Letters to the editor
A Round of Applause For New Ha'Penny Stage
Editor, Times-Dispatch:
What a pleasant surprise to see the new Ha'Penny Stage in Byrd Park. We went to an afternoon performance celebrating Chinese culture, which was superb. The new stage is higher so one can see better and the backdrop is high enough that performers can stage themselves without being seen. Simple concepts, but they add tremendously to the audience's enjoyment.
What really impressed us, however, was moving the stage out of direct sun. No more sitting in the broiling sun and shading one's eyes to see the performance. Finally someone thought to relocate the stage slightly and now performers and audience alike have shade. Even more surprising was provision of chairs for the audience. This was an unusually large crowd with many older-than-usual patrons and the Dogwood Dell staff made a good call in providing chairs. I hope they continue to do so when the audience warrants it.
I also hope that these Chinese performers come back next year, perhaps even to the main stage at Dogwood Dell. They certainly are Dell-worthy. From the aerial antics of the martial artists to the charming dances of little girls in red overalls, it was a delightful and inspiring performance and a great kickoff for the improved venue.
I am glad that in this day of reduced budgets and service cut-backs, the city recognizes the importance of the Festival of Arts and continues not only to support it, but to offer improvements. Thanks Richmond Parks and Recreation, and keep up the good work.
Elaine Lidholm.
Richmond.
Quality Health Care Belongs to All Americans
Editor, Times-Dispatch: In his letter, "Can The Government Beat This Health Care?" L.E. Nugent says he is perfectly satisfied with his health insurance. Millions of Americans, including myself, are lucky to have quality health insurance they (or their employers) can afford. However, the big picture is a different story and the health reforms being debated in Congress have become a necessity.
Over the past eight years, health care costs have skyrocketed, with premiums for employer-based family coverage rising more than five times faster than average U.S. earnings. Pre-existing condition restrictions, caps on coverage, and higher deductibles and co-pays have put a significant strain on family budgets. In 2008, over 13 million Americans with insurance spent over 25 percent of their family income on health care costs. More than one-half of all personal bankruptcy cases are due, at least in part, to illnesses and medical costs.
People without access to employer-based coverage have to shop in the individual health insurance market. These expensive policies have even more limits and higher out-of-pocket costs. Many applicants cannot obtain a policy at any price, just because they have been sick in the past.
Forty-six million Americans, including 9 million children, are living without health care coverage. Every year, especially during this recession, more hard-working families join the ranks of the uninsured. Over the past 15 years, the percentage of uninsured workers in Virginia has gone up nearly 16 percent.
This is why a solid majority of Americans supports health reform. The proposals in Congress will allow Nugent to keep his private insurance while they help all Americans get quality, affordable insurance. Everyone will be a part of the system, and no one will have to fear that one accident or illness will leave them unable to care for themselves or their families.
Jill Hanken.
Richmond.
McAuliffe Invigorated Virginia Politics
Editor, Times-Dispatch: So, he parachuted in carrying his carpetbag? Who cares? He was one heckuva candidate. Whatever happened to Terry McAuliffe?
The carpetbagger tag seemed a favorite. The parachuting-in line was another. Connections to Bill Clinton came to be spoken of as a disease. Yet McAuliffe didn't have to spend what has to be millions of his own money on his campaign. He didn't have to decide that just maybe he had something to offer his home state of the past 20 years.
But he did all of that and much, much more.
Whoever heard of a candidate having a business plan of six chapters (123 pages) of detailed, specific, and knowledgeable proposals for education, transportation, economic security, energy, and job creation? Plus, there was a chapter on the question that so many people asked: How was he going to pay for all the promises? Chapter 6 told how.
His plan is full of viable, creative ideas about where the jobs could come from. The problem? No one I've met had read the business plan.
The incredible endorsement of The Washington Post touted Creigh Deeds as the "Transportation Governor" but his Web site didn't mention transportation and Brian Moran's mention was tepid. McAuliffe had a 26-page plan of up-to-date information even down to proposals for the Obama transportation stimulus money.
