All Bullies Great and Small

“I don’t recall this happening here before, a picket outside the home of a political contributor,” reporter Stewart Ledbetter said on WPTZ.

protestBurlington’s Lenore Broughton is a wealthy Vermonter and the sole contributor to the new Vermonters First SuperPAC. Her group is running an anti-ShumlinCare TV ad campaign. A small group of political activists who favor the single-payer plan marched through the hill section of Burlington, ending up at Broughton’s home; she was out of town. Tayt Brooks, Vermonters First’s executive director, called the picketing a “bullying tactic.”

Erm. No.

It is only bullying when Repugs (the power structure) do it to Dems (the professional victims) so Mr. Brooks probably can’t claim bullying.

It is a popular tactic of the left. See, any disagreement with the one true path is not deserving of American protections because it would ruin their perfect hairdos.

Mayor Thomas Menino (D-Boston) and Rahm Emanuel (D-Chicago), for example, tried to bully the Chick-fil-A restaurant chain straight out of business because its president, Dan Cathy, supports “the biblical definition of the family unit.” Even the liberal Chicago Sun-Times and the Boston Globe strongly criticized that “anti-conservative bullying.”

Meanwhile, vandals spray painted some Romney signs in Greensboro, NC, last week. The red paint formed the well-known circle crossed by a diagonal line across the candidate’s name. Reports say Obama “community organizers” were in the neighborhood at the time. That kind of personal vandalism may be becoming more prevalent by Democrats.

I’m thinking that, particularly in the anti-Lenore Broughton case, there’s a fine line between free speech/right of assembly and attempt at suppression of same. The marchers were definitely trying to stop her from expressing herself.

That’s the story I’d take to the public and, since she has the bucks, I’d make sure the news video footage (or better, jerky cellphone video) makes it into an ad and over to the network news desks with the copy that this is how the left tries to quash democracy.

Federal, state, or locally, we will get exactly what we vote for in 22 days. Let’s be careful out there.


CORRECTION: A previous version of this article stated that almost 70% of students believe it is not safe “to hold unpopular views on campus.” An example quoted merely to amplify the point about bullying turns out to have distracted us from that issue. The discussion centered on whether the numbers were accurate rather than who was the bully. It’s a good question which we will take up separately next week.

Readin’ and Writin’ and Lousy ‘Rithmetic

“Show-me-your-papers!”

Christopher Kieras of Seymour, Connecticut, may have fibbed about his residency when he enrolled his daughter in an elementary school in Westport. That’s what the school district said when they sued Mr. Kieras back in June to recover $27,911 in tuition. Actually, the district which investigates more than 30 student residency cases each school year wants to recoup triple the tuition as damages.

familiesonlinemagazine.comIt seems the Kieras’ daughter is an illegal alien in Westport.

Oh. Sorry. An undocumented child.

Meanwhile, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in August that Alabama public schools can’t check the citizenship status of new students. That’s unconstitutional, the federal appeals court said.

Judges said fear of the law “significantly deters undocumented children from enrolling in and attending school ….”

Say what?

If the results in Westport and other Connecticut towns are any indicator, illegal aliens darned well should be afraid. After all, if we don’t let kids from the next town into our local schools, we certainly can’t let kids from the next country!

Oh. Wait. We really don’t let kids from the next town into our local schools but kids from the next country get a free hall pass.

Connecticut’s neighboring Weston school district now requires deeds or lease records, or statements from landlords. Here in Vermont, residents have to declare their homestead on their income tax returns — the form includes a box for school district, too. The Weston school district (and the Vermont Department of Taxes) better watch out that the American Civil Liberties Union doesn’t take us all to task over the Connecticut version of “show-me-your-papers.”

“Nobody quarrels with wanting the best for your children,” school district attorney Catherine S. Nietzel said, “but it’s not fair for people who do pay taxes and part of those taxes are used for schools.” OK, nobody but the ACLU. And the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Imagine that.

