Archive: A request for a short commentary on Trump v. Barbara

Posted By on April 2, 2026

Over the last few years, I’ve enjoyed being asked to opine on current events and politics for TheHustings.news. It is a congenial bunch writers, who at least outwardly, accept the opinions of others. The talented group consist of retired, or perhaps Trump motorcade SCOTUSclose to retiring journalists, political campaign PR writers/managers, editors and college professors, who come from different parts of the country. A couple of them were automotive journalists (including the editor), whose side interest is politics … which was how I was introduced.

As a non-professional writer, I’ve enjoyed contributing and have found it challenging. What has surprised me, was that I am one of the few (or only one?) who sees things from the MAGA point of view … even if my opinions don’t always align with President Trump. That said, I’m definitely more aligned with fiscal conservatives and Republicans than the others OR even where many Democrat voters have shifted these days (embracing socialism). 😉 

Yesterday’s request came late in the day … but since I’ve been following the SCOTUS oral arguments, added my two-cents. 

Husting 3 columns

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments today in Trump v. Barbara, weighing President Trump’s executive order limiting birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause. The administration argues that “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” excludes children of undocumented immigrants or temporary visa holders, aiming to curb what has become a modern “birth tourism” and an illegal immigration incentive industry unknown 166 years ago.

This view has merit. The Clause was ratified post-Civil War primarily to secure citizenship for freed slaves and their descendants—those born here fully subject to U.S. authority, not foreign diplomats, illegals flooding across the Biden administration’s open border or transient visitors owing primary allegiance elsewhere. Today’s expansive interpretation, granting automatic citizenship to hundreds of thousands annually from non-citizen parents, has fueled exploitative practices that strain resources and undermine sovereignty in ways the 1866 drafters never contemplated.

The Constitution’s text is broad and is open to judicial interpretation, which is the path the Trump administration is seeking. The preferred correction of these abusive practices would be through the amendment process. Unfortunately that is likely impossible in today’s divided and politicized Congress.

UPDATE: Posted today 4/2 with another right-column comment: Under Trump v. Barbara Arguments – “Birth Tourism” … and a previous submission was used in The Gray Area of TheHustings.news.

For those with political interests this APRIL 1, 2026

Posted By on April 1, 2026

Trump currency 250This might trigger a few who attend the No Kings rallies or find that their blood pressure rises at the thought of President Trump, but suspect those who are more tolerant and enjoy political humor might appreciate these two items on April 1st. 😉

On the other hand, if you are like me, I’d prefer having elections that we can trust and be confident that people aren’t using questionable tactics when it comes to voting. Assuring our U.S. elections have integrity and that only legitimate voters are casting ballots would go a long way in making elections fair — in other words, Congress needs to pass the SAVE act. (more…)

What are you paying to fill up your car or truck (March 31, 2026)?

Posted By on March 31, 2026

It’s pretty expensive to drive, fly, ship or LIVE this past month as Iran has made the transit of oil and goods through the Strait of Hormuz nearly impossible. Is there an end in sight? 

We’re definitely not under 40, but we do go “clubbing” at Costco

Posted By on March 31, 2026

Shared with our kids last week and after watching Brenda laugh, decided this social media share was worth posting on the blog. We all had a good chuckle. 😊 

Music Monday: Kenny Chesney and “There Goes My Life”

Posted By on March 30, 2026

On Music Monday, I often highlight music by Kenny Chesney. This week is no exception as I enjoyed listening to the 2003 song “There Goes My Life” … and pondered my life.” This isn’t the only song Kenny Chesneythat has me looking back and realizing that everything happened way too fast.

As the years pass by, I’m very thankful as to how it all turned out, but I recognize that “my life” is going by too fast; it has me thinking about and remembering the French saying, “comme ci comme ça” (which translates as feeling “so-so”) and wondering if I could have been better or accomplished more?

