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8/28/2019

NUTS & BOLTS of 2020


Some people believe it is too early to think in detail about the next national election in November of 2020.  I beg to differ in some respects.
I have not made a decision about the person I will support for the democratic nomination, so in that respect, it is clearly too early.  Nor am I ready to volunteer just yet for ground-game activities.  I’ve not determined which issues I want to headline the campaign, or what strategies might be most effective.  What I am most concerned about at this point are some items of operation that rarely occurred to us in any substantive way until 2016 turned out as it did.  Those "nuts and bolts" issues never get enough attention before we walk into our voting locations. 

I’m talking about exigencies that could easily corrupt the vote and the entire election process as they may well have done – unforgettably – in 2016 (see my Blog post of 11/14/2016).

#1) Hacking and Trolling -- interference of foreign countries in our election process comes down to Russia (and others like China) hacking into voting records and using social media to distort election issues.  We should all be aware by now of what occurred in 2016 (see CNN summary at: https://www.cnn.com/2017/01/07/politics/intelligence-report-russian-interference/index.html)
and, indeed, what has continued to occur since. 

The Russians are involved in a cyber-attack against us aimed at disrupting and distorting our electoral process (and other vital activities).  This ‘war’ is meant not just to disrupt our elections, but to make us look like a second-rate government unable to fulfill our democratic promises and unworthy of consideration as an example of democratic government to the nations of the world.
 
Make no mistake: the USA is losing this battle, mostly because of the denial and neglect of this by the current Administration (although some agencies have continued to fight back).  We have been warned by our intelligence and investigative agencies, by Special Counsel Mueller, by representatives of the Military and by private tech companies that this is real; it is on-going; it is having a deleterious effect upon our democratic processes.  But the Trump administration has done little to counter the attacks.  Instead, this pretend president continues to laud and praise Vladimir Putin at every opportunity.

What are some of the happenings and reports of Russian hacking activity since 2016?  The Center for Strategic and International Studies, based in Washington, DC, has built a list of reported incidents of cyber interference and hacking since 2006 (see their full list at  https://csis-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/190813_Significant_Cyber_Events_List.pdf).  
The partial list below attempts to present a breadth of incidents, and not just those related to elections. It includes activity by countries other than Russia.  This is just the tip of the iceberg; the reality of the cyber war going on under the radar is overwhelming. 

