August 26, 2009

Surf’s Up, Barry…

Filed under: Activism,Health Care,Taxes & Government — Rose @ 7:40 am

From Rick Scott @ Conservatives for Patients Rights:

As the First Family prepares to take a summer vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, we want to make sure that President Obama remains focused on one of the most important issues facing our country: health care. Today, CPR will be launching a new ad, titled Surf’s Up, which is a direct appeal to the President to drop the public option plan.

Americans have made it very clear that they don’t want a government-run public option, they just want lower costs. While President Obama is vacationing in the surf at Martha’s Vineyard, Americans are growing increasingly anxious that the public option will raise costs, not lower them. When the President returns to Washington from his vacation, he should drop the public option plan and go back to the drawing board.

We still need your help to convince our leaders that a government take over of health care is not the right path for lasting reform. Your actions are making a real difference and we hope you continue to engage the health care debate on all levels. Having your voice heard is the most important part of the democratic process and CPR wants you to take advantage of every opportunity to speak out against government-run health care. Your continued attendance at town hall meetings is compelling legislators to carefully examine the reform effort and recognize the serious threat posed by a government takeover. It is through your passion and support that we can illustrate the real dangers of government-run health care.

Here’s how you can help right now:

* Watch our new ad and share it online on your blog, social network, and via email

* Sign our petition against government-run health care and ask all of your friends to do the same.

* Attend a town hall meeting in your area by checking out our comprehensive list of upcoming events.

* Contribute as much as you can to the CPR Education Fund, our educational affiliate, that will help us inform the public about the health care debate.

Thank you for all your efforts and together we will achieve sensible and lasting health care reform.

Sincerely,

Rick Scott
Chairman, Conservatives for Patients’ Rights

700 12th Street NW, Suite 700 | Washington, DC 20005

Amen, brother.

RIP ….

Filed under: General — TBlumer @ 7:38 am

…. Ted Kennedy.

August 25, 2009

America’s Real Homeland Security…

Filed under: 2nd Amendment,Activism,Taxes & Government,Wide Open — Rose @ 5:09 pm

A great piece by Larry Pratt from News With Views

HE HAD A GUN AND NOTHING HAPPENED
By Larry Pratt
August 21, 2009
NewsWithViews.com

From New Hampshire to Arizona, Americans openly carrying firearms have been seen outside presidential appearances. The most remarkable thing about this is that some find this behavior to be remarkable.

…The Second Amendment was added to our Constitution to ensure that the individual right to keep and bear arms not be infringed. Infringement would impair the proper functioning of the militia which had been America’s homeland security system all through colonial times and well into our republican era.

The armed attendees made it clear that they were exercising their right to keep and bear arms. Zero tolerance of firearms has become so extreme that even a picture of a gun can get a student kicked out of school. The presence of armed citizens helps correct the notion that guns are inherently dangerous.

…In addition to the educational value of going about openly armed, the presence of such citizens has another positive impact. Real homeland security is being maintained. The Secret Service is tasked with protecting the president and other select individuals — and nobody else.

For those who object to openly armed citizens being present near presidential events, do they have any concern for the wellbeing of those who do not benefit from Secret Service protection?

Rosie O’Donnell comes to mind here…you know, the idiot who thinks that guns kill people (I’m sure in the same way she thinks her silverware makes her fat). She doesn’t want anyone to have Second Amendment rights (proving she should be kicked out of this country) and yet hires private, armed body guards.

Additionally, I love how the left went ballistic (no pun intended) because a dissenter not only attended one of Obama’s Town Hall meetings, but did so fully armed. Obviously they don’t want anyone exercising their First OR Second Amendment rights in the near vicinity of a President charged with upholding those rights…

Finally, I don’t remember them being outraged when THEY exercised THEIR “freedom of speech” by writing a book on how to assassinate President Bush.

See how ridiculously inconsistent these fools are? Zheesh.

LiveScience.com Writes Up A Report That Should Be Headlined: ‘Majority Not Buying Obama Health Plan Myths’

NoObamaCare0809Using a “clever” headline, LiveScience.com, in a report carried at Yahoo News, tries to give those who will only see the headline the impression that Americans are a bunch of dummies who don’t understand what’s good for them:

Majority of Americans Believe Health Care Reform ‘Myths’

Yes, the word “myths” is in quotes, but the reader is left to assume that a credible outfit must be asserting what those “myths” are. But it’s actually that less than credible outfit known as “the Obama White House,” which claims that those who don’t swallow their assertions are subscribing to “myths.” The reality is that President Barack Obama and his apparatchiks continue to peddle a set of long-disproved assertions about the kind of health care plan he and the Democratic Congress intend to make law.

