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GAME PLAN

Congratulations to any of you who root for the Seattle Seahawks. 

Being a former sportswriter, I know that a winning Super Bowl team is the one that executes its game plan better. On Sunday, the Seahawks’ plan appeared to be focusing on the younger members of the New England Patriots’ offensive line and pressuring their quarterback. The Patriots came close to figuring it out in the fourth quarter, but came up short.

There’s a lesson here for the forces trying to undo the mess that is the United States of America.

We have midterm elections in nine months. In special and off-year elections leading up to November, Democrats are far outperforming the norms. They’ve captured legislative seats in what were thought to be safe Trump districts and taken over municipalities previously run by Republicans.

Democrats are winning because most Americans are sick of this Trump crap. They’ve seen the U.S. embarrassed on the world stage, the economy slide, and the disgrace of mass arrests and extrajudicial murder by the human waste known as ICE.

But success can only be fueled by anger for only so long – although I suspect people are so angry that this feeling will last longer than usual.

Democrats – and the non-Democrats who can’t stand what’s happening to our country – need to come up with a game plan. One that will spell out what they plan to do to not only end the nightmare of Trump II, but to make life genuinely better for the 342 million-plus Americans who aren’t billionaires.

This plan should not be developed by a liberal think tank, or by the groups perceived as being on the left.

It should be developed by the people who it affects. What the Democrats need to do is travel the country listening to the problems people have – and then sounding out solutions.

Take healthcare, which until the Trump threat to democracy was probably the biggest problem people in this country faced.

I’m on Medicare, so healthcare costs are merely outrageous. For many people who aren’t 65, they border on catastrophic. The cost of taking care of yourself and your loved ones should not be an impediment to your financial viability.

The country might finally be ready for universal healthcare. Maybe Medicare for All. Maybe even something as advanced as Britain’s NHS.

But Democrats need to get their push for this from the American people. The ones who are paying outrageous premiums, who are committing huge chunks of their financial wherewithal to pay for prescriptions Having town halls throughout the country – forget the blue state/red state thing – is an important way to get a public impetus for improving healthcare. 

Pointing out that Trump is constantly proclaiming that he’s “two weeks away” from a great plan to replace the Affordable Care Act, drawing up a plan – maybe naming it for a place where a town hall came to a solid conclusion – and then getting just about every Democrat running for the House, the Senate and the statehouses to stand behind that plan. 

That’s what needs to be done to ensure Democrats are not just using rage bait. That it’s finally time to stop screwing around with people’s lives and start making those lives better.

And not just with healthcare. Infrastructure. Immigration. Women’s rights. Climate change. Campaign finance reform. Ending corruption.

This isn’t that original. In our lifetime, the Republicans have run on the Contract for America and Project 2025 – and as miserable as they are, they’ve executed them well. 

The New Deal is an example on our side – we’re still reaping the benefits of FDR’s vision and the impetus for real change. It led to the Democratic Party controlling Congress pretty steadily from the 1930s to the 1980s.

It’s a game plan. Just like what the Seahawks executed in Super Bowl LX. Only this time, both Pioneer Square and Copley Square – and every place in between – will find reason to celebrate.

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Uncategorized

ERASING ERASURE

Carter Woodson created what has become Black History Month because he refused to be erased.

Woodson became a black historian the hard way. His parents, both slaves until a few years before he was born, needed his income in rural Virginia. So he worked as a sharecropper and miner, moving to West Virginia at 17 to dig for coal there.

Well past the age most people graduate from high school, Woodson began attending classes. He finished in less than two years, then got a degree from Berea College in Kentucky. After a stint working for the U.S. government in our then-colony of The Philippines, he got a second bachelor’s from the University of Chicago and then a Ph.D. from Harvard.

But this was the early 20th century – I’m guessing the time period that some folks in red hats perceive as when America was great. 

So when Woodson, with credentials that probably blew away most of those deciding, was refused admission to American Historical Association conferences, he took his wisdom and created the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.

Because Woodson knew – as anyone with even a smidgen of understanding knows – that Black history is American history. It’s an integral part – American history and accomplishment is woefully incomplete without an understanding of what Black people endured and contributed to this country.

Woodson first created Negro History Week 100 years ago. It later became Black History Month and continues to this day with the guidance of what’s now known as the Association for the Study of African American Life and History

He put in February. Not, as some comedians like to joke, because it’s the shortest month, but because it’s the month in which two of the most important figures in Black American lives – Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass – were born.

Black History Month has grown more prominent in recent years. The association that runs it has an annual theme for its commemoration and program, this year focusing on the celebration’s centennial. Other years have seen attention given to education, economics, politics and the arts.

Of course, since the 2024 election, Trump and his gangsters have tried to diminish Black history. There should just be history is the gist of what they’re saying, trying to make it seem as though racial bigotry and animus have been eliminated.

In some cases, retroactively. In Philadelphia, signs discussing how enslaved Africans worked at George Washington’s home were taken down; the city is suing the administration to get them returned. Last year, the dolt occupying the Secretary of Defense’s (that’s right!) office was forced to retreat after an attempt to remove references to the Tuskegee Airmen from training material.

Erasure is not limited to Black people. You’re watching it in real time at the Super Bowl.

It is – to say the very least – insulting the intelligence of anyone with half a brain to think there needs to be an “All American” alternative to the scheduled official halftime performance of Bad Bunny. It implies a) that the Super Bowl is a strictly United States event; b) that Puerto Rico, Bad Bunny’s home, is not part of the United States; and c) that any of the human leaf blower voices listed on the alternative show are in any way comparable to one of the most dynamic and entertaining performers in the world.

But bigots seem determined to have their say. I’m an elderly Italian-American man and the only Spanish I used to know was the translation of English language ads and warnings on the New York City subway (Aviso: La vía del tren subterráneo es peligrosa. Si el tren se para entre las estaciones, quédese adentro. No salga afuera. Siga las instrucciones de los operadores del tren o la policía). That said, the only reason I’m watching the game is to share the joy of Bad Bunny with hundreds of millions around the world.

Bad Bunny, like Carter Woodson, refuses to be erased. So do other Black, Hispanic, Asian, and indigenous people. So do those of us Caucasians who refuse to accept a homogenous white identity, instead relishing the history of our immigrant ancestors.

Combined, those histories tell the real story of a country that hopefully will be great again after we fight off Trump’s effort to destroy us from within.

If you wonder why Black History Month is a big deal, there are two important reasons. One is that you’re going to hear and read a lot of interesting stories that you didn’t know before about Black contributions to America’s struggle.

The other is that no history is invalid or unworthy. History is history. It’s how we know that reverting to the past doesn’t make America great – learning from it and improving on it does.

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