Haiti, revisited

In December, 2003, and again in March, 2006, I had two opportunities to visit wonderful ordinary people in the country of Haiti.

In 2008, four disastrous tropical storms hit Haiti in August and September.  Two years later, Haiti advocates grieved together as Haiti suffered through the unimaginable. tragedy of the earthquake of January, 2010; thence the cholera epidemic later the same year.

Today the news from/about Haiti is not good.  Visual and written messages mitigate against travel there (below photo).  One wonders what is ahead for these long suffering and wonderful people.

Nothing ever is simple as it seems, including such as the above photo.

In 2003 and 2006 I had an opportunity to learn more about Haiti’s history, and Haitians generally, on the ground, in Haiti itself, from Port-au-Prince into the interior of the country.

Succinctly, I appreciated the Haiti contacts.   But with friends like our own U.S. policy, Haitians don’t need enemies.

Haiti became an independent and free state in 1804, the culmination of a revolt of slaves against France.  Haiti was then France’s richest colony, so the loss was severe.

But victories have consequences.  In my understanding, one of the early resolutions of the U.S. government was to not recognize Haiti as a country.  We were a slave owning country, and the idea of freed slaves was not attractive.  We did not recognize the country as a country until 1862.  It was years before Fredrick Douglass was called into action to represent the U.S. in Haiti.  For reasons outlined in the linked article, Mr. Douglass’s time was not productive, for reasons not at all because of Douglass..

From 1915-34. the U.S. occupied and controlled Haiti, essentially as a colony.  In 1957, the to-be dictator Francois Duvalier ascended to power and curried favor with the U.S. as an anti-communist, later followed by his son, “Papa Doc”.  The U.S. was never far in the background.

In 1990 came the first democratic election, in which Jean-Bertrand Aristide won election.  A coup threw him out of office, and he was restored in 1994; finally to be deposed for good at the end of February, 2004, two months after my first visit to Haiti.

Essentially, it seems that Haiti became something of a ward of the United Nations, with the approval of the United States.  In the final coup of 2004, the U.S., France and Canada were key actors.

Of course, there is irresolvable arguments about who was responsible for what.  The ultimate results are what we see today – a country in chaos.

I write now because last evening we had the opportunity to meet with a few Haiti advocates in Minnesota.  It was a very good meeting.   Anyone interested in participating, please let me know and I’ll pass word along to the organizers.

As for myself, in the wake of my time of activism on Haiti I wrote some reflections about the country and the people as I saw it.  You can explore the link here.

NOTE, the blog mentioned at the beginning of the referenced page, OutsideTheWalls, has been replaced by this page, ThoughtsTowardsABetterWorld.  Enter the search word “Haiti” and you’ll find reference to 118 posts which at minimum mention the word “Haiti”.  While I am no longer engaged actively in Haiti activities, I am still in solidarity with the fine people living there.

Cassidy Hutchinson, “Enough”

POSTNOTE 3 – October. 6, 2023:  I completed the book, Enough, by Cassidy Hutchinson, Wednesday, Oct. 4.  It has become one of the unusual books that I read from cover to cover.  There are many reviews, and it is not my intention to review the book, other than saying I found reading this 26 year old’s memoir to be a learning experience.

Much happened between the day I purchased the book (Sep 29) and October 5.  Attorney General Merrick Garland was subject of a powerful segment on CBS 60 Minutes; a U.S. Government shutdown was temporarily averted on Saturday; on October 3, House Speaker, Kevin McCarthy, was voted out his position – the first such action in House history, and nobody knows the consequences of that.  The office is vacant, and its occupant is third in line of succession to the Presidency….

Overnight came a troubling report from yesterday, including a Liz Cheney talk at the University of Minnesota yesterday.

Ordinary citizen Donald Trump was given a gag order relating to conduct at his court hearing in New York City, and shows little sign of learning his lesson, and on and on….

It is all paralyzing, but this is no time for anyone who cares about the future of this country to be paralyzed.  The solution is with each of us, one action at a time.

*

There was a great deal of foot for thought for me in Enough.  Some morsels:  Hutchinson more than once called herself a Moderate Republican; I’ve always called myself a Moderate Democrat.  What is the difference?  She admired what she knew about Ronald Reagan, whose Presidency ended seven years before she was born.  In probably her second chance to vote for President, she supported Mitt Romney.  Of course, she was loyal to “the Boss” as one would expect of a staff employee.

I never had the rarified experience she did, but I worked hard for Reagan’s opponent, incumbent Jimmy Carter, who I’ve always admired.  My vote was for Barack Obama, twice.  On and on.  We both called ourself, political “moderates” though certainly not “twins”.

These and many other vignettes in the book, with the overlay of the near three years since Jan 6 2021,  cause me to think of myself and other ordinary “American people”.

