Somebody Finally Got the Message About the Panama Canal
When Donald Trump announced his intention to "take back" the Panama Canal from China, I had to chuckle. My old friend Linc, who had died in 2005, was having the last laugh after all.
As editor of the Daily Inter Lake newspaper in Kalispell, Montana, for 18 years, I got to meet hundreds of people whom I would never have come across otherwise when they came to visit me at my office. One of the most memorable was an octogenarian named Linc France.
Linc (short for Lincoln) was an American original. For decades he had run Lincs Automotive in Columbia Falls. His 2005 obituary noted that "He could fix anything. If he didnt have the tool, he could make one." Despite ending his formal education in the 8th grade to help support his family, Linc was knowledgeable about many topics and was also civic minded, having served on the Columbia Falls City Council and volunteered for various charities such as Meals on Wheels.
When Linc came to visit me in his blue jeans and flannels with a trucker cap above his piercing eyes, I would sit back in my chair and prepare to be both amused and challenged. Generally, he would be dropping off a hand-written letter to the editor, and he would ask me to give it a once-over. Most of the time, the letter was about the Panama Canal.
President Jimmy Carter had signed the canal over to the nation of Panama for the contractual obligation of a single dollar back in 1977, and Panama took full control on Dec. 31, 1999, but by then most Americans werent interested. It certainly wasnt high on my radar, but Linc insisted on educating me and my readers, so he sent a steady barrage of letters warning of the national security risk of surrendering what he called the "eighth wonder of the world."
On Feb. 28, 2003, Linc wrote a letter we titled "Canal could be sign of worse to come." It was indeed prophetic:
I still wonder how many "taxpaying American citizens" have looked towards the Panama Canal lately. Maybe most everybody is too busy making a living or having too many types of entertainment to even think about Li Ka-shing, who has control of the Pacific-to-Atlantic bypass that was built with American sweat and blood.
(Letters quoted are available at Newspaperarchive.com)
I had never heard of Li before Linc started writing his letters, but I used the still-young Internet to research and found that Linc was right to be worried. The Hong Kong oligarch was using his companies such as Hutchison Whampoa and CK Hutchison to obtain ports at both ends of the canal and to gain effective control. A few months after Panama officially took over the canal on Dec. 31, 1999, the Washington Times wrote this:
Chinese businessman Li Ka-shing was planning to take over operation of the Panama Canal before the pullout last year of the United States, according to a declassified Pentagon intelligence report.
The Army intelligence report contradicts statements by President Clinton and Panamanian government officials that the Atlantic and Pacific port facilities leased in Panama by Mr. Li and his Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. will have no role in Panama Canal operations.
And it was well known that Lis global corporate holdings were closely controlled by the Chinese CommunistParty, as most such companies are in China. Evidence that such control continues until this day came to light in the past few months after President Trump declared his intention to reclaim the canal for the United States.
In an effort to capitalize on the urgency of the situation, the Li family agreed on March 4 to sell controlling interest in the Panama Canal ports to a global consortium led by BlackRock Inc. for $22.8 billion. Beyond the Panama implications, the deal would have turned over control of 43 ports in total in 23 countries, a huge win for the United States.
But within weeks, the deal was put on hold by the Chinese government. According to the Wall Street Journal, "Chinese leader Xi Jinping is angry about [the] plan to sell Panama Canal ports to a U.S.-led group, in part because the company didnt seek Beijings approval in advance." That is tantamount to confirmation that the Trump administration is right in its assessment that Chinas interest in the canal goes well beyond the financial.
And for that matter, it also confirms the worst fears of Linc France, the retired auto mechanic from Columbia Falls, Montana, who was paying attention decades before almost anyone else. As he finished up in the letter quoted above:
I just cant help [but] read or see the handwriting on the wall. It makes me feel sick at what the Red Chinese have gotten away with in the Panama Canal… As we all know, the Red Chinese have taken over the Panama Canal without even firing a shot. When the U.S.A. pulled out and gave it back to Panama, the Red Chinese just moved in, no questions asked.
That is, until Donald Trump moved back into the White House on Jan. 20, 2025. I cant help seeing Linc France coming back to my office at the Inter Lake with a big grin on his face and a red MAGA hat on his head. "Its about time," hed say. "Somebody finally got the message."
