Steve Wynn Interview

Short interview with Steve Wynn, Hotelier and Real Estate (For those of you who don’t know who he is, he built the Mirage, Bellagio, Wynn Resort, and Encore, as well as casinos in Macau). If you listen to this interview (short & to the point) and nothing else today, you will be better informed than your neighbor about the state of the union.

http://www.infowars.com/steve-wynn-takes-on-washington/

A friend sent me this message and link. Remember that I am not political by nature, but Steve Wynn very succinctly paints that picture of the future of U.S. healthcare and the state of our union.

Voluntary Incapacity

Emergency Medicine News:
April 2010 – Volume 32 – Issue 4 – p 8
doi: 10.1097/01.EEM.0000370749.07758.6d
Second Opinion

Second Opinion: Capable – and Proud of It – in a World of Voluntary Incapacity

Leap, Edwin MD

Free Access

Those of us who work in emergency care are often deemed insensitive by others. When we rant about the situations we see, sensitive people genuinely believe that we’re cold, uncaring, or burned out. I have been accused of ultraconservatism, right-wing lunacy, being judgmental (the worst insult a post-modern can muster, by the way) and of being a greedy, Mercedes-driving doctor. (I drive a pickup.) Someone even said my newspaper readers should ignore my opinion about medical finances because I was just “po’mouthing,” a Southernism that implies I was making my situation sound dismal when I was actually quite well off.

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While I’m sure that a few physicians are, in fact, cold and uncaring, most of the docs I meet are anything but. What they are, however, is possessed of the remarkable clarity about humans that can only come from working with actual people rather than theories or ideologies. It’s an insight that cannot be achieved in the purely academic world, nor is it attainable in Internet chat rooms, but it isn’t, as I long suspected, just doctors who deal with reality.

I often speak about our struggles with a dear friend and fellow church deacon who is a manager in a local grocery store. My friend is as kind a man as you’ll ever meet. Devoted to family, friends, and God, he volunteers at a local elementary school, spending time with at-risk children. He comes to church early to pray for the many things that burden his heart. He would literally give you the shirt off of his back. And he’s fed up with the abuse he sees in his grocery store.

He told me, “Ed, I see people using food stamps to buy food I could never afford. And I have a good job!” He recently held forth about a woman using her WIC (Women, Infants, and Children program) card to buy six gallons of milk at once. When he half-jokingly asked what she did with all of the milk, she pointed to a toddler and said, “She drinks all of it.” Later, leaving the store, the customer was heard to say, “What does he care? He ain’t payin’ for it!” Except, of course, that he is.

My friends who are deputies and highway patrol officers feel the same, as do many of my friends whose work as attorneys puts them in contact with the welfare and social services systems. They are often frustrated by the abuses they see, by the parade of bad decisions, and by a bureaucracy that almost seems to encourage and reward the abuse of benefits and services while rarely elevating anyone.

One of my own favorite gremlins is disability. Many of my patients seem to see disability as a career goal. A friend of mine is a school counselor. When she recently asked a young high school student what his post-graduation plans were, he never missed a beat. “Guess I’ll get disability for my nerves, like the rest of my family.”

The thing that makes those outside our circle think we’re bitter is that stories like the ones above drive us crazy. Just like patients who come to the ED for routine pregnancy tests, who ask for prescriptions for Tylenol, and who seek Family and Medical Leave Act forms for ankle sprains. In the same way as the diabetic who refuses to get a $4 prescription at Walmart but regularly goes to McDonald’s before coming to the ED.

There are doubtless well-meaning people who will read this and still marvel at our insensitivity. So I was doing a little reflection on what it is about these situations that frustrates us. Is it, after all, about the money? Are we just mad because we aren’t being paid? Well, that can’t be it. My disabled and Medicaid patients all have insurance. I’m paid for seeing them! Maybe not a full market value, but something is better than nothing.

