Winning the Trifecta of Poverty: Black, Older, Woman
Posted: July 2, 2008 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Esmin Green, Hillary Clinton, human development index, John Edwards, Poverty, taxes, universal health care 3 CommentsJust about the time I think civilization has hit rock bottom, I find something else disturbing. An American Woman, Esmin Green, died because of antipathy, the abhorrent state of health care in this country, and her demographics. She basically won the lottery for what it takes to be an invisible person in this country. She was black, older (49), a woman, and in need of mental health care. The folks in the room did nothing. A security guard did nothing. There is evidence that the staff fudged the details of her death.
“A shocking video shows a woman dying on the floor in the psych ward at Kings County Hospital, while people around her, including a security guard, did nothing to help.
After an hour, another mental patient finally got the attention of the indifferent hospital workers, according to the tape, obtained by the Daily News.
Worse still, the surveillance tape suggests hospital staff may have falsified medical charts to cover the utter lack of treatment provided Esmin Green before she died.”
There is no reason for these things to happen in an industrialized modern country. We are able to treat all people humanely and there are plenty of resources and wealth to make this possible. What we lack is the will. We would rather buy toys and have comfy huge cars and homes than take care of the least among us with our tax dollars or even our charity.
This is from Wikipedia:
Poverty in the United States refers to people living in poverty in the U.S. Within the U.S. the most common measure of poverty is the “poverty line” set by the U.S. government. The official poverty threshold is adjusted for inflation using the consumer price index. Poverty in the United States is cyclical in nature with roughly 12% to 15% living below the federal poverty line at any given point in time, and roughly 40% falling below the poverty line at some time within a 10 year time span. While there remains some controversy of whether or not the official poverty over or understates poverty, the United States has some of the highest absolute and relative pre and post-transfer, poverty rates in the developed world. Overall, the U.S. ranks 16th on the Human Poverty Index.
Those under the age of 18 were the most likely to be impoverished. In 2006 the poverty rate for minors in the United States was the highest in the industrialized world, with 21.9% of all minors and 30% of African American minors living below the poverty threshold. Moreover, the standard of living for those in the bottom 10% was lower in the U.S. than in any other developed nation except the United Kingdom, which had the lowest standard of living for impoverished children.
That’s right, the U.S. is not number one in anything right now when it comes to economics. However, we’re close to achieving the number one for developed nations with high levels of income disparity and poverty. We are no longer the the economy with the highest GDP (the European Union has passed us). We have not been the economy with the highest living standard or income per capita in the world for some time. We’re 9th now in GDP per capita( http://www.indexmundi.com/g/r.aspx?c=cu&v=67 ) per the CIA’s World Fact Book. We’re all losing ground, but there are those in our country who never reached that ground at any point in their lives. Their numbers are growing rapidly.
We’re very low ranked on all indexes that measure how we treat the least among us for wealthy, developed nations. This is especially true when it comes to comparing the U.S. to other developed nations. Here’s the Human Development Report link for 2007/2008. The United States now ranks 17th in the world on this index. (http://hdrstats.undp.org/indicators/5.html)
How can such a rich nation with so many resources and positive gifts to human civilization rank so low on how it treats its most vulnerable citizens? The answer must lie some where within us. It lies within the people that watched this woman fall and die. It lies within the guard that did nothing. It lies within the hearts of the folks responsible for her treatment that ignored her for so long and then lied to cover their actions. It lies within a system where the big economics discussion during a presidential campaign is how can I get away with paying the least amount of money possible to move this country and its citizens forward?
Look at the roads, the schools, the electrical grids, the Levees, the hospitals and then look very closely at the state of their decay. Every time you scream don’t raise MY taxes to a politician, another crack in our infrastructure appears. Another wounded soldier sits in Walter Reed with rat feces and mildew. Another Esmin Green falls to the floor dying without help or hope.
I hope you all enjoy your plasma tvs, your big ol Toasterlike SUVs, and your summer vacations at Disneyworld because those are obviously more important than showing the world that the U.S. takes care of its own. The future requires us to save, to invest, to pay taxes to build infrastructure and to provide funds for research and technology. Our humanity requires us to provide basic services to our fellow citizens.
Now I’m not saying I want to pay for a bridge to nowhere or a museum that glorifies mules or Woodstock. I do, however, want to pay for whatever it would take to stop another person like Esmin Green from dying, to stop toxic food and toys from killing U.S. children, animals, and adults, to ensure that our returning wounded soldiers have everything they need, and to provide for adequate basic health care for all Americans.
I know Hillary Clinton shared this vision with me. I know that John Edwards shared this vision. I know many of you do. It is time we spoke up. It is also time we offer to make sacrifices to ensure that all Americans share the promise of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. My pursuit of happiness does not necessarily require a plasma tv, but it does require that we stop folks like Esmin Green from winning the trifecta of poverty ever again. We need the type of universal healthcare plan offered by John Edwards and Hillary Clinton. Let us commit to the sacrifice and work it takes to achieve it.
