Racism

A couple of days ago I created a fake twitter account for the purpose of poking fun at the Tea Party.  I think I may have to stop.  In just a couple of days of poking around for links I found evidence of the most extreme racism I’ve ever seen.  I mean, stuff you might expect from the 50s (or more likely the 1850s), but it’s all recent.  Here’s the most extreme example I’ve found yet (warning, not for the faint at heart):

 http://www.ep.tc/tea-party-comix/

I actually started to feel sick.  Pretending to be a stupid racist Teabagger while mocking them is taking it’s toll on me after just a day or two.  What I’ve found, the evidence of such extreme racism from the Tea Party, from Fox News, from bungholes like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, I can’t handle it.  It’s too much.  Maybe I’ve grown up sheltered, but I didn’t know people were still like that.  Sure, I knew some people were still racist, but not like THAT.  They’re intentionally stoking a fear of black people in white people in exchange for political capital.  It’s sick.

I’m profoundly disturbed by this.  I do what I do because I know the human race can be better than we are.  We can evolve into something better.  We can do it sooner rather than later.  We can be a world of wonderful people, and we can do it within my lifetime.  We can, but we won’t.  Perhaps I’m naive. 

I have moments like this where I just want to give up.  Just go back to my white middle class home in the suburbs good paying job with a wife and two kids life and forget about all of this, just like everybody else.  But that’s how they win.  When those of us who would oppose these things, when those of us who would stand up for what’s right, when those of us who would strive to see the human species become worth saving just give up and shut up.  They’re wearing us down.  I heard it in Michael Moore’s voice at the end of his most recent movie, he’s wearing down.  So am I.  So is Obama.  So are a lot of people.  

Perhaps we’ll mature someday.  Perhaps we’ll become a species that we can be proud of.  Perhaps we’ll get past all the stupidity, small-mindedness and pettiness of our current age.  But not today.  Maybe tomorrow.

I’m going to bed.

Ray Comfort is at it… Again

I recently found out about this: http://www.livingwaters.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=383

About anything I could say about it is here: http://www.thegoodatheist.net/2009/06/dont-read-this-version-of-origin-of-species/

Centuries after the dark ages we still have religion attacking science.  Why?  Why is it necessary to discredit science?  Can’t you just simply have your beliefs and leave the rest of us alone to learn about things based in fact? If we had listened to you lot we would still be in the dark ages. 

Why the deception Ray?  Why is it necessary to distribute a scientific work with a 50-page rant against it at the beginning?  I’ve never heard of such a thing before.  It’s despicable.  If I hadn’t already left Christianity long ago, that would be enough to convince me that you lot are absolutely beyond any shadow of a doubt FUCKED IN THE HEAD!  Thousands of college kids will remember this later in life.  This will ultimately work against what you’re trying to achieve.  Take some advice: Believe in God all you want, share whatever stories you want, convert as many people as you want, but stop being a fucking prick.  Leave science alone.  If you don’t believe it, that’s your right.  Nobody is forcing you to be an intelligent human being (obviously).  But make your point without having to attack known science with half truths, outright lies and logic fallacies.  Stop preying on the young.  In other words, stop behaving like Republicans.  Stop proving Richard Dawkins right.

Ray Comfort: you, sir, are an asshole.

Retaliation

On September 11, 2001 nineteen terrorists took control of four commercial airplanes.  Two of them were flown into the World Trade center, collapsing both towers.  One was flown into the Pentagon.  On crashed in Pennsylvania, as the passengers decided to fight back.

The total number of confirmed deaths for this atrocious act was 2,973 (not including the nineteen perpetrators).  When men come to our country and murder our civilians, we call it terrorism.

This act, the senseless killing of nearly 3,000 American lives so enraged this nation that we went to war.  President George W. Bush sent the troops to Afghanistan, where the mastermind of the attack was alleged to be cowering, and went after his ass. 

For a while.

Then we went to Iraq because Saddam Hussein may or may not have weapons of mass destruction that he may or may not intend to use on American Soil and he may or may not have some terrorists there too.  So we pre-emptively kicked the crap out of his country (that means we struck first.  We weren’t provoked).  We found and captured the man who hadn’t actually attacked us but probably was maybe going to.  We turned him over to the new government we installed there and they executed him promptly.  Scratch one bad guy. 

