Archive for National Politics

Rep. Phil Hare Health Care Town Hall Meeting Held in Decatur

Illinois Representative Phil Hare held a town hall meeting on the proposed national health care reform legislation in Decatur on August 19, 2009.  The meeting was held at the Community Health Improvement Center (CHIC).  About 25-30 people attended the meeting.  Former Decatur city councilman Dan Caulkins was there and asked some questions.  Current councilman Larry Foster was in the hallway after the meeting and spoke briefly to Rep. Hare.  Foster has recently been vocal about his displeasure of not being invited to Senator Durbin’s recent stealth-like meeting at Decatur Memorial Hospital.  Durbin has been criticized by many for not holding public town hall meetings on the proposed health care legislation; instead Durbin has resorted to small, private meetings with select officials to avoid the heated meetings many congressional leaders are finding themselves enduring when going back home to face their constituents.

The meeting lasted about an hour and was very respectful and constructive in tone.  A handful of individuals shared their own personal stories.  One woman, who had previously been a health care worker herself, but is no longer able to work due to her own health care issues, spoke of her inability to obtain health coverage through Illinois’ FamilyCare program  because she didn’t meet the requirements.  Only women with children under the age of 18 qualify for Illinois’ FamilyCare plan.   She made an impassioned plea for change in the health care system.  She had cancer has a young child, which has led to chronic health issues, therefore no private insurer will cover her.   (Watch video)  She represents many Americans who are left with no health care options due to pre-existing conditions and exorbitant health care costs.

A couple individuals expressed their concerns about abortion being funded by the legislation.  Rep. Hare assured them that coverage for abortion is not included in the bill.  Caulkins expressed his concerns as a business owner of the costs and other concerns that he had.

Videos the videos of the meeting on the Decatur Navigator YouTube Channel.  They are in eight parts.

Flaming Torches

It’s hard to ignore the rowdy town hall meetings lately regarding health care. There’s no doubt both Republicans and Democrats are playing politics, and have bused in their own plants, to either stir the pot or sing praises for the changes – even when neither knows exactly what the changes are. I don’t have a clue what kind of changes congress is planning, however there’s some things I’m fairly certain of: Universal care is pretty much off the table; mandated coverage seems more likely. Much like drivers are required to carry liability insurance for their vehicles, Americans may have to purchase health insurance for themselves – whether they want it or not. The only thing I can be sure of: insurance companies are going to get richer because they’re rooting for the plan. That should tell us something right there.

I don’t know if it’s more entertaining or scary watching the sideshow tactics and paranoia as the health care battle rages on. Some people are tossing out ridiculous claims anywhere from Obama being the Anti-Christ, with universal health care being his first step in his diabolical plan to take over our minds and bodies, to eventual death camps for old people, fat people and the disabled. I think most people find those claims ridiculous but there are serious questions to be asked and answered and that’s what has most people upset.

There’s something very creepy about government creating legislation about our bodies. That why abortion is legal. There are privacy issues but more than that, we all know how persuasive the mighty dollar is. When Grandma begins costing more than she’s worth, do we cut off her health care and put her out the pasture? What about babies born with severe disabilities, who will never be productive in society? If an abortion is medically necessary to save the life of the mother, will government funded programs pay for the procedure or not? What if we are found to carry a cancer gene – will we be forced to pay more? What if we’re overweight? Will we be forced to lose weight to keep our coverage? That’s why it’s so creepy and that’s why people get a little crazy about government playing a major role in our health care coverage – though Medicare and Medicaid, both government funded insurance programs, have been around for ages and there’s enough HMO horror stories to fill a library the size of Texas. None of this is necessarily new nor something we haven’t seen before.

It makes me wonder: Why are Europeans so much more accepting of government run health care while we Americans are ready to pick up flaming torches and pitchforks to thwart it off? Because we’re Americans! It’s because our Constitution is at odds with many proposed changes needed to implement a government run insurance system. We have our rights to privacy and a Bill of Rights ensuring that we can live unhealthy lifestyles – if it makes us happy. Just like we didn’t want British soldiers marching in our homes and staying the night in colonial times; we don’t much care for big brother checking our Body Mass Index to ensure we aren’t costing taxpayers too much or being a burden to society. Independence means just that. Being American carries a price. Those who are able have to fend for themselves must do so. However, if we are to be any semblance to a civilized and yes, Christian nation, we have to care for those who can’t care for themselves. Creating a health care system that can cater to both is the task before us. We just need to be a little more reasonable and quiet to do so.

Uncle Sam Can Read Your Mind

I’ve been reading of several arrest in the Decatur area, of those who have been caught downloading child pornography, onto their personal computers.   I’m in no way defending those who download dirty pictures of children, however it does make one stop and realize that someone in the government, probably more than one person, at many different levels of government,  may be monitoring our every move on the Internet.   Quite simply, it raises the issue of privacy.

