Sometimes with long-haul and stubborn advocacy, you get a win

VOYCE conference flyer for event in metro St. Louis on July 10, 2025 on upholding patient rights when they receive medical care.

I’m ecstatic a nursing home ombudsman shared this conference flyer with me today. We’ve been communicating now for over six years, and during that time, we’ve had lows, then understanding, and also some wins. She said the topic and issues for this upcoming conference being hosted by VOYCE came up, in part, as a result of our many conversations about gaps in care for nursing home residents needing medical care. There’s been a lot of water under this bridge.

VOYCE is a long-term care ombudsman organization based in metro St. Louis, where I have a family member in a federally subsidized nursing home. Its mission is “to educate and empower individuals and their families for quality living across the continuum of long-term care.” They’ve always been responsive to me, and for that, I’m grateful.

And given all that is going on with the absolute political and economic chaos in my country, I could not have received a better message today.

Sometimes what you do as an advocate counts. This is true for me. I hope it’s also true for people who work for groups like VOYCE, who get too little credit and thanks.

In life, you rarely get the luck or privilege of knowing when your advocacy pays off, but that is not why you do it. You do it because it is the right thing to do, even if you lose, over, and over, and over, and over again. If it’s right, and you are firm and do not back down, you have found an unshakable power. Tapping into that takes time, and lots of trial and error. But it’s real.

South Korea gives the world hope for the rule of law and democracy

South Koreans cheer the moment an impeachment vote against President Yoon Suk Yeol is announced publicly.

It is so good to have good news again lately.

First, the world mostly cheered as it witnessed the stunning fall of the horribly brutal regime of the Assad family in Syria on December 8, 2024. That situation is not over, and nations including the United States and Israel were quick to take military actions inside of Syria for their own security interests. But seeing ordinary Syrians with smiles brought me joy.

And now, today, December 14, 2024, the National Assembly of the Republic of Korea voted to impeach its president, Yoon Suk Yeol, who declared martial law on December 3, 2024 (literally in the dark of night), only to rescind that order six hours later when faced with democratic opposition in the nation’s elected legislative body and in the streets.

This is what democracy looks like, and I am so impressed by the people of South Korea for defending their country’s basic democratic freedoms. Well done! This is footage, shared by AFP, of the moment the vote by the National Assembly was announced.

Personally, I am in need of hope now, and I want to thank the people of Syria and South Korea for sharing that with the world.