A Second Open Letter to President Obama, Congress, Policymakers, and Whoever Else is Getting a Say in the So-Called Health Care Debate September 7, 2009
Posted by millyonair in Polictics, Rants.Tags: congress, health, health care, insurance, Life, Obama, Politics, Thoughts
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Dear Sirs, Madams, Misguided Megalomaniacs, and Robots:
This is the second letter I have addressed to you. In the first letter, I was kind enough to clarify for you the task at hand, since you all seem so confused about what it is, exactly, that you are supposed to be doing. And since I am, after all, your employer (with the exception, maybe, of the Robots), I was trying to be fair, to give my “slow” employees a chance to catch up and discern what it is I am asking of you. But you still don’t seem to get it.
So pour yourself a cup of coffee, have a seat, and let me break it down for you again.
Needless to say, I am less-than-impressed with your work performance. You were hired to be problem-solvers. You all went to fine schools, you all play golf with the people you need to be tee-ing up with in order to affect real change in America. And yet this morning I switched on NPR and learned that all of you are still (still!) dickering about the particulars of the “reform” you claim to be attempting. This isn’t reform, guys. It’s business as usual, and I’m still not fooled.
The radio broadcaster was doing her best to try and explain what it is you are all hung up on- something about preventing health insurance companies from denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions, and making health-care coverage affordable for all Americans. All that sounds very altruistic (albeit fustian)- and maybe some of your other bosses are tricked into thinking you are actually accomplishing something by decorating it with big words- but not this one.
Americans don’t need affordable health-care coverage. We need affordable health care. Period. Health insurance is supposed to be for those “what-do-you-mean-I-need-a-liver-transplant?” moments, not for routine bodily maintenance. It should not cost a person hundreds of dollars to have a bone re-set, to get a mole removed, to treat their acne, to diagnose their phlegm-y cough. This is the problem: that the cost of health care is so high that the merest ailment can send working Americans into a financial Vortex of Despair. It’s not just absurd, it’s wrong. That’s the problem. Fix that.
Here’s how it’s supposed to work: Anyone who wants to can buy health insurance on the off-chance that they will someday suffer a serious disease or injury. Because the chances of such a thing are relatively slim, the insurance company profits, in essence, off that person’s continued good health. In the meantime, when that person gets a cold or accidentally puts his arm through a window while installing his mini-blinds, he can go to the doctor and pay for the patch-up in full. Maybe- if his budget is tight- he forgoes his chicken dinner on Friday, or waits until payday to replace the glass, to compensate for the unexpected expense of stitches. But he never, never has to deliberate whether or not the injury justifies the expense while his arm bleeds all over the carpet.
Sirs and Madams, you are supposed to be the good guys. You were hired to protect our interests in the face of predatory greed, among other things. What is going on? Why aren’t you doing that? It really isn’t as complicated as you’re making it seem.
Next time you’re playing golf with one of those insurance company CEOs, just tell them straight. Tell them they’re going about it all wrong. Tell them you’re very sorry, but things are going to be drastically different, and it may mean their third vacation home in Tobago will get foreclosed on. Tell them you have to do the right thing, tell them your boss told you so.
And then tell the doctors.
Unhappily Yours,
The Boss
An Open Letter to President Obama, Congress, and Corprorate Leadership August 10, 2009
Posted by millyonair in Polictics, Rants.7 comments
Dear Abovementioned Sirs, Madams and Conglomerates,
None of that stuff y’all are doing right now is going to make an iota of difference, and I, for one, am not fooled. Quit wasting time rearranging words on paper! It’s time someone stood up and had the courage to address the real problem with the American medical system: Greed. Which of you will be first to speak the truth- that to profit outrageously from the application of medical care to sick or injured people is fundamentally wrong. Naturally, I recognize that doctors and hospital administrators need to feed their families and pay their mortgages, just like everyone else. But why should their ability to facilitate physical healing command such a price? Is it more essential than, say, farming? But real farmers and ranchers can barely eke out a living in this country.