Is it elitism? Do I consider myself better than these folks, who are often poor and uneducated? Probably not. My faith teaches me that we’re all the same in the eyes of God. And my own grandparents were laborers and small business owners as well as subsistence farmers. I have no animosity toward those who struggle.

And then it hit me! Those who struggle! I like it when people struggle, not in the sense of hopelessness or crushing misery, but meaning those who try, who set goals and go through life trying to be better, happier, more successful, more resourceful, more independent. I’m happy to help those who try, and happy to help those who are actually in need. I’ll gladly give care to the truly sick. I’ll stay late, bend over backwards, beg and borrow to do whatever it takes to help them. For those who try? Anything. If they’re trying to do what’s right, trying to get healthy, trying to rise out of generational poverty, trying to recover from an accident or mistake, a prison sentence, or a disabling injury, I’m honored to be there for them.

What bothers me, what bothers us collectively, is not that people need us. It’s not even that people need us for free. It’s that they have begun to worship at the altar of incapacity and what wise men of old called sloth. We are an overmedicated, undereducated nation bent on proving that we cannot, rather than showing that we can. Having inverted the ethics of our forefathers, our goal is no longer autonomy, but dependence.

We have abandoned the sense of guilt that in the past made our citizens try to achieve on their own to avoid being burdens. We have, in fact, abandoned the entire idea of guilt in exchange for a kind of social lovefest, where anything goes as long as we want it.

And nowhere do we see the results of this experiment more clearly, more painfully, than in the emergency department. Young and old alike swamp our departments, convinced that someone owes them money and compassion for their own dysfunctional life choices and beloved incapacity.

It isn’t that we’re burned out. It isn’t that we’re cold. It’s just that we understand better than most what it means to try. No one told us that not trying was an option. And we’re just weary of being responsible for an endless parade of patients who believe we owe them something and who consistently refuse to do anything for themselves.

So don’t let anyone call you bitter, shallow, greedy, or anything else. Gather your friends, business people, police officers, and social workers; collect their stories and pass them on. Explain that you aren’t the only person frustrated with our deteriorating social situation.

And be proud that in a world of epidemic and voluntary incapacity, you remain capable and proud of it.-Dr. Edwin Leap

So you are planning a trip to the Battlegrounds at Gettysburg

So you want to take your kids to see Gettysburg?  Here is my advise based on my experience taking my kids:

  • Read up on the topic before the trip–kids learn by example (if dad is into it, they will be….): #1. Killer Angels–this will get you pumped to see Gettysburg.  It is a GREAT read. #2. Battle of Gettysburg at Wikipedia–this is a short clear summary.
  • Listen on the way–This is the best audiobook on Gettysburg(you can get it at amazon or download it to your ipod at audiobooks in itunes); The kids could only take this 2 hr book on tape in 15 minute intervals, but it is important for you to get through it before the trip to get the kids pumped about the history.
  • Gettysburg Museum–FIRST STOP–we went to the Gettysburg Museum first.  It gave the kids a great summary and got them excited to see the battlegrounds (there may be better museums? This one had a hokey pseudo-disneyland re-inactment, but it was good enough.  Remember to get their free brochure of their audio tour (it has a very simple map of the battles–we did not do the audio tour–it was at least 2 hrs long)
  • Touring the battlefields–#1. Union Line–Go to the Pennsylvania monument first (you can climb to the top and get a great overview and at the top they have pointers to show you where everything occurred) #2. Go to little round top–this was a KEY defensive position and holding this hill on day #2 of the battle was key to victory–there are some great plaques that teach about some key people–Strong Vincent etc. #3. Devil’s Den–my kids were into the idea of snipers shooting at the Union line from this key rock formation. #4. Confederate line–we ran low on time so we just went to the very high tower at the center of the confederate line–great view of battlefield.
  • Patience–my kids must have asked me at least 2 dozen times: “Now who were the Rebels, who were the guys in blue, who were the Confederates, which side was Robert E. Lee on again….” It was all worth it when my son did a speech on Strong Vincent for school….They really do listen.
  • Summary of the battles–Day #1. The push–The confederates AGAIN had a significant victory on the first day which made them too confident for the following days.  Day#2. The flank–Lee decided to go with tactics that worked for him in the past despite very poor positioning.  Meade fell back to excellent defensive position, and Lee couldn’t breakthrough at Meade’s flanks.  Day#3. The charge–The most famous part of the battle(s) is one of the most brutal and some would say courageous or crazy ideas.
  • Lessons learned–Pride before the fall–age old adage–Lee’s over confidence appears to be his undoing; superior weapons save lives–The Union had rifles that had superior technology to the Confederates which helped them to fire more rapidly; a powerful military is important–although I am not big on guns etc. studying military history has helped me to understand that a high tech/powerful military is important to keep the peace (I recently heard a commentator say that we need to get out of all these other countries that we are in (save A LOT of money), but maintain our military edge…so if there is a problem, we can keep the peace…); location, location, location–the view from little round top was a powerful reminder that the high ground is always key…

