By Elaine L. Orr
I've been less interested in writing the last few months -- something that has never happened. I had successful cancer surgery in 2024 and serious neck surgery in early 2025, so I explained (to myself) the recuperations affected my writing drive.
To be honest with myself, medical issues are not the problem. I am in a major funk over not simply the election of Donald Trump but the people around him who want to shred democracy. Without one iota of introspection or analysis of government programs, they have slashed the ability of governments at all levels to meet the needs of citizens. I think the result will be vastly reduced services and many functions pushed to state budgets. And reduced food programs, cuts in cancer research, slashed health care, etc.
The president is not sure everyone needs due process (guaranteed by the 5th and 14th amendments), which is meant to ensure fairness and protect people from arbitrary government actions. A senior aide is talking about why it would be okay to get rid of the right of habeus corpus, which is the right of a person in custody to be brought before a judge to determine if their confinement is lawful.
Immigration as the Focus for Denying Rights
Trump and his ilk have created an enemy (immigrants) around which they hope to gather enough anger to support their actions. It's a common action of authoritarian leaders. Who would question the need to expel violent criminals who entered the U.S. unlawfully? Almost no one.
So what's the problem? Nearly all immigrants (legal or otherwise) are looking for freedom and the chance for a better life for their families. They do the jobs Americans are unwilling to do. Have you ever seen a list of the prisons or mental health institutions that "released their criminal residents" to come to the U.S.? There's no evidence of that. Facts matter.
Multiple Congresses have tackled immigration problems (and there are many), and the 2024 legislation would have been a major step in controlling it. (President Trump didn't want it passed, as he wanted to run on the issue. Shameful. Republicans dropped support after having taken the lead on the legislation.)
Ronald Reagan tried. The Immigration Reform and Control Act he signed in 1986 authorized amnesty for 3 million people, with the proviso that U.S. companies would be penalized in the future for hiring undocumented people. President Reagan, and others, believed that if it was difficult for immigrants to work they would not come.
The U.S. didn't limit immigration (except for health reasons) until after World War I. Immigration quotas based on nationality were made permanent in 1924 and abolished in 1965. While they don't exist now, most of the one million green cards go to relatives of U.S. citizens.
If you don't know the story of your family beyond grandparents. check out the U.S. census for their occupations and income levels. If you don't want to pay a genealogy site, go to your library; they'll have a subscription to Ancestry.com or another site. Same with the free Family Search Centers, sponsored by the Church of the Latter Day Saints (Mormons). Some are affiliated with public libraries.
My own ancestors are all White. Most came from Ireland, none from what Mr. Trump calls the "s**thole countries. Or the African nation of Lesotho, which he maintains no one has heard of.
While one grandmother was born after her parents immigrated to the U.S., most came in the 18th and early 19th centuries. I keep wondering what ending birthright citizenship means for succeeding generations.
I Have Digressed...
I need to figure out how to balance the importance of resisting authoritarianism and cruelty with maintaining the ability to write.
In 2018 (when children were being taken from their parents) I wrote In the Shadow of Light, the fictional story of Corazon and Pico who were separated from their mother at the U.S. border.
This time, I'll revise The Art of Deliberate Distraction, nonfiction written as a panacea to constant worry. It needs to offer constructive suggestions for dealing with the overwhelming frustration and grief of the dismantling of democracy. How can people constructively distract themselves and possibly contribute to hope?
But I do need to continue to write traditional (cozy) mysteries. Besides being my bread and butter, they are their own distraction for people. They also have characters who work to make their world a better place. Good reading for the current time.
When I talk to unpublished authors, I always say they can't wait for a muse. They need to put their tailbones in chairs and work on some semblance of a schedule. Even if it's an hour a week. I need to stop waiting to feel better about the world and just write.
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