Sunday, November 29, 2009
Interim Film Review - The Good Fight
One of the benefits of chronic insomnia is the ability to watch endless amount of film. That being said, I am able to watch movies I never would have been able to see if I had the standard 16-hour waking life.
I just watched The Good Fight - a film about Americans who formed the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and went to Spain to fight for the Loyalist cause in the Spanish Civil War. They fought against the Fascist and eventual victor and dictator, Francisco Franco. The Loyalists ended up losing, but what its government achieved during their short period of rule, along with the courage and resourcefulness of their soldiers from every walk of life and every nation, is remarkable.
The film's strength is its reliance, almost solely, on interviews with the American veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. Even though there are no major revelations, and frankly, no surprises, this film has a warm quality -- as though your own grandfather was telling his story to you beside a fire... or a poster of Rosie the Riveter.
The one aspect of the film that is important to note is that while there were several women, African-Americans, and African-American women who joined with the brigade, the film does not refer to the fact that this was the first American (para) military unit that was not segregated by sex or gender. The filmmakers could have played this up a bit more, but it seemed they were more interested in the individual stories. Who could blame them? Some of them are fantastic.
There is one interviewee who tells the story of being in the hospital in Spain after being shot in the foot only to be visited by his father who had come all the way from the states to bring him home when he heard about it. After seeing his son and the way in which the Abraham Lincoln Brigade was helping the cause of the legitimately elected Spanish government, his father attempted to join the cause himself, only to be dissuaded from military action and sent back to drum up financial support.
The Good Fight is narrated by Studs Turkel, who until his fairly recent death, was the pre-eminent oral historian of our time. He does a great job. I would suggest reading his book, The Good War, which is his collection of oral histories of World War II.
I recommend The Good Fight, especially if you're unfamiliar with the Spanish Civil War.
H.R. 3590 (The Health Bill) – It Has Been Read, Understood and Can Be Explained by Yours Truly (Part III - Rationing of Care)
Issue 1: Rationing of Care – Public AND Private
We don’t want “Obama-care” to get between us and our doctors when it comes to what care we will receive. I agree. I also don’t want private insurance companies getting between me and my doctor. Do you?
I didn’t think so. I certainly didn’t want my insurance company to take its time mulling over its approval of the MRI my doctor prescribed when he found three tumors in my tibia and patella.
Luckily, it only took them 10 business days to approve it.
Section 2711 clearly states that there will be no lifetime limits or unreasonable annual limits of the dollar value of any participant or beneficiary of an insurance plan – ANY insurance plan.
This means that there would be no cause for my insurance company to do a cost-benefit analysis of the MRI of my three bone tumors. That should also save me some time. Thank you, H.R. 3590!
H.R. 3590 (The Health Bill) – It Has Been Read, Understood and Can Be Explained by Yours Truly (Part II) - Why I Read the Bill
I think my decision to read it was based on dare. For a nebbishy Jew who can legitimately be accused of being afraid of his own shadow, I am awfully daring. I have bungee-jumped, climbed big rocks, and ran with the bulls in Pamplona (July 13, 1996). If I had the spare cash, I’d be happy to jump out of a plane or get a tattoo. I don’t know why. Sometimes all it takes is an “I dare you,” and I’m in.
Maybe I’m prejudiced, but when I see a few thousand people in front of the Capitol with Nazi-themed posters, I’m going to assume that even though they’re yelling “Read the Bill!” they probably have not read the bill themselves. Also, any representative on the Hill will tell you that most of them never read the bills themselves either.
Also, when the Wall Street Journal published an article dedicated to decrying the volume of the bill, and elected representatives use the size of the bill, histrionically, to entertain the developmentally disabled, I felt that I was dared to read it.
The Length (Oy Gevalt!)
It’s 2074 pages! My Lord. I’ve never read anything that long.
You see, I am a reader. I’ve read War and Peace (1455 pages), Don Quixote (985 pages), The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1252 pages), Le Morte d’Arthur (935 pages), and the Lord of the Rings (1008 pages). So I am no stranger to reading, although some of these books I read years ago… when ephedrine was over-the-counter… but still…
So I found the bill online. It was easy enough. In fact, even Senator Ensign (R-Nevada) has a link to it on his web site. This gesture makes me want to forgive him for having an affair with his campaign advisor's wife and then having his parents pay them off.
OK, enough of that. Here it is.
As you can see, it’s pretty fucking big. But I started “leafing” through it and I found something odd. Like any Shakespearean play, every line of a bill is numbered. This allows readers to cite specific pages and line numbers in their arguments/research.
The left margin spans 2 inches to the line number and the vast majority of the text has a combined left margin of 3.25 inches. A piece of paper has 8 inches of horizontal length.
Immediately, almost half of the page is blank. Oh, and every page has a 1.75 inch right margin. That means, for all intents and purposes, more than 62% of the horizontal space of each page is blank.
Oh and I forgot to say that the font is at least 14 pt. Oh, and it’s double-spaced.
