The open discussion of important political topics by the Obama administration, so long brushed under the rug, gives me some optimism for the future of the country. Health care concerns have been bothering me for a long time (since college), but have recently moved to the top of the list of the issues that are important to me (since I became a dad?). I have to say it is probably one of the few issues that causes me to even consider life in a different country.
As we've seen lately, even a life's worth of planning and savings can evaporate in a bad day on wall street. In economic terms, money is the assignment of a specific value to hard work. Which is is the real commodity?
Honest people have been losing their hard-earned retirements as wealth is concentrated at the top of the social pyramid. Administrators and executives are rewarded for juggling the money that has to come to represent work. But as companies are backing out of pension agreements and health care costs are increasing much faster than income, we have lost both money and the perception that labor is worth something. Money gets concentrated at the top, but real work is rooted firmly in the ground.
We have not lost any capacity to work. Instead, we have bought in to the collective delusion that money and work are the same. It's similar to blindly placing value on standardized test results and grades instead of the quality of the education provided. One has real value and one is a largely unquestioned societal illusion.
This leaves me asking, is playing by the rules worth it? It also makes me wonder why we can't commit as a nation to taking care of each other. Americans generously provide economic assistance to nations in need and to the victims of natural disasters. The suggested that we guarantee health care to all Americans is greeted with screams of "socialism" from the far right. Dialog is stopped in the societal equivalent of a filibuster.
I think and hope this argument is falling flat these days. What is wrong with social democracy? Most western countries offer health care to their citizens. Socialized medicine is not the same thing as socialism or communism. Are we ignorant enough as a society that we can't distinguish shared medical costs from oppressive government? Is the cold-war era fear of Soviet Communism still controlling us? Stalin would be proud of his enduring legacy. Isn't that what tyrants and terrorists want?
The cost of public panic and fear is too high! It leads to paranoia, loss of freedom, and the funneling of endless resources into unnecessary and ineffective international conflict. Fear has dominated our politics in recent years.
Maybe I should be more specific here--fear motivates both sides. The abstract fear of military attack in the present seems to threaten rural residents of our country while the urban population seems more fearful of future and even more abstract things like not being able to afford to educate our kids and making assure that we'll have reasonable access to health care when we need it. It's the difference in timescale that distinguishes these fears.
On the other hand, none of us really fear much about things beyond the end of our own lives and those of our families. I like to think that I do think of the future beyond my own existence but is this really possible? I doubt that I'm so different from others in this regard.
It is heartening to see American diplomats addressing concerns that are important to me: international dialog again instead of unilateralism, health care, education, and environmental degradation. But those are topics for another time.
Enough heavy stuff for today. I'm going fishing this weekend. Nothing like a day standing in cold moving water to clear your head, bring you back home and make you appreciate what you already have. Who cares about catching the fish?
DWB
Blog Archive
Blog Topics
- Outdoor activities
- Interesting Life Experiences
- Environment
- Living to work vs. Working to live
- Parenting
- Health Care
- Colorado
- Education
- Single fatherhood
- Single parenting
Non-starters
- Excessive negativism
- Celebrities
- Professional Sports
- Sarcasm
Zero Tolerance
- Nihlilsm, fatalism
- Political Extremism
- Religious Extremism
- Cruelty
Interests
- Humor
- Good Reads
- Mysticism and Spiritual Matters
- Interesting quotes
- Travel
- Political Change
- Climate Change
- Conservation
- Photography
- Hiking
- Parenting
- Kayaking
- Fly fishing

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.