Wendy, A Large Small Woman

Wendy came out of the gate fast.

By the seventh grade she was attending high-school classes alongside students years ahead. During high-school, she was recruited into undergrad studies at a flagship university.

At the same time Wendy liked earning her way. She babysat at $6.25 an hour, and at age fifteen took a job “breading chicken” until midnight. She had saved $10,000 before she was out of her teens.

She was young when she met the husband with whom she had a son and a daughter. Pursuing of an associate degree at her community college proved difficult and she decided she could afford to take a year off from her education.

Wendy will tell you that was a mistake.

The mother of two was forced back to work full time. She clocked so many hours that the restaurant “rewarded” her with empty promotion that stripped her of overtime pay.

Now years later as general manager at a restaurant chain, she’s responsible for hiring, firing, coaching, planning and sales — she knows hundreds of customers by first name.

The not large woman can “put away a truck” with the best of them. Wendy knows that food service is punishing and that her knees will creep up on her.

One of her goals is to celebrate her fiftieth birthday without a mortgage. She’s anxious to help her daughter in college avoid the crippling debt she finally managed to overcame.

There’s talk of one day owning a coffee house (cozy, lined with books) that will satisfy a love of engaging the public. There’s talk of fascinating places around the world patiently waiting for her to arrive.

But for now there’s a more immediate goal. Wendy Borges is bent on keeping the various generations of her family intact, and within reach. She comes from a community that places a value on these things.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Impeaching Kim

It was only three presidencies ago that the House set out to “remove a duly elected president from office.”

And it seems like just yesterday that the House plotted to “overturn the will of the American voters.”

The arguments now being made against impeaching Donald Trump are identical to those used during the impeachment trial of Bill Clinton.

President Trump is being accused of extortion, bribery, obstruction and profiteering from being in office. Not to mention using campaign money to pay off porn stars. Not good.

An impeachment inquiry is a painful but necessary step in investigating a president’s conduct. It may or may not lead to impeachment.

Our Founding Fathers wanted us to impress upon our presidents that Dear Leader Kim may be above the law, but they are not.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Donald Corleone [Poster Boys]

Donald Trump has contracted for the services of a ridiculous number of people with hidden ties to former Soviet countries.

No way this is a coincidence.

Trump goombahs are being investigated, indicted and convicted. Flynn, Manafort, Cohen, Stone, Gates, Papadopoulos, Giuliani’s new best friends Lev and Igor. There will be more.

We have an American president who acts like he’s working for a godfather named Putin. He’s reversed the efforts of both Republican and Democratic presidents to contain the Russian dictator.

He wants to ease sanctions and to reinstate Russia in the G7. He’s urged Ukraine to surrender its democracy to Russian aggression. He’s peddling a conspiracy theory that Ukraine, not Russia, sabotaged our 2016 elections.

The Trump operation buys off porn stars, profits from the presidency, obstructs, extorts, destroys whistleblowers and those officers duly appointed to investigate.

Our Founding Fathers knew we’d vote a occasional mobster into the White House now and again, so they gave us a constitutional power to correct that mistake. The power to impeach.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Don Augusto de Lima

They sat and wandered through the inventory of the world events that had unfolded during their lives.

Nota: Si desea leer este texto en español, puede hacer clic en el enlace incluído al final del artículo.

The two men, a Peruvian and an American, are first-hand witnesses to events that will soon be delivered to the mercy of historians and novelists.

Calling him “Don” Augusto doesn’t imply nobility, it’s a term used to distinguish Augusto Senior from his son, Augusto Junior.

Augusto carries himself like a diplomat from the Southern Hemisphere. He steered the conversation toward events his U.S. host would find familiar. Many of them, and their consequences, had been set into motion by the United States.

Augusto was very young when his country shipped its Peruvian-Japanese citizens to U.S. interment camps during WWII.

He read about the American-Korean War in the El Comercio daily and recalls scenes from the 1952 movie “Retreat, Hell” which he saw at a movie house in Lima. A decade later he followed the fate of Peruvian boys who enlisted to fight in our Vietnam War in exchange for U.S. residency.

He describes how the launch of Sputnik startled the world in 1957, followed by Gagarin’s orbit in 1961 and Armstrong’s moonwalk at the end of the decade. He believes organisms are out there to be found.

Augusto Rufasto enjoyed a career working with Peruvian and international clients for Price Waterhouse until he lost his eyesight. He is an advocate of open markets and the Friedman economics that toppled the power structure in Chile.

He notes that China has lifted hundreds of millions out of abject poverty and believes it may become the dominant world power. He agrees the U.S. must protect its productivity and intellectual rights.

Personal wealth is fundamental to a democracy. In the world according to Rufasto, workers should be paid based on their contributions. But unlike luxury cars and larger homes, certain products like healthcare are a natural right.

Is it morally correct to jump borders for the safely of our children? Augusto thinks it is, but adds that one person’s rights end where they violate those of others.

The U.N. General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights when Augusto was eight years old. He traces those values back to the teachings of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Christ.

Two men, strangers, verifying that certain amazing events did happen and that certain ideas were replaced with new ones.

En español Read more…

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Impeach Trump

Donald Trump is trashing our elections.

He predicted his opponents would rig the 2016 vote so he’d be able to sabotage the results if he lost.

We now know that those elections actually were rigged — not by his opponents but by Russian operatives. He denied and obstructed and accused duly appointed investigators of treason.

He used political contributions as personal hush money so voters wouldn’t find out about his payments to porn stars. His fixer’s serving time for helping him.

He straight up lied that millions of illegal votes had been cast against him, dragging his Justice Department into his swamp.

And now whistleblowers who followed the letter of the law revealed that Donald Trump strong-armed a foreign power, this time Ukraine, to conspire in our elections.

He insists he can’t be impeached. Article II, Section IV insists that he can.

Note: The Impeach Button is now available here.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail