Thursday, October 31, 2019

Druid New Year

   Happy New Year to Druids everywhere, and to all those who honor a tradition forgotten, but not gone.
   It's now known as Hallowe'en, or the evening of All Hallows Day, the time of year when this Middle World is closest to the spiritual Otherworld, and when those in the Otherworld can most easily return to visit family, friends and others still here, and when those of us here in the Middle World can most easily visit the spirit worlds.
   We do this by dressing up as "ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggedy beasties and things that go bump in the night," as Robert Burns wrote.
   To Celtic peoples, November 1 is known as Samhain, the end of the harvest season and the end of the year. It also marks the beginning of a new cycle of the year, when we begin to enter the dark time as the sun fades and the spirits of the dark begin to dominate the season.
   It is a time to reflect on the past and honor those who have crossed to the spirit world. It was and remains a time to mimic the tricksters of the spirit world and treat them to small favors so they would remain friendly.
   Samhain (pronounced: SAH-win) is the first of eight festivals of the Druid year, all of which are still observed, even as they were given different names as a new spiritual tradition spread throughout the Celtic world.
   Next is the Winter Solstice, December 21, known to the ancients as Yule, when the sun seems to stop its retreat toward darkness and begins to return, metaphorically defeating the powers of darkness and returning to dominate the world.
   Third in the series is Imbolc, February 1, when the first early signs of spring begin to show through the sleeping earth. The groundhog emerges from his winter sleep, lambs are born and we look for new life in grass, trees and flowers. A carryover of this tradition is Groundhog Day, or Candlemas Day, the Feast of Lights.
   Next in the cycle is the Spring Equinox, March 21, when days and nights are again in balance and people prepare in earnest for the return of the sun.
   At Beltane, May 1, the Druidic cycle is half-way through the year as people honor Belenos, a god of love. It is also a time to gather flowers, to dance and to honor Mother Earth during the modern romance festival of Mayday.
   Midsummer brings another festival, as the sun reaches its highest point in its yearly journey -- the Summer Solstice, June 21.
   Then comes Lughnasadh, August 1, time to gather the first harvest of wheat and bake the first loaves of bread from the new harvest. It is the day to honor Lugh, the sun god, with dancing and feasting. It is also known as Lammas (loaf-mass) Day.
   Lugh was also known as a warrior, with his Sword of Light, and is remembered in Hollywood as Luke Skywalker, with his laser sword.
   The final festival in the Druid year is the Autumn Equinox, September 21, when the days and nights are again in balance and it is time to prepare for the full harvest and begin preparations for winter.
   All these festivals go back many centuries, before the time when a new spiritual tradition began to spread throughout Europe. Rather then try to ban them entirely, the missionaries gave them new names and adapted them to fit the new tradition.
   Nevertheless, the old ways continue, as modern Druids incorporate them into newer belief systems.

John T. Harding is the author of "Druidry for Today: A Tradition Forgotten But Not Gone," available as an ebook or in paperback from Amazon.


Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Phony Constitution?

   "This phony emoluments clause" is how the president describes a phrase in the Constitution.
   One wonders what other parts of the Constitution he considers phony or fake.
   Perhaps he considers the entire document "phony," and therefore can be suspended or cancelled by executive order.
   Check the definition of "emolument," as posted in an earlier entry, quoting my edition of Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary. It means "profit."

Monday, October 21, 2019

Word Warrriors

 It ain't hard to figure.

   Emolument is Latin for profit, and profit means to derive benefit. The Latin phrase "quid pro quo" literally means "this for that," or "something for something." It's a trade.
   The Constitution says government officials are forbidden to profit from, benefit from, gain from or earn from any relationship with a foreign government, official or private entity.
   Lawyers spend hours, days and even weeks arguing over meanings of words, while the rest of the nation wonders why they can't or won't accept the concept of "shall not ..."
   Consider the term "inquiry" as applied to the possibility of an impeachment proceeding. Here are some synonyms for the word "inquire": Ask, question, examine, research, query, probe, investigate, seek or look for information, details and facts to support or deny the truth of some charge, allegation or theory.
   Which one of the ten verbs apply? Or all of the above? The debate only slows the process, which may well be the strategy.
   As for the current hassle in Washington involving the president, the question is this: Did he or did he not accept, earn, derive or benefit from any trade, agreement, pact, arrangement, or deal with any foreign official, agency, company, corporation, firm or individual or any foreign entity, whether friend or foe, while in office?
   If he did, then he violated the Constitution, which he promised to protect and defend. If he did not, then an inquiry -- by any name -- will clear him of any wrongdoing and the nation can move on.
   Either way, the inquiry, investigation, probe, examination, quest or whatever else you want to call it should continue, to establish the truth and the facts supporting it,  and the name-calling can stop.
   As for the comment from a high official the other day that this sort of thing "happens all the time," that does not make it legal.
   Politicians may ignore the Constitution just as burglars ignore the law, but repeatedly doing so doesn't make it right.
   Meanwhile, lawyers and politicians argue the meanings and implications of words, the better to support their beliefs and actions, regardless of what the Constitution says.
   Or as the president's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani said, "Truth isn't truth." And as presidential spokeswoman Kellyanne Conway put it, there are "alternative facts."
   Many in the political herd may argue until the cows come home, but voters know what is left behind.

Friday, October 18, 2019

Electoral Curiosities

Once is an accident, twice is a coincidence, and three times or more is a pattern.

   Only five men have been elected to the presidency after losing the popular vote, and four were Republicans. The fifth, John Quincy Adams, was chosen by the House of Representatives in 1824 after none of the candidates gathered a majority of electoral votes. The Republican Party as we know it was not founded until some 30 years later.
   Since then, all four of the presidential candidates who lost the popular vote but gained the Oval Office by winning the Electoral Vote were members of the Republican Party: Rutherford B. Hayes in the election of 1876; Benjamin Harrison in 1888; George W. Bush in 2000, and Donald J. Trump in 2016.
   Hayes defeated Samuel J. Tilden in 1876 by just one electoral vote, and scholars have long suspected that an exchange of money persuaded one member of the Electoral College -- originally a Tilden supporter -- to change his vote and support Hayes instead. The electoral vote was 185-184.
   Twelve years later, in the election of 1888, Benjamin Harrison lost the popular vote but took the presidency after the Electoral College supported him by a vote of 233-168.
   More recently, in the election of 2000, Republican George W. Bush lost the popular vote but moved into the Oval Office after a prolonged battle in Florida over its vote count was stopped by the U.S. Supreme Court. Eventually, the nationwide electoral count was 271 for Bush and 266 for his Democratic opponent, Al Gore, who had received some 543,000 popular votes more than Bush.
    And in the election of 2016, Republican Donald J. Trump racked up 304 electoral votes to Democrat Hillary Clinton's 227, despite losing the popular vote. That count was 65.8 million for Clinton, and 62.9 million for Trump.
   Many Americans have long been unhappy with the idea of a president being chosen by a secondary vote of electors rather than by the population generally. However, it seems the founders were not confident that the people could be fully trusted when it came to electing a single leader, so the indirect method was designed instead. The Electoral College currently is made up of the total number of members of the House of Representatives -- 435 -- plus the 100 Senators plus three for the District of Columbia, for a grand total of 538 electors. These electors meet after the general election is held and vote for a president and vice president. The winner must score a simple majority of electoral votes, currently 270.
   Normally, the electors vote for their previously designated candidate, but there is no requirement that they do so. In 2016, two electors defected from Trump and five defected from Clinton, but there is little indication that would have changed the result.
   In 1876, however, it did, as Hayes scored an electoral victory over Tilden by just one vote. And in the election of 2000, a continuing recount in Florida was stopped by the U.S. Supreme Court, and resulted in Bush collecting 271 electoral votes, just one more than the simple majority of 270 needed to win the presidency.
   So the argument now is whether the general population has become educated enough, and trustworthy enough, to be able to select a leader by direct vote, rather than be swayed by a demagogue into choosing someone who might lead the nation down an unreasonable path.
   Meanwhile, we continue to choose a president by indirect vote, through the Electoral College of 538 members.

Monday, October 7, 2019

Lawyer's Creed

When you have facts on your side, argue the facts.
When you have law on your side, argue the law.
When you have neither, pound the table.

   We see a lot of table-pounding these days, as supporters of the president ignore direct questions from journalists and keep talking even as the interviewer points out that the person has changed the subject, has not answered the question and has launched an attack on someone else who is not connected in any way to the issue under discussion.
   Meanwhile, a federal judge in New York has rejected a Trumpian appeal of a state subpoena that the president deliver income and tax records to state investigators.
   Defense lawyers claimed that the president is immune from investigation while he is in office.
   The judge said, in effect, go away. "No one is above the law," he wrote, ordering that the records be produced.
   Defense lawyers said they will appeal.
   But this is a state case, not federal. It has been Department of Justice policy not to investigate a sitting president while in office. That, however, is policy, not law, and refers to criminal offenses.
   President Bill Clinton was investigated while in office for a civil offense allegedly involving an extramarital affair and lying to Congress about it.
   And former Vice President Spiro Agnew was investigated while in office for offenses allegedly committed years earlier. As a consequence, Agnew resigned.
   So there are precedents justifying investigations of a president and a vice president while in office. The current investigation, however, involves state offenses, and the federal government typically has no jurisdiction over state cases.
   To claim that the president -- any president -- is immune from prosecution, civil or criminal, while in office is ludicrous. As the judge said, "No one is above the law."
   Supporters can pound the table all they want -- check that: No, they can't. Pounding the table and shouting down and attacking reporters simply for asking questions does not and cannot change the truth nor can it stop journalists from trying to determine truth.