Shortfall

In just the Inland Empire of California, in the Mississippi Delta, in Detroit City, in suburban Phoenix, plus the major metropoli of both North and South Puffin, there may be a million people without commercial health insurance or Medicare or Medicaid. Mr. Obama says his signature health care law will extend coverage to more than 300,000 people by 2014 in that one region of California alone.

Good news?

Perhaps, but coverage may not translate into care: local health experts doubt there will be enough doctors to meet any of those areas’ needs. There simply are not enough docs even now.

THURSDAY, TWO WEEKS AGO
I had to wear comfortable, loose fitting clothes two weeks ago today (what, they don’t supply a johnny?) including a “button down shirt.” I wondered if they wanted one of my pinpoint oxfords or if poplin will be OK? They really meant a shirt with buttons, instead of one that pulls on and off over the head.

My cataracts have been growing for 3-4 years which is not enough for most insurance companies (many demand that vision diminishes to 20:40 corrected before permitting surgery) but mine said, “Just do it!”

eyeballWe got to the eye surgery center half an hour early only to find that the surgeon was running half an hour late. The IV Tech had trouble with my general furriness because he didn’t want me to have a Brozilian when he pulled the tape back off. I remember starting to roll out toward the procedure room and absolutely nothing from then to getting ready to be dropped at the curb. And it put my internal clock off so I have no idea of the elapsed time.

I felt like a tipsy old man when the put me in a wheelchair to wheel me out.

I was quite pleased to have things to hold on to for an hour or two after we left there. I napped part of the ride home.

FRIDAY
I said “you saw me but I didn’t see you” to the doc this morning but he told me I did see him and even asked a few questions.

He said surgery was routine.

Really good drugs: he could have said I cried like a baby and I wouldn’t know.

My white balance is back! It is amazing to see the difference in colors. Ditto the brightness. It may be about 4-6 weeks before the eye actually settles down to a steady focus.

Dr. Dowhan told me I can do my toe touches, tie my shoes, do dishes, anything that doesn’t involve lifting more than 25 pounds. He also figures the NSAID I take will have a synergistic effect with the steroid eye drops I’m using for a week.

That 25-pound restriction made me fear that I would need someone (else) to stack the winter supply when they do come in. And to pull the mower deck. And put up the storm windows. And so on. The Lumber yard finally got a shipment of pellets the day before my procedure and I arranged delivery for last Friday. Coincidentally, our son was here! Now I just need someone to Huck Finn the mower deck off the tractor and put it away.

SATURDAY
My eye was a little sore this morning, in the “eyelash caught under the lid” sense which the doc’s office told me to expect. The refractive error seems to keep changing ever so slightly each day.

TODAY
I have my second surgery this afternoon, opening my left eye to enormous possibilities, just two weeks after Dr. Dowhan had done the same to my right.

It might not have gotten done this year.

I’m fortunate. Some of the great eye centers of the country are within a day’s drive so I could have gone to Wills or Hopkins or even flown to Bascom Palmer in Miami without a second thought. I chose Thomas Dowhan here Vermont because he has as good a reputation as some of the other docs and because he passed Anne’s sniff test. Not only that, he could fit me in on my schedule.

Still, I couldn’t do it at my local hospital of choice because they had no openings until late November. I drove to an eye center an hour south of here.

Good that I got my eye patches this year.

The Association of American Medical Colleges forecasts that we’ll have a nationwide shortfall of 62,900 doctors (not patients, 62,900 doctors) in 2015. That number will more than double in just a dozen years, as we baby boomers and the 30 million newly insured drive demand for care ever higher.

“People will still get care,” Dr. Dowhan told me, “but the process gets slower and laborious and crankier.”

Federal Medicaid guidelines call for 60 – 80 primary care doctors per 100,000 residents in any region plus 85 – 105 specialists. The two counties in the Northwest corner of Vermont have 23 primary care docs associated with the one hospital and 67 specialists for about 56,000 residents. We’re on target today for specialists but we should already have 20 more primary care providers. And what do we do next year and the year after as our population rises? And today’s doctors age out?

Dr. Dowhan is just five years younger than I am. Can you spell r-e-t-i-r-e-m-e-n-t?

