Follow me @waringfincke
Onward Together
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
Women March to Protect and Improve
Watch Women March
They will change the world
The largest worldwide demonstration in history took place a week ago. Women, multiple millions strong, organized and marched with their allies from across the gender spectrum on every continent to tell the world that the new era of authoritarian populism is unacceptable and will be resisted at every turn.
Reminiscent of marches for civil rights, women's' rights and demands for the end to the unjust war in Viet Nam in years gone by, this march clearly trumped Trump's feebly attended inaugural the day before and sent a message that women will not go back, not one step, to the male dominated days of the past.
Tone deaf Trump answered in a room full of old white males the next day by signing an Executive Order banning federal funding for any group any where on the planet that even offers information about abortion. This was followed by a press conference that declared war on journalists critical of Trump and his policies.
The battle is joined.
Women have stepped up and into the leadership of the new progressive movement. They have proclaimed enough of patriarchal patronage and greedy politics of convenience. We will gladly follow into a more empathetic, principled and practical movement that will work for true equality across the gender spectrum, respect for the inherent rights we all possess as human inhabitants of this planet to clean air and water, safe food, universal healthcare, universal suffrage and an end to violence as a path to conflict resolution.
The transition from marching to movement building will not be easy or smooth. But the path is clear and the goals are attainable as we focus on what we stand for, not merely rising up in opposition to what we do not like.
Watching the signage, listening to the speakers and seeing the colors of change evident in the marches, the unity of purpose was clear. We won't give up, we will be heard and we will protect what we have gained over the past eight years.
Trump's minions continue to play right into their own ultimate failure. Executive Orders may change certain policies, but they cannot create the "alternative" reality they so fervently desire. The early Orders, setting the stage for obliterating Obamacare, approving in principle the Keystone and DAPL pipelines, removing helpful information for veterans and LBGTQ Americans from the White House website, shutting down public comment White House phone lines, gagging staffers at agencies disfavored by the administration, building the wall, excluding some Muslim refugees and attacking journalists hell bent on holding Trump accountable all feed into public distrust of the new regime and help create whole new subset of people willing to rise up and resist.
It is not surprising that many of those who marched across the planet were first timers. Trump’s intolerance has created a whole new army of people who have reached the tipping point. They are now willing to put other parts of their lives on hold while they make calls to their members of congress and state legislators, sign up to work on local issues like saving public schools and local libraries, making sure people do not go hungry and have a place to sleep and stay warm, writing letters to the editor, attending town halls, voting and even running for public office.
As one who has been keeping the progressive fire burning for awhile in anticipation of the larger spark that gets people off their couches and away from their TVs, I am thrilled at the prospect of the new wave of enthusiasm the marches have engendered. I am proud of all of my sisters and their allies who stopped what they were doing to march and be seen with signs and tattoos and multi-colored hair while hugging each other with shared joy at their strength.
Yes, Trump has brought us a whole new world. He will temporarily
dismantle, disrupt and disarm some of what is good about America. It will not stand for long in the face of millions and millions of women and their allies who will be working tirelessly to challenge Trump's destruction and later to rebuild a better world from the ashes he leaves behind.
dismantle, disrupt and disarm some of what is good about America. It will not stand for long in the face of millions and millions of women and their allies who will be working tirelessly to challenge Trump's destruction and later to rebuild a better world from the ashes he leaves behind.
My favorite sign from the march proclaimed, "You know things are messed up when librarians march." So watch out Trump. I would not want to be the man who pissed off so many women.
Waring R. Fincke is a retired attorney and vice-chair of the Democratic Party of Washington County.
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Trump will violate the Constitution on Day 1
Trump’s
Business Interests
Will
Violate the Constitution on January 20th
I
must admit that as a constitutional lawyer for over 40 years, I never thought
about Article 1, Section 9, Clause 8 of our founding document, the United
States Constitution. I never had to until now.
It
reads, “[n]o title of
nobility shall be granted by the United States: and no person holding any
office of profit or trust under them, shall, without the consent of the
Congress, accept of any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind
whatever, from any king, prince, or foreign state.”
