Healthcare Carrot in Ear

We didn’t get to be a great nation by being gullible. But when it comes to healthcare, gullible we are.

We spend twice as much as the Japanese, Canadians, British and French. Two dollars spent on healthcare, one dollar wasted.

And the quality of our care? Forbes business magazine reports the U.S. is not ranked within the top ten for medical outcomes.

Hugely profitable medical, pharmaceutical and insurance interests push the argument that Americans should do battle with medical realities with little or no help from our government. That approach can leave families— even those with good coverage through employers — one tumor, one car crash, one tumble-down-the-stairs away from bankruptcy. (Medicare protection can’t come too soon.)

Politicians financed by the medical industry use the word “socialism” to scare us off of a plan to protect all Americans. They talk of free markets, competition and consumer choice, but our current system delivers on none of those promises.

Try unraveling your insurance riders or tracking the charges from an out-of-network emergency-room doctor, you’ll find yourself at the mercy of higher than average call volumes.

This is an election year. Let the candidates know you have an opinion on healthcare.

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African Women Learning English

Nobody wants these women to speak the English language more than they do.They know better than anyone that their futures depend on achieving a certain mastery of the language we speak.

Some years ago there was an ad for volunteers to tutor immigrants studying English. I responded and found it to be a good fit.

Working with newcomers from a dozen countries started me wondering what it takes to learn a language from scratch. I’ve invested six years trying to answer that question.

Taking a introductory course in Spanish at a community college got me ready to study in Spain. (No reason this shouldn’t be fun, I told myself.) I’ve followed up with classes, evenings of conversation and reading lists ever since.

Unlike my clients I’m under no pressure to nail a language to land a job — and a good thing too. If you ask me a question in Spanish there’s still a better-than-even chance I’ll ask you to repeat it. Sometimes I nod and just pretend to understand.

It’s easy to forget that we learn our childhood language over decades. Our mistakes are seen as normal and even cute. But these Africa immigrants are confronted with an immediate, real-life crossword puzzle of nouns, verbs and adjectives wrapped in contradictions and exceptions. It’s more difficult than I had expected.

But I’m here to predict success for the four of them.

With patience and effort, they will undergo a change that borders on miraculous. Breakthroughs in language often occur at the moment a student is about to despair.

At some point intuitions, hunches and wild guesses prove to be correct more often than not. Patterns become familiar. Word associations kick in. Numbers can be understood. Nuance comes into play and jokes start to make sense.

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Climate and Science

Their lives were controlled by the god that supplied their heat and light.

It dictated when they would plant and pick. They tracked the phases of the moon, and used the constellations to navigate home safely.

Around the Third Century BC, a Greek named Pythagoras speculated that the Sun is the center of the known universe. His ridiculous idea fell on deaf ears. And as for Earth being a sphere? They laughed.

Two millennia later Isaac Beeckman observed that we see the sun through something that has substance and presses down on us. Oxygen was identified as air’s most abundant element in the 1770s. Again, there were doubters aplenty.

We now know sunshine warms our planet using a short wavelength and that heat radiates back out at night with a longer wavelength. Not everyone agrees that excess ‘greenhouse gases’ trap those longer rays and allow less heat to escape.

There have always been those who distrust science.

Galileo was forced to denounce his heliocentric ‘heresy’ and spend the rest of his life under house arrest. In the 1800s surgeons refused to wash their hands, fearing people would blame them for spreading diseases.

You’re free to deny the sun will rise tomorrow but the Theory of Probability says otherwise — we’re able to predict to a nanosecond when the sun will break the horizon.

This coming Sunday morning at 04:19 (GMT), the Earth’s annual swing around the Sun will reach its solstice. We’ll see the shortest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere and the exact opposite in the south.

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Milo’s videos

 

Instead of movie stars and sports heroes, M’s role model is the guy who created Johnny Bravo.

M started coming into our coffee shop with his dad back during his preschool years. We see a bit less of him these days — he has things to do.

Few of us realized M’s fascinated by first responders — the firefighters, medics, hazmat and animal-protection teams who serve us all.

His parents have taken him to visit his heroes at their facilities. He downloads databases detailing emergency calls published by municipalities, absorbing everything he can get his hands on.

“I’m kind of different.” The thirteen-year-old director and animator has been staging live performances for years, at the same time developing videos with his friend Charlie.

Trying one technique after another, trapped in one dead-end after another, the resolute M has ended up creating a collection of animated videos.

He uses his iPhone to construct stop-motion animation — moving a fire truck across the screen takes 50 or 60 shots. His typical video is shorter than two minutes and takes roughly four hours to complete. There are no scripts or storyboards. M exploits accidents for all their worth

At his tender age, the kid already knows what an elevator pitch is and explains that his work’s about more than sirens and speeding vehicles — it’s about responders risking their lives to rescue others.

His YouTube channel currently has 14.2 thousand subscribers; a recent video has attracted more than three-million visits.

M thinks it’s important to keep a distance from his online popularity. In a world that is insane for celebrity, he has decided to stay anonymous.

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Wendy, A Large Small Woman

Wendy came out of the gate fast.

By the seventh grade she was attending high-school classes alongside students years ahead. During high-school, she was recruited into undergrad studies at a flagship university.

At the same time Wendy liked earning her way. She babysat at $6.25 an hour, and at age fifteen took a job “breading chicken” until midnight. She had saved $10,000 before she was out of her teens.

She was young when she met the husband with whom she had a son and a daughter. Pursuing of an associate degree at her community college proved difficult and she decided she could afford to take a year off from her education.

Wendy will tell you that was a mistake.

The mother of two was forced back to work full time. She clocked so many hours that the restaurant “rewarded” her with empty promotion that stripped her of overtime pay.

Now years later as general manager at a restaurant chain, she’s responsible for hiring, firing, coaching, planning and sales — she knows hundreds of customers by first name.

The not large woman can “put away a truck” with the best of them. Wendy knows that food service is punishing and that her knees will creep up on her.

One of her goals is to celebrate her fiftieth birthday without a mortgage. She’s anxious to help her daughter in college avoid the crippling debt she finally managed to overcame.

There’s talk of one day owning a coffee house (cozy, lined with books) that will satisfy a love of engaging the public. There’s talk of fascinating places around the world patiently waiting for her to arrive.

But for now there’s a more immediate goal. Wendy Borges is bent on keeping the various generations of her family intact, and within reach. She comes from a community that places a value on these things.

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