Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Seventh grader offers a Biblical basis for hospitality to refugees.


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington DC 20500
28 February 2017 

Dear President Trump, 

You have said before that you are a Christian, Maybe because you are a new Christian it would be helpful for you to hear what I think that should mean.  

In this letter, I want to share some Bible verses with you, that I think might be helpful for you to read as you think about your policies toward refuges and for anyone, really.  

Hebrews 13:2a, states, “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers.”   This means that we, Christians, shouldn’t reject anyone, of any race, gender, or religion, no matter the circumstance.  

In the book of James it says, “My brothers, do not hold your faith in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ with an attitude of personal favoritism. For if a man comes into your assembly with a gold ring and dressed in fine clothes, and there also comes in a poor man in dirty clothes, and you pay special attention to the one who is wearing the fine clothes, and say, ‘You sit here in a good place,’ and you say to the poor man, ‘You stand over there, or sit down by my footstool’, have you not made distinctions among yourselves, and become judges with evil motives?”  This verse really struck me. We, Christians, cannot favor anyone over anyone else. We cannot place Caucasians above Hispanic people, or women above men. We cannot love those who are also Christian but hate Buddhists. We cannot see the wealthy above the poor. 

And lastly, President Trump, I’ll share with you a verse that comes from Romans. It reads, “Therefore, welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God.”  This verse is fairly self-explanatory. We should be welcoming to others, just like Christ welcomes us. We should invite them into our houses, and love them with all of our hearts, just as Christ has loved us--so much that he died for our sins.

I think if you think about these verses, you might have some different ideas about how to be president and how to treat other people.  I have noticed that you tweet quite often. As I was writing this letter to you, I came up with an idea. Do you need something to tweet about tomorrow? How about, when you get my letter, you tweet one of these Bible verses that I have just shared with you?   

Sincerely,
 
F.

Sunday, February 26, 2017

You never call; you never write...

Our thirty-first letter to President Trump:

 

President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington DC 20500
26 February 2017 

Dear President Trump,   

In all of my letters to you so far, I've written to you about things that I think you should change to better serve the American people. You haven't responded to any of my letters yet. Maybe this is because the volume of letters has been overwhelming.  Maybe this is because you don't want to talk about criticism of your job, which is a problem.  Maybe this is because you don't read any of the letters the American people and sending you. which is an even bigger problem.  Our family has sent over 30 letters to your White House.  Why have we not received even a form letter from your team?  As American citizens, we would appreciate an answer. 

Maybe it is easier to answer questions than respond to legislative requests.  If so, I would love to know what you consider to have been the best part of your presidency so far. That might help me to understand some of your decisions.  I look forward to your response.  

Sincerely, 

K.

Friday, February 24, 2017

Honor Students and Teachers, Mr Trump


 President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington D.C. 20500
24 February 2017 

Dear President Trump,
Today I have the privilege of speaking to a large room full of teachers about some ways they can be better teachers.  On a Friday, they will be focused and engaged and will ask me har questions about how to connect content with students in a meaningful way.  Then next week, they will be back in the classrooms, managing large numbers of students, caring deeply for each one of them, sharing their passion for learning and making a difference in the world.  When they have finished teaching for the day, they will go home and grade papers for another three or four hours before going to bed.  I have watched my wife do this for nearly thirty years and she cares as fiercely for her fourth-graders and her subject matter as she did the first year she taught – probably more.
I am not at all clear about how you hope to impact education.  To be honest, based on some of your other initiatives, I am rather apprehensive about what that impact might be. 
I would ask you, however, whatever programs you propose, to think first not of the educational testing corporations who might profit, not of how the proposals might impact the owners of charter schools or what impact it might have on teachers’ unions.  I would ask you to think first of the students and second of their teachers and consider how you might make teachers’ work easier, how you might act to honor them, and  how you might celebrate their good work rather than contributing to a culture that blames teachers for the shortcomings of the political system within which they work.

