Category Archives: Uncategorized

Never give up: #Ferguson and the morning after

In the morning, South High School students held a sit in for four and half hours (the length of time Michael Brown's body was on the street after he was killed). Then they walked out and marched to the Minneapolis police 3rd precinct. Police cars blocked traffic for the march. 2014-11-25 This photo and text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License by Fibonacci Blue

In the morning, South High School students held a sit in for four and half hours (the length of time Michael Brown’s body was on the street after he was killed). Then they walked out and marched to the Minneapolis police 3rd precinct. Police cars blocked traffic for the march. 2014-11-25 This photo and text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License by Fibonacci Blue

What can any one person do in the face of #Ferguson and grief over a child’s death and despair over a country’s continuing racism and failure? What can any white person say, in the face of so much white failure, white racism, white guilt? Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Mr. President: Act now on immigration

IMGP0784With the election over, President Obama has no good reason to delay executive orders to mitigate the harsh application of current immigration laws. Every day that he delays means more families torn apart by deportation. He cannot change the immigration law itself — only Congress could do that, and they won’t. But the president can and must use his executive power to change the way that the current law is applied. That is now the only way to stop deportation of family members and longtime U.S. residents and to protect refugees and asylum seekers fleeing violence and terror in Mexico and Central America.

Immigration reform has come before Congress repeatedly over the past decade. Each time, Republicans in Congress blocked all meaningful reform. With a new Republican majority coming to the House and Senate in January, immigration reform is dead for at least the next two years. The president promised executive action before the election. Then he delayed until after the election, which helped neither immigrants nor Democratic candidates. Now he promises executive action soon, but Republicans are ramping up the rhetoric against both the president’s executive power and immigrants.

Poll after poll shows widespread support for immigration reform, among Democrats and Republicans. Though popular support for immigration reform has increased over the years, right-wing opposition has stymied every effort at changing the law.

That leaves a seriously broken immigration system in place. Right now, spouses of U.S. citizens are being deported. Parents of U.S. citizen children are being deported. Migrants who have lived and worked and paid taxes in this country for decades are being deported. Migrants convicted of minor crimes, even years after paying fines or serving sentences, are being deported.

Congressional inaction leaves only executive action as a tool to ameliorate the damage done by a broken immigration system. While the president cannot change the law, he can order deferred action on deportation for specific groups of people. That’s what he did back in 2012, with the popular DACA program: Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. The DREAM Act, which had broad bipartisan support, would have given these young people legal status. Since right-wing opposition blocked the DREAM Act, the president acted to protect the young DREAMers.

Now these young people are enrolling in colleges, getting jobs and serving in the military. Their parents, however, are still being deported. The parents and siblings and spouses of DREAMers need protection. President Obama can act now, by issuing an executive order extending deferred action to them.

Other groups who need this protection include spouses and siblings of U.S. citizens. U.S. citizens like Madina Salaty and Maria Perez tell heart-wrenching stories of the devastation of their families because of deportation of their spouses. Salaty’s husband came to the U.S. in 1994 on a student visa and lived here for 20 years — more than half his life. He was deported back to Bangladesh in May, subject to a ten-year ban on re-entering the United States. Perez said in the Washington Post that her husband’s 2013 deportation left behind “three broken hearts,” with her four- and thirteen-year-old children suffering along with her.

Long-time U.S. residents also need the protection through executive action. Hundreds of thousands have been deported for non-violent crimes since a 1997 change in immigration law mandated removal of any immigrant convicted of a crime punishable by at least a one-year sentence. This means immigrants with legal permanent resident status as well as migrants without valid visas. An executive order protecting immigrants who have lived in this country for at least three years could stop the deportation of people for crimes such as drunk driving.

Refugees and asylum seekers also need protection. Limits on refugee admissions mean that many people who flee to the United States have no hope of getting a visa. The United States currently admits a maximum of 70,000 refugees each year. Less affluent countries, such as Turkey and Kenya, open their borders to hundreds of thousands of refugees from war-torn neighbors. Even as Mexico searches for 43 students who disappeared in police custody, and even as dozens of bodies are discovered in mass graves, the United States refuses to recognize most Mexican refugees.

Obama promised executive action earlier this year, and then delayed because he didn’t want to anger Republicans before the election. The anti-immigrant extremists will by angry, no matter what he does.

Obama has promised action before the end of the year. Now the question is whether he will delay that action until after the budget is passed.

Delay gains nothing. No conciliatory words, no delays, no attempts at bipartisanship have moved Republicans to cooperate over the past six years. Delay on immigration continues to tear apart families, to deport mothers and fathers, to leave people living in fear. President Obama, the time for action is now.