Individually and as a collective group we are much like what we experience at an ordinary family reunion.  Politics and government are akin to a gigantic buffet, smorgasbord, potluck (take your pick of the word) which I’d guess every reader has experienced, perhaps often.  There are choices to be made, and one’s plate is only so large…as is one’s stomach.  Despite the wailing we so often indulge in, we are an extremely rich country, and there is usually much more available to us than can be consumed.  (I’ll be at such an event on Saturday.  My guess is there will be lots of “leftovers”.)

Most of us are content to pick our few favorites in the line, eat moderately, visit pleasantly, and go home.  We are almost all in this category.  I would guess there might always be someone  obsessed with only one item (call it an “issue”), and won’t eat anything else.  Perhaps that might be the ideologue.

The winner at the potluck is generally all of us, who get some balance and pleasure out of the event.  Were the event to be controlled by the ideologue, there would be less participation.

Maybe our country is a little bit like that potluck table.  Maybe we’re only temporarily out of whack.  Unfortunately, we’re the only ones who can fix this, by who we choose to elect to all our leaders, carefully and well informed.

I do highly recommend Enough.  You won’t regret the read.

*

POSTNOTE 1 – OCT 1, 2023:  Here is Heather Cox Richardson on the House and Senate votes to resolve the threatened government shutdown yesterday.

Simon and Schuster, 2023, 362 pages

Sept. 30, 2023, 2:25 p.m.: Today, I took time to dive into Cassidy Hutchinson’s new book, Enough.  As of this writing, I’ve finished about half of the book, up to the chapter entitled “Election”.  My impressions below:

(Unrelated to this topic, but if you wish, check also the recent posts for Sep 24 (commentaries on Putin and Afghanistan 2003), 26 (my community school election) and 29 (Haiti revisited).

On Sept. 28, 2023, came an e-mail from long-time friend Larry Gauper.

“[Cassidy Hutchinson is] on Lawrence O’Donnell in this youtube clip…she is terrific and Alexander Butterfield is featured too in a clip in the segment…these are two heroes and she’s the kind of young person we need to save this country…LG

My response to Larry:

Monday night I watched Cassidy on Rachel Maddow;

Tuesday, I got her book – hard copy.  Missed Laurence since it’s past my bedtime.
Today I just finished watching her on Nicole Wallace’s program on MSNBC.
So, that’s where I’m at on this!
Yesterday, while purchasing [her book] “Enough”,  I also asked for and purchased “Cheerfulness” by Garrison Keillor.
So, I guess we’re on the same page.

6:45 p.m. Sep 29: I watched the YouTube reference, and it includes Alexander Butterfield (from Watergate era) speaking directly to Cassidy.  It is very powerful.

Cassidy is today only 26 years old, and in Jan, 2021 had just turned 24.

I remembered my life when I was 25 – that was in 1965.  By then, I, too, had experienced a great deal I’d never expected.  Youth is not a disqualified.  We have a great deal to learn from this young person, as we did from our own live.
Sept. 30, 2023, 2:35 p.m.;  I started reading the book.  I frequently buy such books mostly to support the authors effort.  Enough is well worth the investment.

Enough” is personally, and well, written.  As she acknowledges at the beginning “names and some identifying characteristics of some individuals have been changed”, so don’t look for a who’s who.  The book is a personal story.

Cassidy’s place in history is assured, by the January 6, 2021, Insurrection hearings.  She was an employee of the executive branch of our government when the events of 2020-21  occurred.

She was 23 years old when most of the events occurred; in a couple of months she’ll be 27.

What I’ve read so far – from her birth to the 2020 election – has been interesting and informative.  I anticipate that this will continue in the ‘meat’ of the story as I continue reading.

I think I can safely say that anyone who reads this post has experienced life to age 27.  For myself, 27 was 56 years ago.  Those who know my family history, know that some of those years were challenging.  But I would suggest that everyone who has passed the threshold out of childhood can relate many similar stories as told by Cassidy, though all will be different.

Cassidy certainly had the ability and initiative to achieve.  I would suspect she has a bright future ahead of her, though her testimony and her book will certainly not be roundly applauded by those who were past and future patrons.

In the book, she declared herself as a “moderate Republican” – a Mitt Romney supporter.

I’ve always called myself a “moderate Democrat” and I have never heard an adequate explanation of what is the difference between the two terms.  But that’s a topic for another time.  I urge you to actually read Enough and use it as a springboard for thought and discussion.

I will add more comments here after I complete the book, likely in the next few days.  The old picture of the White House in 1904 (below) comes from a large collection of postcards saved vey my grandparents in the early 1900s when they settled in North Dakota.

 

Postcard of White House, 1904, from the Busch farm collection, Berlin ND


POSTNOTE 2: October 1, 2023
After completing the above on Sep 30, and quite literally at the last minute, “Congress staves off shutdown” as the front page headline in the Sunday Minneapolis Star Tribune declared.  There remain issues, but there is no shutdown.


Here’s the vote:

Minneapolis Star Tribune Sunday Oct 1, 2023

There will be endless analysis and postmortems of what this all means.  All that matters to this individual voter is how my Congressperson, and my U.S. Senators voted, and why.

There are remaining issues, unresolved yesterday.  Learn about them, too.

We, the people, are the electors of the government, and our Congressperson is the one closest to our own area.  Take the time to learn….

COMMENTS (more below)

A School Referendum: SoWashCo883, Nov 7 2023

This post relates specifically and solely to a local school election in suburban St. Paul MN.  It is my personal opinion, about my own school district: Dick Bernard

1. There are a large number of candidates for three school board seats.  My personal preferred candidates:
MELINDA DOLS,
SATONIA MOORE
SIMI PATNAIK
These candidates, in my opinion,  seem best prepared to support public education for all.
Here is an important link regarding the election, including candidate links, if submitted.
*
(Personally, my entire life story has been immersed in public education.  Both parents were career public school teachers; my career was public education;  today, one grandson, and two daughters are in public education, two of the three in SoWashCo833.)
2. I recommend a YES vote on each of the three referendum questions, which have been carefully prepared based on existing and future needs.  Here is the school district handout on the referendum election: Sowashco Referendum 2023 SD handout.  NOTE THE HI-LITED PORTION AT THE BOTTOM OF BOTH PAGES.  This school district link also includes an easy to follow tax calculator – how much the issues will cost on your tax bill.
*
The 2023 referendum follows up on a failed referendum in August, 2022, in which roughly 10% of eligible voters voted yes; about 20% voted no; and about 70% did not vote at all.
Succinctly, another failure will only delay and make more expensive future similar questions.  The needs will not go away.
*
Personal Opinion:
Public Education is open to  everyone;
It is inclusive and not exclusive;
In my opinion, the single most important function of “School” is to be the place where young people grow up, and learn skills to cope with the real world they will become part of.
Like every other institution of people, Public Schools are not perfect.
But Public Schools are essential to society at large, and they deserve and need our support.
*
I cannot emphasize enough: in the last such election in #833, almost 70% of the eligible voters did not vote at all.  This is our problem, not anyone elses responsibility.
Pass the word.  There is 45 days till the election.
POSTSCRIPT: Here’s what I wrote after the August, 2022 referendum election in SoWashCo.

 

Putin, and Afghanistan: A Peek at Two Rough Drafts of History

May 28 to June 9, 2003, we joined my cousin and her husband on a Baltic cruise on the occasion of their 50th wedding anniversary.  It was a marvelous time, Copenhagen start and end; St. Petersburg, Russia, June 3 and 4; the other days Stockholm, Helsinki and rural Finland, Estonia, Gdynia (Gdansk) Poland; Oslo, Norway.  A sampler, but a rich one.

But this trip was different: two days after President George Bush visited Vladimir Putin in St. Petersburg (May 31-June 1, 2003) we were there, in fact, one of our tour bus stops was  the lobby of the hotel where the Bush’s stayed.  President Bush meetings with Vladimir Putin in St. Petersburg.

At our  Copenhagen hotel, London’s  Financial Times (FT) for May 29, 2003,  opined on the upcoming Bush visit: Putin, Financial Times June, 2003.  A few weeks earlier, May 1,  2003, had been President Bush’s premature presumed-triumphal “Mission Accomplished” visit to the USS Abraham Lincoln off San Diego.

Back in Copenhagen as our trip ended, at the same hotel, another copy of the Financial Times, this one for June 7-8, 2003, featured a review of what has come to be described as “Charlie’s War” – the early 1990s U.S. dive into the deep end of the pool that is Afghanistan.  The U.S. descent into that over 30 year quagmire was helped along by then-Texas Congressman Charlie Wilson.

The entire and very interesting FT commentary is here: Afghanistan Charlie Wilson 1990s.  Note: the link can be enlarged for ease of reading.

I tend to save things for future reference, as was the case for these two articles.  Given recent history, they seem particularly relevant.  They are offered as food for thought – snapshots of a rough draft of history.  What we choose to remember, and what we choose to forget.

It is 20 years since I saved these articles, less than two years after 9-11-01.

They speak for themselves.

Personal opinion: in our country, at least so far, citizens elect our representatives.  If we criticize them – as we do – we are criticizing ourselves.

Register.  Become informed.  Vote.  Express yourself in other ways.

 

 

Sondergard and the Mn Orch

For years we’ve subscribed to short season (usually 6 concerts) of the Minnesota Orchestra, a magnificent band!

