Category Archives: Government

Can You Get Arrested if…

Esbee had what she thought was a rabid raccoon in the lot behind her back yard. Several calls to Animal Control went unanswered and then when she called the police non-emergency line they were able to get hold of Animal Control and have them call her.  Long story short they got someone out there to inspect about 3 1/2 hours after the incident and left her wondering if there’s a better way.  I suggested a shotgun, which would shock anyone who knows me and really was a joke, but it left me wondering: if you think an animal on or near your property is rabid or is an imminent danger to you, your kids or your goldfish are you within your rights to shoot it?  The rabid animal, not the goldfish.  Could you be arrested for setting off a firearm within city limits?  I’m sure it depends on the laws in each municipality, but just as a concept is it generally okay to shoot an animal that you think is a threat?

Sick

I just finished reading Sick: The Untold Story of America’s Health Care Crisis—and the People Who Pay the PriceJonathan Cohn’s surprisingly balanced book about America’s health care system.  Unfortunately for Cohn I think a lot of people will confuse his book with Michael Moore’s unbalanced film Sicko, so they probably won’t bother to read it despite the painfully long sub-title that seems to be symptomatic of all non-fiction books published these days.

When I say that the book is surprisingly balanced it’s because I kind of expected it to be a screed against the evil insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies and hospitals, but in reality it provides a nice historical perspective on the development of the modern US health care industry and uses half a dozen anecdotal cases to signify how real people are affected by the system.  Where I think Cohn earns his stripes is in not laying the blame for the current health care situation at any one group’s feet, but rather pointing out how the actions of the various players (insurance companies, HMOs, government, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies) are logical given the climate in which they exist. 

Not that Cohn doesn’t have an opinion.  He thinks that the fundamental flaw with the US health care system is that it doesn’t treat health as a function of the common good.  He’s very much in favor of some form of universal health care, and he seems to favor France’s model over Canada’s, the UK’s or other industrialized nations, but he doesn’t prescribe specific plans.  Rather he points out that even though we spend 16% of our resources on health care we put too much of a burden on the poor and middle class.  He says other industrialized nations spend less and provide more coverage for all of their citizens.

Throughout the book Cohn explores both sides of the health care debate as described as universal vs. non-universal health coverage.  He acknowledges some of the free market arguments, but de-bunks many of the sound-bite arguments you hear from the non-universal crowd: long lines in Canada, lack of resources in the UK, sub-standard care.  Just as an example he points out that the UK’s problem isn’t universal care but the fact that they are trying to have universal care on the cheap.  Ends up they spend just 7% of their resources on health care.

Cohn also spends some time explaining why efforts by health care reformists have failed to get universal health care passed in the US.  Of course he focuses on Hillary Clinton’s failed efforts in the early 90s, but he also looks at earlier developments under FDR, JFK and LBJ.  In fact the story of how Medicare and Medicaid came into being is absolutely fascinating if for no other reason than to show that our current crop of politicians aren’t much different from 40 years ago. 

By the way, Cohn thinks that if things keep going the way they have been lately then health care reformers have a better shot in the near future than they’ve had in at least a generation.  Without getting too much into the details lets just say that in ’92 the average person still had adequate health coverage through their employers, but now that many middle class Americans are paying a very hefty price for their coverage AND can easily imagine themselves being devastated by a serious illness they are much more likely to support politicians who promise to take that very fundamental worry away.

There’s a lot for people to argue about in the book, but that’s what makes it a worthwhile read.  Heck, the guy provides literally dozens of pages of citations and notes at the end so you can’t say he hasn’t done his homework.   And for those who might wonder what I think it’s that I agree that we need some form of universal health care.  It fascinates me that as a society we seem to have no problem with the concept of paying taxes to fund our armed forces, our police and firefighters and our roads, but somehow it’s a problem to pay taxes to secure a basic level of health care for every citizen.  I also don’t think the system has to be 100% government administered, it can be some sort of public-private hybrid, but I do think that if we are going to continue to be the most prosperous nation in the world then we’ll need to make this change.

And here’s my own anecdotal evidence that there’s serious need for change: I have a relative who shall remain unnamed that is anything but poor or needy yet after retiring from her "career job" faced health care expenses so high that she took a retail job that paid minimum wage in order to secure health care benefits until she turned 65 and when she turned 65 she had a Medicare party. I’m told that Medicare parties are very common in her circle of friends.  So if government-provided health care is such a nightmare why are these middle and upper-middle class folks so happy to get it?

Rescue and Report: DHS Recruiting Firefighters to Spy on Us?

If this was April 1 I’d think that the following story was a joke.  I even Snopesed it to be sure it wasn’t a known hoax.  Apparently the Department of Homeland Security has asked firefighters to snoop around in houses they’ve been called to help (source Fox News).  From BoingBoing’s post about it:

The DHS likes the idea because firefighters aren’t bound by pesky
warrants and probable cause and can therefore report on suspicious
material like blueprints, anti-American literature, and potential
bomb-making materials (e.g., the bedrooms of every friend I had, circa
1985). Firefighters are just the latest legion of potential snoops the
DHS is leaning on — they’ve also asked meter-readers to peer into our
windows and sheds to find evidence of bad-guy-ery. This stuff doesn’t
work and won’t work: amateur pecksniffs snitching on their neighbors
just flood cops with bad intel, and turn the country into East Germany,
a land where everyone is on alert lest they say the wrong thing and get
turned in to the secret police.

And then from a comment on their post:

As a volunteer firefighter, I will say that turning firefighters into spies is a bad idea.

If criminals have to worry that by calling the fire department they are
also calling the DHS, they may be less likely to call in the first
place, putting lives and property at further risk. If they do call,
they may treat firefighters as hostile parties, placing firefighters’
lives at risk beyond the normal hazards of the job.

If firefighters have to worry that each call may be a hostile
one, that will distract them from the job at hand–saving lives in
immediate peril–and could delay response time in a business where a
few seconds or minutes often does make the difference between life and
death.

The list of "suspicious" things that firefighters are supposed
to be on the lookout for includes cameras, photographs, maps, and
chemicals. In my professional life I am a photographer, so my house is
full of cameras, photographs, maps, and chemicals (not to mention
rubber gloves, an organic vapor mask, etc.)–all perfectly legal–that
might fit the DHS’s definition of "suspicious."

What I find most disturbing about our leaders is that they seem to see our civil liberties as something that needs to be subverted in the name of security rather than protected in the name of civility.  Fat chance that will change anytime soon.

Notes from My Afternoon as a Non-Reporter at a Public Meeting

As I wrote last week I spent about 5-6 hours listening to people speak at the public forum regarding the proposals by WFU Baptist Medical Center to build a hospital in Advance and Novant to build one just four miles from Advance in Clemmons.  According to the Winston-Salem Journal about 700 people were there, which I think is as accurate a count as any.  Following are some notes and observations from the afternoon:

  • When I first got there I stood in the atrium outside the meeting room and watched the proceedings on a television for a few minutes.  I was holding a steno pad since I wanted to take notes and I also wanted to be prepared if I got an important business-related call.  I guess I looked like a reporter because a tall, snow-haired gentleman in a suit that probably costs more than my annual salary approached me and nodded hello while giving me the stink-eye.  I nodded back and waited for him to introduce himself.  When he didn’t I put out my hand and said, "Hi, I’m Jon Lowder."  He shook my hand and said, "Yes."  That’s when my prick-o-meter alarm started clanging.  Then he said, "You look like you might be a reporter" to which I replied, "No, I just carry this in case I get an important call."  He didn’t seem to be buying it and he just walked off and joined his colleagues from WFU.

    Just after that a nice young lady from Novant approached and asked me if I was there to speak.  I said that yes I was and she gave me a green sticker that all the Novant supporters were wearing on their chests.  I put it on my shirt, but since I hadn’t taken off my jacket you couldn’t really see it.  I went inside and found my cousin, a Novant employee, and made my way to the side of the room where she was sitting.  I decided to lean against the wall and wait until the speaker was done before disturbing anyone to sit next to my cousin and that’s when I realized that I was standing next to a reporter (I could tell by her steno notebook and the fact that she seemed to know shorthand) and when I looked up the snow-haired prick gentleman was watching me.  That’s when I decided to whip out my notebook and pretend to write furiously for a few minutes while glancing at him intermittently.  A guys got to have a little fun in life.  After he left I went ahead and sat down.

  • Listening to 150 people say essentially the same thing is very boring.  The reporter was smart and bugged out after number 20.  I was in for the long haul.
  • If I ever want to be a reporter, or even dream of being a faux-reporter, I need to learn some form of shorthand. If not I’ll be the king of paraphrasers.
  • Two paraphrases leap to mind.  First, when the folks from WFU were given their 10 minutes to respond to some of the citizen comments their VP said that they were shocked when they heard the outgoing mayor of Clemmons say that his citizens welcomed the Novant-proposed hospital and maybe his saying that is an indication of why he got his butt kicked in the election a couple of weeks back. 