And he said
There goes my life
There goes my future, my everything
Might as well kiss it all good-bye
There goes my life

In reality I – we – do feel extraordinarily blessed. We have our health, we are financially secure, our kids are doing great and we are both confident in our salvation and eternity. So I’ll try not to contemplate the song’s “comme ci comme ça” feeling too deeply and just enjoy the music. 😉  

The song is about a teen, who is blindsided when he finds out that his girlfriend is pregnant. He tells the audience that his dreams of skipping town after graduation and hanging out on the coast are ruined; in the chorus he sings, “There goes my life.”

By the next verse he is married to his girlfriend and their child is now a toddler. The boy discovers that it was all worth it in the end and that he loves his child more than anything. By the final verse, his daughter is grown up and going off to the West Coast herself. The father thinks as she drives away, “There goes my life, my future, my everything …”

LINK

Palm Sunday 2026: Palms, Praise… and a New Piano!

Posted By on March 29, 2026

Palm Sunday brings to mind the joyful noise that filled the streets of Jerusalem Palm Sunday clipartas crowds welcomed Jesus with palm branches and shouts of praise. One of my favorite verses captures that excitement perfectly:

“The crowds that went ahead of him and those that followed shouted, ‘Hosanna to the Son of David!’ ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!’ ‘Hosanna in the highest heaven!’”

— Matthew 21:9 (NIV)

This year, our family has our own little reason to celebrate a “grand” entrance — the Oostra’s piano was delivered!

Oostra's Boston Piano delivered 260327

On Friday, Katelyn and Drew took delivery of their beautiful Boston grand piano and are transforming their “off the foyer” home office to a music room Thinking emoji(déjà vu — very familiar).. After practicing on a keyboard, our granddaughters now have the real thing — an exceptional baby grand that looks right at home – we can’t wait to hear them play, as well as Katelyn.

Music has always been part of our family’s story — from my Grandmother Corbett on the organ, Mom Howard and daughter Chris exceptional on the piano, to Drew mom and Brenda (violin and piano) and our antique Brambach baby grand that helped Katelyn (and Taylor) learn to play piano when they were kids.

Have a blessed Palm Sunday. 🌿  May your days be filled with praise — and a little piano music too! 🎹

Definitely DESULTORY: Who is the Finnish Saint Urho?

Posted By on March 28, 2026

Neither my wife or I are Finnish or know much about Finland (although Brenda’s mom was 100% Swede – so I call that close) … Flag of Finlandbut one of the stories that our beach-walking friend Byron (Finnish heritage) shared with us was the tale of Saint Urho (see below the break for a few more details)? 😉

Anyway, I decided not to wait another year for March 16th to roll around before posting the humorous story and AI artwork that Byron shared. 

It was a pleasure walking the beach with you over the past few months and getting to know you better!
As I mentioned, my ancestry is Finnish.

For that reason l’ve taken an interest in the legend of St.
Urho, the fictional individual who drove the grasshoppers out Finland and prevented total destruction of the grape crop.
Wanting to have a holiday that was bigger and better than St. Patrick’s Day, a couple of witty individuals in Virginia, MN created the story in 1953.
Appearing below is the story I crafted and sent to my Finnish cousins on St. Urho’s Day.  The image below was AI generated.

Saint Urho on the beach -- AI assistance 😉

While walking the beach this morning I ran across the man himself…St. Urho!  He was on on a flight from Oulu, Finland to Virginia, MN but, because of the blizzard, the flight was diverted to West Palm Beach Airport and he ended up at the Suomi Talo – Finland House in Lantana.  He is a typical Finnish male, a painfully shy man of few words who simply wanted to be left alone.  However, I was able to get him to engage in some small talk.  He wants to go to Ketola’s Department Store in Virginia to purchase a new pair of boots, see some relatives, and hopefully get to the Hoito Restaurant in Thunder Bay for a big bowl of mojakka. 
He says Hei to all!

