Sunday, July 8, 2018
Digging In For the Long Haul
When my wife Lydia and I retired and relocated from the U.S. to the Philippines, in 2005 it was mainly for financial considerations. I didn't expect that we would ever return to the States. Yet despite my eagerness for us to start a new life In Lydia's native country I was sorry to have to leave America and wished that it weren't necessary to take that step..
Now It so happened that at that time George W. Bush had recently begun his second term as POTUS, and I really considered him a dumb incompetent and that his political and economic policies, especially the ones that eventually resulted in the Great Recession in 2007 were abhorrent. Then there was his mishandling of the Hurricane Katrina aftermath.
Yet as bumbling and inept as Bush was through all his missteps, one thing I never considered him to be was malicious and demagogic. Donald Trump of course is these and more. He has unleashed a climate of bigotry among his base of supporters that has turned the U.S. into an ideological cesspool by among other recent actions lending support including a pardon for a federal conviction to right wing extremist and ant-Semite Dinesh D'Souza. Further, Trump has disgraced the office of the presidency with his narcissistic erratic behavior and destructive discourse. He lies like a rug almost daily and should have already impeached based on his violation of the Constitution's Emoluments Clause . I shudder at the prospect of ever having to repatriate to a country with this sad excuse of a human being as its leader.
Life in the Philippines is often frustrating. But the difficulties that we've encountered in living here for the past 13 years pale in comparison to the hardships we would likely face if we were to repatriate. And those in turn would be compounded by the constant awareness that it's Trump and his fellow Republicans who are largely responsible for growing economic difficulties that elderly and other Americans of modest means are experiencing.
So Lydia and I are content with the life that we've made here. In fact when people often ask whether I ever wish I could go home, my reply is that I'm already there. And with the state of affairs in the U.S.as they are now, that's more the case than ever.
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