Meaningful Distinction:
 

 
Patrick S. Lasswell Look outward for something to accomplish, not inward for something to despise.
pslblog at gmail dot com
 
 
   
 
Thursday, September 30, 2004
 
Kerry Raises Questions Where Once Were None

So in the debate just now, Senator Kerry talks about being one of the first Senators in Russia after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. He then spoke of going to the KGB offices and seeing the halls filled with files.

The questions he raises are: Why was it important to him to be the first into the KGB file room? What was important to him in there?

Do I think that Senator Kerry was a Soviet operative during the Cold War? Hell no…well, probably not… Actually, now I have a lot more questions about his involvement in various anti-war groups than I did before he opened his yap about going to the secure files rooms of the KGB. That was a deeply stupid thing to say regardless of his involvement with the KGB.
 
An Appreciation of Zombies and Mount Saint Helens

I watched "Shaun of the Dead" this weekend with my wife this weekend. It was a great movie for a number of reasons, the central one for me was the obliviousness of the average citizen. Great scenes of flipping through cable TV showed how even crucial messages can be lost when you are channel surfing. A few heavy hits on the self-absorbed behavior of people with cell phones are "fried gold" as well. If you see one zombie movie this year, you probably are a fairly well adjusted individual. You should see this movie anyway. Best British comedy in years and it is a real shame that this isn't saying much.

As a blogger, it was a revelation to me to look at my fellows in this perspective. The people around me are not particularly well informed or paying attention. My frustration in dealing with people who don't check Instapundit several times a day is reasonable. Most people are simply letting their routine and pettiness get in the way of understanding what is going on.

As an example of this, I live downwind of Mount St. Helens, which is showing every indication of being about to blow again in the next couple of weeks. Yesterday I went to Harbor Freight (six blocks away, to my wife's chagrin) to buy some filter masks and cheesecloth. To my pleased surprise, they were fully stocked. The clerk asked if I was going to do some painting. When I explained that the volcano within sight of the store was going to explode soon, he expressed surprise. It turns out that virtually nobody else in Portland had put together imminent volcano eruption and need to purchase filter masks and cheesecloth.

Thanks to Cam at NRA News for taking my call on this today. He says he wants me to call again. I did stop talking before I made idiotic mistakes, and I thank Cam again for graciously allowing me to do so.
 
Irrational Obsession Religious and Secular

Irrational obsession is not the sole property of Islam, and I hope the people horrified by today's murder of dozens of Iraqi children take the time to remember this. There are elements of Fundamentalist Islam attempting to corner the market, but there can be no monopoly on idiocy. There are people in the West actively competing for market share of stupidity. Although the most active groups are stuck with industrial age ideology, like a rust belt manufacturer, it is their good fortune to be competing with foreign rivals attached to late bronze-age ideology.

The key thing here is that the terrorists and their apologists have no rational view of history, and so they have no rational view of power. The greatest power is accomplished by free individuals working together to achieve measurable goals through a variety of creative ways. This is one of the reasons why Coalition military commanders are driving authority to junior officers, to let them use initiative to accomplish the peace. As long as we maintain the will to endure the vicious attacks of delusional idiots, both violent and rhetorical; Iraq will become free and great.

Hat Tip: IRAQ THE MODEL

Tuesday, September 28, 2004
 
Why You Are Losing the Election

An acquaintance of mine who is quite Left recently re-established contact with me by sending me a blog post of a retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel who took issue with President Bush's leadership. I emailed back a link to the overwhelmingly positive response by Guard troops heading to Iraq when Bush greeted them on their plane as it refueled in Maine. I also sent links to two other bloggers who had done tours in Iraq, were critical of Bush on a variety of topics, but could clearly distinguish Kerry's failures as a candidate. Over the course of a few emails, my acquaintance completely misunderstood what I was trying to tell him. He denounced Roger Simon for slamming various news sources, regardless of the validity of the critique. I did not correct him in his misapprehensions because by then it had become clear to me what the problem was; if he actually took the effort to understand me, he would have to admit that he was wrong.

