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American Woman

American Woman

In 1776, there was no illusion that American independence was about anything other than White men. It was about White men arguing with other White men about freedom. The American Revolution really did nothing to address grievances of the poor, people of color, or women—White or Black.

When you think about the history that we studied, it was about Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams. Rarely did we ever talk about a female. Women were just never mentioned. Every now and then, when you really dove into the details you could read about Abigail Adams. She was a strong voice in the ear of one powerful man, but there needed to be more. Oh, don’t forget, we used to read about Betsy Ross sewing what would become the new United States flag (turns out that maybe a myth). I don’t remember anything else about her; do you?

While minorities have a long list of grievances, or, as Thomas Jefferson put it in the Declaration of Independence, “a long train of abuses and usurpations.” The list is equally as long for the American woman. For most of American history, her job has been to produce offspring, clean the house, and make sure that the home was hospitable for her “hard-working” husband. Oh, and I mustn’t forget, the American Woman was supposed to educate the offspring so they can assume the roles and perpetuate this American life.

Two things changed that helped liberate some American women. First, birth control.

Birth control
Before birth control, every sexual encounter could result in humiliation, loss of social status, and being banished from the community for the egregious offense (I’m trying to generate as much sarcasm as I can here) of having sex and getting pregnant. In our society, getting pregnant out of wedlock was simply forbidden. There was no discussion, no thoughtful debate: it was just absolutely forbidden.

Women had this literally beaten into them. They were told by their parents. They were told by their teachers. They were told by the clergy that sex was “okay” within the confines of marriage but was sinful outside of marriage.

It is interesting to note, and important to remember, that men did not get banished for impregnating a woman. The double standard was and is outrageous.

Birth control pills really changed everything. Once they were introduced in 1960, sex didn’t automatically equal pregnancy. In theory, birth control pills allowed women the freedom to go and do what they wanted and be who they wanted because they were no longer tethered to pregnancy at every turn.

Legal right to abortion
The other thing that helps liberate women, unshackle them from the kitchen, was legalized abortion. The famous Supreme Court case, Roe v. Wade, made abortion legal throughout the United States. Now, if the revolutionary birth control pill should fail, women had a legal, safe backup method for ending their pregnancy.

There is a huge body of literature for and against abortion. In my opinion, this is not a religious argument (although many religions have taken a stance). When you read the Bible, you’ll find the Ten Commandments. These are the words to live by. And there is nothing in the ten commandments about abortion.

Nor did Jesus say anything on the subject. Throughout the life of Jesus, he stressed loving God and loving your fellow man. He said nothing about do not abort the fetus.

In my opinion, this issue boils down to what you believe the American Woman is. Is an American Woman an equal partner in the phrase “all men are created equal?” If you believe an adult female who is an American citizen should have all the rights conferred by our Constitution, then an American Woman should have the right to decide what to do with her body. It is that simple. Once you decide that the fetus has more rights than the adult female who was carrying the fetus, the American Woman becomes a second-class citizen. Period.

It appears that the Republicans have exactly what they’ve been dreaming about for more than 60 years. They have a super-majority on the Supreme Court. The Republican judges are not just conservative; they are ultraconservative.

And, as we now know, it’s very likely the Supreme Court is poised to overturn Roe v. Wade. As far as I can tell, there is nothing that we can do to stop this from happening. So the question is, what we do after it happens?

Do we rally around the American Woman? Do we follow the American Woman into a years-long battle to actually get meaningful national legislation passed that makes abortion legal in the United States forever? That is my hope.

The Slow Death of Ukraine
Russia has continued its slow python-like squeeze on Ukraine. This is nothing like a blitzkrieg. Instead, it’s more like death from a thousand paper cuts. There is no massive invasion of an army. Instead, there is a missile strike on a train station. There is another missile strike into a clearly marked Red Cross shelter where children are sheltering. There are dozens of missile strikes into apartment buildings.

To me, this war does not seem to be about conquering Ukraine. Instead, it seems to be about punishing Ukraine. It seems to be about inflicting maximum damage.

This war has gone on for more than two months. The Ukrainian people have proven themselves to be resilient, but they lack resources. We are giving them some resources, and so is the European Union, but I would urge the United States government to up their game.