FYI … the Soumi Talo Finland House is a real building that still exists on Federal Highway (US-1) In Lantana, Fl. It was established in the 1930s as a gathering place for Finnish immigrants and continues to serve that purpose today!

Thanks for sharing the story, Byron … and for the enjoyable conversations on our daily beach walks! 

(more…)

Tech Friday: Can you (should you) still plug into wired Ethernet?

Posted By on March 27, 2026

This past week my New Hampshire friend and “once upon a time” my Twitter (X.com) “godfather,” Scott Bilik, mentioned that he turned off the wifi and cellular Scott Bilik X.com avatarconnection on his Android phone and “on a whim” tested the wired Ethernet connectivity. 

I was sitting near our home’s router, disabled WiFi and cellular data on my phone, then plugged in a USB-C–to–Ethernet adapter. And it worked! Android was happily chugging along with a wired connection to Da’ Internets.

Truly showing that phones are still – at their core – just miniature computers.

The gadgety person in me thought this was interesting … but the article Scott linked to in MakeUseOf.com highlighted the benefits of wired “Internets” … to keep with Scott’s humor and Bushism theme. 😉 

Wired Ethernet

Wired is better than wireless — it’s one of the few core tech principles that remain true in almost every situation. Sure, wireless connections can be fast and offer unparalleled convenience. They’re just not as reliable or consistent, and suffer from vulnerabilities like network congestion and interference. You should always keep Ethernet in your back pocket as a Wi-Fi alternative. Wired connections are superior, and that holds true regardless of device type.

Yes, even smartphones benefit from wired Ethernet connections. Wi-Fi and cellular handle 99% of your daily connection needs, but there are still a handful of situations that might warrant wired network connections. Android and iOS both feature support for Ethernet connections, so a simple USB-C accessory is all that’s required to start using them. I do just that for downloading content and low-latency gaming, and it’s really not that crazy.

LINK for more

Sifting through a couple old photos and remembering our Thistle

Posted By on March 26, 2026

Bug CanoeSince I’ve been lax on remembering to post something for Throwback Thursday #TBT, here are a couple old photos from my youth — triggered by talking to our beach walking friend, Byron, talking about a few of the cars he owned (very enjoyable conversation). 

First up, might be considered Volkswagen related, but really it has more to do with the canoe trips Charlie Matthews and I took when we were in high school – good times. That VW Beetle took us to some amazing headwaters and all points in between (including Florida and the Keys when we were on break from college)

Kamakaze in Key Largo 1977 Canoe on a VW Beetle

As for our 18’ Thistle sailboat, it was a relic even back in the early 1990s. A wooden mast and heavy fiberglass hull … but a Thistle was the first boat I had a chance to actually sail. Believe it or not, my youth pastor own one and took me sailing on Kiser Lake … it hooked me on sailing and I was able to convince my dad to buy the “Fiberpile.” Charlie and I spent many a days dreaming about sailing to far away tropical places when we were in high school. 

Our Thistle sailboat in the 1990s18′ Thistle sailboat in our Hudson, Ohio backyard in the early 1990s

A lazy blog archive entry: My favorite path and a PufferFish

Posted By on March 25, 2026

Brenda on our beach path

If I were smart, I’d claim my favorite view would be “looking at my wife” … but what makes this all the better … is the scene; it is my favorite view in the morning, in the afternoon or even evening. All my worries and concerns disappear when I am walking to the beach on this path … especially if I’m with the one I love. 😉 

After a questionable rainy and cooler start to March in Delray Beach, the weather the past few days have been nearly perfect. The humidity reasonable, temperature warm and breezes tropical. Also the beach walking has been enjoyable (meaning no foot pain) and our walks longer than usual (10.5 miles) and our finds unique” (yesterday’s post). Today was a Pufferfish and in case my granddaughters are checking it out, I’ll link to Kids National Geographic

Puffer Fish

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog