No. Enough.
During a protest Friday night, clergy, elected officials and members of the public expressed outrage over the treatment of migrants and refugees at the southern border, but perhaps no one was as clear and succinct as Emily Rosenbaum.
“1982 was the year my stepmother took my toothbrush away. That was the year that I started sleeping on the floor. That was the year when the food got less and worse, and that was the year that I went to school dirty, in unwashed clothes and dirty underwear,” Rosenbaum told about 70 people who gathered at the Jewish Community of Greater Stowe to brave the rain and make their voices heard.