February 2017. A suspected Russian hacker breaches at least 60 universities and US government organizations using SQL injections, including HUD, NOAA, Cornell University, and NYU, among many others. This follows up a hack by the same actor against the U.S. Electoral Assistance Commission in December 2016.
March 2017. An intelligence report revealed a Russian operation to send malicious spear-phishing messages to more than 10,000 Twitter users in the Department of Defense. The malicious payloads delivered through these messages gave Russian hackers access to the victim’s device and Twitter account
April 2017. Cybersecurity researchers revealed a growing cyber-espionage campaign originating in China and targeting construction, engineering, aerospace and telecom companies, as well as government agencies, in the U.S., Europe, and Japan
July 2017. Russian hackers used leaked NSA tools to compromise Wi-Fi servers in European and Middle Eastern hotels in a campaign targeting top diplomats and industrial leaders.
July 2017.  The FBI and DHS announced that hackers had been targeting US energy facilities including the Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corporation in a campaign bearing resemblance to the operations of a known Russian hacking group
October 2017. Russian hackers reported to be targeting potential attendees of CyCon, a cybersecurity conference organized by the US Army and the NATO CCD COE
February 2018.  The US and UK formally blame Russia for the June 2017 NotPetya ransomware attack that caused billions of dollars in damages across the world.
March 2018.  Online services for the city of Atlanta were disrupted after a ransomware attack struck the city’s networks, demanding $55,000 worth of bitcoin in payment. The city would eventually spend approximately $2.6 million recovering from the attack.
 March 2018.  Baltimore’s 911 dispatch system was taken down for 17 hours after a ransomware attack, forcing the city to revert to manual dispatching of emergency services
 April 2018.  US and UK officials issued a joint warning that Russia was deliberately targeting western critical infrastructure by compromising home and business routers
May 2018.  Researchers reveal that a hacking group connected to Russian intelligence services had been conducting reconnaissance on the business and ICS networks of electric utilities in the US and UK since May 2017
May 2018.  Within 24 hours of President Trump’s announcement that the US would withdraw from the Iran nuclear agreement, security firms reported increases in Iranian hacking activity, including the sending of emails containing malware to diplomats in the Foreign Affairs ministries of US allies, as well as global telecommunication companies
June 2018.  The U.S. Treasury Department announced sanctions against five Russian companies and three individuals for enabling Russian intelligence and military units to conduct cyberattacks against the U.S. 
June 2018.  Chinese government hackers compromised the networks of a U.S. Navy contractor, stealing 614 GB of data related to weapons, sensor, and communication systems under development for U.S. submarines
July 2018.  Hackers targeted the campaigns of at least two local Democratic candidates during 2018’s primary season, reportedly using DDoS attacks to disrupt campaign websites during periods of active fundraising and positive news publicity.
July 2018.  The U.S. Department of Justice announced the indictments of 12 Russian intelligence officers for carrying out large-scale cyber operations against the Democratic Party in advance of the 2016 Presidential election. 
July 2018.  Microsoft reveals that Russian hackers had targeted the campaigns of three Democratic candidates running for the 2018 midterm elections.  
 July 2018.  Security researchers detect a spike in hacking attempts against IoT devices in Finland during the run-up to President Trump’s summit with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki. The majority of attacks originated in China. 
July 2018.  Security researchers report that an Iranian hacking group had been targeting the industrial control systems of electric utility companies in the U.S., Europe, East Asia, and the Middle East.  
July 2018.  The Department of Homeland Security reveals that a campaign by Russian hackers in 2017 had compromised the networks of multiple U.S. electric utilities and put attackers in a position where they could have caused blackouts.
August 2018.  Facebook identified multiple new disinformation campaigns on its platform sponsored by groups in Russia and Iran and involved 652 fake accounts, pages, and groups. 
August 2018.  Microsoft announces that Russian hackers had targeted U.S. Senators and conservative think tanks critical of Russia.
September 2018.  In a letter to Senate leaders, Sen. Ron Wyden revealed that a major technology company had alerted multiple Senate offices of attempts by foreign government hackers to gain access to the email accounts of Senators and their staff
 September 2018.  The U.S. State Department suffers a breach of one of its unclassified email systems, exposing the personal information of several hundred employees
October 2018.  The U.S. Justice Department announces criminal charges against seven GRU officers for multiple instances of hacking against organizations including FIFA, Westinghouse Electric Company, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, and the U.S. and World Anti-Doping Agencies
October 2018.  The U.S. Department of Homeland Security announces that it has detected a growing volume of cyber activity targeting election infrastructure in the U.S. ahead of the 2018 midterm elections. 
 October 2018.  The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced that hackers had compromised a government computer system, gaining access to the personal data of 75,000 people ahead of the start of ACA sign-up season.
October 2018.  Media reports state that U.S. agencies warned President Trump that China and Russia eavesdropped on his call made from an unsecured phone
November 2018.  Security researchers report that Russian hackers impersonating U.S. State Department officials attempted to gain access to the computer systems of military and law enforcement agencies, defense contractors, and media companies
December 2018.  The United States, in coordination with Australia, Canada, the UK, and New Zealand, accused China of conducting a 12-year campaign of cyber espionage targeting the IP and trade secrets of companies across 12 countries. The announcement was tied to the indictment of two Chinese hackers associated with the campaign
January 2019.  The U.S. Democratic National Committee revealed that it had been targeted by Russian hackers in the weeks after the 2018 midterm elections
June 2019.  U.S. grid regulator NERC issued a warning that a major hacking group with suspected Russian ties was conducting reconnaissance into the networks of electrical utilities.
July 2019.  The U.S. Coast Guard issued a warning after it received a report that a merchant vessel had its networks disrupted by malware while traveling through international waters
 July 2019.  Microsoft revealed that it had detected almost 800 cyberattacks over the past year targeting think tanks, NGOs, and other political organizations around the world, with the majority of attacks originating in Iran, North Korea, and Russia.
 August 2019.  Russian hackers were observed using vulnerable IoT devices like a printer, VOIP phone, and video decoder to break into high-value corporate networks

Two responses occur to me after reading the entire listing: 
1.      contact your congressman and Senators and tell them they must continue to thwart these efforts through legislation and oversight of Executive responses
2.      if you suspect any hacking of your own online materials by a foreign entity, or have some back-up to prove its existence elsewhere, at least notify CSIS at techpolicy@csis.org.

#2) Outdated Voting Software and Machines – this is something we have ignored for much too long and now we are paying for that delay.  Here’s the story in brief, using an article from March 2019 from a source recognized for reliability, the Brennan Center for Justice.  The report cited is an update to earlier analyses conducted by the Brennan Center in September 2015 and March 2018, which examined the state of voting machines and election security in the United States.  The need to replace antiquated voting equipment has become “increasingly urgent” because:
1)     older systems are “more likely to fail and are increasingly difficult to maintain.” In the 2018 midterm election, old and malfunctioning voting machines across the country led to long lines at the polls, leaving voters frustrated – ­and, in some cases, causing them to leave before casting a ballot;
2)      older systems are “less likely to have the kind of security features we expect of voting machines today.”  The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) recently noted that “machines that do not produce a printout of a voter’s selections that can be verified by the voter and used in audits – should be ‘removed from service as soon as possible,’ to ensure the security and integrity of American elections.”