    The second was from the Davie county manager who was invited by WFU to use some of their response time to share a personal story to help explain what all this is about.  He said that after they’d publicly announced the deal with WFU he was approached by Novant representatives and he asked them how they could have the gall to approach him after what they did to another local hospital (Stokes County).  He said their reply was that it was all about market share.  He then said he told them that it wasn’t about market share it was about the people of Davie County.  If this had been a Q&A I would have asked the guy if he thought WFU didn’t care about market share as much as Novant, because if they didn’t they would be building the new hospital in Mocksville or another central location in the county and not on the eastern edge that happens to be home to the county’s wealthiest component and just a stone’s throw from the western Forsyth population centers of Clemmons and Lewisville.

  • Yes I was there to back Novant, but I was also there to say that I would like to see both hospitals built and preferably for Baptist to build theirs in Mocksville near the current Davie County Hospital.  I wasn’t the only one of that opinion.
  • The guy running the PR campaign for Novant was Mike Horn of Horn & Stronach.  He’s a former mayor of Lewisville and a current town council member.  It’s probably not a coincidence that several representatives from the town council testified in favor of Novant, but they should anyway since it would be the better option for Lewisville residents (in my opinion).
  • It’s interesting seeing people who’s public lives become entwined in their private and professional lives.  Winston-Salem’s mayor gets questioned every once in a while about his dual roles as mayor and president of the Winston-Salem Alliance, and seeing a town council member like Mike Horn wearing his other hat as PR pro was also interesting.  He didn’t speak himself on behalf of Novant, but since many of the speakers had been recruited by either side (WFU or Novant) it wouldn’t be a stretch to conclude that he probably asked his fellow leaders in Lewisville and Clemmons to appear.  Again, I’m not saying anything untoward was going on, it’s just always interesting to me to see how people who serve in public office balance their duties with their private lives.
  • The people from Novant and Baptist were all well-behaved. No catcalls, no booing, only intermittent boosterism.
  • A few of the public speakers mentioned the astronomical costs of healthcare in their comments, but no one from Baptist or Novant addressed that in their responses at the end of the day.  We need a public hearing about that.
  • One’s butt tends to go numb after four hours of sitting.  And if that’s the kind of thing that’s representative of what reporters do day-in and day-out then they can have it.
  • Finally, I’ve determined that I’ll carry a steno pad where ever I go.  It scares people and it’s a lot easier to lug around than a Fancycam.

US State Department’s Official Blog

The US State Department has an official blog that they’ve named DipNote.  I’m assuming that the "Dip" is short for "Diplomat" but given that to at least one generation of Americans the term "dip" is slang for a stupid person it’s an interesting name choice. 

Anyhow, as Erin Teeling at the Bivings Report points out the folks at State have opted to allow comments on the blog that appear to be un-moderated.  From Bivings:

What I found incredibly surprising was that the blog actually allows comments.
And they don’t appear to be censored.  After a quick scan of the
comments on several blog posts, I realized that both positive comments and comments critical of the State Department or US Government are freely flowing.  Here’s an example–a comment that appeared on a post about Burma.

Roy in Oregon writes:
"Thou hypocrite,
cast first the beam out of thine own eye, and then shalt thou see
clearly to pull the mote that is in thy brother’s eye." Luke 6:42

Let me see — You are a political appointee in the most
secretive administration in U.S. history… How is that helping "create a
free flow of information crucial to democratic development?"

— You are the member of an administration which quite
improperly and illegally harvested telephone information without
appropriate judicial warrants…. That doesn’t discourage "free flow of
information?"

— Your President authorized pressuring Internet Service
Providers to release information about legal (but private) citizen use
of the internet… Who can trust this administration to protect the
principles of "freedom of expression?"

Brother, how about first removing the beam (and the
blinders) from your own eye and working to end the murderous cabal
which employs you?  Posted on Mon Oct 08,  2007

Pretty bold.  And the comments are loaded with others very similar
to this one.  It seems like DipNote is actually a legitimate forum for
discussion rather than just a false front.  In an era where so many
media outlets, organizations, and political campaigns are concerned
about "inappropriate citizen content" appearing on their websites, I am
finding the openness of DipNote pretty refreshing.  I have to say, I’m
even impressed.  Why is it that so many newspapers remain unwilling to
open their sites to various types of user commentary, but the US
government appears willing to reduce barriers to two-way communication?

I would love to see all branches of government, at every level from local to federal, engage in this kind of communication.  I think it would go a long way toward bringing more transparency to government and greater participation from the citizenry.

Roy Cooper is My Hero :)

Here’s an interesting tidbit from the news:

North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper and Connecticut Attorney
General Richard Blumenthal on Tuesday said they are continuing to lead
a 50-state investigation into Facebook, a social networking Web site…

Cooper this summer was one of several attorneys general who demanded
MySpace provide data on how many registered sex offenders were using
the site, along with information about where they live…

"We presented to them some of the more graphic and unacceptable
material found on portions of their site, but also design aspects that
must be changed to protect minors against predators," he said.Cooper
has pushed for legislation in North Carolina that would require
children to receive parental permission before creating social
networking profiles, among other changes.