Ronald Reagan Library

I was raised in a home of democrats who thought Ronald Reagan was a “B actor” and an “idiot”.  It was a great adventure and learning experience visiting the Ronald Reagan Library.  The audio tour was done by Ronald Reagan himself (his voice).  It was very interesting.  The library is on top of a hill side over looking Simi Valley.  It is a beautiful ranch style library/building.  A few observations:

  • Like most of us Reagan’s views were formed by his family of origin.  His mom and dad routinely donated their time and resources to those in need, and Reagan worked 7 days a week, 12 hours per day at his first job as a teenager.  He was influenced by his mom’s belief in God, God has a plan for us that we must trust in even if life gets hard, hard work is key to success, and help others because we are all in this together
  • Reagan’s distrust of big government seemed to stem from his fear and hatred of tyranny and communism (the ultimate form of big government).  Juxtaposed to this distrust was Reagan’s firm belief that government was necessary.  During the air traffic control strike, he told the air traffic controllers that as government employees their jobs were essential to the safety and security of the U.S. and therefore if they did not return to work in 48 hours they would be fired.
  • Reaganomics (my understanding) was less taxes (Reagan was a firm believer in taxes but taxes to pay for services at the community level)…and by less taxes it stimulated companies and individuals to create more jobs, more wealth etc….
  • You can tell a lot about someone when they are under stress, and when Reagan was shot (very seriously), he was calm and humorous.  He told the surgeon, “I hope you are a republican.”  The surgeon replied, “Mr. President today we are all republicans.” (a GREAT read is the JAMA article about his injuries and their treatment)
  • I am always a fan of anyone who has a deep and abiding relationship with his wife, and he clearly had that.  He adored his wife, Nancy.
  • Speech after speech he made it clear that he wanted peace but he believed that peace could only be accomplished by a strong military–not to be used but to prevent war.  He turned out to be right and was successful in helping to eliminate communism.
  • Reagan while being interviewed by Jimmy Stuart, no less, about his experiences on Air Force One before he was president.  He tells the story of when he flew in Air Force One to do some diplomacy for a president before him.  It was during the oil embargo and they were running low on fuel and needed to land in a country that said they wouldn’t refuel a U.S. plane.  His advisors at the time told him that this country would refuel their plane if they wouldn’t fly the U.S. flag when they landed.  Reagan said, “We will find somewhere else to refuel.”  The country reconsidered and allowed them to refuel and Reagan flew the U.S. flag when they landed.
  • When Reagan cut federal taxes as president, the federal government collected 40% MORE money from tax payers! It seems counterintuitive, but it turns out that if you lower taxes, people hire more people and those people all pay taxes; therefore lowering taxes/less taxes=MORE not less money for the government. Who knew?

bloated

Healthcare and ‘Filibuster Abuse’

The California Medical Association, that I am a member of, sent me a form email requesting that I contact my state senators regarding the healthcare issue. Reluctantly as an apolitical person, I sent a form email to Senator Boxer. Here is her form letter email response:
“Dear Dr.:
Thank you for writing to me about pending health care reform legislation. I appreciate hearing from you.
As you may know, the House of Representatives passed health care reform legislation in November 2009, and the Senate passed its version in December 2009. These moves brought us closer than ever to providing affordable health care for all of America’s families, an elusive goal since Teddy Roosevelt first proposed it nearly a century ago.