I admire the example set by the curanderos and curanderas of Mexico, healers who take whatever payment people can afford to give them, and render treatment regardless of a person’s ability to pay. Whatever you may think of their methods, my point is that they are not wealthy people; they view their talent as a divine gift. But I’m not really trying to pick on the doctors. Most of the doctors I’ve known have been generous, kind-hearted people, and have charged me modestly, if at all. It’s the combined cost of health and malpractice insurance, hospital visits, labwork, litigators and pharmaceuticals that make this problem impossible to solve without someone willing to stand up and say, “HEY! WE NEED TO GET A GRIP! THIS IS ABSURD! WE’RE BEING GREEDY JERKS!” I know, I know. Everyone wants a piece of the pie. Or pork. Whichever you prefer.
But all I want is to be able to afford my migraine medication. That’s all. I’m a healthy person. I go to the doctor one or two times a year at the most. The migraine pills are the only medication I take, and it isn’t even a daily medication. And I have health insurance. So how come it costs me sixty five dollars for four itty-bitty pills? Don’t you think you’re all being a little ridiculous? And there are people with much, much worse problems than that. Forget a pair of balls- grow a freakin’ heart!
Sincerely,
Your Boss
My Favorite Writer Hates Me January 16, 2009
Posted by millyonair in Books and Writing, Life, Rants.Tags: books, creepiness, Humor, Life, Thoughts, writers, writing
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I would never do this to Joshilyn Jackson.
So, I’ve now read TWO books by Joshilyn Jackson, and have also been reading her blog, Faster Than Kudzu, which really cracks me up and also makes me think, “Gee, if I knew Joshilyn Jackson in real life, I’d probably really like her and we’d be friends, and we’d go out for nachos sometimes.” Except for one thing: Joshilyn Jackson apparently hates me. I have made TWO comments on her recent posts and NEITHER one has showed up on her blog! The first time it happened, I thought, oh, maybe she overlooked it by mistake, I’m sure she would never just NOT include my comments. But it happened again, and it can only mean that she has deliberately decided to OMIT my remarks. Which is like, way mean. Especially since the comments I made weren’t creepy. I totally didn’t even say anything about the Joshilyn Jackson voodoo doll that I cradle lovingly in my arms at night before kissing it gently on its brilliant little noggin and drifting off into Dreamland, where I AM Joshilyn Jackson, with best selling novels and groovy phraseology popping out of me. In fact, I absolutely abstatined from even mentioning the fact that I am currently a smidge obsessed with her. I didn’t even try to be clever or cute. I just said, you know, I like your blog, yadda, yadda, thanks for posting the tips for writers. Maybe she read my last post about her and was like, “Woah, that chick is creepin’ me out.” If so, THIS post is probably going to seal the deal. For eternity.
I’m going to go sit in an empty bathtub and drink myself into a puke-tastic stupor now.
REJECTED! By Joshilyn! Ouch, man. Very ouch.











On Facebook, and Why I Hate It July 7, 2009
Posted by millyonair in Rants, Social Commentary.Tags: Culture, Facebook, Life, media, Rants, Technology, Thoughts, trends
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I do, however, remember her gushing about how “fun” it was, how it was so “great to be in contact again” with people she “hadn’t seen in years.” At first I was like, No. No way. But every day she’d eagerly log onto her Facebook page and start giggling about the comments written on her wall (Wall? Cyberspace has walls?), and I’d be staring catatonically at my blog, trying to figure out what in the hell to post about. After a while I began peering at her Facebook out of the corner of my eye and thinking, “Maybe. It does kinda look like fun.” and then one day my spine went limp and I signed up. Or she she waved the aforementioned thumbtack in front of my eye and demanded. Like I said, I can’t remember.
Since joining Facebook, I have logged in approximately three times. Because another thing I can’t remember is WHY THE HELL IT SEEMED LIKE IT MIGHT BE FUN.
Facebook is not fun. Not even a little bit. I mean, I get that EVERYONE is doing it. And one day, when I am a published novelist, I will probably be required to have a Facebook page, for promotional purposes. It will be all about my novels and how they’re flying off the shelves at unprecedented rates, and hopefully I’ll have a bajillion “friends” who are really just fans- hordes of delirious, devoted bookworms who check my page twenty times a day and write adoring things on my “wall.” (more…)