It is time for us to put all of our chips into the center of the table. I just don’t think that we can sit by and allow the Russians to slowly destroy a country just because they want to. We need to send more weapons. We need to send more guns. We need to send more ammunition. We need to send more antitank weapons. We need to send airplanes. We need to send fighter jets. We need to give Ukraine a fighting chance to save their country.

January 6, 2021
It has been over a year since we all sat and watched our TVs as Americans attacked their own United States Capitol. Once order was restored, I was looking for swift justice. I didn’t see that. Instead, I’ve seen a slow methodical conviction of low-level knuckleheads. I feel like I’m watching one of those classic mafia movies from the 1970s and 1980s. The low-level guys go to jail while the big Mafia bosses continue smoking their Cuban cigars and living in their 20,000 square-foot houses, and never get touched by law enforcement.

A recent recording was released showing Kevin McCarthy, top-ranked Republican Congressman and Minority Leader of the US House of Representatives, condemning the January 6th attack. He went so far in the recording as to say that he was going to ask Donald Trump to resign.

To me, although the recording is genuine, the idea is naïve and McCarthy’s idea was asinine. The one thing we know is that Donald Trump never admits defeat. He never admits that he is wrong. And he would never resign. In fact, there is no circumstance or situation in the known universe in which Donald Trump would admit that he did something wrong and would resign. None.

And, although we never heard this recording before, we did see the sentiment of high-ranking Republicans on the floor of the Senate and the House in the immediate aftermath of the insurrection. There was shock, there was dismay, there was true anger. Yet, over the next several days to weeks anger resided—and then there was renewed, abject fealty to Donald Trump.

Coordination—or collusion
A huge trove of text messages from Mark Meadows, Trump’s Chief of Staff (and Asheville’s former congressman), has been released to the public. They offer several amazing revelations.

First of all, Fox News personalities had open access to the White House. Sean Hannity and others could simply text or call the White House Chief of Staff and expect to get an immediate response.

Second, the White House and Fox News coordinated everything they did. Sean Hannity asked for advice on how to present certain issues to his viewing public—and, in the other direction, gave advice to the White House and how to deal with certain situations including this January 6 attack. This symbiotic relationship is not good for democracy.

Billions for food …
What would you do if you are the richest person in the world, if you had tens of billions of dollars at your disposal? What would you do?

You have enough money to end homelessness in the United States. You actually have enough money to treat everybody who has mental illness in the United States. You could pay for college for thousands of deserving high school graduates. You have enough money to end hunger in the United States. You can set up food stations throughout the United States and feed everybody who is hungry.

…or ego-gratification

Yet, what does Elon Musk do? He spends $44 billion buying Twitter. Why? Because he’s an egomaniac. He believes—no, he “knows” he could run it better.

I have no idea if Elon Musk could do a better job of running Twitter. All I know is that unfettered speech is not good for democracy. We, as humans, are wired to respond to threats. We are wired to respond to immediate threats almost instantaneously. Of course, this makes sense from an evolutionary standpoint: if you don’t respond to immediate threat, you get eaten by a lion.

On the other hand, if a person calls you a knucklehead on Twitter, that’s no big deal—but when several thousand people gang up on you to let you know how worthless you truly are, that can be overwhelming. That can cause suicide. Misinformation can cause homicide.

In the past few years, we have seen small, seemingly innocuous phenomena or statements get blown up on social media, and before you know it, a little, innocuous fact—or falsehood—becomes a national story and everybody is taking sides. Sometimes one of those sides is dangerous, like the shooting up of a neighborhood pizza parlor in Washington, DC, or the attempted kidnapping of Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer—or the storming of the US Capitol.

Undermining education and truth
The latest thing has to do with Florida math textbooks. Several textbooks were banned because they were promoting “unAmerican” ideas. You know that this is nonsense. Right? Every major textbook is scrubbed by wordsmiths over and over again in order to avoid anything controversial.

Now, the folks promoting this campaign have never released a complete list of books they’ve banned or even the full text of a single book. As a result, we can’t tell which words or phrases or actual facts in which books offend them. Instead, they release a couple of cartoons out of a 1,000-page book as an example of the egregious nature of the book.

This is nuts. There is no way that I can rationally decide whether a book should be banned or not based on one picture. Was the picture taken out of context? What point or points were they really trying to make? There is no way to know, though this is similar to the hysteria over teaching Critical Race Theory in primary school.