Regards,

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Mr. Trump, don't cut Barrel of Monkeys and the Grant Park Orchestra


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington D.C. 20500
23 February 2017 

Dear President Trump,
I am writing today to ask you not to cut the funding for the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which the New York Times reported on the 19th of February.  I have been paying taxes for nearly 40 years and am most enthusiastic about the portion of my taxes that go to fund the arts.
I could tell you that the United States spends a miniscule amount on the arts – both in comparison to what we spend on other things (arts funding comprising less than one percent of the budget according to the Times article) and in comparison to other industrial nations.  Instead though, I would rather let the products of that funding speak for me. 
One of my favorite theater groups in Chicago is Barrel Of Monkeys, a group that takes the creative writing of Chicago Public School elementary students and turns that writing into a series of delightful short skits that make me laugh my guts out.  Similarly, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Lyric Opera, the free Grant Park Orchestra, and several of the city’s larger theaters draw funding from the NEA.  If you have never sat in the Pritzker Pavilion on a breezy summer night listening to the Grant Park Orchestra with Chicagoans from all walks of life, you have truly missed something. 
I know you have disparaged Chicago recently, but I think that the arts are one way that Chicago shines.  NEA grants allow these excellent organizations to reach more people with good and moving stories and music.  Why would you want to take that away from people?  To do so would be a mistake.
Please revise your budget and either keep the current levels of funding, or, if you really want to make the lives of Americans better, increase the funding.

Regards,

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Who Opens President Trump's Mail?


Whoever Opens the Letters for President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington D.C. 20500
22 February 2017 

Dear Person who opens the Mail for President Trump,

Our family has been writing a letter to President Trump every day since he took office.  Frankly, it is hard participating in such a one-way conversation.  We know that President Trump gets a lot of letters every day, and we don’t mind continuing to try to reach him with our requests and suggestions, but it would help if we had some idea of the process. and knew that there was somebody reading our letters.
How many people like you work at opening his mail?  Do you keep tallies of where people stand on different issues and deliver those tallies to President Trump?  How often do you do this?  If there are really awesome letters that take your attention, are you able to show those to President Trump?  Does he ever look at any of the letters he gets?  What are the chances he will ever see ours?  Do you think seeing letters from Americans ever has an effect on his decisions?
Do you ever get tired of opening the mail for President Trump?  What is the best part of it?  What is the worst part?  Do you ever get discouraged?
Thanks for doing your job.

Regards, 

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Make good decisions.


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington DC 20500
21 February 2017 

Dear President Trump,

Believe it or not, adults make an average of about 35,000 decisions every single day. That’s 245,000 decisions per week, or approximately 1,050,000 decisions per month. That’s an incredible amount of decisions.
But you aren’t just any adult. You’re the president of the United States. There’s a  lot more pressure on you, because while some people's’ decisions affect their family, their business, or their clients, the decisions that you make every day affect thousands, even millions of people.
Your decisions affect people of all religions, races, and cultures. Your decisions have the power to save lives and keep people safe or to take lives and put people in danger. Your decisions have the power to change what other countries think of the United States. Your decisions could change the world – for better or for worse.
Not many people could say that about their decisions.
So, President Trump, please think about your decisions first.  Please make wise decisions. They can affect so many people. And if you’re unsure about a decision, please ask our all-knowing God for guidance. 

Sincerely, 
 
F.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Two Sides to Every Story


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington DC 20500 
18 February 2017

Dear President Trump,  

There are two sides to every story. If I only look at things from my own point of view, it can be hard to see why others disagree with me. This is why it is essential to surround myself-- and for you to surround yourself-- with different voices and opinions, with different viewpoints and people of different backgrounds. I know this is something you say you value as well-- in your inauguration speech, you said, "We must speak our minds openly, debate our disagreements honestly, but always pursue solidarity." 

I am worried that you are forgetting what you said. You constantly and consistently bash any news outlets that print anything non-complimentary about you. This must stop. I understand that if you are truly trying to do what you believe is right, it must be frustrating to hear others criticize your actions. But calling them "fake news" is juvenile. When you call news outlets names, but have no evidence to back up the cries of, "fake!" then people will cease to respect your opinion. 

