Jeanicia's Running Reality
This is where I'll lace up my thoughts and jog through the chaos of modern life. Whether I’m sprinting past social norms, dodging the latest trends, or taking a breather to reflect on the state of the world, you’ll find me here sharing unfiltered (and sometimes hilarious) takes on the issues that matter. Expect a mix of wit, wisdom, and the occasional rant—because life’s too short not to laugh while we tackle society's marathon together!
Friday, February 20, 2026
You Logically Shouldn't Trust Donald Trump
Monday, February 16, 2026
You Did It Joe
Joe Biden has been in public service so long that at this point, American history occasionally clears its throat and says, “Joe, you remember this part, right?” And he does. Not because he’s clinging to relevance, but because he was actually there—sometimes literally holding the pen, sometimes holding the grief, sometimes holding the country together with empathy and a slightly raspy whisper.
Let’s start with the obvious: Joe Biden did not wake up one morning at age 78 and decide to cosplay as a politician. This man was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1972, when gas was cheap, phones had cords, and “streaming” referred exclusively to water. He was 29 years old, which meant the Constitution technically allowed it but Congress side-eyed him like, “Is your mom coming to swear you in?”
And then tragedy hit immediately. Before he could even take his Senate seat, Biden lost his wife and daughter in a car accident. Two of his sons were critically injured. Most people would have walked away from public life forever. Biden didn’t. He took the train from Delaware to Washington every single day so he could tuck his boys into bed at night. This wasn’t branding. This was survival. The Amtrak conductor knew him by name. America didn’t know it yet, but empathy was being forged the hard way.
From there, Joe Biden did the unglamorous thing that doesn’t trend on social media: he worked. For 36 years in the Senate. Committee meetings. Foreign policy briefings. Judiciary hearings. Legislation that required reading, revising, negotiating, and—brace yourself—compromising. He chaired the Judiciary Committee, helped shape major violence-prevention laws, played a key role in foreign relations, and showed up for funerals, hearings, and midnight votes long after the cameras left.
Was he perfect? No. Was any senator navigating the political climate of the ’80s and ’90s perfect? Absolutely not. But Biden’s record shows evolution—something we say we want in leaders until they actually demonstrate it. He learned. He changed. He apologized. He grew. And somehow, in American politics, growth is treated like a character flaw instead of evidence of humanity.
Then came the Vice Presidency. Eight years as Barack Obama’s right-hand man, emotional support human, and resident explainer of Congress. Biden wasn’t the “cool” one. He was the “call you after midnight because something awful happened and you don’t want to be alone” one. He helped shepherd the Recovery Act after the 2008 financial crisis, worked on cancer research after losing his son Beau, and became the administration’s bridge to blue-collar voters who felt unseen.
And then—because life apparently decided Joe Biden hadn’t been tested enough—he ran for President after burying another child. At an age when most people are aggressively defending their right to never open another Excel spreadsheet again.
He didn’t run on vibes. He ran on stability. On restoring norms. On believing that government is supposed to function, not perform. On the radical idea that democracy requires maintenance. He inherited a pandemic, an economy in freefall, global instability, and a country that couldn’t even agree on basic facts. And instead of theatrics, he brought process. Instead of chaos, he brought competence. Instead of slogans, he brought… binders. Lots of binders.
Joe Biden is not flashy. He will never dunk on opponents with a viral one-liner. He sometimes loses a sentence mid-flight and just lands it wherever the runway happens to be. But he has spent over half a century doing the same thing: showing up, taking hits, absorbing grief, and continuing to believe that government can be a force for good if the people inside it actually care.
In a political culture obsessed with disruption, Joe Biden represents something deeply countercultural: endurance. The long game. The belief that public service is not about being adored, but about being accountable.
He is the living archive of American governance—flawed, resilient, stubbornly hopeful. A man who has outlasted trends, scandals, and several generations of pundits who confidently declared him “finished” every decade since the Carter administration.
And honestly? That kind of commitment deserves flowers. Or at least a standing ovation. Or maybe just a really good nap—finally not on Air Force One.
Because love him or critique him, Joe Biden didn’t just pass through history.
He clocked in.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Human Rights Come Before Immigration Status
Imagine a young girl hiding in a crowded alley, trying to stay out of sight. In her home country, speaking up against the government or even being the wrong religion could get her hurt—or worse. She flees, traveling with her family, crossing rivers and dusty roads, looking for a place where she can be safe. When she reaches a new country, she does not have papers, a visa, or permission to enter. She is scared, exhausted, and alone—but she is still protected by the law.
That protection comes from something called human rights. Human rights are rules that say every person deserves safety and dignity, no matter where they come from or what their legal status is. Crossing a border without permission does not erase these rights. In fact, the law is very clear: you cannot send someone back to danger.
This principle is called non-refoulement. It’s a big word, but it is simple: no government may return a person to a place where they would face persecution, torture, or serious threats to life or freedom. Non-refoulement comes from international agreements like the 1951 Refugee Convention, the 1967 Protocol, and the Convention Against Torture, and it is considered so fundamental that it applies even beyond countries that signed the treaties.
The United States has incorporated these protections into its own laws. Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, a person may apply for asylum regardless of how they entered the country—whether at a legal port of entry or somewhere else. Everyone must have a chance to present their story and receive due process before any deportation. That means the government must carefully evaluate the risks before making a decision, and no one can be sent back to danger without that review.
Think about a journalist who exposed corruption and is now being hunted by authorities. Think about a woman fleeing domestic violence in a country where the police cannot—or will not—protect her. Think about a family escaping a neighborhood controlled by gangs with a record of killing anyone who resists. All of these people could face death, imprisonment, or torture if sent back. U.S. law recognizes that their fear is real and requires that it be taken seriously.
Even children are protected. Imagine a small child arriving at a border after fleeing war. They may have lost family along the way, traveling alone or with relatives. They may have no legal papers, no money, and no idea what comes next. But human rights law ensures that the child cannot be forcibly returned to a place where they would face danger. Their claim must be heard, their safety prioritized.
This does not mean that everyone who arrives is allowed to stay forever. Borders exist. Immigration laws exist. Many claims are evaluated and denied. But human safety must come first. Every person has the right to be heard, to have their story considered, and to be protected from harm.
Courts in the United States have confirmed that these protections apply to everyone on U.S. soil, not just citizens. The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that non-citizens are “persons” under the Constitution, entitled to due process. In Zadvydas v. Davis (2001), the Court emphasized that even immigrants facing deportation must be treated fairly, and their detention and removal cannot be arbitrary.
Human rights are not loopholes. They are not excuses to ignore laws or borders. They exist precisely to prevent cruelty and injustice, even when governments face pressure to act quickly. You can support border enforcement and immigration laws while still insisting that no one is sent back to danger. In fact, the law requires it.
Immigration status is a legal category. Human rights are a legal obligation. Borders exist. Laws exist. But above all, humanity comes first. Every person deserves a fair chance to be safe, and no one should ever be deported to harm.
References
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights, art. 14 (1948)
- Immigration & Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1158(a)(1)
- Refugee Convention, art. 33 (1951) & 1967 Protocol
- Convention Against Torture, art. 3
- Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678 (2001)
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Fixing a Problem That Doesn’t Exist: The SAVE Act
As of early 2026, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (SAVE Act, H.R. 22) has passed the House of Representatives but has not become law. The bill, which requires anyone registering to vote in federal elections to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship, passed the House on April 10, 2025, with a 220-208 vote but stalled in the Senate. At first glance, this may sound reasonable—after all, only U.S. citizens should vote. But when you look closer, the law is more about creating obstacles than solving a real problem, and it raises serious concerns for voters, states, and communities.
Under the SAVE Act, all federal voter registration applicants must provide one of several forms of proof of citizenship, such as a U.S. passport, a REAL ID-compliant driver’s license, a military ID with proof of U.S. birth, a certified birth certificate or hospital birth record, or a naturalization certificate. If someone doesn’t have these documents, they can try to submit other evidence and an affidavit, but the process is complex, discretionary, and unfamiliar to many people. The law also requires states to actively verify citizenship using federal databases and to remove any registered voters flagged as non-citizens.