From Rather's denouncement of bloggers as partisan operatives to any number of idiotic comments I have seen on articles I have posted elsewhere, there is a pattern of willful incomprehension on the Left. If understanding makes you wrong, choose not to understand. If the numbers show that your candidate is losing, fail to understand the numbers. If Christopher Hitchens shows your behavior contemptible, rail against Hitchens.

I suspect that what I am seeing is a cultural artifact peculiar to the Left. Generations of accepting propaganda that excused Soviet brutality have made cognitive dissonance a primary cultural identifier. You simply cannot be part of the Left culture while maintaining intellectual integrity. This has made the peoples of the Left a perfect tool for acquiring political power, as long as nobody pays attention to the facts.

In the information age, the ability to ignore facts is no longer a survival trait worth having. What we are seeing is the collapse of a failed culture that tied its identity to an unsustainable characteristic. In the lifetime of my mother, we have seen the death of the cultures of the isolationist Right and the racist Dixiecrats. Cultural failure happens, and what matters is how you deal with the transition.

Governor George Wallace, for all his many faults, crimes, and sins, is probably one of the best examples of how to recover from a failed culture. He re-examined his life and changed to make things better. This is not the end of the world, even if your friends are telling you to believe it is. Establish your friendships on the basis of how they help you thrive, not on their adherence to party dogma, especially if that dogma is suicidal.

Friday, September 24, 2004
 
Well He Looks Like a '70s Cartoon Character

Captain's Quarters today is following story brought up by the O'Reilly Factor last night, in 2001 John Kerry said that he had been present at the signing of armistice that ended the first Gulf War. So far, they have been able to place Senator Kerry in Boston at a charity function seven hours before the signing in Safawan on March 3rd, 1991. The record they have of Kerry's visit to Iraq shows that he did not arrive until March 16th.

At this rate, the only way the Bush campaign will be able to produce an October Surprise will be to have Daphne, Fred, Velma, Shaggy, and Scooby unmask Osama bin Laden and reveal the junior Senator from Massachusetts. "And I would have gotten away with it, if it hadn't been for you meddlesome bloggers!"
 
Rabble Rousing Stooge

I debated about publishing this; it is the first time I have called a candidate names in quite a few years. After weeks of intellectual analysis, I just have come to the conclusion that there are not two candidates in this election. There is a candidate and a cipher doing anything he can to get elected. Character matters and John Kerry has failed a crucial test of character by letting his campaign get in the way of his obligations as a United States Senator to treat our allies with respect. The junior Senator from Massachusetts did not attend a joint session of Congress addressed by the leader of our newest democratic ally, Awad Allawi. What flunked Kerry was not his snubbing so much as his deliberate insults afterwards. In light of this, the gloves are off.

Last week I wrote how hecklers never drive. Yesterday John Kerry proved me right. Awad Allawi, who Roger tells me was bludgeoned with an ax by a Ba'athist stooge in 1978, was heckled by John Kerry after his speech to a joint session of Congress. True to form, Kerry neglected to attend this historic session; he had more important things to do. While the leader of a free Iraq was thanking the United States, John Kerry was losing an election by rabble rousing.

On the plus side of all this is that Awad Allawi has experience dealing with stooges. Stooges are bullies who have abandoned their identity to those with more power. Once you know you are dealing with a stooge, all you have to do is show that you have power over them, and they will do almost anything you tell them. Awad Allawi, as leader of Iraq, has a significant amount of power over the man who will be elected on November 2nd. If Bush is elected, Allawi will use this power to work with the man in office. If Kerry is elected, Allawi will use this power to drive the stooge to doing what is needed.

