Sunday, September 16, 2012

STATES' WRONGS (Part 2)

(See Part 1 below, 7/31/11.  The following ran as a letter to the Editor of the Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch on September 13, 2012.)

According to "Wikipedia," the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (incorporating the "Principles of [17]98") were written by James Madison and Thomas Jefferson, respectively and were merely their individual OPINIONS about the asserted POWER (not "right") of the states to refuse to enforce federal constitutional principles, smugly repeated by Pauline Madden in [the T-D] on August 31.  Those opinions embracing "nullification" and "interposition" (a/k/a "states' rights") were clearly rejected by the outcome of the Civil War, so one must wonder about those who, like Madden, continue to beat that dead horse today.  Seven of the new states pointedly REJECTED adopting those Resolutions.  None of the 13 original states adopted them.  George Washington was vehemently opposed to them.

Jefferson and Madison did not like the idea of the federal courts being the sole judges of the constitutionality of federal acts, as Alexander Hamilton had asserted in the Federalist Papers (incidentally co-authored by James Madison).  Most opinions of the day agreed with Hamilton's views on the matter, that the federal courts should be the EXCLUSIVE arbiter of federal constitutional law.  This view was buttressed by John Marshall's opinion in 1803 establishing the principle of (federal) judicial review in MARBURY vs. MADISON.

The phrase, "states' rights," does not appear in the US Constitution anywhere.  There is no expression therein of the powers of "nullification" nor "interposition" nor "secession."  I think it's way past time to give all that "states' rights" foolishness a rest.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

SUPPLY-SIDE NONSENSE

On August 14, I had to turn off "Morning Joe" in anger as I watched Chris Matthews and Gene Robinson (among others) sit silently while Joe Scarborough ranted and raved typical Republican supply-side nonsense about the economy.  Democrats are NOT going to win the economic debates (nor will the world economy recover) until the dominance of Ronald Reagan's "supply-side" fantasies is vanquished, once and for all.

Basically, Scarborough's rant attacked Democrats' presumably desired taxation of rich folks and union preferences and "Obama-care" as creating fear and uncertainty among the various "job-creators" out there who, BUT FOR the onerous future risks of higher taxes and employment costs, would magically start hiring all those folks either unemployed or doing part-time work to come back to full-time jobs that are just idling in some sort of economic "Purgatory," just waiting to be filled when said onerous future risks are demolished by Mitt Romney (buttressed by the laser-focused views of Paul Ryan) and thus resolved in favor of said "job-creators."  This fear and uncertainty is, of course, magnified and emboldened by all those "lame-stream journalists" out there who are OBVIOUSLY liberal and OBVIOUSLY Democrats and who favor Obama's tax-and-spend philosophies.

I think that is a fair assessment of Scarborough's positions as he laid them out this morning, and I assume that many (if not most) Republicans embrace those views.

So, as someone else has already asked, if the "supply-side" approach of lower taxes on "job-creators" and other wealthier folks works, then what happened to all the jobs that should have magically appeared after income taxes (but not payroll taxes) were ridiculously cut in 2001 by pernicious Republicans and spineless Democrats?  Before he died, Steve Jobs famously told Barack Obama that all those manufacturing jobs that had migrated to the Third World during the previous 20 years were simply NOT coming back, and to get over it!  Jobs was right, and the simple facts are that the US economy is going to have to reinvent itself away from traditional manufacturing.  When Chrysler and GM were bailed out to avoid bankruptcy, Democrats (including Obama) crowed that the assembly-line jobs were being saved.  Perhaps so, in the short run, but what was REALLY saved in the long run were the aggregate investment of shareholders and bankers and the white-collar jobs of senior management.  IF there were consumers who desired American-built cars and would buy them if available, then those assembly-line workers would have EVENTUALLY found employment elsewhere, to satisfy whatever DEMAND there was for such automobiles.  The shareholders, lenders and managers of Chrysler and GM may have been devastated by a lack of government bail-out of those companies, but the workers would have found whatever work there was to satisfy whatever demand was to be had.  I think the wrong interests were saved by those Democrat-approved bail-outs.

THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A "SUPPLY-SIDE" MARKET!  Why are we STILL debating this crap 24 years after Ronald Reagan left office?  Even David Stockman, Reagan's OMB Director who invented the concept of "supply-side," now admits it was a fabricated bunch of hooey.  All markets are demand-driven--that is, there is no market for sellers or manufacturers of goods or services unless there is a demand for whatever.  And, unless ordinary people have spending money in their pockets, there won't be any DEMAND in the marketplace!  Why is something so seemingly simple so hard for politicians to embrace?  Giving the fewer upper-income folks more spending money than they already have is not going to recover ANY market!  The largesse must be spread among a greater number of consumers.  Ideally, they would have more spending money if they had more jobs, but the jobs simply are not there.  Joe Scarborough is wrong.  "Job-creators" don't have jobs to magically create unless and until somebody wants to buy their stuff.  And, if the jobs are not (yet) available, then the spending money is going to HAVE to come from the government.  It will patently not "trickle down" as chump-change from the overflowing pockets of the lower-taxed wealthy.

Why are we still debating these points?  Why don't Democrats quit trying to embrace "supply-side" and look at markets as they really exist?  Because, Democrats instinctively distrust market philosophy and simply don't bother to master it, when it can work in favor of Democrats' presumed objectives.  Despite the compelling logic, they are simply too ignorant (or corrupt) to effectively defend their own positions.

Most Republicans just fabricate market "witchcraft" to suit their predispositions to cut income taxes on wealthier folks (who, unlike workers, do not pay much in payroll taxes).  At least Republicans serve their wealthier constituency consistently and effectively.  Democrats, the alleged "Party of the People," are mostly clueless.  Like Barack Obama, they have bought into the line that cutting taxes (despite the military-driven deficits) will produce prosperity, so they advocate continued overseas imperialism and keeping taxes lower for those earning up to $250.000, while HALF of all American households gross less than $50,000 annually!  To be sure, many in the lower half don't vote, so they have only themselves to blame, but those are facts.  They can't be bothered to vote their own interests because NEITHER major political party is focused on those interests.  Democrats are chasing big bucks like Republicans, and the ordinary folks can just go suck eggs!

The single greatest consumption engine the world has ever seen, the Baby Boomers, are aging, and our consumption is drying up.  Most of us born before 1960 have bought our last piece of real estate and perhaps our last new vehicle, washing machine, refrigerator, whatever.  Who is going to replace us?  The world economy is in the toilet substantially because the Baby Boomers are cutting back.  The much-lamented feeble savings rate will likely start to rise again as Boomers get older and more paranoid about the future, like their elders have done throughout the ages.  Where has all that buying power gone?  They can't sell enough disposable diapers to recover the world economy!

Politicians, economists, pundits, voters, all need to think about consumption and demand, not supply, especially in the US.  As working-class buying power continues to shrink, so shall US wallets.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

NATIONAL INTERESTS


[The following is taken from an e-mail of 5/20/2012 in response to an assertion that a majority of Americans, even Republicans, poll opposition to the current hostilities in central Asia and the Arabian Peninsula.]


To be sure, many Americans POLL particular opposition to "The War," but they are also scared shitless about "tar-rism," and they see nothing fundamentally wrong with a president autocratically taking offensive military action (or murdering unarmed "tar-rists") on foreign soil without a congressional declaration of war, SO LONG AS they are patted on the head and are told it will suppress "tar-rism" or is otherwise in the nebulous, shifting, shadowy, bureaucratically-defined "National Interest" of America!  This has been our dominant, politically-driven foreign and military philosophy since WWII.

I am very concerned that NEITHER major political party is willing to honor the constitutional restraints on executive power, the very thing (Mr. Scalia) most of the Founders were extremely concerned about.  Had our Fearless Leaders over the years been thus concerned, MAYBE we would not have been so victimized by "tar-rists," and the Twin Towers might still be standing, but now we will never know because most everybody is thoroughly addicted to saber-rattling, muscle-flexing, drone-bombing, Executive-Branch-fashioned American imperialism.  As Mel Brooks said, "It is GOOD to be king!"

The two majors may disagree on HOW "Separation of Powers" should be thus dishonored, but leaders in each have their own set of "core principles" by which they easily rationalize constitutional disregard as desired.  THAT is our real problem, and the "booboisee" (thank you, H. L. Mencken) have no clue!  Mitt Romney may be a an addled dunce, but Barack Obama is our current "problem."  How might we intimidate and control those who are willing to commit suicide for THEIR core principles?  Kill 'em all?  Good luck.  Round 'em up and send 'em to Gitmo?  How many unconstitutional kangaroo courts ("military tribunals") do we create at taxpayer expense to put on sham trials for those folks?  Who is fooled by all of that nonsense, besides gullible American "patriots"?  

Most Americans hardly care, so long as it's somebody else doing the fighting and bleeding and dying while waving the Flag!  Most Americans are a pathetic, witless gaggle of armchair patriots!  It was proven thus during the Vietnam War, and it is being proven again in central Asia and the Arabian Peninsula.

