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	<title>Zoonpolitikon &#187; Blueprint for Change</title>
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		<title>Medical Capitalism: The Deadliest Virus</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/06/medical-capitalism-the-deadliest-virus/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2009/06/medical-capitalism-the-deadliest-virus/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jun 2009 17:44:35 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Political Commentary]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[single-payer health care system]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=793</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Barak Obama&#8217;s health care plan, as it has thus unfolded, should be a clear and final answer to all those who believed this young man would somehow change politics and create a more inclusive, just and caring society.  The pinheads who screamed that socialism would reign and undermine the American way (greed, cynical self-interest, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="mceTemp">
<div class="mceTemp"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-849" title="j0366608" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/j0366608.wmf" alt="j0366608" />Barak Obama&#8217;s health care plan, as it has thus unfolded, should be a clear and final answer to all those who believed this young man would somehow change politics and create a more inclusive, just and caring society.  The pinheads who screamed that socialism would reign and undermine the American way (greed, cynical self-interest, and lack of community) can at last rest comfortably in the certainty that President Obama is different in complexion only from his predecessors.  It is clear that his campaign document, <em>Blueprint for Change</em>, would have been more aptly named, <em>Blueprint for the Appearance of Change</em>. </div>
</div>
<p class="first-child "><span title="O" class="cap"><span>O</span></span>bama still has to announce many of the details of the plan but he has rejected categorically any form of single-payer public system.  His reason:  it would be too expensive given the current state of the economy.  What a crock.  Canadian labour costs have been and remain lower than American in great part because we have a single-payer public health care system  Current closing and downsizing of Canadian automotive plants is due to political considerations not economics.  American political debate would sound like a cacophony of scorched cats if GM were to close American plants and leave all the Canadian plants open.  It would make the company far more competitive if that were the only criteria for restructuring.  So Obama&#8217;s proclamation that cost factors prevent him from creating a health care system that would truly address the current crisis in medicine is just a lie.  A stronger argument can be made that the opposite is true.  The United States cannot afford not to create a single-payer health care system given the current state of the global economy if it wishes to remain competitive. </p>
<p>Surrounded by the executives of the major American health insurance corporations, Obama painted himself as a man of integrity and said he would fix health care regardless of the state of the economy.  As I have said here before, Barack Obama is a master of image.  He spoke of a consensus between the White House and the insurance companies to do what was necessary to see that all Americans would have access to affordable health coverage generously provided by that bastion of social conscience, the health insurance industry.  The question arises what if someone still cannot afford the premiums set by these socially conscious corporations?  First you will have to prove you can&#8217;t afford it and if the government decides you could by oh I don&#8217;t know living in your car instead of paying rent or whatever, then the talk is that a fine should be imposed.  Only in the United States would anyone think that insurance at gunpoint would be an appropriate solution to assure all citizens have health insurance.  Obviously this policy is not in the interests of uninsured Americans so why even think of it.  Wait a minute.  It was conceived in conjunction with the major insurance companies.  You don&#8217;t think that the president and these leaders of American finance would scratch each other&#8217;s back and come up with a solution that benefits themselves do you?  Gee, the insurance industry gets to extort millions in profits from a new source, those who can&#8217;t afford medical insurance, and the government led by Barak &#8216;the enforcer&#8217; Obama sees that they cough up the dough or else.  And Barack&#8217;s pay-off, I suspect a tidy little kickback to his re-election campaign.  Might as well just call him President Barack &#8216;Milhous&#8217; Obama and the corporate executives B. B. Rebozo clones.  It is interesting on this note to</p>
<div id="attachment_850" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 210px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-850" title="CB024010" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/j0406795-200x300.jpg" alt="Save the cost of health care premiums and rent at the same time.  Suicide:  the most cost effective option under the Obama Plan." width="200" height="300" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Save the cost of health care premiums and rent at the same time. Suicide: the most cost effective option under the Obama Plan.</p></div>
<p>mention that a criticism of Obama&#8217;s current nominee to the Supreme Court, Sonia Sotomayer, is her previous assertion that all campaign contributions are in reality bribes.  She was simply stating the obvious.  A person supports a candidate because she expects him to look after her interests and in a self-serving society like the United States that means the individual&#8217;s selfish interests not her communal interest.  A bell should have gone off back in the campaign when Obama rejected public campaign financing.  Guess we know why now.  (Actually the bell did go off but the American public was so caught up in the election of the first Black president and the fulfillment of Martin Luther King&#8217;s dream they refused to listen to those voices.  I guess that they just forgot that King&#8217;s dream was a society where a man would be judged by the content of his character rather than the colour of his skin.)</p>
<div class="mceTemp"> Of course those who they decide really cannot afford the premiums will have some form of subsidy or government system to fall back on.  But that is the system that currently exists and has left 40 million Americans out in the cold without health insurance.  Medicaid, the current fall back for those under 65 who cannot afford private coverage and Medicare for those over 65 work on a means test basis.  The problem with means testing appears when dealing with those who fall on the cut-off line.  Let me give you a personal example.  My wife&#8217;s father had a small company pension ($63.00 per month).  Here in Ontario there is a provincial program called Old Age Supplement which is to supplement the Old Age Security pension universally received from our federal government.  The idea was that it would top up the federal pension to the level set as a living income.  Because my father-in-law had that little company pension he fell just over the line to qualify for the supplement.  Result:  he received about $20 a month less in total than if he had not received the company pension.  Means tested programs always fail and so will Obama&#8217;s current health care plan.  Oh, he will declare success as will his minions but bottom line millions of Americans will still die needlessly for lack of medical care.  The absurdity continues if you remember that the cut-off point must be approved by a group of people who cannot manage their household budget while earning multi-million dollar salaries.  This is why they NEED lump sum infusions at least once a year in the form of bonuses.  Oh yeah, these are the go to guys when it comes to budgeting necessities. </div>
<div id="attachment_851" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 247px"><img class="size-full wp-image-851" title="single-grave-2" src="http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/single-grave-2.jpg" alt="I chose to pay the rent.  Now I have a permanent home." width="237" height="218" /><p class="wp-caption-text">I chose to pay the rent. Now I have a permanent home.</p></div>
<p>Health care is a human right.  Money was quickly found to fight an illegal war of aggression in Iraq.  Obama while downsizing that war is ratcheting up another unwinnable war in Afghanistan and in the process propping up a government rife with war criminals.  (While Obama continually tries to compare himself to Kennedy and Roosevelt, his behaviour increasingly resembles Nixon.  Nixon while taking credit for troop reductions in Vietnam failed to inform the public that they were just secretly being deployed to Cambodia which led finally to the rise of Pol Pot and the systematic murder of millions.  Now that&#8217;s the American way in action.)  There is no question of cost for these ill-conceived adventures.   They are being fought in the name of security while they have only succeeded in making Americans less secure and making the entire world more dangerous, and more in danger.  A secure state is one that minimizes the possibility that any of its citizens will die needlessly or preventably.  Health care then is a security issue.  Not just programs to deal with potential pandemics but prompt, quality medical assistance to every citizens who needs it when they need it.  Paying the rent or saving your life should not be a choice for a citizen of any civilized country.  Today in the United States it is.  Therefore the United States in NOT a civilized country.  It is a barbaric despotism where the wealthy and powerful spend their time cheating the weak and vulnerable.  And the &#8216;President of Change and Hope,&#8217; Barack Obama has revealed his true self as the &#8216;President of No Change and No Hope.&#8217;</p>
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		<title>Heralds of Interesting Times</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2008/12/heralds-of-interesting-times/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2008/12/heralds-of-interesting-times/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Dec 2008 20:35:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Canadian Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Society:  Us v. The Man]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[first casualty of war is the truth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[George Bush]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Journalism]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/?p=217</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This will be remembered as the year of the big story.  The Democratic primary fight pitting the first female candidate with a chance of being nominated by a major party against the first Black candidate; leading, as expected, to one of them winning the White House.  The presidential election culminated in the first Black man [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="T" class="cap"><span>T</span></span>his will be remembered as the year of the big story.  The Democratic primary fight pitting the first female candidate with a chance of being nominated by a major party against the first Black candidate; leading, as expected, to one of them winning the White House.  