Here’s the good news: Since BCFJ’s last update, “Congress provided $380 million in Help America Vote Act (HAVA) funds to help states to bolster their election security. For the most part, states have used this money for critical security measures.”
The Election Assistance Commission (EAC) has reported that states “will use $136 million of this funding to strengthen election cybersecurity, $103 million to purchase new voting equipment, and $21 million to improve post-election audits.”
The bad news:  “this only scratches the surface of investments that are needed in the coming years…the way the money was distributed means it was insufficient to replace the vast majority of the most vulnerable machines before the 2020 election (if you want more information, see:

From the Brennan Center’s own research and monitoring of the current state of election technology and security practices, we get a snapshot of the current state of voting technology in the United States…
·      121 officials in 31 states said they must replace their equipment before the 2020 election, largely related to the fact that voting machines across the country are “aging out…”  Two-thirds reported that they do not have the adequate funds to do so, even after the distribution of additional HAVA funds
·      45 states are currently using voting equipment that is no longer manufactured
·      Election officials in 40 states told us they are using machines that are at least a decade old this year. The lifespan of electronic voting machines can vary, but experts agree that systems over a decade old are more likely to need replacement for security and reliability reasons.
·      to make matters worse, many of the older machines have systems running software that was developed decades ago, including Windows XP and Windows 7. Too often, vendors no longer write security patches for such software, leaving machines more vulnerable to cyberattacks.
·      a disproportionate number of these old systems have no voter verified paper backup, something that…’security experts around the country, have argued is an unnecessary security risk.’ In 2019, 12 states still use paperless electronic machines as the primary polling place equipment in at least some counties and towns
·      Almost every election official who responded that they planned on replacing voting equipment also stated that their hope was to find new machines that produce voter-verified paper backups that could be used in a recount or audit
·      A top funding priority for election officials was the hiring of more IT support staff, particularly at the local level.
·      Other items that election officials mentioned include providing more training for their staff, strengthening the physical security of their storage locations and polling places and putting in place robust post-election audits

 #3 Who Owns the Companies That Produce the Voting Machines?—is a question being raised by states like North Carolina and Maryland both of which experienced some indication of possible conflicts-of-interest with companies used for 2016.
v North Carolina will require touchscreen-only voting systems to be replaced with equipment that produces a paper record. The change will affect machines in about a third of the state’s counties.
The move came a week after federal authorities said they would finally conduct a forensic analysis of voter check-in software (that failed on Election Day in 2016 in Durham County) to see if Russian military hackers who targeted the software provider may have tampered with registration information to disrupt voting -- the first known federal probe of voting technology that malfunctioned during the 2016 election, when Russian hackers infiltrated election systems in several states.
(they found no indication of foul play).
v Maryland officials learned last year that a company maintaining their election infrastructure did not disclose that it was being financed for more than two years by a venture fund whose largest investor is a Russian oligarch. A U.S. Department of Homeland Security team found no evidence of intrusion on the state’s election system, however.

“Peering into who is behind voting-equipment makers is a long overdue step that few states have taken,” said Lawrence Norden, an expert on voting machines with the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s law school.  “We know very little about voting system vendors, and this is a crucial piece of information,” he wrote in an email.

#4)  NY Reforms – Just how diligent has your local election board been about instituting the voting reform measures that were signed into law by Governor Cuomo in January of this year?  Here is a list:
a.      early voting Election Law 8-600 in effect – are adequate polling places identified per the Law? “at least one early voting polling place for every full increment of fifty thousand registered voters in each county; provided, however, the number of early voting polling places in a county shall not be required to be greater than seven, and a county with fewer than fifty thousand voters shall have at least one early voting polling place.”
b.      pre-registration for 16- and 17-year-olds
c.      portability of registration records  
d.      consolidated dates for state and federal primaries
e.      distribute ballots to military voters farther in advance of elections . The legislature also passed:
f.       constitutional amendments to permit same-day registration (SB 1048) and
g.      no-excuse absentee voting (SB 1049), both of which will need to be passed again and then ratified by the voters.

 The truth is, it is not too early to worry about the nuts and bolts of the 2020 election.  In fact, for some states and localities, it may be too late to make much-needed changes to machines, software or vendors.  Let’s hope not. 

Meanwhile, it is never too early for progressives, democrats and independent voters (and any Republicans who care to seek fairness in the election process) to raise these basic questions with their local boards of election and government officials, just to see if their commitment to just elections is solid and their follow-through actions constitute a verifiable and justifiable conclusion. 
CAUTION: the unnoticed nuts and bolts that hold something together can age, rust and break causing a whole system to be corrupted and to fail. Don’t take this situation lightly – there is a “cyber war” going on and Russia is winning because we are not attending to our voting infrastructure!   

8/21/2019

"MENTAL ILLNESS PULLS the TRIGGER"

The man who occupies the White House as president has once again presented a mistaken premise, backed by no factual evidence, to mislead his followers and anyone else who might be persuaded by bumper sticker mentality.
 
Following the two horrific mass shootings in El Paso, TX and Dayton, OH, Donald Trump spoke on Monday, August 5, 2019 from the White House during which he declared “mental illness and hatred pulls the trigger, not the gun.”  Although earlier in the day he had mentioned (in a tweet) a need for “background checks,” in this speech, he described the shooters as “mentally ill monsters.”   And, this wasn’t the first time he made such a statement.  Trump also suggested that mental illness was to blame for the killings that happened at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs in Texas in November 2017. He continued to press this theme at his most recent rallies.