It reminds me from when I was in Junior High and I needed to stretch a two-page paper into a five-page paper. I would manipulate the margins and the font so that there would be about four words per page. A lot of us did. It was the advent of the age of word processors and we milked it for all it was worth. Eventually, our teachers caught on and started to give us assignments based on word number.
This gave me an idea. I took a random ten pages from my dusty old copy of War and Peace. Of those ten pages I counted an average of 456 words per page. Then I took a random ten pages of H.R. 3590 and found that there was an average of 143 words per page. Hmmm. So, generally (and generously) I’ll say that each page of the bill is about a third of what a real book is. So, let’s re-evaluate the size, generously again, at about 700 pages.
700 pages isn’t so bad, is it? Let's Get Started...
H.R. 3590 (The Health Bill) – It Has Been Read, Understood and Can Be Explained by Yours Truly (Part I)
I hadn’t read the health bill (H.R. 3590). I had listened to Senators and Congressmen whose opinions I trust. I saw how the insurance industry mobilized its employees and paid stooges to scream and yell at the top of their lungs. I make my political judgments that way. I don’t usually read the actual documents (as I have a job) but I’ll take a look at who cheers it and who boos it, and based upon my general affinity/hatred of the parties involved, I’ll make a decision.
Sure it’s simplistic, but that’s one more degree of judgment than most of us utilize when it comes to politics. Not all of us have the time or inclination to analyze, in any way, aspects of politics. Most of us are happy to listen to a Glenn Beck, O’Reilly, Limbaugh or Olbermann. I went a little farther. There were several sources I visited to help me make my evaluation of the push for a public health insurance program. I felt the best opinions I could get were from the health professionals themselves...
The New England Journal of Medicine
The National Medical Association
The American Nurses Association
… and of course, the people who, in general, need health care the most...
American Association for Retired Persons
… and the major unions who already worked hard to negotiate their "Cadillac plans..."
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
… and, unapologetically, the liberals...
The Center for American Progress
So, I support it. Now, to Read it!
Friday, November 20, 2009
ACTION PLAN FOR THE NEW ERA OF RESPONSIBILITY
New Era of Personal Responsibility
Would you ever dare to poison the water or kill people with cigarettes and asbestos if you weren’t protected by a legal clause that can only fine you and not imprison you? Maybe.
5. Prohibition of Religion
And by the way, if you’re looking for absolution from someone who is in no way a participant in your “sin,” you’re looking in the wrong place. Personal responsibility is supposed to be personal.
Will No One Rid Me of This Turbulent Priest?
Tonight, I spilled some beer on my floor to commemorate what could have been his 84th birthday. As I was wondering why I spilled it on my own floor and not someone else’s (or perhaps out the window), I tried to figure out what my favorite Richard Burton movie is. The funny thing is, I love him more for the movies he hated doing.
Actually, I met the screenwriter way back when I was a college student. I can’t remember his name but he was lecturing about his Oscar-winning screenplay for Ghandi. From The Medusa Touch to Ghandi in five years… Only in America.
Becket ended up taking his new job very, very seriously. Agnostic no more, he bought himself fur underwear – underwear he never took off. That’s right… NEVER. He was self-flagellating by flatulating. Seriously, if I go more than a day without changing my 100% cotton boxers, I break out in a rash. Imagine what that was like for Becket. It was said that when he died and they removed his clothing there were all sorts of insects crawling in and out of the underwear and feeding off of his flesh. Yikes.
Anyway, while it usually takes going to prison to find Jesus, it is definitely much rarer to find Him after being appointed to the second most important position in England. Perhaps this was why Henry II was beside himself with Becket’s continual refusal to hand over control of the Church to him. He saw it as an utter and perpetual betrayal of his lifelong friendship and sponsorship. The rift widened and Henry II, a big drinker, started getting loud about it around court. One night, during a particularly angry, wine-induced tirade with a bunch of drunken knights, Henry screamed, “Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?”
“Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?”
A drunken warrior king, in front of a gaggle of loyal, drunk knights yells, “Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?” It wasn’t long before knights had invaded the cathedral at Canterbury and murdered Thomas Becket on the steps to the altar. When Henry woke up the next morning to find out that he had inadvertently ordered the death of his best friend, he was heartbroken.
“Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?”
Psychotic Congresswoman Michele Bachmann rants about the (now) evil federal government and invents wonderful stories about FEMA concentration camps and how the Census is designed to control you. In Kentucky, an old man who worked part-time as a Census taker was taken out into the woods and murdered. Carved into his chest was a single word: FED.
“Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?”
Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, and Michael Savage call President Obama all the names in the book, including “a racist with a deep-seeded hatred of white people,” a “ communist,” a “fascist” and the man who will rob them of their America. Chuck Grassley, Dick Armey and a whole host of insurance companies preach to a mob of people holding signs of the President as a monkey, or with a Hitler moustache. Hell, to a lot of people he’s not even an actual American… He hired a Puerto Rican woman to replace a white, male Supreme Court Justice. Can you believe the nerve of this guy? Weren’t there any other white men he could have hired?