However, with its unprecedented abuse of the filibuster, the Senate minority has blocked further progress on this historic legislation. Like millions of Americans, I am gravely disappointed in these delays…

Barbara Boxer
United States Senator”

For some reason her letter deeply affected me, I surprised myself by my passionate response….

“The 2 largest lobbying groups in support of this healthcare bill are the insurance companies and the drug companies. These 2 groups have little or no interest in the well being of my patients.

The healthcare bill does not have ANY malpractice reform. Without malpractice reform, myself and my fellow physicians will continue to drive the cost of healthcare upward to protect ourselves from litigation. Without malpractice reform, there will be no success in reducing healthcare costs.

You mention the ‘unprecedented abuse of the filibuster‘. I cannot disagree with you more.  Not to mention the fact that there has been NO filibuster, the purpose of the filibuster is to allow the minority to have a voice. Without it, the minority and the American people would not have a voice. Our government is founded on the ideal that it is a government ‘by the people and for the people’.

You are my representative, but as a U.S. citizen, it is MY government.   Our government was established with checks and balances to prevent the abuses that I have seen recently. I cannot tell you how truly disturbed I am that a government representative would use the terms  ‘abuse’ and ‘filibuster’ in the same phrase. No matter what political party we align ourselves with, we should embrace and applaud the voice of the people.

I guarentee that many of the people that voted for Scott Brown were NOT republicans; it was a bipartisan election by the people and for the people. They voted for him so that they could have a voice, and that voice has a name: filibuster.

Thank you for your time.”

Sorry for the politics from a person on a blog that is apolitical, but what I have seen in the last year in politics has compelled me to become more political.

Doctor Senator’s Opinion of Healthcare Reform

Sadly, I think it is too late.  This interview should bring us all chills down our spines. 

30 Minutes with Dr. Coburn
Tom Coburn, MD (R-OK) is one of only two physicians serving in the US Senate. He’s known for his opposition to earmarking and has taken a strong stance against the current health care reform bill. EPM tracked down Dr. Coburn to ask him why. 
 
Interview by Mark Plaster, MD
 
 
EPM: We understand that you oppose the current health reform bill in the Senate. What do you see as its major problems?

Sen. Tom Coburn: This bill will ultimately divide the loyalty of the physician, not to be a 100% advocate for the patient, but to be sure and cover their backsides, so they don’t get in trouble with the government. The cost comparative effectiveness panel? You’re going to have to do things the way they think you need to do it. This [bill] guts the art of medicine.  For 80% of the people that will be just fine. But we will have changed our focus to the cost of medicine from the health of the patient. What’s the other bad thing about the bill? It’s going to raise everybody’s taxes. It’s going to raise everybody’s costs and it’s going to raise everybody’s insurance premiums.

EPM: Assuming that we need to control cost, what’s wrong with how this bill goes about accomplishing this task?

Coburn: The assumption [in Congress] is that we need to spend more money to control costs.  That’s ridiculous!  One in three dollars that we spend in health care today doesn’t do anything to help people get well or prevent people from getting sick.

I have a friend who now practices medicine. He’s an internist and a great doctor. A year ago he quit taking Medicare and Medicaid. All he does is cash business. He let four people go in his office. He only has one employee now. Those four people weren’t doing anything to help people get well. They were doing the business of medicine rather than the health care of medicine. Truly, 50 to 60 percent of the overhead of every health care organization is spent complying with the rules and filling out the paperwork. [My friend] now sees fewer patients, says he’s practicing the best medicine he’s practiced in his life, and he makes the same amount of money. His prices are very reasonable. And if someone doesn’t have money, he’ll still take care of them.
 