Yee-hah!

Monday, March 26, 2012

THEOLOGIANS AND ATHEISTS

A close friend reported going to hear a theologian talk about atheism. I sent him the following reply:

I am fascinated by all these "reverends" and "theologians" speaking about atheism. It really does twist their little pointy tails right up! I think a lot of folks are really bugged that there are some of us out here who just don't buy into the "fairy tales." They are desperate to refute what they THINK we are saying! I think they are scared we might be RIGHT! Before he died, Christopher Hitchens was one of the few atheists going around and talking about it. Most of us hide in the closet. It's not a popular philosophy. But for the most part, atheism gets discussed by those who are hostile to it, so their objectivity is open to question.

I am NOT "anti-theistic." Some atheists are, but I think that is a different kettle of fish entirely, and I think it's dishonest and counter-productive. If one is truly "anti-theist," then he or she is self-encumbered with a burden to prove the NON-existence of a deity, and that is absurd! I can't PROVE a goddamned thing! I have no clue whether there is a deity out there or not. But, I just don't care! As Bill Maher said a few weeks ago, if God will show an unambiguous sign and/or his followers can prove his existence, then I shall immediately change my mind! PRAISE THE LORD! But, until that proof is forthcoming, I CHOOSE to be a skeptic. I CHOOSE to simply not believe. I recognize I could be wrong, but I DON'T CARE! I also do not speak for any other atheist. There is as much variation among atheists as there is among Episcopalians. Some atheists may vehemently disagree with my views!

The magician, Penn Jillette, says there is really no such thing as "agnostic." If one says he or she "does not know" IF there is a deity, then that means they simply do NOT believe there is a deity! One either KNOWS it or does not KNOW it! There is no inbetween. All True Believers (the ones I have talked to) will say they KNOW God exists! It is a moral certainty for them. Fine. I am glad they are certain. They COULD be right! I DON'T CARE! (I personally think they are "whistling by the graveyard"!) But if one does not KNOW, then one cannot possibly believe in the affirmative, which is the true posture of an atheist. A true atheist is not CERTAIN, either. The true scientist is never certain of anything, for a fundamental element of the scientific "persuasion" is that anything a true scientist believes could be proven false AT ANY TIME! That is the essence of the "scientific method": the RISK of being proven wrong!

How many True Believers are willing to admit the POSSIBILITY of error? I have yet to meet one! In his wonderful opera, Faust, Randy Newman has the "Satan" character saying that "religion is the product of a desperate mind that knows it is going to die"!

About 15 years ago, I was interviewed by the local Episcopal rector who was working on his doctoral dissertation, and he was obliged to interview an atheist or agnostic, so he asked to talk to me. He came by my house and we had a very pleasant discussion for about 2 hours. I liked him a lot and considered him a friend. The local Methodist minister was also a friend, and the local Baptist minister and his wife were clients and came to a couple of my wild-ass parties! I guess they felt "safe" there to have a good time, and they did!

I am not anti-theist, but I am anti-establishmentarian. The US may well be a "Christian nation" (whatever in the hell that means), but we are supposed to have a secular government. I try to keep that on the level! I am obliged to defend the rights of others to worship who- or whatever they wish, but I don't have to buy into their silliness.

BIPARTISAN EMASCULATIONS

Regardless of what US voters think they want, or what we've all been conditioned to accept, there is no constitutional authority for the kind of militaristic colonial adventurism that has been going on in this country since World War II and the "reign" of John Foster Dulles and his ilk over foreign policy. If taxpayers are forced to maintain a military force far greater than necessary to protect us, that military force must and will find stupid things to do at taxpayer expense. It's like firemen who go out and start fires to put out because they get bored just sitting around the firehouse--amazingly, much arson is committed by trained fire personnel!

Regardless of all the arguments about what a dangerous world we live in, etc., US colonial adventurism and our penchant for making deals with the wrong local devils (until they are shoved up our asses) has gotten the US into a lot of unnecessary conflict. We justify maintaining a huge standing army for the very reason that our "bipartisan" policies since World War II have been pretty much the same: meddling in the affairs of other cultures and nations and trying to jam their square pegs into our round holes. Our leaders and many voters routinely assume that because no other nation is willing to expend lives and treasure doing that sort of thing that we have no choice but to step into the breach, in mutually bipartisan lunacy. Any reluctance is belittled as cowardice and/or lack of "patriotism."

