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Bill Cryer's avatar

Jim, as bitter as a Michigan winter can be, you managed somehow to find a path out. I wonder, if you had been one of those boys in a “puffy down jacket, ski tag on the zipper”, would you have been motivated to move on? I’ll bet not. People—Gere and his like excepted—want to be left alone. “the government that governs least is the government that governs best” is the political credo of most citizens—and not just in this country. The truth is, we don’t want to know what is really going on, we just want to know that the HEB is open, the roads are clear, and our money is still good. Of course, all of those things depend on government officials seeing to their very important duties. What is so very strange to me is so many who loudly proclaim that “I did it myself” don’t realize the simple fact: government, big government, government that has its fingers in every aspect of their life, is a necessary by-product of living in a complex, exploitative society. We are a step away from savagery without our rules and laws and , yes, a too-often over-bearing government that orders you connect your septic tank to the city sewer. What we should be demanding is that our political leaders actually solve problems and make our lives fuller and richer rather than wasting time and resources arguing about personal choices, such as abortion or gay rights—often crucial personal concerns— but best left in the sanctuary of the home, with the government making sure those choices are respected, just as it does in the choices of marriage, careers or the design of our latest tattoo. The failure of our political class is that they are unable and unwilling to face issues that can only be solved collectively, : climate, war, poisoning our environment, immigration. These are problems that we “can’t do ourselves.” Unfortunately for us, our political leaders —of both parties—seem more interested in their careers than problem solving. A wholesale change in leadership is needed and it ain’t happening fast enough. We are a stiff-necked people, stubbornly clinging to illusions of self-sufficiency.

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Myra Jolivet's avatar

Growing Up took me back to my childhood in Berkeley in the 60s and the "Gary" in my world, an older sister explaining the depths of America's conspiracies to me. You and I spent our childhoods at opposite ends of the country, but the common ground is there. The great gift of your writing is your ability to tell us your story against the backdrop of national events and the condition of humans, while linking us all together with common ground. My mind re-visited a past that moved at the speed of light with death, protests, disillusionment, and a struggle to hope for better days. Everything IS political if we use the definition, "the public affairs of a country." I hope your writing remains, political. We need it.

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