This mornings Minneapolis Star Tribune, page one, featured the debut of a new conductor.  As the review in the Variety section headlines: “Thomas Sondergard makes an epic debut”.

Here’s the front page photo:

Sep 22, 2023 Minneapolis Star Tribune front page

Here’s the program descriptor of the concert we heard: Sondergard Mn Orch Prog Sep 21 2023.  The Strib review is here: https://tinyurl.com/yrdkta8r

On page two of the link, note the highlighted section at the bottom of the page.  Wherever you are, you can listen, live, to the full performance tonight, 8 p.m. CDT.  You’ll be glad you did.

Also in this program book is an article about Sondergard in his own words; and an interview with the featured Oboe soloist Nathan Hughes. Sondergard:Hughes Mn Orch Prog Sep 21 2023 

NOTE: In the photo, had Sondergard looked to his left, he’d have caught us, four rows back.  Fame is elusive….

Additional Note: The annual twin cities Nonviolent observance is between now and October 3.  Schedule of events here.

Vladivostok, and other things.

I’m ending this week with ‘miscellany’ – there’s far too much going on to write about everything.  Here goes:

  1. VLADIVOSTOK

Earlier this week, Kim Jong Un and Vladimir Putin met near Vladivostok, Russia.

I am a long-ago Geography Major.  Back then – the 50s – I would only have known it had to be a very long ride from Pyongyang to Moscow.  Those were the days when you had to look at a Globe, a map hanging on the wall, or an Atlas in the library to even find Vladivostok, if it even showed up on the immense land mass that was, then, the USSR.

Now, the handy route map on my computer  apologizes for having no data about how to get from Pyongyang to Vladivostok, but still provides amazing information.  So, my alternative was to get the route from Moscow to Vladivostok.  Here it is, as adapted by myself:

Moscow Vladivostok Russia N. Korea Ukraine

Long and short: It’s over 5000 land miles from Moscow to Vladivostok.  On the other hand, unknown to me till yesterday, Russia shares a few miles of border with North Korea, close to Vladivostok. Indeed, Khasan, Russia is at the border with North Korea,  160 miles or so from Vladivostok.

(It’s about 500 miles from Kyiv, Ukraine, to Moscow – not much more distant than Minneapolis to Chicago.)

Geographically, Russia is an immense country – roughly the size of Canada and the U.S. combined.  On the other hand, Russia’s population is less than half that of the United States; and about three times the population of Ukraine….

Of course, Vladivostok would not be in the news except for the fact that Kim Jong Un and Vladimir Putin were talking in person about some deals.  The in-person meeting had its own messages to the assorted audiences who would see it.

So, we catch a moment when two authoritarians apparently commit to their deal.  Of course, their power will be utterly worthless to them when they die, as they will, as we all ultimately do.

There are few scoundrels in Putin and Kim’s class.  But I could easily write a list of perhaps ten individuals who I’d consider equally or even more dangerous authoritarians – people who control power over people in assorted ways, a few of them in our own country.  Your list may well be similar to mine, but who specifically doesn’t matter.  To whom, including themselves, would more concentration of power make a long term difference?

The reality, it seems to me, is the symbolism of the armored train that Kim Jung Un used to get to the border of Russia.  It demonstrates the constant paranoia about enemies.  They and their ilk are  in prisons of their own making, with only temporary reward.  No thanks.

2. COURT

The Rule of Law has been the hallmark in our countries aspiration to democracy.   It has been and hopefully will continue to be our ideal.  By no means is our Rule of Law perfect.  But it is infinitely better than a Law of Force, such as demonstrated Jan. 6, 2021, and surrounding days following the election of 2020.   It has been a dismal time in our history.

The Rule of Law is deliberately tedious and all about interpretation of evidence, and ultimately left up to a judge (there are over 30,000 of these, state and federal), or a jury of citizens.  Justice takes time, and is foolish to predict outcomes.  I can wait.  But I will follow the process over the coming months and perhaps even years.

I pay a great deal of attention to the legal issues front and center regarding Jan. 6, Mar-a-Lago, Fulton County GA, New York, etc., but   I have devoted very little space to them here.  To the best of my recollection I have not personally used the words “Donald Trump” in this blog since January 2021.   (There have been rare mentions since Jan 2021, and have been in comments by others than myself.). To me, “Donald Trump” is really only the people who voted him into office and still support him.  As an individual, he is nothing – a modern day “Wizard of Oz” behind his media screen, a fraud gifted in front of a microphone.  In my opinion, he will stand alone as the worst president in all of our history as a country.

