Tag: politics

AZ Constitution Ammendment Ban Moves To Senate

A bill to add a same-sex marriage ban to the AZ Constitution passed the AZ House on Tuesday. Now the measure goes to the Senate before it can be placed on the ballot this fall. Read the story here and here . Here’s the deal, Arizona voters already turned down a measure like this back in 2006 and, in doing so, made AZ the only state to turn down such a measure that has been placed before voters. How many times will it have to show up on the ballot before the AZ Legislature figures this out? Anyway, Equality Arizona has all the info and will help you find your AZ Senator so you can let them know how you feel about this bill.

You Learn Something New Every Day

I had no idea that HIV positive non-citizens are not allowed to enter this country.  We are one of just a few countries that ban entry by HIV positive individuals.  Other countries that also have this ban include China, Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia.  We’re in great company.  There’s a bill in congress now that would lift this ban.  Let’s hope it passes and is signed soon!

A Relay of Protests

As many of you know, I love the Olympic Games. The idea that the world can come together once every couple of years and enjoy sport and put aside all issues is awesome to me. National pride isn’t a bad thing during the Olympic Games, it’s just viewed as cheering for your team.

So, now that the Olympics are taking place in Beijing this year the Olympic Torch Relay is being hampered by protests towards China’s stance on Tibet and their stance on basic human rights. See the images below. I find them exceedingly powerful.  I’m awaiting the pictures from the Torches visit to San Francisco on Wednesday.  Thoughts?

SNL Says It Best

SNL had a great opening skit this weekend.  Remember all the crazy, out of control Hillary bashing that went on this past week by the Media?  You know… all that hullabaloo about how much money the two of them have made since 2000???  Watch it and laugh.  Bravo SNL.

Health Care and the United States

America has a problem… a big problem.  Health care in this country is broken and needs to be fixed.  There are way too many people uninsurned or underinsured.  Someone should not have to decide between eating or paying for medical expenses.  Below are a few excerpts from a paper written for the Agenda for Shared Prosperity .  It is titled Health Care for America .  These paragraphs do a pretty good job of explaining my viewpoint on where health care in this country should be moving towards.

What “Health Care for America” would do:

What Health Care for America would do is simple: every legal resident of the United States who lacks access to Medicare or good workplace coverage would be able to buy into the “Health Care for America Plan,” a new public insurance pool modeled after Medicare. This new program would team up with Medicare to bargain for lower prices and upgrade the quality of care so that every enrollee would have access to either an affordable Medicare-like plan with free choice of providers or to a selection of comprehensive private plans.

At the same time, employers would be asked to either provide coverage as good as this new plan or, failing that, make a relatively modest payroll-based contribution to the Health Care for America Plan to help finance coverage for their workers. At a stroke, then, no one with a direct or family tie to the workforce would remain uninsured. The self-employed could buy into the plan by paying the same payroll-based contribution; those without workplace ties would be able to buy into Health Care for America by paying an income-related premium. The states would be given powerful incentives to enroll any remaining uninsured.

What “Heath Care for America” wouldn’t do:

Equally important is what Health Care for America would not do. It would not eliminate private employment-based insurance. It would not allow employers to retreat from the financing of a reasonable share of the cost of health insurance. It would not leave Americans coping with ever-higher private insurance premiums with an inadequate voucher, or pressure them to enroll in HMOs that do not cover care from the doctors they know and trust. It would not break up the large insurance groups in the public and private sectors that are best capable of pooling risks today. And it certainly would not encourage individualized Health Savings Accounts that threaten to further fragment the insurance market and leave Americans even less protected against medical costs. Instead, Health Care for America would preserve what works in American health financing and replace what does not—through a simple yet comprehensive strategy that holds out the best promise of controlling costs, improving quality, and guaranteeing health security.

What some in this country fail to realize is the following.  The moment you remove the act of paying for health care the patient goes from being a customer to being a charity case.  This is not good.  Being a charity case means you should be grateful to the person/entity providing you the service.  They have no obligation to make sure you are a happy customer.  Their paycheck is not directly affected by your satisfaction.  This leads to all sorts of problems, some of which you can see in other country’s health systems (Canada anyone?).

Every American should be allowed access to affordable health care.  Affordable does not mean free.  Free does not and has not worked in this country.  Anyone who believes that free heath care would become a reality in the United States during their lifetime needs to do more research.  Our government can do great things to move our health care system more in line with the rest of the industrailized world but we need to be realistic and understand that it will not come in the form of free health care for all.

Hawai’i – Small State, Big Issues

The following links will take you to two sites.

The first is the Wikipedia entry for the Akaka Bill currently in the U.S. Congress. Read up on what exactly this bill will do and you can’t possibly tell me that it would pass any sort of Constitutional test.

The second site (zeroshibai.com) touts itself as “The Voice of the Silent Majority”. The site is an interesting read. Granted, I don’t live in Hawai’i nor am I Hawaiian, but I still find this fascinating. How is this controversy not making more headlines here on the mainland? I guess we have to wait until crazy shit goes down before we’ll hear anything about it. Check the awesome cartoon they created. Let’s just say it created quite a stir in Hawai’i and with the OHA.

Cow Inoa