Since the Republican National Convention, John Kerry has come out swinging. His attempts to energize the anti-Bush "base" have been vile and pathetic. Perhaps next week he will be throwing rocks at an anti-WTO protest to show his credentials. Rabble rousing is not statesmanship. Abandoning your obligations is not leadership. Insulting an allied leader who risks death ever day of his life for his efforts to bring better conditions to his people is not coalition building. John Kerry is not presidential; he is a stooge, and a pathetic one at that.
 
Going From Annoyed to Angry

I don't link to Jason Van Steenwyk's CounterColumn enough, although I read him about every day that the atmosphere is allowing him to blog. On those days that hurricanes are trying to eradicate him from the face of the earth, I check his blog anyway. Today he converted me from being annoyed with that twit Kerry to being furious with that son-of-a-bitch Kerry.

Ok. So you want other nation's leaders to expend political capital and treasure and send their lads to risk their lives along with theirs.

So why don't you act like it? Why aren't you trying to sell the deal?

Because right now you are calling the U.S. Government incompetent and arrogant. You're arguing that Iraq is sliding into chaos. You argue that thousands of terrorists are slipping across Iraq's borders and that it's become "a magnet for terrorism."

You dispatch your sister to tell Australia that supporting the United States in the war on terror puts them at greater risk than they were before.

You stand with a straight face and tell nations like the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Italy, who have each shed blood for the freedom of Iraq as part of the coalition, that they're members of "a fraudulent coalition."

You can't even be bothered to leave Ohio to speak with Allawi when he comes to the US to say "thank you." But you don't hesitate to all but brand this man--who lives in Iraq every day--a liar, and then have the chutzpah, the gall, the arrogance to tell him from afar that he's out of touch with the reality on the ground.


Yesterday morning I could understand undecided voters, this morning not so much.

Hey Jason, could you please set something up so that if the fourteenth hurricane to hit Florida this season finally manages to take you out something gets posted on your blog. I promise that everybody will say nice things about you. Even if you don't get up to Oregon to have beers with us. Really, at this point you are becoming a fugitive from the law of averages. On the plus side, at the current rate, your entire battalion will be volunteering to go back to Ar Ramadi because it is safer than dodging Hurricane Zebediah.

Thursday, September 23, 2004
 
Kerry Refutes Totten

Michael, did you know that the Eskimos have over a hundred words for snow? There are terms to describe "rotten snow that is likely collapse if you walk on it." Now they can have a new word for "yellow snow that is rubbed in the face of centrist pundits:" Kerry.

It is like the Kerry folks saw your TCS article and built their campaign to dispute it. How in the hell can this dink suppose that he will build a meaningful alliance with anybody if he talks like this about people who like the US. "Coalition of the Backstabbing" is all he can assemble with this kind of foreign policy.

What's he going to do next week, bitch-slap Girl Scouts to get out the women's vote?
 
Health Care and the Cost Plus Monster

Roger L. Simon has initiated a thread on his blog that is well worth discussing, but instead of trying to fit a too-long comment, I will write a too-short essay. Additionally, by writing this in Word I can get my spelling checked and claim that I wrote this in 1972 when I submit it to CBS.

Our nation is currently facing a three headed monster with an insatiable appetite. Unlike the mythical Cerberus, though, this beast is not guarding Hades so much as dragging us down there. The first head is the insurance industry, the second is the tort bar, and the third is the medical services industry. These heads feed each other and drive each other's appetites.

The insurance industry makes a profit on the difference between the rates you pay and the medical expenses they pay for. By using actuarial prodigies, they have been able to increase profitability while accepting higher expenses. The key here is that if medical procedures are insanely expensive, insuring the risk of that procedure occurring requires more money. By driving down the acceptance of claims for insanely expensive procedures, they can net additional profits by not matching their actuarial tables to their payment schedules. But the more lucrative and safer method is just to take the same percentage on a larger bet.