Life would be a lot better if every news broadcast said the same thing. Complete consistency in reporting would make it easy to get the official facts of an event. However, that is not a free press-- there would be a party with specific interests and biases controlling all of the information the people of America received. America considers the freedom of the press to be something so important that we explicitly protected it in the first amendment to our Constitution. As someone who is sworn to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States, you must respect this as well.

Sincerely,
 
K.

Friday, February 17, 2017

Mr Trump, are you okay?


Honestly, it is getting harder and harder to write civil, rational letters to a president who continues to act in an increasingly irrational fashion.  I apologize for any snarkiness that is intruding into this letter.  The fault is mine. 

Incidentally, this is our 25th letter to President Trump.  No responses yet.
 
 
 
President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington DC 20500
16 February 2017 

Dear President Trump, 

Are you okay? 

I ask because today’s press conference was frankly odd to watch.  You treated  the reporters with what seemed at times like rudeness.  When the one reporter asked what your administration intends to do about the rise of anti-sematic attacks, your response was to chew the reporter out for not asking you a simple enough question.  Sir, as President of the United States, you should perhaps expect complex questions.  And honestly, although the situation might argued to be complex, the question was pretty simple.   

So there are three possible explanations.  The first one is that you have never developed the social grace to respond to a question with a polite answer.  You might have said that your administration was still looking into the problem.  You might have said that you were concerned about the issue and intended to look into what could be done about it.  You might have said you were concerned.  You didn’t.  You accused the reporter of lying when he had initially agreed with you when you told him that he had a simple question.  This is not the way a president should act.  

The second explanation is that you really don’t care about the rise of anti-Semitism and are proud of that fact, so you enjoy messing with reporters. I will give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that this is not the case. 

The third possibility is that there is something wrong.  You interpreted a question about your policy as an accusation that you were anti-sematic or racist.  You asserted, after you accused the reporter of lying, that you were not anti-Semitic and that you were not racist.  While there may be people accusing you of that, the reporter at the press conference was not doing so.  So perhaps you can see why I am concerned. 

So I ask again, are you okay?  Frankly I, and most of the rest of America, are worried.  Please write back and let me know.   

 Regards,

 Bill Boerman-Cornell

Thursday, February 16, 2017

Mr Trump, own up to your mistakes and start thinking -- about others if possible.


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington DC 20500
16 February 2017

Dear President Trump,

Yesterday, as reported by the Washington Post, three investigations into your administration moved forward.  The office of Government Ethics opened an investigation into KellyAnne Conway’s promotion of Ivanka Trump’s fashion line; the Republican-led Oversight Committee began probing your discussion of sensitive information in public at your resort; and Republican Senator Mitch McConnell announced that the Senate investigation into pre-election conversations and negotiations with Russia will deepen. All of this only about 25 days into your presidency.

I know you will be tempted to respond that the news media is out to get you, or worse, that this is “fake news” – an accusation that just makes you look foolish.  The fact is, each of these investigations looks into a mistake that could have been prevented with some careful thought first.  You need to own up to this.

And, moving forward, you need to think less like a reality television star trying to grab headlines and more like a president who cares for the people in his country – all of the people in his country.  Stop eliminating regulations that keep corporations from polluting the skies and water that belong to all of us.  Stop trying to shut out refugees who are fleeing oppressive regimes.  Work toward justice for all people.  Work toward excellent schools for all students, not just those whose parents are wealthy.  Work toward alternative energy sources that reduce our dependence on foreign oil.  Do that, and do it with wisdom, and you may leave a far different mark on history than the one you seem to be headed toward now.

Sir, this is the twenty fifth letter our family has written you.  I am not so naïve to think that you are actually reading them.  I am also not so foolish as to give up hope that one day maybe you will.

Regards,

Bill Boerman-Cornell

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Our friend Shari''s letter encourages President Trump to take the high road.

Guest writer, friend, and my former student Shari Spoolstra may have a slightly different political position than our usual letters.  It is a thoughtful and graceful example of civil discourse.