Definitions matter.  And so does Trump’s Rhetoric. 
“’Mental illness’ is a disease that causes mild to severe disturbances in thought and/or behavior, resulting in an inability to cope with life’s ordinary demands and routines.” 
There are more than 200 classified forms of mental illness. Some of the more common disorders are depression, bipolar disorder, dementia, schizophrenia and anxiety disorders.  Symptoms may include changes in mood, personality, personal habits and/or social withdrawal.
“Mental health problems may be related to excessive stress due to a particular situation or series of events … mental illnesses are often physical as well as emotional and psychological. Mental illnesses may be caused by a reaction to environmental stresses, genetic factors, biochemical imbalances, or a combination of these. With proper care and treatment many individuals learn to cope or recover from a mental illness or emotional disorder.”  (http://www.mentalhealthamerica.net/recognizing-warning-signs)

Basic questions that Trump needs to answer, based on his own words:
1.      how do you define “mental illness” and what proof (documentation) do you have that it “causes” the trigger-pulling? 
2.      are guns protected by the 2nd Amendment or is the peoples’ right to own and bear arms the subject of 2nd Amendment protection? Are you asking us to accept all guns (and gun manufacture) as constitutionally protected, even though these are potentially lethal weapons and killing machines sold for profit?  Strange, since potentially lethal (and even faulty) products -- like certain drugs, foods, toys, autos & trucks -- are generally well-regulated to assure people’s safety and tranquility!
3.      are you equating those who are mentally ill with being monsters?  are you saying that all persons who are shooters are mentally ill?  or are you saying that all mass shooters must be mentally ill and are therefore also monsters? do you even know what you are saying?
4.      was the NRA consulted in any way about this speech (and more recent rantings)?  After all, it is NRA propaganda that insists that guns are not any kind of problem, but that mass shooters who pull the trigger are mentally ill and that anything (like background checks) that restricts gun ownership (sales?) is a “slippery slope” toward confiscation of guns
5.      if hatred is part of the problem with these shooters, what actions are incumbent upon you to assure that hate speech and hateful behavior are curtailed?

MENTAL ILLNESS is NOT the main reason why mass shootings and domestic terrorism are increasing in this nation.  That is a figment in the imagination of a deficient president and his equally deficient conspiracy-prone followers.  Perhaps more relevant to the situation is a current atmosphere of violence as acceptable behavior contributed to by the following:
§  a history of violence toward people of color (from slavery to Jim Crow to white nationalism or white supremacy to immigration restrictions
§  election of a racist to the presidency with his vile language and behavior toward ‘others’ like immigrants, Muslims, Mexicans, Africans, etc.
§  a president who signals his approval and empathy with violent hate groups like Nazis, white nationalists and the KKK
§  a president whose intent is to destroy democratic values and replace them with:
o    absolute loyalty to him as leader (‘Fuhrer’ in German),
o   a constant din that government is the problem,
o   laws made useful for self-advancement; and,
o   violence and revenge seen as necessary in a war against people who disagree or criticize the Leader
§  the glorification of guns and easy access to them
§  protection of potentially lethal products by the NRA (for profit)
§  using violence as a means of control over others

Some responses to Trump comments on Mental Illness:
“Aug. 6, 2019 --
"…the American Psychiatric Association (APA) quickly issued a statement saying the "overwhelming majority" of people with mental illness are more likely to be victims of violent crime than to carry it out.
APA President Rosie Phillips Davis, PhD, added these thoughts:
“As our nation tries to process the unthinkable yet again, it is clearer than ever that we are facing a public health crisis of gun violence fueled by racism, bigotry and hatred. The combination of easy access to assault weapons and hateful rhetoric is toxic. 
“A small percentage of violent acts are committed by people who are diagnosed with, or in treatment for, mental illness. The rates of mental illness are roughly the same around the world, yet other countries are not experiencing these traumatic events as often as we face them. One critical factor is access to, and the lethality of, the weapons that are being used in these crimes. Adding racism, intolerance and bigotry to the mix is a recipe for disaster.”

Renee Binder, MD, a professor and director of the Psychiatry and Law Program at the University of California, San Francisco, says these types of shooters are "highly disturbed in some way or another," but there is not a strong connection between mental illness and violence.  In addition, using the term "monsters" to describe people who have mental illness "does a lot of harm," she says. "There's already so much stigma against people who have a diagnosis of mental illness."” (https://www.webmd.com/mental-health/news/20190806/experts-slam-trump-for-post-shooting-comments#1)

Research strongly suggests that Mental-health issues are not necessarily predictive of violent outbursts. 
v Although as many as one in five people in the US experience mental illness every year, people with serious mental-health problems account for just 3% of all violent crime.
v Psychiatrists and psychologists have been looking at the data on this for a long time, and there's just no evidence of a (direct) connection between mental illness and violence. Instead, researchers have discovered that people with major mental illnesses are 2.5 times more likely to be the victims of violent outbursts than the general public. (Business Insider)
v According to the National Center for Health Statistics, less than 5% of the 120,000 gun-related killings in the US between 2001 and 2010 were perpetrated by people diagnosed with mental illness.
v “If we want to address the gun violence that is tearing our country apart, we must keep our focus on finding evidence-based solutions. This includes restricting access to guns for people who are at risk for violence and working with psychologists and other experts to find solutions to the intolerance that is infecting our nation and the public dialogue.” (APA President)

Scientists say the real problem is that violent, impulsive, and angry men are (easily) getting their hands on guns.  There is…a well-established pattern among mass shootings: They're typically perpetrated by angry young men.