Meanwhile we’re not really focused on finding the guy who killed nearly 3,000 American civilians anymore.  Iraq was far more important.  The cost of the war in Iraq is well documented.  We paid for our invasion of Iraq with over 4,000 American Soldiers.  When we send our young men and women to another country and they get killed then, we call this patriotism.

Meanwhile, as a result of our invasion and conquer of the sovereign nation of Iraq, since 2003 100,971 of their civilians have died.  When we send men to another country and their civilians die, we call this collateral damage.

Just to recap:

American civilian deaths: 2,973 as a result of a terrorist attack.
American soldier deaths: 4,287* as a result of our invasion.
Iraqi civilian deaths: 100,971* as a result of our invasion.
*Afghanistan statistics not included. 

And we’re completely baffled as to why people in the Middle East don’t like us.

In Dalton Trumbo’s classic book “Johnny got his gun”, he added an additional introduction in 1971 responding to the then current Vietnam War.  To avoid possible copyright issues, I’ll paraphrase as much as possible, but I would much rather type it in verbatim. 

He says that 40,000 dead young men (the number of dead American soldiers at the time) was equal to 3000 tons of bone and flesh.  124,000 pounds of brain matter.  50,000 gallons of blood.  1,840,000 years of potential life lost.  With 4,000 dead, you can easily adjust these numbers for Iraq.

300 tons of flesh and bone.
12,400 pounds of brain matter.
5,000 gallons of blood.
184,000 years of lost potential life.

The math is a slightly harder for the Iraqi citizens.

7500 tons of flesh and bone.
310,000 pounds of brain matter.

You get the point.  These numbers should make you vomit.  If they don’t, you need to ask yourself why.

Dear Dick Cheney

Dear Dick,

What do you use to wash the blood of our American Soldiers off your hands with?  I only ask because it seems really effective.  Based on your attitude one tell that you feel no remorse at the thousands of soldiers who died for your wallet.  I won’t even mention the almost countless dead Iraqis, because they don’t really count, right?

I really would like to know in case I ever find myself in a situation where I can make myself and my friends blindingly rich at the cost of hundred of thousands of lives.  Good trade off, eh?

Seriously, the United States of America has signed no less than two treaties making the use of torture by the American Government a crime punishable by international law.  One of these treaties is the Geneva Convention.  Why is the international community not pressing charges against George Bush and Dick Cheney?  The entire world knows they are guilty of war crimes just as much as Saddam Hussein or Adolf Hitler.  Where is the international outrage?  Obama is NOT going to do it.  The American people are not listened to by their government, or they would already be on trial.  The American Government proves this every day.  They listen to big corporations.  That’s who they represent, that’s who they protect.  Not you, not us. 

It’s up to you, the rest of the world, to make this happen.  Stand up and say “we will not tolerate war crimes, whether they be committed by Iraq, Iran, Germany, Italy, or the freakin’ U.S.A”.  Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech entitled “Beyond Vietnam” about a year before his assassination.  In it he spoke of a worldwide revolution.  I think this revolution has largely occurred, and just as he predicted, the United States is dead last in keeping up. 

It is with such activity in mind that the words of the late John F. Kennedy come back to haunt us. Five years ago he said, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”

It’s time.

The way things are now…

Even Fox News reported this one.  Surprisingly they even reported the fact that their previous insurer raised their rates 40% for the audacity of having a baby.  Then the new insurer denied the baby health coverage.  

17-Pound, 4-Month-Old Baby Denied Health Insurance for Being Too Fat – Children’s Health – FOXNews.com

I find it amazing that they can report a story like this, yet continue to defend a system that treats Americans this way.  Would the insurer have reversed their decision had the dad not been a local news anchor?  Not likely.  You can almost hear the “oh shit!” when they realized who they had screwed.  They’re expected to not cover their child.  This kind of insanity only occurs in this country, and the right wing continues to call this the best health care system in the world despite mountains of facts to the contrary, and endless stories just like this one.  Nearly everybody has a health insurance horror story.  I have more than one.

