Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013
Conservative Health Care
A converted former right-wing Republican contributed this story:
Luci and Her Visitor
Luci was sick at heart.
On the way home at 10 PM, from her second job as a cleaner, the stars finally aligned and three pieces fell into place; she saw an open drugstore, she had twenty extra dollar in her purse, and she remembered she hadn't had her period since -- well, she couldn't really remember. It had been at least four months. She stopped at the store, and bought a pregnancy test.
She'd missed periods before, which her girlfriend Katya had put down to overwork, bad diet, and the strain of trying to raise a child with almost no money. Luci and baby Liza lived in a fleabag motel which served two types of patrons -- those who rented by the hour (Luci could hear their rutting through the thin walls), and those whose only alternative was the street. A tenement-style apartment would be cheaper, but Luci found it impossible to save up a security deposit. Liza, a terrible two, was cared for by the kindly old lady in the next unit, who cleaned the motel toilets in lieu of rent. Luci had no idea what she'd do if the old lady died or moved away.
Luci had been home for ten minutes, and had gone straight to the bathroom with the test. She knew she had to go next door and collect her child, but first she had to compose herself and find some strength. The test had been positive.
Luci knelt by her bed, her face on the threadbare blanket, and sobbed. "Dear God, why?" she said. "I'm not a bad girl. It's just that I get so lonely, and when some man looks at me cross-eyed, I get pregnant. Billy told me I looked pretty, gave me one beer after work, made love to me in the bed of his truck, and then he never called, and now I have his baby in me. It's not fair. Help me, God. Help me."
There was a sighing as of wind, and a dim red glow appeared in the corner of the room. A voice said, "I vill hear your petition." The voice had an Eastern European accent.
Luci didn't stop to question the reality of the apparition. She poured out her heart -- the poverty, the dead end jobs, the pain of trying to do right by Liza, and now the unexpected pregnancy -- a pregnancy in a state where an abortion in the first trimester was hard to get, even if you had money, and a pregnancy in the fourth or later month was unobtainable.
"So vy did you fall pregnant?"
Luci confessed her lapse in judgment, precipitated by loneliness and some unaccustomed alcohol.
"This is vat you need to do. Fly to San Francisco. Check into the Four Season hotel. Speak with the concierge. She can set everyting up."
Luci was dumbfounded. "What would that cost?"
"If you are careful, not more than ten tousand."
"Ten thousand?" Luci screamed. "I don't have ten!"
"Den svallow your shame, and see your GP. He can refer you to an OB-GYN who takes your employer's medical plan."
"I don't have a GP. And my employer doesn't give me medical. I have two part-time jobs, and neither have benefits."
"Vy do you have such miserable jobs?"
"Because I can't find anything better. Say, what sort of angel are you, anyway?"
"And vy can't you find anything better?"
"Probably because I'm a high school dropout. As you ought to know, angel or lady or whatever you are, I can barely read. I can't even add without a calculator."
"And vy is dat? Are you lazy, or stupid, or boat?"
"Well, I wasn't lazy. I tried hard. But my teachers were all shit; fifty kids to a class, and we all got A's and B's. One teacher actually said, 'I'm not going to let a bunch of stupid kids destroy my career. You will all pass. Let somebody else tell the principal that you're unteachable."
"Ant vere you unteachable? Vat is dat, if not stupid?"
"I don't know. All I know is, my Mom couldn't help me. She was a dropout, too. I had no place to study at home. My teachers went home at four. The school library closed at four."
"So vy didn't your mother put you into a better school?"
"We were POOR! Don't you get it? POOR!"
"Many poor people overcome many obstacles and achieve great success. Vy veren't you vun of dem? I vas."
"Many poor people? How many is many? Out of how many millions of poor people? Are most of them ...fools?"
"Ach, dere it is. As Herbert Spencer said, 'The only consequence of saving fools from their folly is to fill the world with fools.' The world is full of fools because misguided people helped fools like you. Vell, I'm not going to make the same mistake."
"Go to hell!" Luci screamed. "Who, or what, are you, anyway?"
"Vat you should say is, 'Go BACK to hell.' I am da ghost of da great philosopher Ayn Rand. In recognition of my great visdom, Lord Satan has appointed me ambassador to the human race in general, und to da Republican Party in particular."
"Great wisdom, my ass. Just go to hell. Or back to hell. Whatever."
