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!
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Why Do Global Companies Accept Global Standards—Except for Americans?
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
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.
📖 Where It Appears in Sacred Texts
📜 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.
📖 In the Christian Bible:
The Book of Esther appears in the Old Testament (though some traditions include additional Greek portions).
📖 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
Friday, February 27, 2026
Donor States, Immigrants, and the Money Grab No One Talks About
If you’ve ever heard someone complain about “donor states,” you probably thought, oh, those wealthy states paying more in taxes than they get back. And if you’ve followed news about immigration, you’ve probably noticed the endless finger-pointing at immigrants — as if they’re the problem, as if they’re the ones draining resources.
Here’s the truth: the real story isn’t about fairness, or crime, or who deserves what. It’s about money, power, and politics.
Since 2025, the federal administration has gone on what feels like a mission to punish states that don’t fall in line. And who are these states? Often the so-called “donor states” — places like California, New York, Minnesota, and a few others. These are the states that send more tax dollars to Washington than they get back in federal spending. Think about it: billions in revenue that help fund the rest of the country. And yet, instead of respect or recognition, these states have been targeted.
Take Minnesota, for example. Federal officials threatened to hold back hundreds of millions in Medicaid funding, citing alleged “fraud concerns.” On the surface, that sounds reasonable, but the state’s leaders insist it’s politically motivated — a punishment for resisting federal directives. Imagine what that means for real people: seniors waiting for prescription coverage, families depending on health services for children with disabilities, hospitals scrambling to fill gaps. California, one of the largest donor states in the country, has faced constant legal and political pressure while trying to provide health care, housing, and education resources to immigrant families. Meanwhile, other states like New York, Washington, and Massachusetts have been scrutinized for “sanctuary policies” or progressive programs, even though these initiatives don’t cost the federal government anything extra — in fact, they save money in the long run.
And let’s talk about immigrants — the people often used as scapegoats in all of this. The reality is that immigrants are major contributors to the economy. They pay taxes, run small businesses, and fill essential jobs in health care, construction, food service, and technology. A Cato Institute analysis found that over decades, immigrants have contributed a fiscal surplus of trillions of dollars, paying more in taxes than they receive in benefits. And yet, since 2025, federal policy has leaned heavily toward enforcement: arrests, deportations, and aggressive raids that disrupt communities and local economies. Cities like Denver have stepped in with protective measures, restricting federal agents from certain properties to prevent unnecessary detentions.
Why does this matter? Because these attacks aren’t abstract policy debates — they have real consequences for real people. Cutting federal funds from donor states can reduce access to healthcare, education, and infrastructure projects that millions rely on. It can also shift the burden to local taxpayers, often hitting the same people who are already paying the highest taxes. Immigrant communities face family separations, economic instability, and fear of participating in civic life, even when they’re law-abiding residents contributing to the state’s well-being.
Consider this: if California, a state that contributes billions more than it receives, is forced to redirect resources to handle federal enforcement priorities, that’s money that can’t go to schools, roads, or disaster response. For example, California has invested tens of millions in local programs for immigrant students — programs that could face cuts if federal funding is withheld. If Minnesota loses Medicaid funding, vulnerable families, seniors, and people with disabilities feel it first. And when immigrants — the workers who keep hospitals running, food on shelves, and communities vibrant — are threatened, the economy and social fabric weaken for everyone. Even something as small as a delayed bus service, a cut after-school program, or a reduced vaccination clinic can have ripple effects on a community.
The pattern is clear: states that contribute the most financially, and communities that contribute socially and economically, are being attacked — not because of policy failures, but because of political leverage and control over resources. Cuts to federal funding, raids, legal threats — it’s all part of the same story.
But the fight isn’t one-sided. Donor states aren’t taking this lying down. California is challenging federal funding cuts in court while supporting immigrant families. Maryland is suing to block detention centers. Local leaders across the country are finding creative ways to protect communities, even under pressure. These examples show that resistance is possible, but it requires awareness and public support. For instance, when Denver limited federal enforcement in local properties, it not only protected families but also set a precedent for other cities facing similar federal pressure.
At the end of the day, this isn’t about fairness or safety. It’s about power, influence, and the bottom line. And while the headlines might make it look like immigrants and donor states are “problems,” the reality is the opposite: they’re the ones holding the system up, quietly paying into it, contributing to it, and trying to make it work.
So when you hear rhetoric about “states taking more than their share” or “illegal immigrants draining resources,” remember: it’s not just a story — it’s a warning sign. Someone is deciding who gets money, who gets protected, and who pays the price. And if we don’t notice, the consequences will hit all of us — the taxpayers, the local communities, and the people who are already doing the most to keep our country running.
This is why paying attention matters. It matters when headlines try to divide us instead of showing the truth. It matters when decisions about funding or enforcement are made in a political vacuum rather than based on evidence and fairness. And it matters because the more we understand who is really contributing and who is really being punished, the better we can advocate for policies that actually work for everyone — not just those in power.
What You Can Do: A Call to Action
Awareness is the first step, but action is what makes change real. Here’s how you can help:
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Notice and Share: Pay attention to local news about donor states and immigrant communities. Share stories with friends, family, or on social media to break through misinformation and highlight the contributions of both.
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Support Local Programs: Many communities run programs for immigrant families, from school tutoring to legal aid. Even small donations or volunteering can make a huge difference.
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Advocate for Fair Policies: Contact your elected officials and demand that funding decisions and immigration enforcement be fair, evidence-based, and free from political retaliation.
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Engage in Civic Life: Attend city council meetings, school board discussions, or community forums. When people show up, it’s harder for decisions to be made quietly that hurt the most vulnerable.
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Amplify Voices: Follow local leaders, immigrant advocates, and donor-state officials who are fighting for equity. Share their stories and perspectives — sometimes a single story can shift public perception more than headlines ever will.
We can’t sit back and let political games decide who gets funding, protection, or recognition. By noticing, sharing, and taking action, we can make sure that donor states and immigrant communities are not only defended but also celebrated for the contributions they make every single day.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Who’s Really Paying for Social Security and Medicare—and Where’s the Money Going?
Meanwhile, the current administration is talking about cutting Medicaid and privatizing Social Security, threatening the very programs that citizens rely on. If immigrants and citizens alike are paying into these systems, then the big question becomes: where is all that money actually going?
Immigrants—both documented and undocumented—are essentially subsidizing a system they may never access. Undocumented workers pay Social Security taxes using ITINs, yet cannot claim benefits. Legal immigrants contribute for years before even becoming eligible. And now, with potential cuts and privatization looming, the funds they’ve poured into the system could be siphoned away, redirected, or exposed to market risks, leaving future retirees with far less than promised.
This isn’t just a policy debate—it’s about fairness. Millions of families depend on these programs. Millions of workers contribute their hard-earned money in good faith. Yet the system increasingly seems opaque, unaccountable, and tilted. People who work and pay taxes have every right to know exactly how their money is being used—and to ensure it is being used for its intended purpose.
Think about the grandfather relying on Social Security for his medicine. Think about the young immigrant worker paying into Medicare, knowing they may never see a dime. Every dollar they contribute is a reminder of a system that collects money but doesn’t always deliver on its promises.
Social Security and Medicare were meant to be fair, reliable, and transparent. Right now, they are none of those things. We need accountability, clarity, and respect for the people—citizens and immigrants—whose work funds these programs. Because at the end of the day, it’s not just about money. It’s about trust, fairness, and the promise that the system will protect the people who keep it running.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
FAITH WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE A BRANDING STRATEGY
I can’t help but think about Matthew 21 whenever I hear that Donald Trump is selling Bibles. The image is jarring — faith being packaged and marketed like a product, tied to political identity. In that moment, I imagine Jesus walking into the temple courts during Passover, where pilgrims were crowded around money changers and animal sellers, trying to navigate the transactional demands of worship. The place meant for prayer and connection with God had become a marketplace. Jesus’ response was immediate and uncompromising: he overturned the tables and declared, “My house will be called a house of prayer, but you are making it a den of robbers.” Worship was never meant to be commodified, and faith was never meant to be leveraged for personal gain or political branding.
This idea is reinforced in John 13:35, where Jesus told his disciples that everyone would know them by their love. Not by what they sold, promoted, or posed with, but by the tangible, active love they extended to others. Faith is not a symbol to display. It is an action to live.
This truth becomes even more vivid in Matthew 25:35–40, where Jesus describes what faithfulness looks like in the real world. He talks about hunger, thirst, strangers needing welcome, people lacking clothing, those who are sick, and those imprisoned. These were immediate, life-or-death realities in first-century Judea. Hunger was constant. Water was precious and scarce. Travelers relied on hospitality to survive. Clothing was not guaranteed, illness often led to social isolation, and imprisonment stripped people of almost everything. To follow Jesus meant entering into these realities, seeing the suffering, and acting to alleviate it.
Modern leaders give us concrete examples of what this looks like when faith is lived. George W. Bush launched PEPFAR in 2003, saving over 25 million lives by funding HIV/AIDS treatment around the globe. Jimmy Carter has spent decades building homes with Habitat for Humanity, restoring dignity and stability for thousands of families. Barack Obama expanded health coverage for over 20 million Americans through the Affordable Care Act and strengthened nutrition programs that fed millions during economic downturns. Even infrastructure projects like federal clean water and lead pipe removal reflect the same principle: meeting human need in practical, measurable ways. This is faith expressed through action, not slogans.
Then consider the contrast. In 2025 and 2026, policies implemented by Trump and many MAGA-aligned leaders show the consequences when faith is treated as a marketing tool rather than lived as mercy. Asylum hearings are being canceled or fast-tracked for denials, leaving vulnerable people without due process. Refugees with pending court cases face detention, and some are deported to third countries without notice. Hundreds of thousands are stuck in legal limbo, and ICE agents have made arrests of people who are already under active protections. Policies like these actively hinder the ability of people to survive and thrive. They stand in stark contrast to the call to “welcome the stranger” and “care for the least of these.”
At the same time, Trump’s sale of “God Bless the USA” Bibles demonstrates a clear shift from substance to brand. Faith becomes a commodity, and loyalty to a political identity is elevated above the tangible care of those in need. Even criminal convictions, admissions of sexual assault, avoidance of taxes, and other transgressions have not diminished the political influence of this brand. Faith is no longer about living mercifully; it is about signaling allegiance, performing identity, and selling an image.
Scripture repeatedly draws this distinction. Matthew 21 warns against turning sacred things into profit. John 13 tells us love is the defining marker of discipleship. Matthew 25 measures faithfulness by how we feed, clothe, welcome, heal, and visit. Jesus did not measure devotion by who held a Bible or who waved a flag. He measured it by how deeply people entered into the lives of those in need and alleviated suffering.
Holding a Bible in your hand does not make you a disciple. Selling one does not make you righteous. Living faith means extending mercy even when it is inconvenient, difficult, or costly. It means feeding the hungry, welcoming the stranger, caring for the sick, and standing with the imprisoned. It means turning our actions toward others rather than turning sacred things into products.
As Jesus said, “Whatever you did for one of the least of these… you did for Me.” The question is not who is holding a Bible. The question is who is living it.


