Archive for July, 2008

Why NOT to Ride Greyhound

This is to fulfill my odd/disgusting news story quota of the month.

And this is relevant not only greyhound, but all buses!  True story, some of the creepier people I have ever seen were on a bus that took me from Ithaca, NY to Buffalo, NY (and every podunk town in between).  Honestly, I just hate buses.  Mean drivers, dirty seats, creepy people… pure nastiness.

From FoxNews, Man Accused of Stabbing, Decapitating Seatmate on Greyhound Bus in Canada

When the victim began screaming, the bus pulled over and more than 30 passengers fled. The driver, along with a passenger and a trucker who had stopped at the scene then boarded the bus in an attempt to help the victim, the CBC reported.

“When we came back on the bus, it was visible at the end of the bus he was cutting the guy’s head off and pretty much gutting him up,” Caton told the CBC.

The attacker reportedly lunged at the three men, who managed to trap him inside the bus until authorities arrived.

I don’t know if I have mentioned it here, but I absolutely love my new 2008 Nissan Sentra… for many reasons, but never having to ride a bus again is near the top of the list.

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The Real Face of “Choice”

Oregon Offers Terminal Patients Doctor-Assisted Suicide Instead of Medical Care

PORTLAND, Ore. — Some terminally ill patients in Oregon who turned to their state for health care were denied treatment and offered doctor-assisted suicide instead, a proposal some experts have called a “chilling” corruption of medical ethics.

Since the spread of his prostate cancer, 53-year-old Randy Stroup of Dexter, Ore., has been in a fight for his life. Uninsured and unable to pay for expensive chemotherapy, he applied to Oregon’s state-run health plan for help.

Lane Individual Practice Association (LIPA), which administers the Oregon Health Plan in Lane County, responded to Stroup’s request with a letter saying the state would not cover Stroup’s pricey treatment, but would pay for the cost of physician-assisted suicide.

“It dropped my chin to the floor,” Stroup told FOX News. “[How could they] not pay for medication that would help my life, and yet offer to pay to end my life?”

The letter, which has been sent to other terminal patients throughout Oregon, follows guidelines established by the state legislature.

Oregon doesn’t cover life-prolonging treatment unless there is better than a 5 percent chance it will help the patients live for five more years — but it covers doctor-assisted suicide, defining it as a means of providing comfort, no different from hospice care or pain medication.

“It’s chilling when you think about it,” said Dr. William Toffler, a professor of family medicine at Oregon Health & Science University. “It absolutely conveys to the patient that continued living isn’t worthwhile.”

In issuing their latest Prioritized List of Health Services, state officials reported a new emphasis on preventive care and cost effectiveness. Dr. John Sattenspiel, LIPA’s senior medical director, defended the measures.

“I have had patients who would consider knowing that this is part of that range of comfort care or palliative care services that are still available to them, they would be comforted by that,” Sattenspiel said. “It really depends on the individual patient.”

Toffler called it a callous practice that went against medical convention. “It corrupts the consistent medical ethic that has been in place for 2,000 years,” he said. “It’s absolutely breathtaking.”

Oregon is the only state to legalize doctor-assisted suicide, which came into effect in 1997. Since that time, there have been 341 reported cases where doctors provided lethal doses of medicine to patients to end their lives.

Oregon voters have upheld the “Death with Dignity” law three times, and Sattenspiel says it is the state’s duty to inform patients of all their legal options.

For Stroup, however, suicide was never an option. He fought back, and the Oregon Health Plan eventually reversed its decision and is now paying for his chemotherapy, giving him hope he’ll be around a little longer for his 80-year-old mother and five grandchildren.

But I thought assisted suicide was all about empowering the rational individual to make end of life choices?  This seems a lot like what those crazy pro-life lobbyists and bio-ethicists have been saying - devaluing terminally ill or disabled individuals, making subjective quality of life judgments, and starting down the road to forced euthanasia.

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Smogasboard

According to CNN.com, people who work minimum-wage jobs live on the edge. They are also no longer teenagers. In support of the latter proposition, CNN highlighted the career of a 21-year-old man who works at his local Wendy’s and decided to move out of his parents’ home.

While it would undoubtedly be a good thing if this young man were to have more career opportunities and an easier time paying his bills, the simple fact is that minimum-wage jobs - menial, unskilled labour - are not meant to provide a living wage- especially one that supports a family. Does anyone really think that a person should be able to make a career out of flipping hamburgers?