Obamacare makes all the metrics worse, from access to level of care to cost. That’s the story of this administration.

Even blind in one eye and can’t see with the other, we should all see that.

The Real Global Weirding

It is 104° in Phoenix today. It is 84° in the Keys today. Heck, it could be 64° in North Puffin today.

Paleoanthropologist Richard Leakey’s comments in a much delayed podcast of NPR’s Science Friday just gave me an aha moment.

Mentioning NPR cost me the conservative vote. Rufus may never speak to me again.

Professor Leakey helped me realize exactly why Al Gore has led us down the wrong primrose path.

Mentioning Mr. Gore cost me the liberal vote. Paul “Buster” Door may never speak to me again.

We aren’t facing a question of Global Warming. We aren’t facing a question of Global Cooling. We aren’t even facing a question of Global Climate Change.

The problem isn’t Global Weirding.

Of course the globe is warming. Or cooling.

The problem is people. People who would leverage the fact that you don’t know the science to coerce you do something bad for you.

Hubris.

Hurricane AndrewSee, Mr. Gore and his cohort don’t care as much about Global Weirding as they care about what steps we take to control Global Weirding. They think the solution is the Big Government answer to control people because obviously people cause Global Weirding.

Horse Puckey.

Of course there is Global Warming. Of course there is Global Cooling. Of course there is Global Climate Change. Of course there is Global Weirding. Or Global transitioning. This little blue marble is always warming or cooling or in transition.

It’s the Sun, stupid!

Convincing new evidence demonstrates that Al Gore, the IPCC, and other global warming doomsayers screwed us while they were having on with the pooch. The landmark CLOUD findings at CERN show that cosmic rays and the sun (not human activities) are the dominant controller of climate on Earth.

Professor Leakey reminded me of the historical record. Forget who caused it, he said. Let’s look at the prehistoric record and recognize that climate change has happened before and because it’s happened before we know the scale of possibilities and the change we’re looking at is not unlike changes we’ve had before. The difference is we’re now eight billion people. Before there were less than a million. This is going to impact. Rising sea levels today will be very different than rising sea levels 500,000 years ago.

That brings us to three most important facets of this discussion:

  • Al Gore is a fraud. He may have created the political science of Global Warming but he apparently knows less about the fact-based science than my friend Scott, a cartoonist in Alaska.
  • Rush Limbaugh is a fraud. He is so caught up in his disbelief in science (because scientists push the evolution of Man) that he cannot accept any scientific statements about Global Climate Change.
  • NASA is a fraud. Between James Hansen driving Global Warming at Goddard and Charles F. Bolden, Jr, driving Global Warming at Congressional budget talks, NASA has shown they don’t care about the science. They care only about the money.

The lowest temps in the last dozen years occurred in 2007 and 2011. Last year was globally cool despite what it felt like here in North Puffin. On the other hand, 2004 and 2010 were the hottest. So what?

Hubris. Do you really trust a politician who can’t predict tomorrow’s weather can forecast the climate a decade from now? Or a century? Do you really believe a politician who can’t bring democracy to a few square miles of desert can terraform an entire planet?

Follow the money.

It doesn’t much matter what you think of which politician usurping the science. It doesn’t even matter whether you think the science says it’s going to get hotter or the science says it’s going to get colder. We know Earth will get hotter. We know Earth will get colder. Sooner or later.

The only question left to resolve is simple: If the seas are really going to rise 5′ in the next 50 years, Why the heck are you spending all my money assessing blame instead of building a bloody dike?


This editorial is the reason Al Gore invented the Internet.

Thursday Thorn

August 8: Gas prices are up sharply again. We saw $3.669-3.719/gallon pretty much everywhere we went…”


gas price
And now it is September.


“There’s no longer much surprise nor anguish about that,” Liz Arden muttered this morning. “Most of us are all in that dull acceptance stage.”

And that, dear readers, is both the problem and what the retailers count on.

People grumble. People protest. People email plans to each other. Congress holds hearings. And then it becomes the new normal.