(no subject)
Aug. 14th, 2009 04:29 pmMissing Russian ship may be found near Cape Verde
That story just keeps getting weirder.
An Open Letter to recent authors being assholes on the internet.
It's not about expecting everyone in the world to agree with me. But if I must make a choice between supporting an artist/writer who has said hateful, cruel, degrading things about me and people I love and an artist/writer who hasn't? Well that is an easy choice then. It's certainly easier to separate things in the case of the dead, but this will be one of my new rules for the living.
http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2009/08/open-letter-to-john-c-wright.html
A fantastically reasonable and rational response to yesterday's fail. It's interesting to note that Wright eventually deleted all the comments (something like ten pages the last I looked) and then deleted the entire entry.
I have to say that if you are going to proclaim that dissenters can only provide ad hominem attacks and no rational answers, then you should probably think about not devolving to a bunch of ad hominem attacks yourself. My journalism teacher would have blown a gasket over that.
John Mackey, Whole Foods CEO, is against health care reform
Why a boycott of Whole Foods might have a substantial impact
LA Times Editorial on the subject
CEOs of major corporations are people too, we know that. They certainly have their own opinions. But when they take the pulpit wearing their titles to express their personal opinions - that's when things start getting messy. I confess even my jaded self finds it surprising that the CEO of a company whose clientele is quite liberal would put himself in this position. Does not one have a PR department anymore who pays attention?
I am thinking about going to the protest on Sunday at Whole Foods headquarters on 6th and Lamar. I want a sign that says "Fire your PR department because they sure aren't working!" on one side too.
Health care reform is about creating choices. Get that through your numb-fucking skulls. The very idea of a for-profit medical and health care system is pretty damned morally reprehensible.
That story just keeps getting weirder.
An Open Letter to recent authors being assholes on the internet.
It's not about expecting everyone in the world to agree with me. But if I must make a choice between supporting an artist/writer who has said hateful, cruel, degrading things about me and people I love and an artist/writer who hasn't? Well that is an easy choice then. It's certainly easier to separate things in the case of the dead, but this will be one of my new rules for the living.
http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2009/08/open-letter-to-john-c-wright.html
A fantastically reasonable and rational response to yesterday's fail. It's interesting to note that Wright eventually deleted all the comments (something like ten pages the last I looked) and then deleted the entire entry.
I have to say that if you are going to proclaim that dissenters can only provide ad hominem attacks and no rational answers, then you should probably think about not devolving to a bunch of ad hominem attacks yourself. My journalism teacher would have blown a gasket over that.
John Mackey, Whole Foods CEO, is against health care reform
Why a boycott of Whole Foods might have a substantial impact
LA Times Editorial on the subject
CEOs of major corporations are people too, we know that. They certainly have their own opinions. But when they take the pulpit wearing their titles to express their personal opinions - that's when things start getting messy. I confess even my jaded self finds it surprising that the CEO of a company whose clientele is quite liberal would put himself in this position. Does not one have a PR department anymore who pays attention?
I am thinking about going to the protest on Sunday at Whole Foods headquarters on 6th and Lamar. I want a sign that says "Fire your PR department because they sure aren't working!" on one side too.
Health care reform is about creating choices. Get that through your numb-fucking skulls. The very idea of a for-profit medical and health care system is pretty damned morally reprehensible.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-15 06:14 pm (UTC)You have automobile insurance right? When you get a new car and you still owe money on that car you are required by the bank that lent you the money to carry a full coverage policy. When you've finished paying off your car loan the government only requires that you maintain liability coverage, which is significantly less comprehensive and significantly less expensive. This doesn't mean you can't have full coverage insurance, it just means that you have the OPTION to spend your money as you choose. Why shouldn't health insurance be the same?
Regardless of how exactly we do this, the idea that we're suddenly jumping into the healthcare ocean is incorrect. Healthcare reform, national healthcare issues, have been on the table since 1992. That's more than half my life.
Health care reform and health issues have been on the table longer than that. The SPECIFIC health care bills currently being proposed by Congress have not. The full language of H.R.3200 was not released until July 14, 2009, and yet the president was pushing for Congress to pass the bill by the end of that month. Have you tried to read the bill in its entirety? It's legal jargon is incredibly difficult to wade through and understand and yet Congress was supposed to read through all of it, comprehend what they read, consider the merits and costs of everything proposed (and there is a hell of a lot in there) and pass it in 17 days?
You are an intelligent and reasonable adult and the fact that this doesn't frighten you frightens me. The decisions made now are going to have serious and lasting repercussions and the idea that we implement them with little to no consideration or understanding is asinine.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-15 06:44 pm (UTC)I do actually have the text of the bill bookmarked (found here) and I have read probably two thirds of it so far. The parts I haven't read through yet are the ones pertaining to Medicaid/CHIP and health workforce development.