Put simply,
this provision is designed to keep foreign governments from meddling in our
political affairs by bribing our elected officials, as in Mr. Trump, you owe me
$1 million, I’ll forgive the debt if you _________________.
My
conservative lawyer friends who believe we must take the words of the
Constitution literally, without room for changing circumstances, are having
difficulty with Donald Trump’s abject failure to follow this simple language
with respect to his business holdings that spread across multiple foreign
countries.
One pundit
tried to side step the anti-bribery language of this clause by suggesting that
it does not apply to presidents. Sorry, but the word “any” shoots that one down
in a hurry.
In order to
keep his international businesses running, they will have to do business with
foreign states in order to operate. Trump will need import/export permits,
occupancy permits, tax incentives, debt restructuring and all of the other
parts of the “deals” he loves to make. At each and every turn, he will run
afoul of this constitutional provision should he keep control of his assets. An
“emolument” is a payment and that is a very broad term that can encompass not
only monetary compensation but also any benefit obtained in exchange for some
action.
Recognizing
the legal thicket and potential fodder for those who oppose him, Trump has been
advised to sell off his business holdings or, at the very least, to follow
precedent set by several predecessors and place his business holdings in a
“blind trust.” These trusts put control of the assets in the hands of a neutral
third party to manage and control without any reporting to, input from or
influence by the owner of the assets over the handling of the trust assets.
Trump just
cannot let go of his financial empire. At his press bludgeoning this past
Wednesday, he appeared with a table filled with file folders that were supposed
to represent his holdings and what he planned to do with them. He said he would
not sell or put these assets into a blind trust. Instead, he would turn operational
control over his businesses to his sons to manage in his name until his term
was over. This does not meet any reasonable definition of a “blind trust,” even
if he does make good on his promise to “fire” them if they don’t do a great
job.
Needless to
say, the government’s own ethics watchdogs found Trump’s proposals wholly
unsatisfactory. Ethics lawyers for past presidents from both political parties
have chimed in, saying these proposals are not sufficient.
So what
happens next?
Congress
could give him a complete pass on the prohibitions in the Constitution. A
simple majority resolution exempting Trump’s businesses from the anti-bribery
bar might do the trick. While the GOP majorities in both house of Congress
might be willing to do much of his bidding, I doubt they would feel comfortable
going that far. I would have said there was no way Trump would get a pass on
this, but then I remember the Citizens United case that opened the dark money
flood into our political discourse and now I’m not so sure.
The U. S.
Constitution is not self-executing. That means nothing happens unless one
branch of the government or another does something to enforce its provisions.
Certainly violation of the anti-bribery bar could be an impeachable offense,
but only if Congress chooses to act should such a violation take place. Would
Congressional Republicans take up articles of impeachment if Trump maintains
control of his international empire? I doubt that they would, unless some
foreign holder of Trump debt tries to use repayment as leverage to obtain some
advantage.
I guess it
will be up to us, remember “we, the people,” to demand that Trump sell or put
his private business interests in a truly blind trust, and hold Congress
accountable for failing to make sure it happens or it will just be Trump
business as usual for the next four years.
Waring R.
Fincke is a retired attorney and Vice-Chair of the Democratic Party of
Washington County.
Sunday, January 1, 2017
For the New Year
A conversation with my grand daughter
"What was it like, Grandpa, back in the olden times when you were young?"
Well Lilly, there was strangeness in the land. My friends and I did not want to grow up like our parents. We lived under a repressive government engaged in an immoral war in Vietnam that forced many to kill yellow people because we lived in fear of communism. Black Power cries led to civil rights struggles throwing off some of the shackles of slavery, segregation and second class citizenship. Women were rising up to demand equality with men through passage of an Equal Rights Amendment. The sexual revolution took off with easy access to contraception and loosening standards of morality and propriety on everyone's TV. We experimented with pot, LSD, psychedelic mushrooms seeking deeper access to realms of consciousness. Higher education was cheap and excellent to help channel our passions.
"So, what did you do, Grandpa?"