EPM: The supporters of this bill claim that it will increase the number of family practitioners in this country.  You are a family practitioner.  Do you agree?

Coburn: No. It will not increase the number of family practitioners.  This bill does nothing to pay family practitioners more, it only helps them pay off their loans. One in fifty doctors who graduated from medical school last year went into primary care. Just one in fifty. So how do you incentivize people to go into primary care? You pay them more! What [the government] is going to do is provide all of these subsidies for loans, but [medical students] won’t go. They’re going to realize that they can spend one more year in residency and earn twice or three times the earnings over the long haul.

EPM: What do you think will happen if this bill passes?

Coburn: Forty-five to fifty year old doctors are not going to play this game.  If they have a way to retire, they are going to do it.

EPM: Will we have more specialists or fewer?
   
Coburn: Medicare has created an absolute shortage of cardiovascular surgeons. They pay about $1,200 for a heart bypass now. These guys have 8 years of post-medical school training. They have 12 years of training in medicine before they ever get a start earning a penny. And now what used to be a $3000 procedure is now a $1500 procedure. The program at the University of Oklahoma shut down for cardiovascular surgeons because they couldn’t get anyone to go into it.
   
EPM: Senator Reid claims that this bill will cover everyone, cut the deficit and save lives.  What do you say?

Coburn: If you use real accounting, this is a $2.5 trillion bill that will run massive deficits. Here’s why. Number one, Congress will never cut Medicare. That’s $500 billion more. Number two, the doc fix. The doc fix will get fixed, but they’ll never cut spending somewhere else to pay for it. That’s another $274 billion. Then we’re going to increase those eligible for Medicaid. And we don’t have the money to pay for it. And then finally, everything you buy in health care now is going to get a new tax on it. Your drugs are going to get a new tax, your insurance is going to get a new tax, your medical devices are going to get a new tax. And then finally, since they charge you only $750 to not have health insurance, what do you think healthy people 40 and under are going to do? They’re going to take the $7000 or $8000 that they were contributing to their employer and they’re going to keep it, pay the $750, put $4000 away every year and if I get sick, then go buy the insurance. What’s that going to do to the insurance industry? The healthy people are not going to be in the pool. So the pool is going to be smaller and the pool is going to be made of sicker, older people. So everybody’s premium is going to rise. So not only are we going to have massive deficits from it, but the price that everybody pays is going to go up. Plus, we’re going to tax small businesses, we’re going to tax individuals, we’re going to raise the Medicare tax and then take the money from Medicare – which has a 75-year unfunded liability of $39 trillion – and create another government program.   

EPM: Can you explain your numbers?

Coburn: Over the next ten years, 55 million more Americans are going to go into Medicare. The baby boomers. My generation. We’ve been paying in, but the amount of money to pay for our health care is in deficit by $39 trillion over the next 75 years. In other words, that’s what we’ve promised but don’t have in the bank. And that’s the differential after the taxes are collected. So if you’re going to raise the Medicare tax, it ought to go to fund that differential rather than create another government program.
The government controls 61% of health care now, if you add up Tri-Care, VA, Indian Health Care, federal employees, etc… Tell me one of those that is efficient, working on budget and delivering the care that we want them to have. None of them. And we’re going to put the rest of the care in the government’s hands?

If you were to go back and look, when did health care inflation start at 2.5 times what the regular CPI was? When they instituted Medicare. Why? Because we have this disconnect between the purchase of health care and payment.

EPM: So how do you bring cost under control?
 
Coburn: First of all you incentivize tort reform throughout the country. You’d save $100 billion on health care tomorrow. The numbers on malpractice suits are that 80% that get filed get dropped because they’re just attempts at extortion. Of the 20% that either get handled or go to court, only net 3% end up being found in favor of the plaintiff. And the ones who win, who have legitimate injury, only get 40% of the money. And it takes forever for them to get compensated. So one of the ways to [reform] would be loser pays. Go to English law. You would save $100 billion the first year you had that in effect.

