Deciding who god should like in the name of politics

August 26, 2017

Without regard to what you may or may not think about our current president, we heard something the other day that bothered us.

Someone at the table criticized something the president said.

Another person said “God bless him, I hope he figures this out”.

The first person asked “Why would you say that?  Why would you ask that God bless him?”

The response was along the lines of “Wouldn’t you want God to bless every person”?

“Not that guy” was what we heard next.

Have we sunk that low?

We deserve better

Brutus


ESPN cowers before the crowd

August 24, 2017

Where will it stop?

The other day the sports network ESPN removed one of their announcers from the broadcast of the  University of Virginia opening football game.

His problem?  The announcer’s name is Robert Lee.

Has common sense been sacrificed to fear of being branded politically incorrect?

Is the mob in control?  Are we seeing the beginning of an American Reign of Terror?

We deserve better

Brutus

 


1984

August 21, 2017

We are going through a period in this country where some people want to obliterate references to past figures and events that they find to be offensive.

Those same people might live to regret the day when the same thing happens to them.

Many of our elected officials are jumping on this bandwagon as a way to deflect focus away from their failures.

What is happening now is dangerous.  Once this type of thing starts there is no telling where it will stop.

We deserve better

Brutus


Health care as an entitlement

August 19, 2017
 An emergency room doctor wrote this on his blog.  M. T. Cicero sent it in.

We fling open the doors of America’s emergency departments to help those who can’t afford health care. We have legislated this protection: No person can be turned away for financial reasons. This is very compassionate and represents the higher angels of our culture. Alas, it also is emblematic of the stupider demons of government. You see, the ER demonstrates the inverted priorities of American society.

In the ER, expensive tattoos abound. Piercing is ubiquitous. Almost every adult and child has a smartphone, it seems. All too many spend the duration of their ER visit glaring at the screen of said phone; barely looking up at the physician who is attempting to engage them in meaningful conversation about the reason they came for care.

Cigarettes populate purses and drug screens are notoriously positive for at least chronic narcotic pain medications, but often other substances, among them marijuana and amphetamines.

Dental care? It is regularly ignored because, in the words of my patients, “I don’t have dental insurance.” Guess what. Neither do I, and I pay a lot for insurance. Dental care has typically been a cash business. That’s why dentists, crafty guys and gals that they are, spend their time mucking around the human mouth. Floss and toothpaste? Seems a bit excessive compared to a nice new tattoo.

But, on the southern end of things, carefully groomed pubic hair is not at all out of the question. The teeth may fall out; the nether regions will be carefully tended.
It’s all about priorities: those of individuals and those of leaders. Our leaders, ever convinced that we must give medical care to those perceived to be in need, often forget that modern definitions of poverty and need may be a bit different from need throughout human history. And that if a family has an expensive cell plan, new truck and big-screen TV with satellite, it might not be unreasonable to ask them to put up a little money for their own health care.

A woman told me, recently, that her daughter (at birth) had a minor congenital abnormality that required daily application of a cream. “And I had to spend $200 of my own money!” She was aghast. As are all of those who will gladly pay anything for Oxycontin (legal or otherwise), but who are offended and downtrodden when their antibiotic isn’t free at the local pharmacy.

We can’t keep this up. We’ve created a monstrosity of entitlement. I care for the poor; I love the poor and have always tried my best to help those in genuine need. Those truly hurting.

But when cosmetics, vices and electronics are considered reasonable expenditures while the rest of us pay for necessities like prescriptions (or over the counter Tylenol and Motrin as I’m often asked to prescribe for Medicaid), then we are entering the death spiral.

Hate me if you want. The truth is unpleasant.

But it is clean-shaven.

Edwin Leap is an emergency physician who blogs at edwinleap.com and is the author of The Practice Test.


Fighting us with our money

August 17, 2017

This is the second note that came in about the electric company’s bills:

Dear Brutus,

I thought that you readers might appreciate being directed toward an interesting surcharge on their El Paso Electric bill. The charge is called “rate case expense surcharge” and is typically a few cents.
The bill does not explain the purpose of this surcharge. My understanding is that we (the customers) are charged for El Paso Electric’s legal fees, so the utility monopoly does not have a financial burden when they apply to raise our rates.
We deserve better.
Publius