Notwithstanding the Taliban's perverted social views, they should not be confused nor conflated with Al-Qaida, as so many operatives in both parties and in the military have done. Had the US not been mucking around in Saudi Arabia, it is arguable that the disaster of 9/11/01 would not have occurred. Afghanistan is not a "country": it is a mostly anarchic geographic space between countries! It has no national identity, regardless of which stooge we put in power. The US and its military have no business whatsoever being in central Asia, arrogantly engaging in "nation-building." And, in a fit of hyperbolic patriotism on the part of most everyone, including most of the so-called "press," the US has embarked on an 11-year military exercise in central Asia that is utterly unauthorized by the Constitution, and almost nobody gives a damn because it makes us feel good to go out and kick some "towel-head" ass! Show 'em who's boss!

Tell that to the poor guy whose penis got shot off in Fallujah, fightin' for his country! How many medals will compensate for that?

The rest of us are almost totally disengaged from what has been going on over there, and that is no way to run a "war"! The "good" thing about a congressional declaration of war is that it won't pass unless the need is critical and support is broad, and IF it passes, the nation has no choice but to become engaged. Executive-Branch war-making is blatantly unconstitutional. But that is all we have had since World War II, and every such conflict has been utterly failed, futile nonsense. The US should immediately stop what its personnel are doing in central Asia and get the hell completely out of there--right now! Support the troops! Declare "victory" and bring 'em all home!

And as for 9/11/01, what happened in the US back then was a set of horrific crimes, not "acts of war." The entire mess should have been handled as civilian criminal prosecutions from the very beginning, with proper due process for all suspects. Instead, it was used as a deadly pretext for playing "soldier" with taxpayer dollars and conveniently suspending constitutional guarantees of due process, creating very bad legal precedents in the process. That was all done in "bipartisan" fashion and continues as such under Barack Obama, who campaigned quite to the contrary in 2008. To paraphrase a friend's father (discussing partnerships), "bipartisanship" is the sorriest ship that ever sailed the seas!

And as conservative humor-writer and commentator P. J. O'Rourke says, "bipartisanship" one of the most dangerous words in the English language!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

THE CONSTITUTION AND BIRTH CONTROL

[The following ran, slightly edited, as "Correspondent of the Day" in the Richmond, Virginia Times Dispatch on Saturday, March 17, 2012.]

Your "Correspondent of the Day" for March 12, Rev. Msgr. Michael McCarron of Williamsburg, erroneously asserts that totally voluntary hospital operations of the Catholic Church have a constitutional right to be treated differently from other hospitals merely because of the religious affiliation. He is simply wrong. Like the taxable parking garage owned by St. Paul's (Episcopal) Church in downtown Richmond, as a secular operation a Catholic hospital must and should account to the government the same as other hospitals. A Catholic hospital is a health agency, not a church. Its association with the Catholic Church is merely incidental to its primary function, and it enjoys a government-protected territorial monopoly and receives secular government assistance, the same as other hospitals. The Constitution arguably (1) ensures secular government and (2) protects the practice of religion by individuals and their institutions of WORSHIP. It does not prevent accountability for secular operations. That has nothing whatsoever to do with "freedom of religion."

All hospitals in Virginia must first obtain "Certificates of Necessity" granting a virtual monopoly for the territory to be served by the hospital. One may not simply "open a hospital." Recently, the federal government proposed that hospitals (generally) provide employees with adequate medical care, INCLUDING birth control. The Catholic hospitals were not singled out in this regard. If the Catholic Church wants to make money off its monopoly hospitals and receive public assistance, it should expect to "pony up," the same as any other hospital operator. Instead, it claims a "right" to a special EXCEPTION from universal regulation where none lawfully exists.

If a church is going to establish a hospital, it must obviously abide by government regulations targeting the health of the patients. By Msgr. McCarron's tortured logic, a church-related hospital would be constitutionally exempt from compliance with any health regulation deemed to be in violation of its sponsor's subjective dogma. For example, consider a hospital established by religious snake-handlers that might refuse to treat poisonous snakebites deemed to be inflicted upon presumably wicked victims by the hand of God. Would such ludicrous refusal be protected under the Constitution? I doubt it. (I am not here suggesting an equivalency between snakebites and birth control, although I am tempted!)

If the Catholic Church does not want to dispense birth control information or devices, its members may certainly lobby in opposition to the relevant hospital regulations generally, and/or it can just get out of the hospital business.

"CRACKER" REPUBLICANS AND THE RULE OF LAW Or, How I became a switch hitter!


