Mexican Billboard

Fear is not a policy.

Hate is not a strategy.

Attacking the character and the sincerity of people fleeing violence and poverty will not secure our borders.

For two years President Trump, along with a Republican House and Senate, did nothing, nada. The result has been an unprecedented spike in migrant-family crossings.

Instead of workable solutions, Donald Trump resorts to bigotry and lies; dehumanizing the ninety million neighbors with whom we share a 1,954 mile border and who constitute our third largest trading partner.

One of six American families is Hispanic or Latino. They contribute, they serve. The crime rate among immigrants remains lower than the U.S. at large – homegrown supremacists are a more immediate threat.

We teach that the Creator endowed us with uncommon virtues as the source of our ‘American Exceptionalism.’ Reagan called America the shining city on the hill. Lincoln called it the last best hope of earth.

When our children hear politicians vilify Mexicans, Guatemalans, Nicaraguans and Hondurans as a group — pimping hysteria to win elections — they are learning the opposite lesson.

Warn your children about Donald Trump.

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Laura And Her Lists

Laura becomes physically uneasy if something causes her to miss even a single day. It has been an important part of her daily life, weekends and vacations included, for as long as she can remember.

Nothing is quite right until she stops and sets aside a moment to draw up her to-do list.

There are routine chores, ongoing projects broken down into manageable steps, as well as activities that promise pleasure and enrichment.

Some items get carried over from one day’s list to the next. When an entry is finally retired Laura goes back and crosses it off from that day’s list and all the earlier ones as well. Crossing off a unpleasant task is especially gratifying because now it is behind you and you’ve proven, once again, exactly what you’re made of.

Laura Dell keeps her lists organized just so. She staples her yellow legal-pad pages together at the end of the month and stores them chronologically in marked boxes.

Making a list sparks ideas and connections. Chance entries take on a life of their own. Penicillin must have on Fleming’s to-do list.

Laura’s mother impressed on her that time is not to be wasted, it’s not replaceable, and that you’ll need it if you mean to accomplish anything in life.

If her habit seems like a compulsion, it’s one that has served her well. She is a organization-development consultant whose billable hours are the basis of her income. As a divorced working woman who raised three children, survival has always depended of juggling demands.

Laura suspects that her obsession may have at times affected her physical well-being. To this day she delights in telling that when her children were young, they’d find her list and scribble ‘go to the bathroom’ as something she should consider doing from time to time.

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Electoral College Billboard

Two of our last three presidents won with fewer votes than their opponents.

There’s an unfairness built into our constitution that gives people in less populous states more say in choosing a president than people in larger states.

The Electoral College has recently favored Republicans — every Republican president elected after 1988 has lost the popular vote — but it threatens all of us. Both red-state Texas and blue-state California are cheated from fair representation

It’s a simple numbers game.

Texas has 45 times more people than Wyoming but both have the same number of senators — two each — so a Wyomingite enjoys four thousand, five hundred percent more clout in the US Senate. That advantage carries over to the Electoral College which has overruled the nationwide popular presidential vote five times.

It all goes back to our founding. The smaller colonies held off from joining the republic until they were given extra representation to protect them from the larger ones. The cruel irony is that exactly the opposite has come to pass. To this day a minority exercises a privileged leverage over the majority.

There’s almost no chance of amending the Constitution because the smaller states aren’t about to end their sweetheart deal. But a movement is developing among the states that could get around that problem. They would simply agree to assign their Electoral College votes to the candidate who earns the popular election.

COUNTERPOINT BY JACK PAINTER Read more…

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Peter and Enzo

There are dogs bred to herd sheep and steers. Enzo isn’t one of them.

And there are dogs that assist the sight-impaired. That’s not Enzo either.

Certain breeds flush game from tall grass but Enzo does not hunt, pull sleds, sniff out contraband or repel intruders.

The two and one-half year-old spent 10 days waiting to be adopted. He was withdrawn, mistrustful and desperately in need of a haircut.

Joanna and Peter drove two hundred miles during one of the meanest days in many years (-20°) bent on adopting a dog that same day. Too soon for a new mutt? Joanna was confident that her Jude would have understood.

The shelter’s app listed three dogs that might work given their apartment and their allergies. The least promising, the only one left when the couple arrived, had been written up for urinating and nipping. Patience was advised.

Enzo inspected every inch of the living room at the Mulder-Baker household before sequestering himself there. Its couch revealed truths about the late Jude that only another dog could understand. It was reassuring.

Enzo feared the hallway leading to the rest of the place. Something in its closet made noise and caused heat to fall from the ceiling. But the kitchen and its activities called and eventually Enzo allowed himself the run of the place. Once on the bed he inched his way toward nighttime contact.

Because he’s skin and bones, Peter and Joanna feed him canned food. They agreed they wouldn’t repeat the table scraps mistake they’d made with Jude. Maybe the squeaker toys Peter brought home would compensate.

Ezno is taken out three times a day. Joanna does the a.m. and Peter the p.m. Midday is a toss-up.

It’s not unusual to see the writer of long-form articles in the New York Times, The New Yorker and The Guardian — one well along on an anticipated novel — abandon his work in a window at our coffee shop to show his new dog the neighborhood.

We tend to think of shelters as places we humans go to rescue animals. And that’s true as far as it goes but more often than not, the rescues that take place go in both directions.

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The Value of Beauty

Does beauty contribute to a person’s success?

BARCELONA — The students who descended on room 214 had paid their dues. Their Spanish classes were now focused as much on conversation as grammar and syntax.

The professors came armed with questions to engage visitors from various continents, each with histories all their own. Some expressed ideas they wouldn’t have shared at home.

The Italians, French and Portuguese had a Latin-root advantage over the others. Among the most articulate was a Frenchwoman named Mathilde Courty who was younger than the median age around the table.

The group assumed the question relating beauty to success to be directed at women. The men, intelligent men, held back.

It was agreed that voice, facial expressions and eye contact create their own kind of beauty, that vanity can turn a beautiful person ugly and that humor makes a plain person irresistible.

It was Matilda who posed a follow-up question.

Why do woman invest so much time making themselves attractive? Why the mascaras, powders, glosses, buffing and botox? And why are men exempt from the beauty arms race. Dandies once wore powdered wigs and cod pieces. Peacocks parade for hens.

Matilda is a wandering soul who has studied and traveled in Italy, Peru, England, Spain and Vietnam; she has lived in Bénin. Her Spanish studies are prep to serve people with disabilities in South America.

The good looks we inherit courtesy of our parents, the beauty we earn by making ourselves helpful and the beauty we enjoy simply by being young all were in display that final period of the day.

The rain had stopped and the conversation wandered outside to the tables on the sidewalk where it switched to English without anyone noticing.

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