Sunday, March 20, 2011

The Most Courageous, Important Man in America




Meet Wendell Potter. I'm sorry you don't already know him. I'm grateful you'll have the chance.
Mr Potter spent years as the head of corporate communications for large health insurance companies Humana and Cigna. He walked away from a six-figure salary because he could no longer spin the insurance industry's talking points, an industry who's focus has shifted in recent decades from patient care to satisfying their Wall Street investors.


I had the great honor of meeting Mr. Potter, who has written a book, Deadly Spin, that goes into great detail about how your insurance company is using your premium dollars to bankroll the relentless propaganda and lobbying efforts focused on protecting their seemingly endless profits. He didn't have to do this. He's not exactly a young guy. He could have stuck it out a few more years, raked in comfortable money, and sailed into an easy retirement. But a crisis of conscience, building for years, was solidified by a trip to a free health fair on a visit back home in east Tennessee. A few miles away in Wise County, Virginia, he witnessed as America joined the Third World:
"Nothing prepared me for what I saw as I walked through the gates... I felt as if I'd stepped into a movie set or war zone. Hundreds of people, many of them soaking wet from the rain that had been falling all morning, were waiting in lines that stretched out of view. As I walked around, I noticed that some of those lines led to barns and cinder block buildings with row after row of animal stalls, where doctors and nurses were treating patients. Other people were being treated by dentists under open sided tents. Many were lying on gurneys on rain-soaked pavement. Except for curtains serving as makeshift doors on animal stalls, there was little privacy. ...Dentists were pulling teeth and filling cavities, optometrists were examining eyes for glaucoma and cataracts, doctors and nurses were doing Pap smears and mammograms, surgoens were cutting out skin cancers, and gastroenterologists were conducting sigmoidoscopies. Huge amounts of medications were being dispensed. ... As I took in the scene at the Wise County Fairgrounds, I realized that the folks in those lines and animal stalls could have been my relatives or my parents' neighbors. I could tell from their faces that they were people with whom I shared cultural roots, but who-for whatever reason-simply hadn't had the good fortune to land a high-paying job and a cushy office in a Philadelphia skyscraper. ... Among the reasons I finally left my job at CIGNA was that with each promotion, I got a better understanding of how insurers get rid of enrollees they don't want-the very people who need insurance-when they become a drain on profits. ... The power of my experience in Wise County really hit home a couple of weeks later as I was boarding one of the two private jets CIGNA uses to fly executives around the country. ... As usual, on this flight, a uniformed attendant brought me lunch on a gold-rimmed plate and handed me gold plated flatware with which to eat it. My thoughts turned immediately to the people I had seen being treated in animal stalls just days earlier. A few months later, I saw an article in Architectural Digest ... it described a 24 room mansion ... it didn't disclose the name of the retired executive for whom this mansion was built, but it was common knowledge in the executive suite at CIGNA who lived there. It was the company's former chairman and CEO, Wilson Taylor, whose salary in 2000, his last year with the company, was 24 million dollars-which doesn't include the additional millions he reaped from stock options and deferred compensation. When I read that article and saw the stunning pictures of Taylor's new place, it became clear to me, in ways that it hadn't before, that people enrolled in CIGNA's insurance plans had actually helped pay for that 24 room stone manse with it's 17th century Spanish columns and it's impossibly French kitchen. Furthermore, I could now see clearly, those people in Wise County would not have had to stand in line in the rain for hours to get get care in animal stalls if so much of the money Americans spend for health care didn't wind up in the pockets of insurance company executives and their Wall Street masters."
This is just a small part of the real story about what's happening with healthcare in this country. Does this sound like the richest, most successful democracy in the history of civilization to you? Can you actually support this immoral inequality? We have the greatest healthcare on Earth-if you have means to obtain it. Are you lucky enough to have insurance? Don't get too comfortable, it can disappear at any moment. And no reforms Washington or any one else ever enacts will make a meaningful difference until we eliminate the strongest deterrent to equal healthcare access: the insurance companies.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Do Republicans Hate Small Businesses?



Above is my letter to the editor that appeared in The Miami Herald on Friday, January 21, 2011. House Republicans successfully voted to repealLink the 2010 health insurance reform law. Of course, it was grandstanding at it's finest: they knew there was no chance it would pass the Senate or survive a presidential veto. But they insisted they had to do it since they promised the voters they would. Of course, they also promised not to kill jobs or raise taxes, which this would clearly do. In fact, the non partisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that this repeal would add 230 billion dollars to the deficit and leave 32 million more people uninsured as detailed here: http://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=1750

Amazingly, the bill that they want repealed is remarkably similar to what Republicans proposed in 1993 in opposition to Hillary Clinton's proposed reforms as detailed in this chart compiled by non partisan Kaiser Health News. The difference today? It wasn't their idea this time.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Copy, Right?