This is brilliant!  But I don’t think Mr. Cooper goes far enough.  First of all I think we should demand that parents procure training in graphic design for their children before they allow them on a social networking site.  I mean have you seen some of these kids’ pages?  Who’s protecting my brain from being seared out of my skull by these emoticons layered upon animated GIFs and then overlaid with an illegally downloaded Nelly Furtado track?  Forget the sickos out there, we need to protect these kids from themselves.

And why is Mr. Cooper confining himself to social networking sites?  We need to protect our kids from the bookstores.  Have you been in a Barnes & Noble lately?  There are books with pictures of naked people in there!  Rumor has it that some people also use naughty language while they’re walking the aisles.  Worse, apparently bookstores will allow anyone to walk through the doors so I think we need to demand that they provide an accounting of every criminal they serve.  After all we must keep our children safe.

What about ice cream stores?  Those are well known to be places that kids like to go, but I’ve also heard that they will serve anyone.  What’s to keep sickos from sullying our childrens’ brains there as well.

What’s that?  You think it’s a bad comparison because parents will protect their kids since the kids need to be with them to go to those places so by default the parents will be able to protect them?  Are those the same parents the kids need to provide the computer and the internet connection in order to use social networking sites?

Want to Make a Fortune on Your Shipping & Handling Charges? Work With Uncle Sam

A couple of days ago I wrote about the increasingly popular online practice of selling things dirt cheap and then making money on the shipping and handling charges.  Well the online folks are a bunch of pikers compared to the small defense contractor based in South Carolina that, among other things, charged almost a $1 million to ship two $.19 washers to Texas.  The sister team running this company manages to make Cheney’s boys at Halliburton look like Boy Scouts.

Oh, and because these jokers got away with several of these S&H scams for years thanks to the Pentagon’s expedited payment system for items that were shipped under "priority" status, the Defense Logistics Agency and the Defense Finance and Accounting Service "have made major changes, including thorough evaluations of the highest shipping charges."  Good to know, huh?

More on that Prayer Thing

As you may recall the esteemed leaders of Forsyth County, NC have decided to fight the ACLU on sectarian prayers being used to open county meetings. Our county leaders say they don’t want to tell anyone how to pray or be told by the ACLU that they have to tell people how to pray and they argue that they invite people of all denominations to pray.  Well, after a little digging I found that their idea of religious diversity is a bit wanting, but they’ve enacted a very technical system called "thumbing through the phonebook" that might lead to a more diverse set of religious leaders giving the opening invocation.  (BTW, a similar system was recently upheld in Georgia).

So what will happen when the first Muslim or Hindu is invited to give the invocation?  Well, if what happened in the US Senate is any indication we might be in for an interesting ride. From TPM:

Today was a historic first for religion in America’s civic life: For
the very first time, a Hindu delivered the morning invocation in the
Senate chamber — only to find the ceremony disrupted by three Christian
right activists…

The three protesters, who all belong to the Christian Right anti-abortion group Operation Save America,
and who apparently traveled to Washington all the way from North
Carolina
, interrupted by loudly asking for God’s forgiveness for
allowing the false prayer of a Hindu in the Senate chamber. (Emphasis added)

Think of how much fun these yokels will have in their home state when they don’t even have to travel!  Here’s the video of the happenings from YouTube:

Money-Money-Money, Mooooney

One of the things I consistently hear from friends and family who read my mind dribblings is that they read everything except for the "boring stuff" about politics and government.  Invariably they say something like "I’m just not as into it as you are" which is fair since I’m interested in lots of boring things, including my navel.  Still, it got me to thinking that maybe I need to be a little more entertaining when I write about that stuff since so here goes my first try:

Today’s topic: War and Money

Important takeaway: We’ve spent a buttload of money on the war in Iraq and it’s not ending any time soon.

Interesting hook: Some folks are putting a $1.2 Trillion price tag on the war, but back in 2003 when one of the Bush administration’s economists predicted the war might end up costing us about $100-200 billion dollars he was canned. The other administration estimates at the time were closer to $60 billion which means they were only off by, oh, $1.14 trillion.

Entertainment Value: Think about what $1.2 Trillion could buy.  If I were writing my typical, boring, wonky stuff I’d write about all the teachers it could pay for, doctors it could provide, yada, yada, yada.  But for fun lets look at the number of the following that you could purchase:

Man that’s a lot of spare change.  Now, if you want to talk about real money take a look at what Fec’s pointing to re. the coming crisis due to the healthcare and retirement costs of the aging (finally) baby boomers. 

Boring? Yes.  Important? Hell yes.