Showing posts with label Night of the Hunter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Night of the Hunter. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Health Care Is A Human Right

Saturday afternoon, I sat down in a minister's office with four other people to provide input to Barack Obama's still-under-development health plan. The advantage of a small meeting soon became apparent: No long-winded one or two people can dominate, as often happens in a larger meeting (especially with Democrats). The Obama strategy must prefer it this way: Anyone who had commented on health care at change.gov was asked to assemble a meeting. Although provided with a cheat sheet and few questions as a basic structure, we were all able to get any points across. One person took notes, wrote up the results and circulated them for approval, then passed them along to the Obama team.

The attendees made for a fairly diverse lot, considering the small size: A retiree dependent on Medicare, a disabled veteran dependent on the VA, an uninsured activist, a minister, and me (self-insured). All had an impressive familiarity with the issue, down to some detail. And we are all impressed and hopeful that our opinion had actually been solicited.

Although we filled out forms and provided (excruciating, in some cases) detail, the group spoke loud and clear on two matters that the Obama paperwork avoided or danced around. First, we urged Obama, in all of his communications, to treat health care as a basic human right. This, combined with a general mistrust of private insurers, led us to prefer either an goverment-funded and administered plan, which doesn't appear to be on the table as yet.

Everyone there was open to persuasion regarding the argument that the most efficient approach is to take advantage of the existing infrastructure, i.e., employer-based health coverage administered by private insurers. However, none of us is convinced of that now, and all agreed that going in that direction requires much heavier regulation than is currently the case. IMHO, this would entail as big a battle with insurance companies as dumping them altogether. And none of us at the meeting will ever sign for the idea that the guarantee of a basic human right can be left up to employers and insurers.

It's actually beyond me why a business of any size would want the current system to continue. The costs are crippling and coverage has shrunk. By the Obama team's own estimate, one in five Americans with employer-based coverage have needs that exceed their benefits. That's 60 million people, which when added to the 50 million uninsured adds up to more than a third of the country left behind by their own system. To me, that's an infrastructure broken beyond repair...

U. S. Senate to turn away 71-year old Negro man as "unqualified"? That's what the Roland Burris story has started to sound like. I'm no big fan of Rod Blagojevich, but let's face it: He pulled a neat trick by appointing Burris to Obama's Senate seat. It's time to seat him and move on. Luckily, it sounds like cooler heads are prevailing...

Thanks to Robert Frost's Banjo, I've been exposed to a whole blogging culture dedicated to the love and promotion of something dear to Citizen K.'s middle-aged heart: Old movies. I grew up watching them on television with my father, and came to appreciate the talents of now-forgotten actors like Ed Begley (Sr.), Van Heflin, and Katie Jurado.  In one of my first blog entries, I wrote about what makes an old movie an old movie. One time at Office Depot, my eyes lit up at the sight of Odds Against Tomorrow, a 1959 film that I hadn't even heard of.  Well, Asleep In New York,  Another Old Movie Blog, and The Classic Maiden all understand why no one in their right mind would walk away from a bargain-bin video of a movie starring Harry Belafonte, Robert Ryan, Shelley Winters, Ed Begley, and Gloria Grahame...

BeauSoleil has a new album out. J. Poet of Crawdaddy! reviews it here...

Every year, the Oxford American publishes a special southern music edition that includes a compilation CD. It's always worth getting because of the sweep of the music: The CD crosses decades and genres with ease, successfully mixing the work of regional performers, one-hit wonders, and international stars. This year's 10th Anniversary edition features two CDs. Order from their web site or look for it at your friendly neighborhood news stand...

Past OA compilations have dug have some wonderful obscurities. A few years ago, they wangled a license for the audio of Robert Mitchum and Lillian Gish singing "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms" in The Night of the Hunter. Check it out: