Posts Tagged With: Nuns on the Bus

2018 Trip 5: Orlando and Palm Beach: Nov. 2

Part of the caravan to Mar-a-Lago, we are the red car.

West Palm Beach, FL Nov. 2

Nuns on the Bus. Well, this blog is political. Fair warning. One of the reasons we are down in Florida is to support the “Nuns on the Bus”; a group of Catholic religious women who are going around the country to educate the public about the inequalities in the 2017 tax bill. They make stops: at congressional offices, at local non-profits helping those in need of assistance, and at town hall locations to explain the tax bill.

This is the 6th time they have made a similar cross-country trip for justice. This trip began 27 days ago in California and ended today with a gathering that drove by Mar-a-Lago. Last night, they held one of their town hall meetings to explain the tax bill. Their explanation is easily understood. I will see if I can briefly highlight it. (They made it easier to visualize by having five individuals represent a person they actually met on the tour who are in one of the five quintiles.)

First divide the country in to quintiles by income. That is, the bottom 20% of the people by income, then the next 20-40% (the lower middle quintile), then the people in the 40-60% of income (the middle class), then the people in the 60-80% of income (upper middle), and finally the top 20% by income. The KEY STARTING FACT is that from 1940 to 1980, each quintile grew by an equal percent. There were still top earners and people at the bottom, but each group’s income grew at the same rate.

Starting with the Reagan tax cuts and continued with the Clinton and Bush tax cuts, this equal growth in income changed dramatically. From 1980 to 2016, the list below shows how dramatic that has been:
Bottom quintile income grew by 8%
Lower middle income quintile grew by 17%
Middle income quintile grew by 20%
Upper middle income grew by 32%
Upper quintile income grew by 66%
Oh, and by the way, the top 1% income grew by 205%
Quite a difference from a 1940 to 1980 growth pattern that was equal for all quintiles. The town hall meeting visualized this by having the person representing each quintile take a proportionate number of steps to dramatize the difference.

But the second part of the meeting discussed the proposed program cuts that MUST be made (as legislators such as Sen. McConnell has indicated just recently) to pay for the tax cuts. In this enactment of the proposed program cuts, first each person took steps forward to demonstrate average tax refunds. The lower quintile average refund was $90, the top quintile was $193,000. Then our representative individual took steps backward to represent the dollars they lose by the elimination of such programs as food stamps, Children’s Health Insurance Program, school lunches, Pell grants, etc. The lower two quintiles lost money; the top quintile’s gains far outpaced everyone else.

Personally I regret the lost opportunity for the country. If we were to spend well over a trillion dollars; an infrastructure program would have attracted bipartisan support. Jobs would have been created, business (large and small) would have revenue and profits, and streets, bridges, water and sewer plants and lines could be improved, electrical lines upgraded, and state and national parks improved. Probably the worst travesty is that the tax cut and ignoring infrastructure reflected true Republican priorities; support the donor group and ignore Americans.

Welcome talks before the caravan departs.

Today the gathering at Meyer amphitheatre in West Palm Beach and the drive of a caravan of cars past Mar-a-Lago represented hope but possibly a futile gesture. When we wake up Wednesday morning, we should have a better indication.

Some personal tid bits. We are staying at a Hampton Inn in West Palm Beach. Unknown to us, the nuns stayed here also and we talked with several of them at breakfast. We were also able to renew acquaintance with several nuns we had met at the Cedar Rapids IA town hall meeting we attended earlier in October. At the drive to Mar-a-Lago we gave a ride to a couple; she was one of the original founders of Network Lobby. Network Lobby is the advocate arm of the U.S. women religious groups. She is married now and has four kids and 12 grandchildren. Her brother was one of the founders of Outback Steakhouse. He is out of that now and starting a new chain called Bolay, meals based on a bowl and healthy food options to fill it. As we left the rally and went to lunch, we happened to pass one and stopped there for lunch. It was quite nice.

Vote November 6


Ed and Chris

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2018: Staying Home for Awhile, October

Headwaters of the mighty Mississippi River at Itasca State Park in MN

Saint Paul, MN October 26

We will be leaving tomorrow for a week’s trip to Florida. We will blog about our travels and adventures in Florida next week so we want to wrap up our fall “close to home” activities.

