Readers Write: Border Crisis

 

 

Image taken from July 2nd, 2019 Time Article A Reckoning After Trump’s Border Separation Policy: What Kind of Country Are We?

By Linda Kelley Freivalds

Published July 3rd, 2019

We can step up and fix immigration

I’ve been amazed and shocked by President Donald Trump and his administration’s positions on so many issues, I cannot count. But watching the news with photos of congressional visits to refugee sites in Texas I am appalled, embarrassed, ashamed, discouraged, saddened and whatever other words are available to see the photos of what our country is doing to people who are only trying to escape tragedy and difficulty in their home countries. We, America, are acting no better than other despotic countries.

My husband and his family escaped from Latvia in 1944 when the Soviet Union invaded their country. His family was fortunate to be taken in by the U.S. troops at a displaced persons camp in Austria and finally was transported to the United States. John, my husband, to pay back the gift of becoming an American, sponsored a Cuban family when Fidel Castro kicked out 350,000 people who are now thriving in the United States.

We did it before; we can do it again.

Linda Freivalds, Wayzata

 

Freivalds: To be Airbnb or not to be

 

Published 5/30/2019

By John Freivalds

Talk about cultural isolation. Living on Lexington some 50 miles from downtown Roanoke I didn’t know what Uber was until a friend of mine from New York came to visit. He wanted to call Uber and see if they could take him to the airport. As he called, I asked him “what is Uber?” At that time there was no Uber that came out this far. Then I found out about Airbnb when friend Sandy told me she had listed her house on Airbnb. What’s Airbnb? I asked. Not surprisingly it’s an online company that started in San Francisco (www.airbnb.com)

Read more …
 

Kristallnakt finds Kansas (and most everywhere in-between)

 

 

Published March 1st, 2019

Duluth News Tribune, Duluth, MN

By John Freivalds

For you Kristallnakt challenged, Hitler's Nazi brown shirts with government support smashed Jewish owned shops and burned 270 synagogues on November 9th 1938, some 80 years ago. Sadly, once again history repeats itself. Will anyone remember the turmoil's we are going through and its causes 80 years ago. Probably not. Yet Kristallnakt and the Border wall have served the same purpose; create fear and intolerance. It is really time to soft pedal Trump and his most ardent supporters as a mere disrupter of the status quo and admit they are really no different from Hitler and autocrats from the past. 

Read more …

Freivalds: Leave the chihuahuas at home

 

 

 

By John Freivalds, Coffee by the Lake

Published 2/12/19

Lakeshore Weekly News-Wayzata, MN

 

We shared the elevator from the parking ramp to Target Center with a doting grandmother. She was taking her 10-year-old grandson to his first basketball game.

As we walked into the Target Center a guy was standing on a wooden platform surrounded by well-wishers yelling, “Repent!” They probably had the right idea. 

Read more …

 Come on, cold wimps; it's only been 'a bit brisk'

 

Published 1/31/2019

Duluth New Tribue, Duluth, MN

By John Freivalds

 

Methinks we have become a nation of wimps. I think it started with the invention of the concept of wind chill, which came out in the middle of the 1970s. Then Thomas Gifford wrote "Wind-Chill Factor," which became a No. 1 best seller. Gifford was born in Dubuque, Iowa, where I lived for 33 months before moving to the Twin Cities. While in Dubuque we did have one morning when it was minus-26. For you weather-challenged, wind chill is "the cooling effect of wind on exposed skin." A little irrelevant in that few of us run around naked in a blizzard.

But really, folks, cold is not what it used to be.

 

Many of us have heated garages, remote starters for our cars, earmuffs, hand warmers, down jackets, Will Steger mukluks, thermal socks (if not underwear), fur-lined gloves, and even heated steering wheels. We drive to work and park in underground garages and work in heated offices. I even saw an icehouse being hauled onto a lake with a propane tank on the back. In fact, where would it be so cold that you needed a fur coat?

Not even at the Vikings stadium, which is enclosed and heated. Bud Grant, the former Vikings coach, remember, forbid heaters on players' benches during games.

And these days the utility can't cut off your heat in the cold weather.

Yeah, and the reality show, "Naked and Afraid," is done in the tropics. Let's see them do it in Antarctica. The University of Minnesota Duluth is noted for its study of hypothermia; so let's get folks there involved.

But it sure does make good reading when the topic is the "polar vortex" coming down from the north. You can tell your friends in San Francisco how cold it's going to get. But I wonder how Plains Indians and the early settlers got by. For one, they slept with their animals. Cows not only gave milk; they radiated heat.

I was born in Latvia, a country with a 140-mile border with Russia. I left as a child after the Russians invaded, as my father, a journalist, either would have been shot or all of us would have been sent to Siberia — where it's really cold. And in those days there were no Cabelas to go to. Or warm food to help you keep going. And no baths when you trudged back to the barracks.

Cold is relative. Once in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, I asked the locals about some low temperatures they had been having. Yep, it was "cool." That was the only thing they would say. Or my boss at the Grain Exchange walking through the wind tunnels of downtown saying, "Yes, it's brisk today." Or died-in-the-wool Minnesotans saying they like the cold because it keeps the riff-raff out.

My library is full of books about Arctic and Antarctic exploration. Those guys went out without down anything to explore the endless tracts of ice and snow and cold.

Or there are totally crazy guys like Jon Turk, author of "Cold Oceans," who decided to kayak around Cape Horn. Lake Superior was too tame for him.

John Freivalds of Wayzata, Minn., is the honorary consul for Latvia in Minnesota and the author of six books. His website is jfapress.com.