"Of course, Lord Satan did not SAY it vas because of my great visdom. He is such a tease. Vat is said vas, 'I'm kicking you out of hell because I can't stand the sight of you. You'll never be a demon, you're already too big a bitch.' Funny, is it not?"
"Yeah. Hilarious." At the red glow faded, Luci's eyes fell on the room's single closet, a dusty alcove with no door. Between her threadbare clothes, there hung a wire coat hanger.
Luci and Her Visitor
Luci was sick at heart.
On the way home at 10 PM, from her second job as a cleaner, the stars finally aligned and three pieces fell into place; she saw an open drugstore, she had twenty extra dollar in her purse, and she remembered she hadn't had her period since -- well, she couldn't really remember. It had been at least four months. She stopped at the store, and bought a pregnancy test.
She'd missed periods before, which her girlfriend Katya had put down to overwork, bad diet, and the strain of trying to raise a child with almost no money. Luci and baby Liza lived in a fleabag motel which served two types of patrons -- those who rented by the hour (Luci could hear their rutting through the thin walls), and those whose only alternative was the street. A tenement-style apartment would be cheaper, but Luci found it impossible to save up a security deposit. Liza, a terrible two, was cared for by the kindly old lady in the next unit, who cleaned the motel toilets in lieu of rent. Luci had no idea what she'd do if the old lady died or moved away.
Luci had been home for ten minutes, and had gone straight to the bathroom with the test. She knew she had to go next door and collect her child, but first she had to compose herself and find some strength. The test had been positive.
Luci knelt by her bed, her face on the threadbare blanket, and sobbed. "Dear God, why?" she said. "I'm not a bad girl. It's just that I get so lonely, and when some man looks at me cross-eyed, I get pregnant. Billy told me I looked pretty, gave me one beer after work, made love to me in the bed of his truck, and then he never called, and now I have his baby in me. It's not fair. Help me, God. Help me."
There was a sighing as of wind, and a dim red glow appeared in the corner of the room. A voice said, "I vill hear your petition." The voice had an Eastern European accent.
Luci didn't stop to question the reality of the apparition. She poured out her heart -- the poverty, the dead end jobs, the pain of trying to do right by Liza, and now the unexpected pregnancy -- a pregnancy in a state where an abortion in the first trimester was hard to get, even if you had money, and a pregnancy in the fourth or later month was unobtainable.
"So vy did you fall pregnant?"
Luci confessed her lapse in judgment, precipitated by loneliness and some unaccustomed alcohol.
"This is vat you need to do. Fly to San Francisco. Check into the Four Season hotel. Speak with the concierge. She can set everyting up."
Luci was dumbfounded. "What would that cost?"
"If you are careful, not more than ten tousand."
"Ten thousand?" Luci screamed. "I don't have ten!"
"Den svallow your shame, and see your GP. He can refer you to an OB-GYN who takes your employer's medical plan."
"I don't have a GP. And my employer doesn't give me medical. I have two part-time jobs, and neither have benefits."
"Vy do you have such miserable jobs?"
"Because I can't find anything better. Say, what sort of angel are you, anyway?"
"And vy can't you find anything better?"
"Probably because I'm a high school dropout. As you ought to know, angel or lady or whatever you are, I can barely read. I can't even add without a calculator."
"And vy is dat? Are you lazy, or stupid, or boat?"
"Well, I wasn't lazy. I tried hard. But my teachers were all shit; fifty kids to a class, and we all got A's and B's. One teacher actually said, 'I'm not going to let a bunch of stupid kids destroy my career. You will all pass. Let somebody else tell the principal that you're unteachable."
"Ant vere you unteachable? Vat is dat, if not stupid?"
"I don't know. All I know is, my Mom couldn't help me. She was a dropout, too. I had no place to study at home. My teachers went home at four. The school library closed at four."
"So vy didn't your mother put you into a better school?"
"We were POOR! Don't you get it? POOR!"
"Many poor people overcome many obstacles and achieve great success. Vy veren't you vun of dem? I vas."
"Many poor people? How many is many? Out of how many millions of poor people? Are most of them ...fools?"
"Ach, dere it is. As Herbert Spencer said, 'The only consequence of saving fools from their folly is to fill the world with fools.' The world is full of fools because misguided people helped fools like you. Vell, I'm not going to make the same mistake."
"Go to hell!" Luci screamed. "Who, or what, are you, anyway?"
