'Cause somebody has too. It seems in Puerto Rico, that this day passes without so much as a glance. Only Federal facilities are off today, while most businesses (including banks) comport themselves as if it was a normal workday.
Hispanics in the U.S. complain that THEY don't have a DAY. They ask why the influential Hugo Chávez who fought for the rights of immigrant workers doesn't have a day... as if everyone needs a DAY, a special day to call their very own, to love him and pet him, to squeeze him and hug him. Is Martin Luther King Jr. Day just a token black holiday?
Our honoring of Martin Luther King Jr. is not an acquiescence to black pressure, an ethnic hero of choice for those darker Americans so that they may feel like they are somebody. I shout an emphatic NO! even though the road to a national holiday was frought with much debate over this very topic. He's just a black leader. He's a womanizer. How can we put him on a pedestal with the likes of Washington, Lincoln? America finally "gave in," and bit by bit they adopted the national holiday that was to become Martin Luther King Jr. Day. I imagine there are many still grumbling, and I wonder if white folks don't like the feeling that maybe there's a black man telling them what to do.
Folks, Martin Luther King Jr. was not a great Black American, he was a great American. Martin Luther King Jr. restored OUR sullied, tattered, torn constitution to what it originally intended. Martin Luther King Jr. restored your rights, whatever your ethnicity. He restored your dignity whatever you call yourself. He gave back to you what was stolen from you. He fought, suffered, and died for YOU, you Americans, you Hispanic Americans, you Native Americans, you Chinese, Korean, Philipino, Croatian, Polish, German, Italian, Irish, French, Scandanavian, Russian, Indian, and Arab Americans. Martin Luther King Jr. wrestled with the soul of a nation, a lethargic broken lost shadow of its former self and fought to restore its heart, its core. He struggled to return to YOU what you deserved, what every person deserves.
I say to every American citizen that did not take time to reflect on what Martin Luther King Jr. did for you individually, shame on you! Shame on your shortsightedness. Shame on your selfishness. Shame on your cluelessness.
The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. Martin Luther King Jr. pulled many a long night by himself, hands bloody, arms weary, against apathy, hatred, bigotry, and even physical death. He pulled and pulled and pulled a sinking America kicking and screaming back into focus, back toward justice, back toward righteousness,
For you.

By Laura
The other day, while Jim was cooking and as the TV was turned on to the news Olaia shares her comments. She hurrahs when she sees the soldiers coming home and wonders why the news report on their return is so short. She can identify with the joy she felt knowing her Daddy was back home after a 90 day military absence. Then she asks why are more soldiers going back if they already caught the bad ruler. Jim and I try to explain that there are still some people that are angry and want to make things the way they were. These people worked for the bad ruler and are used to the way he did things, scaring and hurting people.
The news then flashes to police arresting a woman who killed her children and I wish Olaia would not catch any of it but she does. "Mommy why are that women that way?" "Sometimes people are just sick, their brain is sick and they do bad things.
Olaia then walks to the kitchen and I change the channel before more horribly depresing news reveals to our daughter the despair and violence of the world. In the kitchen I overhear her explain to Jim: "Daddy, bad people have God in their hearts they just don't feel Him. They need to listen to Papa Dios."
At a time when it is all too common and too easy to disassociate ourselves from the violence and despair by calling those who commit violence monsters, Olaia reminded Jim and me that God is in them just as much as He is in us.