Here’s the kicker: voter fraud by non-citizens is extremely rare. Multiple studies and investigations by organizations like the Brennan Center for Justice have found that incidents of non-citizens voting in federal elections are statistically insignificant—so small that they do not affect election outcomes. In other words, the problem this law claims to solve barely exists, yet the solution could create real problems for millions of eligible voters.
Many U.S. citizens don’t have the required documents. Older voters may have lost birth certificates or were born at home without a hospital record. Low-income families may not have passports or REAL IDs due to cost or difficulty accessing government offices. Native American communities often face unique documentation issues, like inconsistent birth records on reservations. These citizens could be denied the right to vote simply because they lack paperwork.
States would also face a huge administrative burden. Clerks and election offices would need new systems, staff training, and additional resources. Errors in federal databases could wrongly flag citizens as non-citizens, leading to incorrect removals from voter rolls. Mail-in registrations would require extra steps, increasing the risk of delays or rejected applications.
The law raises serious privacy and equity concerns as well. It requires states to share voter registration information with federal agencies like the Department of Homeland Security and Social Security Administration. This raises questions about whether sensitive personal data could be misused or leaked, or whether citizens could be unfairly targeted or disenfranchised because of database errors or racial bias in how information is flagged.
Imagine Maria, a lifelong U.S. citizen, who wants to register to vote before a federal election. She was born in a rural hospital in 1970, and her birth certificate is misplaced. She doesn’t have a passport or a REAL ID yet. Under the SAVE Act, Maria could face extra hurdles, confusing paperwork, or even rejection, despite being fully eligible. Meanwhile, the likelihood of a non-citizen fraudulently registering to vote remains extremely low.
Beyond these practical concerns, we have to ask why the government is spending so much time and energy focusing on small groups of people: non-citizens, trans people, Muslims, and others who are already marginalized. For example, bills restricting voter registration often disproportionately target areas with large immigrant populations. Policies that require strict documentation can make it harder for Native American voters to participate. Efforts to surveil or “verify” citizenship often overlap with broader attacks on Muslim communities or trans people, such as attempts to restrict access to identification or public services. These policies raise the question of whose participation is being questioned and why, even when there is no evidence of widespread fraud.
When Support Makes All the Difference
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
History, But Make It Comfortable
There’s a false narrative gaining traction right now—that teaching the truth about slavery, Jim Crow, and racial violence exists to make white people feel guilty. Politicians repeat this as if it’s a fact, as if history itself has intent, as if honesty is somehow an accusation.
But history doesn’t assign guilt. It tells the truth. What people do with that truth—who they choose to identify with—has always been their choice.
When we teach about slavery, we are not telling white people, this is your fault. We are saying, this happened. And once you know that, the only real question becomes: who do you see yourself as in this story?
Because the past was never populated by one kind of white person.
There were white people who enslaved Black people, defended the practice, wrote laws to protect it, and built wealth by stripping others of their humanity. And there were white people who fought against slavery, organized abolitionist movements, helped enslaved people escape, challenged unjust laws, and risked their lives to stand on the side of equality.
Both groups existed at the same time. Both are part of our history.
So when politicians claim that teaching this history makes white people feel guilty, what they’re really reacting to isn’t guilt—it’s choice. Because once people see the full picture, they’re forced to reckon with the fact that neutrality was never neutral, and silence was never harmless.
Guilt isn’t the lesson. Agency is.
Teaching about slavery and Jim Crow doesn’t force shame onto anyone. It reveals how injustice actually works—through systems upheld by ordinary people making ordinary decisions. It shows that oppression wasn’t inevitable or abstract; it was constructed, defended, enforced, and normalized.
If that truth feels uncomfortable, it’s not because of someone’s race. It’s because discomfort often accompanies clarity. Once you understand that injustice was the result of choices, it becomes harder to pretend we don’t have choices now.
That’s the part many politicians are desperate to avoid.