"Vat you should say is, 'Go BACK to hell.' I am da ghost of da great philosopher Ayn Rand. In recognition of my great visdom, Lord Satan has appointed me ambassador to the human race in general, und to da Republican Party in particular."
"Great wisdom, my ass. Just go to hell. Or back to hell. Whatever."
"Of course, Lord Satan did not SAY it vas because of my great visdom. He is such a tease. Vat is said vas, 'I'm kicking you out of hell because I can't stand the sight of you. You'll never be a demon, you're already too big a bitch.' Funny, is it not?"
"Yeah. Hilarious." At the red glow faded, Luci's eyes fell on the room's single closet, a dusty alcove with no door. Between her threadbare clothes, there hung a wire coat hanger.
Labels:
Abortions,
coat hangers,
health care,
poverty,
pregnancy
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Truth Exchange: ACA Is Great
If you read or listen to Republican obstructionists, you get the idea that the Affordable Care Act is a disaster. Listen to ordinary people and the story is different. Note this unsolicited response in an Oklahoma newspaper about one man's early enrollment:
By R.D. Miller on Nov 13
The ACA is great. I enrolled and went from 700 bucks per
month to 328 starting in Jan. My old deductible was 10K and the new is about
6200.. There seems to be a lot of ranting about a good thing.
My 700 bucks a month was via my wife's policy as a state
of Oklahoma teacher. My new policy for me will be BC/BShield and cuts my
insurance in half or more. My doctor and hospital choices will not
change.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Job Creators?
How often are voters taken in by the pious slogans of conservatives about "job creators" and "makers" and "takers?" Bob Bianchini of Tulsa offers this insightful observation:
Compare that
to the president of a Rhode Island-based toy company, whose pay was bumped up
from $25 million to $28 million, at the same time the company let 170 employees
go. Can you imagine how many jobs the so-called "job creators" actually would
create if they had the same attitude as Wang? Don't hold your
breath.
--
By Bob
Bianchini, Tulsa
Frank Wang, who is
paid $75,000 a year as president of Oklahoma School of Science and Mathematics,
rejected an opportunity for a large raise because he feared the adverse impact
it likely would have on one or more of his employees.
A consultant
had recommended a salary range of from $87,212 to $130,818 for his position. "I
told our finance guy that I would decline any increase because 70 percent of our
expenditures are for personnel, and I likely would have to let someone go or
reduce someone's work hours to get the pay increase," Wang
said.
--
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Is Medicaid Anti-Christian?
If you ever wonder what evangelical pastors think about government helping the poor, this link from CNN will enlighten you. http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2013/11/08/the-obamacare-question-pastors-shun/ . I personally have had Baptist ministers give me the same interpretation of Christian theology that you will find in this article. I don't mean to exclude other denominations; I just have not asked them.
Labels:
churches,
Evangelicals,
Medicaid,
Obamacare,
poverty
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Truth Exchange: Blame Dems for Saving World
A Republican sought to get even with a Democrat who had posted a list of the Republicans'negative accomplishments. He sought to do it with sarcasm, which immediately backfired on him. Here is his sarcasm, followed by our response:
By Charles Reed
A Democrat posted a list, of the Republicans' accomplishments in the last 100 years. So, I
think it only fair to name a few of the Democrats' "accomplishments."
1. World War I: 53,000 killed; total casualties,
204,000
2. World War II: 400,000 killed; total
casualties, 1,078,000
3. Korean War: 50,000-plus killed; total
casualties, 103,000
4. Vietnam War: 53,000 killed; total casualties,
153,000
The sad thing is that most
of these men were from 17 years to 23 years old. Thousands lost legs, arms,
eyes.
I guess maybe for some
people this pales in comparison to things like Watergate, the Great Recession
and shutdown of the federal government for a few days.
Mr. Reed,
Can you remember a little incident known as Pearl Harbor? If President Roosevelt and Congress had not responded with war, you would be speaking either
Japanese or German today and ruled by either an emperor or a dictator. You seem
to approve of that idea.
Do you also like
the idea of a nuclear armed North Korean dictatorship controlling the great industrial
capacity of South Korea, if Truman had not intervened?
Or even Europe and England ruled by
Germany, in whatever form it might have taken, if we had not entered WWI (which
historians now label as "the useless war" but which, nevertheless,
would have ended with a German victory if Pres. Wilson had not first shipped
supplies to England and then joined in the fighting.)
