Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Night Freedom Began

Before there was Easter, there was Exodus.
What It Actually Is
Passover commemorates the Israelites’ liberation from slavery in Egypt.
The central ritual meal (Seder) retells the story of oppression and freedom.
It is history remembered as identity.
πŸ“– Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
πŸ“œ In the Torah:
Exodus 12–15 (especially chapter 12 for Passover instructions).
This is core Jewish scripture.
πŸ“– In the Christian Bible:
Same Exodus text. Also referenced in the Gospels during the Last Supper.
πŸ“– In the Qur’an:
Moses (Musa) and the Exodus appear extensively:
• Surah Al-Baqarah (2:49–50)
• Surah Al-A’raf (7:103–137)
The Qur’an recounts Pharaoh, oppression, and deliverance.
What People Get Wrong
Passover is not just “Old Testament stuff.”
It is the backbone of Jewish identity.
And no, acknowledging Jewish liberation history is not an attack on anyone else.
Shared Themes
Liberation. Divine justice. Deliverance from tyranny.
This story belongs to all three traditions.
Why It Matters Now
Oppression is not ancient history.
Passover reminds us freedom stories matter.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Party After the Discipline

If Ramadan is spiritual boot camp, Eid al-Fitr is the graduation party.
What It Actually Is
Eid al-Fitr marks the end of Ramadan, the month of fasting.
It begins with:
• Communal prayer
• Charity (Zakat al-Fitr)
• Food. Glorious food.
This is joy after restraint.
πŸ“– Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
πŸ“– In the Qur’an:
While Eid itself is not named directly, fasting in Ramadan is commanded in Surah Al-Baqarah (2:183–185).
Eid marks the completion of that command.
πŸ“– In the Bible:
Ramadan and Eid are not present.
πŸ“œ In the Torah:
Not present.
However: Sacred fasts followed by celebration? Very present.
• Yom Kippur (Leviticus 16)
• Passover feast after liberation (Exodus 12)
Different calendar. Similar rhythm.
What People Get Wrong
It is not “Muslim Christmas.” It is not a rejection of other holidays.
It is simply the end of fasting.
If your neighbor eats biryani, you’ll survive.
Shared Themes
Discipline → Gratitude → Celebration.
Every Abrahamic faith has that rhythm.
Why It Matters Now
In a culture allergic to restraint, Eid reminds us that joy hits different when you’ve earned it.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

The Night That Changed Everything

Some nights you scroll. Some nights you sleep. And then there’s the Night of Power.
Laylat al-Qadr commemorates the night the Qur’an was first revealed to Prophet Muhammad.
This is not a political night. It’s a revelation night.
What It Actually Is
Observed during the last ten nights of Ramadan, Laylat al-Qadr marks the beginning of divine revelation.
It is described as: “Better than a thousand months.”
Muslims spend it in prayer, reflection, and seeking forgiveness.
Quiet. Intense. Sacred.
πŸ“– Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
πŸ“– In the Qur’an:
Surah Al-Qadr (97:1–5) explicitly describes the night.
Also referenced in Surah Ad-Dukhan (44:3).
This is foundational Islamic scripture.
πŸ“– In the Bible:
Laylat al-Qadr does not appear.
πŸ“œ In the Torah:
It does not appear.
However —
The idea of divine revelation happening at a specific moment in history absolutely does.
• Moses receiving the Law: Exodus 19–20 (Torah & Bible).
• Prophetic revelation experiences throughout scripture.
Different night. Same theme.
What People Get Wrong
It is not a “takeover night.” It is not political. It is not aggressive.
It is about revelation and mercy.
If someone praying all night makes you nervous, that’s a you problem.
Shared Themes
Revelation. Scripture. Divine guidance entering history.
The Torah was revealed. The Gospel was proclaimed. The Qur’an was revealed.
Three traditions. Same category: sacred speech entering time.
Why It Matters Now
Laylat al-Qadr reminds believers that transformation can begin in one moment.
Sometimes history changes quietly.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Why Do Global Companies Accept Global Standards—Except for Americans?

I’ve been sitting with a question that I can’t quite shake: how do U.S. employees working for global organizations tolerate the obvious double standard in how they’re treated?

Because the reality is this—these companies know how to do better.