Frank Miele, the retired editor of the Daily Inter Lake in Kalispell, Mont., is a columnist for RealClearPolitics. His book 'The Media Matrix: What If Everything You Know Is Fake' is available from his Amazon author page. Visit him at HeartlandDiaryUSA.com or follow him on Facebook @HeartlandDiaryUSA and on X/Gettr @HeartlandDiary.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

USA Today
26 minutes ago
- USA Today
Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen
Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen The White House investigation comes on top of similar inquiries at the Justice Department and a House committee. Show Caption Hide Caption Biden speaks in public for first time since cancer diagnosis Former president Joe Biden delivered his first public speech at a Memorial Day event in Delaware since his cancer diagnosis was announced. WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump ordered an investigation of former President Joe Biden's alleged "cognitive decline" to determine who decided his signature should be applied to official documents by autopen. Trump's directive to the White House counsel, David Warrington, in consultation with Attorney General Pam Bondi, ratchets up the pressure behind Trump's longstanding criticism of Biden's mental ability. The probe comes amid similar inquiries at the Justice Department and in a House committee. "This conspiracy marks one of the most dangerous and concerning scandals in American history," Trump wrote in his order. "The American public was purposefully shielded from discovering who wielded the executive power, all while Biden's signature was deployed across thousands of documents to effect radical policy shifts." But Biden has replied in a series of recent public appearances that he was in command of his faculties. He has also been critical of Trump, arguing that his successor was taking a hatchet to the Social Security Administration. "They are wrong,' Biden said of his alleged cognitive decline on ABC's "The View." Trump directed the investigation to cover whether Biden's aides coordinated to shield the public from information about Biden's mental and physical health. A new book, "Original Sin," describes aides shielding Biden from Cabinet secretaries and limiting his access. Biden recently revealed his diagnosis of prostate cancer. Trump also directed the investigation into how Biden took executive actions during his final years in office, to determine who ordered the autopen for granting clemencies or other presidential actions. Presidents have used autopens for decades under DOJ memo Presidents have used automated pens to mimic their signatures on documents for decades, often when away from the office, when Congress completed urgent legislation. Justice Department memos in 2002 and 2005 confirmed that a president could direct an aide to use an autopen to sign legislation that remains valid under the Constitution. "This memorandum confirms and elaborates upon our earlier advice that the President may sign a bill in this manner," the 2005 memo said. Biden pardoned his brother, James Biden, and other relatives for unspecified crimes during his final days in office. Biden had previously pardoned his son, Hunter Biden, after gun and tax convictions. At the Justice Department, pardon attorney Ed Martin said he would investigate Biden's pardons and use of the autopen. Congressional Republicans have long argued that the president profited from his son's and brother's overseas business deals, which the family denied. The chairman of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee, Rep. James Comer, R-Kentucky, asked former Biden aides to sit for transcribed interviews about his mental fitness for office. Trump notes special counsel's finding about Biden's condition Trump's order highlights a particular sore point involving the different treatment of him and Biden in retaining classified documents after leaving office. Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith charged Trump with unlawfully retaining more than 100 classified documents at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, where they were retrieved 18 months after he left office during an FBI search. The charges were dropped when Trump was elected to a second term under a policy against prosecuting a sitting president. Special counsel Robert Hur decided against charging Biden for classified documents found at his Delaware home and a Washington, D.C., office during a search Biden invited. Hur concluded jurors would have found Biden "a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.' "For years, President Biden suffered from serious cognitive decline," Trump wrote. "The Department of Justice, for example, concluded that, despite clear evidence that Biden had broken the law, he should not stand trial owing to his incompetent mental state."