He sees things differently because he hasn't been involved in state government. He is mystified by what he sees as Virginia's failure to be innovative, to be the most attractive state for new businesses and industries. He urged Virginia to match and exceed incentives that are working for other states.
Part of the charm of Sen. Mark Warner is his sense of humor. McAuliffe seemed to be from that mold. He remained good-humored while Moran became angry and attacked him -- from the February Jefferson-Jackson Democratic Dinner on regularly for four months. Typically, the concession video of McAuliffe was upbeat. He said he wouldn't give anything for the experience of running, that he'd had a great time.
And you know what? I'll bet he did. Nancy St.Clair Finch. Richmond.
Chesterfield Supervisors Ask Necessary Questions
Editor, Times-Dispatch: Hooray for the Chesterfield Board of Supervisors' questioning of the Chesterfield School Board. It is clear the School Board does not like the questions. It has been a long time coming that someone is actually asking how our tax dollars are spent.
In the past, the School Board had one way of balancing a budget and that was to find a new program or project to spend any surplus. Many school systems are required to maintain a certain surplus in order to handle years like this one. Even the state has a rainy-day fund. Why not one for the Chesterfield school system?
Marleen Durfee is my representative on the Board of Supervisors and I commend her for the pointed questions she is asking and pressing for redistricting to solve the overcrowding rather than an automatic assumption by the School Board that capital improvement dollars is the answer.
Robert Derrick.
Midlothian.
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Reader Reactions
When it says “me only” it means that people who work for it are bad if they want to take care of their family first. It has apparently read, digested and regurgitated Animal Farm “rich bad, poor good”, “hard work bad, mooching good”. When it talks about making the world a better place, it doesn’t understand history enough to know that collectivism doesn’t work and it certainly doesn’t prosper.
It is pretty ignorant of the world if it wants to punish success, work and achievement to support the ones who won’t work.
Studebaker - So, if, say, Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin share a Peace Prize, that’s O.K. just as long as Stalin doesn’t win it individually. Yeah, I see your line of thinking.
More repetition and preaching.
Nobody has to travel to Canada. The Canadians are bery obliging and come here to relate their health care woes and get the timely top notch care they need.
Actually there are private clinics popping up all over Canada where citizens can go and pay for the care that their much touted system cannot.
Another bit of blabber without research of facts and info. Lazy talk teaches naught.
What do some think of the report given by the Congressional Budget Office of Jan 31, 2008 re: by 2016 HALF of Americans will have to spend 45% of their incomes for health insurance?
What say yea?
Also, which Senators in past two years have traveled to Germany, Switzerland, any other European country, even mere one hour flight from D.C. to Toronto, and obtain facts of their system? Surely there must be some on-line reports of their trips and reports? Heck, John McCain & Lindsay Graham made many trips half way round the globe to Iraq. Graham’s utmost acheivement was buying 5 rugs for 5 bucks at a Baghdad market. McCain, Graham, Grassley…their reports of foreign health care management fact-finding trips?
There are some excellent posts in this thread. Both pro and con. There are also some that are both dogmatic and deliberately insulting.
We are here to voice our opinions as concerned citizens.
Some have more access to information by virture of their careers and have provided valuable input. That fact however does not exempt them from personal bias and partianship.
We must remember the old admonition “there are lies, damn lies and statistics.“
The least credible commentors are the name callers and equal opportunity insulters.
Incoherence is also a problem and tends to negate what otherwise might be a viewpoint worth considering.
This subject is exceedingly complex and there is no one solution, despite some of the adamant statements made here.
“look down their nose at the producing class”, “looks down its nose without understanding what its talking about”, “misses the point.”, “amuses me”….Do such comments come from rational thoughts built on a foundation of study of facts and awareness of issues in need of correction; or do such comments come rather from raw emotions, blinded by lack of acceptance of reality?
A twin says, “everything is better’over there.‘Why don’t they go….over there?”…We expect such childishness on a grammar school play ground, but by an adult?
It’s either immaturity or plum laziness to not seek accurate info, but simply be a sponge to whatever they hear? Seeking knowledge requires desire to work for it.