In progress now are the first of endless court cases which deserve to be watched.  There are  over  1,300,000 lawyers in the U.S.  who will be especially attentive.  Their function is to argue points of law.  So disagreements and losing cases are not alien concepts to them.  Every lawsuit is at some level one versus another.

My continuing mantra: be sure you’re registered to vote, and that you vote well informed in the upcoming elections; and urge others you know to do the same.

 3. MAUI:

This week I came across a 2013-14 calendar I’d kept which featured a series of ancient maps.  I leafed through it, and January was an 1885 map of Maui:

Maui, 1885

If you look carefully, on the far left of the map, there is a circled word, Lahaina, which has immediate meaning in these days.  Here’s a pdf of the  map,  Maui 1885

Lahaina, the site of the recent disastrous fires which gripped us all,  is but a speck on Maui, as Maui is just a speck in the Pacific Ocean.

Detail is important, but it is also important to retain perspective.

(The colors on the map connote ownership in 1885, the green and the yellow were either government or crown properties.  Hawaii became a U.S. territory in 1898, a state in 1959.)

4. MISCELLANY:

Of course, there’s always “breaking news”. everywhere.  This week a strike of United Auto Workers began; there is harping about impeaching Joe Biden, etc. etc.  Bad news always sells better than good.

I like to notice the people I have contact with every day, in every context, whether I know them or not.  While there are exceptions, I am struck by how truly decent people are.  It is good grounding in reality.  I would guess others have the same impressions.  We know we’re a polarized society, but I see signs that folks are working on that, one interaction at a time.  There is hope.

*

Molly sent an article about Covid vaccination for the upcoming fall season. “There’s a lot of general info & background in this article, fyi. here sounds good to me!” .

*

Frank suggests the following:

Father Harry Bury, Maverick Priest was interviewed by Don Olson on Thursday September 14th on KFAI on 90.3 FM’s “Northern Sun New”.

This talk will be archived for 2 weeks.

Play at Landmark “War, Resistance, and Protest: The Trial of the Minnesota 8”  October 5th & 6th – 7 pm | October 7th – 2 pm, 2023      $10

Dick’s note: The play is Frank’s personal story of the  important trial and subsequent imprisonment at the time of Vietnam War protests in the late 60s early 70s.  Frank is a long-time friend, but I did not know him till long after the events of the Trial.

5. RECOMMENDATION:

Like everyone, I’m besieged with information.  Every time I publish a post I say publicly what I consider my self to be – you can see it at upper right: Moderate Democrat.

Over time, I’ve come to rely on several commentators as frequent sources of credible information, especially on politics in general.  I recommend you check out any of these sources, any time.  Joyce Vance, Civil Discourse, on matters of Law; Heather Cox-Richardson, Letters from an American, on matters of public and international policy and history; Jay Kuo, The Status Kuo, on matters of Law; Doug Muder, The Weekly Sift, on general matters of public policy.  There are many other reliable sources, but these are good, reliable, frequent sources of informed analysis.  I especially thank my friend, Joyce, for making me aware of these and many other resources.

*

POSTNOTE SEP. 17: Last evening I happened across a very relevant TV program, released May, 2020, which is still accessible.  It was a 2020 William Shatner program on the topic of Cults.  At least take notice of it, here.  I did not seek the program out, but it is very relevant to today….

COMMENTS (see also the end of this post): 

from Howie: Thanks for the geography lesson. Having driven from the Midwest to Seattle and from the Midwest to DC, I have a personal experience with the size of the US, about 3000 mi wide. 5000 mi within Russia takes on a personal scale. I suspect that many who travel at 300 mph, 30k ft above the earth, will not have that personal perspective.

from Darryll:  Early in Trumps rule, I compared him to the Wizard of OZ.  I also compared him to a carnival barker.  I now believe “mob boss” is the best description. I cannot understand the people, I know well, supporting him.  The book, by his niece, describing him is right on the money.

 I believe he and his kind are as much a danger to this country as global warming.  He can be stopped.  I have problems with people who think global warming is not a danger.  I taught the principals of global warming in my classes for many years.

 

.

 

9-11-01 revisited

POSTNOTE: Chuck W sent his own blog commentary, which can be accessed here.

*

Today is the 22nd anniversary of 9-11-01.  It was a Tuesday.

Twin Towers New York City late June 1972. At this point, one of the towers had opened, the second was near complete.  Photo Dick Bernard

Over the years, I have written often about aspects of 9-11 and its profound impact on me, personally, but I wondered, this year, why the attention?  It is, after all, 22 years.  At the end of this post, unedited, is what I wrote on September 9, but didn’t post at the time.

My attitude changed last night, watching another National Geographic perspective, this segment. about Air Traffic controllers in the wake of the national catastrophe of 9-11-01.