The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington D.C. 20500
15 February 2017 

Dear Mr. President, 

I’m going to jump right in, you are a busy man after all. I beseech you to listen with an open heart and mind.
There are so many citizens in our country that want you to fail. (I don’t understand this logic, at all, but that’s a different topic.) I fear that, even if your “presidential stat sheet” has great numbers, millions of people won’t care or even sadder, they won’t believe it. So, it is vitally important that your stat sheet be successful. Unfortunately for you, it's going to take more than numbers to be considered a successful president.
My point is- prove them wrong. Don’t only succeed; succeed with grace, humility, and compassion. Succeed by bringing unity back to this country. Succeed by encouraging peace. Succeed by respecting your opponent’s ideas. Succeed by protecting the weak, by listening to your constituents- on both sides of the aisle, by making compromises when necessary. Succeed by rising above backbiting and malicious talk. Succeed without Twitter, without boasting, without bulldozing. Succeed with prayer, dignity, humility and compassion. These are the values our country was built upon- embrace them.
Confidence can still be achieved without bulldozing the weak. Decision making can be made while including others and following procedure. Signing executive order after executive order doesn’t prove that over half the voters agree with you, it proves that you can bully your views into reality. You don’t need to prove to the opposition that you are right by tweeting about it, prove them wrong with humble silence.
Succeed, Mr. President, but do it well.

Respectfully, 

Shari Spoolstra

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

What will you build?


The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington D.C. 20500
14 February 2017 

Dear President Donald Trump,  

Since you have taken office, you have issued a lot of executive orders.  These have mostly involved undoing initiatives or cancelling rules or laws.  You have also spoken about building walls and travel bans and keeping refugees out of the country. 

But this is all tearing down what came before and shutting out what is outside. While I am strongly opposed to all of this, that is not what I want to ask you about. 

My question is, what are you going to build?  What new things do you want to start?  How are you thinking you are going to make things better for average Americans?  What will you do that will promote justice and fight against ignorance, poverty and disease?  How are you going to make it so those who are sick can get medical help; so those who are hungry or homeless can get access to food, shelter, and jobs; so that everybody has a shot at a good education and a meaningful job; and so that people of this country can live without fear of injustice? 

Tearing down and shutting out – those things are easy.  Building up, helping the weak and the poor, making it so everybody gets a chance – those things are difficult, but worth working toward. 

Sincerely,  

Bill Boerman-Cornell

 

Monday, February 13, 2017

Don't be the class clown

Our family has sent over 20 letters to President Trump.  After completing this letter, my daughter F said that she feels like she has nothing left to say to Mr. Trump.  I know what she feels like.  There are still an endless series of issues that need to be addressed, but it can get tiring when we feel that, when we put each letter into the mailbox, no one is reading it on the other side.  But she wrote this one.  And she has a week to think about what to put in the next one.  We'll see what happens.   
 
 
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington D.C. 20500
13 February 2017 

Dear President Donald Trump,  

I am a middle schooler, and there are numerous class clowns in my seventh grade class. I’m sure you are familiar with what class clowns do--they oftentimes make inappropriate jokes or comments to make people laugh and hide the fact that they don’t understand the lesson being taught.

I wonder if sometimes you might have a little bit in common with the class clowns I know.  It seems to me that sometimes you, like class clowns, say outrageous things for attention and popularity. I do not mean to be disrespectful, this is just what I see, and it frustrates me. 

I wonder what would happen if, instead of saying that people who disagree with you that they are wrong or “Sad” you should perhaps talk to them. They might see things differently than you do, but maybe that is okay.  Sometimes I think about what our world would be like without diversity. If everyone thought the same, there would be no imagination or competition, or even cooperation.

You, Donald Trump, could change your reputation. You could be known across America for being kind, thoughtful, and respectful. It would take some work, but it would definitely be worth it.

Sincerely,  

F

 

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Twitter No More (part 2)


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington D.C. 20500
11 February 2017

Dear President Trump, 

My sister wrote to you a few weeks ago with a sentiment that I now echo: Please remove yourself from twitter. Whenever you tweet, your opponents use the tweets to ridicule and mock you, and your allies smack their heads with their hands as they anticipate another PR crisis to explain away. From your own point of view, removing twitter from your life would be an enourmously good thing.
 
