In a Jan. 20 column ("Will this downpour stop? It always has"), George F. Will stated that it "must be misery to awaken to another day of being Donald Trump." Let's see …
(1) He is the 45th president of the United States; (2) he won the election by defying all polls and defeating Hillary Clinton; (3) he has a beautiful wife; (4) he has a wonderful and accomplished family; (5) he is a billionaire; (6) he owns multiple properties and businesses here and all over the world; (7) he has the news media reporting and analyzing all he says and all he does 24/7; and (8) he is in excellent health.
Lord, that all of us could wake up to another day so miserable.
John Heili, Lake Elmo
MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION
It is a gateway drug, plain and simple. These stories show it.
Regarding the potential legalization of recreational marijuana in Minnesota, I am going to be very candid. Potheads and haters get ready.
I recently finished working for eight years at the Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center in downtown Minneapolis. This is a men's program, and the men come for six months to try to get sober. I was part of a group that led chapels and then small-group discussions every Wednesday night. Eight years, 52 weeks a year: 416 small groups. That is a lot of small groups.
The stories of the men in the program were utterly devastating. The "Sally" is often the last chance for many of the addicts in the program. Many of them had been through as many as 10 recovery programs. Most of them had lost their jobs, their marriages, their families, their health and their dignity. Certainly, none of them intended to end up at the bottom of the barrel.
To a man, their stories began when they were 14 or 15 — when they started drinking or smoking pot. One thing led to another, and they became hard-core addicts.
To a man, they would tell you that marijuana was a gateway drug to meth, cocaine, crack, heroin and other devastating drugs.