Archive for June 12, 2015

Forced to Crawl onto a Plane

A wheelchair-bound woman had a choice: crawl up the airplane steps or miss her flight.  American Airlines told Theresa Purcess it was too late to set up a ramp because she hadn’t requested one in advance.  Maybe so, but we never know in advance if we’ll board a plane through a floor-level tunnel or up long, steep steps.

I know from personal experience that there was at least one other option.  I’ve been placed in a chair and carried up airline steps by two airline employees.  Judging from this passenger’s picture, I wasn’t quite as heavy as Ms. Purcell, but these people are trained to bring people of all sizes up those steps.

American admits they blew it, not adhering to established regulations. They’ve apologized to her…but refused any compensation.  I think she deserves something for the humiliation she went through (again, from experience, I understand her humiliation), for denying her basic human dignity.  I doubt it’s worth what she’s asking; however, American should be penalized.

Meet Ms. Purcell and read more about her story at the Ch. 7 Eyewitness news story “Woman in Wheelchair Sues American Airlines after Having to Crawl onto Plane.”

 

 

Let ‘Em Camp Out

Landlords can raise rents.  No rent freeze in a city I saw on the news this morning.  They were debating a freeze as part of their plan to help their homeless population find shelter and get off the streets. Their final decision was to allow rents to continue on their spiral upwards.  As for the homeless, the city’s plan is to provide money for them to live, temporarily, in motels and campgrounds.

I have to admit, that’s getting some of them off the streets–and out of the good citizens’ sight–at least for awhile.  As far as a start toward a solution to the problem of people living inhumane lives on the streets, well, you be the judge.

 

 

They Hire Anybody who Asks

If you were a business owner, would you hire anyone who walked through your door and asked for a job–no background checks or interviews, just hired on the spot, no questions asked?  That’s what Greyston Bakery, in Yonkers, N.Y., does.  No openings?  The person goes on a waiting list until there is an opening.

Many of these new hires are ex-felons, immigrants, and addicts.  That doesn’t matter.  If they want to work, Greyston will train them and start them on the job.  These workers will also receive help with childcare, affordable housing, and healthcare.  Of course, if they don’t do their jobs properly, they also receive a boot out the door.

This company–quite successful, by the way–has a philosophy that business should be socially just.  What a novel idea!

Oh, and if you’ve ever eaten a Ben & Jerry’s brownie…they baked it.

For more details, go to the grist.org article on their site.

 

 

Personal Note: Two Rings

As you know, I don’t often blog about personal matters (although you get enough of my personal opinions!)  But today I’m sharing my bitter-sweet mood.

Last night my son and his fiance texted me pictures of the wedding rings that they’d just picked out for their Sept. 5 nuptials. I looked at those lovely rings and was surprised at my feelings.

Understand that the “kids” will both turn 30 in a month, and I’ve looked forward for many years to being mother of the groom.  I love my future daughter-in-law, because of herself and because she makes my son very happy.  I think they’ll have a beautiful life together…and give me wonderful grandchildren.

So why the sadness in the midst of my happiness?  I figured it out this morning.  The problem is that I’m a mother and that my son and I have always been exceptionally close, without an apron-string relationship.  And those rings represent the fact that he really is all grown up and about to begin a whole new phase of his life.  And I’m turning my “baby” over to another woman.

So now you know the truth about me: I pretend to be a rational, thinking person but have a side that’s irrational and emotional. Then again, that’s probably part of being a Mom, which is a title I cherish and will never give up, thanks to my son’s loving, caring, sharing future bride.

Our Ocean: Caring for a Friend

Our ocean.  It gives us beauty, fun, food, jobs, medicine, air, weather patterns, a place to think. In return, we give it pollution, beach erosion, and death to its inhabitants.  But with our normal daily activities we can reverse this destructive human trend:

1) Lessen pollution by conserving water and guarding against oil and antifreeze running into the ocean. (The ocean gets more oil from car leaks than from large tanker spills.)

2) Avoid litter–cigarette butts tossed onto the street end up in the ocean, killing sea-life.

3) Ask questions before buying seafood. Was it farmed, thus depending on wild fish as its food source?  Where was it farmed—inland, meaning that waste didn’t flow into the ocean?  If wild, was it caught in such a way that didn’t also catch turtles, dolphins, and other life that was simply discarded?   (For help, print a pocket guide from http://www.seafoodwatch.org/-/m/sfw/pdf/guides/mba-seafoodwatch-west-coast-guide.pdf?la=en.)

It’s not too late—yet—to start taking better care of our wonderful, watery friend.

 

 

Big Enough to Get Felonies Forgiven

Did you, like so many Americans, lose your home, job, or retirement because of the games played by JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and Barclays, and others?  Those financial institutions added a good number of people to the ranks of the homeless and jobless and endangered older people who now, thanks to them, have little or no retirement money to live on.

It looks like they’re going to get waivers of their penalties and regain their “trusted” status, despite their pleading guilty to felonies (rigging exchange rates).

It’s not a done deal yet, though.  If this angers you, if you feel they shouldn’t be forgiven so easily, read more details on the Credo Action website and sign their petition.

 

 

A Reminder from Charles Schutz

After my negative blogs this week, I have to get back to my true nature, the one I was born with and kept until I began letting the world press in on me.  Who else to help but Charlie Brown and Snoopy?  Thank you, Charles Schultz, for a much-needed Thursday Thought:

Another Black Mark Against California

Yesterday I wrote about a free ride for CA legislators. Today I’m again unhappy with my normally beloved state.

We’ve put in a lot of time, energy, and money to solve a problem: executions.  We haven’t had any for 9 years, and 170 people currently sit on Death Row, 17 of whom have no appeals left to them.

After hassling with the Supreme Court for some time, our corrections department has come up with a new form of execution.  Will it succeed where the electric chair, gas chamber, and 3-drug injections failed?  And will “success” be measured in a population of 0 on Death Row?

I can’t help wondering if all the time, effort, research, and money put into devising this new killing system were put into repairing our biased, unequally applied, wealth-driven, often wrong legal system, if maybe we’d reach 0 population on Death Row naturally, through death-by-old-age or morally, by equal application of capital punishment and release of people who, thanks to that equal application and advances in science, should never have been there in the first place.

 

 

Drunk Legislators

Is it okay for your legislators to get drunk and not call Urber, a taxi, or a friend to drive them home?  It is in my state (CA).  Or so it seems.  Our lawmakers have provided themselves with 24-hour-a-day drivers, on stand-by and getting paid (yes, by us taxpayers) to pick them up if they’ve been drinking.  This way, they argue, they won’t get a DUI.

Well, duh!  Do what your constituents do: call that taxi or Urber or friend.

Better still, be grown-ups and don’t put yourselves in that position.  Remember this: we elected you on the idea that you would make reasoned, sober, adult decisions, and you will be up for re-election sometime soon…

 

Are You In the Know?

This weekend, did you photobomb while twerking in your jeggings like a silly emoji while drinking lambrusco and wiping crema-like sweat off yourself?

If you aren’t totally in the know and don’t understand what I’ve just written, you need to consult the new Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary.

That august tome has just added 1700 new entries PLUS 700 new ways to use already-listed words.

On May 20 I thanked Richard Nixon for expanding our language.  This week I thank Merriam-Webster.  I think….