And if you are unwilling to do this, perhaps there is a crew of people who could all sign off on your tweets before you send them. One of the most important lessons I have learned in my life is that multiple diverse perspectives are invaluable to me when I consider political issues and make decisions, and I hope that you will find this to be true as well, whether that is through tweeting or through any other policies, orders, and speeches you may make. 

Sincerely,
 
K.

Friday, February 10, 2017

No More Rude Phone Calls to Heads of State, Please


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington D.C. 20500
10 February 2017 

Dear President Trump, 

An article in the Washington Post two days ago (Feb 8) summarizes your phone conversations with foreign heads of state.  It speaks of some successful calls, including one to China which has set a good tone for your relationship with them, but also describes several calls that were rude or contentious (Australia, France, Mexico, Pakistan, and others).   

In your discussions with foreign countries, particularly those that are our allies (Australia, France, and Mexico, for example), can you please treat them with the respect and dignity that they accord us?  To do less than that is to endanger the progress that statesmen from both US political parties have committed their lives to.   

In your discussions with foreign countries that we are not on good terms with, can you please tread carefully? There is no sense in antagonizing countries like North Korea or China.  It may well be that North Korea, for example, does not have a missile capable of reaching the US at this time as you mentioned publically last week, but they can easily reach South Korea, a country we have been allied with for some time. Taunting North Korea puts our friends in South Korea at risk. 

I am not a diplomat.  I am just a guy . But even I can see that the behavior you have shown toward other nations is unreasonable.  As one of the most powerful countries in the world, we can afford to show some gracefulness to the other countries.  Since you are our representative, it behooves you to show evidence of that grace in the way you speak. 

Please consider this. 

Regards, 

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Thursday, February 9, 2017

The First Complaint Ever About the Dakota Access Pipeline


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington D.C. 20500
9 February 2017 

Dear President Trump, 

ABC News reported yesterday that you stated that the Dakota Access Pipeline was not controversial and that you did not receive a single complaint about it.   

The pipeline runs next to Native American land.  It runs under the Missouri River.  It is close enough to both a sensitive aquifer and fragile prairieland that an environmental study was called for.  You issued an executive order to cancel that study.   

There have been protests for months because to build a pipeline in that location seems both insensitive and antagonistic toward the Native Americans who live there.   

Because this seems short-sighted, dangerous, and more like the actions of a bully than the actions of  the president of the United States, allow me to officially lodge a complaint.  Now you have at least one. 

Regards, 

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Civil vs uncivil discourse -- by guest letter writer Steve Bakker


On Wednesdays we welcome members of our extended family to write a guest letter.  Today's guest letter is from one of my favorite former students, the incomparable Steve Bakker.
 
President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington D.C. 20500
8 February 2017 

Dear President Trump, 

You must have been aware that your uncivil discourse as a presidential nominee brought you some popularity.  You may also be aware, now that you are president, that your conversations with foreign and domestic political leaders have been making you unpopular in the halls of politics, and among the ordinary residents of your country as well—according to a CNN poll, you have the lowest approval rating for an incoming president (44%) since people began collecting such data.  

A lot of people around me have been critiquing civil discourse, leading me to question it too. Some argue that many of the terms of polite national discourse are set primarily by people in the upper and middle classes. Our words for uncivil language suggest this connection: bad language is “vulgar”, “crass”, “crude”, “boorish”--words that have historically been used to negatively describe the lower class. Some argue that subduing vulnerable emotions in civil discourse issues from dominant pressures deemed masculine in our culture, undervaluing forms of expression deemed feminine. Some argue that European Enlightenment values pushed a false notion of objective authority onto civil discourse worldwide, pretending detachment from emotion and subjective interests. The dominant voices of European colonialism, assuming the superiority of the so-called white race and its role in the world, have undervalued other modes of human discourse which do not try to so cleanly partition intellect, interest, and emotion. Polite discourse, as we often think of it, discourages many displays of strong emotions and forbids outbursts from people who may be under serious, ignored distress, suffering under the yoke of oppression. Civil discourse can be used to silence marginalized and exploited people in our society. In short, it can perpetuate oppression—classist, sexist, racist, or otherwise. 

