Published in the High Desert Advocate in the March 7th, 2019 Edition
Glenn Mollette
By Glenn Mollette
People around the world dream of coming to America and having a better life. Since our founding as a nation, millions have come here and found a better life than they left behind. We can be proud of this in our country. Welcoming those who desire to come here and work hard is good for them but especially good for us. We now have about thirty-seven million legal immigrants in the United States.
Dr. Erin Berber is an Endocrinologist at Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio. He was raised and educated in Turkey. He graduated from Istanbul Medical School but came to America for additional medical training. He has been with Cleveland Clinic since 2005. I wasn’t sure that I liked him very much when he recommended that my entire thyroid should be removed. The biopsy indicated a strong suspicion of cancer on one side and he didn’t like how the other side looked. He was right as I had four malignant nodules pathology would later confirm. Looking back, I like him a lot better knowing now I was in the hands of a very capable, trained surgeon who took care of me. I didn’t care that he was from Turkey. He knew what he was doing.
There are a lot of doctors in America from India, Turkey and other countries. Many of them have come to America, completed medical school or done their post medical school training. Many have stayed, become incredible citizens and made our country even better. We have been a nation of opportunity for them but also they have helped make our nation greater.
America has been a land of opportunity for people from around the world. Therefore, we must keep ourselves free and this requires a strong military, secure border, good law enforcement and the freedom for all Americans to be able to protect ourselves. The government should provide good roads and bridges and ensure that all Americans have access to good affordable health care. After this we all need an environment where we can pursue a life of peaceful existence and our daily dreams with a reasonable tax rate.
My grandpa Hinkle operated a small rural Appalachian grocery for most of his life. He and grandma Hinkle worked in the store together until he was 83 and she was about 80. He worked up until two weeks before his death. Life was six days a week of long hours but with grit and no one else to care for them they made a living and raised ten children in an impoverished East Kentucky culture. My dad worked underground mines for over 30 years while he and mom farmed and raised five children. They worked hard but we had a good life.
America must continue to be a place where people with desire and determination have a chance to make something of themselves. This makes America great.
Glenn Mollette wrote many books. Learn more at www.glennmollette.com•