Acid Rain
29 Saturday Jan 2022
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29 Saturday Jan 2022
Posted in poetry, romance, Uncategorized
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23 Sunday Jan 2022
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15 Saturday Jan 2022
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15 Saturday Jan 2022
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Dreams
The stained glass
picture that is my dream,
shatters to thin, gossamer
shards as I as reach
up from sleep
grabbing at them, trying
to keep the picture in tack.
Too late, they dissolve,
sugar candy in my hands
and slip back into that shadow world
that is the nether
regions of my mind.
Bubbling just below the surface,
just out of reach
the images entice me,
tantalizingly close.
I turn to look and they
wash away,
chalk pictures in the rain.

10 Monday Jan 2022
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PAPER HEART
I take out the paper,
red, pink and silver.
I lay out the best, small scissors and
freshest glue.
I carefully fold the colored paper
into two neat halves and slowly cut
the paper heart.
And then another and another.
With the glue,
I place them together, delicately.
I create the perfect, beautiful
paper heart.
I hold this to you and you take it
and tear out a small hole
in the middle.
You hand it back to me
and smile – sweetly.
I am left with a tear in the middle
of my beautiful, beautiful, heart.
12 Sunday Dec 2021
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They are old,
they are young,
they are middle.
They dress in all grey colors;
neither black nor white,
just faded shades of
everything.
They sit in the train station
and watch TV or sleep;
they don’t take the train.
The trains come and go
on every hour and the half.
The people dump out in gabbling gobs then,
get sucked back in through
clanging metal doors.
The men sit and stare;
happy couples run and grab each other,
then say teary farewells.
Teens, in groups, walk arm in arm,
chattering parakeets.
The men sit with stony expressions.
People drink coffee and eat ice cream.
The stores open and close,
the people go home.
The men sit;
they don’t take the train.

05 Sunday Dec 2021
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25 Thursday Nov 2021
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22 Monday Nov 2021
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≈ Comments Off on How much do Mexican nationals spend in Arizona?
Are Mexicans still spending millions of dollars a day in Arizona? We’ll soon find out
Opinion: Arizona leaves money on the table when it comes to tourism from Mexico – we just don’t know how much. A new study will fix that.
The Republic | azcentral.com
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There’s gold along Arizona’s southern border and it should be more aggressively mined to benefit you and your family.
But you don’t hear much about it.
What you hear is the bad stuff about Arizona’s border with Mexico. (And, yes, there are problems.)
But let’s face it: The average Arizonan has little to gain from the relentlessly negative political hyperbole about the border.
Mexican shoppers help you
On the other hand, you and your family have a great deal to gain from increasing the number of legal Mexican shoppers to our state.
That’s the border story you don’t hear. But should.
Gov. Doug Ducey – who has done his share to feed the Trump administration’s big, bad border frenzy – is going to help tell that story by updating a 2008 study into how much Mexican shoppers spend in our state.
There’s gold in that spending.
How many millions? We don’t know
How much? We don’t know.
We do know the contribution of Mexican shoppers to our economy was significant a decade ago.
The 2008 report done by the University of Arizona’s Eller College of Management found Mexican visitors spent more than $7.3 million a day in Arizona stores, restaurants, hotels and other businesses.
That money supports businesses and jobs, as well as producing sales tax to help fund basic state and local services – like your child’s school.
It supports schools and local services
The 2008 study found legal Mexican visitors represented “a staggering 48.62 percent of the total taxable sales in Santa Cruz County.”
Keep in mind: The 24 million visa-holding Mexican travelers who came here that year far exceeded the number of people who crossed the border illegally in any year.
You didn’t hear much about those legal border crossers, which is a real shame.
Arizona didn’t do much to treat them like valued customers, which is a lost opportunity.
Dissing our customers wasn’t smart
In 2010 – after years of ugly rhetoric about the dangers of the border – GOP Gov. Jan Brewer signed a xenophobic anti-immigrant law that resulted in boycotts, lost conventions and bad press.
It also inspired deep resentment in Mexico.
Despite it all, Mexicans continue to visit.
A recent study for the Office of Tourism found that in 2017, tourists who stayed overnight in our state spent $22.7 billion in Arizona. Two-thirds of the foreign tourists were from Mexico, according to reporting by The Republic’s Russ Wiles.
We don’t know how many more Mexicans would have come if we’d been nicer. We do know that neighboring border states – and Nevada – were courting Mexican travelers while we were making rude gestures.
A new study is coming – at last
What’s more, this broad study of tourism did not capture day trippers from Mexico or people who stayed in private homes, so it most likely under-represents the contribution of Mexicans to Arizona’s tourism economy.
We need an update of the 2008 study for that – and at long last, Ducey’s Office of Tourism is getting ready to do it.
Scott Dunn, director of communications at the tourism office, says a request for proposals for a new Mexico visitor study should go out in September.
“The more data we have, the better we can grow the Mexican market . . . our largest source of international travelers,” says Dunn.
Here’s what the study needs to do
He says it will be a “comprehensive study of the Mexican market,” but adds that it is too early in the process to say exactly what it will cover.
There are a few important things to consider when when designing a new study.
Give Gov. Ducey some credit
Unlike Brewer, Ducey has worked the Mexican market to Arizona’s advantage.
Under his administration, Arizona opened a trade office in Mexico City, assigned liaisons to encourage trade and worked with Mexican elected officials to build relationships. He even touted Mexico as Arizona’s top trading partner.
That trade relationship accounts for $2.4 billion a month in commodity flows to Mexico through Arizona’s ports of entry, according to July Arizona-Mexico Economic Indicators prepared by Eller. But that’s down from $2.9 billion in March 2017.
We still need a cheerleader
Our economic relationship with Mexico requires attention – just like any other relationship. Arizonans need to understand that.
Yet Arizonans continue to hear more about the problems at the border than about the great economic benefit and opportunity the Mexican border represents.
That needs to change.
The overdue update to a decade-old study of Mexican shoppers is a good sign.
But we also need to hear more from our elected officials about the gold mine on our southern border.
Reach Valdez at linda.valdez@arizonarepublic.com.
21 Sunday Nov 2021
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As the year 2021 starts to wind down, it becomes time to reassess the year and maybe our lives. So much has happened in the last year and a half with Covid. Much of it bad (social isolation, losing friends and family members), some good (connecting with more and more people by Zoom.) It is time to think: I am getting what I want out of life? Am I happy? What can I do now and in the near future to bring my life more in alignment with what it should be? If nothing else, Covid has been a reminder to each of us that things happen and we might not have as much time on this planet as we thought. cew
Oct 18, 2012, 02:40pm Forbes Magazine
The 25 Biggest Regrets In Life. What Are Yours?
Contributor
I write about technology and media
Fork in Road
We are all busy. Life happens. There’s always something to distract us from getting around to certain things we know we should do.
Soccer practice. Work. Home renovations. Getting that next big promotion.
And with the explosion of always-on smartphones and tablets delivering a fire hose of urgent emails, not to mention Twitter and Facebook (FB), in recent years, things have only gotten busier.
In the backs of our minds, we know we’re neglecting some stuff we should do. But we never get around to it.
Then, something happens. A good friend or loved one – maybe close to us in age – drops dead unexpectedly. We begin to think about what our biggest regrets would be if we were suddenly sitting on our death bed.
Here is a list of the 25 biggest ones we’ll probably have.
The question is, are you going to change anything this afternoon or tomorrow in light of this list? Or are you going to go back to your busy life?