America, We Have a Problem

Immigration has torn our nation apart.


Millions of people have entered the United States illegally. You can use all the euphemisms you like — undocumented workers, persecuted pilgrims, suffering masses — but the simple truth is they are people who entered our nation illegally.


The USCCB has issued a strong condemnation of the Trump Administration’s “indiscriminate mass deportation of people.” The bishops offer a token nod to the right of a nation to defend its borders. But you can sum up the document by saying that deporting illegals is cruel, unChristian, and worthy of condemnation.


In reality, the deportations are not “indiscriminate” but carefully planned and executed.


The bishops, in their analysis, ignore how we got into this mess. It resulted from the Obama and Biden Administrations inviting millions of illegals into the nation for one or more of the following reasons:


1. Overwhelm the social-services system and therein force massive transfers of wealth from taxpayers to the government.
2. Boosting census numbers to create more Democrat-voting Congressional districts.
3. Adding millions of welfare-depending people to the voting rolls (even if illegally).
4. Creating a huge class of people dependent on the government for support and thus willing to support any and all entitlement programs.
5. Providing cheap labor that displaces existing American workers.
6. Centralizing all power in the government at the expense of the individual.

All this was easy to see coming. When Biden was President, thousand of illegals streamed across the border each day. We didn’t know where they came from or where they were going. Many were unaccompanied minors destined for sex trafficking or virtual enslavement.


Biden said there was nothing he could do without new legislation. But after Trump was elected, the border crossings stopped. It was a miracle, right?


Now we have millions of people here illegally and they are demanding we take care of them. And, of course, there are millions of people born and raised here legally who also are demanding we take care of them.


In this context, the Trump Administration is doing the hard task that must be done to hold people accountable by forcing them to accept the consequences of their illegal (criminal) actions. The consequences might be unpleasant but that is the price for going against the law.


The bishops have countered by playing the useful idiot: abetting illegal actions while believing they are doing the compassionate, Christian thing. In offering concern about illegal immigrants, they ignore Americans who lose their jobs to cheap labor, taxpayers who lose their homes, citizens who can’t get health care because the medical system is overwhelmed, schools that are overcrowded and trying to teach students who don’t know English.


President Trump didn’t create this crisis but he is trying to solve it while preserving the United States of America.


Will the process be painful? Yes… but so would be doing nothing. If I come home to my house one day and another family has moved into my home illegally, getting them out will likely be painful. But so would it be painful to tell my family to shrug it off and go sleep on a park bench.


Of course, perhaps some dishonest realtor illegally sold my house to an unsuspecting soul who thought he has bought it honestly. Likewise, we probably have many people who entered the country illegally and were told it was okay and they could “get their papers later” and not to worry. We certainly hear the emotional stories of people crossing the river, trekking across the desert, working to make a better life for their families.


Those stories just give more credit to the immigrants who came to America legally, waited their turn, and worked to become citizens.

We don’t have a perfect system, but the system we have is better than just letting people stream into the country, demanding all the benefits afforded American citizens. America, our home, deserves protection, just like the home of an individual American. If we don’t accomplish that protection, what people come here to get will be gone.


The Charlie Kirk Effect


My wife and I have a pleasant Sunday after-church habit of going for a walk.
The town where we live is pleasant and safe and we usually go for about an hour. This includes a stop at a local chocolate shop for something sweet and a coffee to go. It is a leisurely walk, a walk I anticipate fondly,
I often wear a baseball cap for these walks, typically choosing one from my broad MAGA collection. This is not an effort to foment revolution, but just show support for what I believe in. Sometimes my hat causes a reaction from others out for a Sunday stroll. The reactions have evolved through three periods of time.
In the year or so before the 2024 Presidential election, reactions alternated between a sneer of contempt and a quiet nod of approval. The anti-MAGAs were much braver than the pro-MAGAS; I think people who agreed with my hat were fearful to show it. Hating MAGA was seen as acceptable.
This changed after Donald Trump was elected in 2024. I noticed that many people I passed smiled and bravely said “I like your hat.” The MAGAs had come out of the closet and felt they had permission to confess their support for Trump. On the other hand, those who had opposed Trump either eyed me warily or avoided eye contact.
We now are in a third period, which I believe exhibits “The Charlie Kirk Effect.”
In short, the horrific murder of Charlie Kirk has emboldened moral people with Christian values to stand up for what is right and to speak it. After all, if a man dies for the truth, the least the rest of us can do is defend the truth.
Last Sunday, I wore my least bold MAGA had on our walk. It is all black with black MAGA lettering — rather subtle. Still, I got reactions. The first came from a couple teenage boys on bicycles who stopped and said they really liked my hat. From my experience, such behavior from teenage boys is unusual.
Then a young couple walking a dog passed us and the wife flashed a big smile and said, “I love your hat.” That put a smile on my face — and my wife’s pretty smile grew bigger.
This, of course, is hardly a statistically significant survey of American opinion. But I believe it is a positive moment, at least for me.
Charlie Kirk sacrificed his life simply engaging in constructive dialog to help young people find the truth — about Christianity, marriage, honesty, the eternal truths embodied in the Ten Commandments.
Charlie set the bar for the rest and we must follow his lead. We all have the responsibility to speak truth with patience, kindness, and respect. I promise to try.

