Nov 062021
 

For years we have faced a terrible health care crisis. The cost of health care has skyrocketed, and families have gone bankrupt due to medical bills. One statistic I encountered (though I cannot vouch for its veracity) is 62% of all personal bankruptcies are due to medical bills, and of those, ¾ had medical insurance. Hospitals have become for-profit ventures, and investigations have turned up gross overcharging time and again. Horror stories about our horribly broken health care system abound. One-third of Go Fund Me campaigns are to help families pay mounting expenses. Just recently, a woman in Georgia was charged $700 just for sitting in an ER even though no doctor ever examined her.

We pay insurance companies to cover our medical bills, but they are notorious for jerking around their customers. They have a long, long list of “pre-existing conditions” that they use to blow off nearly anybody requesting that a bill be covered, and use various weasel words to avoid covering various items. People have sat on hold for hours and hours without hearing a live human voice. Forget a lawsuit – each company has a large army of lawyers who can drag out the case until the one suing runs out of money. A class-action lawsuit, in which a bunch of little fish gang up on the big fish? Sorry, now allowed these days.

Meanwhile, in numerous other countries, people have access to affordable health care. Nobody goes bankrupt, nor are taxes bleeding everybody white. Medicines and prescriptions are inexpensive, if not free. Activists are hollering for a similar system here, marching and protesting, signing petitions and post cards, contacting their representatives by phone and e-mail and text and twitter. Up against this crusade is the powerful medical insurance lobby, as well as conservative pundits ready with propaganda about extreme expense or asking if this means that every wino gets a free liver transplant. Those who howl about Medicare for All being costly are strangely silent about how much we squander on “defense” and tax breaks for big corporations and the ultra-wealthy.

People in the U.S. who have the means and opportunity regularly travel to Mexico or Canada for the medications they need. Many patients have resorted to “medical tourism,” traveling to distant lands to receive treatment they can’t get here due to the great expense or unavailability. The rich, of course, always have this option; those of modest means may have to scrimp and save for months, maybe years.

Practitioners of alternative medicine appeal to the desperate, promising miracles that they cannot deliver. When traditional Western medicine sucks patients dry and cannot save everyone, naturally shady practices become attractive. They can always send a paid-off shill to claim that such-and-such cured them of cancer, ALS, etc., and those who have lost their patience with our messed-up system often listen.

To cure this country’s malady we need the right people in charge. And who better to run health care than doctors? Also, we need to put more emphasis on prevention. Here is a perfect example of an ounce of prevention being better than a pound of cure. Perhaps everybody gets basic care – yearly checkups, flu shots, certain screenings – for free. Other suggestions include putting public assistance programs such as Medicaid on a sliding scale, instead of having a sharp cutoff; and offering “gapcare,” low-cost coverage for those people who don’t qualify for Medicaid/Medicare but can’t afford regular health insurance or COBRA. In a certain sense, Obamacare is gapcare; but it still puts big insurance companies in charge of who gets what – if anything.

Meanwhile, we have to start by accepting responsibility for our own well-being. We have no business demanding a better health care system when we eat like elephants and exercise like sloths, when we shovel all manner of unhealthful swill into our mouths. Unfortunately, you can scream and scream and scream in American ears until you drop from asphyxiation, you can shove all sorts of posters and videos extolling a healthful lifestyle in their faces, you can hold guns to their heads, nail their eyes open, wallop their enormous arses with bullwhips – but the instant the seductive smell of greasy, trans-fat laden French fries or chocolate cake full of simple carbohydrates hits their nostrils, all the lecturing is forgotten. The only way to get some people to eat anything healthful, it seems, is to chain them to chairs and prop their mouths open. All the preaching about eating right is drowned out by the obnoxious jingles of restaurants touting vile garbage they have the temerity to call food. We sit at desks all day at work, and loll on the couch in front of the TV all evening. We seek magic-bullet solutions to our expanding waist lines, hoping that we can get drastic weight loss in a pill or just 10 minutes a day of diddling with the latest as-seen-on-TV gadget. We mewl for a royal road to radiant health and chase after every fad diet rather than making a reasonable effort to get in shape and stay in shape. It is all part of our becoming lazy, not just physically but also intellectually and ethically.

Thus, better health care is a two-way street. We can holler for a health care system that doesn’t result in hundreds of thousands of personal bankruptcies a year, but we also have to take care of our own bodies.

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Nov 062021
 

Glenn Kirschner – Federal Judge Chutkan Destroys Arguments by Donald Tump’s Lawyer on Executive Privilege.

Now This News – How Gang Leaders Are Helping Get New Zealanders Vaccinated. I like it. Progress doesn’t get made by being too chickens**t to take risks.