Minnesota, like many other states in our diverse and beautiful country, has an extensive state park system. There are 76 state parks in Minnesota. Many people, we included, visit state parks that are near to their home and/or have a unique feature. To encourage people to visit all of the Minnesota state parks, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR oversees our state parks) has a program called the Passport Club. A person buys a booklet at a state park and then when they visit a MN state park, the booklet is stamped and dated from that park. In retirement, we decided to see how long it would take us to visit all the parks. We started in April 2015 and got our 74th stamp last October. (Two parks do not have to be visited since they can only be accessed by boat.). We picnicked, hiked and participated in programs at parks we never would have visited except for this passport challenge.

We have decided to complete a second MN State Parks Passport and have added the challenge of doing the Hiker’s Club hike that is identified at each park. These hikes range from 1 mile to 6 miles. We have already visited 9 parks on our road to complete our second passport book.

Itasca State Park

Hiking at Wild River (top), Lake Louise (Chris in pic) and Interstate State Parks in MN

This month we visited Itasca State Park with Ed’s sister Jude. Itasca is the headwaters of the mighty Mississippi River. It begins its 2350 mile journey to the Gulf of Mexico as a small stream flowing out of Lake Itasca where flat rocks and a footbridge have been placed to allow people to walk across the Mississippi. Itasca is the second oldest state park in the nation, after Niagra State Park in New York. The park is home to over 100 lakes and thousands of acres of wetlands and forests. We also visited and hiked at Lake Louise, Interstate and Wild River State Parks this month.

The Nuns’ Bus in Cedar Rapids IA

Have you ever heard of the Nuns on the Bus? The advocacy arm of U.S. women religious (nuns) over the years has criss-crossed the country on a bus tour to talk about targeted political issues. This October a group started in California on a truth tour to talk about the Republicans’ tax policy. They hold town hall meetings, meet with members of Congress, have site visits and rally’s. Last week, they (and their bus) were in Cedar Rapids, Iowa for a town hall meeting on our nations’ recently enacted tax policies. We went down for the meeting, listened to the presentation and joined the small group discussions on what an individual can do (VOTE).

Prior to the evening gathering, we went to the National Czech and Slovak Museum and Library in Cedar Rapids. One gallery was a heart wrenching telling of Czechoslovakia during WWI and shortly thereafter. Czechoslovakia no longer exists; divided into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993. If folks feel depressed about our current political climate, reflect on history, ours and that of other nations.

Returning to St. Paul from Cedar Rapids across IA farm land and along the Mississippi River

We stayed overnight in Cedar Rapids after the nuns’ program and since the next day turned out to be one of our rare (for this year) glorious fall days, we decide to take the long way back to St. Paul through western Wisconsin. We stopped at a wonderful conservation interpretation center in Clayton County, IA and were pleased to discover a new information center that opened this summer along the Great River Road in Genoa, WI by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Mary of the Angels Chapel attached to St. Rose Convent

At the nuns’ program in Cedar Rapids, we met some nuns (Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration) who had come down from LaCrosse, WI. They invited us to stop at their convent, St. Rose Convent, if we had time; we did and were so glad we stopped. We had a tour, with historical commentary, of their chapel (located on the campus of Viterbo University) and their perpetual adoration chapel (a Catholic worship space) that has had uninterrupted prayers being said in it 24/7 since August 1878!

Sandhill cranes at Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge

Last weekend we participated in a bright and early (6:30 a.m.) activity at the Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge to watch the morning wake-up of about 9,000 sandhill cranes from their roost to forage in neighboring fields as they fatten up for their flight to Florida. It was 32 degrees out with 20 mph winds; there was no bird watching shelter, so were outside for 2 hours. We have seen 200,000 sandhill cranes in Kearney, Nebraska several years ago so this was a low-key affair but worth it. In an interesting fact (to us, at least) the Kearney sandhill cranes migrate north to Canada from Texas, going to the west of Minnesota. The Minnesota sandhill cranes migrate southeast to Florida. Maybe we will see some of the same birds next week, we did not check to see how long the cranes’ migration journey takes.

We continued this month our volunteer work with the Bell Museum of Natural History and Ed with the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area, including the annual volunteer dinner where Ed received a National Park Service backpack for exceeding 750 cumulative hours of service.

Did we mention to VOTE on November 6?!

Fall in St. Paul, two days apart

Chris and Ed
October 26

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