The good news is that the American people aren’t buying most of what Obama et al are selling:

More than 50 percent of Americans believe a public insurance option will increase health care costs, according to a new survey on assertions the White House has called myths.

The national survey, conducted from Aug. 14 – 18, involved a random sample of 600 Americans aged 18 and older living in the 48 contiguous states and Washington, D.C. Respondents indicated whether or not they believed 19 claims about health care reform, each of which is considered a myth by the White House.

…. “It’s perhaps not surprising that more Republicans believe these things than Democrats,” said study scientist Dr. Aaron Carroll, director of Indiana University’s Center for Health Policy and Professionalism Research. “What is surprising is just how many Republicans – and Independents – believe them. If the White House hopes to convince the majority of Americans that they are misinformed about health care reform, there is much work to be done.”

Mr. Carroll seems to inherently assume that “the majority of Americans that …. are misinformed.”

Here are some of the findings noted by LiveScience, compared to their disposition in the real world:

  • 67 percent of respondents believe that wait times for health care services, such as surgery, will increase (91 percent of Republicans, 37 percent of Democrats, 72 percent of Independents). Response: Virtually every other state-run health care system has seen waiting times increase when nationalization occurs. More recently, waiting times have increased in Massachusetts after the implementation of state-controlled Commonwealth Care, aka RomneyCare.
  • About five out of 10 believe the federal government will become directly involved in making personal health care decisions (80 percent of Republicans, 25 percent of Democrats, 56 percent of Independents). Response: This has of course happened already in other countries, but is also a stated objective of the likes of Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, who believes that doctors too often focus on patient well-being while ignoring how doing so affects others in society.
  • Roughly six out of 10 Americans believe taxpayers will be required to pay for abortions (78 percent of Republicans, 30 percent of Democrats, 58 percent of Independents). Response: Even the Associated Press has conceded that abortion is in there.
  • 46 percent believe reforms will result in health care coverage for all illegal immigrants (66 percent of Republicans, 29 percent of Democrats, 43 percent of Independents). Response: The current dubious estimate of roughly 47 million uninsured Americans includes 12-14 million illegals. Though the Congressional Budget Office says that though ObamaCare will fall well short of its stated intention, that stated intention is to indeed cover all who are uninsured, legal and illegal.  Beyond that, there’s little doubt that illegals would be covered through court action if anyone tried to resist covering them after ObamaCare’s passage.
  • 54 percent believe the public option will increase premiums for Americans with private health insurance (78 percent of Republicans, 28 percent of Democrats, 58 percent of Independents). Response: This has to happen, because the relatively rich benefits package the government would impose on any plans allowed to continue to exist exceeds the coverage many individuals and companies currently carry.
  • Five out of 10 think cuts will be made to Medicare in order to cover more Americans (66 percent of Republicans, 37 percent of Democrats, 44 percent of Independents). Response: The Obama administration has already stated that it will cut Medicare spending but that it will somehow not cut benefits. Even putting aside how virtually impossible that is, a so-called CNN Truth Squad Fact Check tripped up on itself by admitting that the “subsidized” Medicare Advantage program would be cut.

As said in the title of this post, a headline written to inform instead of to deceive those who don’t read the full article would have written up roughly as, “Majority Not Buying Obama Health Plan Myths.”

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Video: ‘One Single-Payer System’

Filed under: Health Care,News from Other Sites,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 10:45 am

Now that’s entertainment:

Lyrics:

One Single Payer System
One single payer system that’s what we intend to get
One single payer system perhaps not all of it yet
Something that Bill and Hillary could not do
We’ll just abolish illness with you-know-who
One single payer system everybody gets their share
But we’ll never have to ration care, no way son
Hell, folks he can heal the planet
Disease, well, we’ll simply have to ban it
Cause he’s the one

One single payer system like our neighbors the Canucks
One single payer system but ours’ will be real deluxe
In one fell swoop we’re solving the health care crunch
Who says that we don’t believe that there’s no free lunch
One single payer system let’s do it for Uncle Ted
Pretty soon he’s dead, it’s time to get it done
This is change you can believe in
Trust me, you know we ain’t deceiving
Cause he’s the one.