The tort bar makes money the old fashioned way, they steal it. There are rural regions of the country where whole jury pools are owned by leading tort law firms. Many corporations settle for extravagant extortion rather than risk the jackpot justice of the rural south. Another magnificent fraud perpetrated is the class-action lawsuit where millions of people in a class receive lunch money and a few law firms get millions. The worst part of this is that there is so much money that long shot frivolous lawsuits are worth pursuing because there is enough venture capital to sustain them. Medical malpractice and drug failures employ tens of thousands of exceptionally well paid parasites.

The medical services industry, ostensibly the most beleaguered, is a connected head. Drug companies just add the expense of additional testing to the price of their product and make more money. In many ways the pharmaceutical giants are research finance groups more than they are research companies. Although lawsuits drive down their profits in the short term, in the long term they just drive up what the drug companies can charge.

These three heads are not at all friendly to each other, but they are connected to the same insatiable appetite that is bureaucracy. The executives in charge of each of these industries still want larger offices, more staff to control, and more institutional security. The key here is not to attack any one head, but to attack the appetite that drives them all. This is the way that Health Care can be affordable in the future.

Wednesday, September 22, 2004
 
Bush=Kerry

In perhaps the cleverest of political moves that appears to have escaped everybody's notice, the Bush campaign had already refuted the National Guard record story before it even came to light. You see, if officers were altering their service record, Bush is guilty of being a bad Guardsman and Kerry is guilty of being a fake hero. If officers are not altering their service record, Bush is a good Guardsman and Kerry is a hero.

It's like this détente between the campaigns and it explains perfectly why Bush never backed the Swiftboat Veterans for Truth. If the Democrats had not launched Operation Fortunate Son, armed neutrality would have existed. As it stands, the Kerry campaign is forced to argue losing policy already refuted by their candidate just to take attention away from the question of the service records. If this is not just idle speculation, I may have to give credit to Karl Rove for being just as scary as he is portrayed.

Monday, September 20, 2004
 
The Hawkish Case for Totten

I am not sorry this post went so long. If Michael and I had been talking this out...we'd probably still be talking. Please read Michael's fine article first, and then my counter-argument.

I greatly respect Michael Totten for attempting to build a hawkish case for John Kerry, and I know he worked hard to build it. Nevertheless, I would not be a friend if I let the case he built stand unquestioned. As an intellectual exercise, his effort makes certain kinds of sense, it is all perfectly reasonable. The topic under discussion is not an abstract exercise in logic, though. We are discussing the direction, quality, and character of leadership of the United States and the free world. With that in mind, I am now going to take the friendliest meat axe in the world to his arguments.

Deflating the Anti-War Movement (a.k.a. Appeasement of the Chattering Class)

While it is true that many in the anti-war camp are active solely to oppose George W. Bush, it is also true that many people honestly believe that war is the single greatest evil in the history of the world. Regardless of the merits or sanity of this belief, it exists and for hundreds of thousands of people, the way they feel worthwhile as human beings is by opposing war. A lot of people who are very wealthy through no merit of their own actively seek out ways to show that they are of value by contributing to anti-war causes. David Frum in his book "The Right Man" describes an example the logic of these people with a quote from Barbara Streisand, "I know what I am talking about. I give a lot of money to environmental causes." The money you give makes the cause right.

Thousands, if not tens of thousands, of people make their living from the largesse of people committed to the eradication of war; every tenured professor who is part of a "Peace Studies" department, for instance. Michael is presuming that a University department that has exactly zero metrics for the success of their graduates is going to be intellectually honest enough to re-evaluate the necessity for their existence. Electing John "Department of Wellness" Kerry to the highest office in the land is not going to do anything to diminish the anti-war industry in America or their need to secure funding. There are thousands of people who have no marketable skills apart from opposing war who are not going to retrain like crippled loggers just because logic dictates that infinite pacifism is suicidal.