I always thought the Constitution guaranteed the right to privacy and I was surprised to learn that, no, it doesn’t.  It does protect us from those pesky British soldiers, who used to barge in and take over the sofa and television remote from startled families in the 1700′s.  Boy, was that was annoying!  However, in the absence of a specific right to privacy, the 9th Amendment has been used in such high profile cases where the rights to privacy were at the center of  the debate, such as in Roe vs. Wade.   The ninth amendment states:  “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” And if that doesn’t make it as clear as a bell, this should:

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals stated as follows in Gibson v. Matthews, 926 F.2d 532, 537 (6th Cir. 1991):

[T]he ninth amendment does not confer substantive rights in addition to those conferred by other portions of our governing law. The ninth amendment was added to the Bill of Rights to ensure that the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius would not be used at a later time to deny fundamental rights merely because they were not specifically enumerated in the Constitution.  (Link)

Huh?  Okay, I was doing pretty good until I hit the words “maxim expressio unius est exclusio atlerius“.  What the heck does that mean? I’m no lawyer, nor Constitutional expert, but I think it means that just because a specific right isn’t defined somewhere in the Constitution,  it doesn’t mean that the absence of such a right makes it okay for the government, or anyone else, to deny someone else of basic human rights, and a certain level of privacy, may be one of those basic human rights. So in other words, it’s a case by case judgment, where common sense  should prevail.

So, just be aware that every Web site you visit, every picture you download, every email you send, and every search term you may Google is probably entertaining a government official somewhere, and, if you’re downloading things that are illegal, you may find yourself in hot water!

Just as long as my iPod music library is never displayed publicly, nor seen by the Decatur Police Department, I’ll be okay.  If anyone were to find out that I have purchased and downloaded music from such artists as:  Air Supply, Bread and Captain & Tennille, I’d never again be able to look another person in the eye!

President Obama, wherefore art thou hope?

I know many American find Barack Obama a man of hope.  He inspires millions but I don’t think I’ve ever heard a more depressing politician in my life. Our economy is in ‘dire’ shape.  Every moment we’re on the “brink” of disaster or calamity.  The time is now, NOW, NOW!  There’s no time to wait or debate.  He has me totally freaking out every waking minute of the day.  Where’s the hope?

A typical President Obama statement on the economy:

The United States is going through a devastating time in history. Banks are failing. Millions of jobs are being lost. The Stock Market is tanking. Other nations hate us. The future is bleak. Today is worse than any nightmare we could conjure up in our minds and tomorrow only a poke at futility. The stimulus plan I and the Democratic Party are proposing will help stop the bleeding, reverse the catastrophic imminent collapse of our financial institutions and shine a ray of light onto an otherwise dismal, depressing, hopeless, awful, pathetic, never ending hell hole of a nation. We must brave icy currents, volcanic eruptions, mud slides, tornadoes, hurricanes, dust storms, blizzards, high humidities, low barometric pressures, meteor showers, and gamma ray bursts, to get to the other side – to the shore of prosperity.  That shore is beyond our sight now, as we drift on an ocean of turmoil and uncertainty. As we ride the waves and experience the nausea and discomfort of never-ending, pounding, relentless waves against our nation’s hull, we must never forget how deeply depressing and awful these times are. I will remind you day and night of just how awful these times are until our nation is again sailing on a sea of hope and prosperity. Goodnight. God bless you and I sure hope the sun rises again tomorrow – though I wouldn’t make a bet on that.

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Before I get attacked with broken beer bottles and bricks from Obama supporters, I actually like Obama’s honesty on the subject of the economy.  I complained in the past when President Bush or any other president sugar coated economic downturns but I understood why they did it.  Today, our economy is consumer-driven.  If we scare consumers to death and convince them not to spend a nickle of their money, are we not only making matters worse?

Related Articles:  http://foxforum.blogs.foxnews.com/2009/01/08/peek_obama_market/

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/dominic_lawson/article5733858.ece

One down; One More To Go

Well, things didn’t go the way I wanted last night, and I won’t lie and say I’m happy, but it must be a wonderful day for African Americans who have been waiting for this day for so long.  I’m sure most never thought they’d see a black president elected in their lifetimes.  However,  this morning, it feels like the glass ceiling is a mile thicker after witnessing the treatment of Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin by our media and many of our citizens.  Our country may be on its way to moving beyond racism, and that’s wonderful, but we’ve got light years to go before we get past the sexism, which wasn’t only tolerated but perpetuated by the same people who decry the mistreatment of other minorities.

Congratulations to Barack Obama and to all of his supporters.  One wall has been broken down; we still got one more to go.

Someday we’ll have a woman tossing her hat in the air in front of White House! I don’t know if I’ll live long enough to see it, but someday!