I just watched Super/Man…

… and this film was a massive pull on the heart.

Superman is my favorite super-hero. I have 1000s of Superman comic books. It’s possible the reason this true because I saw Superman: The Movie in 1978 when I was six-years-old. I have faded memories of reading the comics at my grandmothers house, lying in the floor with the air conditioner blowing cool air over me and the comic pages. I remember holding the pages down so they didn’t turn on their own. I also have a memories of gazing at an image from the movie (the one below) and wishing there was a real Superman. I even prayed and wished I could be Superman.

To say, this film impacted my life is an overstatement. I bought the trading cards, the comic books, the soundtrack on vinyl and recorded the moving off the ABC Sunday Night Movies on VHS. I still have the VHS tape and the movie is in rough shape as I know I wore out that magnetic tape long ago. I recently found a digital copy of that ABC screening (it had scenes that weren’t in the theatrical cut) and watch it once a year.

So, back to the Christopher Reeve story. It saddened me in 1995 when Christopher Reeve suffered his riding accident that nearly took his life. I prayed he would recover. I’d be dishonest if I didn’t wish his recovery was because I wanted him to return to the role. Most of us comic geeks hoped that he’d return and maybe even team up with Michael Keaton in a cross over movie. It was just fan boy fantasies as movies like that weren’t as common as they are now.

I think the film brings great awareness of his life and struggles. I learned much about the man behind the Superman that I didn’t know. I also hope that the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation continue to fund medical research to hopefully find a remedy to spinal cord injuries. To see what Christopher went through was hard. He may not have had the physical strength of Superman but he had the determination and bravery of Superman. To see his children remember those horrifying days and years of recovery brought tears to my own eyes.

If you get an opportunity to watch the film and I insist you do see this documentary, you’ll see that Christopher Reeve had the support of many Hollywood celebrities, premier politicians and even some Presidents of the United States. A bill was even signed into law by President Barrack Obama to set aside roughly $150 Million dollars to do more research into spinal cord injuries. And I tried hard not to bring my own jaded emotions to this part of the film.

I know I’m cynical and as I get older it doesn’t get any better. So, we have something that impacts thousands of Americans, millions of people worldwide, and the US Government only sets aside $100 million bucks?! Why isn’t this more. Especially when we send billions to other nations. We sent $100 Billion dollars to the Ukraine alone in the last year. So yes, this is why I look at Congress and that President with disdain. It disgusts me that they send that kind of money funding a war that doesn’t benefit us. And they praise and expect us to cheer and give standing ovations because they got a minor $100 Million dollars for something thats much more important than foreign wars that shouldn’t have happened in the first place. (Ok, enough of the politics!)

But you’ll now understand why I have little faith in our respected leaders.

Please go see this documentary. Please donate money to the cause.

Be a Superman!

Just a thought ….

So, if you think our government leaders are not trying to push us to a socialist or communist regime, think about the constant desire to push the minimum wage upwards?

The federal minimum wage in 1990 was: $3.80. This was the hourly wage I got when I was hired at my first job. It was a film developing business called Moto Photo. I was happy to get it. We were promised a .25 cent raise in 6 months if we did well and possible .25 cent raise each year after that. We also got a $4.95 commission by selling club memberships that were $24.95. I was able to buy a car in high school working this wage.

I moved to Colorado in 1994, and got a job at Kmart making $7.50. I was making only $4.55 back home. I thought wow, I’m going to be rich! Yet, apartments were $400 a month where they were only $275 back home. So each city and state did have higher wages even though the federal min wage was only $4.25. Business would hire at a higher rate to get better people. And depending on the skill and job, hourly wage was determined by what one needed to do. Why did I get $7.50 because I was going to work in the photo processing area and I had 4 years of experience. I got .50 cents more an hour for that skill set over a standard cashier.

By the time I was in management at the Kmart Corporation I was still only making about $12 an hour. Fast forward about 30 years and the federal minimum wage is still only $7.25. Yet Colorado’s min wage is $14.42; Denver is $18.29. So local min wage overrides the Federal. Some would say this is just to fight the higher cost of living. Ok, sure. But what does that do to the economies of the region or does to inflation. Do you think bread and milk costs the same in Denver as it does say in Wichita Kansas?

As I was driving by the local McDonalds, I saw the “Hiring” sign. The starting wage is $18.29 to $21.89. And the the job just requires one to stuff fries in a bag or take orders at the take out window. Now, my wife is a teacher at a public school for kindergarteners. She makes $21.89. She teaches the next generation of children to write, count and behave in a class room environment. Yet, this is the same wage you can earn just working at a burger joint. I remember when that was not the norm.

I think when a low-education-easy-skill job pays the same as a higher-skill-education job, that feels like communism. Everyone gets the same wage– no matter the job.

Perhaps I’m just exaggerating or being a conspiracy theorist. Yet, if there is no motivation to become a high skill or high education job over those of a ditch digger or trash man, then what do you think that does to the work force? Just a thought….