Thursday, January 29, 2026

LEFT FOOT, RIGHT FOOT, WE KEEP ON...


I went to a candlelight vigil two nights ago to honor and remember the murder, by federal ICE and Border Patrol agents, of two different people on the streets of Minneapolis who were acting in the role of observers of ICE and CBP activity in their neighborhoods.   

For historical reference in case my grandkids ever read my blog books:  ICE is Immigration and Customs Enforcement; CBP is Customs and Border Patrol. The current presidential administration has sent hundreds and thousands of ICE and border patrol agents into liberal-leaning American cities in liberal-leaning states to "round up" the "worst of the worst" undocumented immigrants who have committed violent crimes.  Los Angeles, Chicago, Portland Oregon,  now Minneapolis, and now heading to Maine and beyond.  They are rounding up not only criminals, but anyone they feel like, anyone who has brown skin and a bounty on their heads, since they get a bonus for meeting arrest quotas.  

It turns out 73% of those being detained and/or deported without due process have NO criminal record, are here legally or may even be U.S. citizens.  

The agents are recruited without care to qualifications or training, and given weapons and explicit permission to "clean up" areas deemed to be "dangerous", like quiet neighborhoods.  They are dressed in military camo war-like uniforms,  do not wear name tags and always cover their faces with bandana type masks.  They menace and abuse and beat up people, throwing them into vans and whisking them to private, for profit immigration detention centers where detainees are locked up in overcrowded, dirty, dangerous cellblocks away from their families (unless their kids got scooped up too, which is common) awaiting indefinitely a possible deportation.  No due process.  NO due process.

So people not targeted by ICE or CBP have decided to come to the aid of their communities by standing in witness to these abhorrent activities. They pass out little red cards to people who may be targeted, with information about their rights as a targeted person.  They have whistles around their necks to call out an alert to ICE presence and arrests.  They have cell phones in their hands to record ICE abuses during a sweep of an area.  Whistles, cards, and cell phones are the weapons of peaceful witness going up against armed men unwilling to show their faces, unwilling to show their names, with permission from our Homeland Security Department, with the blessing of the President, to act with impunity and without constraint.

On January 7th,  a 37 year old mother, Renee Good, had just dropped her 6 year old son at school when she became aware of ICE activity. Being a trained observer, she and her wife went to the area with their whistles.  Her car was at an angle on a portion of the street, but cars were able to get around her; she was not impeding movement.  ICE agents descended upon her car, reached in through her open window.  She turned her wheels away from the agents attempting to drive away, her last words, with a smile being, "That's fine, dude.  I'm not mad at you."  An officer shot her three times through her open window, killing her instantly while calling her a "fucking bitch".  It was all recorded by bystanders.  

On January 24th, VA Hospital I.C.U. nurse Alex Pretti, also 37 years old, arrived at a scene of CBP agents knocking people to the ground in their activities and tried to help a woman who had been toppled.  Seven agents wrestled him to the ground, pistol-whipped him, beat him.  In the melee they discovered he had a concealed firearm (legal and with a permit to carry it) and disarmed him.  One officer held Pretti's gun at his side while two others shot the disarmed Pretti 10 times, killing him on the street.  His last words were to the woman he had tried to help, "Are you OK?"

Both of these people were white, committed to peacefully witnessing and documenting the abuses toward people of color by the federal agents in their neighborhoods.  In both cases Homeland Security and the President called them "domestic terrorists" and denigrated their reputations with vile lies.  They told us, the public, that what we saw with out own eyes on multiple videos taken by bystanders did not happen.  They said the agents shot in self-defense out of fear for their lives.  They declared there will be no investigation by Minnesota law enforcement, that Homeland Security and the US Justice Department will investigate. It would be laughable if not for being so tragic.  Fascism is here.

So, many of us are reeling.  There is numb shock.  There is outrage.  There is a sense of overwhelm.  There is confusion and disorientation.  There is exhaustion.  There is the realization that countless black and brown people are being brutalized and killed out of sight of cameras.  And the reminder that this attack on certain people is how it has been, over and over, in our history.  And those who have stood against this cruelty have been brutalized and killed too.  In my lifetime, the Civil Rights Movement and the Viet Nam War protests saw similar cruelty towards a target group, along with those who tried to stand witness and protest.  