Back in the 1960's I was Chair of the Young Republicans chapter at a small Virginia men's college and a self-described "conservative" Goldwater supporter! I saw the beginnings of the flocking of racist Southern Democrats into the Republican Party, beginning during the Nixon Administration and the payoff of Nixon's "Southern Strategy" run by Harry Dent, Jr., a racist Republican operative from South Carolina. I was horrified to watch Republican Nixon recruiting and openly campaigning for incumbent racist Southern Dems against duly nominated Republican candidates in the 1970 congressional elections, and by the time of George McGovern's Democratic presidential nomination in 1972, the goose was pretty much cooked. Most of the Southern Dems (not all, though) had migrated to the Republican Party or were well on their way. McGovern's nomination was the last straw for many.

To be sure, not every Republican is a practicing racist, but practically all practicing racists and bigots are now proclaimed Republicans! Nixon welcomed the racists, and Ronald Reagan welcomed the homophobic bigots and religious bigots into the Republican Party. The Republican Party has become what it is today thanks to Nixon and Reagan and the trailer-trash "crackers" they welcomed into the Party.

I realized I could no longer co-exist in the Republican Party with those types, so I left, wandering in the political wilderness for about four to five years. I voted for Libertarian Roger MacBride in 1976; I could not bring myself to vote for the cretin (Ford) who stupidly pardoned Nixon before he admitted to anything, and I could not bring myself to vote for a shamelessly evangelical Christian (Carter). However, I later came to respect Jimmy Carter as the real deal and was an enthusiastic supporter for him in 1980, partly because Reagan scared the bejeezus out of me! As an independent, I had supported "convenient" Dem Chuck Robb for Virginia Lieutenant Governor in 1977, and I attended my first Virginia Democratic Convention as a Delegate in 1978. I became Chair of a county Democratic chapter in Virginia in early 1979, and I resigned Election Night in 1981 (before the results were announced) when (finally committed) Dem Robb was elected Governor. The wife of my successor as Chair had a bad stroke about a year later, and he was totally distracted with that thereafter, so I wound up effectively serving as "Chair pro-tem" for another few years. I willingly did most of the work and had no real title. I didn't care about the "title," though.  The work had to be done.  The "Reagan Years" were not popular times for Dems in Virginia, regardless.

I supported Bill Clinton (not my first choice for the nomination) in 1992, but I resigned from the Democratic Party (I was more or less asked to get out) in late 1995 because I knew I would not support Bill Clinton for re-election in 1996. I had been complaining vehemently about his "Wrong-Wing" triangulation tilt with fascist Republican Dick Morris. It seriously annoyed the True Believers in the Democratic Party who would brook no dissent within. I can't remember for whom I voted in 1996--it may have been the Libertarian candidate. I voted for Ralph Nader in 2000 because I could not stand nor trust Al Gore or Joe Lieberman. Contrary to the wishful thinking of excuse-mongering Dems, Nader did not cost Al Gore the Election! Gore lost that election all by himself!

In 2004, I mistakenly thought that John Kerry had a chance to take Virginia, so I voted for him, despite the fact that I have never liked or trusted him, either. He predictably lost. For me, getting rid of Bush that year was a high priority. He is arguably the most dangerous, evil President we've ever had. I never thought I would say so, but he was much worse than Nixon!

I gladly supported Barack Obama in 2008. The notion that Sarah Palin might be one of John McCain's feeble heartbeats away from the Presidency was frightening in its implications. The recently-shown HBO drama, "Game Change," only confirms my thinking. Sarah Palin is utterly unqualified to hold any elective office! She is a vapid, silly ditz! Unfortunately, I have come to refer to Obama as "Prez Origami," because he folds so easily and will assume any shape desired! It seems he has squandered almost his entire Presidency so far trying to validate George W. Bush's absurd policies. He has thrown "Hope 'n' Change" out the window! In fact, "Hope" has become "Nope."

As despicable as Osama bin Laden seemed, all we really know about him is what the government has told us! In 2011, bin Laden was summarily shot on Obama's orders, unarmed (probably in the back of his head, gangster-style, with his arms secured behind his back), and his body was conveniently dumped at sea (so there could be no autopsy showing how close the gun may have been to the back of his head). Instead, the Constitution requires that he should have been arrested, brought to trial in a civilian court with a lawyer, a jury, right of cross-exam, etc. in accordance with the Sixth Amendment. Now, I realize this procedure fails to satisfy the blood-lust for vengeance that stupidly infects many Americans' thinking. Because they rigidly believe the US is a "democracy" (George W. Bush said so), many seem to think that "due process" ought to be put to a vote. However, it is well to remember that the purest form of "democracy" is a lynch mob, because everyone in attendance agrees on the outcome, except for the victim!

