Because even though it's been seven months and I am going to forsake this channel in favor of a writer's website, this is just too important not to share. (Also posted on my Facebook page)
I promise soon to post the address of my new website.
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Sunday, June 17, 2018
Father's Day?
Father's Day.
Really? Usually a day of looking forward to calls from Daughters
One and also Two, Mary suggesting a nice dinner, sitting reading and writing
and scratching the dogs. In short, usually a really nice, relaxing day.
But not this year.
This is the year I can't avoid the admission that I am complicit in the incarceration of innocent children (innocent by any reasonable measure and yes, children!) in what amounts to gaily painted concentration camps.
But not this year.
This is the year I can't avoid the admission that I am complicit in the incarceration of innocent children (innocent by any reasonable measure and yes, children!) in what amounts to gaily painted concentration camps.
We have become the people to whom we have always held
ourselves to be morally superior. We have become the monster in the closet, the
foul breath in the room, the scratching at the window. We have become every
child's dread fear - separation from Mom and Dad, lack of the comfort of the
familial cocoon, confirmation that never again - even if and when returned to
their parents - can they feel truly safe and watched after.
One of the fundamental tenets of my belief system is
that ANY child should be able to rely on ANY adult for protection and succor.
Anywhere. Any time. Under any conditions.
I have failed to meet that measure. We all have.
I have failed to meet that measure. We all have.
History will record our failure. This will become part
of our 'permanent record,' along with Nagasaki, Manzanar, the Trail of Tears
and Bloody Sunday on the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
But today is not about future history. It can't be.
Today is today and what we see is what we must deal with.
Yesterday a candidate walked up our driveway on his
canvassing rounds to make his pitch for local election. I scanned his brochure
and noted no mention of party affiliation, so I asked. He visibly breathed in
before answering, "Republican." I told him as politely as I could
that I was a former life-long Republican who would not vote for any member of
that party at any level for the foreseeable future. I shared that he could
thank Trump, Ryan and McConnell and their minions for my defection. He tried to
rally, saying this was a local election and didn't I care about car tab taxes?
When I said yes, but I care far more about my country putting children in
camps, he got it and instantly turned on his heels.
They say all politics are local and to some extent
that's true.
It's no longer enough to plan to sweep them nationally in the mid-terms or to vote Trump into the dustbin at next opportunity. We must do those things but also we must be vocal at the local level so that every time they get together in any numbers as a party, they hear the stories of how this national horror is coming back on them. Politicians care about the next election.
It's no longer enough to plan to sweep them nationally in the mid-terms or to vote Trump into the dustbin at next opportunity. We must do those things but also we must be vocal at the local level so that every time they get together in any numbers as a party, they hear the stories of how this national horror is coming back on them. Politicians care about the next election.
As long as children are held in cages - even cages of
drywall with gay murals - I am complicit in child abuse.
And so are we all.
And so are we all.
Father's Day, indeed!
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