I have read, watched, talked, thought, been immersed in the cultural rage of this past month.  (Well, at least rage by those of us who don't think any of this is normal or desirable or in alignment with American ideals.)  I needed to go to that vigil, to gather with my community in solidarity, to light a candle, to perhaps hear soft music, or encouraging words, or acknowledgment of our collective grief, to be mostly silent and breathe together, making eye contact or having a quiet conversation of support.  That's what I thought a vigil was.  I was not entirely correct.

We arrived a bit late, to find about 150 people gathered, with a local Christian pastor speaking at a microphone.  I sort of tuned her out.  I did not come for a Christian church service, but understood her words might be meaningful to some attending. So I found a place on the fringes to stand and wait until she was finished.  Then the organizers spoke about ongoing efforts to peacefully protest and resist.  It was starting to feel like a rally and another call to action.  I understand.  Doing something is important and empowering.  

Then the mic was opened to any who felt moved to speak.  Uh-oh.  In my experience this is a risky invitation.  And sure enough, the first speaker was a young man full of righteous rage.  While I agreed with his point of view, the F-word laden rant shouted to the crowd felt like a verbal assault that I could not tolerate and incongruent with the candle-in-the-darkness vibe.  I left.  I heard his voice echoing off the downtown buildings almost all the way back to my car.  I don't know what happened after that, but I knew that the vigil was not the balm I'd hoped for and needed.  

It is important for everyone to deeply feel and express whatever is "up" for them.  I know that.  But witnessing more rage did not serve my process of integration.  I needed quiet; I needed a feeling of calm; I needed the connection of community in sadness and grief and smiles of encouragement and understanding.  I went home and got quiet.  Hub made us a lovely dinner.  I emailed and texted with friends who had been there too, who it turned out felt similarly to me.  We held each other in the love and care we needed.

I spent much of last week "doing democracy".  With the League of Women Voters I pre-registered new voters at the local high school and did a tour of our county elections office, observing their process for testing on site voting machines and ensuring ballot accuracy.  I attended an Indivisible sign wave on the streets after Pretti's killing.  I've called all of my state and federal representatives and senators.   This week I've Zoomed into the LWV Lobby Week issue updates and have taken action on a variety of bills before the State Legislature. I voted for the school district bond and levy and wrote a letter to the editor urging others to do that too.  Then I went to the vigil.  And yesterday I realized I had to stop.  Just for a little while.  I often get to the point of feeling like none of my efforts matter, and that simultaneously I'm not doing enough.  The calls for action are endless.

Yesterday I woke up in tears again, brain in sort of a fog.  I decided I needed to go somewhere.  So Hub and decided to visit the community we hope to move into in a couple of years.  We saw friends there, met some lovely people, had a great yummy "I don't care how many calories this is" lunch and popped in to talk to our marketing gal about options for upgrading the interior of our apartment if we want different flooring or cabinets or tile.  Just life stuff.

I could beat myself up about being inappropriate and "selfish" and future-oriented, fiddling away as America burns.  But the other disorienting thing is that life really does continue to happen.  The good with the awful, the mundane with the unthinkable, the joyful with the sorrow.

Left foot, right foot, we keep on.  We live our values.  We take care of each other.  We take care of ourselves.  We take a break.  We do not quit.

At least, that's the view from here...©

Photo Credit:  Everett Daily Herald

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

HEALTH CARE FOR THE ELDERLY

Stipulating  from the top.  Yes, I am very fortunate to have health care coverage.  Since turning 65 we have used Medicare Advantage plans.  There are many and we have a person we see annually to help us choose which is best for us depending upon projected health care needs and their various coverage options.  Also which one has successfully negotiated a contract with the providers we see.  

And so begins the completely screwed up profit-driven health care system in the United States.  

This year the Medicare Advantage plan we've had for the past few years (and which we were happy with) did NOT end up with a contract with our health care clinic and other providers so our choice was to find all new doctors under the old plan, or join a new plan that covered our current providers. We decided the logical thing would be to change insurance rather than change our doctors, dentist, etc.


Our new coverage began January 1 and I immediately got a letter from the new insurance company assigning me a new Primary Care Physician, with the helpful advice that if I did not want that person as my PCP, just call their handy 1-800 number to talk to a representative who could help me choose another. Easy, peasy.

This morning I placed that call at around 7:20 a.m. to let them know I already had a PCP I've been seeing for many years and plan to keep her and that she is "in network", meaning covered by my new Medicare Advantage plan, United Health Care.  I dialed the number in the letter and of course got a recording with a raft of meaningless (to me) information about their website, app, etc, which I'd already downloaded and accessed.  