Although the US Supreme Court has limited the reach of constitutional due process to US citizens or on US soil, there are no such limitations written into the Constitution. Had bin Laden been convicted in a civilian court (as I suspect he would have been), then he should have been punished in accordance with our Constitution, which Obama and everybody else has sworn to support and defend, without exceptions. The possibility that Obama had his fingers crossed behind his back when he took the oath of office does not count! The fact that I am outnumbered by those who angrily disagree with me does not mean that I am wrong!

War, especially all the undeclared "pseudo-wars" we've had since WWII, is never an excuse to evade the requirements of the Constitution. The Congress has not formally declared war any time since World War II, and the President does not have war-making powers specifically granted under Article II, regardless of what the Supreme Court has said. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court has mostly abdicated its proper oversight of military and foreign policy in rather cowardly fashion. There are no such exceptions in Article III of the Constitution, and "military tribunals" established and controlled under Article II are also not authorized under the Constitution! All of that seems to bother very few people, however.

Republicans and "tea-baggers" are raising complaints about Obama that are mostly silly and seemingly racist in their purpose and motive. There is plenty to legitimately criticize Obama about, such as Obama wrongfully continuing and escalating the pseudo-wars in central Asia, his renewal of the vile USA PATRIOT Act by autopen and, most reprehensibly, his recent signing of the Military Authorization Act that permits indefinite detention and even "rendering" of persons (including US citizens) "suspected" by SOMEBODY in the Executive Branch of "terrorism," all without lawyers or trials or other pesky "legal technicalities." That is blatantly unconstitutional, but Obama, being the chameleon that he is, signed it anyway while bleating about his reservations with it!  WHAT "reservations"?

I had a front-row seat to the sad racist conversion of the Republican Party in the 1970's. I had no choice but to leave.

HEALTHCARE FOR REAL

The recently adopted healthcare law (herein "Obamacare" for convenience) should be overturned by the US Supreme Court on grounds of unconstitutionality and/or be repealed by the Congress. In its place should be adopted a new, truly UNIVERSAL, publicly-funded healthcare law--WITHOUT ANY REQUIRED INSURANCE-CO. PARTICIPATION--and no employer mandates, the kind of plan that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and President Barack Obama killed. A proper plan should be government-run/single-payer/"Medicare For All," as others have called it. The government system (Medicare) is already in place. The size of a patient's co-pay or annual contribution could and should be means-tested, but the bulk (80%?) of the cost ought to be covered by higher INCOME (not payroll) taxes. In fact, the current 2.9% regressive Medicare payroll taxI should be totally repealed. It is a needless burden on workers and employers. An ill-advised increase is being planned, however, to offset rising costs in Medicare. That may well aggravate current unemployment and "under-employment" and business stagnation.

Yes, there would be fraud, but it could be "managed." (That kind of fraud would not be nearly as bad as current military procurement fraud, for example.) Unlike "Obamacare," primary participation by insurance companies should be superfluous. There is simply no need for a proper healthcare system to allow health insurance companies, acting as "middlemen," to skim off their unnecessary share of the cashflow. They could, instead, market supplemental plans like current Medicare supplementals. "Medical Insurance" is not synonymous for "Healthcare"! It is simply not essential to a proper government-run system.  Besides, haven’t the PRIVATE healthcare insurance companies really had quite enough time and opportunity to provide a DECENT system instead of the ludicrous, insurance-centric “pig-sty” we now have?

The chances of such a program getting through the current Congress are almost non-existent!  President Obama squandered the most likely opportunity for proper action when the Democrats controlled both Houses of Congress.  Those days are gone, now, and the Republicans may well take control of the Senate after the 2012 elections!  Obama has only himself and Harry Reid to blame.

The insurance companies had their opportunity to "fix the problem" after the failure of Hillary Clinton's questionable health-insurance proposals in the mid-1990's. The companies did nothing, however. They squandered their "right" to be the prime beneficiaries of a national program as they now are under "Obamacare."  Bill Daley (son of the Chicago mayor and later Commerce Secretary) attended a healthcare conference in DC back then.  Daley's job was to sell the "Hillary" plan to Congress.  I stood up and told Daley that all the government had to do (at the time) was to guarantee (1) insurability, (2) portability, and (3) non-discrimination, but Hillary, her cohort Ira Magaziner and Daley had made it needlessly complex, with all sorts of predatory employer mandates, and it predictably failed.  The fault for that avoidable outcome may be laid at their feet!  They were all very arrogant and patronizing and would not heed anyone's varying opinion.  Those attitudes alone may have done more damage in Congress than anything else!