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Shooting of Israeli embassy staffers underscores US ‘era of violent populism'
The killing of two staff of the Israeli embassy in Washington DC comes as the war in Gaza has splintered the American body politic alongside the ongoing rise in political violence. A shooter, identified as Elias Rodriguez, shot the two people, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim, outside the Capital Jewish Museum on Wednesday after they left an event hosted by the American Jewish Committee. Rodriguez reportedly chanted 'free, free Palestine' while being detained by security. This is the latest act of violence in a string of incidents that have affected Jewish, Arab and Muslim communities in the US. A man in Illinois attacked a six-year-old and his mother, both Palestinian American, and killed the boy in 2023 soon after Hamas's 7 October attack on Israel, and three Palestinian students were shot in Vermont in November 2023. Reports of antisemitism, Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism have soared since the war began. But an uptick in violence is not uniquely associated with the war in Gaza. It's a feature of this 'era of violent populism', said Robert Pape, director of the University of Chicago Project on Security and Threats. Between assassination attempts on Donald Trump, ongoing threats of violence against a wide swath of government officials including judges, and an arson attack against the Pennsylvania governor, Wednesday's shooting was not one that happened in isolation. 'This is a chronic illness in our country,' Pape said. 'This is not a set of isolated events.' People who commit acts of political violence often believe they will be celebrated by some portion of the public that supports the same goals, he said. The alleged killer's supposed manifesto nods at this. 'They think about how they want to be perceived and what they want the news to be saying about them afterwards,' said Liliana Mason, a political science professor at Johns Hopkins University. 'And it's a very kind of self-oriented set of motivations.' 'We know that this guy screamed Free Palestine. He probably thought that he was doing something political. But also, there are plenty of people who think we should free Palestine, who are not going to go murder a couple people.' A small portion of the pro-Palestinian movement has formally embraced the language of armed resistance, but the vast majority of those protesting against the war have been non-violent. In the day since the shooting, condemnations have come from all sides of the political spectrum, including from politicians who have opposed US involvement in the war and joined pro-Palestinian protests. It also sparked a debate over the distinction between antisemitism and anti-Israel political violence, in part because it remains unclear what the perpetrator knew about his victims. 'My heart breaks for the loved ones of the victims of last night's attack in DC,' said Rashida Tlaib, a congresswoman who is Palestinian American. 'Nobody deserves such terrible violence. Everyone in our communities deserves to live in safety and in peace.' Trump offered condolences to the loved ones of the couple killed in the attack. 'These horrible DC killings, based obviously on antisemitism, must end, NOW!' he wrote on Truth Social. 'Hatred and Radicalism have no place in the USA.' Jews in the US have said it is another example of the menace they are facing as people protest against the war. Josh Shapiro, the Democratic governor of Pennsylvania whose residence was the target of an antisemitic arson earlier this year, said he was 'heartbroken and horrified' by the attack. 'May their memories be a blessing and a call to action for each of us,' he wrote on social media. A writer in the conservative Jewish publication Commentary wrote that Jewish institutions would quickly work to increase security and that 'Jews will be arming ourselves'. Pape's surveys have tracked a growing acceptance of using violence to achieve political goals across the political spectrum. A poll he conducted in partnership with the Anti-Defamation League in spring 2023, before the Gaza war began, found that Americans who are highly antisemitic were three times more likely to support violence to achieve political aims than the general population. (The Anti-Defamation League is known for tracking antisemitism, but its methods have come under scrutiny for conflating antisemitism and anti-Zionism.) But the killings also show that the US is a 'tinderbox' and that political violence is a slippery slope, said Pape. People tend to compartmentalize political violence – if there's an act of violence against Jews, it's only a Jewish issue, the thinking goes, he said. But violence tends to beget more violence, and more acceptance of violence. His surveys in 2024 found increasing support for violence against Trump alongside support for violence in favor of Trump, stemming in part from a belief that the electoral and political systems won't address their grievances. 'The more political violence there is against Trump, the more there will be political violence against Democratic leaders like Josh Shapiro,' Pape said. 'The more there's political violence against Josh Shapiro, the more there will be antisemitic political violence. These are not compartmentalized issues.' Meanwhile, it's not only those in the Jewish and Palestinian communities who are being affected, but also those who have taken part in demonstrations associated with the war in Gaza. Police have used force against protesters on campuses and off, seeking to quash the mass movements that have sprung up around the globe. Thousands of students have been arrested, suspended, kicked out of colleges, lost financial aid, had their degrees withheld. Others who were in the US on visas have seen their immigration threatened and face deportation. The killings in Washington will probably lead to further crackdowns by the Trump administration on the pro-Palestinian cause. Pape's most recent survey, earlier this month, showed 39% of Democrats agreed that using force was justified to remove Trump from office and that only 44% of Republicans opposed Trump using the US military to stop protests. 'We can sleepwalk into martial law pretty easily,' Pape warned.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump news at a glance: Elon Musk rallies voters to ‘kill' the president's signature tax bill