I just heard today about a friend of my wife’s, who had lost their insurance because the father had become unemployed (a fairly common occurrence these days), and now their baby has a serious condition.  They’ll never recover from this.  You have to wonder how they’re going to send children to college when they’ll most likely be paying for saving their child’s life for the rest of their lives. 

That’s all it takes to destroy a family here.  Lose a job, get sick. 

The right-wing takeaway: If your child is careless enough to develop a serious condition, let ’em die.  Serves them right for being so thoughtless.

My takeaway: This is like living in a George Orwell novel.  If our elected leaders can’t take this seriously and put a stop to it, vote them out. 

I’m making a list of politicians who A) support real reform, B) oppose any reform, and C) are pretending to care about reform but really trying to fuck it up as badly as they can (i.e. Max Baucus).  I will post this if reform fails.  I may post it anyway.  I’m going to use it as my voting guide in the next election.  I hope you do too.

Obama Derangement Syndrome?

I was as shocked as anybody that President Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize.  I didn’t know he was nominated.  Now that the surprise has worn off, I’m proud.  The leader of our nation has won the Nobel Peace prize.  That doesn’t happen very often. 

The right is angry.  They think he didn’t deserve it.  They think he should give it back.  They think the world will view this as a huge joke. 

I have two questions for them.  Answer these, and we can talk. 

1) Is the Nobel Peace Prize awarded by an American institution or an international one? 

2) Why has no Republican president in recent memory won the Nobel Peace Prize?  I say recent memory, but I’m not sure ANY Republican has won one.

Should Bush have gotten a peace prize?  I don’t think they award it for starting pre-emptive wars on false pretenses.  In face, things like that usually lead to war crimes trials. 

Rachel Maddow cited a right-wing viewpoint from the beginning of the decade called Bush Derangement Syndrome.  It goes something like this: we hate Bush therefore he can do nothing right.  I guess that means that being opposed to two ceaseless wars, torture, ignoring the Constitution, undoing the Constitution, warrantless surveillance, and other things along those lines is only because I didn’t like Bush.  This is an interesting viewpoint, since I actually liked Bush until I found out about those things.

This viewpoint in interesting, though, because it seems that no matter what Obama does, they hate him for it.  Even on issues that should not have a political slant, they boo his successes and cheer his failures.  I don’t think Obama is perfect, in fact I’m keeping a running list of things he’s done (or not done) that upset me, but compared to Bush, he’s fuckin’ Jesus Christ. 

I don’t understand the hate that leads someone to cheer America’s loss regarding the Olympics.  This is from the same party that said “Country First”.  I don’t understand the hate that leads someone to be angry that their president earned the Nobel Peace Prize.  This is also from the same party that said “Country First”.  Apparently “Country First” really means Republicans First. 

Well, that’s not entirely fair, apparently John McCain had nice things to say.  I may not agree with his viewpoints, but at least he’s capable of showing tact. 

America… WHAT THE FUCK!?!?!?!?

Message to Max Baucus: FUCK OFF AND DIE!

 

Max Baucus has introduced legislation that is basically a handout to the private insurance companies.  This legislation cannot pass.  It will bankrupt millions and make billions for the insurance companies in the process.  In other words, the rich getting richer off the misfortune of the poor. 

Fuck off Max.  You may be a Democrat, but you’re a fucking corporate stooge.  You might as well be George “I represent the top 1% of the rich in this country and the rest of you losers can fuck yourselves” Bush.  Jay Rockefeller is trying to get anything even remotely resembling something good for the people in this bill, and you stump him at every turn.  I hope they’re paying you well, fucker.  If there’s a Hell, I hope you like it warm.

The New Face of Conservatism in America

These were seen at a recent “Tea Party”.  The stated goal from the 9/12 website (Glenn Beck’s little project):

image

Reconcile that with the reality of hate and intolerance:

Capture1 

Comparing Obama to Hitler.  Seriously?  Hitler?  Please, oh please somebody try to justify that one to me.  I’m just itching to have a go at somebody with that low of an IQ.

Capture2

Comparing Obama to Hitler, Stalin, Lenin, and Castro.  Ignorance knows no bounds. 