If a good and proper program were adopted, it would prioritize prenatal and pediatric care and limit certain kinds of truly non-emergency treatments for those over 80. It would stress elder COMFORT over most anything else, INCLUDING the use of narcotic drugs if necessary, and it should legalize voluntary euthanizing. It should liberalize and promote out-patient treatment processes, and the authority for narcotic-drug regulation should be taken away from the DEA and its very existence should be revoked!  The DEA is a most unnecessary bureaucracy.  All drug regulation should be turned over to the FDA instead.

In fact, "victory" should be declared forthwith in the absurd "War On Drugs," and ALL federal drug prohibitions should be immediately repealed.  ALL those financial resources should be redirected elsewhere, such as for drug-addiction therapies!  Such a shift could substantially relieve the cost of "Medicare For All."  All non-violent and petty drug offenders in the federal prison system should be immediately pardoned and set free (thereby reducing the absurd costs of operating the federal prison system)!  Drug use/addiction are legitimately HEALTH issues, not law-enforcement issues!

Other countries have figured out how to allow doctors to earn comfortable livings and work enthusiastically in their chosen professions.  Why would that be a problem here?  Of course, the likelihood of major six-figure windfalls for specialists might be tempered, but why should they be legally protected?   Doctors might actually wind up working more predictable hours with less stress and anxiety!   The benefits-filing process could be streamlined and simplified, thereby relieving healthcare providers of needless paperwork.

Patent protections for meds and other devices should be extended to run from date of approval rather than from date of application.  And, the antitrust laws should be amended to allow the formation of voluntary co-ops for purchase of meds and devices in bulk and from any sources, domestic or foreign, so long as the meds or devices are FDA-approved.  FDA funding should be expanded to streamline the approval process, which I would open to all comers.

Unfortunately, and as previously stated, the chances of such changes being approved in the current Congress are almost nil, but that is what President Obama and Senator Harry Reid should have done in the first place.  "Obamacare" is a hopeless mess.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

POLITICS vs. RELIGION

(The following was published as a Letter to the Editor in the Richmond Times-Dispatch on Friday, December 10, 2011.) Your self-serving November 23 editorial assures the reader that your call for more religious expression from political candidates does not "impose a religious test" on candidates, contrary to the explicit language of Article VI of the US Constitution. Of course, the First Amendment guarantees your RIGHT to be wrong, but you can't fool most thinking people by slyly imposing such a noxious, repugnant test then haughtily declaring that you have not done so. There is absolutely no place for religion in political debates. None whatsoever. Contrary to your assertions, it does not inform diddly about a particular "candidate's intellect and character." Political candidates are not running for priest or bishop but for secular political offices. If an overtly religious candidate should win an election, do we voters then get to blame God if that candidate does not perform up to par? I doubt it. Why not instead support the ideals and patriotic spirit of Article VI by making it clear that all political candidates should keep their personal religious beliefs to themselves? After all, Jesus said as much in the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew Ch. 6.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

BELIEVING

I remember asking a Jewish friend of my younger brother (when I was about 13 years old) whether or not he “believed in” Jesus. Of course, I already knew the likely answer; I was just being provocative and mean. I had decided by that young age that Jews were different, were “separate” from us Christians, even though we had known the family for years, shopped at their clothing store, and they were enormously friendly, especially to my brother.

I was being a nasty little prick, something that came easy to me.

I think about that event now and am ashamed at the memory, even at age 65. “Believing in” whatever was the phrase of choice, and it could be cruelly used to separate the accepted from the unaccepted. Looking back, what we were really asking was whether or not a person was possessed of such inane credulity that he or she could completely surrender all critical thought and accept the magical, hocus-pocus nature of what we, the majority, deemed to be real.

Now, I do not here accuse all religious persons of inanity or irrationality. I am merely describing what I subjectively expected the Jew (or whomever) to buy into when I was 13 years old. Unfortunately, I think a lot of religious persons have not matured in their thinking since THEY were 13 years old, possessed of the same sort of intolerant thinking as was I, and today, religious belief is frequently defined by intolerance of the beliefs of others. If one is possessed of knowing the One True Way, then the ways of others are perforce corrupt!

I think that is what bothers me about religion the most—the intolerance of others. The comedian, Lewis Black, says that the “9/11” terrorists (and others like them) lack a sense of humor. I agree with that. That is how I see religious belief today—a surrender of critical thought, which forces one to be tolerant, because the more one knows, the less certain one must become of one’s own conclusions.