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

ALERT: Fiction ahead!

Look for a lot fewer News Day posts in November, as I’m signing on for National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo)! If you haven’t already heard of it, NaNoWriMo is a 16-year-old project that last year enrolled more than 300,000 people on six continents, with each person writing 50,000 words of a novel between November 1 and 11:59 p.m. on November 30. (That’s the NaNoWriMo shield at left.)

Because of NaNoWriMo, and also just because I can, I’m planning on a lot more creative writing during November. I will probably post a lot of short stuff — poetry, mini-essays, reflections, and such — on Fragments, another one of my WordPress blogs, rather than on News Day.

When I write blog posts on News Day, I usually spend a lot of time researching, reading and thinking about them. That’s time I will give to my creative writing during November. I’m excited about doing something different, and have no idea how much I’ll publish on Fragments or whether anyone will read it.

On to the adventure!

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

A passionate ‘genius’

" There is a sense that there is a 'rapeability' factor that comes from a product of the United States' long history of anti-Indian and anti-woman policies, which have become part of the fabric of our society."  -- Sarah Deer  Photo courtesy of the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Creative Commons license.

“There is a sense that there is a ‘rapeability’ factor that comes from a product of the United States’ long history of anti-Indian and anti-woman policies, which have become part of the fabric of our society.”
— Sarah Deer
Photo courtesy of the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Creative Commons license.

Profile: Law professor Sarah Deer – now a MacArthur fellow – is a tireless advocate for Native victims of sexual assault [Published in Minnesota Women’s Press, 10/28/2014]

Volunteering at a rape crisis center in college changed Sarah Deer’s life. She worked with rape victims, heard their stories, accompanied them through trials. The crisis center was “grass-roots, tiny,” Deer says, but its influence was huge. Her work there set her on the road to becoming a lawyer and, this year, winning the prestigious MacArthur Foundation fellowship commonly known as a “genius grant.” Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Al Jazeera: US college students face high debt, shattered dreams

I’m writing regularly on Al Jazeera — click here for my latest.

While Germany makes university tuition free, the US allows for-profit colleges to prey on low-income students

October 27, 2014 2:00AM ET

On Oct. 1, Germany’s Lower Saxony became the last German state to make college free to all, including international students. Briefly breaking from a national tradition of free universities, Germany began charging a small amount of tuition in 2006, but that experiment failed. German leaders now say the tuition-based education is unjust and unfairly privileges students from affluent backgrounds. “Tuition fees degrade the educational opportunities for bright young people from low-income families,” Gabriele Heinen-Kljajic, state minister for science in Lower Saxony, told the state parliament in September. … MORE

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Connecting health, equity and transportation

Factors contributing to healthThe increase in the minimum wage is the biggest public health legislation passed in the last legislative session, according to Minnesota health commissioner, Dr. Ed Ehlinger. Moving from lowest twenty percent income level to the second-lowest twenty percent income increases life expectancy by three years. Public health is also closely tied to transportation, said Ehlinger in his keynote address to the October 25 St. Paul Healthy Transportation for All forum. His insights offer a lot of food for thought.  Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Subverting Obamacare — watch out for dirty tricks

© Maxim_Kazmin - Fotolia.com

© Maxim_Kazmin – Fotolia.com

The weekend brought news of two dirty tricks that could cheat people out of the health care coverage they need.

Dirty trick #1: Deceptive dot.com packaging Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Ebola and E. Coli

© Jonathan Stutz - Fotolia.com

© Jonathan Stutz – Fotolia.com

Ebola has killed one person in the United States, and two more are infected and being treated. E. coli killed two children in Oregon in September, and at least one more child is in serious condition. The CDC estimates that every year almost 48 million Americans get sick, 128,000 are hospitalized and 3,000 die from food-borne illnesses, including E.coli, salmonella, campylobacter and others.

The U.S. responded to the threat of Ebola by training medical personnel, setting up secure hospital facilities, and screening airline passengers from countries where the disease is epidemic.

The U.S. response to the reality of foodborne illnesses? Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Staying poor in America

rich or poor © kikkerdirk - Fotolia

rich or poor © kikkerdirk – Fotolia

Start poor, stay poor — there are exceptions, but that’s pretty much the rule in America. From last week’s depressing news cycle, some insights on how it works —

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

#BringBackOurGirls — now?

Today’s news reports claim the Nigerian government and Boko Haram have reached a truce, and that the girls kidnapped six months ago will be returned. I want to believe. I want this to be true. And as much as I want to believe, I know that parents and families of 200+ girls want so immeasurably more for this to be true, for their girls to return. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized