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Health Care

Mar23
2010
Kristi Written by Kristi

I’m not ashamed to be a Democrat.  I voted for Clinton.  Twice.  I have never voted for a Republican and so help me, I don’t ever plan on it.  I’m a church-going Christian who is pro-choice.  Where health care is concerned, I AM OVER THE MOON about this bill being passed.

We pay almost $1000 a month for health care using my COBRA benefits from my last job.  We are 2 healthy adults but I have pre-existing conditions, namely migraines, which will make it virtually impossible for me to get coverage after our current benefits are up in December.

The anger, the hyperbole, the “they’re cramming this down our throats” rhetoric that can be best traced back to the lackeys of Fox News make me silently seethe.  Why?  Because people like Glenn Beck don’t have to worry about not having health coverage.  He’s got plenty of money from his form of conservative irritainment.  And people like me?  People who run a business, who scrape by each month, who can’t afford NOT to have insurance, are left stressing about how to pay insanely high premiums and terrified that one trip to the hospital could mean thousands in medical bills that we cannot pay.  The stories of people like me don’t anger people the way Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh want. (When is he leaving the country anyway? I can arrange for some free time to help him pack.)
Don’t get me started on those receiving Medicare and how they want the federal government to leave their Medicare alone.  Seriously?  I don’t know how many people thought in 1965 that Medicare was the beginning of a communist regime in the US but today, it’s amazing how many people have bought into the bullshit propagated by conservative news and talk radio.
The question I’m left with in response to the hyperbolic vitriol?  Why don’t we deserve the same access to quality care without being bankrupted in the process?  We contribute.  We pay our own way.  We own a business.  We don’t ask for hand-outs and don’t expect them.  But come December, without this new bill, we would be left with no option but to go without health insurance, or at least without dental and vision and somehow deal with the ass rape that would be medical (if I could even get covered).

Having lived for 2 years in the UK where I had coverage for simply holding a visa, I paid nothing for a doctor visit and a whopping £6.50 (about $12) for migraine medication that without insurance costs me $150 (£100).  For 6 pills.  Yes, you read that right.  6 pills.  Yes, people bitch about the NHS, and many with good reason but the bottom line is this.  You don’t get denied coverage if you are sick, if you get sick, if you are healthier than a horse, if everyone in your family had cancer or you have some wonky blood vessels in your head that you cannot control for love or money.  Yes, there are wait lists for procedures and yes, this royally sucks ass.  But you also have the option to have private insurance, either that you pay for out of pocket or that your employer provides.  Doesn’t make it a perfect system by any stretch of the imagination but when you consider that in the US, we have over 32 million people who are without adequate health coverage and consider ourselves to be the last great superpower in the world?  It’s despicable that we would deny care to those who, through no fault of their own, are without.
So enough with the rhetoric.  Enough with the hate speech.  Enough with the talk of secession from the union and suing the federal government on my behalf.  Please don’t.  My health depends on it.

Posted in Everyday Life, Work

Justice

Mar22
2010
Rob Written by Rob

“It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.”

President Theodore Roosevelt,
“Citizenship in a Republic,”
Speech at the Sorbonne, Paris, April 23, 1910

“Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe.”

Frederick Douglass

Shooting

Jul15
2009
Rob Written by Rob

We had a little neighborhood drama here the other day.

Late Monday morning, Kristi and I were standing in the kitchen trying to get Tuck to eat. This year has been real up and down with him; the latest cycle has been down. Since about the start of July he’s been losing weight again and we’ve had to encourage him to eat and drink. We think that maybe we’ve turned the corner on this cycle again – he’s had a couple progressively better days – so we still have hope for him.

Anyway, we’re standing in the kitchen talking and three loud bangs rip through the air. For a moment we just stand there looking at each other. “What was THAT?”, Kristi asks. And I’m thinking, I suppose someone could be firing off leftover firecrackers. “They were too far apart for firecrackers,” Kristi says. “That was gunfire.”

Turns out she was right. About two blocks away from our house, out along the main street that runs through our neighborhood, a man and his girlfriend were walking down the sidewalk with their baby in a stroller. Someone pulled up alongside them in a silver Honda, fired three rounds, hit the guy square in the chest, and then sped off. The girlfriend and baby were all right, though one of the rounds went through the stroller; media reports suggest that the bullet hole missed the baby by about six inches. The guy who was shot is still alive (at this writing) and in the hospital.

The good news is that the police found the guy, and it doesn’t seem to be either random violence or gang related. There have been several gang-related shootings in nearby neighborhoods since the 4th of July, mostly over in the high crime airport area. We have our share of weirdness over here, but La Loma is a pretty quiet, nice neighborhood – the idea of a gang shooting so close to home isn’t something many of us here want to contemplate. Seriously, around the corner and two streets down: that’s how close it was.

In other news, we used some of Kristi’s off time to make some big improvements to the bathroom. As soon as I get a chance I’ll take some pics and update here – we repainted, put up new shelves, new lights, new baseboards, lots of other things. It’s almost a whole new room. Stay tuned.

Posted in Everyday Life, House and Yard

A Better Day

Jan20
2009
Rob Written by Rob

Feeling almost normal today. Still a bit congested, and woke up this morning with a nasty cough – the cold finally dropped out of my head and down into my lungs – but on a whole I’m feeling much better. God, I hate being sick. I’m happy now to be up and around and drinking coffee and doing client work again. (I’m just looking forward now to being able to taste things normally again.. I couldn’t taste anything yesterday, with all the gunk in my nose, and now everything just tastes weird.)

So.. don’t you just think that Bush can’t wait to get on that helicopter, go home, and finally be rid of this job?

I thought the speech Obama gave was excellent, but what most struck me were the points he made that extended beyond even the commanding rhetoric that Obama is known well to muster in his speeches. It wasn’t just talk; there was something else there. He gets it. He understands full well that his job now is not simply to get the economy growing again, but to prepare the American people for a society-shifting event that will last long after his tenure expires. The bank failures of the fall was just the start, and not nearly the end; Obama fully grasps that his challenge now is to build a national ethos that can persevere beyond the deaths of Circuit City, suburban housing, mass motoring, cheap gas and artificial abundance – an American purpose that rediscovers hope as a handmade thing, and not (as Jim Kunstler puts it) a consumer product.

It’ll be a long road for us all. But I’m confident that our new president enters office fully prepared to take the first steps.

Posted in Everyday Life
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