Saturday, July 3, 2021

July 3, 2021 When the High and Mighty Apologize By Michael Curtis...More familiar is the maxim, variously attributed to Winston Churchill or Benjamin Disraeli, “Never apologize, never explain.” It is rare for a sincere and honest apology to be offered for a mistake in policy or action.

 

American Thinker

When the High and Mighty Apologize

Most people, including political figures and public and cultural institutions, let bygones be bygones, and do not have the words “I’m sorry” or “I apologize” in their vocabulary.More familiar is the maxim, variously attributed to Winston Churchill or Benjamin Disraeli, “Never apologize, never explain.” It is rare for a sincere and honest apology to be offered for a mistake in policy or  action.

In June 2021 the British Royal Academy did so in what is a remarkable example of admission of moral wrongdoing, expressing regret, acceptance of responsibility, genuine repentance, and attempt to make amends. The RA apologized for withdrawing the work of an artist who had expressed purportedly “transphobic” views in a 2019 blog, stating its original decision was a betrayal of its most important core value, the protection of free speech. The RA is to be complimented on the courage of its new decision, especially now that some of its students have been angered by the apology, arguing that it had given legitimacy to transphobia, and that “trans liberation is an endeavor of global importance that addresses classicism, racial justice, and healthcare reform.”

The reality is that it is the RA, not the angered bigoted students, who uphold beliefs in the importance of plurality of voices and free thinking.

Throughout history apologies, though rare, have been meaningful. In 1077, the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV apologized to Pope Gregory VII for conflicts over the precedence of ecclesiastical or secular power by standing in the snow for three days and nights at Canossa. King Henty II apologized for the assassination by his four knights in 1170 of Archbishop Thomas a Beckett in Canterbury Cathedral.  In 1697, a judge and jurors apologized for the witch trials in Salem in 1692. Henry Ford in 1927 apologized for his antisemitic campaign in The Dearborn Independent.

One of the most moving apologies was the gesture on December 14, 1970, of German Chancellor Willy Brandt laying a wreath and kneeling at the site of the Warsaw Ghetto, and expressing guilt for the Holocaust. On October 2, 2019, Canada officially apologized to the First Nations and Inuit people for discrimination and harm and asked for forgiveness. 

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In modern times we are familiar with prominent political individuals who avoid full apologies for their statements or actions, but limit themselves to express some form of regret, or deny they did anything wrong, or escape responsibility by using impersonal language or the passive voice saying, “mistakes were made.” Three responses of this kind came from then Democrat President Bill Clinton, former Republican Governor of South Carolina Mark Sanford, and Republican Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. Bill Clinton at first stated “I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky.” He later admitted his relationship was not appropriate, and then later still in June 2004 admitted to a “terrible moral error,” but no apology.

Governor Sanford finally admitted an affair with an Argentinian businesswoman, and confessed, “I have been unfaithful to my wife ... I hurt a lot of different folks. And all I can say is that I apologize."

Representative Greene in June 2021 had compared mandates on wearing masks in Capitol Hill to the Holocaust. After visiting the US Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., Greene altered her tone. Her remarks, she said, were offensive, and she wanted to apologize. “I made a mistake… there is no comparison to the Holocaust.”

Not all politicians are equally forthright. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo was accused in 2021 of allegations by several women of sexual harassment, as well of misleading the public of COVID-19 deaths in nursery homes.  He denied any wrongdoing and questioned the motives of his accusers and claimed to be victim of a smear campaign.  In defending himself, Cuomo explained his interactions may have been insensitive or too personal, and that some of his comments, given his position, made others feel in ways never intended: “I mean no offence.”

A generation earlier, equivocation over apology can be seen in the case in 1992 of Sen Bob Packwood accused of sexual harassment of at least ten women. He was obliged to resign from the Senate.  What is one to make of his later non-apology and its verbal dexterity?  “If any of my comments or actions have indeed been unwelcome or if I have conducted myself in any way that has caused any individual discomfort or embarrassment, for that I am sincerely sorry. My intents were never to pressure, to offend, nor to make anyone feel uncomfortable, and I truly regret if that has occurred with anyone either on or off my staff.”

In a long overdue action, the family of the well-known writer Roald Dahl “deeply apologized” for the lasting and understandable hurt caused by some of Dahl’s statements: “Those prejudiced remarks are incomprehensible to us and stand in marked contrast to the man we knew.” Yet the Dahl family had waited more than thirty years to make an apology, and that apology should have been more open. Dahl’s virulent antisemitism had long been known. In an interview in 1983 he said he believed “there was a strain in the Jewish character that does provoke animosity.” In 2018 the British Royal Mint   decided not to issue a commemorative coin on Dahl’s 100th anniversary of his birth because of his antisemitic views. 

Roald Dahl has returned indirectly. In 1983 he published a book The Witches in which the witches have thin curvy claws, like a cat, and with gloves to hide them. In June 2021, the Hollywood Warner Brothers big budget version of The Witches was released. The star of the film is Anne Hathaway, who plays the character of the Grand High Witch is made to look sinister by picturing her ectrodactyly split hand with three elongated fingers on each hand and toeless feet. This equating of physical differences with villainy was criticized as insensitive to disabled people. Anne Hathaway apologized for her portrayal of disability, saying she had recently learned that many people, especially children, are in pain because of the portrayal of the Grand High Witch.