When multinational corporations operate in countries like India, Germany, or the U.K., they comply with local labor laws without hesitation. That means offering robust paid leave, national holidays, parental benefits, and in many cases, guaranteed healthcare. Not because they’re feeling generous—but because they have to. It’s the law.

And yet, those same companies turn around and tell their U.S.-based employees to be grateful for significantly less.

Make it make sense.

We’re talking about organizations that are fully capable of administering comprehensive benefits packages across multiple legal systems, cultures, and expectations. They navigate complexity every day. They adapt. They comply. They figure it out.

So why does that effort seem to stop at U.S. borders?

Instead, American workers are often given the bare minimum—limited PTO, expensive or confusing healthcare options, and workplace cultures that subtly (or not so subtly) discourage actually using the benefits they do have. And the messaging is always the same: this is just how it is here.

But it doesn’t have to be.

That’s what makes it so frustrating.

Because this isn’t about feasibility—it’s about willingness.

These companies prove every day that they can meet higher standards when required. They demonstrate flexibility, adaptability, and even generosity—when external pressure demands it. But in the U.S., where labor protections are weaker and expectations have been normalized downward, that same energy disappears.

And the burden shifts to the employee: be thankful, don’t compare, don’t ask too many questions.

But how do you not compare?

How do you ignore the fact that your colleague doing similar work in another country has guaranteed time off, better healthcare access, and stronger protections—simply because their government requires it?

It creates a strange dynamic where American workers are essentially subsidizing corporate convenience. The company saves money here while maintaining its global reputation elsewhere. And the people who know the most about how uneven the system is—the employees inside these organizations—are expected to just…accept it.

I don’t think that’s unreasonable to question.

If anything, it highlights a bigger issue: when fairness is treated as optional instead of foundational, it stops being about policy and starts being about values.

So maybe the real question isn’t why companies do this—we already know the answer to that.

The better question is: why are we still expected to be okay with it?

Monday, March 2, 2026

Two Visions of Texas: What the Propositions Say — and What They Assume


If you read through the full list of Republican and Democratic propositions in Texas, you start to notice something deeper than policy differences. You begin to see two entirely different stories about what Texas is, what it fears, and what it believes government is for.

One story is rooted in constraint — limit taxes, limit mandates, limit services, limit cultural change. The other is rooted in expansion — expand healthcare, expand access, expand wages, expand infrastructure, expand rights.

Both claim to defend freedom. But they define freedom differently.


The Republican propositions open with property taxes — a longstanding Texas pressure point. The call to assess property taxes at the purchase price and phase them out entirely over six years signals a sweeping fiscal ambition: shrink government revenue and force spending reductions to match. Requiring voter approval for local tax increases reinforces the same philosophy — government should grow only with explicit permission.

This is a coherent ideological position. It assumes government overreach is a core problem and that limiting revenue will discipline spending.

But as the list continues, the focus shifts.

Healthcare appears, not in the form of expanding access, but in prohibiting denial of care based solely on vaccination status. Again, this reflects a worldview concerned with mandates and institutional control.

Then education enters the picture — and here the narrative becomes more cultural than fiscal.

One proposition would require public schools to teach that life begins at fertilization. Another would ban gender, sexuality, and reproductive clinics and services in K-12 schools. These measures assume a particular threat: that schools are either promoting controversial medical services or failing to reflect a specific moral framework.

Yet public K–12 schools are not operating reproductive clinics in any widespread way, nor are they centers for surgical gender transition services. School nurses provide basic health services. Counseling departments address student well-being. Curriculum standards are publicly debated and regulated through state processes. The idea of banning “gender, sexuality, and reproductive clinics” suggests the existence of a systemic practice that has not been demonstrated as widespread in Texas schools.

Similarly, the proposition to prohibit Sharia Law stands out. Texas courts already operate under the U.S. Constitution and Texas law. Religious law does not supersede civil law in American courts. There has been no credible evidence of Sharia law being implemented as binding law in Texas judicial systems. The proposal speaks less to an existing legal problem and more to a cultural anxiety — a symbolic gesture meant to signal vigilance rather than solve an identifiable governance issue.

These propositions reveal something important: not all policy planks respond to measurable systemic problems. Some respond to perceived cultural threats.

That pattern continues with immigration. The Republican proposal to end public services for undocumented immigrants frames immigration primarily as a fiscal burden. It prioritizes restriction and cost containment. There is little discussion of labor markets, federal authority, or economic integration — the emphasis is on reducing strain.

The Democratic propositions tell a very different story.

They begin with expanding Medicaid — an effort to increase healthcare coverage in a state with one of the highest uninsured rates in the country. They propose funding public schools at the national average per pupil, raising salaries for school and state employees to at least the national average, and adjusting for inflation. They address housing affordability in urban and rural communities. They call for expanded public transportation so residents can get to work, school, and healthcare.

Where Republicans emphasize limiting government growth, Democrats emphasize using government capacity to address economic strain.

Healthcare, for Democrats, centers on access and autonomy. Expanding Medicaid increases coverage. Protecting reproductive decision-making safeguards individual medical choices. These are framed not as cultural signals but as systemic responses to affordability and access gaps.

On immigration, Democrats propose humane policies and pathways to citizenship — treating immigration not simply as a cost issue but as a human and economic one requiring structural reform.

The environmental plank is similarly expansive: clean water, clean air, biodiversity protection, and preservation of natural and cultural resources. By contrast, the Republican water proposition focuses specifically on banning large-scale export of groundwater and surface water to a single entity — narrower and defensive in scope.

Even the democracy-related proposals reflect different priorities.

Republicans propose term limits for elected officials and preventing Democrats from holding leadership roles in a Republican-controlled legislature — a move that consolidates internal party power. Democrats propose secure online voter registration, banning racially motivated or mid-decade redistricting, and creating a non-partisan redistricting board — structural reforms aimed at electoral process fairness.

And then there is Proposition 10 on the Democratic side: banning racially motivated redistricting and creating a non-partisan board. This responds to a documented, litigated issue in Texas politics — redistricting battles have repeatedly reached federal courts. In contrast, prohibiting Sharia law addresses a legal framework that does not govern Texas courts.

That contrast is telling.

Some propositions respond to measurable policy debates — healthcare coverage rates, housing costs, teacher pay, redistricting lawsuits, property tax burdens.

Others respond to symbolic or cultural flashpoints — fears about religious law infiltration or the existence of school-based gender and reproductive clinics that are not operating as widespread institutional systems.

None of this is accidental.

The Republican propositions reflect a governing philosophy built around restraint — restraining taxes, restraining services, restraining cultural change, restraining perceived ideological influence. They also contain elements of symbolic politics, signaling protection against cultural shifts that many supporters view as threatening.

The Democratic propositions reflect a governing philosophy built around expansion — expanding services, expanding infrastructure, expanding healthcare, expanding wage support, expanding voter access. They focus more on economic equity and structural reform than on cultural signaling.

In the end, the divide is not just policy-based. It is narrative-based.

One side tells a story of Texas needing protection — from taxation, from mandates, from immigration strain, from cultural change, from perceived ideological encroachment.

The other tells a story of Texas needing investment — in healthcare, schools, wages, housing, transportation, environmental protection, and electoral fairness.

When you read the propositions closely, you can see not only what each party wants to do, but what each party believes is wrong.

And sometimes, what a party proposes to ban tells you as much about its fears as what it proposes to build tells you about its hopes.

The Holiday Where the Villain Loses and Everyone Eats Pastries

Some of y’all think this is “Jewish Halloween.”
It’s not.
Purim is the annual celebration of survival — specifically, the survival of the Jewish people in ancient Persia when a government official tried to wipe them out and failed spectacularly.
Let’s get into it.
What Purim Actually Is
Purim commemorates the story of Queen Esther, her cousin Mordecai, and the exposure of Haman’s plot to destroy the Jews in the Persian Empire.
It is joyful on purpose.
Costumes? Yes.
Food? Absolutely.
Reading the whole dramatic story aloud? Mandatory.
Booing the villain’s name? Encouraged.
This is resistance with pastries.
πŸ“– Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
πŸ“œ In the Torah:
The story of Purim is found in the Book of Esther (Megillat Esther), part of the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh).
Key chapters: Esther 3–9.
This is canon in Jewish scripture.
πŸ“– In the Christian Bible:
The Book of Esther appears in the Old Testament (though some traditions include additional Greek portions).
πŸ“– In the Qur’an:
The story of Esther does not appear in the Qur’an.
And that’s okay.
Not every sacred story is shared across traditions. That doesn’t make it suspicious. It just makes it specific.
What People Get Wrong
Purim is not about revenge.
It’s about survival under political threat.
It’s about diaspora identity. It’s about courage inside empire. It’s about a woman navigating power strategically.
And no, celebrating Purim is not some kind of anti-anyone statement. It is a historical memory of attempted annihilation.
How It Gets Politicized
Any time minority survival is celebrated, someone somewhere frames it as hostility.
But Purim is not anti-Persian. It is anti-genocide.
There’s a difference.
Shared Themes
Even though Esther’s story is not in the Qur’an, the theme of God preserving a people through unlikely individuals is deeply shared across Abrahamic traditions.
Minority faith surviving empire? That’s practically a recurring series.
Why It Matters Now
Purim reminds us that:
• Bureaucracy can be weaponized.
• Silence can be deadly.
• Courage sometimes looks like strategy, not shouting.
And yes — you can fight evil and still eat dessert.
Before villainizing a holiday, maybe read the book.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Thanks, Period

