Mother’s Day
should be about love and compassion, right? Please tell that to our legislative
leaders, both national and state. While it was a mind-boggling time—historic,
to use a more proper term—in Washington last week, the Texas legislature did
not get left out of the party.
Currently a
handful of right-wing extremist representatives are using parliamentary
procedure to block 100 bills because they aren’t getting their way. One of the
bills blocked has to do with cutting Teas’ way-too-high maternity mortality
rate. Particularly appropriate on Mother’s Day. Sure, it’s called serving for
the good of the state.
And state
officials have found a swell way to turn young immigrants into haters of the
U.S. and terrorists. Just lock them up in a for-profit juvenile facility thinly disguised as a day-care center.
Really, guys? You want us to believe that? It is so wrong on so many levels,
among them the fact that for-profit
prisons should be outlawed. We encourage crime by making it a source of
profit—there’s no direct money in educating youngsters and leading them away
from a path of crime. So, let’s make a buck!
Second, the
immigration law in Texas is harsh enough, tearing children from their mothers’
skirts (often, literally). But to put them in a for-profit incarceration center goes beyond any sort of human
decency. Yes, I believe our governor has signed that one into law.
As he did the
sanctuary city law which forbids city governments and law enforcement officers
from ignoring Texas’ harsh immigration laws. The tiny border two of El Cenzio
is suing the state government over the law. The mayor refuses to turn in his
fellow citizens. Resist, he says, is the right thing to do.
This may seem like
a non sequitur, but I assure you it’s not. Last night my oldest granddaughter went
to her high school prom. Her father, mother, and younger sister checked into a
hotel for a Mother’s Day getaway and left the keys to the house to Maddie She
was encouraged to invite her close friends, boys and girls, for the after-prom
all-night party. My son’s reasoning? “I’d rather have them in my house than in
a cheap bar or hotel.” His stipulation: they collected all car keys (Maddie
knew where they were) and the kids were forbidden to touch his liquor (he’s a
connoisseur of fine Scotch). They didn’t hide liquor, jewelry, anything, just
opened the houses to the kids.
We’re waiting to
hear a report, but I’m betting on Maddie. I have faith in her to do the right
thing and to have chosen her friends well. How does this relate to the Texas or
national legislatures? I believe if you trust people, they will live up to your
expectations. If you distrust them, they think, “Why the hell not?” and do what
you suspected them of doing.
I cannot fathom
this hatred of immigrants, particularly Mexicans and Muslims. Texas, of course,
is focused on Mexican immigrants. They are, we’re told, criminals, rapists, the
dregs of society. Funny, some of the Mexican-Americans I’ve met are the nicest
people—kind, caring, raising their families to be good citizens. In California,
farmers are crying because their crops are rotting in the fields—the immigrant
workers are afraid to come to work. Not all immigrants can afford the time and
cost of citizenship—a factor no one considers apparently.
If we continue
this ban, think how many service industries will be affected. The hospitality
industry will take a huge hit—no one to clean hotel rooms, wait tables, tend
bar. Who will clean your house and your office? There are a thousand other jobs
done by Mexicans. Don’t tell me those jobs belong to Americans—most Americans
won’t do a lot of them.
I think we need to
get a grip on this immigration nonsense. By all means, deport any known and
proven criminals and terrorists. Stop deporting innocent people or those with
minor infractions in the long-ago past. Sure, it’s hard to detect terrorists,
but we have tremendous law enforcement tools and techniques. Put them to work.
And use a bit of compassion. And outlaw for-profit prisons.
Happy Mother’s
Day. Sorry for the rant. Maybe I shouldn’t read the news.
PS: My son’s house
was just as he’d left it. Yay, Maddie!
6 comments:
We got a leader with lower respect for women than voters have for him, it trickles down. Good thing about it, I now hearing strong voices from strong women roaring back like morning thunder. My mother is no longer with me but I'm happy to say I always vote in a direction she would approve of.
Yes, I hear those roaring voices too. Good for you for keeping your mom in mind in the voting booth. I often think and vote how my dad would.
Trump won the election, get over it. It's like when you fly on a plane, you may not like the pilot but you still pull for him...
Sorry faulty analogy. I won't get over it--and neither will millions of Americans--until he is out of office. Wish you'd sign your name.
If I signed my name you would hate me as much as Trump...and I like to be part of your family....so yes, you scare me and will run yellow while trying to bring you to your senses...I do love you BTW....
Now I'm really curious, but I try not to hate, so probably that's not true that I'd hate you. I might try to get you to see the light of day however. I'm sure you're somebody I also love, and such a trifling person as Trump won't change that.
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