This is not to say that I don't value civil discourse, just that I try to see how its rules and its consequences vary in different contexts. A soft answer can turn away wrath in one place and decree carnage elsewhere. The most troubling example of this for me was my relationship with the Obama presidency. He seemed more civil to me than his predecessor, and you, so far. There was much I found to criticize:  Obama continued with bombings and military operations in more countries than Bush had, conducted 10 times as many drone strikes, and oversaw increasing domestic surveillance in his tenure. He oversaw a record number of deportations under a presidential administration, and had spoken in favor of increased border fencing and deportations (having voted for both as a Senator). And yet because he didn't seem as bellicose, domineering, or “crude” to me in his public discourse, he didn't raise my ire as much! Nor did he seem to raise as much ire in those around me. Was this also true of many other people who roughly share my politics--that we were disappointed with Obama, but due to the way he comported himself, we were not as animated as we were by Bush to resist US war and repression? If so, then there were severe costs as well as benefits to his overtures of civility.  

Conversely, it heartens me that so many have protested against your arrival as President and many of your executive decisions thus far. I am not heartened that your incivility has animated this resistance, but given the circumstances, I'd rather there be resistance than not. I'm heartened that most of it is nonviolent. Yet I wonder if you would have faced less fierce opposition at the airports and would have made more progress with your refugee ban had you taken your time implementing it through the established channels, conferring with state officials, etc. I wonder if added flourishes to your border wall plans, such as promising that Mexico would pay for it, will compromise the amount of success you would have made with more measured, polite speech and deliberation toward the same ends. I'm quite confident that, for better or worse, the resistance which I believe you deserve has been elicited by your crass discourse. 

Martin Luther King, Jr., is of course remembered for taking nonviolent civility into the heart of deadly repression. He also said, in response to black riots of his day, “a riot is the language of the unheard.” I believe in masses of people making demands of political leaders, not in a complete vacuum, but as a force which ruling classes must negotiate with, ideally civilly. I have been part of nonviolent protests since you took office, and I have seen a handful of people be uncivil in these marches. I'm struggling to learn how to engage in civil resistance without castigating entirely those strangers who take more extreme measures than I would, or say things less civil than I would imagine myself saying in exchange with people in power.  

How do we be civil in conflict with each other, Mr. President? I aspire to move people to join in protest, to grow Dr. King and Stanley Levinson's vision for civil conflict: “Mass civil disobedience can use rage as a constructive and creative force. It is purposeless to tell Negroes they should not be enraged when they should be. Indeed, they will be mentally healthier if they do not suppress rage but vent it constructively and use its energy peacefully but forcefully to cripple the operations of an oppressive society. Civil disobedience can utilize the militancy wasted in riots to seize clothes or groceries many did not even want.” I am not a black American in the 1960s, but I and millions of others today have rage and creativity to spare. May we share them constructively, as civilly as we can in our contending terms, in word and in deed.

Sincerely, 

Steve Bakker

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

No Trump is an Island


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington D.C.  20500
7 February 2017 

Dear President Trump,  

Perhaps there is a difference between your public persona and the real you.  Your public persona casts aspersions on the judges who do their best to faithfully execute their office, belittles those who engage in peaceful protests, and attempts to marginalize the media.  Perhaps there is a real you that views these actions as part of an act – one that serves some political purpose. 

If that is the case, I would encourage you to let the real you to the surface and understand that, as the poet John Donne said, “No man is an island entire of itself.”  Your actions have effects on real people.   

When you cancel regulations that prevent coal companies from dumping their tailings in streams, you kill wildlife and pollute water that people depend on.  When you treat America’s valued allies, some of whom we have fought beside, as if they are naïve contractors whose contracts you can renegotiate to suit your own ends, you may be depriving America of allies we will one day need.  When you deny refugees who have been carefully vetted by the Department of Homeland Security the right to enter this country, you may inadvertently be recruiting more members of ISIS. 

I have two best friends who I have known since junior high.  Though I do not always get along with them, I deeply value their opinions.  I listen to them, even when they disagree with me.  Sometimes I learn a lot from our arguments.  