One single payer system might be kinda tough to sell
One single payer system won’t leave it up to Michelle
Harry and Nancy you folks can calm your fears
And he’ll get coverage that will fix those ears
One single payer system covers every healthcare need
No time to read the bill just pass Obama Care
But it sounds a little socialistic
This pig is gonna need some lipstick
ObamaCare!

Another NHS Story U.S. Media Will Likely Ignore: Widespread Use of Foreign GP ‘Commuters’

NHS_Logo

I don’t anticipate that those in the UK who are rushing to the defense of their precious National Health Service (NHS) will be bringing up the item that follows any time soon, nor do I expect the U.S. statist heath care cheerleaders to take note of it.

The UK Daily Mail tells us that NHS is importing general practitioners who commute from foreign countries. Wait until you see the reason why, and the effect it has had on patient care.

Here are key paragraphs from the report by Rebecca Cambers:

The huge extent to which the NHS needs foreign doctors to treat patients out of hours is revealed today.

A third of primary care trusts are flying in GPs from as far away as Lithuania, Poland, Germany, Hungary, Italy and Switzerland because of a shortage of doctors in Britain willing to work in the evenings and at weekends.

The stand-ins earn up to £100 an hour, and one trust paid Polish and German doctors a total of £267,000 in a year (about $441,000 — Ed.), a Daily Mail investigation has found.

It raises fresh concerns that British patients are being treated by exhausted doctors without a perfect command of English.

…. The figures come months after an investigation was launched into the conduct of a German doctor after two patients died on his first shift in Britain.

…. (A) Nigerian-born doctor (based in Germany) injected 70-year-old kidney patient David Gray with ten
times the maximum recommended dose of morphine, and an 86-year-old woman died of a heart attack after Ubani failed to send her to hospital.

The NHS is having to rely on doctors from overseas because a lucrative new contract for British GPs has resulted in more than 90 per cent opting out of responsibility for their patients in the evenings and at weekends.

Despite doing less, their pay has soared by 50 per cent to an average of almost £108,000 (about $178,000).

Responsibility for out-of-hours cover has now passed to primary care trusts.

A different Daily Mail piece from August 20 tells us the following:

…. the controversial contract …. saw the pay of practice-owning GPs increase by 50 per cent over four years, to an average of almost £108,000, even though they are now working seven hours a week less.

Meanwhile the rise for salaried GPs, who work longer hours, has been just 10 per cent to £54,000 on average.

That second Daily Mail piece reports that the salaried GPs want to form a “breakaway union.” So in case you didn’t know that even doctors who own their own practices are unionized under the NHS, now you do.

Back on point: What in essence happened is that NHS cut a deal with its unionized in-country GPs that was so favorable to the GPS that they stopped doing what they had been doing. Rather than attempt to go back to the docs and try to solve the problem, NHS bureaucrats took the easy way out, spending lots of taxpayer money for expensive, imported temps. In some cases, not surprisingly, they haven’t vetted their commuters very well.

Say what you will about our the imperfections of the current health care system in the U.S. — and yes, there are many — it’s almost inconceivable that it could have produced a widespread bureaucratic screw-up in the provision of primary care such as this. But with a statist health care regime in place, even if run by the allegedly best, brightest, and most noble (which, sadly, would be far from the case under ObamaCare, based on the presence of the likes of Ezekiel Emanuel) botches like the one described here are likely to become a standard feature, as is the case with NHS – which, as seen here, has a long, long history of wide-ranging problems.

Cross-posted at NewsBuster.org.

Positivity: A remarkable miraculous, assisted recovery

Filed under: Positivity,US & Allied Military — TBlumer @ 5:57 am

Multiple-hanky alert: This is from CBS News, back in May.

It is primarily about a heroic soldier, but it’s also about the character of a remarkable, unassuming general:

A better title — “General Petraeus Wakens Lieutenant Brian Brennan From Coma.”

August 24, 2009

Make My Day: David William Hedrick

Filed under: Activism,Health Care,Taxes & Government,US & Allied Military — TBlumer @ 2:54 pm

From a town hall meeting (HT Hot Air and Glenn Beck on the air) with Congressman Brian Baird (D-WA):

Transcript:

David William Hedrick: My name is David, and I’m from Camas, Washington.

