So, much better over here; thanks for all of your good wishes. I think a combination of a super-busy weekend, some lapses with the vitamins and a bug all created a sort of perfect storm over here -was never feverish, just lots of joint pain- and for some reason today my tongue hurts, but otherwise, the ship is aright.
But I had some serious news over the weekend, about some friends of ours.
1) Adam, age 18, was away at school and feeling short of breath. First they thought it was a cold, then they thought it was pneumonia. Then they discovered lymphoma within the pleura of his lungs. After removing 5 liters of fluid from his chest cavity, Adam is comfortable, but he is immediately undergoing chemotherapy. The doctors at his hospital were wonderful and told him that as the chemo recipe for his treatment is constant, he can be treated at a local hospital or clinic near his school. Go back to class and try to continue school with the chemo, if you can, they told him. School and people may be a distraction. Either way, well get you through this.
Adams cancer treatment began within 6 days of his diagnosis. Doctors are optimistic.
2) Gene, age 80, a man who never likes to sit still and who only just retired this autumn from his retirement job on a road crew, which he took on ten years ago because retiring at 70 seemed boring, to him. He found a lump on his torso and had it check out; also diagnosed with lymphoma this week. The doctors are confident the cancer is not advanced and that -being a robust, optimistic sort who has never been sick a day in his life- Gene will withstand the treatment easily and that there should be no problem eradicating this cancer.
Genes cancer treatment will begin within 8 days of his diagnosis. Doctors are optimistic.
3) John, age 67, semi-retired (he drives a tourist shuttle in the summer) was experiencing breathlessness. He could not finish a stress-test and was immediately scheduled for (depending on conditions) either the insertion of two stents or a bypass. It was discovered that his blockages required a triple bypass, which he underwent with flying colors, yesterday.
Johns heart surgery came within a week of his failed stress test, less than two weeks from his initial breathlessness. His prognosis: excellent.
These are all family members of friends, and theyre all living in different states, and I think its pretty remarkable that each one of these men were able to experience such fast and optimistic -dare I say can-do responses to their situations, without anyone interfering with them or their family about treatment options, or age considerations.
Nobody looked at Gene and said, well, I dunno, youre 80, man. Lymphoma treatment is costly, and youre not exactly contributing to the tax coffers, anymore; youve had a good run. Kiss your wife goodbye and take the red pill, already. Do it for America!
No one looked at John and said, hmmmm, youre 67; a bypass might keep you alive for another 15 years, and there will be blood thinners and other meds, check-ups and such. Thats going to be expensive, so maybe we dont do a bypass on you. Just you know, walk slow and dont move around too much. We can give you a wheelchair and some oxygen, for a while
I dont want to say that Obamas is a cant-do America, but I do not see how any of these people could be better served under Obamacare.
For the past few months, weve heard that the H1N1 virus was a killer that was going to wipe out a huge swath of the global population. We were warned that everyone must, must get the government-provided vaccination. Then there werent enough vaccinations to go around. Then the president decided to declare a national emergency about H1N1 because, apparently, not enough people were sufficiently freaked out about this latest crisis.
Nothing about the way the government has handled the Great Big Swine Flu Scare of 2009 has left me encouraged about how it will handle health care matters for individuals.
For that matter, nothing about how the government has handled the Cash for Clunkers program, or the investigations into ACORN (oh, wait, there havent been any) or has [not] brought the budget in on time (which is, you know
their fundamental job) convinces me that they will be able to do anything but completely screw up our healthcare system.
Now, its true, Adams parents have good (not congress-critter level, but good) health insurance. Gene, thanks to his union/pension situation which I dont wholly understand, also has very good coverage. Johns coverage is Medicare with supplemental coverage. And its true that not everyone in America has health insurance. The number of uninsured seems to range from 15 million to 45 million depending on which politician youre talking to, on which day. Lets go with Obamas most recent figure of 30 million, just to keep to the average. Thats 10% of the population.
So, let us stipulate that that 10% of our population needs health insurance, and let us further stipulate that costs are too high; that there does need to be some limited health insurance reform that should include interstate competition and perhaps limited tort reform as well.
Why cant our congress offer their own insurance plan (which is so great they have no intention of giving it up to stand in lines with the rest of us) to the underinsured, at a reduced rate, based on a sliding scale? Surely a government that believes it can treat 300 million Americans on a case-by-case basis can efficiently insure 30 million of its needier citizens on a case-by-case basis, and administer to them some appropriately priced insurance? Surely that would -in the long run- cost less than overhauling the entire healthcare system? Surely managing healthcare for 30 million people is easier than managing health care for 300 million?
Let someone who can pay $20.00 a month pay it, someone who can afford $100.00 a month pay that, with the government covering the rest of their premiums and assisting with co-pays, where needed. Why is that considered not doable, while a systemic and dubious overhaul, with government bureaucrats deciding on treatments for the masses, is seen as doable and desirable, even in the face of daily evidence that the government cannot do the most fundamental of its jobs?
I would much rather see my taxes go to the purchasing of insurance for 30 million than for this unworkable boondoggle that the president and congress are determined to shove down our throats, even as were screaming we dont want it.
Please pray for Adam, Gene and John, if you will. Great health care can still use prayers!
Obama is really into himself. This worthless trip blocks traffic and creates a mess. He has a home theater.
Seven, he has to be seen treating the first wookie well. Besides, how is Glamour going to be able to give chewbacca a fashion award without some pictures of her in something other than furniture upholstery?
Nan
October 29th, 2009 | 3:56 pm | #34
We cant criticize our dear leader now, can we? The part that everyone is missing in this article is when Michelle talks about the White House and her servants. I thought we ended slavery years ago. Michelle, they are called staff, not servants