Elon Musk has ramped up his opposition to Donald Trump's One, Big, Beautiful Bill, criticising it in about two dozen posts on his social media platform X in the past 24 hours. In one post to his 220 million followers on the platform, Musk rallied voters to contact lawmakers, writing: 'Call your Senator, Call your Congressman, Bankrupting America is NOT ok! KILL the BILL.' White House officials said Donald Trump remains committed to passing his spending and tax bill through the US Senate, despite the increasingly vocal opposition from his billionaire donor. Here are the key stories at a glance: Donald Trump's signature tax bill would blow a $2.4tn hole to America's national debt over the next decade, according to a congressional budget office analysis, which came as Musk called for a new bill. The non-partisan budget office said on Wednesday that Trump's 'one big, beautiful bill' would decrease federal revenues by $3.67tn while cutting spending by $1.25tn through 2034, as the national debt currently stands at $36tn. Read the full story Donald Trump has signed a proclamation banning travel from 12 countries and restricting travel from seven others, reviving and expanding the travel bans from his first term. The nationals of Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen will be 'fully' restricted from entering the US, according to the proclamation. Meanwhile, the entry of nationals of Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela will be partially restricted. Read the full story Donald Trump has ordered an investigation into his predecessor Joe Biden's actions as president, alleging that his top aides masked the Democratic president's 'cognitive decline'. 'This conspiracy marks one of the most dangerous and concerning scandals in American history,' Trump wrote in the memo. 'The American public was purposefully shielded from discovering who wielded the executive power, all while Biden's signature was deployed across thousands of documents to effect radical policy shifts.' Read the full story Donald Trump signed a proclamation to restrict foreign student visas at Harvard University, the latest move amid an escalating row between the Trump administration and the academic institution. The proclamation suspends the entry into the US of any new Harvard student on a student visa, and directs the secretary of state to consider revoking existing visas. 'President Trump wants our institutions to have foreign students, but believes that the foreign students should be people that can love our country,' the White House said in a fact sheet about the proclamation. Read the full story Donald Trump spoke for more than an hour with Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, but he conceded the talks would not lead 'to immediate peace' in Ukraine, and warned that Russia would respond to Ukraine's successful attacks this week on its airfields. Read the full story Senior US immigration officials over the weekend instructed rank-and-file officers to 'turn the creative knob up to 11' when it comes to enforcement, including by interviewing and potentially arresting people they called 'collaterals', according to internal agency emails viewed by the Guardian. One email said: 'We complained for the last four years about not being allowed to do our job, and now the time has come for us to step up!' Read the full story The US has doubled tariffs on foreign steel and aluminum imports to 50%, pressing ahead in the face of criticism from key trading partners with a measure that Donald Trump says is intended to revive the American industry. Read the full story The Department of Education announced that it has notified Columbia University's accreditor of an alleged violation of federal anti-discrimination laws by the elite, private university in New York that is part of the Ivy League. The alleged violation means that Columbia, in the Trump administration's assessment, has 'failed to meet the standards' set by bodies responsible for the accreditation of degree-granting institutions. Accreditors determine which institutions are eligible for federal student loans and various federal grants. Read the full story Linda McMahon, the education secretary, said she is unsure if teaching students about two of the most notorious racist episodes in US history would fall foul of the Trump administration's onslaught against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). Read the full story The BBC has defended its Gaza war coverage, accusing the White House of misrepresenting its journalism after criticism from the Trump administration over a report on a deadly strike near a US-backed aid site. UK prime minister Keir Starmer said he hopes a trade deal with the US could come into effect 'in just a couple of weeks.' A federal judge in Colorado temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting the family of the man charged in the attack in Boulder, Colorado. Catching up? Here's what happened on .