Congressman Baird: Hi David.

David: First of all, I wanted to let everyone know since this is a thing tonight that I’m a Marine Corps vet.

Baird: Thank you, David.

David: And like you, I did swear an oath to defend my Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.

Now I heard you say tonight about educating our children, indoctrinating our children, whatever you want to call it.

Baird: I didn’t say “indoctrinating.” I never said that.

David: Stay away from my kids!

I also heard you say that you’re going to let us keep our health insurance. Well thank you! It’s not your right to decide whether or not I keep my current plan or not. That’s my decision.

Now I’ve heard recently in the media you and some other people on the national political stage call us “brownshirts” because we oppose you.

Baird: No I did not. No I did not. What I said was …. and I’ve apologized for it.

David: Thanks for apologizing. I won’t speak to you then. I will speak to others.

I’ll remind you, a little history lesson — the Nazis were the National Socialist Party, they were leftists. They took over the finance. They took over the car industry. They took over health care in that country. If Nancy Pelosi wants to find a swastika, maybe the first place she should look is the sleeve on her own arm.

Now what I want to know is, you’ve done a lot of things to violate your constitutional oath. As a Marine, as a disabled veteran who has served this country, I have kept my oath. Do you ever intend to keep yours?

Mr. Hedrick’s YouTube narrative:

I, David William Hedrick, a member of the silent majority, decided that I was not going to be silent anymore. So, I let U.S. Congressman Brian Baird have it. I was one questioner out of 38, that was called at random from an audience that started at 3,000 earlier in the evening. Not expecting to be called on, I quickly scratched what I wanted to say on a borrowed piece of paper and with a pen that I borrowed from someone else in the audience minutes before I spoke. So much for the planned talking points of the right wing conspiracy.

Thank you, David. Well done, sir.

_____________________________________________________

UPDATE: This is how Brian Baird justifies claiming he didn’t call town hall attendees opposing statist health care “brownshirts” –

Rep. Brian Baird (D-Wash.) apologized yesterday for accusing town hall protesters of “brown shirt tactics” and comparing them to a “lynch mob.”

Baird, who originally decided against holding town hall meetings because of expected protests, now says he’ll schedule some forums during the August recess.

…. Baird made headlines last week by comparing town hall protesters to Nazi guards.

“What we’re seeing right now is close to Brown Shirt tactics,” Baird told the Columbian. “I mean that very seriously.”

Oh, so he “only” accused Americans who want to be heard of “brownshirt tactics” while “comparing them to a lynch mob.” I’m soooooo relieved. (/sarc) Geez, even The Hill blogger Eric Zimmerman gets the comparison Baird was making.

A class act would have said, at worst, “I didn’t exactly say that, but I’m very sorry for what I did say, because it was wrong,” instead of brusquely saying “I’ve apologized for that” and pretending that everything is now hunky-dory. But Brian Baird is clearly not a class act.

Zeke the Bleak Tries a Sneak

Filed under: Economy,Health Care,Life-Based News,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 9:44 am

EzekielEmanuel081109Rahm Emanuel’s unreformed brother should not get anywhere near the levers of power in health care.

_______________________________

Note: This was originally posted at Pajamas Media and teased here at BizzyBlog on Friday morning. Update: You don’t have to be a supposed right-wing knuckle-dragger to see what Zeke Emanuel is all about. Nat Hentoff, prominent civil libertarian and a 50-year veteran columnist at the Village Voice until last year, also understands.

_______________________________

Earlier this month (“ObamaCare as a Moral Clunker”), I wrote that there are three insurmountable moral objections to the President’s and Democrats’ versions of mislabeled “health care reform”:

  1. They are all designed and destined to ration care. This will lead, as it has in state-run systems virtually everywhere, to long waits for even critical services. In Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal, Harvard professor and chairman of President Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers Martin Feldstein confirmed this obvious and inconvenient truth, writing that “rationing health care is central to President Barack Obama’s health plan.”
  2. Under the idea of “Comparative Effectiveness Research” (CER), which has already been funded to the tune of over $1 billion, the inevitable and unavoidable rationing just described would more than likely be carried out under a regime of care denial driven by age-based and “quality of life” criteria. This will, formally or informally, lead to a system similar to that found in the UK, where its National Health Service, under the concept of “Quality-Adjusted Life Years’ (QALY), won’t pay for medical procedures that “cost” more than $50,000 for each of year additional life expected to gained (“cost” is in quotes because I believe that such “costs” are often overloaded with fixed overhead that largely should not be relevant to such decisions).
  3. The people who would be in charge of implementing a state-controlled system, which remains the objective of President Obama and Congress as long as they seek any kind of “public option” or government-managed “co-operative” set-up, have viewpoints that are ethically questionable at best and morally abhorrent at worst.

