Read it and weep (for 
America)


Hat tip to Roy Filly



← A primer on the “National Debt.”
Read it and weep 
(for America).
Posted on March 3, 2013 by Roy Filly  
Read it on the Web
http://theruggedindividualist.wordpress.com/2013/03/03/read-it-and-weep-for-america/

The 
Navy (insert here “our Republic”) is a master plan designed by geniuses 
for execution by idiots.
Tom Keefer offers this comment to Willie as the Caine heads to 
sea. [From: The Caine Mutiny]
It is only when the people 
become ignorant and corrupt, when they degenerate into a populace, that they 
are incapable of exercising their sovereignty.
James Monroe

Dear Readers,
I state unashamedly that I have a knack. I wrote the following 
sentence in the very first blog post of The Rugged Individualist. “… I believe 
I have the ability to perceive a convincing argument when I 
hear it (and, on the opposite side of that coin, to know when it is time to 
start shoveling)!” A reader sent the following article to me (and, thanks JM). 
As soon as I read it I said to myself, “A-ha.” 
Mr. Colebatch has flipped that peculiar switch in my brain that suddenly 
elucidated for me what it is about Mr. Obama I find so infuriating. 
It’s simple, he is Captain Queeg!


For those readers unfamiliar with Herman Wouk’s towering novel and 
the subsequent movie about war and incompetence, The Caine Mutiny, this 
particular post will be less meaningful. It is a great film if you haven’t seen 
it. The film received Oscar nominations for Best Picture, 
Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, Best Screenplay, Best Sound 
Recording, Best Film Editing, and Best Dramatic Score.
Roy Filly



His Queeg Moment
By Hal G. P. Colebatch
A perspective on our president from Down Under.
In Herman Wouk’s 
classic World War II novel, The Caine Mutiny, there is a moment when a group of 
the ship’s officers are getting away 
from the increasingly eccentric Captain Queeq by relaxing ashore.

Suddenly the malcontent Lieutenant Keefer asks the others: “Does it occur to 
you that Captain Queeg may be insane?”


In fact Queeg is not insane, at least not at that time. He is 
simply 
grappling, more and more disastrously, with a job too big for him. Come 
the crisis of a typhoon, he becomes paralyzed and nearly sinks the ship 
by failing to give the obvious orders. At the subsequent court-martial 
he appears quite normal until he breaks down under the pressure of 
cross-examination. Before this, the officers have searched the 
regulations for guidance, but the regulations refer only to a captain 
who is clearly and unmistakably insane, not one who is merely guilty of 
eccentricity and bad judgment. At a lower level of responsibility, Queeg might 
have performed adequately, but with Keefer’s question, the 
remaining respect for Queeg’s office has gone.


Obama’s second 
inauguration speech may be his Queeg moment ― an 
undeniable demonstration that, in an emergency, he is incapable of 
grappling with reality. For all his unceasing invocation of the word 
“change,” the outstanding thing about Obama has been his apparent 
inability to react, even to an imminent crisis. Like Queeg, he stands 
frozen on the bridge as the waves grow higher, or obsesses over issues 
like homosexuals and women in the military as the typhoon rises.

Faced with the worst looming fiscal cliff-fall in world history 
Obama, like Queeg in the typhoon, has done nothing at all, but has, 
increasingly, resorted to meaningless words. His pseudo-Keynesian fiscal 
notions and a mantra-like repetition of old and failed ideas, suggest a serious 
lack of mental versatility.
Economics is not an exact 
science, but some of its rules are now well-known, and one is that a government 
cannot spend its way 
out of a recession.


Yet Obama does not 
project any sense of urgency, merely a smug, 
radiating sense of his own greatness. The one fiscal measure to which he seems 
committed ― taxing the rich ― is infantile stuff, like Queeg’s 
obsession with who ate the wardroom strawberries. Any first-year 
politics or economics student knows that there are not enough rich, 
even in as wealthy a country as the United States, to have raising their taxes 
make any appreciable difference. President Reagan’s 
application of the Laffer Curve proved emphatically, and only a short 
while ago, that the way to both stimulate the economy and to increase 
government revenues is to lower taxes. And it is not hard to pick some 
areas as least where towering taxes would make no appreciable difference to 
public infrastructure.

Like Queeg, Obama shows an inability to change course when such a 
change is desperately needed. Giving 20 F-16 fighters and hundred of 
tanks to Egypt was never, in my opinion, a clever idea. Even when Egypt 
was an unequivocal friend its security required things like armored cars to put 
down street violence, not these hi-tech weapons whose only 
conceivable use would be against Israel. Indeed, Obama seems to show no 
awareness that Egypt and other major Islamic countries have changed from being 
friends to something like enemies in a few months. For a 
President of the United States there is a difference between making a 
bad policy choice and clinging to that policy when it is plainly 
completely wrong, like the Cainesteaming in a circle and 
cutting its own tow-line. Mistakes that cannot be ignored are always 
someone else’s fault (refer George Bush).


The dancing is 
still there, the golf, the celebs, the multi-million 
dollar holidays, but behind them it is possible to detect a desperate 
emptiness, a interconnected mosaic of failure. The one much-boasted 
triumph, the killing of Osama Bin Laden, was the work of other men. One 
of those most responsible, Dr. Shakil Afridi, rots in the hellhole of a 
Pakistani jail, abandoned. Obama’s oath to bring the Benghazi murderers 
to justice seems to have been forgotten as soon as it was made, 
something ― I am not sure if there is a word for it ― actually below the level 
of a campaign promise. Allies have been lost or slighted in 
almost every part of the world, the Afghan war has brought the U..S and 
NATO humiliation and Russia and China lead in Space. The defenses of the U.S.’s 
major allies, such as Britain, are in an even more dire 
situation.

This does not even 
consider the exploding levels of domestic poverty. Restoring flexibility to the 
wage system, so as to give American 
industry a reasonable degree of competitiveness, seems out of the 
question.

The Western position in Mali seems to have suddenly collapsed 
without warning, or without preventative action being taken, and meanwhile, we 
have had the North Korean threat. I somehow doubt we would have had that if 
Reagan had been at the helm. What, exactly have things come to when a cockroach 
of a country, apparently run by real, certifiable lunatics, 
can threaten the United States with nuclear weapons? The typhoon waves 
are starting to break over the bridge.
 
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I’m as mad as hell,
and I’m not going to 
take it any more.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_qgVn-Op7Q

Mrs. Richard "Peggy" Martin (1935 - 2012) 
  
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/dfw/obituary.aspx?n=margaret-irene-martin-peggy&pid=159081400&fhid=12241#fbLoggedOut
 
   
http://www.legacy.com/guestbook/dfw/guestbook.aspx?n=margaret-martin&pid=159081400&sort=1
   
   
 
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