Capture3

I’m pretty sure threatening the President’s life is a felony.  Slogans like this are supposed to unite the country?

Capture4

Heil White Supremacist Moron!

Capture5

This one doesn’t deserve a comment.  The bearer is a waste of oxygen.

Capture6

If Fred Phelps showed up to the funeral of one of her loved ones, Maybe she would have an idea how distasteful that sign is.  Then again, probably not. 

These people make me sick.  The only thing missing here are white hoods and a burning cross.

Glenn Beck, go fuck yourself.  Would you please find another country in which to peddle your hate, lies, and fear-mongering?  We’re all stocked up here.

These people’s hate speech is, unfortunately, protected by the Constitution, the same document they seem to believe Obama is subverting.  It protects the morons too.  Where were they when Bush started chopping out the parts of the Constitution he didn’t like?  Did they march then?  They have no clue that if things had continued the way they had under Bush for a few more years, they likely would no longer even have THAT right.  One has to wonder if they’ve even read it.

This is the face of modern “conservatives” in America.  If you’re a conservative, take a long look.  If you feel disgusted, congratulations, you’re still human.  Please rethink your convictions and stop listening to idiots.

If you don’t feel disgusted by this, get help. And please never vote again.

The "Case" Against Socialized Medicine

My blog has gone quite political over the past year, and the reason for this is that I’ve gone quite political over the last year.  The is the inevitable end result of roughly the last decade, starting with my exit from the cult.  After leaving, I found it harder to just simply accept what I’m told.  It becomes exceptionally hard to remain a conservative with this viewpoint.  Most people fall into one of three categories:

  1. I don’t want to hear about it.  By far most people fall into this category, and for most of my life I did as well.  What little readership I had before has most likely left for these reasons.  I’m pretty sure I have, not counting myself or the Chinese porn sites who spam my comments, two readers now.  That’s okay with me.  If one person finds me through Google and questions long held heretofore unquestioned beliefs as a result, I’ve made the world a better place.  In other words, I’m not going to shut the fuck up.
  2. My beliefs are right and yours are wrong and I don’t really want to hear what you have to say and I’ll shout until you give up.  It’s difficult to not fall into this category myself, but mostly because when I get into arguments like this, I’ve actually spent a little time looking into facts myself rather than just regurgitating Rush Limbaugh.  Even that’s not fair, Rush proves he’s “right” by belittling his opponents.  The logic fallacy in that should be clear even to those who have never studied logic.
  3. I’d like to hear what you have to say and judge it’s merit for myself.  This is by far the smallest of the three categories, and, ironically, the group I’m talking to now. 

In the interest of trying to remain a member of group #3, I followed a link from an obviously conservative acquaintance on Facebook recently.  I’d like to offer a rebuttal to this article, and as a result will probably end up quoting the entire thing. The link is here: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1229567/posts.  It’s very entertaining, and is posted by, apparently a political science major.  I’ve never studied political science, but, well… here we go.

One of the greatest dreams of American liberals is a nationalized health care system similar to the one in Canada. They argue in favor of such a system because they believe health care is a basic “right,” and because they believe the current system is flawed beyond repair. As with most problems, they advocate government solutions, not private enterprise solutions. Unfortunately, the government has an abysmal record of correcting problems, and American health care would be no exception.

Most of this article provides no backing for any of it’s claims (so neither will I), so I think we can take the statement that the government has an abysmal record with a shaker of salt.  Private enterprise had their shot at this problem, and I think it’s pretty clear they blew the pooch on this one.  Advocating private enterprise solutions to this problem would be similar to trying to cure a headache by pounding yourself over the head with a mallet.  The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.  That was Einstein, if I’m not mistaken.

First, let’s examine the “right to health care” claim. Obviously, there is no right to health care established in the U.S. Constitution. However, we do have a moral right to health care, some will argue. Unfortunately, those who make this argument do not understand what a “right” is.

Of course there’s no right to health care in the U.S. constitution.  It would have read something like “The people shall have the right to government sponsored bloodletting and leeches as needed” at the time.  The Constitution was designed to be flexible, and meet the needs of the people as they changed.  Over 200 years later, they’ve changed a little.  In a government for the people, of the people and by the people, a “right” is what the people determine it to be.  We call this “Elections”.  Medicare, Social Security, Unemployment , Fire and Police service are also not covered by the Constitution.  By this argument, we should disband all of them.