The administration appears to be trying to allay the justifiable concerns about Item 3, and seems to believe that if it can do that, Americans won’t be as worried about Items 1 and 2. Sadly, despite the worldwide track record of state-run and state-controlled systems, there is some plausibility to this strategy. Even with the vocal and growing opposition to ObamaCare as a whole, Rasmussen reports that “57% oppose the plan if it doesn’t include a government-run health insurance plan to compete with private insurers.”

This is where Ezekiel Emanuel (“Zeke”), brother of President Obama’s Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, comes in.

Zeke has been and apparently still is Chair of the Clinical Center Department of Bioethics at the National Institutes of Health, where he is still listed as an employee. I have confirmed that Zeke is still employed there. He has been with the Obama administration as health-policy adviser at the Office of Management and Budget since February, and is a member of the Federal Coordinating Council on Comparative Effectiveness Research.

Hmm. He’s a busy guy. I wonder how many taxpayer-funded income streams he receives?

Zeke has an ugly paper trail that goes back a long way. What follows are just a few examples.

On the Hippocratic Oath, Zeke said in 1997 that it “…. represented the minority view in a debate within the ancient Greek medical community.” Well, if everyone had been following an ethical framework, the Oath wouldn’t have been necessary, would it? One might as well say that in the 1950s, the majority of white Southern Democrats opposed the voting rights for black Americans. So what? Does that make Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King presumptively wrong?

In a study released in 2001 based on a review of 1996 death and patient records, Zeke and a team of researchers found, as summarized by the New York Times, that “many cancer patients receive chemotherapy at the end of life, even if their kind of cancer is known to be unresponsive to the drugs.” Sounds familiar to the risible claim by the President a few weeks ago that pediatricians are taking out tonsils for purely financial reasons, doesn’t it? But Zeke & Co. rigged the test by bright-lining the difference between “responsive” and “unresponsive” cancers. According to this American Cancer Society link, for liver cancer, one of those the study deemed unresponsive to treatment, “(chemo) drugs shrink less than 1 in 5 tumors, and the responses often do not last long.” Hold it right there. First, chemo does work at least occasionally; when you have serious cancer, “occasionally” sounds pretty good. Second, rather than giving up on chemo for liver cancer, researchers are now investigating the possible effectiveness of hepatic artery infusion (HAI) for delivering the chemo drugs. Following Zeke’s logic, attempting chemo for liver cancer would have been abandoned, and it’s likely that the idea of trying HAI might never have been conceived.

Perhaps Zeke’s most infamous recommendation is in an essay (Pages 12-14 at link) in the November-December 1996 Hastings Report. In it, while quite frequently using variations of the word “communitarian,” he wrote that “…. services provided to individuals who are irreversibly prevented from being or becoming participating citizens are not basic and should not be guaranteed. An obvious example is not guaranteeing health services to patients with dementia.” Charming.

But now we’re supposed to forget about all of that old stuff. Zeke recently embarked on a reputation rehab tour, and now squeaks that he’s no longer so bleak. You can tell that the administration knows it has a serious problem on its hands, because the doctor even found time in his interview rounds to get with the lefty-despised Washington Times. Here is some of what he told Times reporter Jon Ward on August 13:

“When I began working in the health policy area about 20 years ago … I thought we would definitely have to ration care, that there was a need to make a decision and deny people care,” said Dr. Emanuel, a health care adviser to President Obama in the Office of Management and Budget, during a phone interview.

“I think that over the last five to seven years … I’ve come to the conclusion that in our system we are spending way more money than we need to, a lot of it on unnecessary care,” he said. “If we got rid of that care we would have absolutely no reason to even consider rationing except in a few cases.”