A 2017 report from the Department of Homeland Security on "mass attacks" in public spaces found similarly that "almost half" of the attackers studied that year were motivated by personal grievances, retaliating for various perceived slights, including being bullied, disliked, or wronged by peers or family members. It's a phenomenon that other researchers have noticed, too.
"Most mass murders are planned well in advance of the outburst, usually as acts of revenge or retribution for perceived slights and wrongs," psychiatrist Michael Stone noted in a 2015 report on "mass murder, mental illness, and men."

The forensic psychiatrist Liza Gold teaches at Georgetown and edited the book "Gun Violence and Mental Illness." She told Business Insider in 2017 that mass shooters tend to be "impulsive and angry about a lot of different things" and said many have a history with law enforcement or violence, especially around domestic violence.  

 “Domestic violence can be physical or psychological, and it can affect anyone of any age, gender, race, or sexual orientation.  While every relationship is different, domestic violence generally involves an unequal power dynamic in which one partner tries to assert control over the other in a variety of ways.  Some perpetrators may even use children… or other family members as emotional leverage...”

One of the outcomes of domestic violence for children involved can be the disorder called ’Intermittent Explosive disorder’ which appears to result from a combination of biological and environmental factors. Most people with the disorder grew up in families where explosive behavior and verbal and physical abuse were common. Being exposed to such violence at an early age makes it more likely for children to develop the same traits as they mature. There may also be a genetic component through which the susceptibility to the disorder is passed from parents to children. The majority of cases occur in persons younger than 35 years of age.  The disorder is probably more common than realized and may be an important cause of violent behavior. Some studies have found that intermittent explosive disorder is more common in men.” (Psychology Today, August 12, 2019)

This brings us to a point that does not receive enough attention.  Yes, mental illness may be behind the actions of mass shooters, but not just any form of mental disorder and certainly not mental illness that is being successfully treated.  What may be more accurate is that a disposition toward violence is behind these killings.  That violence may find its origin in mental disorder of one or another kind that has gone undiscovered, unreported, undiagnosed and untreated.  And therein may lie more truth than fiction.    

One writer describes the duplicitous approach of the psychological community and the media toward protecting those with mental illness from further stigma while also acknowledging that some untreated or uncured mental disorders do involve a tendency to the violence behind these shootings. Her work “as a writer, trainer, and coach focuses on educating the world to the true nature of what it's like to have bipolar disorder and/or a form of schizophrenia” as she does. 
  
Julie A. Fast, Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder, Mental Illness, Violent Behavior, and Mass Shootings  A balanced perspective.
Posted Aug 12, 2019 in “Psychology Today”
 “Currently, there are two messages in the mental health community: The public cry is, ‘We are not violent,’ and at the same time, behind the scenes, “Please do something about people with untreated mental illness who are violent, but don't tell the world or we will have more stigma.” We can't have it both ways.

“My approach is...I want the world to know that those of us with serious mental illness absolutely can get better if we say ‘yes’ to treatment when treatment is available. On the other hand, I feel the ravages of my own mentally ill brain that has violent thoughts and leads me to violent behaviors. This is reinforced by… clients who tell me first-hand stories of mental illness and violence in their own homes. 
 “Research — the kind reported after there is violence in a mass shooting—strongly points to people with untreated mental illness as the perpetrators of the majority of mass shootings in the U.S. In many cases, family members tried for years to get help for the child.”

Her conclusion is compelling:
“We need a balanced discussion. The majority of people with mental health disorders have depression and anxiety. They are not known to be violent. Those of us with SMI or SPMI on the serious mental illness scale who have a form of bipolar or a psychotic disorder--  We are the ones in jail and in hospitals. We are on the streets. We are the one who needs a health check before buying a gun.  No, not all people with serious mental illness are violent, but I can honestly say I have never met someone who is in a dysphoric manic episode with psychosis who is not violent to some extent.”

The mom of one of the recent shooters in El Paso tried to tell the police she was scared. They ignored her. "The kid is 21 and has a right to have an AK47," the police said. The young man opened fire at Walmart and killed innocent people. It is being called ‘domestic terrorism’ (which) will fit the agenda that mentally ill people are not violent…
“We can't end stigma while simultaneously giving the opposite message that none of us are violent. It sends a mixed message and, in my opinion, will lead to more killings.”

So, how do we approach this topic of gun violence.  Probably not in the way that Donald J. Trump has proposed: by considering all mass shooters as mentally ill. 

This stigmatizing error leads to all kinds of abuses, some of which Trump has already hinted at; institutionalization being the worst.  The fight to rid society of the scourge of incarceration (institutionalization) and non-human and inhumane treatment and isolation from the world, has been too long and arduous to return to that ignominious model of ‘treatment.’  Trump is a knee-jerk Regressive who has no idea how stupid and dangerous this is. It reminds one of the Nazi’s solution to mental deficiency which was to “lock ‘them’ up” and basically experiment on ‘them’ or let ‘them’ die. 

On the other hand, the mental health community, and our government leaders have failed to attend with money and commitment to treatment of mental illness in its many forms.  The worst has probably been the utter failure to provide adequate public resources for the diagnosis and treatment of those who suffer with mental disorders that may lead to violent outbursts.  Our community mental health system was so inadequate when de-institutionalization occurred that it could not provide adequate support and treatment for all those placed in our communities, too many ending up on the streets to become homeless or jailed.  Despite some improvements that have occurred, such as group residences and clinics, we still have inadequate community resources for the treatment needed by those experiencing mental illness or disorder.