Laws have been passed across the country that Critical Race Theory should not be taught in elementary school. What? Critical Race Theory has never been taught in elementary schools. Never! It is something that has been discussed in some law schools. The whole CRT controversy was whipped up to force some people to have an emotional response. Personally, I also think we should pass laws stating that nuclear physics should not be taught to kindergartners. My friends, be thoughtful. Be rational. Oh, and one other thing to remember. It is an important rule. It is unbreakable: Friends don’t let friends watch Fox News!!

By |2022-08-21T14:43:35-04:00August 21st, 2022|Civil Rights, Education, Healthcare|Comments Off on American Woman

Justice in America

Justice, according to Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary, is the maintenance or administration of what is just: Impartial adjustment of conflicting claims. Another definition is the quality or characteristic of being just, in partial or fair. Sometimes, justice in our legal system can be extremely elusive.

Justice not done

I am sure most of you remember Trayvon Martin. Mr. Martin was a 17-year-old walking back from a corner store when he encountered a community-watch guard, George Zimmerman, in February, 2012—almost ten years ago. George Zimmerman thought he had the right to stop in question Trayvon Martin. An altercation broke out, and George Zimmerman fatally shot and killed the unarmed Trayvon Martin.

In the subsequent trial, George Zimmerman claimed that he feared for his life during the altercation. Therefore, he said, he was justified in defending himself (by shooting Trayvon). Mr. Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree murder and manslaughter.

This was not justice.

No justice in Wisconsin

In August of 2020, Kenosha, Wisconsin police shot an unarmed 29-year-old gentleman named Jacob Blake. The video of this shooting was extremely disturbing. Blake was actually getting into his car. His kids were in the back seat. The police officer opened fire. Fortunately, Mr. Blake did not die—but he was left paralyzed from the incident.

Rioting broke out in Kenosha following the shooting. Kyle Rittenhouse, a 17-year-old white man (boy), who lived in a neighboring state, decided that he needed to drive to Kenosha to help protect private property and also to act as “a medic.” (Rittenhouse has no formal medical training that I can find.) He brought with him an AR-15 rifle, though it is illegal for someone under 18 to own such a weapon (an adult illegally bought it for him).

As you can imagine, a man walking the streets during a large and sometimes violent street protest with a rifle will get noticed. An altercation broke out. Kyle Rittenhouse shot and killed two men. He wounded a third man.

The trial of Kyle Rittenhouse did not focus on the fact that he was a 17-year-old kid with delusions of grandeur who clearly walked into a heated situation with an illegal weapon. Instead, it focused only on the immediate minutes before he open fire. Kyle Rittenhouse—just like George Zimmerman—testified that he feared for his life. He imagined the two unarmed men were going to disarm him, and therefore he had to protect himself. By shooting them to death.

The jury found Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty on all counts. He was allowed to walk free. Again, this isn’t justice.

George Zimmerman and Kyle Rittenhouse are similar people. In my opinion, they used poor judgment, and because of their actions innocent people needlessly died. George Zimmerman had no right to stop Trayvon Martin. Kyle Rittenhouse should have never brought a semiautomatic rifle to a volatile protest. Yet both men were allowed to walk free.

I do not believe that justice was served. As a matter fact, I would argue that both men were allowed to walk free because of the NRA. Both men were beneficiaries of laws that were written by the National Rifle Association.

Maybe Merriam-Webster needs to update its definition of justice and its opposite. The opposite of “justice” isn’t only “injustice”; sometimes it’s “white privilege.” And yet …

Justice achieved—in Georgia

Ahmaud Arbery was a 25-year-old black man who was out for a run in his hometown in Brunswick, Georgia. By all accounts, he was a kind and loving man. He like to stay in shape—so he went out jogging.

He was not far from his home when he was confronted by two men in a pickup truck—father and son, Gregory and Travis McMichael. A third man, William Bryan, joined the pursuit. For some reason—or for no reason, other than that he was African American—these three white men concluded that Mr. Arbery was the same man who had vandalized house that was under construction in their neighborhood.

Gregory McMichael is a former investigator for the Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office. They decided they had the right to make a “citizen’s arrest.”