To nuke that “five to seven years” assertion, I only had to go to one source, namely Betsy McCaughey in the July 24 New York Post. McCaughey cited three examples from the last two years contradicting the existence, let alone the timing, of Emanuel’s conversion:

  • Doctors take the Hippocratic Oath too seriously, (in Emanuel’s words) “as an imperative to do everything for the patient regardless of the cost or effects on others” (Journal of the American Medical Association, June 18, 2008).
  • McCaughey says that Emanuel repeated his “not guaranteeing health services to patients with dementia” assertion in a February 27, 2008 article (“The Cost-Coverage Trade-off: ‘It’s Health Care Costs, Stupid’”) in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
  • She writes that “He explicitly defends discrimination against older patients” in a January 2009 Lancet article. Indeed he does, advocating something he calls “the complete lives system,” whose relevant care-determining factors include “youngest-first, prognosis, save the most lives, lottery, and instrumental value.”

I’ll add another example as a bonus. During the 2006 bird flu concerns, Zeke had his own ideas about how vaccines should be administered in a scarcity situation:

In a column in today’s issue of Science, they (Zeke and co-author Alan Wertheimer) say vaccine rationing should not be based on medical questions — such as who has the weakest immune system.

Rather, the ethicists argue, experts should consider the philosophical question of who would benefit most in the long term.

…. In their column, they argue every person, ideally, should have the opportunity to experience all the stages of life. But in a pandemic, kids should not be a big a priority, since they have not invested enough into their lives yet; on the other end, older people have experienced more of life’s stages, so they don’t deserve priority either.

They suggest a “cycle of life” priority that gives preference to people 13 to 40 years old — as long as they are reasonably healthy. If they have high-risk conditions that make them a lower bet for a long life, they drop down on the priority list.

It’s simply amazing. No matter what the medical issue at hand happens to be, Zeke always ends up at the same place — not treating the somehow unworthy, or letting them die.

Some “conversion.”

Unfortunately, Zeke is only one of many in the Obama administration, up to and including the President himself, whose outlandish views should never be granted real power in the health care system. The mere prospect that such people might someday, as Mark Steyn aptly puts it, “nationalize your body,” should be enough to persuade anyone that any and all attempts at enhancing state power over our health care system must be stopped once and for all.

Positivity: GA Man Buried In Coffin Built By High School Students

Filed under: Education,Positivity — TBlumer @ 5:56 am

From Tiger, GA:

A Georgia County Shares a Tale of One Man’s Life and Death

Published: August 22, 2009

His pallbearers were the six boys who built his plain pine coffin in their high school shop class. They built it right in the middle of the classroom. When they finished, one of the boys crawled inside it while the others toted him around the school to make sure it worked.

Now Sammy Green lay inside the coffin, wearing the overalls he requested, while the boys marched him to his mountainside grave. Two preachers played guitars and crooned the kind of bluegrass gospel Mr. Green loved. “I’m a weary traveler,” one song began, “traveling through this land.”

Only about a dozen people attended Mr. Green’s funeral on Thursday afternoon in these fog-wrapped mountains, tucked into the northeast corner of the state. None were relatives — they are all dead — and most hardly knew Mr. Green, if they knew him at all. The boys who built the coffin never met him. Yet it was the people of the county who made the funeral possible.

For years, the story of Mr. Green, a never-married 76-year-old itinerant millworker who could not read or write, and his impending burial had spread through the mountains of Rabun County and beyond, becoming the kind of tale these people have long been famous for telling.

It began two years ago when a couple of students and a teacher from Rabun County High School showed up to interview him for Foxfire magazine, a renowned student-run publication devoted to Appalachian culture.

Since its founding here in 1966, Foxfire has sent students out to interview aging relatives, vanishing craftsmen and all manner of homegrown characters. Subjects run the gamut: beekeeping, moonshining, witches.

The magazine’s articles have been anthologized into a popular series of books. With about nine million in print, they have been adapted into a Broadway play and TV movie.

Mr. Green spoke into the students’ tape recorder for hours about his hardscrabble life. He was born in nearby Murphy, N.C., one of six children. His father pulled him out of the second grade to grind corn at a watermill. He hunted squirrels for food, smoked “baccer” (tobacco) and walked six miles to church, where he was baptized in a river on a 35-degree morning.

He worked for a while at a steel mill outside Atlanta, but returned to North Carolina to cut pulp wood and, as he told his visitors, “snake logs.” He paid for his own parents’ burials, once walking 16 miles for a headstone (he never had a driver’s license).