The Trumpian solution for resolving gun violence is to target those with mental illness: to deny them access to guns, to lock them up in big buildings and to isolate them from the rest of us.  He has no idea what could or should be done about community resources to treat mental illnesses; even though that would cost less than building or re-furbishing all those institutions.  Indeed, he can’t even deliver on “meaningful” background checks for all gun purchases because he can’t stand up to the NRA (he can’t risk losing their support!). 

Once again – as with so many of this nation’s social issues – Mr. Trump has little or no understanding of the actual problems; and little regard or understanding for in-depth solutions.  He defines problems in terms of conspiracies (mostly against him) or in terms of personal whims or fantasies or prejudices; or simply in terms that someone else provides (like FOX News personnel).  As long as he remains in office (along with ‘Moscow Mitch’ and his silent majority of GOP Senators), solutions to gun violence and the tremendous need for effective treatment of mental illnesses that lead to violent eruptions, have slim chance of being undertaken.  
THERE IS BUT ONE SOLUTION – IMPEACH TRUMP NOW and VOTE Do-Nothing REPUBLICANS OUT IN 2020!


8/09/2019

WE KNOW WHAT HAS TO BE DONE

We have heard lip service this week from Donald J. Trump in his role as the alleged President of the United States.  We heard a con man who speaks out of both sides of his mouth.  We heard a liar who rarely speaks without telling some form of untruth about people and policy.  We heard a profiteer who blamed consumers for the problem of violence (blaming their hate, mental disturbance, playing video games and allowing unbridled immigration).  
We heard a corrupt politician who read words from a teleprompter calling for action but who took no effective action except to please his sponsors (the NRA and corporate giants).  We heard a white nationalist, a purveyor of hate and racist venom (using racist language that divides people against one another), call for the nation to come together in unity, a unity he has worked to destroy.  Trump said, ““In one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy.  Hatred warps the mind, ravages the heart and devours the soul.”  
Hopefully, this man of warped mind, ravaged heart and devoured soul will not be the chief spokesman for this nation much longer.

This illegitimate president tried to tell us that the causes of recent mass shootings have to do with Hate Speech, violent Video games, and Mental Illness. But there were no words that indicated remorse for his own contributions to hate and violence.  There was no reference to the need for the Senate to act on national gun legislation passed by the House of Representatives that would institute universal background checks but has been blocked by Senate Republican Leader, “Moscow Mitch” McConnell, who has a penchant for barring Senators from voting on much-needed legislation until he hears from his manipulator, Donald J. Trump!

This fake president has directed the Department of Justice to “work harder” with local, state and federal agencies to find potential attackers (about as ineffective as one can be!). He also called on social media companies to "develop tools to detect mass shooters before they strike" (the same social media companies that allow their platforms to be used by radicals who advocate violence…).  Trump also asked the FBI to identify what resources the agency needs to investigate and disrupt "hate crimes and domestic terrorism" (the same agency Trump continuously maligns). 

Later in his speech, Trump called for the end of the "glorification of violence," focusing on the video game industry and said mental health laws must be reformed. Trump also said he will direct the Department of Justice to propose legislation to treat hate crimes and mass shootings as capital crimes that can result in the death penalty (the same death penalty that didn’t work to deter other major crimes). In Tweets, he said, “Republicans and Democrats must come together and get strong background checks, perhaps marrying this legislation with desperately needed immigration reform" (so we can do what? --  build that wall to keep our domestic terrorists within the U.S.?). "We must have something good, if not GREAT, come out of these two tragic events!”  This is his Plan for controlling gun violence.  It stinks of stupidity, hypocrisy and pure nonsense.  (Recently, he has suggested that background checks might be acceptable, but no one knows just what he will support to keep the NRA happy!)

We already have some sense of what must be done to control gun violence, and several of the proposals have overwhelming public support even among gun owners.   A CNN poll on Sunday August 4th, “saw record highs for its own polling, with 7 in 10 Americans wanting stricter gun laws.

Following the domestic terror attacks in Dayton and El Paso, public support rose.  Most Republicans would support legislation banning assault-style weapons, a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll found Wednesday — a finding that contradicts President Donald Trump's claim earlier the same day that there's "no political appetite" for such restrictions.

The poll found that: 
·       Nearly 70 percent of all voters would back such a ban 
·       Support for an assault-weapons ban was higher, at 86 percent, among Democrats, who have been pushing for new restrictions on the firearms in the wake of two mass shootings over the weekend
·       Ninety percent said they would back universal background checks for gun sales 
·       Only 23 percent of all voters oppose an assault weapons ban, the poll found. 

Republicans typically are more reticent to support new gun restrictions, and Trump campaigned in 2016 on his strong support for the Second Amendment. But the poll found that:
·       55 percent of GOP voters were comfortable with banning assault weapons, and 
·       54 percent said they would support stricter gun laws more generally. 
 (The poll was conducted Aug. 5-7, in the immediate aftermath of two mass shootings)

A few more of those public-supported proposed gun laws, include:
·       banning of high capacity magazines (large capacity magazines are the common thread uniting all of the major mass shootings in recent history. These magazines were prohibited under federal law until Congress allowed the 1994 assault weapons ban to expire in 2004.)
·       banning bump stocks
·       pressure on internet platforms to disallow (white nationalist) groups that post violent hate speech and harmful terroristic threats.

