Monday, December 20, 2021

Granddaughter’s Return, Covid Remains, Biden Still Dogged by Trump—and now Manchin, Guns as Protection? Amnesty International, Peace Corps, Caribbean, Persistent Abortion Wars, Looking Back

Let’s start out with a happy event, another visit from my granddaughter who came here from Florida again to see her father who remains hospitalized but expects to be released soon. Her Dad’s medical problems are challenging, but she has helped to improve his outlook by her visits. I was also glad for the chance to see my granddaughter again. I do miss the times when she and her mother lived nearby. [Again, please excuse odd changes in font, not always possible to correct.]


Nature can unleash a sudden fury that shatters expectations and allows no time to prepare, whether through a volcanic eruption, lightening strike, or earthquake, all of which I have experienced firsthand. So I do empathize now with folks in Kentucky and surrounding states after tornados have torn through their towns without warning, something I’ve never actually experienced myself, though I do know the shock of a such a sudden environmental event. 

Many children were killed by the tornado, which always seems especially tragic, as we’d like to think everyone will live the usual lifespan. However, in the wake of the pandemic, the US average lifespan has now fallen instead of rising gradually every year.

Reuters, U.S. life expectancy falls to lowest level in almost 20 years due to COVID-19 -CDC Life expectancy in the United States fell by a year and a half in 2020 to 77.3 years, the lowest level since 2003, primarily due to the deaths caused by the COVID-19 pandemic..."Life expectancy has been increasing gradually every year for the past several decades," Elizabeth Arias, a CDC researcher who worked on the report, told Reuters. "The decline between 2019 and 2020 was so large that it took us back to the levels we were in 2003. Sort of like we lost a decade." Deaths from COVID-19 contributed to nearly three-fourths, or 74%, of the decline. 

 

NYTimes, Omicron Threatens Red America

[Because Republicans and conservatives are more likely to be unvaccinated, they are getting sick and dying from Covid at higher rates than Democrats.]

As the world now enters the 3rd year of the pandemic, after initial signs that it was waning, new variants are setting everyone back and continuing to take lives, though perhaps at a slower pace. We might have hoped that vaccines would vanquish the virus once and for all, but it now looks like the world might well be living with Covid for years to come.

AP, US faces a double coronavirus surge as omicron advances

The new omicron coronavirus mutant speeding around the world may bring another wave of chaos, threatening to further stretch hospital workers already struggling with a surge of delta cases and upend holiday plans for the second year in a row.

Reuters, Two-dose vaccines induce lower antibodies against Omicron

This means that are more breakthrough infections even among the fully vaccinated.  

 

MarketWatch, U.S. edges toward 50 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and 800,000 fatalities, as New York starts week with new face mask mandate


NY Times, As U.S. Nears 800,000 Virus Deaths, 1 of Every 100 Older Americans Has Perished

 

LA Times, California population continues decline, driven by lower immigration, fewer births and pandemic deaths

 

Those of us age 65 and beyond face a greater risk of death from Covid than any other age group. Even completely vaccinated seniors may contract the disease and die from it rather than from other causes, and their deaths have been swift. Therefore, although vaccinated, we elders must continue to isolate and wear masks in public places.

 

Most American couples are now able to control their fertility and are having only one or 2 children, if any, which is not replacement. Most young parents or couples of my acquaintance have 2 boys, 2 girls, or one of each, but all say, “That’s it. We’re done.” And despite the inroads of Covid, the US still has more elders than children, something also happening in China and Europe, but to an even greater extreme there. We all need more kids and more immigrants and refugees!

 

Now, because of the pandemic, it’s been almost 2 years since I’ve gone to Honduras to help out with medical brigades, which have not yet resumed. I still have a brand-new wheelchair I was planning to take “next time.” 



I'm certainly missing my volunteer service with medical brigades in Honduras, as shown in this photo from an earlier visit there. 



I also gave up doing on-site interpretation in the DC area when the pandemic hit, because of my need to use public transportation. In fact, I’ve recently given up working altogether. Since everything takes me longer now and I have no car and no family in the immediate area, my days are still full.

A year ago, most Americans and the world at large heaved a huge sigh of relief because Donald Trump would be leaving office, but now pessimism has returned. President Joe Biden still doesn’t get enough credit for all his hard work and what he has accomplished and neither does VP Harris. The resurgence of Covid has cast a dark cloud over everything.

President Biden has been trying to talk down inflation by calling it “transitory;” meanwhile wage hikes have sparked an upward spiral. Biden has also increased support for families with children, doing more to protect fetal life than any abortion bans. He knows that the children of today will support the seniors of tomorrow, as will refugees and immigrants. His accomplishments remain overshadowed by the antics of Trump, who continues to try to grab the spotlight and hold sway in the Republican Party, even while out of office and with his twitter finger stilled. I’d like to think his star is fading. Trump is a serial liar living a life completely contrary the values of his own followers, while clean-living, hard-working Biden fails to get the credit he deserves.

The damage done by Mr. Trump and his administration to our country and to the world will be analyzed for years to come. And it’s still continuing, hitting hardest on the Republican party, both on Republican candidates and current office-holders. Unfortunately, one man of dubious intellect and without shame still holds sway there, impelling more enlightened party members to leave office or else bear the brunt of his distain. Future historians will have the task of figuring out just what went wrong.

Republican office holders who failed to support any number of constituent benefits nonetheless claim credit when promoting the same back in their districts.

Washington Post, One year of 'President Manchin': For the Democratic agenda, all roads go through West Virginia [This is the guy single-handedly holding up Biden's agenda.]

 

Business Insider, Manchin tanks Democrats' hopes of passing Biden's big bill by Christmas with last-minute demands to cut the child tax credit

 

Manchin as emerged as a kingmaker in the Democratic Party, someone single-handily shaping legislation and still holding up its final passage.

 

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis seems to be creating a deliberate parody of a rightwing politician, with both his odd smirking facial expressions and his quirky proposals, such as his “Stop Woke” bill, which will appeal to knee-jerk hardcore conservatives, but will be mocked by others, and perhaps even privately by DeSantis himself.

 

Boxers and football players have repeatedly been shown to experience memory loss and speech problems; I’ve mentioned in a previous blog my interview with Muhammad Ali conducted with his wife as spokesperson when he could no longer speak after being punched in the head so often. So why does anyone persist in such harmful sports? Is it worth risking dementia, even if money is involved? My 19-year-old grandson, now in college in Texas, had to quit playing football because it was interfering with his studies. I was relieved to hear that he had quit.

 

Killer robots, often attacking from above, may shield their manipulator from physical harm, but their far-away handlers can also make deadly mistakes, as happened when a US drone strike killed the innocent occupants of a vehicle in Kabul, many of them children. If, in fact, there had been a face-to-face or close encounter there, the would-be attackers would have pulled back after noticing that the vehicle’s occupants presented no threat. Drones may have reduced casualties in warfare, but do carry their own risks.   

 

In restaurants and hospitals, robots under the immediate eye and control of humans in such close settings can actually enhance efficiency.  

The Peace Corps is back in business again, starting out with Peace Corps Response, that is, by sending already experienced former volunteers for 6-12 months to carry out specific tasks. Five countries are leading the way: Belize, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, and Zambia. The Corps is also now offering "virtual" (online) assistance to other countries from here, asking us act as volunteer consultants. Some of these virtual volunteer positions look intriguing, but I'm not sure about making the time commitment and also about being able to navigate zoom and the other technologies required. But because of my Spanish fluency, I'd like to try it.

This website announces efforts to encourage more private investment in Latin America to provide incentives for people to stay home, https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/12/13/vice-president-kamala-harris-announces-new-commitments-as-part-of-the-call-to-action-for-the-private-sector-to-deepen-investment-in-central-america-now-totaling-over-1-2-billion/

Although I announced my retirement from volunteer duty with Amnesty International after more than 40 years, I’ve asked to have hand in choosing my replacement, so I’m still on duty, now going on 41 years, and still in charge of the Caribbean after my 2 volunteer helpers have just resigned. I recently supported a stay of deportation back to his native country for a man who left the Dominican Republic at age 11. Folks born elsewhere should not neglect becoming citizens.

 

Miami Herald, Mother of jailed minor who protested against the Cuban government goes on hunger strike

The Cuban Communist Party may be losing its grip, but is hanging on ever more tightly to keep the populace from exploding in fury and frustration. After more than 60 years of privation and strict controls, most Cubans are more than ready to shed the party and jettison all it stands for. I feel I have a good sense of the public pulse because of my many visits there, my connections with Cuban refugees and expatiates here, and my Amnesty Int’l volunteer work.

The following refers to lifting restrictions on sending money and allowing visits to Cuba. https://thehill.com/policy/international/americas/586246-more-than-100-house-democrats-urge-biden-to-lift-restrictions

Miami Herald, Coast Guard rescues three Cuban migrants from sinking boat off Florida Keys

Cuban boat people keep on coming, although they are almost always sent back.