Another entertainment star Lin-Manuel Miranda, creator of Hamilton, has had to face the truth about diversity. He made the film In the Heights, a musical set in the Washington Heights neighborhood in Manhattan, NYC, a largely Dominican neighborhood.  Soon after the opening of the film, Miranda, composer and lyricist,  was criticized and apologized for the alleged lack of sufficient darker colored Afro-Latinos  in the film.  He added, in unrelated rhetoric, he could hear  the hurt and pain over colonialism.  

Miranda said he was trying to paint a mosaic of the Afro-Latino community, but fell short, and was truly sorry. Whether this was an honest apology or an evasive and vague response to criticism remains to be seen. However, Miranda’s case brings up the central issues how many  dark skinned actors would be enough to be immune from criticism of colonialism, and who is to decide.  How to define the dimensions of diversity in art and in society when some group may claim not to be included?

Photo credit: Leyram Odecrem CC By 2.0 license

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July 3, 2021 It's time to modernize the Selective Service System By Anony Mee

 

American Thinker

It's time to modernize the Selective Service System

Let's call this killing lots of birds with one stone, or maybe with one of the pro-regressives' wind-powered turbines.  Currently, males are required to register for the Selective Service, and only males are subject to the draft.  It doesn't matter whether they call themselves men or women; only those with 30 trillion XY chromosomes in their bodies are subject to this provision of the law.

It's time to change that, especially as the physical fitness requirements for military service seem to be softening.  Let's include all those with 30 trillion XX chromosomes, too, even though they have one third less muscle mass than the others.  That way, no matter what one calls oneself, which pronouns are on today's menu, or how one chooses to find sexual pleasure, the draft will make no distinction among our young people.

The draft requires all men in the United States to register within 30 days of their 18th birthday; within 30 days of their entry into the United States either as a permanent resident, refugee, asylee, or illegal alien; and within 30 days of the expiration of their non-immigrant visa, whichever category is applicable, until the age of 26.  If we modernize the Selective Service laws, this would include "all" "genders."

Let's make registration begin at the age of 16.  If teenagers are legally competent to choose to undergo life- and body-altering surgery and drug therapies, then they're certainly mature enough to be subject to the draft.  Of course, deferment of call up until the age of 18 should apply to those making satisfactory progress toward their high school graduations.

Let's take the registration requirements out to the age of 30.  After all, we don't want to miss inducting soldiers at their physical prime, especially after they have proven their fitness by walking most of the way here from a variety of airports south of Mexico.

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When the High and Mighty Apologize

Let's amend the Immigration and Nationality Act while we're at it.  Currently, legal permanent residents may seek expedited citizenship.  However, this does not provide that silver path of citizenship to the golden streets of America for illegals.  Let's allow illegals with one year of honorable service in the U.S. military to be able to apply for lawful permanent residence.  Then, a year after receiving their new status, with continued honorable service, they would be eligible to apply for citizenship.

Homeland Security is overwhelmed trying to deal with the crisis at our southern border.  They need help.  Who better to call than the United States military?  For some, soldiering is a primary skill; for others, it is secondary to other professional activities, from management, medicine, and logistics to billeting, transport, clerking, and cooking.  Military personnel are very good at capturing and securing areas, facilities, and hostile forces.  They can erect their concrete bunkers in a day and have mobile cafeterias, clinics, and supply depots stocked, organized, and operating in another.

Good ol' Joe is determined to bring our troops home from Afghanistan; that's maybe 3,500 fighters of a long war that may never be over.  But if the philosophy of the Biden administration is that troops come home when war is over, what are we doing keeping 30,000 troops in Germany, 50,000 in Japan, and 8,000 in England — with whom we haven't been at war for more than 160 years?  They're still shooting at us in Afghanistan.

Troops, active or reserve, would be an enormous help to DHS.  They could lift the burden of managing the mass of illegals.  DHS staff can focus on what's important — patrolling, surveilling, apprehension, and determining the threat level of those apprehended.

Once caught, let the military pick them up, house, feed, and clothe them.  Let the military fingerprint, photograph, obtain biometric blood samples, conduct background checks, and manage their detention.  While they are at it, the military can process those detained with respect to segregating those with criminal records from the rest.

The military can set up classrooms for the detained to begin studying English and be assessed for educational equivalency.  While the migrants are waiting to be processed, they could get to work on their GEDs.

The military can provide clerical support, assisting those who will most likely be staying in the U.S. to obtain Social Security cards for identification.  They can conduct medical exams, including providing the standard round of vaccinations required for all immigrants to the United States.  They can handle the DNA testing necessary to support family reunification.  Given that the vast bulk of the cartels' victims coming across the border are young men and women, the troops can register them for the Selective Service.

This may provide DHS with enough breathing room to be able to docket their hearings with immigration courts, provide notification letters for hearing dates, and explain the next steps.  Much better than turning them loose, never to be seen again outside a jail cell.

Remember, Joe put Kamala in charge not just of the border, but of the jobs program also.  And who's going to need those jobs more than the poor migrants swarming across our borders and sucking up blue-city resources like locusts?

Anony Mee is a retired public servant.

Image: Andrea Widburg using public domain images.

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If you would like to comment on this or any other American Thinker article or post, we invite you to visit the American Thinker Forum at MeWe. There, you can converse with other American Thinker readers and comment freely (subject to MeWe's terms of use). The Forum will be fully populated and ready for comments by midday (Eastern time) each day.

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