While these proposals are most likely to be supported by a large portion of the public, there are others receiving attention, particularly from Democratic candidate for President, Corey Booker, who has proposed these additional concepts:
·       begin using executive actions to enact his plan to curb gun violence on “day one” as president, should he win in 2020.
·       in addition to a ban on assault weapons, bump stocks & high-capacity magazines, he wants a limit on gun buyers to purchase of one handgun per month;
·       require gun manufacturers to produce guns with microstamping technology, which would make bullet shells fired from a weapon traceable to a specific gun
·       implement stricter regulations on gun manufacturers by allowing the Consumer Product Safety Commission to issue recalls on faulty guns and make safety warnings
·       repeal the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, which would allow victims of gun violence to sue gun dealers and gun manufacturers for the misuse of their products. 
·       call on the IRS to investigate the National Rifle Association’s actions to see if the organization’s tax status as federal tax-exempt 501(c)(4) should be revoked
·       dedicate more federal resources toward studying gun violence as a public health issue, increase support for survivors of gun violence, and increase funding for violence intervention programs.

One of the more controversial proposals that has been advanced is that of gun registration.  Let us remind ourselves of some of the current federal and state laws… particularly as concerns registration and licensing.  (A more detailed summary of laws can be found at The Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence at www.smartgunlaws.org and more detail about registration at my Blog posting of 7/4/2016).

“A limited system of federal firearms registration was created by the National Firearms Act, 26 U.S.C. § 5801 et seq...enacted in 1934 to impose an excise tax and registration requirements on a narrow category of firearms…  With its provisions effectively limited to pre-ban machine guns and transfers of short-barreled rifles and shotguns that are specifically authorized by the Attorney General, the registration system created by the National Firearms Act falls far short of a comprehensive registration system.

“There is no comprehensive national system of gun registration.  In fact, federal law prohibits the use of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) to create any system of registration of firearms or firearm owners.5

Summary of State Law
Six states and the District of Columbia require registration of some or all firearms. (For more information about such laws, see their summaries on Assault Weapons50 Caliber Weapons, and Large Capacity Ammunition Magazines).
Additional states require the reporting of firearm sales and transfers to a state or local agency, which maintains these records.
Conversely, eight states have statutes prohibiting them from maintaining a registry of firearms except in limited circumstances

The Law Center makes the bold claim that:
““Licensing and registration laws make it more difficult for dangerous people to obtain guns and help ensure that firearm owners remain eligible to possess their weapons. Firearm registration laws can lead to the identification and prosecution of violent criminals.  Registration helps law enforcement quickly and reliably trace firearms recovered from crime scenes.  Registration laws are most effective when combined with laws requiring licensing of firearm owners and purchasers.”

“States with some form of both registration and licensing have greater success keeping firearms initially sold by dealers in the state from being recovered in crimes than states without such systems in place.2  This data suggests that licensing and registration laws make it more difficult for criminals, juveniles and other prohibited purchasers to obtain guns.” 

Let us dive a little deeper into core of our gun violence problem.  If we really want to get to the heart of the problem, we have to accept, and act upon,  the part that money and profit play in making us the only country in which access to guns (and use of guns to kill innocent people) is as prevalent as it is. We are bamboozling ourselves if we continue to believe that we will solve this problem by dealing only with the symptoms of the cancer within.  We will not reduce gun violence until we accept the fact that, as with the scourge of tobacco and nicotine, the core of this societal problem revolves around the love of money and profit.  

Here is my take on the matter:
1)      We must separate guns as a product from the right of ownership of those products – “to keep and bear arms.”  What does that mean?  It means that the very first thing we must do as a people and a nation is to assert that the 2nd Amendment does not bestow rights on guns – guns are simply products that are potentially lethal, like automobiles.  As such, guns must be subject to restrictions and regulations as potentially lethal products, as we do with automobiles, drugs and some foods.  The right bestowed by the 2nd amendment is the right to ownership of guns, but that right cannot be used to override the rights to safety, a full life and pursuit of happiness for other persons. 

2)       We need to clarify the Second Amendment to the Constitution.  One of the most conservative Justices ever, Antonin Scalia, when he wrote the majority opinion for the Court in District of Columbia v. Heller decision in 2008, said this:

“Like most rights, the Second Amendment right is not unlimited .  It is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose:  concealed weapons prohibitions have been upheld under the Amendment or state analogues. The Court’s opinion should not be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.”

It would seem clear that the Second Amendment needs clarification, either by amendment or subsequent legislation, showing that it is not absolute in its coverage of guns.  Perhaps something like the following:

“The Congress shall make no law abridging the right of the States to form and maintain well-regulated militia.  Likewise, the Congress shall pass no law infringing on the right of the people to own non-military style arms appropriate for sport, and defense of life, home and a free State.  
The Congress may pass subsequent laws that regulate the production, sale, licensing and utilization of guns and other weapons to preserve the safety and tranquility of the people and their communities.”  