Really American – Congressmembers Say “‘Let’s Go Brandon”

Robert Reich – How Wealth Inequality Spiraled Out of Control

politicsrus -When Evil Came to America (pretty dramatic, but I won’t say the drama isn’t needed.)

Mrs. Betty Bowers – The United States of Freedom

Beau – Let’s talk about the FEC’s worst decision since their last one….

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Nov 062021
 

Yesterday, another quiet day, thankfully.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

The 19th – A Duchess and a senator go to dinner
Quote – In a furious dash to ensure a universal paid leave policy — however small — makes it into the final version of a care package weaving its way through Congress, the Democratic legislators who have advocated for the policy for years are trying everything — including working with the Duchess of Sussex.
Click through for how this happened. I have nor forgiven Gillibramd, but if this helps get it done, that may help. (Incidentally, SOME people are capable of rising above “I’ve got mine” and work to help others.)

Wonkette – Special Counsel John Durham Arrests Russian Pee Tape Man For TERRIBLE LIES!
Quote – We’re sorry, but does any of that rise to the level of “lied to FBI about secret negotiations with Russian government”? We are just asking, because we are unclear on what the standards are here in Wonderland.
Click through for story. I don’t know what else you’d expect from a “Special Prosecutor” appointed by Bill Barr. Couldn’t (and shouldn’t) he be replaced with a real person?

The Hill – Democrats ramp up filibuster talks after voting rights setback
Quote – After months of trying to give space for bipartisan discussions on election legislation, Democrats are planning internal talks about what, if any, rules changes they’ll be able to get through on their own. Those ideas include smaller shifts on nominations or amendments. But altering the filibuster — particularly when it comes to elections bills — is getting the most attention.
Click through for more – I should bloody well hope the filibuster’s abolishment is getting discussed!

Food for Thought –

Democracy for America and Robert Reich want you to sign (and share) this petition (and I don’t know why you wouldn’t want to.)

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Nov 052021
 

COP 26 Day 5 | Young people raise their voices

 

Euronews Green delivers a Special COP26 email to my mailbox every day during the two weeks it is running (01-12 November 2021). I’ll publish it in its entirety for those who are interested. This is the fourth in the series.


Today’s takeaway

After world leaders, financiers and energy experts had their say, COP26 turned its focus to young people and marginalised communities on Friday.

“What do we want? Climate justice! When do we want it? Now!” thousands of mostly young protesters chanted as they took to the streets of Glasgow.

Instead of the optimistic statements by officials over the past few days, activists slammed COP26 as a “failure”.

“We will not accept it,” climate activist Greta Thunberg told a buzzing crowd at the Fridays for Future march. She compared the summit to a “global north greenwash festival” and finished with, “this is shameful”.

Young people raised their voices not just outside the summit venue but also inside. The COP26 Presidency said the views of over 40,000 young climate leaders were presented to ministers and negotiators at a meeting today.

However, young activists said they were not sure they were being heard. “I feel like I’m being seen,” said Brianna Fruean, a 23-year-old activist from Samoa at the beginning of the conference. But – “I will know if I’ve been heard by the end of COP.”

In other news today, a study by Oxfam charity found that the world’s richest 1 per cent would emit 30 times more carbon dioxide than the amount deemed compatible with the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5C. The world’s richest “appear to have a free pass to pollute,” Oxfam said.

If you weren’t able to follow along on Thursday, here are the 5 key takeaways from day 4 of COP26.


At a glance

Climate activists walk 820km in 26 days to reach COP26

Meet the activists who walked from London to Glasgow to raise awareness, engagement and action on the climate crisis. Over the course of 26 days, the hikers battled rain, wind and storms to arrive on time for the beginning of COP26.
Read more

Greta Thunberg speaks to thousands: ‘COP26 is a PR event to fight for the status quo’

The young Swedish activist spoke with urgency, attacking the climate conference itself on the Youth Stage at COP26 today. “COP has turned into a PR event where leaders are giving beautiful speeches and fancy commitments and targets,” she said.
Read more

Meet the young people turning eco-anxiety into eco-activism

Phoebe Hanson felt powerless, alone and afraid when she first learned about climate change as a teenager. But instead of giving in to feelings of despair, she has turned her own experience into a tool for helping other young people suffering from eco-anxiety.
Read more


Social exclusive

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Nov 052021
 

Glenn Kirschner – Trump Lawyers Falsely Claim in Court Filing that FBI & Senate Committee Cleared Trump Re: Jan 6

Meidas Touch – QAnon cult humiliated after JFK Jr. fails to ‘reappear’ in Dallas, declare Trump king

The Lincoln Project – Last Week in the Republican Party…

CNN – QAnon believers gathered to see something physically impossible

Liberal Redneck – January 6th Was Not a False Flag

Puppet Regime – Biden’s Paid Leave Problem |

Beau – Let’s talk about Manchin and political games….