A “right” is the ability and autonomy to perform a sovereign action. In a free society founded on the ideal of liberty, an individual has an absolute ability to perform such an action – so long as it does not infringe upon the rights of another individual. Health care is not speech: In order for you to exercise a theoretical “right” to health care, you must infringe on someone else’s rights. If you have a “right” to health care, then it means you must also have the right to coerce doctors into treating you, to coerce drug companies into producing medicine and to coerce other citizens into footing your medical bill. This is Orwellian. “Freedom” for you cannot result in slavery for others. Thus the concept of a “right” to health care is an oxymoron: It involves taking away the rights of other individuals.

Here we start to sound a bit like Glen Beck, full of conspiracies.  We’ll ignore the obviously emotionally laden choice terms like “slavery”.  We seem to have re-defined what the term “slave” means.  We’re also ignoring the fact that true slavery existed in this country under the Constitution until the mid-1800s, when it was amended (under rather considerable protest) to redefine what “rights” are to include people who aren’t white.  This is a great example of how our Constitution adapts to changing times.  If anything about his statement were true, then police and firemen could effectively be considered slaves by the same argument.  This is a completely illogical leap, and I just can’t buy it.

Surely, though, we can agree that doctors, the pharmaceutical industry and insurance companies earn excessive profits, you say. Well, that depends on what your definition of “excessive” is. Doctors literally hold the lives of their patients in their hands.

So do police officers, but the chief of police doesn’t make 9 digits a year.

How much is someone who saves lives everyday worth?

How much is a human life worth?  Are the 250 million Americans who have health coverage somehow more valuable than the 50 million who don’t?  Oh, and Police save lives every day too.

The same is true of pharmaceutical companies. While it has become fashionable to condemn their profits, the fact is that these profits fund medical research, which leads to more medicines being produced, and, consequently, more lives saved. Insurance companies spread the cost of health care among many people who might not otherwise be able to afford it, and thus make health care readily available for many.

Pharmaceutical companies do make excessive profits, and the new medicines being produced seem to consist largely of Viagra and similar products.  That’s because that’s where consumer demand is.  The cost will be spread among many in a government plan as well, making health care readily available for all.  I would hate to be the guy who has to choose who isn’t included in the “many” group. 

While on the topic of profits, we should examine them. The word “profit” is considered to be a dirty word by many on the political left, but why? What makes a profit bad? Nothing.

Normally I would disagree that liberals consider profit a dirty word, and I would agree that there is nothing wrong with making profit, but when denying care to citizens with or without coverage increases profits, then they are profiting off of death and disease.  That would make profit bad. 

On the contrary, profits are very positive. When you come to class in the morning, there is a good chance you either drive a car or ride a bus. Do you think the bus driver and the workers who built your car or the bus did so that you could get to school on time? Of course not, they did because they wanted to make money. Yet their pursuit of a profit benefited them as well as you.

Comparing bus drivers to insurance company executives is just a little skewed.  I don’t the the guy who built my car got paid 100 million in compensation last year (maybe the guy who owns the company did though).  The rhetoric usually throws the word “socialist” around, playing off the fact that most Americans don’t know the difference between the words “socialist” and “communist”.  They hear “socialist” and all they see the hammer and sickle.  The truth is that socialism is not the inverse of democracy, it’s the inverse of capitalism (and even that’s not entirely accurate). And neither pure capitalism nor pure socialism is a good thing, that’s one of the things America tends to do well, maintaining a balance between capitalism and socialism.  However we’ve made socialism a bad word through years of indoctrination and association with communism (e.g. Cold War, Red Scare, etc etc).  Evil is in the eye of the beholder, and most of the rest of the world views the U.S.A. in the same light we used to view the U.S.S.R.  Some popular socialist programs we already have that you might not realize are socialist are Medicare and Social Security.  Similar arguments were made against these programs before they passed “Socialism, BAD BAD BAD!”  Most politicians these days are smart enough to know that proposing the abolition of these programs would be political suicide. 