3)      As we have done with other manufactured products that affect health and well-being, gun makers must be required to accept responsibility for their potentially lethal products.  We have had some experience with this process with tobacco companies and are currently dealing with opioid drug makers and the effects of their potentially lethal products.  Although that tobacco effort has taken much time and energy, many lives have been saved from the results so far.   What we proposed and demanded in relation to sale of potentially lethal nicotine and second-hand smoke could easily be applied to guns as manufactured products.  So, read the following as though applied to guns and gunmakers.
a.       raise the age of customers eligible to purchase the product
b.       make some companies pay fines or reparations for the devastating results their products cause like loss of functions or incapacitation. etc.
c.       march in front of CEO homes and businesses in protest
d.       stop buying their products; boycott big retailers like WalMart and others who refuse to end sale of harmful products
e.       impose advertising restrictions
f.        require warnings of ‘danger’ on their product 
g.     limit or terminate special considerations like tax breaks, capitol funds for expansion, government grants for any purpose, exemption from property taxes
h.     limit government contracts 
i.       disallow manufacturer advertisements in sports venues or on billboards near schools, or anywhere that children could be affected 
j.   don't forget the power of the courts during conflicts with the tobacco companies -- progressive organizations, civil rights lawyers, individuals harmed by a hate group may need to use the courts, especially in light of the district court ruling in Washington, DC that just imposed a $750k fine on a hate group which just might help force these animals back into their slimy swamp
k.       regulate the use of terms that minimize the effects of the product (such as "mild" and "light" in the case of cigarettes) by requiring that their products conform to certain standards regarding descriptive terms
l.     create a Products Scientific Advisory Committee to help inform the FDA on issues relating to the products
m.         create a Center for Arms (as with Tobacco) Products as a branch of the FDA, for the implementation of laws and regulations related to gun violence control. The main duties of the Center for (Tobacco) control include: 
                                                               i.      Set performance standards
                                                             ii.      Review applications for new tobacco products (see premarket tobacco application) and modified-risk claims (see modified risk tobacco products) before they reach the market
                                                           iii.      Require and control warning labels
                                                           iv.      Establish and enforce advertising restrictions

4)      We need public displays of opposition to the lack of responsibility by gun manufacturers for their products, such as:
a.       protests and petitions of gun manufacturers who ignore the lethal effects of their products, and who refuse to institute remedies at point of manufacture that could lessen damaging outcomes from their products (such as an imprinted individualized ID number on every gun)
b.     expansion of laws that enable victims of gun violence to make it easier to sue gun manufacturers for damages
c.       boycotts of retail outlets and internet sites that support, display, or offer to sell weapons of war like AK-47s, bump stocks, oversized magazines; or, that simply glorify guns and weapons
d.      towns and cities in which gun manufacturers reside need to demand community service, pollution control, and a responsible pay-back for gun manufacturers who leave, or threaten to leave, those communities
e.       private organizations and associations need to sponsor educational (and protest) events for their membership and communities that awaken voters and residents to the possible dangers and ill-gotten gains of gun manufacturers, emphasizing how residents’ health and economic status could be suffering
f.        but finally:  when gun manufacturers take positive actions to curb gun violence and threats to health and well-being, there must also be positive promotion of those efforts on a continuing basis

We cannot resolve the issue of gun violence, or the causes of other types of violence, unless we accept the fact that the profit motive is at least one of the primary root causes of the problem and its visible damaging results.  In fact, money or profit must be considered whenever reform of something is contemplated because the effects of money tends to be hidden (often on purpose).  It is so often hidden because too many of its biggest recipients are duplicitous leaders like Donald Trump – they don’t want you to know how little they care, how much they take from you in order to line their own pockets, or how dishonest they are in their dealings with ordinary people and communities.  Like Donald Trump, they go to the greatest lengths to conceal, to divert, to mislead; to undermine any criticism, to escape any blame, to blunt any charge of irresponsibility, and to cloak the racism at the core of their motives.  All the while they know what they are doling (Making Money off killing machines), but have convinced themselves that they are successful, upstanding citizens who have made a difference in the protection of lives and property.  

Let us remind gun manufacturers that the innocent people killed by domestic terrorists with military-style weapons and oversized magazines is not acceptable and will not be tolerated.  Let us stop the carnage by attacking their measurements for success. 

LET US EXPOSE THEIR SECRETS AND THEIR LIES
LET US REVEAL THEIR RACIST WHITE NATIONALIST MOTIVES FOR ALL TO SEE
LET US REDUCE THEIR PROFITS AND RAISE THEIR TAXES
LET US HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE FOR DAMAGES CAUSED TO INNOCENT LIVES
LET US REMIND OURSELVES – as RESPONSIBLE CITIZENS -- THAT 
WE SHALL NOT IGNORE THE SACRIFICE OF INNOCENTS ON AN ALTAR OF GREED, PROFIT and RACISM!

{As the fortunate recipients of the love, beauty and richness of Latino heritage from a son-in-law and three grandchildren, our family takes personally the heartbreak and fear produced by the tragedies in California, Ohio, and El Paso.  We send our thoughts and prayers with our promise to do all we can to reject this vile racism and violence that threatens us all.  May the grace of loving concern provide a measure of strength that leads to healing}