Michael Responds: I do not argue that the "Peace Studies" professor will find a new job if John Kerry is elected. But the "Peace Studies" professor will not be a hero to liberals if their president gets in fight with Moqtada al Sadr or the mullahs in Iran. The "Peace Studies" professors were flatly ignored during the Balkan wars. The liberal heroes of the day were those who warned against the evils of fascism and the dangers of appeasement.

Patrick refutes: During most of the Balkan wars, the United States was not involved in the war, and so the press was not covering the professors who objected to it. This doesn't mean that they weren't saying inane things in their journals; they just weren't getting any notice. Additionally, it could be argued strongly that Peace Studies professors have little, if anything, to gain from following current events. Acknowledging the mechanics of the rude world outside has the disturbing tendency of destroying their discipline. While I suppose there is some satisfaction in the suppression of these people, it hardly seems worth electing Kerry to do so.

Flipping the Media Message

Michael wrote his article before the Rather meltdown, so I'm going to give him a pass on this, except to say that there are strong indications that the media needs a lot more confrontation to stay honest than they have been getting. Electing John Kerry does not make the media more honest just because they are less stridently opposed to the Chief Executive.

Michael responds: I did not argue that the election of John Kerry will make the media less biased. They will be biased in favor of John Kerry then as now. And because they will be biased in favor of John Kerry they will not wish to put a doom-and-gloom spin on John Kerry's efforts to stabilize Iraq. (He promised to pull troops out in four years, which is the same thing as promising not to withdraw them at all. If anything, he will send more troops.)

Patrick refutes: I can see how this could "grease the wheels" in Iraq. I am less certain that the mainstream media is going to survive the next four years intact, regardless of who is in office. Think about it this way, the faster the mainstream media disintegrates, the sooner centrist columnists will get high paid assignments. (OK, revealing my Democratic roots by holding out a patronage lure.) Honestly, electing Kerry to get positive spin on military actions is just adding another mouth to feed. Nothing is free.

Ending Bush Derangement Syndrome

A lot of people are insanely angry about Ronald Reagan and are taking it out on George W. Bush. Some people are insanely angry about Richard Nixon and are taking it out on George W. Bush. A few people are insanely angry about Calvin Coolidge and are taking it out on George W. Bush. There is a tremendous amount of transference in the political process, something that J.F. Kerry is not above taking advantage of. Electing John Kerry only defers therapy for another term; it does not treat the underlying cause. At what point in his campaign has John Kerry shown any desire to restore civility to the electoral process? The first step is admitting you have a problem, and that step becomes a lot easier on November 3rd if Kerry is on the dustbin of history.

Making the Hecklers Drive

Michael, the hecklers never drive. While there are all kinds of great stories about complainers who make good, this is not going to turn out like "My Cousin Vinny". For one thing, there is an infinite amount of distraction. The exhibitionists in New York this summer were not concerned about the genocide in Sudan; they were getting naked to support their AIDS funding. Instead of confronting clear and present dangers to the United States, the hecklers will focus on what will get them screen time. This is a class of people who define themselves by their acerbity, not their integrity.

Further, the shameful truth about liberals in power is that they have, repeatedly, turned their back on the world. For all the great experiments that liberals have tried and succeeded at, we have a disgraceful tradition of abandoning projects that got too hard or were incapable of success. Even though the need continued for some kind of action, liberals follow their enthusiasm too much. The continent of Africa exists as a bleeding testimony to the frailty of liberal conviction. Abandoning Iraq, Afghanistan, and Israel to the fate of Rwanda, Somalia, and Zimbabwe is not going to be easy to explain, which is probably why John Kerry is starting now.

Michael responds: You say "the hecklers never drive." Ah. But John Kerry is a heckler, and if he wins he WILL drive and will no longer be allowed to heckle. People will heckle him instead. Those who blindly follow Democratic presidents will stop heckling because their man is driving.