 

On another island,

Haiti's Moise was probing officials linked to drug trade when he was killed: NYT

 

Reuters, Victims of Haiti blast buried in mass grave, death toll hits 75

A fuel truck overturned and 75 were killed trying to collect fuel when the tank exploded.

 

AP, All from US missionary group freed in Haiti, police say

[The missionaries were kidnapped by the 400 Mawozo gang on Oct. 16. There were five children including an 8-month-old in the group of 16 U.S. citizens and one Canadian. Their Haitian driver also was abducted, according to a local human rights organization. It is not known if a ransom was paid.]

 

Here is a new Amnesty International initiative on behalf of Haitian migrants. https://www.amnestyusa.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/AMR3651012021ENGLISH-1.pdf STOP US DEPORTATIONS AND ABUSE AGAINST HAITIANS ON THE MOVE: AN URGENT STEP TOWARDS CREATING JUST POLICIES FOR HAITIANS

Soon US green-card holders and other lawful residents who are not yet citizens may be able to vote in New York City and in other jurisdictions in New York and California. If people are living here legally and paying taxes, it seems fitting that they be allowed to cast their votes in local elections.  

Atlanta Black Star, Will a Stand Your Ground Self-Defense Claim Save Black Oklahoma Man Who Killed White Intruder? Legal Expert Says It Depends: ‘I Just Leave It to God’


NBC News, Students reporting alarming Snapchat messages may have thwarted mass shooting, police say

 

ABC News, 1 dead, 14 injured after shooting at vigil in Texas

 

News Observer, 2 people killed, 4 injured in Durham shooting. Nearby school shifts to virtual.

 

News Tribune, Man says he was ‘fooling around’ when he shot childhood friend in the head in Oregon

 

After recent shootings, every one of us needs to be on guard for copycat events. All-too-frequent mass murders have been magnified and distributed far and wide via social media, incentivizing others to follow suit. The ready availability of firearms in the US puts us all at risk. Personal firearms may have some value for target shooting or for hunting, though killing wild animals for food is out-of-date. In any case, firearms should be kept, as in some other countries, only in secure lockers. Ample US experience has shown that carrying around a personal firearm or having it in the home is risky to the owner, as well as others. Even a prop gun on a movie set can be lethal. Firearms manufacturers and distributors may need to be bought out to protect us all. The fortunes of militant firearms promotors like the National Rifle Association are now fading, but not fast enough. And countries like Honduras where firearm possession is even more widespread end up with an even higher rate of gun deaths as a result.


The Telegraph, 12-year-old charged with murder in shooting death of another child, Georgia police say

Events like this could have been prevented by having stricter gun laws and fewer guns in circulation. Countries with no nonsense gun laws or that keep guns locked up at shooting ranges, such as Britain, Finland, and New Zealand, have vastly fewer gun deaths per capita than the United States. Gun enthusiasts here put us all at risk, leaving all as sitting ducks, like the child just shot by another in Georgia--one child dead, another with his life ruined.

 

Market Watch, Newsom positions California to become first blue state to pursue gun control by mimicking Texas abortion law

 

While most Democratic office holders support tighter gun laws, they often either leave abortion decisions to the women involved or simply avoid making any comment. And what about fathers’ rights? Fathers’ rights seem to kick in only after a baby is born. Abortion is also an issue I’d prefer to avoid further myself, but it is now front and center before the Supreme Court, so is impossible to ignore. The number of abortions in the US and elsewhere has fallen precipitously in recent years as more women are using contraception. And now most abortions can be undertaken early in a pregnancy with pills a woman can take at home, leaving no practical way to stop them or actually to even count them. The FDA has lifted restrictions on receiving abortion pills by mail. Doctors who perform surgical abortions are increasingly out of work. And coat hangers are definitely out as well.

 

In developing countries, where often abortion is illegal, tubal ligation may still be undertaken after a woman has had 2 or 3 children to avoid any further need for contraception. Vasectomies are done less frequently there, as men tend think of pregnancy as a strictly female concern, also fearing that a vasectomy may affect their virility. Last time I was in Honduras, I talked with 2 women, actually next-door neighbors, who each had undergone a tubal ligation by the same surgeon after a 2nd pregnancy, only to have it fail and result in the birth of a 3rd child. Abortion had never occurred to them. Now both have undergone the sterilization procedure once again with a different surgeon, successfully this time.  

