An Open Letter to President-Elect Donald Trump

An Open Letter to President-Elect Donald Trump

Dear Mr. Trump:

Congratulations on your victory after a long election night and even longer campaign year. This race was hard fought and against a formidable opponent in Hillary Clinton. And your electoral win says much about your tenacity and skill in this political effort.

Given that I have spent the past 38 of my 48 years studying, commenting, writing, teaching, and engaging in government and politics, I must say that this was one of the most fascinating and difficult presidential election years I have ever witnessed. As such, I am taking the liberty to share some thoughts not only about the process but also about the prospects ahead.

Is This an Epochal Election?

Is This an Epochal Election?

Beyond expectations of pundits, pollsters and most political analysts, Donald Trump was elected the 45th President of the United States. While the reasons for this outcome will likely be debated far into the future, it is meaningful to ask whether this vote ushered in a new epoch in American history, or a continuation of current trends. Few elections have changed the direction of our country; Jackson, Lincoln and the triumphs of both Franklin and Theodore Roosevelt come to mind. Using their victories and the pivotal changes produced in their aftermath, we can speculate if this election result might result such an event.

America's Longest Debate

America's Longest Debate

A debate stretching back to America’s founding recently resurfaced during this election cycle, with Donald Trump’s suggesting the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank’s monetary policy favors the incumbent party’s bid to retain political power. From the beginning of our nation’s origins, our leaders have quarreled over the power and influence of a central bank. Initially, opposition led by Thomas Jefferson, centered on the concentration of economic clout a central bank would necessarily possess, claiming it would benefit manufacturers and traders in New England over agrarian interests in other states. However, with war debts still needing to be repaid, merchants and farmers having to rely on credit from one another or on banks in England, and each state issuing its own currency, the argument favoring a central bank prevailed. At the time of its creation, just three local banks operated in all of the 13 states, one in Boston, New York City and Philadelphia.

A 9/11 Remembrance: Why I Honor the Flag, the Anthem, and the Constitution

A 9/11 Remembrance: Why I Honor the Flag, the Anthem, and the Constitution

When my father was a young boy in India, he dreamed of someday going to America—a remarkable place of opportunities. In the 1940’s in a newly independent India, that idea seemed as preposterous as going to the moon. But in 1969 America put a man on the moon. And just two years later in 1971, my father immigrated to the United States from India. He was 27 years old and came to this country on a student visa. He had never left his native country and only had a few dollars to make his way in a new country.

Reaching The Unreachable

Reaching The Unreachable

Imagine you’re a 21st century Christian missionary: Where on this vast earth would you go to bring the word of Christ? For Pastor Mike Goodyear of Pathways Church in Fair Oaks, California and his congregation, the answer is simply 10-40 degrees latitude. Within these geographical latitudes is drawn a rectangle from longitude 15 degrees west of the meridian at Greenwich England to 120 degrees east of the meridian. What lies within this rectangle is the African continent’s northern half, the middle east, along with southwest and southeast Asia and much of China. As Pastor Mike, as he is affectionately known points out, this area was chosen because we wanted “to go where the need is greatest.” He explains that about 2 billion people live within this rectangle area who “don’t know Jesus.”