Archive for September, 2009
Decisions Affecting an Individual
Monday, September 21st, 2009When The Truth Doesn’t Get You What You Want…
Saturday, September 19th, 2009Everywhere Czars…
Tuesday, September 15th, 2009Health Insurance Reform
Monday, September 7th, 2009Cost and control, pre-existing conditions and covering the uninsured, those are the problems with our current system. The care part of our healthcare is very good. Eliminating or minimizing government’s role in your healthcare (or your life in general) is even better.
In pretty much all things, I fall back to the belief that decisions affecting an individual, are best made by the individual affected. The arrogance of making those decisions for someone else because they might make the wrong one just doesn’t sit well. Of course poor decisions are sometimes difficult to live with, but there is something extra maddening when those decisions most affecting you are made by someone else.
When it’s your life, you should have control over it. I do believe that was the intent behind the life part of life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.
via Ace…
Healthcare Reform in one Paragraph…
Thursday, September 3rd, 2009Short. Simple. To the point.
I’m not against the government getting involved in healthcare specifically, I’m against the government getting involved in anything it can avoid. Admittedly, there are problems (preexisting conditions, insurance tied to employment, other stuffs too) with our current system but addressing those problems seems to be only a starting point for throwing the entire system under the bus in a move to get the government more involved.
I don’t care what it is, I dont’ want the government more involved.
Some Artistic Healthcare
Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009I prefer my government to be small and out of the way and fairly unobtrusive in the manner it interacts with my life. I understand the need for some taxes to fund some of the essentials (defense, law enforcement, the building and maintenance of some highways maybe) but otherwise I’d like to not be overly reminded of its existence. But now it looks like there’s a movement to insert a little bit more of the government’s view of things into the art world.
This is a perfect example of why I want the government to be small and unobtrusive. People always have an agenda, everyone does, and they will always find a way to try to further it. That is human nature. So from where I sit the problem isn’t so much that the NEA might be trying to do this, I think that is pretty much to be expected, the problem is that they have been provided with the tools to do this at all.