The presidential election culminated in the first Black man to become president of the United States.  The campaign season showed us new creative heights of sexism and racism dressed up with the proverbial lipstick.  Oil prices soared and a terrified public was told to expect them to climb even higher by the winter of 2008/2009.  Then the financial crisis exploded on society.  Oil prices plummeted to just below $50 a barrel.  Banks and financial institutions that were once the pillars of American capitalism collapsed, demanding public money to bail them out of their self-created disaster.  Not only demanding but expecting the public to simply hand over their hard earned money so that they could lend it back to us with interest.  The automakers followed suit.  Detroit, who for years refused to produce environmentally friendly and efficient vehicles, wanted the public to fund their stubborn ignorance.  The sense of entitlement in the ruling financial/industrial elite expressed itself in the crass reaction to any political oversight or confrontation.  The Detroit automakers and the Wall Street financiers sat before Congress and made them an offer they couldn&#8217;t refuse; either give us the money we demand or face the horror of the deconstruction of your entire economy.  There used to be a name for this behaviour.  Now what was it again?  Oh yes, I remember, extortion.  Congress bent before the deities of commercial Valhalla, sacrificing their dignity and our money to these sybaritic gods of greed.  When it rediscovered its backbone and tried to deny the Detroit 3, the High Priest in his White Temple, Pope George,  intervened and promised to save the American car industry himself.  An incoming president promises to withdraw troops from an ill-conceived illegal invasion of Iraq only to send them, in Nixonian style to another conflict in Afghanistan.  Redefining words in ways that would make Orwell envious, withdrawal has come to mean a permanent force of at least 50,000 remaining indefinitely in Iraq. </p>
<p>I often remind my students of the ancient curse, <em>may you be born in interesting times.</em>  Well if any times can be considered interesting these can.  We, the great unwashed (mental note need a shower today), in each historic epoch look to the heralds, the troubadours,  the minstrels, of the time, the fourth estate, in short the media to guide and inform us.  Legends in my lifetime like Neil Sheehan, Tom Wolfe, Seymour Hirsch, Woodward and Bernstein, Edward R. Murrow and more too numerous to mention have illuminated the dark underbelly of our society in an effort to help us understand ourselves and our world.  Understanding precedes correcting.  We rely on these heralds to tell us what is happening.  If they are silent then we are ignorant.  If they are biased we are misinformed.  If they are stupid we are in deep do-do.  These three are not mutually exclusive.  The greatest crisis facing our society and our planet today is that most &#8216;journalists&#8217; are all three.  They are often silent because to report would challenge the underlying  &#8217;truths&#8217; of the ideology they are sworn to uphold.  And they are often too stupid to see their own bias.  To see it they would have to examine themselves and ask some very difficult questions and we live in a world that discourages analysis and critical thinking as dangerous. </p>
<p>Bias in the media is not necessarily, although it can be in a small number of individual cases, a conscious behaviour.  Most journalists believe they report in an objective and unbiased manner, always sure to verify their information with &#8216;official sources&#8217; and &#8216;recognized experts&#8217;.  What they don&#8217;t see is that these &#8216;official&#8217; and &#8216;recognized&#8217; people are just that, official and recognized, but by whom.  The ideology of liberalism has been accepted in our society today as natural.  It is the ideology that is not ideological.  In some ways this is true of every society in every epoch.  We believe that the way we live is the correct, most natural, most rational form of living.  Our thoughts and understanding become the hard truths by which everything is measured.  But how is this conditioned reached?  In other words, who made up these norms and enforces them, to different degrees punishing any who might think or act a little differently.  In Western society in the early 21st century the truth is a liberal truth, having firmly grasped European and most particularly American society in the 17th and 18th centuries, rising though the 19th to cult status and vanquishing its greatest challenger in the industrialized world with the fall of communism and the discrediting of socialism in general.  What is has displaced, vanquished and rejected is not necessarily wrong because it has lost a battle.  If losing a battle were all that were necessary to discredit an adversary then we should reinstitute trial by combat for all disputes for clearly might makes right.  I wish that those who so fondly recall John Kennedy&#8217;s remarks in his inaugural speech, <em>Ask not what your country can do for you, ask rather what you can do for your country,</em>would actually read the rest of the speech and see the suffering and pain Kennedy expected the American people to endure just to defeat, not the Soviet Union, but just the idea of communism/socialism.  This is the objectivity that journalists are trained to see.  Liberal perspective becomes truth.  Official sources are trusted and left unchallenged.  As John Pilger remarked, speaking at a conference about his new book, <em>&#8216;Freedom Next Time&#8217;</em>,  the bits of true investagative and reflective journalism that find their way into the pages of major papers or onto mainstream networks both radio and television, are honourable exceptions rather than the rule of modern journalism.  