Thursday, January 16, 2025

Advice for the inauguration

1.  On January 20 when Trump is sworn in, be sure you have your television tuned in to a different channel.  Don’t just turn it off.  That will make the inauguration come out on top in the ratings.  Turn it to the Food Channel or the Weather Channel or the one that is always running “Ridiculousness.”


2.  When you meet a Trump supporter, don’t argue or get angry.  Just say very calmly, “Yes, I can see why a guy like you would support Trump.”


He will immediately bristle, and say something like “What’s that supposed to mean?”  


Again, calmly, “It’s just that I understand why a guy like you would like Trump.”


3.  Be Michelle Obama, not John Fetterman.


4.  January 20 is Martin Luther King day.  King’s family has recommended that on that day we do something to make our communities better.  While the clown show takes place in D.C., do something to make your community a better place.  

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

I missed Biden's Farewell Address

Tonight I was attending a Palmerton Area Democratic Club meeting and missed Biden’s speech.  He was a good president, did more to combat global warming than any other president, was a friend of labor unions, brought down the price of drugs, kept Russia from swallowing Ukraine, and appointed intelligent and caring cabinet members.  


I could list more accomplishments, but his presidency will be forever tainted by his inability to recognize two large issues–inflation and illegal immigration.  I know that the economy is somewhat independent of what an administration does, but any administration needs to recognize when people are hurting.  It felt like Hoover saying “prosperity is just around the corner” when it obviously wasn’t.  He needed to  empathize with the American public and acknowledge the problem.


The same with illegal immigration.  Recognize it as a problem.  Don’t downplay it.  


The worst sin of the Biden presidency, however, was not abiding by his promise that his would be a one-term presidency and not allowing the Democratic Party to pick a successor to run.  Harris did not have enough time to campaign and did not have the freedom to criticize Biden’s shortcomings.  Whatever else Biden did well, and he did many things well, he left us with Donald Trump as his successor.  That will forever tarnish his record.

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Letter to Congressmember Meuser

Dan Meuser is a right-wing extremist member of Congress.  He is a big time Trump supporter.  Last week the Lehighton Times News ran a letter from Rep. Meuser extolling the new administration.  I had to set him straight on a few points.  Here is my letter:


Dear Congressman Meuser,


Recently you wrote in a column in the Times News that “The American people voted for President Trump’s plan to cut waste, and restore fiscal sanity.”  I’m sure they did.  What the American people did NOT vote for was blustering about Panama and Greenland and completely unqualified cabinet appointees.


Restoring “fiscal sanity” is interesting.  I don’t think you do that by giving tax breaks to multi-millionaires like yourself or eliminating the inheritance tax so those same multi-millionaires can pass their money down to their kids.


And then we get to the old Republican trope of “embracing domestic energy production,” another phrase for “let’s really ramp up global warming.”


I am so tired of wealthy Congress members who move around until they find a seat they can buy lecturing us on economic matters.  According to the web site “Open Secrets,” your net worth in 2018 was over $30 million.  I’m sure with the Trump tax cuts, it has jumped.  In the meantime, thank you so much for the commentary on how great we are all going to have it.


Sincerely,

Roy Christman

Monday, January 13, 2025

Advice for foreign Musalim college students

Get your butts back here before Jan. 20.  When Trump was last inaugurated he restricted entry from many countries with Muslim populations, including Nigeria, Sudan, Syria, and Somalia.  The list could get long this time, since there are more counties that Trump evidently doesn’t like.  


Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, and MIT have all notified their foreign students to get back to the U.S. if they traveled home for the holidays.  Four years ago thousands of students were stranded at home when the travel ban was imposed.

Sunday, January 12, 2025

"Refugees" by Brian Bilston

I don’t have permission to use this poem, but I don’t think Mr. Bilston will mind.  The name, but the way, is a pseudonym.  When you reach the end of the poem, read it again backwards.  Start with the last line and read up.  It is amazing. Try it.


They have no need of our help

So do not tell me

These haggard faces could belong to you or me

Should life have dealt a different hand

We need to see them for who they really are

Chancers and scroungers

Layabouts and loungers

With bombs up their sleeves

Cut-throats and thieves

They are not

Welcome here

We should make them 

Go back to where they came from

They cannot 

Share our food

Share our homes

Share our countries

Instead let us 

Build a wall to keep them out

It is not okay to say

These are people just like us

A place should only belong to those who are born there

Do not be so stupid to think that

The world can be looked at in another way.

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Forced expatriation

In 1992 the term “ethnic cleansing” was first used by Bosnian-Serb  paramilitaries against rival ethnic groups in the former Yugoslav republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina.  Their idea was to create “racial homogeneity” in areas with diverse ethnic groups.  Basically it was genocide, although to be clear, you can have ethnic cleansing by other means such as forced expatriation.  


Forced expatriation is not new in the U.S.  The “Trail of Tears” is one of the better known examples.  I suppose we could call the relocation camps for Japanese-Americans during World War II “internal expatriation.” although I’ve never heard that label.


The mass deportation proposed for immigrants after Trump assumes the presidency is not exactly “ethnic cleansing,” and I don’t think it would qualify as genocide.  I’m not sure what we should call it.  I am sure it is not a cause for celebration. 

Friday, January 10, 2025

District elections for Hazleton

According to an A.P. report, the Justice Department has asked a federal judge to rule that at-large elections for Hazleton city council members violate the voting rights act.  Hazleton is about 2/3 Hispanic (mostly Dominican), although the voting age population is only about 43% Hispanic.  No Hispanic has ever been elected to the city council.


If the town is divided into districts, there is a good chance that at least one and maybe two of the districts would elect Hispanics.  


I was part if a campaign to divide San José into districts.  There were seven council members elected at large, none of them Latino.  I supported the district system for a different reason than ethnic fairness.  I wanted a council member who was mine.  Under the existing at-large system, who do you appeal to?


The campaign, run by Dr. Terry Christensen of the San José Pol. Sci. Department, was brilliant.  The maps were drawn before the measure was put on the ballot.  Potential candidates who lived in a district had an incentive to campaign for the measure.


It passed, and indeed Latinos were elected.  And I had my councilman, a guy named Tom McHenry.  Housewives were also elected from the smaller districts.  The elections became less partisan, depending more on face-to-face campaigning.  Candidates spent less money.  Instead of mailers to all of San José, you only needed to send your campaign mailers to 10% of the voters.  


So yeah, I like district elections.  The bigger the city, the more important they are.  As far as the Hispanics in Hazleton are concerned, however, if they wait a few years and register a few more voters, they could take all five seats.  Then the Anglos would be campaigning for districts.