From Deseret News archives:
Adults, youths don't seem to understand 'no'
My mother, who spoke only Spanish, quickly squelched my enthusiasm and in a stern tone told me, "Con el gobierno no se fuega" (you don't mess around with the federal government). I was told it was a federal offense to tear a stamp off and, if I did, the police would come after me. That was one of many daily lessons I learned about living by the rules, according to my mother and "reaffirmed" by my father when necessary (which is more than I want to remember).
My parents escaped the violence of the Mexican revolution shortly after being married in their "ranchito" in Fresnillo, Zacatecas. Not unlike today's immigrants, they left to seek a better life. They ended up in Idaho picking onions and thinning beets. The only schooling they had was my father's a second-grade education in Fresnillo. They did not understand English, but they were honest, hard-working people who were humble, respected the laws and made sure their children did as well. But then, that was true for most families in those days. Fortunately, there are still parents who teach their children to live by the rules very early in life and as adults they don't need cops to remind them. They have that tape of their mother's rules constantly running in their mind.
That was then. Now, we see a breakdown in personal responsibility and an increasing disrespect for the law. "No" doesn't really mean "no." Today, many show no respect for teachers, law enforcement or the law be it driving, school bullying or taxes. We have politicians, locally and nationally, who interpret the laws according to their convenience. It's only when they get caught that they claim amnesia or a clerical error. We have upstanding people evading taxes. Maybe they didn't have moms to remind them, "You don't mess with the federal government."









