
My “If I were president…” (*see home pg.) colleague, Shane Ian Hoffman, sent me the above after our most recent podcast, which was on immigration. Indiscriminate mass deportation is underway. But should it be? Indiscriminate, that is. Case in point, which was cited during our podcast: The New York Times headline was: “Fleeing Gangs, Children Head to U.S. Border.” The article started with a 13-year-old boy who had gone missing in a San Pedro Sula neighborhood in Honduras. The boy’s seven-year-old brother went looking for him, starting at a local gang hangout. Two days later, both boys were found tortured to death. “The first thing we can think of is to send our children to the United States,” said a tremendously distraught mother in that Honduran town. And so, some parents do. Distance: 1,600 miles — often unaccompanied. Sometimes they come as families. But now we are “indiscriminately” turning these people away at the border, or sending them back if they’re already here. While we continue, for many of us, to live privileged, and often relatively safe, First World lifestyles. It would be best to read the above graphic, closely. If we don’t adhere to what’s written there, think of the high wall many of us might be met with at the border of Heaven. For a look at a position paper on immigration, that would align with the “liberty” talked about above, see…