Patrick refutes: I take issue with this. Sitting behind the wheel is not the same as driving. There is no proof that Kerry will drive if put in charge, which may be the reason the DNC started backing him last year. If Kerry had driven important legislation on a regular basis during his Senate career, there would be reason to believe him a driver. Kerry has no history of driving consensus in the Senate to accomplish meaningful legislation. This may be the reason we have heard nary a peep from the Kerry campaign regarding his record. In the 19th century, the United States could afford a Chester A. Arthur "go-along, get-along" presidency. The worst refutation of your case for Kerry as a hawk who can lead is his eighteen years in the US Senate.

Reuniting the Country

Michael is incorrect when he says that anti-Americanism has been on an upward tick since the Soviet Union imploded. Anti-Americanism has been on an upward tick since the Third Reich was defeated. Because the US was the healthiest power after WWII, it was the target of tremendous resentment on the part of those nations who took it in the shorts. The failure of the welfare state hasn't made us better liked, either. The American "way" is not the only way to do things, but it has the distressing tendency of being the most effective way. I hope that someday somebody else will come up and challenge the United States so everybody can do thing better. Until that happens, people are going to be blaming the United States for their failures. Electing John Kerry might well help the US in this regard, though the cure may be worse than the disease.

When Michael talks about US power being matched, he is flat dead wrong. Write this down Michael: the ONLY way that power is shown to have been matched is by total war. This is the ultimate antithesis of non-destructive testing. Civilization can take a whole lot more anti-Americanism than it can endure full scale military power testing. Bad news: China is buying the equipment to become a 21st century superpower. Good news: China is not changing the fundamental doctrine that would allow equipment synergy characteristic of US military interconnectedness. Potentially the worst news you have ever heard: China cannot admit that they are doctrinally flawed, and so they can only find out the hard way.

Ending the UN Fetish

I am not entirely convinced that the Democrats paid attention to the first rule of demon summoning: never call up what you cannot put down. The "UN approval" demon is not one that shows sign of returning to the nether regions it came from. I am even less convinced that John Kerry has the power and the will to exorcise this demon.

Checkmating the Radicals

I am not sure that John Kerry will be able to avoid putting radical leftists into positions; the ABB candidate is riding into battle on a hydra, not a horse. After the fight, there will be a lot of mouths to feed.

(Possibly) Breaking the Strategic Impasse

Harry S Truman had a world of trouble overcoming the title of the "Senator from Pendergast" because of his connections to the Kansas City boss who backed him. Even so, he had an agenda and integrity. John Kerry has an opposition candidacy, and he lacks both agenda and integrity. On November 3rd, regardless of the results of the election, all of Kerry's political capital evaporates in a frenzy of either recrimination or patronage. This is not a result that will drive military confrontation of terror sponsors and the extermination of fundamentalist sociopaths.

Michael, you did not convince me, and I doubt you convinced yourself. I have to give you credit for a game effort at an impossible goal. I respect you even more for the intellectual honesty to admit the weakness and derivative nature of the available arguments. It all seems a bit much to hope for an undistinguished candidate to discover unexpected greatness twice in a row.

Thursday, September 16, 2004
 
Confronting the Islamic Republic of Iran

Would you prefer a conventional invasion of Iran or an exchange of thermonuclear weapons? Conventional weapon as slow and painful, thermonuclear exchanges are quick and excruciating.

In the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, there is this room designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. This room is an amazing space that draws out your mind and allows you to consider the possibilities of how people interact with space.

In the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., there is a silver bird built by men of vision and flown across the Atlantic by a man of spectacular courage and will. This Spirit of Saint Louis showed the world what free men could do and inspired millions to go further and do more.

In Qom and Tehran are deeply corrupt religious fanatics who have been attacking my country by proxy on a retail basis for twenty-five years. Today they are telling us that their killing is going to change to direct supply on a wholesale basis. They are telling me that they are perfectly willing to turn that room in New York, the bird in D.C., and millions of people around them into radioactive ash because we will not submit to their authority.