An altercation ensued. There was in a fight over the shotgun that Travis McMichael was carrying. Two shots were fired. Ahmaud Arbery was dead.

Because this happened in a small town in Georgia, the case almost disappeared before it got started. One prosecutor argued there was not enough probable cause to arrest those who shot Mr. Arbery. Another recused himself. The case finally went to the Cobb County prosecutor.

Fast forward to the trial, in which, somehow, an almost-all-white jury in Georgia (11 Whites, one Black) found all three men guilty on all courts. This was justice.

(In September, 2021, former Brunswick District Attorney Jackie Johnson was indicted in for “showing favor and affection” to her former subordinate Gregory McMichael during the investigation, and for obstructing law enforcement by directing that Travis not be arrested. This, too, is justice.)

Omicron

On November 24, the day before Thanksgiving, South African scientists reported to the World Health Organization that they had discovered a new variant of the coronavirus. It is being called “omicron” (the 15th letter of the Greek alphabet).

Right now, it is too early to determine whether this variant is more infectious or even more deadly than the original virus or the delta variant that hit this summer and fall. The initial response from the international community has been to restrict travel from South Africa. The United States is jointing suit.

I am not sure that this is the right move. Two years ago, China first identified the coronavirus, and the Trump administration told us that everything would be fine. They stood around and did nothing—and then they opted to limit travel from China. As it turns out, by the time the Trump administration had decided, the coronavirus had already crossed the Pacific Ocean and was in Washington state.

What was completely unknown at the time was that the coronavirus had actually crossed the Atlantic Ocean and was beginning to ravish New York. Apparently, it had already reached various places in Europe directly from China. The China travel ban was completely useless.

As of this writing, the omicron variant is already here. Eighteen states have reported the omicron variant by early December. I am not sure that limiting travel to South Africa has any value; in part, it punishes South Africa for doing the right thing: immediately alerting the world to the new variant. Instead, testing all passengers from South Africa and those who recently traveled to South Africa for coronavirus might be a much better move.

When will we learn?

We are beginning to enter our second year of dealing with the coronavirus. As soon as a surge passes, we begin to relax. Life begins to return to almost normal—then there is another surge. Over 789,000 Americans have died because of Covid-19, and many more will die during the next surge—and the one after that.

We must get as many people as possible vaccinated. We need to help the rest of the world get vaccinated. This is truly an international disaster. Until we get everyone vaccinated, we are going to continue to fight Covid. (By everyone I mean more than 90% of the adult population.)

’Tis the Season

So Merry Christmas to everyone. I’m serious. Merry Christmas. May your hearts be full of love and joy. In addition, wear a mask. Find a couple of special masks for the holiday season. Get together with family and friends who are vaccinated.

I would still avoid large crowds. I haven’t been to a movie theater in over 20 months. And remember, I love movies. I have been to theaters for the opening week of every James Bond movie since The Spy Who Loved Me. But I didn’t see No Time to Die until it was available on Google Play. Although I hated not to see it on the big screen, I thought that the title was talking to me. It was telling me not to risk it. Going to a movie wasn’t worth my life. It isn’t worth your life either. This is no time to die. 2021 was better than 2020. And truly, I’m looking for 2022 to be even better. So, not just Merry Christmas, but Happy New Year to all!

By |2022-08-18T21:15:31-04:00December 18th, 2021|Coronavirus, Domestic Issues, Healthcare|Comments Off on Justice in America

Martin Luther King – Riots

“But it is not enough for me to stand before you tonight and condemn riots. It would be morally irresponsible for me to do that without, at the same time, condemning the contingent, intolerable conditions that exist in our society. These conditions are the things that cause individuals to feel that they have no other alternative than to engage in violent rebellions to get attention. And I must say tonight that a riot is the language of the unheard. And what is it America has failed to hear? It has failed to hear that the plight of the negro poor has worsened over the last twelve or fifteen years. It has failed to hear that the promises of freedom and justice have not been met. And it has failed to hear that large segments of white society are more concerned about tranquility and the status quo than about justice and humanity.”

― Martin Luther King Jr.
March 14, 1968

By |2015-04-29T06:39:52-04:00April 29th, 2015|Civil Rights, Domestic Issues, Race|Comments Off on Martin Luther King – Riots
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