Profile
-
- Male
- June 27
- Straight
- Cancer
- Expressing Myself
- College Graduate
- No
- Yes
- Christian
- Proud Parent
- Moderate
- Native American
- Average
- 5 feet 10 inches
- Deming, NM, US
About Me
Retired Military. 12 years 82ABN, the rest with the 7th ID Light, 65th Engr @ schofield bks, and instructor USASMA @ Ft. Bliss
Now I am an RN/Director of an ICU
Now I am an RN/Director of an ICU
I'd like to meet:
Fran Tarkenton, Allen Page,
Activities:
Interests:
Football, down hill skiing, SEX
Favorite Music:
Favorite TV Shows:
American Idol, Dancing with stars, Don't forget the lyrics
Favorite Quotes:
Winners never quit, Quitters never win. (Seen on a sign @ jump school) If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much space, NO FEAR
Blog Entries
- No blogs have been written yet
Media
Comments
Questions
-
Road trip anyone?Answers: 26
-
-
For SH Yankee fansAnswers: 10
-
Would all my SH friends read this?Answers: 24
SodaFeed
rnvtach has no recent activity.
View all of rnvtach's 2595 answers and comments
Latest Question
Top Sodaheads


Summer ak...
KAT
happy birthday!!!!!!!!!
Sister Jean
I has a L...
happy birthday vtach....did you see angel's poll?
Summer '0...
Thanks. lol =]
How are you?
Summer '0...
Heyy :)
I saw your comment on the poll "Whats wrong with you" and how you were talking about coming on Sodahead! LoL That made me laugh...I'm newer here. So Yah. haha
How are you? Just thought I would say hello...
loky
Your country is proud of you . Your people are proud of you. I am proud of you. Never think otherwise. You have a lot to be proud of!
nina
hi vtach
tnx so much for the comment on my profile
hope u have the same experience very soon !!!
it feels so good vtach,,especially with the one u love
viva love
nina
Summer ak...
Sister Jean
THANKS for the 45,000 poll it was great it happened yesterday as I had a big family problem and it was a great distraction!!!
Ant~ All ...
Ant~ All ...
Thanks for the raves
Sister Jean
thanks for 45,000 rave
KayR~NBA-...
People of color must work together for change
By Nicole Lee
-Guest Columnist-
Updated Jun 18, 2008, 09:26 am
Daily, I get forwarded informational emails from family members. Most are constructive. They remind me of the important fact that far too many women in our country are dying of cancer.
Others are not so constructive, and talk about economic problems in the U.S. focusing on one central enemy: the immigrant.
“Illegal immigrants come to this country, steal our jobs, and don’t pay taxes.”
“Immigrants take advantage of federal, state and local services.”
“Immigrants demand everything in Spanish from the street signs to the national anthem.”
These emails expose the ugly, harsh prevailing beliefs expressed by White and Black Americans alike. Whether dominantly liberal or progressive, many Black Americans have lived for generations at the back of the line, and tie the perceived threat of immigrants to their scarce jobs and resources. Although we share a similar historical condition and have worked together for basic human rights and justice, these tensions manifest themselves between Blacks and Latinos.
In this age of globalization, it is ok for everything to be transnational except poor people. Jobs can be shipped from country to country. Vertical industrialization is over. That shirt you’re wearing was most likely manufactured in multiple countries. It was woven in one country, sewn in another, packaged possibly in a third. Multinational corporations, with the help of the U.S. and European governments, have divided up the world into raw material producers and manufacturers. Your shirt is not illegal.
Capital is also transnational. Once tied to the gold standard, the U.S. dollar is now tied to the international market and is traded internationally. It is affected by the British pound and Japanese Yen. This is not illegal. What is apparently “illegal” is, in response to these transnational economic changes, for the poor people who are most negatively affected by globalization to migrate. Yet, despite all the rhetoric, these undocumented immigrants are boosting, not hurting our economy. If all the undocumented workers left the U.S. tomorrow, our economy would lose $1.8 trillion a year.
We need to let go of the myth that people are coming to this country because “it’s the greatest country in the world.” I have traveled all over the world; I have never met anyone who wanted to leave their homeland. But because of conflict, disease and lack of opportunities people do have to leave. Trade agreements in the style of NAFTA and CAFTA have sweeping economic effects that benefit large corporations, not the workers. People in the U.S., especially in the rust belt, have social protections such as welfare and Medicaid, but still feel the crippling effects of job losses and high prices. Workers and families in poorer countries, like Mexico and Nicaragua that do not have any social safety nets, feel the brunt of the changes more severely and desperately. Besides trade agreements, the slavery of debt of poor nations and structural adjustment (a process whereby poor countries our forced to reduce their spending on social services) have created an economic maelstrom in already fragile countries.
From low intensity warfare to full scale invasions, our foreign policy has set into motion a chain of events that make many countries unlivable. We allow our government to spend almost $500 billion per year, almost $1.4 million per day on “defense,” yet it is our coupled economic and foreign policies that are causing many of the conditions people flee.
All Americans, including Black Americans, must work to make our world, and not just this country, livable. We have to create a foreign policy that makes it possible for people to live in their home, in their country and to have a promising future. Undocumented workers, the majority who are honest and hard working, deserve basic human dignity, decent working conditions and path towards legalization. It is with our shared histories in mind we can work together to ensure fair and just economic and social conditions at home and abroad.
zathura33
Thanks for the rave!! Have a Good 4th, if I don't run into again before then!
KAT
hi