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Nov 052021
 

Yesterday, my visor extender came, and it is substantial. It’s already a little longer than my visor without any extending – and it has a side extender which I probably won’t be able to extend completely when it’s in the windshield, because it will run into the rear view mirror, but which will be very handy when it’s turned to the side window. In the package were two items which are not what I thought I had ordered, and whch are hard to describe, but which I think I can use to good effect also. So, 9 days ahead of my next visit, I am set.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

Zuckerberg’s ‘Meta’ Name Already Taken By Anti-Capitalist Org
Quote – “Through art and research, argument, and poetry,” the site says, “mέta (the abbreviation of our Our Center for Postcapitalist Civilization) works to break with a dystopic present to imagine the world anew—to grasp our present historical moment so as to help radical progressive movements find a path from the emergent dismal postcapitalism to one worth fighting, and living, for.”
Click through for story. I can’t find it now, but I’m sure I saw somewhere that mέta applies for trademark protection four months ago. This is important because names are not subject to copyright. Trademarks, on the other hand, are protected at least as strongly as copyrights. So Zuck may have to think again. I ceertainly hope so.

‘That Is Literally Congress’s House’: Judge Skewers Donald Trump’s Argument That Jan. 6 Investigation Lacks Legislative Purpose
Quote – The judge quickly took aim at Trump’s reliance on the Supreme Court’s Mazars decision, which established that lower courts must take into account separation of powers concerns implicated by congressional subpoenas when information related to the president is implicated. Much has changed since that July 2020 decision. Namely, Trump is no longer president.
Click through for more. This is somewhat under everyone’s radar (well, except for Glemm’s radar), but I think worth knowing.

Giuliani investigators home in on 2019 plan to advance Ukraine interests in US
Quote – The high-profile federal criminal investigation of Rudy Giuliani in recent days has zeroed in on evidence that in the spring of 2019 three Ukrainian government prosecutors agreed to award contracts, valued in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, to Giuliani and two other American attorneys as a way to gain political and personal influence with the Trump administration.
Click through for somewhat mealy-mouthed details. Subtitle: “Prosecutors believe Giuliani and two others may have violated law over agreement that would have seen them win lucrative contracts” Gee, ya think?

Food for Thought –

 

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Nov 042021
 

COP 26 Day 4 | Is this the end of coal?

 

Euronews Green delivers a Special COP26 email to my mailbox every day during the two weeks it is running (01-12 November 2021). I’ll publish it in its entirety for those who are interested. This is the third in the series.


Today’s takeaway

It was Energy Day at COP26 today and negotiators switched their focus to how the world can ditch fossil fuels.

Among a flurry of announcements, one in particular stood out. Over 20 countries committed to both phasing out and refusing to build new coal power plants for the first time.

“Today, I think we can say that the end of coal is in sight,” said COP26 chairman Alok Sharma, praising the deal.

However, critics pointed out that the biggest polluters, like the United States and China, have so far failed to sign up. They also argued that all fossil fuels need to be phased out, it’s not just coal.

In a turn of events, by the end of the day, Poland had already reversed its commitment to exit coal by 2030.

Meanwhile, Indonesia backpedalled on its promise to end deforestation by 2030 after signing up to a landmark deal along with over 100 other countries.

If you weren’t able to follow along on Wednesday, here are the 5 key takeaways from day 3 of COP26.


At a glance

Biggest polluters are missing from major pledge to phase out coal

More than 40 countries have made a major commitment to end coal use on Wednesday. But several major economies still have not set a date for ending their dependence on the fuel that is a major source of planet-warming emissions.
Read more

What is ‘nature tech’ and why should you listen out for it at COP26?

Director and chair of the Nature4Climate initiative Lucy Almond makes the case for ‘nature tech’ and explains why bridging the two worlds is so essential.
Read more

Renewable energy will never be 100% green, says expert

Switching to clean energy is the best chance we have of slowing down the climate crisis. But one scientist tells Euronews renewable sources can never be 100% green, due to the emissions generated from manufacturing them.
Read more


Social exclusive

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Nov 042021
 

Glenn Kirschner – Recap of Legal Stories for October 2021: From Trump Crimes to Congress; From Garland to Bannon

The Lincoln Project – Anti-American

Dem Congressman Expertly Breaks Down How Progressive Policies Are Key to Competing With China in Fiery Speech

Liberal Redneck – Virginia Governor Fallout

Rocky Mountain Mike shares Richard Henzel reading “The Craven.”

Leroy Anderson – The Classical Jukebox (complete with skips and “broken record” repeats – remember?)

Beau – Let’s talk about 30% of Republicans, Trump, and the midterms…

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