Vietnam was a
terrible mistake, taken by a Democratic president. 1968 I made the mistake of voting for Nixon, who promised to end the war but instead expanded it into Cambodia and also brought us Watergate. I
regret that personal mistake.
Without Democrat President Roosevelt's
job-creating and bank-regulating emergency actions, my family would have
starved during Hoover's Great Depression. So, I would not be here to chide you
for your ill-considered statements. Presuming you survived all those other
calamities, I suppose you could thank Pres. Hoover and the conservatives in
Congress for that.
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Give and Take: TruthExchange
Health Care? Who Needs Health Care?
This posting responds
with facts to false claims made against the health care act in Oklahoma.
Michael Brakey,
Skiatook,OK
The rollout of Healthcare.gov has been a complete disaster. Stories of the site malfunctioning are
being reported everywhere. Regular Americans are having extreme difficulty
signing up. Liberals like Sen. Joe Manchin and entertainer Jon Stewart
("The Daily Show") think a delay of the individual mandate would be a
good idea.
Some Obama-supporters are beginning to face increased costs for health
care. Health-care companies are laying off Medicare doctors in droves. For
instance, United HealthCare just fired thousands of Medicare Advantage doctors.
That means less supply of care.
The Obama administration exempted Congress from "Obamacare."
President Obama delayed the mandate for big business. Why shouldn't the mandate
be delayed for all of the American people?
TruthExchange
Mr. Brakey, do you have any interest in truth? Or do you just want to
scare people the way you are scared?
United Health Care has not "fired"
Medicare Advantage doctors. It has merely removed some doctors from its
network. This does not affect the availability of those doctors to treat other
patients.
At last account, the CEO of United Health
Care made $5 million a year, even after the company had to pay $900 million in
a lawsuit for backdating claims. And that was before the Affordable Care Act
kicked in. It doesn't sound like the company, or the doctors, are suffering too
much.
The Obama Administration did not
"exempt" Congress from Obamacare, whatever you meant by that. Read my
response (below) to Rob Morrison.
And, finally, Sen. Joe Manchin is far from
being a liberal. He is one of the most conservative Democrats in Congress.
Halloween is over. It’s safe for you to
come out from under the covers and stop being afraid of hobgoblins.
Rob Morrison,
Tulsa
Mr Brakey, Oblameo is all about political
payback; that’s why he gave Congress and big business special favors regarding
Oblameocare. Don’t think for a second that he "cares" about the
little people. He and his central planners will not be deterred from their
mission, which is to shut down the insurance industry. The Oblameocare website
was such a big success that only 6 people signed up the first day.
No wonder the serpentine Kathleen Sebelius
wouldn’t answer the congressional question when she was asked whether or not
she would enroll in Oblameocare if she had that option. Her answer was “it’s
against the law for me to enroll in the health plan…” That encapsulates the
ignorance and elitist arrogance of the Obama administration. They had no
intention of ever signing on to this mess.
Why is it that some Republicans are stepping forward and announcing that their
staffs were forgoing their subsidies and joining Oblameoare? Why is it that not
a single Democrat has stepped forward offering to do the same thing? It’s
called hypocrisy.
TruthExchange
Mr. Morrison, Congress has the burden of special, and costly,
restrictions, not favors. Sen. Grassley amended the law so that Congress
members and staffs have to give up the employer-based coverage that every other
large employer provides and instead buy the insurance individually on the
exchange. Grassley, a Republican, hoped this would make members vote against
the law. It did not.
Nearly
half of the members of Congress are millionaires. They can afford the change.
Their staffs, however, are ordinary working people with families to support.
This will be a burden to them.
Previously, about two-thirds of the premiums
for their insurance was paid by their employer. About 95 percent of all
Americans who have health insurance today get premium support from employers,
or belong to Medicare. Only people who have or need individual policies—and,
now, Congressional members and staff—are eligible to use the ACA exchanges.
And,
wrong again, Mr. Morrison. Secretary Sebelius was exactly right. As a Medicare
recipient, the law prevents her from getting additional insurance through the
exchanges. Try FactCheck.org for a full explanation.
The Affordable Care Act was passed to make
insurance available to those who have none, not for those who have insurance
available for them through their employers or Medicare.
Labels:
ACA,
exemptions,
Hobgoblins,
Sebelius,
United Health Care
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