Adam Smith once said, “It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest.” As we have seen, profits and self-interest are not bad things.

Ditto, bad comparison.

Let’s pretend, for a moment, that the left gets its way, and the United States adopts a universal health care system. This profit motive will effectively be removed.

Ignoring the fact that Doctors in other industrialized nations with universal health care plans make rather good money, medicine just simply should not be about profit, it should be about saving lives, and this is where America differs from the rest of the industrialized world.  I’m a little apprehensive of the doctor who became a doctor for the money, rather than for the desire to save human life.

Doctors will then be government employees, and, as such, have far less accountability,

I’m yet to see the government employee who has less accountability.

as well as lower pay. Could we still expect the best and brightest to strive to be doctors?

Yes, but the greedy will probably be forced into politics now.

Probably not. More than likely, they will pursue other careers where they can make more money.

It appears we’ve lumped the best and brightest in with the greedy, and I think that’s unfair.  Many pursue careers in teaching and law enforcement despite the abysmal pay.  A few of them still pursue these careers for the wrong reasons, but mostly they are people who are doing what they love.  While I strongly feel that they deserve more pay, I think this fact, along with lack of recognition for societal contributions, filters out a lot of bad eggs.  If somebody decides to not pursue a career in medicine because of the pay, it probably wasn’t where they belonged.  They should try being CEO of Halliburton, or perhaps starting a war in Iraq.  There’s a lot of money to be made there.

Some love to bemoan the fact that the United States is one of the few industrialized nations without a government health care system.

I looked this one up, and we have some company on this one.  Mostly Africa and the Middle East.  Interestingly enough, Iraq and Afghanistan have universal health care programs paid for by United States war funding!!!, but we don’t have one back home.  And “love” seems a highly inappropriate and emotionally laden word to choose there.

Yet they rarely note that the United States produces disproportional amounts of the new, life-saving drugs, largely because of the profits drug companies make. Will we continue to produce these drugs if we abolish the profit motive? Not likely. Chances are, they will not be produced at all, and more people will needlessly suffer and die as a result.

The truth is a disproportional amount of the profits drug companies make go to their executives, not research.  50 million Americans do not have health insurance.  That’s roughly one out of every six Americans who cannot afford to see a doctor, and this number has been steadily growing for decades.  What good does it do us to produce the cure for cancer if nobody can afford it?  And we’re making some big assumptions here that don’t seem to be grounded in fact again.  There’s no indication that drug companies will stop producing drugs if we reform health care.

When we examine countries that have embraced socialized medicine, we find long waiting lists, expansive red tape and little concern for the individual. Do you really want to be told which doctor to go to? Do you want to wait years to have necessary medical procedures performed? If so, then socialized medicine is for you.

Conservatives love to throw this one around, but there’s no backing data for it.  We’re told what doctors we can see now.  We have necessary medical procedures denied now.  We have long waiting lists now.  I suppose if want that sort of thing, then privatized medicine is for you.

But if you believe in individual rights, competent healthcare and sound economic policies, we must get the government out of the doctor’s office.

The government isn’t in the doctor’s office.  The author has completely failed to show what individual rights, competent healthcare, or sound economic policies have to do with “the government in the doctor’s office”.  Most conservative arguments seem based on inducing fear of change.  They fail to mention that you’ve already got someone intervening between you and your doctor, and they have a financial interest in finding some way (any way) to deny your claim.  Denying a claim is the equivalent of denying health care, because very few Americans can afford the outrageous charges for even minor operations under the American system.  A recent study showed that different insurance companies were denying between 20-40% of all claims they received (one[Cigna] was 20, another [UHC] was 40).  Does it sound like this is just a problem for the uninsured?  People who are paying their premiums (or being a “Grown Up”, as Lynn Jenkins of Kansas recently called a young waitress supporting a two year old) are still being denied care.  People are DYING as a result, and we should, as Americans, each and every one of us, find that shocking and unacceptable. 

We’re very fond of talking about how superior we are to the rest of the world (freedom fries, anyone?), and that’s very easy to believe as long as we don’t actually look at the rest of the world