Posts Tagged obama

Does The Race Card create Racism?

I’ll never forget the first time someone called me a racist.  I was in eleventh grade at my high school in Los Angeles.  It was another kid in my class that I had just met.  He gave me some attitude, and I asked what his problem was.  He simply said I was a racist.  I was totally taken back, and when I asked what gave him that impression, his only answer was that I was a racist because I was white.

Until then, I had never thought about whether or not I was a racist.  I had never considered skin color as a factor of anything at all.  I grew up with friends that were White, Black, Latino & Asian…   and I’m not saying that I had some sort of respect for people of a different race.  I didn’t, because it wasn’t even a factor.  I didn’t think of there being anything different to respect or not respect.  To propose it to me would have been no different than asking if I took issue with people that have blonde hair. The question in and of itself is puzzling.

I’m not trying to say that I had no knowledge of racism.  Of course I did.  We studied it to no end in school, talked about it in class, but I never had any connection to it.  To me it was something of a different place and time. 

However, that day in high school something changed.    The kid that had called me a racist for no other reason than the fact that I was white suddenly became different.  He judged me based on my color, and nothing else.  I was suddenly forced to see him as different from me.  I suddenly had to treat him differently than others, causing me to create a category for him in my mind. In other words, with respect to him, I was now a racist.

Later in life, I had been talking with my childhood best friend.  He had developed a huge issue with race.  He was Asian, and said that he often encountered race-related obstacles.  Some of his stories had me feeling for him, and some had me thinking he had a chip on his shoulder and would take any unexplained situation and make into a race issue.  The thing is, that I had never thought of him by his race…. Until then. 

The more he talked about the fact that he was different, the more he became different. He was incredibly sensitive to anything that he might consider racist, to the point that I found myself walking on eggshells to make sure I didn’t offend a person that I considered like a brother.

Doesn’t this create more racism?  If you want me to see you as different and treat you differently than I would treat the person next to you, aren’t you insisting on a racist bias?

So I notice it more and more over the years, especially when people talk about the ‘Race Card’.  Seriously, what did race have to do with OJ?  Do we really believe that if Rodney King had been white, the cops would have offered him milk & cookies?

Now it is getting more and more intense with Obama in the White House.  An overwhelming majority of Americans voted for Obama.  But every time someone has a problem with his policy, people start yelling that they are only complaining because he is black.  Really?

In the history of this country, democrats and republicans have never seen eye to eye.  One has always disparaged people from the opposing party.  They do it because they disagree on the issues.  Why is it that now someone that disagrees with Obama’s issues is accused of only disagreeing because of his color? 

Every time I see this happen, I see people trying to change the rules of politics because of race, which I believe can only lead to frustration and a greater problem with racism.

We are creating Frankenstein’s monster here.

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Obamacare & The Public Option

OK, it is time to start writing here, and what better place to start!

I’ve been watching this debate for months now, and I honestly cannot believe my eyes and ears.  I won’t sit here and tell you that we don’t have major problems in the delivery of our health care, but as we learned by electing Obama, ‘CHANGE’ is just change… not necessarily ‘GOOD CHANGE’.  Where do you think we got the term ‘from the frying pan into the fire’, anyway?

I spend a great deal of time in one of the glorious ‘socialized medicine’ countries: Italy.  So let’s look at it for a second:

Free healthcare for all

Right?  WRONG.  Look at your paycheck.  See all those little taxes that get deducted?  Unemployment, Federal withholding, FICA, etc. etc. Italy has a gigantic one for Medical care…  and it is higher than what I pay here in the states.  Of course, if you are unemployed you don’t have that tax taken out, and you still get healthcare.  But here in the states you can walk into any emergency room and get treatment even if you cannot afford it, and the quality of THAT treatment is far superior to what the healthcare in Italy offers.

Quality Healthcare for All

Really?  Are we honestly drinking that Kool Aid?  A friend of ours in Italy needs an MRI, and she needs it STAT!  Since it is urgent, she will only have to wait a few months!  She ended up having to go to a private clinic where she paid thousands.  Yet she still must pay that tax.

Another friend has a 10 year old child with a serious heart condition.  He needed an operation urgently enough hat he was instructed not to play until he got it.  He was put on the waiting list, and finally went under the knife after six months

I watch friends go to doctors for routine appointments, and when they do so they need to block off the entire day.  Why?  Because a 9:00 AM appointment means ‘sometime today after 9AM’.  My wife was once in a waiting room awaiting her appointment, and after hours, she watched the doctor walk out to lunch with a waiting room full of people that had been there all morning.

I have yet to see a hospital that looks even remotely sanitary. 

A semi-private hospital room means there are only 6 beds in the room.  Private rooms?  HA!

A job in the system is a job for life.  The net effect is that there is no accountability for much of anything – it’s quite a bit like the DMV.  So if you want care, you must always have a family member by your side to make sure you are always getting it.  And tipping nurses for care is quite common as a consequence.

The funny thing is that when it is really, really serious, many that have access come to the states for healthcare.  Why is that?

But the drugs are cheap

Yes, they are.  I do believe that we need to find a solution to the costs of meds.  Does that mean we need to emulate a world full of broken systems?

But That’s Just Italy

Yes, it is.  It is one example of socialized medicine.  It is where the bulk of my experience comes from.  But I have heard similar first-hand horror stories from all over the world. Go ahead and research the state of the system in the UK, for example.  How about France?

We’ll be more like Sweden and Canada

Will we?  Let’s assume their systems are fantastic  (They aren’t)

Sweden has about the same population as the State of  North Carolina.  That makes the USA roughly 3,300%  more populous than Sweden.

Canada’s population is less than the State of California by itself, making the population of the USA more than 900% larger than that of Canada.
Additionally, every state in the union has its own laws, its own problems, its own culture.  Do we really believe a federal government will come up with a wonderful plan that will be efficient, take care of everyone, and make us feel like we are getting better care?

So what’s the answer?

I don’t know.  I don’t claim to be someone with the answer, just someone that doesn’t like what is being shoved down his throat.  In other words, I don’t have to know how to make a great sandwich in order to know that a dog feces & moldy cheese sandwich will taste bad, do I?

I do know that a government-run healthcare system will most likely look like other government-run systems, and nothing about that sounds like quality to me.

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