Real scientists understand this way of thinking. I once read a definition of scientific theory as being something that could be proven wrong. With religion, it seems that most of the adherents are firmly convinced that NOTHING could be wrong with their opinions. Religious persons are absolutely convinced they know The Way. On the other hand, scientists know that if they submit their research to peer review, one of their peers may find something wrong with it. That is the risk taken, and the reward is having it thus tested and others drawing the same conclusions, unable to find error. Peer review is at the core of scientific research. Religion cannot withstand “peer review.”

Nor does religion require “peer review.” By its own definitions, it is beyond proof and research and question. Religion must be accepted “on faith.” The human mind may question, but religion requires that the answers all point in the same direction. That is just fine with me, and I am obliged by oath to defend the rights of those who embrace such, but I cannot accept the unconditional surrender of critical thought necessary to embrace religious “belief.”

I am not “anti-theist.” I know that some atheists are “anti-theist.” I think Madalyn Murray O’Hair was “anti-theist,” and she is probably the archetype of an atheist in most people’s minds, so that whenever they encounter “atheism,” they see “anti-theism.” I am an atheist, which is a loaded word, so I frequently describe myself as a “non-believer.” It is less antagonistic. I am simply “without theism.” I do not spell “atheist” with a capital “A.” I do not belong to any such organizations, and I do not proselytize and I, frankly, cannot understand how one may advocate for a belief in nothing at all! Some atheists do that; I don’t.

The personal religious beliefs of others are none of my business. I can’t prove that any believer is wrong. I can’t prove that God does NOT exist. Logically, one cannot prove a negative. I simply don’t concern myself with what others may personally believe. However, if and when there is an attempt to have MY government spend MY tax dollars and/or use MY government property to advance religion, then that is MY business. I will fight such nonsense tooth and nail.

Majorities (five out of nine Justices) on the US Supreme Court have ruled that governmental bodies may open their meetings with non-sectarian prayers, sort of a generic plea to whatever deities may be out there. They have also peculiarly ruled that Wiccans (and perhaps other “weird” religious believers) are not entitled to inclusion in official governmental prayer lists as are the “mainstream” believers in “real” deities. The Supremes have created a mighty slippery slope and have no one to blame but themselves. That all the Justices have been religious believers (currently 6 Catholics and 3 Jews) may have something to do with their tolerance for such governmental religious activity, but I believe the said majorities have misread the Constitution. I think that a majority of the Founders (not all of them) were very clear that government in the United States should be rigidly secular, so that no one gets a religious leg up on anyone else. The religious buffoons on the Supreme Court seem to utterly disregard this clear history. Besides, I don't think any God is going to take the blame for whatever elected officials do to the People's Business at government meetings!

One of the three things that Thomas Jefferson specified on his tombstone was to be known as the author of the “Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom,” still valid law to this day, codified as Va. Code Section 57-1. Many believe the Statute to be a precursor to the federal First Amendment. It is fairly lengthy, and it contains a fairly explicit rant by Jefferson disparaging the influence of the then-dominant Anglican clergy, who were trying to get the Anglican (later Episcopal) Church established in Virginia as the “official” tax-supported church. Patrick Henry was one of the supporters, in opposition to Jefferson and James Madison.

Near the end of the Statute, Jefferson observes that later politicians will surely try to change the Statute or repeal it, but he brands such future efforts as ill-advised. For Jefferson, unyielding government secularism was preferred and is certainly reflected in the language of the Statute. True to prediction, Republican Delegate Bill Janis of Goochland County attempted, around 2007, to modify the language of the Statute by specifically authorizing the official conduct of Christian devotionals in public schools. Fortunately, that bit of idiocy, approved by the hot-headed Christian “Taliban” in the House of Delegates, was quietly quashed in the Virginia Senate.

Upon being admitted to the Virginia State Bar in 1973, I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States of America and the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Virginia.  (So did Bill Janis, also a licensed lawyer.)  I was proud to take that oath and consider myself to be bound thereby until death, despite my having resigned my licensure as a lawyer. I am, therefore, obliged to defend the personal right of anyone to believe whatever he or she wishes to believe and to practice those beliefs with or without others. I am also obliged to resist the establishment of religion in government. One’s personal right of belief does not extend to using one’s incidental position as a government official to advance those beliefs. Former Chief Justice Roy Moore had to learn this hard lesson when he moved his big rock (bearing the engraved “11” Commandments) into the lobby of the Alabama Supreme Court.

Atheists come in all different flavors and stripes. None of us bears any more likeness to any other than do Presbyterians or Catholics or Jews. We are as different from one another as any other human group, and I know this is hard to fathom among believers. I don’t presume to speak (or write) for any other atheist. But I hope I make my own opinions very clear.