by
Gadfly
This essay addresses the recent exchanges between
President Trump and four Congresswomen, collectively known as the squad. The
exchanges sound petulant. However, before
we treat the two parties with moral equivalency and tell both to cease and
desist, let me begin with a story.
Training
for combat operations in fighter aircraft is dangerous business. High speed, three-dimension maneuvering, with
high g-force loading on the aircraft (and bodies—five Gs makes 10 pounds weigh
the equivalent of 50 pounds), and a variety of tactics employed to defeat an
enemy pilot characterize the flying. It
involves split-second decision making and extreme physical exertion.
One of the safety measures during such training
operations is the “knock it off” call.
If any pilot (or weapons systems officer in two-crew fighters) sees a
situation developing that could easily spiral out of control, then they are to
shout out, “knock it off, knock it off, knock it off.” This basically reboots the training.
On one of my missions near Stuttgart, West Germany in the
early 1980s, I heard over Guard frequency (all aircraft must monitor Guard
frequency on UHF—ultra high frequency), “Antar one eight, knock it off, knock
it off, knock it off!” Less than a
minute later, I heard the same call, with the tone of voice sounding more urgent. About five minutes later, Stuttgart Control
announced over Guard frequency, “All Antar aircraft, RTB [return to base] immediately.” I knew something tragic had happened and led
my formation back to base.
Antar was the call sign for members assigned to the 20th
Tactical Air Support Squadron based at Sembach Air Base, West Germany. We were all checked out as forward air
controllers, flying the OV-10 Bronco. Each
member then had a number assigned. For
example, Antar 18 (Antar one eight) belonged to a pilot named Chris. The pilot in a different aircraft, another
Antar, was assigned to fly as the Red Baron on this day of flying. His mission was to fly into the vicinity of
the various Antar training missions to measure their vigilance awareness
(clearing for other “enemy” aircraft that were closing in on their
position). The procedure was to make two
ninety degree turns and then to rock your wings to signal that you noticed his
presence. The Red Baron would then proceed
to another Antar training area.
Antar 18 did not follow the procedure. Instead, he became aggressive and maneuvered against
the Red Baron as though he was an actual enemy aircraft. Because of the high G-loading, airspeed and
altitude were rapidly depleting, becoming dangerously low and slow (approaching
stall speed). This is why the Red Baron
was calling knock it off.
Antar 18 stalled out and, because the aircraft was too
low, was unable to safely eject from the aircraft. Antar 18 had a passenger in the back
seat. Both died in the crash.
Safety, legal, and flying evaluation boards were
convened. The Red Baron was exonerated
by all three boards. Yet, by an
authority at a higher level, the Red Baron had his wings taken away, as if he
was just as guilty for the crash as Antar 18.
He believed someone should be punished for the aircraft loss. Antar 18 and his passenger were already
dead. Could not punish them. This was assigned guilt through moral
equivalency . . . not based on evidence but personal opinion and a tit for tat
moral reasoning paradigm.
The knock it off call that is needed in the case of Trump
versus the squad exchange is not for Trump or the squad. It should be directed at the anti-America
faction in America, the cancer that is symbolized by the squad.
“The squad” is openly socialist in their political
orientation, which is extremely contrary to the idea of America. Whether they are tutors or mere unwitting
champions of the ideology, understanding the ideological “formation process” is
enlightening and disturbing.
For those who follow my blog entries, you are familiar
with some of the evidence I have provided as it relates to the socialist
(communist and fascist) infiltration of American institutions. We can learn a great deal from those who “drank
the Kool-Aid,” such as Whitaker Chambers, Bella Dodd, and Douglas Hyde. In his book, I Believed, Hyde tells his story about becoming a prominent
Communist in Great Britain. In his book,
Dedication and Leadership, Hyde
explains how Communists are recruited and developed to be very active in the
movement. Here is a lengthy excerpt from
Dedication and Leadership:
. . . In Communist hands the subtle method [in
non-totalitarian societies] may take on an almost sinister quality, as ideas
which would otherwise be unacceptable are skillfully got into the heads of
those who attend the classes.
Such instruction leads those who are
indoctrinated in this way to abandon and repudiate practically all their past
thinking and, indeed, to abandon the very things which first brought them to
Communism. For example, the man who
joined because he was at heart a pacifist comes in time quite naturally and ‘logically’
to accept the need for violence [think Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter,
and Antifa], for civil war and insurrection (even though anyone who has
experienced civil wars knows that these tend to be much nastier and bloodier even
than ordinary ‘imperialist’ wars) and to sit up till midnight studying Lenin on
the art of insurrection as a means of establishing a system of society in which
war will evermore be impossible.
The man with a liberal past comes
believing that by joining the Communist Party he is somehow putting himself on
the side of liberty, freedom, equality.
After attending a few Marxist classes he has come to ‘realise’ that
these are but ‘bourgeois concepts’ which must be not only abandoned but also
combated, since they are all part of the means by which an inhuman social system
is made acceptable, in the guise of being tolerant and democratic, to those who
suffer at its hands (pp. 86-87).
Based
on this formation process, is it hard to understand the ideological motivation for
sanctuary cities and states, open borders, and the claims about inhumane
detention centers and concentration camps by members of the squad and other
leftists?
There
is no moral equivalence between Trump and the squad. Like Trump, Americans need to protect the
idea of America and be bold enough to tell the squad and those they symbolize
to “knock it off!!!!!!” America is our
home. “Home is where the heart is.”
When
President Trump tells members of the squad to go home, he means they should go
to where their heart belongs, which is not America. The truth may hurt; but it can set us all
free from the brutal chains of illusions and delusions.