The Voices and Faces of Aleppo Will Haunt Us by marilyn salenger

Physicians for Human Rights photo

Physicians for Human Rights photo

A young girl whose life of normalcy was destroyed by world events over which she had no control sat in hiding, fearing for her life. There was no Twitter or Facebook to hear her cries. She wrote words in a diary recounting her frightening experiences and struggles to remain hopeful on the edge of terror. Her name was Anne Frank and she lived in Amsterdam, Holland in the 1940s. She and her family remained hidden behind a bookcase wall for two years trying to avoid capture by the Nazis. Anne and the rest of her family were eventually found and thrown in a concentration camp where all but her father died. Their crime was their faith. They were Jewish.

The world waited too long to save the millions who perished in those camps over 70 years ago. The world has repeatedly waited and watched too long as genocide and the mass slaughtering of people has taken place in different parts of the world. Rwanda. Bosnia. Darfur.

And now Syria.

The world once again, including the United States and our allies, appears to be paralyzed as the horror continues. Fear of getting immersed in another war has left the human cries for help unanswered, and the millions who have fled afraid for their future. As President Barack Obama leaves office, the red line he drew for this Syrian war and its use of chemical weapons has been crossed and blown to the wind. Obama threatened force, but chose otherwise. The reluctance to forcefully confront Bashar al-Assad and his Russian and Iranian backers overwhelms.

Aleppo, once Syria's largest city, is now a place of ruins. Children, so many of whom have been orphaned, are trapped in what was once their home along with remnants of scattered families. It is unimaginable not to think back to the Holocaust and its victims. A dictator is once again using his power in an attempt to succeed in the mass destruction of his people

Syrians have been left no option but to seek refuge in foreign lands. Yet their numbers are so great that the countries whose shores initially welcomed them, now feel burdened. As global politics become increasingly involved, their futures continue to be problematic. For Syrian Muslims, the doors are beginning to close.

The role of the United States remains questionable. President-elect Donald Trump assumes office having pledged to ban those of the Muslim faith. His attraction to Russia makes the future of Syria even more ominous, and the lives of millions of refugees more uncertain. 

The cries for help continue. Enough. The slaughter of human beings should not be tolerated. It goes against the very basis of humanity and the need to survive.                                                                                              

Trump's Very Public Blurring by marilyn salenger

Photo by Gage Skidmore/ CC-SA 2.0

Photo by Gage Skidmore/ CC-SA 2.0

Donald Trump continues what he started in his quest to be president. Angst and anger. As he transitions from chief executive of a private business to the most powerful public job in the world serving as president of the United States, Trump remains caught up in personalities and knee jerk reactions. While the rest of the country is looking for direction and leadership, his constant and very public parade of people in and out of his gilded building in New York City appears to have taken priority over almost all else, except his Twitter account.

Our president-elect has chosen not to accept daily intelligence briefings, taking only three to date, while he continues to talk to leaders from all over the world. If you think about that for more than a minute, you can get a major case of angst.

Former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, who served under nine presidents expressed serious concern, saying,

"A president is always looking at a series of threats that may be out there ... Some of them may be credible, some may not be credible. But those threats change on a day-to-day basis with new intelligence, with new sources, with new assets that provide information. Every president I know ... has taken their intelligence daily brief because that sets the agenda for what you have to focus on as president of the United States."

The one thing we now know that we can count on, whose proportionate importance becomes hard to compare, is being able to wake up each morning and read Trump’s thought(s) of the day. Just follow him on Twitter @realDonaldTrump. For anyone who thought he might assume a more presidential and restrained persona after the election, think again. One day he tweets about his disdain for Saturday Night Live spoofs (and he's been a prior guest on the show), the next it's about foreign policy, his hatred of the media (that he works hard to court), the cost of a new Air Force One, or the announcement of a new Cabinet nominee.

It's all running together, and that's a problem. Including the ethical standard Trump's term of office will set. The imperative of doing away with conflicts of interest appears to be viewed by our president-elect as part of that annoying status quo he railed against. But it's extraordinarily important. While federal conflict-of-interest laws appear to exempt the president, there’s a constitutional ban on accepting payments from foreign governments, and there are anti-corruption laws against bribery and fraud. Previous presidents, including Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush, legally separated themselves from their businesses.

If you combine Donald Trump's global business entanglements, including financing, with his children's roles in his life both personally and professionally, the potential conflicts of interest are just waiting to happen. All you have to do is look at his new Trump International Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC. Foreign governments and special interest groups are already reserving their rooms. Trump's daughter, Ivanka, has her own branded spa inside its luxurious space, and she's planning to move to DC along with her husband and close advisor to her father, Jared Kushner. 

Trump supporters don't seem to care. They continue to make excuse after excuse for their man, no matter what he does, generally ending with "Give him a chance." 

Donald Trump is walking a delicate line with the rest of the country. Divisiveness is palpable every minute of every day somewhere in these United States. It's not a healthy way for America to stand tall. 

Reach out to all of us, President-elect Trump. Focus time and energy on leading the way to some form of unity so that more of us can give you a chance.