 

Abortion advocates seem eager to point out that mothers are disadvantaged financially by having children, but that actually raises a false equivalency. Parenting is essential to the continuation of the human race and of our own society. Would most women (or men) exchange their children for a better job or more money? Arguments about the financial burden of parenthood only give weight to the need to provide more assistance to families raising children, especially in a country like ours with a falling birth rate. Biden is trying to provide more help to families with children. Who else is going to support and assist childless folks in their old age?

 

Is it easy to bear and raise kids? Even for those of us who have done it, certainly not. But it’s the only way the human race, our nation, and our own families can continue to exist. So far, every person must first gestate in a female body. We all started off that way, at a time that may have proved inconvenient for our parents. Nonetheless, most parents would sacrifice their own life for their offspring. And Germany now seems to be doing just fine without any legal abortion at all.

 

Gay marriage has won majority acceptance in fairly short order because it involves 2 consenting adults. But abortion pits a potential or developing human not yet breathing air and with no voice against an already born human. Should that helpless developing human creature be denied a chance to keep on growing and to emerge to a life outside the womb? A fertilized ovum being kept on ice is a different story as it can remain in a suspended state indefinitely. Only inside a female body does it begin to grow. Should stopping that process be allowed at the sole discretion of the woman involved? If so, up to what point? That’s the question posed by abortion laws. What counts as a human person worthy of continued life seems to depend on consensus or majority opinion. Black people, women, and prisoners are some whose lives at times have been considered of lesser value, along with the enemy in wartime. There is now no firm consensus on when a fetus is worthy of continued existence. And it was distressing a few years back when late-term abortions were reported to involve piercing the fetal skull to enable easier extraction, though now such a fetus is said to be injected with a special solution (like that used to euthanize animals or to inflict the death penalty on humans?). Despite the hue and cry about the 15-week limit in the Mississippi law now before the Supreme Court, Chief Justice Roberts is right to ask whether 15 weeks is not long enough?  

 

According to a recent AP/NORC poll, 61% of Americans believe abortion should be legal during the first trimester, up to 12 weeks, but only 34% approve it in the second trimester, 13-26 weeks, so the Mississippi law now before the Court going into the second trimester would be approved by most Americans.

 

New York Times, Some Voters Are at Odds With Their Party on Abortion

“Among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, three-in-ten do not agree with their party on abortion,” according to the Pew Research Center, so I’m not alone in my misgivings. Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar says: pro-life Democrats … are part of our party, and I think we need to build a big tent.” But most pro-life Democrats in public life seem to keep their stance private. And many of them and many of us who would give more agency to the pre-born also oppose the death penalty.

 

As the war of words continues, abortion supporters are labeling the other side “anti-reproductive rights” and “anti-choice,” choice being a word they seem to have appropriated. What about supporting the choice to bear a child? What about making a choice to avoid sex because of the chances of an unwanted pregnancy?

 

Both Biden and Harris have publicly supported abortion as a “constitutional” right, apparently based on the right to privacy, as abortion appears nowhere in the constitution. Yet, there are also many dissenting voices, now getting louder. 

 

New Jersey Herald, Abortion and the U.S. Constitution | Napolitano

Andrew P. Napolitano, a former New Jersey Superior Court Judge and author of 9 books on the U.S. Constitution, argues that "The fetus has an interest in having a life," quoting Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s statement on Dec. 1.

Justice Amy Barrett, herself both an adoptive and a birth parent, points out that adoption is an avenue open to those who don’t feel ready to raise a child. Yet some “pro-choice” advocates have even attacked adoption as providing something lesser. There are special problems related to adoption, as I can attest, but some of those problems derive from negative social attitudes not based on facts. And admittedly, an older child who has experienced neglect or mistreatment in a birth family may then require remedial parenting by an adoptive family, not an argument against adoption nor an implication that such a child should not exist. Yes, some birth parents do mistreat their children, so either must learn new ways or let others do the job instead. I have worked with many such families as a social worker and a probation officer. The bottom line is that we as a society still value individual human existence, even though every life has many challenges and is inevitably only transient. Most Americans would support an adopted or foster child’s right to exist and to live to a ripe old age if possible. The following article makes some telling points. Las Cruces Sun-News, Attacks on adoption need to stop before they gain traction

 

Most commentators acknowledge that the majority of Americans still don’t have firm opinions about abortion, so it’s not actually “a done deal,” as abortion advocates like to contend. Many of us are still ambivalent, especially as a fetus takes on a more recognizable human form.