I stretched myself into new ways of existing. I moved about the country fighting for civil rights and organizing in communities of color in the South. Later, I marched against the unjust war and contemplated strategies to avoid having to kill people who never harmed me in the name of corporate greed. I learned about dangers to our environment and what Native peoples believed about our interconnected mutual dependence with Mother Earth. I studied the law, figuring that I needed to know how the system worked and what the rules were if I was ever going to be able to change it. I decided that my life's work was to defend the defenseless, to protect individual liberty from governmental over reach and to protect our Mother Earth. I committed to trying to make the world a better place every chance I got. I met your grandma and she was involved in many of those same fights, plus some of her own. Through and with her, I joined the battle for equal rights for lesbians, bi-sexuals, gays, transgendered, queer and intersexed people. More recently, we've taken up the challenge of preserving and improving public education.
"How did it go, Grandpa?"
It still goes, Lilly. We are back to a repressive government bent upon turning back all the changes me and my friends were able to make. Our lives move in swings, like the pendulum of an old grandfather clock. Sometimes we win and sometimes we lose. It is up to each of us to push against the backward arc and make it go forward again. We are getting too old for the fight and keep looking for a new generation of warriors to continue the struggle.
"So what can I do, Grandpa?"
Learn what is right and wrong and keep it in your heart and head. Stand up when others are being treated badly and keep pushing back against injustice. Learn history well and listen to your elders who fought for justice, fairness, equality and freedom. Learn what they did when they took to the streets to stop an unjust war, to promote civil and human rights, to protect our Mother Earth, to stand up for those who are LBGTQI and fight for equal rights and reproductive freedom for women. Don't let them take your school, you have much to learn.
"But I am only a young girl and can't do those things yet."
Your time will come, Lilly. You just have to remember your Grandpa and Grandma, what they did and the stories they told. Your time will come.
"What was it like, Grandpa, back in the olden times when you were young?"
Well Lilly, there was strangeness in the land. My friends and I did not want to grow up like our parents. We lived under a repressive government engaged in an immoral war in Vietnam that forced many to kill yellow people because we lived in fear of communism. Black Power cries led to civil rights struggles throwing off some of the shackles of slavery, segregation and second class citizenship. Women were rising up to demand equality with men through passage of an Equal Rights Amendment. The sexual revolution took off with easy access to contraception and loosening standards of morality and propriety on everyone's TV. We experimented with pot, LSD, psychedelic mushrooms seeking deeper access to realms of consciousness. Higher education was cheap and excellent to help channel our passions.
"So, what did you do, Grandpa?"
I stretched myself into new ways of existing. I moved about the country fighting for civil rights and organizing in communities of color in the South. Later, I marched against the unjust war and contemplated strategies to avoid having to kill people who never harmed me in the name of corporate greed. I learned about dangers to our environment and what Native peoples believed about our interconnected mutual dependence with Mother Earth. I studied the law, figuring that I needed to know how the system worked and what the rules were if I was ever going to be able to change it. I decided that my life's work was to defend the defenseless, to protect individual liberty from governmental over reach and to protect our Mother Earth. I committed to trying to make the world a better place every chance I got. I met your grandma and she was involved in many of those same fights, plus some of her own. Through and with her, I joined the battle for equal rights for lesbians, bi-sexuals, gays, transgendered, queer and intersexed people. More recently, we've taken up the challenge of preserving and improving public education.
"How did it go, Grandpa?"
It still goes, Lilly. We are back to a repressive government bent upon turning back all the changes me and my friends were able to make. Our lives move in swings, like the pendulum of an old grandfather clock. Sometimes we win and sometimes we lose. It is up to each of us to push against the backward arc and make it go forward again. We are getting too old for the fight and keep looking for a new generation of warriors to continue the struggle.
"So what can I do, Grandpa?"
Learn what is right and wrong and keep it in your heart and head. Stand up when others are being treated badly and keep pushing back against injustice. Learn history well and listen to your elders who fought for justice, fairness, equality and freedom. Learn what they did when they took to the streets to stop an unjust war, to promote civil and human rights, to protect our Mother Earth, to stand up for those who are LBGTQI and fight for equal rights and reproductive freedom for women. Don't let them take your school, you have much to learn.
"But I am only a young girl and can't do those things yet."
Your time will come, Lilly. You just have to remember your Grandpa and Grandma, what they did and the stories they told. Your time will come.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)