The clenched fist. The admonition to join the revolution. Looking at these two images, you'd probably assume that Howard Stern wants you to buy whatever Triton Digital is selling. Of course, you'd be wrong. The two have nothing to do with each other. The Howard Stern ad likely goes back as far as 2005, before his show's debut on then Sirius Satellite Radio. The Triton ad and imaging doesn't appear on their website in any way and I've never seen it online before. I found this ad on a geeky radio website called Radio-Info.com. It seems that, according to their website, " Triton Digital Media provides local media companies with technology and services to grow their brands, their audiences, their distribution, and their revenue. We provide solutions to meet our client’s needs in the digital age."
In other words, they do sales, videos, audio, websites, training and app development for TV, radio, print, and other local media.
They're trying to sell their services to radio people. So, they probably know a thing or two about radio, right? Do you think they knew that they were copying Sirius/XM radio's branding for the Howard Stern show? Could this be just an amazing coincidence? More on this in my next posting.



UPDATE:
I sent several electronic communications to the Howard 100 News team. Unfortunately, they never responded to my inquiries. Apparently, they're more interested in detailing every aspect of Gary dell'Abate's diseased toe nails.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

A Steve Spurrier Top Ten List


Ah, it's that time of year again. The pads are cracking. The band is rehearsing. Florida is getting ready to play Miami. Of Ohio. It must mean that college football is about to consume many Saturdays for millions nationwide real soon. When I think of college football, I imagine cool, breezy, fall afternoons in the deep south, where gold and auburn leaves frame a packed erector set of a stadium that's been expanded so many times, it's now jammed with crowds of rabid fans so numerous that there are more people in the stadium than in all of the surrounding towns combined (run on sentence alert!). And this year, I know you're wondering about the same thing I am: Why can't South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier match the success he had in Gainesville, FL, in his new home in Columbia, South Carolina? After much deliberation, I've developed a Top Ten list that makes it all make sense:

10. I've been to Columbia. I spent a month there one day.
9. When recruits learn USC is in Columbia, they refuse the offers citing their lack of Spanish. It's also not the other USC.
8. Several recruits actually boarded flights for Colombia (the other one).
7. Do you really want to be known as a Gamecock for the rest of your life?
6. Gamecock. Isn't that illegal, Mr. Vick?
5. South Carolina Democrats just nominated an unemployed, alleged sexual predator who can barely speak in complete sentences and can't explain where his filing fee came from, for a seat in the United States Senate.
4. In Gainesville, Spring Break doesn't require a Greyhound ticket.
3. South Carolina still displays the Confederate flag on a monument on the state capital grounds. Welcome to 1861.
2. Even Governor Sanford couldn't find a girlfriend in South Carolina.
1. You get plenty of training in creative thinking in Gainesville figuring out new ways each year why you can't play Miami, FL in football. Go 'Canes!

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Drawing Obama



If you have no life, like me, you may be interested in this cartoon by Pulitzer Prize winning Miami Herald cartoonist Jim Morin. You may also be interested that they printed my response to it a few days later. After my wife saw it, she alerted me that they misspelled my name. She said it should have been L-O-S-E-R.
You can click these to make them larger.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Shocking Images!

Have a look at these pictures taken last week during a fierce electrical storm at virtually the same instant by two Chicago Tribune photographers. You'll likely recognize the twin spires on the Willis (formerly Sears) Tower. The shorter building is the new Trump Tower. Me thinks that's the building that needs a different name. Anyway, they're insisting that these photos are 100% legitamate and unaltered. This isn't Photoshop. It's Photoshock.

Page An Affront

Large, 98 point type, (or whatever) should only be used in a newspaper to display the most urgent, important news. It lends gravity to the story and puts it in perspective. This was lost on our friends at the Sun Sentinel a few years ago when they launched a childish new design that encourages this sort of screaming every day. Now, if the sensationalized story is actually news, that's one thing. But when it's a weather prediction, front page, above the fold, that teases a story that's not even in the A section, it feels silly. It's sillier still, (O.K., stupid) when said prediction never comes true. There wasn't a drop anywhere to be found, and I've got the wilted, withering grass to prove it, despite the fact that it rained here Friday morning. The good news is that my daughters' 6th and 4th birthday party was high and dry. Actually, I think the person who decided that this front page was a good idea, was probably having his/her party at Chuck E. Cheese's that day, too.


Sun Sentinel Broward Edition
26 Jun 2010