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A new study has found that the gender gap in math has disappeared for girls up through 11th grade (here). My only comment: Larry Summers’ fundamental error was to attempt to evaluate a constant quality (relative intellectual capacity of men and women, which, if it changes, does so over millenia) with variable data (such as the relative achievement of me and women in math and science).

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More “Impeach Bush”. Would it be too difficult to ask Congress to spend its time confirming judges, getting out of the ethanol mess, or solving the oil crisis, rather than swaggering about like a ten-year-old boy who just won a kickball game?

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Too Bad There Wasn’t a Slip ‘n Slide, Too

Baby moose playing in sprinkler: here!

Charen: A Child Killer’s Homecoming

Over the past few days, I’ve been sitting back and listening to the various news reports and opinions on the prisoner exchange between Israel and Lebanon.  I have my views, but it has been hard to articulate them after my trip to Israel.

Just to get this out of the way, let me re-emphasize that I understand why Israel needed those bodies back - for religious reasons and for national closure.  That said, exchanging living terrorists for dead Israeli soldiers and negotiating with a terrorist group — while another terrorist group is holding captive a living Israeli soldier — was stupid.

I finally found a column by Mona Charen that truly articulates what I have been wanting to say.  It obviously comes from a person who loves Israel, yet is unimpressed and actually displeased with the course of action Israel chose to take.  You can go read the entire column yourself, but I wanted to emphasize exactly what sorts of regimes and people Israel is surrounded by and encouraged by the international community to negotiate with.

Via RealClearPolitics.com, regarding the key murderer Israel freed:

This week, Kuntar, dressed in fatigues and sporting a Hitlerian mustache and haircut, walked down a red carpet arrayed for him in Beirut. The government closed all offices and declared a national day of celebration. Tens of thousands of Lebanese cheered, waved flags, threw confetti, and set off fireworks as Hezbollah staged a rally to celebrate their “victory” over Israel. Mahmoud Abbas, the “moderate” leader of the Palestinian Authority, sent “blessings to Samir Kuntar’s family.” PA spokesman Ahmad Abdul Rahman sent “warm blessings to Hezbollah … on the return of the heroes of freedom … headed by the great Samir Kuntar.”

Does that sound like the actions of a viable partner for peace?

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Bodies of Goldwasser and Regev Returned to Israel

Regev and GoldwasserThere really are no words that can adequately express my feelings about this whole situation.  My anger at Israel and the US for not fighting harder to get these soldiers back sooner (and possibly alive), my disgust at the terrorists who commit these kinds of acts of barbarism, my sadness and sympathy for the families of these fallen soldiers.

I was in Israel a little over two weeks ago when news services first reported that the Israeli Cabinet had decided to make a prisoner exchange.  Israel giving up 5 (living) terrorists and Lebanon returning Goldwasser and Regev - their status was unknown.  Early reports actually claimed they were alive.  To see the looks of shocked joy on Israeli faces at the possibility of the soldiers being alive evolve into resigned faces of unsurprised mourning was one of the most emotionally challenging experiences of my life.  For the first time, I actually understood the true strength of the Israeli people.

I’ve written about this situation before - after hearing Karnit Goldwasser speak at Cornell, at the one year anniversary of the kidnapping, and after Karnit challenged Ahmadinejad at a UN press conference.

As insanely upsetting as it is to me that Israel would agree to turn over 5 living terrorists - one of whom is Samir Kuntar, a Palestinian terrorist who brutally killed 5 Israelis in 1979 -and dozens of bodies in exchange for two bodies… I can now understand why, as a nation, they have to.

I think this paragraph from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs puts it into perspective:

Israel has a duty, as a nation and as a people, to protect those who risk their young lives to defend its citizens. Every Israeli soldier knows that their country will do its utmost to retrieve them should they fall into the hands of the enemy. This is an expression of Israel’s deep reverence for human life and of its respect for the fallen. This principle stems from Israel’s sense of morality as well as from Jewish ethics. It is a demonstration of Israel’s moral and physical strength.

Thy children shall come again to their own border.  Jeremiah 31:17

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More information on Goldwasser, Regev, and Shalit (who is still in the hands of Hamas):

Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
YNetNews.com

JPost
Banim

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