New York Times, Abortion and the ambivalent majority

New York Times, The Mushy Middle

Austin American-Statesman, Brooks: Abortion: The voice of the ambivalent majority

Washington Post, Medical advances saving premature babies pose thorny issues for abortion rights advocates


Creston News Advertiser, Iowa, Anti-abortion group monitors SC hearings

[This last article lays out arguments on all sides and speculates on the possible positions of Supreme Court justices.]


Perhaps then it is now quite fitting, a half century after Roe, that the debate is arising anew and that the Supreme Court be revisiting and possibly updating the law on the issue. 

Human habits and mores do evolve over time, either slowly or more rapidly, but always in flux. Nothing stands still. Our revered forefathers—what about our foremothers?--declared that “all men are created equal,” leaving out half of humankind. But times do change.

 

It’s not surprising then as more becomes known about fetal development and after medical practices have evolved, that abortion limits may also need updating. Now almost fifty years on, Roe vs. Wade is not the last word forever and for all time. In prior eras, a fetus wasn’t actually recognized as human until “quickening,” or when movement was felt at about 18 weeks. Then according to Roe, it was only after 28 weeks, though babies born earlier have survived, now even at 21 and 22 weeks. However, what is “true” depends not only on facts on the ground, but on consensus and we are not yet at any consensus on abortion in this country.

 

Having reached a certain age myself, I realize I don’t have the last word on abortion or anything else—none of us does, as I’ve learned by having lived through a whole myriad of changes in accepted mores and practices. Looking back on my own life, I’ve seen and experienced quite a lot. I can recall the days when making long-distance phone calls was prohibitively expensive, so I now value today’s easy phone and internet connections with family and friends all over the world, including the ability to exchange photos and even have live conversations. We never had TV when I was growing up so I don’t have a set in my home now, but still listen to the radio. As kids, my late brother and I were eager fans of the Lone Ranger radio show.

 

As the oldest child of 3, I early on assumed the role of teacher and caretaker, later becoming a social worker and a juvenile probation officer and, eventually, working in occupational therapy, though in research and training, not as a therapist myself. Being a mother has always been important to me and I saw raising my 4 kids, or even 5 including my Cuban foster son, as a calling. Post-retirement, I joined the Peace Corps, working there with families with children as a health volunteer, then afterward again with families as a Spanish interpreter and medical brigade volunteer.

 

Taking a long look back at the evolving trajectory of my life, I recall graduating cum laude from UC, Berkeley, a few weeks after turning 20, when college educated women simply did not cohabitate before marriage as they do now—at least we weren’t supposed to. So, like many other women of my generation, I married rather young, at age 21. I then helped my husband obtain his first job and continued assisting him with his work. I also worked myself. But our union did not end up following the script of triumph against all odds that I had once envisioned. After 4 kids and 24 years of marriage, my husband divorced me to marry a much younger woman working in his office, another common practice. We had become part of and influenced by the social trends of that time, just happens as now.

 

Major differences between us and other divorcing couples back in the day were that my husband was totally blind and had never held a job before we married, also that he was of Korean descent while I was a child of European heritage. As you might imagine, my parents were not happy about my marriage, but gradually came to accept it. After our split, my ex-husband did his best to thwart me and our kids financially, I’m not sure exactly why. During the years after he left, he spoke with me only once by phone before his death and he never again set foot in the home we had bought together and where I still live today. I remember our one post-divorce conversation well; it was wide-ranging and he had actually called me. He asked me about my job and about some articles I’d had in the paper. That call took place in 1994, 4 years after his departure, so I thought finally the ice had been broken, but that was the first and last time he ever spoke with me after he left. When I called him back, his second wife answered and said all communication must go through her. Obviously, if he had wanted to talk with me again, he knew my number.

 

My former husband’s absolute rejection propelled me to embark on a totally new and successful career. I also took on various volunteer endeavors. But I was hesitant to marry again despite having a serious suitor. Then I was laid low by the deaths in successive years of my son and Cuban foster son, something I had to endure without a partner’s support. Their loss was very, very hard and still is. In fact, my son’s death date has just passed on Dec. 19, which happens to also be my older daughter’s birthday.

 

I then went on to join the Peace Corps in my 60s, write 2 books (still sold on Amazon), and embark on a brand-new post-retirement career as a Spanish interpreter and translator, becoming one of very few speaking both unaccented English and Spanish. I’ve continued with volunteering, serving more than 40 years as an Amnesty International activist and also offering my services to annual medical brigades to Honduras ever since Peace Corps, now halted only by the pandemic. So I feel I’ve not done too badly with the hand I was dealt, but my life is not quite over yet, so stay tuned.

 

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