Tag Archives: robert heinlein

It’s Not as Bad as it Seems

Robert Heinlein once said something like “If you think that things are worse now than ever before in human history, you haven’t read enough history.”

Actually, I think what he said was “If you think death is the worst possible thing that can happen, you haven’t read enough history” but that doesn’t fit the blog I want to write, so I changed his quote.  He’s dead, he won’t object.

My favorite Heinlein story was "The Man Who Sold The Moon."

Really, there are wars all over the world, starvation in Somalia, horrible abuses of women throughout the Islamist nations, economic hard times throughout the developed world and the threat of an actual corporate takeover of the United States, but it’s still nowhere near as evil as the world of 1940.  It’s not as bad as the times of slavery and the brutal war that ended it.  It’s not as bad as the times of the plague, the reign of terror in France, the Spanish Inquisition, the anarchy that followed the collapse of Rome, it’s not as bad as Roman times were for everybody except the Romans.

We not only have a pretty nice standard of living in the developed world, we have electricity, automobiles, airplanes, movies, computers and all sorts of cool stuff.  When I look around me and see how incredibly stupid most people are (I believe it was George Carlin who said “Think of how stupid the average person is, and then remember that 50% of the people are even dumber than that”), I am rather amazed that we’ve gotten as far as we have.

But we have.  And no matter how many ignorant tea baggers continue voting for Republicans, no matter how many completely unnecessary wars get started, people are still working on space elevators, and portable desalination devices, and robots, and alternative energy, and better artificial organs and limbs, and mag-lev trains and flying cars.  Some day, we will have all these things.

We will still have fools among us, no doubt, but life will continue to get better.  If we survive.

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A Year in Hell

Bradley Manning has been in jail for a full year, as of yesterday.  He has not had a trial.  He is accused of leaking a bunch of secret U.S. government documents.  The only

Five foot two and 105, perhaps the bravest man alive

witness against him is a hacker type guy who was once hospitalized for mental issues, named Adrian Lamo (I swear I am not making that up – the guy’s name is actually Lamo), who says that Manning told him he sent the docs to Wikileaks.

Now, to be fair, the mental illness in question was Asperger’s, which basically means the guy is a supergeek.  Also, Wikileaks did receive a whole bunch of documents from somebody, and Manning did have access to the documents he is accused of making public.  So, yeah, there’s a chance that Manning’s guilty, but…he has been in jail for a year, and he hasn’t had a trial.

This thing of keeping somebody in jail forever without due process is bullshit.  It doesn’t just violate the U.S. constitution,  it  violates the Magna Carta and all unwritten laws of human decency, fair play and common sense.

It casts doubt on the government’s case.  If they could prove he did what they say he did, they’d have charged him by now.   There’s no new evidence that’s going to come to light.  There’s no ongoing investigation, no matter what they say.

I think it’s entirely possible that Manning may have copied the files and sent them off to Wikileaks – apparently he’s really good with computers.  No matter.  For the government to prove that he aided an enemy, they’ve got to name that enemy and prove that he aided them.  Since congress gave up on ever declaring war on anybody after WWII, just abdicating to the president the right to bomb the fuck out of anybody any time he feels like it, we don’t “officially” have an enemy.  Also, they haven’t actually proved that anybody has been harmed by release of the documents – in fact, there’s quite a bit of evidence to the contrary, that they’ve done a lot of good.  O.K., maybe a few diplomats have been embarrassed, but if ever there was a class of people that deserved a heaping helping of embarrassment, it’s career diplomats.  Sycophantic paper pushers, by definition.  Also, you could say that those people who have been killed in the “Arab Spring” uprisings might still be alive if not for Wikileaks, but then again, dictator’s might still be in power in Tunisia and Egypt, and the people there are real happy that they are gone, so, a net plus.

There was a line in one of Robert Heinlein’s books, I forget which one because I haven’t read Heinlein since I was a kid, and I might be getting the phrasing wrong, but the idea was “the difference between a traitor and a hero is a generation.”

There is no doubt in my mind that 50 years from now, Bradley Manning will be viewed as a hero.  He should be released immediately.

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