the band from K&B Construction. Burning down the house. Same message lol.