 
EPM: Would that really change the way we practice?
 
Coburn: It would over time. It would take 10 or 15 years for the changes to happen on the physician side. We’ve developed this habit [of defensive medicine] because of being sued inappropriately.
EPM: What other ways can we lower health care costs?

Coburn: Create real competition and transparency in the insurance industry. And you can only do that by allowing people to buy what they want. So if I want to buy a $25,000 deductible policy and I can find someone in this country to sell it to me, I can buy it. I can’t do that now. I live in Oklahoma. The highest deductible policy you can buy is $7500. Also, allow associational group health plans. Let small businesses come together and pool their resources and contract out on a broader base of indemnification. Small businesses have no buying power, so you allow them to combine. Finally, allow the markets to function. The problem with all of these bills in Washington is that they’re government centered, not patient centered.

EPM: You don’t seem very optimistic about your colleagues in the Senate.


Coburn: What ails Congress today, in my view, is people who are making decisions at this level who have never done anything except politics.  They are wonderful people, they care about the country, but they are clueless when it comes to common sense.

I don’t think anyone with less than 20 or 25 years of experience in life should be in politics; someone who has been around the block and knows how to prioritize things. The problem with Washington is that they don’t want to prioritize anything. They just want to keep charging it to our kids.

Healthcare Debate and Reform

This is the cold, hard truth, and although I mentioned this article in my last post, I think that it is so important to understand and share with others that I have posted it here in its entirety (call your representatives!):

Francis Collins, Part 1 & ‘finding waldo’

Have you ever played the book game ‘finding waldo’? I thought I would share this brief article and see if anyone wants to post a comment sharing with us what they find ironic/problematic with this article that was the lead article in medicine’s premier journal-The New England Journal of Medicine. I will share what I found in a follow up post.

Opportunities and Challenges for the NIH — An Interview with Francis Collins
Robert Steinbrook, M.D.
Francis Collins, the physician and geneticist who was sworn in as the 16th director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in August 2009, anticipates scientific opportunities and budgetary challenges. Although the NIH received $10.4 billion in new funding under the American Recovery and ReinvestmentAct, the money must be spent by September 2010 and the institutes’budget has otherwise been relatively flat since 2003 (see graph).1 Fiscal year 2011 begins on October 1, 2010, and prospects are uncertain.

Collins, 59, has led the Human Genome Project and directed the National Human Genome Research Institute at NIH; his laboratory has identified many important genes. He also established the BioLogos Foundation, which addresses the interface between science and faith, and wrote a best-selling 2006 book, The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief. Some observers expressed concern that his personal religious beliefs would affect his judgments as NIH director.2 When he became director, Collins resigned from the foundation, ended his involvement in public discussions about science and faith, and provided reassurances that his agenda for the institutes is scientific, not religious.
(vol 361:1321-1323 October 1, 2009)

Promising the Impossible

The OC Register had a concise and important editorial in today’s newspaper regarding the healthcare issues.  As always please share your thoughts with us.

Promising the impossible

Reformers’ health care promises not worth a wooden nickel.

John Stossel

John Stossel
Syndicated columnist,
Co-anchor of ABC News’ “20/20”

I keep reading about health-care “reform,” but I have yet to see anyone explain how the government can make it easier for more people to obtain medical services, control the already exploding cost of those services and not interfere with people’s most intimate decisions.

You don’t need to be a Ph.D. in economics to understand that government cannot do all three things. (Judging by what Paul Krugman writes (http://tinyurl.com/lgpr4o), a Ph.D. may be an obstacle.)

The New York Times describes a key part of the House bill: “Lawmakers of both parties agree on the need to rein in private insurance companies by banning underwriting practices that have prevented millions of Americans from obtaining affordable insurance. Insurers would, for example, have to accept all applicants and could not charge higher premiums because of a person’s medical history or current illness” (http://tinyurl.com/knzczq).