Finally too old to work and practically homeless, he met a family of traveling gospel singers at church and they took him in. One daughter eventually moved with her family to Rabun County and brought Mr. Green along.

After he finished his life story, Mr. Green asked the students to turn off the recorder. He looked troubled. Suffering from a deteriorating lung disease, he said he did not have enough money to be buried. He worried that if he died a pauper, the county would cremate him, an act that he believed would sentence him to eternal damnation. All he wanted, he said, was a pine box and a hole to put it in.

In the driveway as they left, one of the students, Casi Best, turned to the teacher and said, “Can’t we do something?”

“I could tell it was burden for him,” said Ms. Best, now a freshman at Piedmont College, in Demorest, Ga.

So Ms. Best and some other students started a “Bury Sammy” campaign. The school’s industrial arts teacher got the six volunteers from his ninth-grade class to build a coffin, pulling a design off the Internet. A bluegrass barbecue was held at a Wal-Mart parking lot. Mr. Green showed up briefly, trailed by an oxygen tank, marveling at the coffin on display.

“He said, ‘I don’t know if I’ll fit in there,’ ” recalled Joyce Green (no relation), the faculty adviser for Foxfire. “I knew he would. My son had already measured him.”

A granite company donated a headstone. A county cemetery offered up a plot. A funeral home director cut his rate to cost. People dropped change into gallon jugs placed inside gas stations, banks, beauty parlors. The $3,100 needed to bury Mr. Green was soon raised.

“He said, ‘That’s one thing I don’t have to worry about,’ ” remembered Sherri Eads Gragg, the woman who had taken him in.

Go here for the rest of the story.

Civil Libertarian Nat Hentoff ‘Scared’ Of Obama Admin; Formerly Admiring NYT Pretends Not To Hear

NatHentoff2009

A well-known newspaper had this to say about writer Nat Hentoff upon his departure from the Villiage Voice at the end of 2008 after a 50-year run:

Across his 83 years, his three dozen books and his countless newspaper columns and magazine articles, Mr. Hentoff has championed free speech and opposed censorship of any kind, whether by liberals or conservatives. Few have more assiduously and consistently defended the right of people to express their views, no matter how objectionable.

The thing is that, agree with him or not, Nat Hentoff offers no opinion that isn’t supported by facts, diligently gathered.

Mr. Hentoff may not hear as well as he once did, or stand quite as straight. But he will not fade to silence.

That tribute appeared in the January 8, 2009 New York Times, in a column by Clyde Haberman.

Despite that praise, the Times is pretending that the fearful alarm Hentoff is sounding over ObamaCare doesn’t exist. But it does. In his August 19 column at Jewish World Review, Hentoff reminds us of a mostly-forgotten presidential quote from April, and makes an important, real-world point about how Washington carries out vaguely written laws:

I am finally scared of a White House administration

I was not intimidated during J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI hunt for reporters like me who criticized him. I railed against the Bush-Cheney war on the Bill of Rights without blinking. But now I am finally scared of a White House administration. President Obama’s desired health care reform intends that a federal board (similar to the British model) — as in the Center for Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation in a current Democratic bill — decides whether your quality of life, regardless of your political party, merits government-controlled funds to keep you alive. Watch for that life-decider in the final bill. It’s already in the stimulus bill signed into law.

…. No matter what Congress does when it returns from its recess, rationing is a basic part of Obama’s eventual master health care plan. Here is what Obama said in an April 28 New York Times interview (quoted in [a] Washington Times July 9 editorial) in which he describes a government end-of-life services guide for the citizenry as we get to a certain age, or are in a certain grave condition. Our government will undertake, he says, a “very difficult democratic conversation” about how “the chronically ill and those toward the end of their lives are accounting for potentially 80 percent of the total health care” costs.

….. As more Americans became increasingly troubled by this and other fearful elements of Dr. Obama’s cost-efficient health care regimen, (Dr. Wesley) Smith adds this vital advice, no matter what legislation Obama finally signs into law:

“Remember that legislation itself is only half the problem with Obamacare. Whatever bill passes, hundreds of bureaucrats in the federal agencies will have years to promulgate scores of regulations to govern the details of the law.

“This is where the real mischief could be done because most regulatory actions are effectuated beneath the public radar.

….. Condemning the furor at town-hall meetings around the country as “un-American,” Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi are blind to truly participatory democracy — as many individual Americans believe they are fighting, quite literally, for their lives.