I made it through the initial automated maze, to finally be asked why I was calling.  I said "update primary care physician".  But the A.I. voice was stumped and said, "It sounds like you are calling about a referral or appointment."  I said "No". And "she" repeated her query about why I was calling, so I repeated my response and she went back to "It sounds like you are calling about a referral...etc etc."  I was in the loop of non-communication with a robot.  Frustrated, I hung up.  That number in the letter was not working for me.

So I went to their handy dandy app.  I found the chat option and opened a chat.  The responder actually sounded like maybe a real person, but who knows?  I explained my situation, as well as my frustration with getting through to a real person.  It seemed like I was being heard and understood, but "Prince" (not his real name, I'll bet) kept asking me to "give him 2-3 minutes to access my file", then to "give me 2-3 minutes to update your PCP", then "still working, please give me 2-3 minutes more", on and on.  Twenty minutes into it he said he could not add my PCP's name because she is not accepting new patients.  I KNOW THAT!  I'm not a new patient; she's been my doc for years; I just want her name in my file to avoid any confusion when I go to my annual physical later this month.  He said he could not add her name, but to "call this number and they will help you" and he gave me another 800 number to call, assuring me he had sent them info on my request and they would know what to do.

I called.  I got another automated menu of meaningless info and then it asked if I was calling as: 1) a member of United Health Care.  Or: 2) if I was calling about the UHC plan.  I said yes to being a member. The response was for me to call the "member line" which was the FIRST number I called to start with -- the one who did not understand my request.  And then it said, "This call will now be disconnected."  And it was. So I hung up and called again, thinking I'd just choose the other option.  So I did that and it seemed to work until the voice said, "First, are you calling as a UHC member?" And again I said yes in order to not get a sales pitch.  Again I was told to call the member number and was disconnected.

I was now about 45 minutes into this fiasco.  

I called the original number and when it asked what I wanted I finally remembered what I'd learned in Automated Hell recently on a trip, that I could say, "Speak to a representative".  I really kicked myself for not remembering that, when almost immediately I was told a rep would be right with me.  Well, maybe not right away, but eventually a guy came on and I went through my whole thing again.  I say this calmly now, but in the moment, my voice shook with frustration, overwhelm, and a bit of rage.  He was sympathetic but confused and need more information and queried me about why the AI voice did not understand my request and I said, (I'm not proud of this) "Because I didn't fit the list of problems it could respond to!!! It's not a fucking human!!!"  (I apologized immediately and I might have heard a soft chuckle on his end.)  He said he would file a complaint about the AI issues because they take customer service interface very seriously.  Fine.  

Then he asked who my PCP was, name, address, phone, etc. and put me on hold "for a minute" while he checked on my file.  It was actually many, many minutes and when he came back he said he couldn't update because he went to the Optum website and that doctor is not accepting new patients.  "OMG!!!!  I KNOW THAT!  I have said over and over I am an existing patient; I only want to let UHC know the name of my current, actual PCP!"  He said, "Oh, you are an existing patient?" like it was the first he'd heard that.  "Let me go check on something and get back; can you hold?"  Of course.

Thirty minutes later, he was back with "good news".  After calling my doctor's office (and no doubt navigating their animated and frustrating system) he was able to confirm I am, in fact, an existing patient and he was able to update my United Health Care file.  He said this with such pride.  I had to laugh.  I said, "Wow, they don't pay you enough, do they, to listen to frustrated "members" rant and then have to fact check what they tell you."  Again, he might have chuckled but did not engage and I recalled that "(your) call may be recorded" and he'd likely catch hell for commiserating with my frustration.

So with that 45 minute call, along with 30+ minutes on the chat, and all the "call this, call that" numbers and automated deadends, after over an hour and a half I was finally able to complete my mission -- which should have taken 10 minutes, tops.  There were many moments when I was "this close" to just hanging up.  But I was determined not to give in, not to quit.  The System was NOT going to defeat me!!!  Not today, MF!

This is a crazy world, isn't it?  There are times I feel like I'm living in a nightmare maze of wrong turns, false hopes, kicks in the shin, tiny victories, and a pre-recorded ever-repeating ear worm 'on hold' jingle that never ends.

At least that's the view from here...©

Photo Credit: Just saw it online, not sure of source.  But if I knew I'd immediately acknowledge cuz it's so true and funny.

P.S.  I may have offended some of you with my swearing in this post.  Oops.  I will now go sit in blissful peace on my meditation cushion to make amends.  Ohmm.......🙏🏽