Thursday, November 20, 2025

Rights, Responsibilities, and Wisdom

The First Amendment









 Congress shall make no law respecting or establishing religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof: or abridging the freedom of speech, or the press; or the right of the people to assemble, and to petition the government for redresses of grievances. 


We live in a world today where people doubt science, yet they go to the Doctor when they are sick, and they get into airplanes to fly off to visit family for Thanksgiving without understanding how the pills their doctor gives them helps them get well or how the airplane keeps them in the air.  So long as we are comfortable trusting those wiser than ourselves, the world moves along fairly well.  However, it is when we trust those whom we follow, not because we believe they are wiser or better educated, but because they tell us what we want to hear.  That is what gets us in trouble.

The world is full of charlatans, and if we follow them blindly to get what we want, there is really no excuse for blaming anyone but ourselves.  The Founding Fathers gave us the gift of living in a Nation which requires responsibilities.  

Unfortunately, civics has been removed from many, probably most, school curriculums, and many of us have little awareness of the way our political system works, nor the important personal responsibilities placed on each American.  Past blogs have described the checks and balances intended to keep any one part of government from exceeding its intended power.  

I remember when I first registered to vote.  My party choice was easy:  my great grandfather had fought for the Union, and he would always vote for Lincoln's party.  His son served in the Kansas House of Representatives for 3 terms. My father and my mother were Republican County Representatives.  Of course I registered as a Republican.  I suspect that many people register for the party their family followed, without giving it much thought.  That might have confused the Founding Fathers, who regarded the right to vote as a serious responsibility.

The Founding Fathers also regarded matters of Faith as extremely important, and they gave churches a significant privilege of being excused from taxes on churches and other religious property.  In exchange, churches were not to use their Sacred places for political matters.  Yet, we all know of examples when that is done.    

I was very surprised and confused when the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens United to reverse centuries-old financial campaign restrictions and enabled Corporations and other outside groups to spend unlimited money on politics.  Today, a huge amount of fundraising for advertising political matters comes from "super pacs."  That court ruling has changed elections, and I am still confused with the decision of the Court.  The idea of "one man, one vote" is smothered by Citizens United, in my opinion.  Unless the Supreme Court changes its ruling, that will continue.  

What would go a long way in informing Americans about our constitution and how it works would be to return to classes in Civics, not just one class in student's senior year but rather, age-appropriate classes starting in Junior High School and continuing until High School graduation.  

When I see the nonsense of long lines at voting places because they refused to provide adequate locations, disruptions of depositing ballots in Post Office Boxes, and refusing to allow water to be given to people waiting in lines on very hot days because inadequate voting sites were provided, I cannot but think of the ridiculous obstructions imposed on Black Americans in the South after the Civil War.  

Voting is our right, and when we take the time to vote, knowing that our little vote is tiny in a nation of so many people, and yet we vote, the Founding Fathers would be proud.  Those we see finding ways to   impede votes they assume to be in disagreement with their preference--disgrace themselves.         

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

The Challenge of Finding Solutions

My blog last spring titled "Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts" addressed the upheaval when President Donald Trump named himself President of the Kennedy Center and replaced the Board of Trustees.  President Kennedy has no other memorial in Washington D.C.  The Kennedy Center is his memorial, together with a recognition of President Eisenhower by the naming of the Eisenhower Theater.

A young John F. Kennedy announcing Adlai Stevenson

Since the Spring changes, people have shown their disapproval of the changes to the Kennedy Center with their dollars.  At the time of President Trump's naming of the new board, the Kennedy Center was supported by 40,000 individual donors who formed the foundation of the Center's financial support.  Since then, many of these donors have shown their disapproval of the changes by withdrawing their financial support.  From September 3rd to October 12th 43% of seats across the Opera House, Concert Hall, and Eisenhower Theater went unsold.  In comparison to the previous year, ticket spending fell by more than half.  

Removing their support is about the only way donors have to show their disapproval of the replacement of professional leadership and laying off staff.  Some artists have withdrawn their work from the Center.  These results hurt the Kennedy Center itself.  

 With regard to certain proposed changes of the Center, according to the U.S. Code, "After December 2, 1983, no additional memorials or plaques in the nature of memorials shall be designated or installed in the public area of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts."

The Kennedy Center is an American treasure.  Ways must be found to please people who love it, including not only the patrons who have been financial supporters, but also children who can learn to appreciate the arts of all kinds, and visitors from across America and the World can enjoy the Kennedy Center once again!     

,

 

  

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Something to Consider



Sometimes the ideas for my blog just pop into my head with no explanation.  Last night we were returning from a wonderful musical performance and these words popped into my mind out of nowhere.  "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

The words come from the Declaration of Independence.  I had not thought about these words for some time, and I do not know why they came to mind out of nowhere, but they are powerful words, especially the declaration that all men are entitled to "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

Yet, at the same time, America sanctioned slavery.  We had taken the land from the indigenous people who lived here before us. The rights described spoke of men, not men and women.  

It took a war for America to abolish slavery, and even longer for women to get the vote, but eventually it happened.  As for our treatment of indigenous people, it has remained complicated.

Those drafting the Declaration of Independence were considering what they saw as unacceptable treatment from the King of Great Britain, which they called "injuries and usurpations," such as refusal to "Assent to Laws."  Their list of abuses by the King was pages longer than the Declaration itself.

They declared, "That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it."  

They acknowledged that such action should not be carelessly undertaken, "But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such Government."  What followed was a very long list of the violations made by the King.

Our Founding Fathers did not choose to elect a king.  Instead, they devised a system of divided powers, in which no single branch of the government has entire power.  The idea is that both the house and the senate have different responsibilities, the members of the house elected every two years, while the senators serve for six years.  With such a large nation, it was assumed that their votes would vary from state to state because of the different needs and opinions from the citizens they represented, avoiding block voting.  Abraham Lincoln warned against political parties, recognizing that political parties might form voting blocks, disrupting the benefit of independent states voting for their constitutions rather than as party leadership controlled.  Likewise, the independence of the Supreme Court, following the law rather than politics, would check personal and political influence.  

The wisdom of the Founding Fathers is always "Something to Consider."