Can we blame the journalist for seeing the world as those around them see it?  Can we blame the journalism program at university and college for putting out people that will blindly follow those who preceded them in the industry?  The question is a little unfair, I admit.  What I am really asking is can ordinary people be blamed for being ordinary?  How can we expect journalists to all be great people?  People of high conscience, principle, and great courage.  For it takes great courage to go through life uncertain of every thought you hold.  For the great person knows she/he  may be proven wrong at any moment.  Even when forcefully and vigorously asserting a position or argument, a little voice, like the slave in the chariot during a Roman triumph, constantly whispers <em>&#8216;remember, you are only human&#8217;.  </em>That is a lot to ask of anyone, to go through life in uncertainty.  But that is the human condition.  It doesn&#8217;t mean that you must always relinquish the field to your opponent or preface every remark with <em>&#8216;I could be wrong but&#8217;</em>.  You still forcefully assert your arguments because you believe them to be provably correct.  And you believe this because you have questioned them in the first place.  Accepting that we all have an inculcated perspective based on our lifetime experience means digging deeper and challenging that perspective constantly so that when we opine we do so with the confidence that that opinion will stand up to scrutiny.   That is the mark of great character and that is what I demand of journalists.  To do otherwise would be to condemn myself and you to purgatory of totalitarianism.  Such character is not encouraged by our education system or our social institutions as a whole.  The password for smoothly sailing through life is acceptance.  Accept the world as presented.  Don&#8217;t rock the boat.  But while courage won&#8217;t make you popular, it will make you honourable.   The choice is always up to the individual  So I implore those who proceed into journalism, if you don&#8217;t have the intestinal fortitude to ask the hard questions and examine your own failing then at least become a sports reporter where even basic intelligence is optional. </p>
<p>In politics the first question that should always be asked is <em>&#8216;In whose benefit?&#8217;   </em>Who benefits from seeing things this way rather than that?  Who benefits when ideas are defined this way rather than that.  If the same people who are defining the events and ideas are the same people who benefit from those particular definitions, we need to be skeptical.  Maybe they are being honest and it is just coincidence that they also benefit but to accept that as the usual is to be stupid.  And that is the situation with the media today and for most of the past 100 years.  Accepting the views or their &#8216;official&#8217; and &#8216;recognized&#8217; sources is doing just that.  These sources benefit by the way they define the world and these are the only sources journalists must use. </p>
<p>And how do journalists deal with their inability to really question the power brokers in our society?  Look at the questions they are asking.  Recently I was reminded of a question asked right after the attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001.  I remember it being asked and at the time just shook my head in disbelief.  It has become part of the conspiracy theory industry that has grown up around that tragic day.  (The attacks have spawned several industries actually.  Only America could market tragedy like soap suds.)  The question was &#8220;Mr. President.  Where were you when you first saw pictures of the first plane hitting the towers?&#8221;  I have paraphrased as it was asked more than once directly to the president and to his media representatives.  The initial answer that he was at the school when he saw a picture of the first plane hitting which is incorrect as images of that plane hitting had not been uncovered at that point is why the conspiracy theorists are all over it.  Most likely it was the second plane hitting that he saw and the answer a result of miscommunication.  But for all the attention that the question has received because of its answer, no one has questioned the question itself.  Why would anyone, let alone someone who must by virtue of covering the White House be at an upper level of his/her profession, ask such a stupid question ?  Who the hell cares where he was when someone first showed him a picture.  What critical information is uncovered by this?  The question of when was also asked several times.  When did you know this?  When did you hear that?  When did that zit on your nose pop?  Maybe George was having a dump when his aids first showed him the pictures or told him about the collapse.  Maybe Laura wheeled a TV over to the hall and he kept the door open to watch the coverage.  If he is like me he probably got her to bring him a cup of coffee as well.  How much of this crap (pardon the pun) do we need or want to know.  Personally I have no interest in any of this.  I don&#8217;t care who told him what, when.  I would be interested in deeper questioning of his plans for dealing with the situation.  That is news! </p>