You know what really gets me? The fact that I’ve had a menstrual cycle all these years when I didn’t even need it! As a kid, I thought the only question was how many kids I'd have, not if I'd have any at all. Now, here I am, child-free by choice, wondering why I’ve spent decades suffering through cramps, bloating, and mood swings for absolutely no reason. If I’d known early on that child-free living was an option, I’d have saved myself the trouble—and maybe even invested that tampon money into something more useful. Seriously, if you add up the cost of menstrual products over a lifetime, it’s *absurd*—close to $18,000 by some estimates! And to make matters worse, lawmakers across the country don’t even want to subsidize these products. In many states, menstrual products are still taxed as "luxury" items. Luxury? Oh please, I assure you, there’s nothing luxurious about bleeding every month.

Let’s take a moment to talk about *why* this is even still an issue. Men in power are deciding what’s necessary for women’s health, from menstrual products to birth control and abortion access. How about instead of regulating our wombs, they start funding the things we need? Basic necessities like menstrual products should be free, or at the very least, untaxed! Some states are catching on—New York and California have removed the tampon tax and now offer free products in schools and public facilities. Minnesota has joined the effort, with Governor Tim Walz signing a bill to provide free menstrual products in schools, despite backlash. The fact that we even need to push for this shows just how out of touch lawmakers can be. Meanwhile, in Texas, we can’t even get lawmakers to protect basic reproductive rights, but they have all the energy to pass restrictive abortion bans and take birth control off the table .

And speaking of taking things off the table—how is it that with all of this control over women’s health, no one told us we didn’t even need to menstruate at all? Science shows that women don’t *need* to have periods if they’re not planning to get pregnant, and yet, here we are, still fighting for the right to control what happens with our bodies. Imagine if teenagers were given the option to pause their periods and harvest their eggs, preventing all the unnecessary suffering. We could stop the cycle—pun intended—and invest that time and money elsewhere. Instead, lawmakers are focused on controlling women, rather than giving us options.

And let’s not even get started on the control men have over women’s bodies. The idea of bodily autonomy is under attack, and it's happening everywhere. I mean, it’s like a never-ending game of who gets to make the rules about what we do with our health. Just last year, Texas passed Senate Bill 8, which bans most abortions after about six weeks, before many women even know they're pregnant! Meanwhile, in California, they’re finally getting it right by offering free menstrual products in schools and public facilities. It’s about time, right? But progress is slow, and we’re still dealing with places that try to defund Planned Parenthood while pushing policies to limit abortion access. It’s wild how many hoops we have to jump through just to maintain our bodily autonomy  .

And what about those kids these lawmakers claim to care so much about? Nearly 24,000 teens aged 15 and up are stuck in the foster care system, many of whom may never be adopted. Yet the same politicians who want to force women into motherhood are doing very little to address the crises these kids face. These teens are fighting for stability while we’re out here fighting for control over our own reproductive rights .

Now, I’ve made my peace with the fact that I didn’t opt out of menstruation sooner, but here’s the kicker: the one thing I could always count on was my period. While lawmakers and men were busy telling me what I couldn’t do, my body reminded me every month that, like clockwork, I had this little sliver of consistency. It’s funny in a twisted way, that the thing society loves to ignore or overregulate was the one thing I could always count on. So, while the world tries to control women's health, I find a certain ironic comfort in the fact that, through all of it, my menstrual cycle has always had my back.