I do not want to have my nation suffer the pain and burden of another invasion and reconstruction. I deeply regret that if forced to choose between art, accomplishment, and freedom or the control of corrupt religious fundamentalists with nuclear weapons, I will choose to protect the culture of my people by invasion.

Sunday, September 12, 2004
 
From Here to eForgery

One of the guys who wrote the book on computer typography, Dr. Joseph M. Newcomer, has weighed in. The CBS memos are a fraud.

The probability that any technology in existence in 1972 would be capable of producing a document that is nearly pixel-compatible with Microsoft’s Times New Roman font and the formatting of Microsoft Word, and that such technology was in casual use at the Texas Air National Guard, is so vanishingly small as to be indistinguishable from zero.


Of special note is the pseudo-kerning of the letter combination of "fr" not found on any typewriter or typesetter, but standard on current versions of MS Word:

The “r” is tucked under the “f” in the same way a Microsoft font does it. In 1972, technology available in the office, including proportional typewriters, could not do this. So it is clear that the only way this document could have been done is using a modern computer font, and the placement is pixelwise identical to Microsoft’s Times New Roman.

It looks like Dan Rather is going to go down in flames over this massive lapse in ethics. Goody.
 
Shabby Treatment of Wounded Guard and Reserve Soldiers

Congressman,

I bring your attention to the 9/11/04 AP report by Andrew Kramer detailing months of shabby treatment of wounded Oregon National Guardsmen who have been kept from their families due to bureaucratic incompetence and inefficiency. These soldiers should be returned to their homes as quickly as possible for convalescence at full pay and with full benefits until such time as their recovery warrants a final disposition of their medical claims.

The valor of our Guard and Reserve troops has earned them better consideration than picking up cigarette butts on light duty hundreds of miles from home while paper-shufflers who have never heard a shot fired in anger dither over their disposition.

Our nation is at war, and we cannot afford to treat our wounded as a bureaucratic inconvenience.

Patrick S Lasswell
Portland, OR

Hat Tip: COUNTERCOLUMN

Friday, September 10, 2004
 
The letter in the post below was scanned into a .tif file and converted into a .jpg because my system was choking. That is what I consider to be a reasonable quality scan of an original military document.

This is what I consider to be a fraud intended to influence a national election.

Show us the originals, Dan!

Thursday, September 09, 2004
 
Real Documents

Here is a copy of a Letter of Appreciation I got in 1992 from ComTraPac for exemplary service in setting up a retirement ceremony. The whole story is a bit more complex. In 1992 I was assigned temporarily to base maintenance of the base that housed ComTraPac. Rather than just get bored, I looked for interesting things for Base Maintenance to do. Mostly because I found real things to do instead of make-work, the other temporary duty sailors worked harder than they ever had. One area that had been largely ignored was the ComTraPac offices, and they actually had some interesting things to do.

In another of those instances where the Navy's Department of Surprise Parties and Practical Jokes to really make my life interesting, I got a short notice cross-country transfer. The NCO in charge of Base Maintenance, a Boatswain's Mate on a base that was 98% Sonar Techs, had been getting a lot of positive notice during my time assigned to him, and he was a good guy. I figure he got word to ComTraPac that the guy who had driven the positive changes on their facilities was getting screwed and could use a positive bullet on his next evaluation. The command structure of the base I was assigned to was apparently institutionally incapable of recognizing positive effort that was not part of their permanent staff.

I bring this up as an example of a document from the early 1990s that was from a major command using their best word-processing equipment to produce a serialized document for the record.

Here is a document, allegedly twenty years older that is proportionately spaced. It is a forgery, and a bad one that the AP and CBS claimed to be valid. The letters are evenly mono-spaced, not proportionately spaced. If you look at the word "flight" you can clearly see that the letters f, l, and i are proportionately spaced. Nobody had equipment to produce this kind of document for regular personnel actions in 1972.

Attention to detail!

Hat Tip: Powerline and Citizen Smash

 

 
   
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