I rarely fly, but planes remain almost a daily presence for me.  Ironically, in a recent post I included recollections about 9-11-01 and airplanes, including this: “My daily walking route is beneath several major flight paths.  A typical walk is punctuated at least a half dozen times by sounds of jet or other aircraft heading somewhere or other.  Not so, September 12 and 13, 2001.  The silence from above those days was truly deafening.  Yes, birds were chirping, and in other ways life seemed serene but no sound from the sky.  None.  The planes began to fly again and the silence ended.”  (This quotation is from the beginning of the final link at the end of this Aug. 22 post on Ukraine.)

What stuck with me last night was the air traffic controllers at Gander Newfoundland – a place that on a normal day dealt with (my recollection) 7 large aircraft landings, but on 9-11-01 had to handle 234 landings of major aircraft in a couple of hours, as it became apparent that planes were being used as weapons of terror, and the first response was to ground everything, everywhere, with planes in the air forced to go to other than major airports to diminish the risk to the greatest number of people.

The ATC’s at Gander and elsewhere did heroic work that day, and in my case were unsung until last night.  There were and are infinite repetitions of people working together every day, everywhere.  We all live on the same island.

I suspect that 9-11-01 will remain part of the national conversation than other similar catastrophes, and probably for good reason.  As I point out in my draft (below), there is lots for all of us to consider as we go forward into the rest of our lives.

*

Saturday night meant an entire evening revisiting 9-11-01 and its aftermath on the National Geographic Channel.

It was long and well done, as could be expected.

When it ended I asked myself the repetitive question I have asked over the past 22 years: what have we learned from the experience of 9-11-01?

What have each of us learned…what have I learned?

In a democracy, the “I” is most important.  Because each of us participate in setting the direction for our society.  The U.S. is US.

About a week ago I watched the new documentary: Escape from Kabul, about the end of U.S. presence in Afghanistan in August, 2021.   I highly recommend it.

Afghanistan was our initial target in response to 9-11-01.  We were there 20 years.

After the film I wrote a brief on-line review which I wish I had copied, to the effect that Afghanistan should represent an opportunity for all of us to learn.

My writing was the 7th review.  It was brief, it was non-partisan, it named no names or blamed no President.

I looked back later in the week, it had not passed muster with whomever controls what others see.  It apparently did not fit the preferred narrative.

So be it.

It’s now 22 years since 9-11-01. One of my grandkids was born about 8 months after 9-11; he graduated from high school in the terrible Covid year of 2020; he’s now in his senior year in college.

His cohort has seen it all in their lifetime.  I wonder how they will apply the lessons of the last 20 years to their lives.

I wish them well.

Commentary 4/20/2002: Afghanistan colum 4:2002001

Rewiring America

An unwritten rule of the road in these parts is don’t mess with summer, which ends with Labor Day.  Makes sense to us.

So, when we met J. Drake Hamilton of Fresh Energy on August 18, I said I wouldn’t pass information along till September.  By our Minnesota rule-of-thumb it’s now Fall.

We’ve been a supporter of Fresh Energy for a number of years.  It has been a very effective advocate for its mission “to shape and drive bold policy solutions to achieve equitable Carbon-neutral economies.  Together we are working toward a vision of a just, prosperous and resilient future powered by a shared commitment to a carbon-neutral economy.

At our meeting Aug. 18, J. shared with us a publication that is well worth your time, prepared by a national organization Rewiring America.  At the site, scroll down to “Go Electric.  Free Guide to the Inflation Reduction Act“.

For beginnings I’ll let the weblinks speak for themselves.

Take an active look.

School 2023-24

Yesterday, the day after Labor Day, was the first day of school here.  At my coffee place, the Blackboard had been cleaned and a question for the day appeared:

The previous day, I’d stopped by the Middle School where my daughter is Principal, and gave her my more or less annual calendar taken at the Education Minnesota (state teachers union) booth at the State Fair.  I had posed for the free photo a few days earlier (see below).  Tuesday, ours was a 30-second meeting – it was, after all, day one of the school year, and managing a 1000 student school is not easy.

Here’s the pdf version, easier to use: 2023 Calendar.

The place called school has always been complicated, never more so than today.  I have certain ‘street creds’ on the topic, being the oldest child of career public school teachers, and a lifelong connection to public schools in varying capacities.

My daughters school has about a thousand kids.  Begin with the reality that every student has two parents, from all of the variations of families.  The kids often have siblings, and friends and other associations.  More than most occupations, public education is intensely personal.

Public Schools has an essential but oft-overlooked function.  The school is an essential preparation for the child preparing for independence and  immersion in the larger world outside the home – a transition from which a child cannot be insulated.

Kids need to learn how to get along, often with others they might not normally associate with.  This includes not only other students, and teachers, but all range of other school employees, cooks, custodians, etc., etc., etc.  All are human beings, with all the complexity that comes with that.  We see this every day in our own environments.  Public ed mirrors our own selves.  Life is not always ideal; it is always real.

My youngest grandkid is about to finish high school, the last of nine.  I’ve watched them all from a Grandpa’s perspective.  Like society in general, they are not “identical twins”, none of them.

We adults know the drill from experience, how it is to grow up.  For the kids, its on the job training, as it was for us.  Adults who teach and have other roles in school are helpers in this transition, and we each have our own memories.

*

Years ago, before I retired, I was assigned to do a couple of workshops at the annual Summer Leadership Conference of my teachers union, then called MEA.  I don’t remember the specific topic of the workshop; I will never forget what happened.

I decided to start the workshop by asking participants, most of them teachers with lots of experience, to think back to their own years as a student, then to think of a school employee who really made a difference for them, then to pick a word or two to describe what it was about that school employee that made a difference in their lives.

Long story short: the entire workshop ended up devoted to the feedback from participants.  Only a single person, of perhaps 40 in all, could not come up with anyone who had made a positive difference in his life.

Later I recorded the words that had been used.  They are below.  Use them your self to identify someone (not necessarily only a school employee) who stood out in your own life.  You might find it of interest.  Here is a pdf of the illustration: Qualities of Educators.

(Of course, these are the best qualities of an exemplary educator defined by a veteran teacher who was once a student.  Every teacher would readily acknowledge that there are infinite variations from day to day in every interpersonal interaction in the school.  We all know about our own good days and bad days, and about the uncertainties of larger group and interpersonal dynamics.  But educators everywhere, every day, aspire to a better experience for all.)

I represented public school teachers for 27 years, and for nine years was one myself.  With an entire life in and with daily proximity to school employees I say with no hesitation: the public is very well served and public education is a great gift to children everywhere.

Have a great year.

POSTNOTE: I was sitting in the coffee shop when the first person wrote their comment.  She appeared to be middle school age, with perhaps an older sister and some of the sisters friends.

Her comment: “How to get out of the “prison”.  I also like my drink and the bagel.”

If/As I see other comments, I’ll add here.

CURRENT EVENT: THE REFERENDUM FOR SOUTH WASHINGTON COUNTY DISTRICT #833 NOV. 2023

There is hardly an institution in our country as “public” as the Public School.

In my own school district, South Washington County #833, in east suburban St. Paul, nearly 19,000 children, about 20% of the total population of about 100,000 in four distinct cities, depend on public participation and support.  This plays out again in a school referendum scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023.

This years referendum is described here in a mailing to school district residents: Sowashco 833 Referendum 2023.  Here is more, from the District’s website as of Sep 9, 2023

This is a second run for this referendum – the first failed in August 2022, my opinion, lack of public participation.  About 20% of eligible voters voted against the referendum; only about 10% of the eligible voters voted for.  This meant about 70% of eligible voters didn’t show up, for all of the usual kinds of reasons.

So, the referendum failed, but the anti-referendum folks didn’t succeed, either.  The demonstrated needs remained, only now they are more expensive.  The blame game is not very persuasive.

Because school referendums are so locally centered, and because school board members are elected locally, and school staff are hired locally, there are all sorts of rules relating to school district lobbying for its own funding.  There are in fact rules.  Here are the rules from last year: Sowashco 833 Rules 2022.  If the school district officials do not seem to be vigorously supporting their own referendum, it is because they are not allowed to, by law and policy.

As was true last year, this year all indications are that the recommendations were made carefully, based on needs.  But beyond the recommendations, the campaigning has to be community based, and not from the institution itself.  There are two months, and early voting begins soon.  It will be seen how this all plays out in the next two months.  Public involvement is essential.

NOTE: I posted about the 2022 election on August 12, 2022.  If you are interested it is accessible here.

Directly relevant to the 2023 issue:

Sept 22 is the First Day Vote Early! or make a plan to vote by Nov 7, 2023.
On Sept 21, 6:30 pm – 7pm at Jerry’s Foods, Supt. Nielsen will discuss what’s on the Levy.  Because of space limitations, RSVP is requested: here

 

1) See what’s on your Ballot, here:
 (type in zip code, then house number & spin for the street)
A) Choose 3 of 11 candidates.
 (2 are incumbents – Simi Patnaik and Melinda Dols; Satonia Moore worked at Lake Middle School for 15 years.
Here’s Jamie Kokaisel blog – she ran as a bloc with Eric Tessmer (who got elected), to cut taxes, fund private schools, villify the ‘other’, ban books

B) Choose for the Levy here – question 1, 2, and /or 3 
if you click through, it has a 34 page Powerpoint
Slide 7 – shows a survey of what voters preferred to fund 75% for HS, 60% for Elem.
Slide 8 – student enrollment 18,520 grows to 19,199 in 5 years, based on Preschoolers – who live here, NOW
Slide 31 – shows $6/mo property tax for Q1 + shows $2/mo for Q2 = $8/mo for both passing
2) They DO NOT factor in the City of Woodbury’s “2040 Plan”  – to increase population 80,000 to 90,000 by 2030
by adding more houses, townhouses and apartments. (Would some have schoolchildren?)