I wonder whether Obama would be so willing to promote such health care initiatives if, say, it were 60 years from now, when his children will — as some of the current bills seem to imply — have lived their fill of life years, and the health care resources will then be going to the younger Americans?

The Times has given no coverage to Hentoff’s “facts, diligently gathered,” as shown in this search of its news and this search of its blogs, both only on his last name.

Given the Times’s open acknowledgment of Hentoff’s stature just a short time ago, its refusal to recognize Hentoff’s warnings is yet more proof, as if needed, that the Times is primarily about promoting a political agenda, and only tangentially about reporting the news.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

August 23, 2009

George Will: There’s No Reason To Believe They Will Ever Let Go

Filed under: Business Moves,Quotes, Etc. of the Day,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 9:18 pm

Do Barack Obama’s state have their equivalent of 1968′s Breshnev Doctrine, wherein the communist former leader of the Soviet Union stated that, as George Will accurately describes it in his column today, “asserted a Soviet right to intervene to protect socialism wherever it was imposed”?

Objectors will immediately respond that Fiat is running Chrysler, that GM wants to go public, and that some banks are being “allowed” to pay back TARP money. The quick responses are:
- I’ll believe it when I see it.
- Money-losing companies that don’t have prospects for consistent growth usually don’t go public (except in the Internet bubble days of the mid-late 1990s, and we see how that worked out).
- Many banks haven’t paid the money back, there’s no guarantee that others will be allowed to do so, and Washington is usurping management perogatives over banks that have repaid in compensation, travel, and other areas.

Will notes signs that there is in reality little interest in letting go in Washington:

(does Obama and his administration) have an aspiration that they dare not speak? Do they hope state capitalism will be irreversible — that wherever government has asserted the primacy of politics, the primacy will be permanent?

They say not, but they say many things they probably do not believe. (That a government-run “public option” health insurance would not extinguish or even harm private insurance; that cap-and-trade carbon regulations will raise energy costs without injuring the economy; that taxing Peter to subsidize Paul’s purchase of a new car is a sound basis for economic growth; that a 85 percent unspent stimulus has routed the recession, etc.) Two legislative proposals are revealing the administration’s real intentions regarding government ownership of companies.

The “Auto Stock for Every Taxpayer Act” drafted by Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Tennessee Republican, would have required the Treasury Department to distribute to individual taxpayers — evenly, to the approximately 120 million who filed 2008 returns — all the stock the government holds in General Motors (61 percent) and Chrysler (8 percent). ….. the legislation would (also) have prevented government from influencing corporate decisions for social, energy or environmental policy purposes.

Last month the Senate rejected this legislation 59-38. Only one Democrat voted for it.

….. the “TARP Recipient Ownership Trust Act,” introduced by Sen. Bob Corker, another Tennessee Republican, and Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat …. says that when the government owns more than 20 percent of a company (today, AIG, Citigroup and GM), that stake will be controlled by an independent trust administered by three unpaid trustees appointed by the president. The trust would have two primary responsibilities.

One would be to guarantee that the companies are run not as political pawns but as profit-making entities seeking to maximize shareholder value. As Alexander notes, “there are at least 60 congressional committees and subcommittees authorized to hold hearings on auto companies and most of them will, probably many times.” Another responsibility would be to divest the government’s ownership stake by Dec. 24, 2011 ….

….. The president accurately says Americans are “reluctant shareholders” of GM, AIG and Citigroup. But is he?

If the Corker-Warner legislation is defeated, as Alexander’s bill was, on an essentially party-line vote, this will be redundant proof that Obama’s professed reluctance is fictitious. If it is, then what is real is what the Democratic left desires, an Obama Doctrine that says the trumpet of state capitalism — capital increasingly controlled from Capitol Hill and the Treasury Department — will never sound retreat.

Thus, as Will notes, we will have our proof one way or the other soon enough.

The Breshnev Doctrine was only defeated when the Soviets’ puppet regimes were overthrown in the late 1980s, and only then after the Soviet Union had been severely weakened for a decade by a determined Ronald Reagan, Pope John Paul II, Lech Walesa, and Margaret Thatcher.

If the Obama Doctrine described by Will becomes evident, how will it be defeated?

If the Obama Doctrine described by Will becomes evident, guess who will come to be seen as one of its principal apologists for the doctrine in real life?