When they claim they’re protecting children, what they’re really protecting is fragility—an unwillingness to let young people ask the obvious questions. Why were some people allowed to own others? Who made those laws? Who challenged them? Who benefited? Who stayed silent?
Those questions don’t indoctrinate children. They help children develop a moral framework. They teach them that the world they inherit was shaped by human decisions—and that they, too, will be asked to make decisions when they encounter injustice.
No one is asking white students to identify with enslavers. But the resistance to teaching this history suggests an assumption that the only white people in the past worth mentioning were villains. That simply isn’t true.
White students are free to identify with abolitionists, freedom riders, civil rights allies, labor organizers, journalists who exposed brutality, lawyers who challenged segregation, and everyday people who refused to comply with unjust systems. Those stories are just as real. They just don’t serve the same political comfort.
So when someone hears about slavery and immediately thinks, this is about me and my guilt, that reaction deserves examination. Because history doesn’t force anyone into a role. It presents options.
You don’t inherit guilt from the past—but you do inherit responsibility in the present. Responsibility to recognize injustice when it appears. Responsibility to decide whether you’ll benefit quietly from an unfair system or challenge it openly.
Teaching history honestly doesn’t shame anyone. It removes the lie that injustice was accidental or unavoidable. It makes room for accountability instead of denial.
It reminds us that systems don’t run themselves. People run them.
And if people built unjust systems, people can dismantle them.
You can identify with those who hoarded power—or those who challenged it. With those who enforced cruelty—or those who refused to participate.
That choice belongs to every generation.
And that is exactly why the truth must be taught.
Sunday, February 8, 2026
In My Lifetime, the Halftime Show Has Always Been a Vibe — But Bad Bunny? I’m Losing My Mind!
If you’ve been watching the Super Bowl halftime show over the years, you know the drill: flashy, chaotic, a little extra — always a vibe. But when they announced Bad Bunny as this year’s headliner, I didn’t just get excited — I screamed, I danced, I nearly knocked over my coffee. And then I saw some of the reactions online… and I genuinely had to sit down.
People were mad. Mad. Over Bad Bunny. And I thought… are we not all at the gym perreando at least once a week? Like, come on — it’s reggaetón, it’s movement, it’s pure joy.
Then some folks started whining they wanted a “U.S. citizen” to perform. Sweetie… Bad Bunny IS a U.S. citizen. Born in Puerto Rico, which means he literally has papers. Meanwhile, let me remind you of the actual history lesson: several non-U.S. citizens have headlined halftime shows with ZERO backlash — Phil Collins, U2, Shania Twain, Sting, Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Coldplay, Shakira, J Balvin, The Weeknd, and Rihanna. That’s right, kids — it’s not about citizenship, it’s about your inability to handle a little culture and rhythm.
When the citizenship argument failed (shocker), the outrage pivoted: “Well, his music when translated is explicit.” Oooh, I see, so we’re translating now? Meanwhile, some were floating the idea of Kid Rock performing. You know… the guy who somehow has never had a “translation issue”? Then the pivot shifted again: “It’s because he sings in Spanish.” As if you personally know every word to every English song ever. Chill.
And honestly? I’m DONE with the attitude that basically screams, “If I don’t like it, no one else can enjoy it.” Newsflash: if you don’t want to watch Bad Bunny, fine — don’t watch. But don’t ruin it for the rest of us who actually know how to have fun.
Growing up with Puerto Rican family, hearing some of these takes — especially from a fitness community that claims to be inclusive — has hit a little sideways. Benito isn’t just an entertainer; he’s music, movement, culture, and a WHOLE mood. Respeto es lo mínimo. Respect is literally the bare minimum, y’all.
This halftime show isn’t just a performance. It’s a celebration of music, movement, and culture that so many of us already carry in our playlists and workouts. It’s about embracing joy, dancing unapologetically, and remembering that being inclusive isn’t just a word you throw around like confetti — it’s action.
So here’s my take: put on your sneakers, crank up the reggaetón, grab your cafecito, and let’s perrear like we mean it. Because Bad Bunny is here, and honestly… we DESERVE this vibe.