Obama’s Life Story: Just One Long Series of Easily Debunked Myths
Posted: July 1, 2008 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Obama autobiography +lies, Obama lies, Selma got me born, Uncle Frees Auschwitz 1 CommentIt’s just one Forrest Gump moment after another in Barrack Hussein Obama’s Life. You would think after so many instances of his ‘autobiography’ winding up in the urban myth sites that he’d quit making up details of his life. Well, folks here he goes again. This week’s selection from Moments of My Metaphorical Life by Barrack Obama is watching astronauts in Hawaii from Grandpa’s shoulders.
Obama said in his speech yesterday:
“One of my earliest memories is of sitting on my grandfather’s shoulders and watching the astronauts come to shore in Hawaii.”
source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25479276/
Let’s talk about what is wrong with this memory. FIrst, the astronauts arrived aboard the USS Hornet in July 1969. Obama claims he moved to Indonesia at the age of 6 and returned to live with his grandparents in 1971. Unless Obama was spending summers with his grandparents there is no way he could have seen the USS Hornet arrive in Hawaii.
Second, I can’t imagine the petite me at 10 on my granddad’s shoulders. Obama’s grandfather must have been lifting weights for years to handle the slightly chubby Obama.
However, let me make my major point. This is just the latest in a series of stories that Obama weaves about his mythical childhood. Many of these stories are easily debunked by facts. His staff calls them metaphorical. While my mother would have rinsed my mouth out with soap for lying , my University would pull my job for publishing things as facts that are proven untruths. Remember this one?
“Selma got me born!” On the march anniversary of the Bloody Sunday march in Selma, Alabama, Obama fondly spun this yarn about his parents.
“There was something stirring across the country because of what happened in Selma, Alabama, because some folks are willing to march across a bridge. So they got together and Barack Obama Jr. was born.”
Uhhh, Obama was born in 1961. The Selma march took place in 1965. His spokesman, Bill Burton, later explained that Obama was “speaking metaphorically about the civil rights movement as a whole.”
Then there was THIS whopper on Memorial Day Weekend.
Even the MSM didn’t let that one drop. There were two major problems. Obama has no uncle and Auschwitz was liberated by the Soviets.
Don’t forget this made-up memory. During the same ‘metaphorically’ enhanced March of last year, the Chicago Tribune reported another faked autobiographical detail in Obama’s “Dreams from My Father:” Obama says his racial awakening occurred at age 9 while reading Life Magazine. He described an article and two accompanying photographs of an African-American man physically and mentally scarred by his efforts to lighten his skin. Life magazine’s own historians say the article and the photographs don’t exist.
So, can some one with a background in psychiatry please explain these behaviors too me?
Obama Throws the First Amendent under the Bus AGAIN!
Posted: July 1, 2008 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Establishment Claus, first amendment, Obama hates the Constitution, Obama lies, Obama pandering 13 CommentsWell, here I am sucking up my morning coffee before heading to a frosh seminar to torture my students on the National Income accounts. I just finished responding to a friend supporting Obama that criticized my last post asking why Obama hates the constitution and decrying him as the real Dubya third term when this news pops up from the AP wire:
source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080701/ap_on_el_pr/obama_faith
Obama to expand Bush’s faith based programs
“CHICAGO – Reaching out to evangelical voters, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is announcing plans to expand President Bush’s program steering federal social service dollars to religious groups and — in a move sure to cause controversy — support some ability to hire and fire based on faith.
Obama was unveiling his approach to getting religious charities more involved in government anti-poverty programs during a tour and remarks Tuesday in Zanesville, Ohio, at Eastside Community Ministry, which provides food, clothes, youth ministry and other services.
“The challenges we face today … are simply too big for government to solve alone,” Obama was to say, according to a prepared text of his remarks obtained by The Associated Press. “We need all hands on deck.”
Obama’s announcement is part of a series of events leading up to Friday’s Fourth of July holiday that are focused on American values.”
The Senior Lecturer on Constitutional Law (on Leave) appears to not respect the Establishment Clause of the first amendment. He just continues to make my arguments for me. This is like shooting fish in a barrel. I was heavily criticized for comparing Obama with Cheney. So, will some one explain to me how expanding Bush’s Faith-based Initiatives is not in keeping with my assertion that Obama is looking like the one that will be Dubya’s third term? This quote is from the same AP article.
Rev. Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, criticized Obama’s proposed expansion of a program he said has undermined civil rights and civil liberties.
“I am disappointed that any presidential candidate would want to continue a failed policy of the Bush administration,” he said. “It ought to be shut down, not continued.”
I have to tell you, that because of these kinds of things I have a difficult time voting for ANY Republican. Now I get to watch a Democrat trample the same First Amendment rights with no shame? I’ll just leave you with a Monte Python clip, because if the Obama campaign get’s any more surreal, I’m going to think we’re living a Monte Python Movie. What’s next? Bill Richardson as head of the Ministry of Silly Walks?
I want to add this quote because it seems so relevant on this still unfolding story.
Beliefnet gives Obama’s proposal a 9 out of 10 on its “God-o-Meter.” Editor Dan Gilgoff writes:
“That’s why Obama’s announcement today…is so significant. Not only is Obama showing how faith would shape policy in his administration, he’s being so bold as to criticize Bush’s faith-based program for not going far enough in opening the federal social services spigot to churches and other faith-based groups. In effect, he’s out-Bushing George W. Bush in one of the President’s specialty areas — connecting faith and public policy.”






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