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https://substack.com/@randy127340/note/c-105570822

Randy (@randy127340)

Sister McFarland, we need many more like you. I have been at the Capitol. I have talked to legislators. I think it would have been easier to talk to Pharaoh, whose heart at least temporarily softened now and then. The hearts of the legislature and governor are granite by comparison. And so I am convinced that it will take a mass movement of people willing to be arrested, like the demonstrators here who refused to leave lunch counters, to bring about a change. We will need hundreds. Something happened two weeks ago that I did not expect. I called William Lamberth's office, as I have done many times. I was calling about his bill, and I had the verbal shotgun ready to start blasting. But as with every other previous time I've tried to reach someone there, the call went to voicemail. Rep. Lamberth records his own voicemail, in which he identifies himself and says no one is available right now. In disgust, I said, "Yeah, you're never available" and hung up. The phone rang that night, and when I answered I was startled to find that it was William Lamberth. He apologized that no one had answered and said that it was a very busy office, which I don't doubt. I believe at first he thought I was a constituent, but he kept talking to me even after I told him I wasn't. We talked at least 20 minutes, and the entire conversation was civil, even friendly. I made clear my staunch opposition to his bill. He seemed a bit surprised and very curious when I explained to him why his bill violated my religious convictions, but maybe I merely read that into his response. After he made his case on behalf of the bill--it was unfair to children to give them false expectations, by providing a public education, that they would be able to pursue a college degree and a professional career. But I replied that was true only if his position was that the Dreamers should never receive a pathway to citizenship. And that led him to admit that he hoped there would be such a pathway--but that this was a federal issue and not something on which states could act. Of course, I said. But if you'd like for these kids one day to be able to become citizens, then shouldn't you prepare them for that by educating them? The conversation went on this vein, and we also talked about my opposition to the voucher scheme. He apologized, in so many words, for Scott Cepicky's infamous remarks that he wanted to blow up the public education system and praised our public schools--something I didn't expect to hear. This was also the first time I've heard a Republican in the legislature speak to the humanity of immigrant children, instead of repeating the pathetic mantra that their parents eat our pets or that they're drug smugglers (looking REAL hard at you, Marsha) and rapists. I know I didn't change his mind at all. But I am hopeful I did give him something to think about. Acknowledging the humanity of immigrant children is a bridge I think I can build on. I plan to reach out again, remind him of our conversation, and ask him to encourage his fellows to avoid dehumanizing language when speaking on this issue. It could change the whole tenor of the dialogue. Was God trying to send me a message when I went in ready to hammer Lamberth, and then he reached out to me in an unexpected way, leading me also to talk with him in a way I had not expected? I am open to that possibility. I will pursue it. Do I still think I will need to get arrested, along with many of you? Yes, honestly. But now I will try to go about it more in the spirit of James Lawson and John Lewis than the prophet Amos.



Bing

Randy (@randy127340)