We still have some Americans who feel comfortable and warm in the pot of water slowing increasing in temperature. The 10%+ annual rising boiling financial pot that is our country’s health care industry. They ignore study from Der Spiegel, Europe’s largest weekly magazine, the BBC, The Toronto Star, even the Congressional Budget Office. We have yet to hear voices from all-is-well folk who have taken time to read the Jan 31, 2008 CBO report to the Senate warning of our expanding financial disaster. Too lazy? Too stubborn? Too arrogant?
No big deal. Some are happy with their me-only, now-only worlds, while others strive to make the real world better; including a better world for future generations, even theirs.
This is Randy’s reply—
Studebaker: Yasser Arafat wins a Nobel Peace prize for working towards peace. You don’t see the problem or the irony with that or were you simply stating a fact without a point of view on it? Posted by ( Randy )
To this post of Studebaker’s:
Yasser Arafat shared the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres & Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin “for their efforts to create peace in the Middle East”
The purpose of the Nobel Peace Prize is to draw attention to the effort, risk & sacrifice necessary for people to help bring about peace. And that flawed men & women, even scoundrels, can rise above the clamor and work towards peace.
All three of these men risked their lives for the peace. Yitzhak Rabin, “gave the last full measure of devotion” for the hope of peace. On November 4th 1995, Yitzhak Rabin was murdered by a radical right-wing Orthodox Jew who opposed the signing of the Oslo Peace Accords. Posted by ( studebaker ) ****
RANDY: perhaps I should have included info on the Oslo Peace Accord which is why Arafat, Peres & Rabin were awarded the prize. By the way, Arafat did not win the Nobel Peace Prize. The prize was awarded to three men, two of them Israelis (Shimon & Peres) and on Palestinian. Shimon & Peres agreed to accept the prize together with Arafat. The prize was not awarded for who or what these men were; it was given for a particular thing they did in spite of who or what they were. Do you understand? Or do you just not know what a point-of-view is?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oslo_Peace_Accords#cite_ref-8
HSA’s coupled with high deductible plans work rather well.. many companies have gone to these types of programs because they encourage people to only go to the doctor when they are really “sick.“ BTW.. my plan does include routine checkups (physical..mammogram etc..) for a small copay. It is the repeated runs to the dr for the sniffles that come out of my pocket until I reach the deductible. Right now.. the govt programs don’t have any way to incent people to NOT go to the hospital for every small ache and pain. How are we going to stop frivolous visits? Rationing? I know people on medicaide and they “live” at the doctor.. constantly have appts. They are NOT sick people.. it’s just since it doesn’t cost them anything.. they just go.
The government is NOT an efficient machine.. at least when a private company is providing services they have an incentive to keep costs down.. The govt? nope.. red tape..waste.. corruption.. abuse.. it never fails.. We do NOT want politicians (who have proved to be oh so trustworthy) making these decisions for us.
MrRight - I think what amuses me most is, on one hand, they gripe about an unfulfilled need, but, on the other hand, they don’t want to do the work and they want someone else to pay for it. Then, they complain that the producing class is making too much money from meeting the need. On top of that - and this is what’s REALLY telling - they look down their nose at the producing class and assert that, somehow, these people are simple minded and stupid. Do you think Barack Obama has produced anything besides two books about himself and, maybe, a set of horse head book ends from wood shop in high school? Nah. That’s what all of this “spread the wealth” tripe is all about. Not earn the wealth, spread the wealth. UGH.
Moochers need producers, but, they don’t like them. They are driven to insanity by the good fortune the producers earn for their hard work and still, have no idea how extremely silly they look demanding that others subsidize their lifestyle. Too often they remind me of the guy who orders a delivery pizza and gets upset when he finds out that the delivery boy won’t come into the house, fix him a drink and feed the pizza to him while he watches MSNBC.
Randy,
Isn’t it funny how compassionate liberals are not.I don’t know which is worse,the faux intellectual condescension or its disdain for its own country and countrymen.Coupled with the view everything is better’over there.‘Why don’t they go….over there?
Commonsense ain’t what it used to be either.
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