Laura was out in a meeting today, so I was alone with the kids, the two little delightful munchkins. They were getting antsy to get out, so around four thirty, we decided to go to the park. I put on their shoes and got them their clothes. Jaimito was particularly impatient. "Go go go gogo....waaaaaaaaa."
"Jaimito, Daddy has to go pee pee. We're still going to the park. I'll be right back."
Suddenly from out of nowhere, a breeze picked up. I felt the back of my neck tingle. It was a sinking feeling. I was miles from home and I knew there was no one to save me.
I answered my frantically ringing cell phone. "James O'Malley."
«Hey James, Jose Camacho»
«How are you, Jose, how can I help you.»
«There seems to be a problem with our bandwidth. I'm not getting access to the Internet, and my provider said that they are not showing any connectivity problems with our site.»
«Hmmm,» I said as I did the pee pee dance. Damn! I lamented, tech support.
By then, the wind was blowing like a 2 year old lying on the floor throwing a tantrum. I knew it was bad. Really bad. None of the hatches was battened... or whatever you do with hatches. «Let's take a look,» I said as I logged in via secure shell. «You look good from here. I don't see a problem.» I was puzzled. I asked him about his machines, checked IP's, checked the web caching proxy. Nothing. I sent him running around checking cables, different machines, different web-sites. Nothing. Jaimito was still wailing.
Oh my God, the Cape wasn't where I thought it was. I realized I was in the wrong machine. «Jose, you won't believe this. I was logged into another client's machine. Forget everything I said.» I felt like an idiot, but we quickly got back to work. No time to fret. This was life or death. I got him to go to the machine and log in. I wanted him to run an IP traffic program so we could analyse from where the flood of traffic originated. «Log in, type i-p-t-r-a-f and hit enter.» He typed it wrong. I spelled it again and I got him into the program.
Turn into the storm, I kept repeating to myself, but it's tough. When you are being buffeted from all sides, you can't tell from where the winds are blowing. Suddenly a big one came crashing over the port side. My cell phone started to beep. Arrgh, low battery. I quickly found a charger cord and plugged myself in. I was now tied down on deck. I wasn't going anywhere. If the boat sank, I was going to go with it. I still had to use the bathroom and I could no longer see what the kids were doing, and the mosquitos were ravaging my legs.
I continued to lead him through menus and commands, having him read to me the program's output letter by letter. Every mistake costs valuable time. What could be going on here, I thought? The machine is spewing out tons of traffic, but I can't log in. Normally, even when traffic is heavy, the encrypted shell will at least give me a login prompt. It looks like a ICMP flood from a virus worm, but I have that blocked at the firewall. What is going on!
«Check the protocols on the outgoing connections,» I said. «I bet it's a large email attachment. And I bet it's going over the IP-sec encrypted tunnel.» Sure enough that's what it was, encrypted communications between nodes on their VPN. IP-sec packets take precedence over normal Internet traffic, so if you flood the tunnel, traffic outside receives a lower priority. «I bet someone sent a huge email attachment and it's stuffing up the tunnel.»
Jaimito is quiet now. I don't hear him, but as any sailor knows, that is the time to be afraid, be very afraid. «Hold on,» I told Jose. I put the phone down and made my way to our bedroom. The floor was sticky. Odd. The devastation I saw would bring a grown man to tears: lipstick, makeup orange juice everywhere. The storm wrought more damage than I could have imagined. "Jaimito!!" He looked up at me with guilty eyes and handed me the smashed lipstick as if to say, I was just looking to give this to you, Daddy. "Oh, you little boy!" I said in a stern voice, which as any parent knows is more than sufficient to initiate a full blown guilt cry. Jaimito started bawling again. Such a good little repentant boy. I love him. But now was not the time, the storm was coming again, and I needed to get back to my station.
I picked up the phone. «Jose, are you there? Good, now we see that it's a large email attachment. Let's try to delete it from the mail queue.» Type the command /root/qmHandel -l | less, then look for the unique id of the email in the queue. Then type /root/qmHandel -dxxxx. Rinse, lather and repeat until the queue is empty. I quickly realized that the task was too complicated to attempt in such a tumult. «Let's just kill the whole email server, » I said. «Type k-i-l-l-a-l-l -9 q-m-a-i-l---s-e-n-d... no, not sent... s-e-n-d. Okay, got it. Did it return an error. No? Okay, hit the up arrow and repeat the command until you see it say "no process found." » This carried on for a while. Mistakes, corrections, return to the command. I would leave the phone make a quick circle of the house to see that hatches were battened and attempt the log in remotely. «I'm in!» I exclaimed. «Okay, that's what it was, Jose. Let me go into the queue and delete the e-mails. I'll have it fixed in a few minutes.» I hung up the phone and breathed a sigh of relief. I ran to the bathroom before I exploded and Jaimito started wailing again as if to say, I waited all that time and you're still not going to take me to the park?! Poor little thing. Of course, Olaia was a little angel, she stayed calm throughout the perfect storm.
It's just the beginning.
Remember when you used to go out when you were younger? You would go out to the parties, dances, merriment, and then you would come home to the quiet. Well, when you have kids, the party comes home and stays like a European house guest. It runs 24/7. It's like one of those Rave parties that go on and on and on. It never stops. It never lets up.
So before you think that parents are old, boring, and un-fun, just remember, we party harder than twenty somethings. We party harder than college students. We party harder than high school students.
We go OUT to relax!

Jaimito, is a little party animal. There is no doubt. He takes after his mommy. I guess that's why I like hanging around the two of them so much. In college, Laura was the nucleus of all fun, our circle of friends orbiting like electrons attracted to her positive energy. In all reality, I'm just along for the ride. Sometimes it's a bit bumpy, but oh the fun! Couple that with the fact that she's a good stable element, and you've got a perfect party.
Jaimto is definitely Laura's son.
He's been saying something for the past month or so. It sounds like "Go-qool." He says it so emphatically and precisely, that is, the exact same way every time. I, for the life of me, haven't been able to figure out what he has been trying to communicate. Today, as we were getting up, he repeated it while Laura was putting on his shirt.
"Oh, you want to go bye-bye," she said.
"Is that what he's been saying?" I said incredulously. "He's saying go out or go bye-bye? Geez, all this time, I never figured it out. It was never on my radar screen that he could possibly be expressing a desire to go out, to get out, to go bye-bye." And my mind wandered back to all times he'd said it. He'd been bored, looking for excitement.
"Daddy, I'm tired of my toys, I want some REAL ACTION. I WANT TO PARRRRRRRTTTTTYYYYY!!!"
"Hehe, well I guess that explains it. He is your son, hon. Since, I'm not such an initiator of partying, it never dawned on me that he could be wishing for action, to go bye-bye." I shake my head, "Well, if you two come up with something fun to do, you'll let me know, right? I don't want to be left behind."