The Buck Stops

I’ve been hearing that many federal government employees are worried that they may lose their jobs. This is because of the aggressive work of President Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).


DOGE has started to look into budgets, staffing levels, and organizational failures in various parts of the government. Much to the surprise of no one, they have discovered there is a good deal of waste, corruption, and (believe it or not) lack of worker enthusiasm.


We taxpayers are paying more than we should and getting less than we deserve. Surprise: this has been going on for a long time. Perhaps that is why government employees are so shocked that there might be layoffs, downsizing, or early retirements — realities people in private industry have faced their entire working lives.


It seems the employees of the federal government believe they should have their jobs for life, get regular raises and promotions, work from home, and enjoy a month of paid vacation a year. So in light of an administration that believes government should be efficient and effective — and taxpayers should get honest work from the people they pay to serve them — federal workers are worried. Maybe they deserve to be worried.


Don’t get me wrong. Losing a job is a terrible experience. I’ve been through a couple major corporate reorganizations and downsizings that cost thousands of people their jobs. I’ve been the guy losing his job and the guy telling friends they were “redundant.” It is unpleasant being on either side of the conversation.
But life goes on, people adjust, and do the heroic tasks of caring for their families. There are sleepless nights and ample worry.


But people who run businesses, own homes (or hope to), and pay taxes also worry.


They worry about government regulations that make it difficult to stay in business.


They worry about how much higher their property taxes will go — and whether they can keep their homes (or ever afford one).


They worry that massive government spending and debt will mean they will lose more of their hard-earning income to taxes imposed by a wasteful and corrupt bureaucracy.


DOGE may seen cruel and heartless to federal workers fearing for their jobs. But to people scrimping to pay for health care and groceries, DOGE looks like the hope for a brighter future. If DOGE really saves a billion here and a billion there, those are billions that don’t have to come out of the paychecks of working Americans.

Vote for policy, not personality

Citizens and Christians have a more responsibility to vote.

You are going to hear that in homilies, news editorials, maybe even from friends and neighbors. I mostly agree. But not everyone votes with a clear head.  Many votes from ignorance, fear, and just plain stupidity.

There are many reasons to vote for a candidate, some good and some awful.  Let’s look.

10 worst reasons to vote for a candidate:

  1. They promise to expand government to make everyone equal.
  2. They want rich people to pay the “fair share” without telling you what that is.
  3. They want to increase taxes on businesses.
  4. They believe in the broad nonsense of “women’s health” issues.
  5. They support the Paris Climate Accords.
  6. They support DEI.
  7. They want to defund the police
  8. The deny that marriage is between one man and one woman.
  9. Your union boss supports them.
  10. They are a Democrat.

10 best reasons to vote for a candidate:

  1. They will cut taxes and regulation.
  2. They will maintain a strong military
  3. They support public safety.
  4. They will defend life at every stage from conception to natural death.
  5. The realize that government creates more problems than it solves.
  6. They recognize that the United States was founded on Judeo-Christian principles.
  7. They will defend the original intent of the Constitution.
  8. They will appoint conservative judges and executive-branch officials.
  9. They will limit the growth of government and reduce the number of government employees, programs, and offices.
  10. They are the Republican with a chance of winning.

You don’t have to be a genius to realize the worst reasons justify voting for Harris; the best reasons justify voting for Trump.

Some people – even those who agree with Trump on policy, say they just can’t vote for him because he is mean, is rich, or has a nasty personality.

Frankly, Harris doesn’t have a great personality and has lots of trouble being open and honest.  She also can’t seem to make up her mind about what she believes.

What Harris says will change with the direction of the wind; what Trump says is what he will do. He gets my vote because he will support the Constitution and the American people.

I’m not going to date him, spend my weekends fishing with him, or hang out at the Mar-a-Lago clubhouse. I will have the opportunity to live my life as a free man.

Pick policy over personality.