[From Bill Lifka - Graphic by Ira]
MAX THE ARMY MULE
I knew a sergeant at The Artillery School who’d served from before WWII when
horse drawn artillery still existed. He’d served in a mountain battery that used
mules to carry the small howitzers in two pieces. The tube was placed on the
back of one mule and the carriage with wheels on another mule. The ammunition
and other battery equipment were also carried by mules. Mules were chosen over
horses because they were stronger, had staying power and were sure-footed on
mountainous terrain.
On the negative side, some mules are downright stubborn
and unwilling to do their jobs if doing so doesn’t suit their fancy at the
moment. In Sgt. Clancy’s battery, one of the mules, Max, was noted for being
most stubborn of all. His habit was to rear up on his hind legs when the job or
situation wasn’t to his liking.
On or around Fort Sill there are no mountains
but there is rolling terrain. One fairly big hill, called Signal Mountain, rises 1200 feet or
so over its base at an increasingly higher slope near its top. A punishment
hike or two up the hill was a regular Saturday event for me when I attended
OCS. (Actually performed at a “paratroop shuffle”.)
For the mountain artillery,
Signal Mountain was the only way to keep its mules in shape. On one fateful
day, Sgt. Clancy’s battery was on its way up the mountain. Max was having one
of his more ornery days and had been kicking and rearing from the moment he’d
been led from the corral. His handlers couldn’t let him get away with bad
behavior on this occasion or he’d be worse the next time.
Eventually, Max
settled down sufficiently so a carriage could be loaded on and he fell in the
line of mules heading out on the trail. As I know from personal experience, the
trail up Signal Mountain is narrow and falls off sharply to one side. There’s
not much room for error, which mules seem to know instinctively. With the
exception of Max, all the mules settled into the climb at a steady pace,
placing their hoofs with practiced care.
Max knew better but he continued to
show his dissatisfaction by skittering around and tossing his head. Finally he
reared up on his hind quarters, a tremendous feat considering the load he was
carrying. Unfortunately, he rose past the point where he exceeded the center of
gravity (his and his load), fell backward and rolled down the mountain upside
down atop the carriage wheels accompanied by the cheers of his handlers. Max
was stubborn to his end.
PERSEVERING VS BEING STUBBORN
There’s a difference between persevering and being
stubborn. When one keeps trying to attain a goal using other than previously
failed actions, one’s persistence is considered to be strength. When one keeps
trying the same failing action, it’s called stubbornness and stupidity.
That
brings me to my subject which is current historic levels of stubbornness and
stupidity in Congress, as opposed to the usual stubbornness and stupidity
that’s a hallmark of those hallowed chambers.
It might have been better if the Republican-led House had practiced
with a few easier initiatives before introducing a bill that began changing
Obamacare. I use the word “began” because the plan of the Speaker and his
associates was to effect a change in three stages. It was quite certain
Democrats in the Senate would vote 100% against any Republican sponsored health
bill out of the House because Democrats in Congress and those not yet removed
from Executive Branch departments have been waging a fierce war against all
Republican initiatives since the election.
It makes no difference that the
country needs adult leadership right now desperately; the main goal for
Democratic officeholders is to let their constituents know they are bent on revenge
for having lost the White House and the sweetest revenges for most Democrats
are preventing any changes to Obamacare and preventing the appointment of Neil
Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. Last week the Democrats succeeded in the first of
these and next week they hope to succeed in the second.
Actually, it wasn’t
Democrats who defeated Obamacare replacement. It was 25+/- Republican
congressmen who call themselves the “Freedom Caucus.” They consider themselves
to be “true” Conservatives and, therefore, are “real” Republicans who take
Party principles seriously.
As far as I can figure out, I share all the major
beliefs of these guys but I want you to know I think they were stubborn and
stupid on this occasion as they were back when the previous Speaker gave up and
retired rather than fight them as well as a President (Obama) out to destroy
the Republican Party.
In my view, Ryan had a correct strategic plan that
addressed the Senate process and the bare majority held by Republicans in that
house. It was Freedom Caucus Republicans who would not follow the leadership
again because they didn’t think their plan went far enough.
I had the opportunity to talk to my
Congressman just after the fiasco. I told him he was wrong and needed to change
his ways. He has a great name, an impressive appearance and a pat answer, as I
had expected. He is a stereotypical politician: 18 years in the Florida House,
10 years in the Florida Senate, 6 years (so far) in the U.S. House. In each of
these offices he ran from two different districts because of redistricting; he
likes the job. I rated his reason for blocking Ryan’s bill as unadulterated BS,
although he argued well. He denied he’s a member of the “Freedom Caucus”. (That
caucus ran him as a candidate for speaker against Boehner.) He argued the Ryan
bill didn’t go far enough and denied Freedom Caucus changes would prevent
Senate passage.
He was wrong or betting I wouldn’t know. He said maybe it was
good Obamacare would continue since it would fail and that would force Americans
to embrace a truly great replacement. When I mentioned “party loyalty”, he
denied that was important. He was wrong again. I know some really smart Conservatives who think like my (new)
Congressman. I just don’t get why they like what I think is all bad.
Any
improvement in Obamacare would be better but still bad because any federal
government involvement in health care will cause it to be ineffective. To let
Obamacare fail (as it will) is just plain irresponsible and Republicans will
get the blame.
Democrats in the Senate are as bad as the wrong-headed
Republicans in the House. They have acted like idiots in their questioning Neil
Gorsuch, who has been rated as an ideal candidate for the Supreme Court by
legal organizations ranging from Liberal to Conservative. His extensive service
as a federal judge provides unwavering testimony to his fairness in upholding
the law and not making the law, as Liberals expect of them. Senate Democratic
leaders rant and rave in their frenzied attempt to defeat him. (Or anyone Trump
might name.) The basis of every argument against Gorsuch is that Democrats
expect judges to make decisions on ideological grounds not on the law as
written. They are too stupid to realize that would bite them in the ass in due
time.
The problem of the Freedom Caucus is the same as that of the Democratic
Caucus in the Senate. Although they are directly opposed on all political
issues they share a monumental stubbornness and lack even the barest smidgen
of modesty in their belief they are 100% right and any opposition is 100%
wrong. I wonder if there’s a steep hill near Washington DC on which we could
gather these folks together and tie wheels on their backs.
Bill Lifka