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Commentary
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The
statements, opinions, or views in the articles may not
necessarily reflect that of the Goan Voice Canada. |
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U.S. debate on health care is a warning to
Canadians
http://www.thestar.com/printArticle/698873
TheStar.com | September 22, 2009 | Linda McQuaig
I'm inclined to believe the fierce resistance to
health-care reform in the United States is the work of
a small fringe. The other possibility is that there's
something deep in the psyche of Americans that drives
them to defend to the death their right to deny health
care to millions of their fellow citizens.
Some have attempted to downplay the scariness of
recent protests against President Barack Obama's
health reform efforts, noting that a lot of Americans
protested George W. Bush as well. But the anti-Obama
protesters are much more extreme and yet are treated
much more respectfully. When Obama spoke in Phoenix
last month, about a dozen protesters showed up
carrying guns, including one who was interviewed by
the national media as he strutted about freely with an
assault rifle slung over his shoulder. (Anti-Bush
protesters got no such media attention, and would have
been arrested if not shot had they shown up at
presidential rallies bearing assault weapons.)
While the U.S. media gave prime time to gun-toting
health reform opponents, they all but ignored a
Harvard study, reported last week in the American
Journal of Public Health, that found nearly 45,000
people die in the U.S. each year largely because they
lack health insurance.
As resistance to U.S. health reform rages on with
its inane, vicious, even racist overtones the fiasco
should remind Canadians of the dangers of allowing our
public health-care system to deteriorate. What makes
health reform so elusive in the U.S. is the way its
opponents led by wealthy corporate interests are
able to play Americans off against each other.
Americans are hunkered down in their own little
bunkers, watching out just for themselves and their
families. Anyone proposing reforms that might result
in higher taxes is met with a rifle poked out the top
of the bunker.
It's this dynamic citizens pitted against each other
that has kept Americans at each other's throats over
health care for years. It's easy to understand, for
instance, why middle class American taxpayers resent
paying for medicaid, a public program that provides
some coverage for the poor, when these same taxpayers
can't afford coverage for themselves and their
families.
The only real solution is public health care for all.
A Canadian-style plan could save Americans $400
billion a year, Harvard's Dr. David Himmelstein wrote
recently in the New England Journal of Medicine. But
Americans are so uninformed about the rest of the
world that few even seem aware any Canadian can spend
weeks in hospital getting state-of-the-art medical
treatment and then walk out the front door without
owing a penny. Such is the menace of public health
care.
Universal care is extremely popular once it's in
place, but it can be hard to overcome resistance to
putting it in place, as the current U.S. psychodrama
shows. (Canada went through a less traumatic, but
still difficult initiation.)
All this should serve as a potent lesson to Canadians
about the urgency of protecting our public health-care
system. Once it starts to fall apart, the rich bolt
from it, arrange for their own care and then object to
paying taxes for a system they don't much use.
The importance of avoiding this fate has never been
more apparent than now, when the snarling fury of
America's current crop of right-wing extremists almost
makes one nostalgic for last year's gentler, childlike
lunacy of Sarah Palin. |
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Goa In State Of Flux
From:
www.villagetinto.in
http://www.villagetinto.in/article/goa-state-flux-511
By: Glenn Costa | Published on: Thu, 24/09/2009
Goa is in a state of flux at present. This is a
generally literate state, with a western fusion type
of culture - not just because of the long Portuguese
occupation - but also because migration has long been
an accepted and much used way of life.
Migration was initially true only of the Christian
converts but today it encompasses all religions and we
see the majority Hindu community too migrating.
However, the people who reside in the state, either by
choice or because they have no choice, are finding
themselves increasingly marginalised and playing a
less and less important role in the governing of the
state. Today the politicos the new bluebloods on the
throne - have managed their electoral strategies so
well that they know that by managing about 20 per
cent of the electorate they are home free.
All parties - earlier the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak
Party and now the Bharatiya Janata Party and the
Congress use tried and tested means and tools to win
elections. As part of the larger strategy, the BJP
uses the Muslims to create a bogey man and try and
unite its core constituency while the Congress uses
the BJP and its sometimes avowedly communal agenda to
ensure that the minority vote comes to it. And all do
it irrespective of how badly and openly anti-Goan or
selfish an dself centered their policies may be. And
the Goans are caught between the devil and the deep
sea. But mostly out of their own choosing.
For example: on one hand it is the local priest or
bhat or mullah asking him - nay telling him or her to
vote for a particular person from a particular party,
never mind that your eyes and ears tell you that the
person has not done anything for the community, has
openly flouted all regulation and rules. And added to
that, has amassed wealth beyond imagination.
So instead of going against the current, the majority
buckle down, take a few free meals and drinks, listen
to their religious gurus or opinion makers and cast
their vote as told. And we get the leader, rather
rulers, we deserve so we should not crib. And then we
get no water or electricity or sewage or parking but
mega housing projects, political instability, non
functional government, blatant corruption, no rule of
law, robberies, pathetic transport system, drugs...
If I go on it would become a rant. |
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