No more evil “cherry-picking.” No more “discrimination against the sick. But that’s not insurance. Insurance is the pooling of resources to cover the cost of a possible but by no means certain misfortune befalling a given individual. Government-subsidized coverage for people already sick is welfare. We can debate whether this is good, but let’s discuss it honestly. Calling welfare “insurance” muddies thinking.

Such “reform” must increase the demand for medical services. That will lead to higher prices. Obama tells us that reform will lower costs. But how do you control costs while boosting demand?

The reformers make vague promises about covering the increased demand by cutting other costs. We should know by now that such promises aren’t worth a wooden nickel. The savings never materialize.

Some of the savings are supposed to come from Medicare. The Times reports “Lawmakers also agree on proposals to squeeze hundreds of billions of dollars out of Medicare by reducing the growth of payments to hospitals and many other health care providers.”

With the collapse of the socialist countries, we ought to understand that bureaucrats cannot competently set prices. When they pay too little, costs are covertly shifted to others, or services dry up. When they pay too much, scarce resources are diverted from other important uses and people must go without needed goods. Only markets can assure that people have reasonable access to resources according to each individual’s priorities.

Assume Medicare reimbursements are cut. When retirees begin to feel the effects, AARP will scream bloody murder. The elderly vote in large numbers, and their powerful lobbyists will be listened to.

The government will then give up that strategy and turn to what the Reagan administration called “revenue enhancement”: higher taxes on the “rich.” When that fails, because there aren’t enough rich to soak, the politicians will soak the middle class. When that fails, they will turn to more borrowing. The Fed will print more money, and we’ll have more inflation. Everyone will be poorer.

The Times story adds: “They are committed to rewarding high-quality care, by paying for the value, rather than the volume, of [Medicare]services.”

Value to whom? When someone buys a service in the market, that indicates he values it more than what he gives up for it. But when the taxpayers subsidize the buyer, the link between benefit and cost is broken. Market discipline disappears.

Listening to the health-care debate, I hear Republicans and Democrats saying it’s wrong to deny anyone anything. That head-in-the-sand attitude is why Medicare has a $36-trillion unfunded liability (http://tinyurl.com/72bm5h). It’s not sustainable – and they know it.

They’ve given us a system that now can be saved only if bureaucrats limit coverage by second-guessing retirees’ decisions. Government will decide which Medicare services have value and which do not. Retirees may have a different opinion.

One may be willing to give up the last year of life if he’s in pain and has little hope for recovery. Another may want to fight to the end. But when taxpayers pay, the state will make one choice for all retirees.

Now, to reduce the financial burden of the medical system, Obama proposes a plan that inevitably will extend the second-guessing to the rest of us. So much for his promise not to interfere with our medical decisions.

Purple People

“Now tell me again who is blue and who is red?”

Racist, stupid, bigoted, evil….these are some of the words used to describe ‘us’ by ‘them’.

Intolerant, arrogant, angry, blind….these are some of the words used to describe ‘them’ by ‘us’.

Something has gone terribly wrong here.

We worship a God who is BIGGER than ALL of THAT!

We follow a God who became a man who was beaten, whipped, tortured, mocked by the ruling government of his day.

We cherish the LOVE of a God who was mocked by guards who made him wear a robe that symbolized royalty, KINGSHIP as they laughted and scorned and cried out, “King of the Jews! Ha Ha Ha!”

The robe he wore was PURPLE: The color of KINGSHIP.

We are NOT blue; we are NOT red.  We ARE the PURPLE people.  We follow and worship the God in the PURPLE robe who loves each of us as if we are the ONLY person in the universe.

Share with us your comments after you listen to Rob Bell’s teaching titled: Beware the Dogs and Greg Boyd’s teaching titled: Defying Tanks.  These are 2 of the MOST challenging sermons that I have heard.  After you listen, PLEASE share your thoughts on some practical and specific ways that we can transform our world!