<p>But news is what the heralds of these interesting times are trained to ignore.  We hear the lies repeated.  The auto industry is in trouble because it pays its workers too much.  Truth the average pay at assembly plants in the U.S. is $30 an hour.  Given the price of housing and feeding a family in America today that is not exorbitant.  But according to the heralds unless the workers stop being so greedy the Detroit 3 will collapse.  In whose interest?  The self proclaimed best political team on television asks whether President-elect Obama can move forward on health care reform in the midst of this financial crisis.  Read General Motors financial report.  You will discover that health care costs are hurting their competitiveness.  But no mention of this on CNN.  Oh! no! Wolf wouldn&#8217;t want to mention that.  In whose interest?  Victory in Iraq and in Afghanistan is necessary to secure the world (read the United States) from further terrorist attacks.  Most Americans still believe that Iraq was involved in the attacks and that the elimination of the Taliban will produce a free and democratic Afghanistan (read my earlier post <em>Team Afghanistan</em> for some insight into the reality).  Bringing death and destruction to those half way around the world will make them love us.  Instead every objective measure shows a more dangerous world today than before the War on Terror.  Even that phrase, war on terror is never questioned but it may tell us more than we want to know.  How can you have a war on an idea, a concept?  What would that look like?  You can&#8217;t kill an idea only the holder of the idea.  Then look at how we are proceeding in this so-called war.  In whose interest? </p>
<p>In whose interest?  Over and over I ask myself that question as I watch events unfold before me.  If only journalists could find the courage to start asking those questions.  Not just of the powers that be but of themselves.  In whose interest is it that they reject information from every alternative source in favour of the &#8216;official&#8217; and the &#8216;recognized&#8217;?  It is certainly not in mine or in the interest of society as a whole.  But it does seem to be in the interest of those who make the decision of what information the public receives.  The heralds of interesting times have much to answer for.</p>
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		<title>I Had a Dream</title>
		<link>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2008/11/i-had-a-dream/</link>
		<comments>http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/2008/11/i-had-a-dream/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2008 16:38:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Policy]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[How important is it to elect the first Black president today?  Is it so paramount that we don&#8217;t want to look at his character and his policies?  Now before anyone gets their knickers in a knot, I am not saying that Barak Obama is a Marxist.  I can categorically tell you that he is not [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="first-child "><span title="H" class="cap"><span>H</span></span>ow important is it to elect the first Black president today?  Is it so paramount that we don&#8217;t want to look at his character and his policies?  Now before anyone gets their knickers in a knot, I am not saying that Barak Obama is a Marxist.  I can categorically tell you that he is not because I am a Marxist and he has never been to any of the meetings <img src='http://zoonpolitikon.ca/blog/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> .   On the contrary I am amazed that someone whose policy manual (Blueprint for Change) and whose campaign behaviour has been to run from every progressive cause and every opportunity to challenge America in another direction, is seen as this great agent of hope and change.  Saying it over and over don&#8217;t make it so.  On policy after policy in the &#8216;Blueprint for Change&#8217; Obama fiddles with the knobs without changing the station.  But then why change when everything is going so well.  I mean what is wrong with what is?  American children are illiterate and innumerate in comparison to others countries.  That&#8217;s okay, if they can&#8217;t read they won&#8217;t have their little minds twisted by crazy things like ideas and stuff.  Millions of Americans are dying to see Obama&#8217;s new health care package and will continue to do so under it.  And the most popular colour for children&#8217;s pajamas this season among working families is sidewalk grey.  Oh no.  Let&#8217;s not look at fundamental change because haven&#8217;t you heard our fundamentals are strong.  I can sum up Obama&#8217;s policy book in one word, safe.  Say as little as possible and nobody will have anything to challenge you on. </p>
<p>His record?  Well, here&#8217;s a man who abandons his friends, forces those who have actually fought in the trenches and sometimes risked their lives to kow tow to him, to humble themselves to a national audience, and reverses his position every time it is politically expedient.  I know those are the qualities I would look for in the leader of the free world.  As a Senator he supports a financial bailout that saves the Wall Street tycoons whose greed created the economic crisis while doing nothing to help the real people whose lives are being destroyed.  On the campaign he rejects public financing after promising to embrace it because he realizes he can out-fundraise his opponent and buy an election.  Much of his money coming from Wall Street and the corporate sector.  &#8216;Very interesting&#8217; as Arte Johnson used to say on Laugh-In. </p>
<p>I have waited a long time to see the first Black president of the United States and the first woman president and I could have tolerated Clinton.  Maybe.  Well if I held my nose.  This morning my class watched Mississippi Burning and this election kept creeping into my thougts.  I remembered the great Black leaders of my youth.  Malcolm X.  Bobby Seales.  Medgar Evers, Stokely Carmichael, Martin Luther King.  I thought about Julius Nyerere and Nelson Mandela.  Barak Obama just doesn&#8217;t fit.  It is not just that he doesn&#8217;t look like the other presidents on the dollar bills but that he doesnt&#8217;t act like those men I so admired.  I will celebrate the symbol but mourn the character of an Obama presidency.</p>
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