https://substack.com/@randy127340/note/c-105570822

Sister McFarland, we need many more like you. I have been at the Capitol. I have talked to legislators. I think it would have been easier to talk to Pharaoh, whose heart at least temporarily softened now and then. The hearts of the legislature and governor are granite by comparison. And so I am convinced that it will take a mass movement of people willing to be arrested, like the demonstrators here who refused to leave lunch counters, to bring about a change. We will need hundreds. Something happened two weeks ago that I did not expect. I called William Lamberth's office, as I have done many times. I was calling about his bill, and I had the verbal shotgun ready to start blasting. But as with every other previous time I've tried to reach someone there, the call went to voicemail. Rep. Lamberth records his own voicemail, in which he identifies himself and says no one is available right now. In disgust, I said, "Yeah, you're never available" and hung up. The phone rang that night, and when I answered I was startled to find that it was William Lamberth. He apologized that no one had answered and said that it was a very busy office, which I don't doubt. I believe at first he thought I was a constituent, but he kept talking to me even after I told him I wasn't. We talked at least 20 minutes, and the entire conversation was civil, even friendly. I made clear my staunch opposition to his bill. He seemed a bit surprised and very curious when I explained to him why his bill violated my religious convictions, but maybe I merely read that into his response. After he made his case on behalf of the bill--it was unfair to children to give them false expectations, by providing a public education, that they would be able to pursue a college degree and a professional career. But I replied that was true only if his position was that the Dreamers should never receive a pathway to citizenship. And that led him to admit that he hoped there would be such a pathway--but that this was a federal issue and not something on which states could act. Of course, I said. But if you'd like for these kids one day to be able to become citizens, then shouldn't you prepare them for that by educating them? The conversation went on this vein, and we also talked about my opposition to the voucher scheme. He apologized, in so many words, for Scott Cepicky's infamous remarks that he wanted to blow up the public education system and praised our public schools--something I didn't expect to hear. This was also the first time I've heard a Republican in the legislature speak to the humanity of immigrant children, instead of repeating the pathetic mantra that their parents eat our pets or that they're drug smugglers (looking REAL hard at you, Marsha) and rapists. I know I didn't change his mind at all. But I am hopeful I did give him something to think about. Acknowledging the humanity of immigrant children is a bridge I think I can build on. I plan to reach out again, remind him of our conversation, and ask him to encourage his fellows to avoid dehumanizing language when speaking on this issue. It could change the whole tenor of the dialogue. Was God trying to send me a message when I went in ready to hammer Lamberth, and then he reached out to me in an unexpected way, leading me also to talk with him in a way I had not expected? I am open to that possibility. I will pursue it. Do I still think I will need to get arrested, along with many of you? Yes, honestly. But now I will try to go about it more in the spirit of James Lawson and John Lewis than the prophet Amos.



DuckDuckGo

https://substack.com/@randy127340/note/c-105570822

Randy (@randy127340)

Sister McFarland, we need many more like you. I have been at the Capitol. I have talked to legislators. I think it would have been easier to talk to Pharaoh, whose heart at least temporarily softened now and then. The hearts of the legislature and governor are granite by comparison. And so I am convinced that it will take a mass movement of people willing to be arrested, like the demonstrators here who refused to leave lunch counters, to bring about a change. We will need hundreds. Something happened two weeks ago that I did not expect. I called William Lamberth's office, as I have done many times. I was calling about his bill, and I had the verbal shotgun ready to start blasting. But as with every other previous time I've tried to reach someone there, the call went to voicemail. Rep. Lamberth records his own voicemail, in which he identifies himself and says no one is available right now. In disgust, I said, "Yeah, you're never available" and hung up. The phone rang that night, and when I answered I was startled to find that it was William Lamberth. He apologized that no one had answered and said that it was a very busy office, which I don't doubt. I believe at first he thought I was a constituent, but he kept talking to me even after I told him I wasn't. We talked at least 20 minutes, and the entire conversation was civil, even friendly. I made clear my staunch opposition to his bill. He seemed a bit surprised and very curious when I explained to him why his bill violated my religious convictions, but maybe I merely read that into his response. After he made his case on behalf of the bill--it was unfair to children to give them false expectations, by providing a public education, that they would be able to pursue a college degree and a professional career. But I replied that was true only if his position was that the Dreamers should never receive a pathway to citizenship. And that led him to admit that he hoped there would be such a pathway--but that this was a federal issue and not something on which states could act. Of course, I said. But if you'd like for these kids one day to be able to become citizens, then shouldn't you prepare them for that by educating them? The conversation went on this vein, and we also talked about my opposition to the voucher scheme. He apologized, in so many words, for Scott Cepicky's infamous remarks that he wanted to blow up the public education system and praised our public schools--something I didn't expect to hear. This was also the first time I've heard a Republican in the legislature speak to the humanity of immigrant children, instead of repeating the pathetic mantra that their parents eat our pets or that they're drug smugglers (looking REAL hard at you, Marsha) and rapists. I know I didn't change his mind at all. But I am hopeful I did give him something to think about. Acknowledging the humanity of immigrant children is a bridge I think I can build on. I plan to reach out again, remind him of our conversation, and ask him to encourage his fellows to avoid dehumanizing language when speaking on this issue. It could change the whole tenor of the dialogue. Was God trying to send me a message when I went in ready to hammer Lamberth, and then he reached out to me in an unexpected way, leading me also to talk with him in a way I had not expected? I am open to that possibility. I will pursue it. Do I still think I will need to get arrested, along with many of you? Yes, honestly. But now I will try to go about it more in the spirit of James Lawson and John Lewis than the prophet Amos.

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