Who are your friends that you listen to?  Is there someone you respect enough that you will listen when they tell you that you are wrong about something?  I hope so.  Because the persona you display publically is that of a man who does not listen to anyone who tells him he needs to rethink something or reconsider an issue.  Your public persona, sir, comes across as being rather foolish.  It is my hope that the real you has enough wisdom to at least listen to your friends, it not your enemies.


Sincerely,

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Monday, February 6, 2017

Simple Advice from a Kid in Middle School


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington D.C 20500
6 February 2017 

Dear President Trump:    

I have been reading that you have a record-breaking number of millionaires and billionaires in your cabinet. I think it might be helpful for you to also listen to ordinary, common people.  

Sincerely,

F.

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Disappointed at Prayer Breakfast Remarks


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Washington D.C.  20500
4 February 2017

Dear President Trump,  

You, sir, move at an exhausting pace. It's hard to keep up. Every week I think about at least five things I could write about (at least three of those having something to do with your twitter account. Have you thought about my sister’s advice to you two weeks ago regarding your deletion of it?).  

The thing that stood out the most to me this week, I think, was the National Prayer Breakfast. I will not mince words. I was and am appalled. Horrified.  

You spoke to those gathered and said: 

"But we had tremendous success on The Apprentice.  And when I ran for President, I had to leave the show.  That’s when I knew for sure I was doing it.  And they hired a big, big movie star -- Arnold Schwarzenegger -– to take my place.  And we know how that turned out.  (Laughter.)  The ratings went right down the tubes.  It’s been a total disaster.  And Mark will never, ever bet against Trump again.  And I want to just pray for Arnold, if we can, for those ratings, okay?"  

I was not there, so I can only assume that these words were said in a joking manner. But whatever the case, this is unacceptable. I know many people, and I'm sure there are millions more like them, whose reservations about voting for you were assuaged by your proclamation that you are a Christian. And I am here to tell you that not one of my friends would treat a national prayer breakfast with the callousness, selfishness, and disregard that you have. You are not living up to my expectations (which were not good ones) and not living up to those of my friends who supported you. So, on behalf of my friends who voted for you: Do Better.  

Sincerely,
 
K

Friday, February 3, 2017

Short letter about how complex problems and simple solutions don't always mix


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington DC  20500
3 February 2017 

Dear President Trump, 

As I suspect you know from your business dealings, problems are rarely simple, and when you apply simple solutions (an immediate travel ban) to complex problems (terrorism), you end up with problems that are more complex than you started with.   

The Dakota Access Pipeline; our relationships with Australia, Mexico, and Palestine; health care, our education system – all of these are very complex problems that require thoughtful decisions and complex solutions.  I encourage you to take the time to respond to these issues with careful wisdom, considering implications and consequences to all involved. 

Sincerely,
 
 

Bill Boerman-Cornell

Thursday, February 2, 2017

Be Kind to Reporters


President Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington DC  20500
2 February 2017

Dear President Trump, 

Through much of its history, American society has held up many jobs as worthy of respect.  Teachers, doctors, police and fire fighters, those serving in the military, clergymen, writers, editors, journalists, public servants, and many more were all regarded as playing an important part in the fabric of our society. 

More recently we have taken to disrespecting these professions.  We speak of them in unreasonable generalizations.  All teachers, we say, are not working hard enough.  All doctors are getting paid far more than they are worth.  All police officers are corrupt and racist.  Most recently it is journalists who have been getting a beating, and much of that disrespect has come from your quarter.

Members of the news media often put themselves in harm’s way to provide us with information about war-torn parts of the world.  They work long hours trying to find the truth behind things.  They do their best to make sense of a very confusing set of data and try to report that in the most objective way they can.  Is there bias?  Of course there is bias.  Human beings cannot report on anything without seeing it from a particular perspective.  But they try to eliminate bias as best they can.

But when you call all reporters, particularly those who report things that you disagree with --  purveyors of “Fake News”, that is not only disingenuous, it is insulting to those who spend their lives trying to keep the public informed. 

I am not a reporter.  I don’t know any reporters.  But for the sake of the dignity of your office, I ask you to treat them with respect, as you would anyone who does a difficult job.  In return, I think you can expect many of them to do the same for you.

Sincerely,

 Bill Boerman-Cornell