Friday, July 30, 2010

Law vs. Regulation

There is something that is just not right in the world that gives me an unsettled feeling. Kind of like when there is background noise from a fan running. It isn’t obvious, but makes you edgy. It comes from a couple things that I have held to be true my whole life that are now being ignored.

Currently, illegal immigration is a big issue. The federal government is standing in the way of Arizona enforcing federal law. It isn’t that alone that gives me an unsettled feeling. It is the apparent reason that the federal government is doing it. Opposing the Arizona law is being called the largest voter registration event in history. That is where my brain can’t compute. I have this belief ingrained in me from my school days that a benefit of citizenship is the right to vote. So if the right to vote is only granted to citizens, resident aliens, legal or illegal, still don’t have the right to vote. This is a law without any regulation, apparently. ID is not required in most polling places. There are lots of regulations, not even laws, that have many more inconvenient rules that you dare not break. When did regulations begin to carry more weight than laws? Let me clarify, laws are made by our representatives whom we have elected for that purpose. Regulations are rules made up by government bureaucracies to carry out their mission which could be environmental protection, education, food production and distribution, drug oversight, etc. Laws should be regulated, and regulations should not carry more weight than laws.

Another belief I hold, learned from my public school education, is that a president has to be a natural born citizen. I am not saying our president is or isn’t a natural born citizen. I am just saying that he hasn’t proved that he is. I don’t understand why the law is that you have to be a natural born citizen is not regulated. Why don’t you have to give proof that you are a natural born citizen when you file the papers to run for president? That documentation is required to get a driver’s license or a passport. Had that been a rule and the president followed it there wouldn’t be any question as to his citizenship status.

I think our country would not be in the trouble it is in today if we understood the difference between laws and regulations. Laws need more regulation, and regulations should not carry the same weight as laws.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Am I the only one who noticed?

It is hard to believe that in these days of 24/ 7 news and an abundance of commentary on three full time news stations on tv and countless radio shows that there is something that has been missed in a big news story. There are two recent news stories that the pundits seem to have missed out on. The first one is the episode with Al Gore and the massage therapist. I have heard VP Gore’s bizarre behavior blamed on everything from drugs to Bush Derangement Syndrome. There is a very logical explanation that I haven’t heard anyone suggest. “Massage” has long been a euphemism or front for prostitution. In recent years with legitimate massage maybe we have forgotten that. I think that when Al Gore told his assistant that he needed a massage a legitimate massage therapist was hired, when what Al Gore was expecting was an old fashioned massage, aka a prostitute. I’m not sure if that will help his public relations, but it makes his actions understandable.

On a completely unrelated topic, did anybody notice how President Obama introduced Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court. In his first line of introduction President Obama said, “I have selected a nominee who I believe embodies that same excellence, independence, integrity, and passion for the law -- and who can ultimately provide that same kind of leadership on the Court: our Solicitor General, and my friend, Elena Kagan. “ (emphasis added) In fact, Obama and Kagan first met years ago at the University of Chicago Law School where they both taught. It just doesn’t seem like the American way to place your friends in positions, especially the highest positions of influence in the country. I’m not saying you can’t have a history with a nominee, or not like who you nominate. I just believe that when you choose people for very important jobs that you cast your net farther than your circle of friends and you look for people who are the best qualified for the job. Noting Kagan’s thin resume it makes you wonder what indicates she will be a good judge. Naming friends to high places always seemed like what they do in other, not American countries. The kinds with dictators. Maybe he was just calling her friend to be friendly, but I don’t think so.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Live until you die


There is a popular song that tells us to “live like we’re dying”. Yesterday we spent the day with my sister-in-law, Julie, who is doing the opposite. She has been miraculously battling cancer for the past two-and-a-half years. She is at the point of hospice coming in once a week. We don’t know how long we get to have her here on earth with us, but her grace is making these days precious in a way. She is “dying like she’s living” so nobly. Yesterday we visited her at home, arriving about 3:30 and left around 8:30. Also there were six of her children with their families. She had been resting until we got there but was up the whole time. When I say up, I mean on her feet, in the kitchen which is where I will always picture her. We had a wonderful time together; children playing, big kids playing volleyball, others just sitting together visiting or making guacamole in the kitchen. It is always so nice to be at the Charlesworths. So normal.
The past few days Julie hasn’t been able to eat or even drink without vomiting. That’s the reality. But she continues to put others first. She is very open about what is going on, and when her kids ask her how she’s doing she’ll tell them but as she and Allan are experiencing they just don’t really know. There isn’t anything to tell them what to expect. She is writing her own ending the way she wants it to go. Later in the evening she disappeared for a little bit. Allan mentioned that they were expecting a call. I guessed it would be the doctor returning their call. It turns out that she had started vomiting up blood. As with everything else they don’t really know what that means. It is a change and can’t be too good but they really don’t know what it means. I guess I said that.
I am getting to the age where I think about my own death. I hope that I can live until the day I die. I am glad that Julie is able to live until she dies, at least so far. I also hope that I can live like Julie lives. She has taught me so much about loving and taking care of others. She is a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother, mother-in-law, daughter, sister, and sister-in-law. All of her family knows it and appreciates it.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

There is a God

The argument is over…there is a God whose name is Jehovah. He is the God who created the heavens and the earth, and chose Israel as His own. From Israel came the savior of the world, Jesus Christ.

How, you ask, can I say that with such certainty? I have been listening to the reports of recent conflicts between Israel and the Palestinians. Following that the unabashedly anti-Semitic comments from Helen Thomas. (By the way, why has she kept a lid on her true feelings for so long? Could it be that anti-Semitism is gaining favor in Washington and she didn’t fear reprisals?) That any reasonable person could take the side of the “peace activists” who brutally beat the Israelis who boarded the ship is beyond me. When the UN Council on Human Rights ignores gross violations of human rights by followers of Mohammed and routinely cites Israel with human rights violations it seems that the world is upside down. When Israel is blamed for stopping the peace process in the Middle East I ask “what peace process”? Peace in the Middle East has been fought out for my whole life, and I am not that young any more. Consider this, if Palestinians would stop throwing bombs there would be peace in the Middle East. The promises of peace for land have not been kept.

In my naive little world I don’t understand anti-Semitism. Why do people hate the Jews so much? I personally don’t know a Jewish person that I can think of. The only reason that I have heard why people don’t like Jews because they are bankers. Whaaaat? Are bankers evil? Are gentile bankers hated? If you hate a whole race because some are bankers, you must hate all races to be fair. If you don’t like bankers you don’t have to have much contact with them. I know a few bankers, and they are not evil. I wonder if most anti-Semitic people could give a good reason to hate Jews. I met an anti-Semite once. He was an 80-year-old Czechoslovakian man in 1984 and he blamed WWII on the Jews. Funny, I always pictured them as the victims of WWII.

Anti-Semites can’t give a logical reason for hating Jews. That’s when I realized that anti-Semitism is a spiritual thing. It must be true that Israel is God’s chosen people and is opposed by the enemy of God who is Satan. People hate Israel because Satan hates Israel. The enemy of our souls uses people to display his wrath on the Jewish people. Somehow this realization gives me peace. Not peace that the treatment of Israel and Jewish people today is okay; just peace that now the world makes sense again. Now I understand why we are instructed in the Bible to pray for the peace of Israel “…for the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty for the tearing down of strongholds…” If Israel ever needed prayers for peace it is now.

2 Corinthians 10:4