 

3) Here’s the Sign-up for Th Sept 21, 6:30pm at Jerry’s Foods, upstairs.
SD47 hosts a program, with Supt Nielsen on the levy questions

 

A New Flag for Minnesota?

PRE-NOTE: I have made additions to the posts for August 11 (Lahaina), August 22 (Ukraine) and August 24 (Stairs).  Access through archive at right on this page.

*

A current important issue in Minnesota is the design of the Minnesota state emblem.  More on that below.

One week ago I was at Huot MN, a few miles west of Red Lake Falls on the Red Lake River in northwest Minnesota.  The occasion was the annual chautauqua & French-Canadian/Metis Festival of AFRAN (Association of the French of the North), a group with a history going back to 1981.

Centerpiece of the Festival was a hand-made Red River Oxcart – the vehicle which facilitated earliest white settlement of what is now the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul from Pembina and points north and west in the early and middle 1800s.

Red River Oxcart at Old Treaty Crossing, Huot MN, August 26, 2023.  Cart handmade to original 1800s cart specifications by Ed, Dan and Owen Jerome. Ed Jerome (Hallock MN, in photo) was the Master Craftsman in making this cart and taught the skill to his cousins, Dan & Owen at Turtle Mountain ND.

The August 26-27 event was at what is now referred to as the Old Crossing Treaty Park.  A short walk from the above photo was the actual Red Lake river oxcart crossing access, now a public boat launching area.

Boat launch/landing at Old Crossing, Huot MN
August 26, 2023

The Treaty referred to was concluded in 1863, and is briefly described here: Huot Crossing Trtyt 1863001.

*

This years event at Old Crossing dovetailed with an important initiative which will be discussed this fall in Minnesota, in preparation for consideration by the 2024 Minnesota Legislature, and   is defined in the 2-page legislation titled “State Emblems Redesign Commission”: Minnesota Flag Redesign 2023.

Information about the Redesign Commission is here, and will doubtless be updated frequently.

There are an abundance of opinions about the Minnesota Flag, which has seen a number of renditions since statehood in 1858.  A good general history of the flag can be read here.  More general information about flags, generally, can be read here.

PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS: I learned of the Flag Redesign proposal early in 2023.  I hadn’t known of it before.  I knew little about the Minnesota flag history, but do know the history of flags, generally, and their relationship to power, and the tensions between natives and white settlers in this area as the United States expanded.

Minnesota became a state in 1858, and before and after came all of the assorted transactions that ultimately resulted in the United States in which we live today.  We are no longer in 1858.  165 years later, what the flag will be, is going to be debated.  It will be an interesting conversation.

I felt, and feel, that the Commission is a good idea, regardless of what it reports out.  This commission mandates representation of native constituency groups.

Early on, I thought my friend, Virgil Benoit, who also organized the Old Crossing event I attended August 26, had  a well thought out position on the flag issue.  You can read his comment here: Virgil Benoit on Mn Flag and Seal (2).

I was also struck by the design of the logo of Virgil’s organization, which would make a very appropriate description of Minnesota of today.

August 26, 2023, at Old Crossing Event, Huot MN.

UPDATE:

September 2, 2023, the Minneapolis Star Tribune had a front page article about the issue. Minnesota Flag Redesign Star Trib Sep 2 2023

COMMENTS:

from Jeff: I think there was an article in either the WaPo or the NYT recently on the issue of state flag redesigns.   Interesting read.  There is alot of it going on , as it is deemed branding now.

response from Dick: I really don’t follow this stuff very closely, and learned about it at a meeting perhaps in February.  It had apparently come up in a prior legislative session and failed.  Some dust was kicked up about it.  I sent around the wording of the Law relating to the members of commission, to which one responded “My eyes must need correcting…I don’t see any European Americans on that list.”  If you look at the committee list, 5 of the 13 are specifically for persons of color.

I would suspect that in previous decisions about the flag there was no such allowance to specifically give non-white folks actual representation.

It will be very interesting to see what results by January.

Here’s a picture of the current symbol, from the xrmap flag collection 2.7, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

from Mary Ellen: Our northern neighbor, Canada, adopted its maple leaf flag in 1965. Before that the flag was a field of red with the Union Jack in one corner and symbols of Canada in the opposite corner.

I hope Minnesota can find an equally successful new design. It is time.