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Bureaucrat Beat

Bureaucrat Beat: Live Like Us, Bad Verizon, and Racketeers

A local person came up with what we think has fabulous potential.  This person suggested that all officialdom have no better health insurance than their constituents. Obvious incentive for them to make it much better for the common masses when it's directly related to themselves.capitol

Since the current officials in office from here to there do not have the compassion or self-discipline to deprive themselves of benefits, it will take a law to make them do it.  Of course, they make the laws.  You get the picture.  A selfish, greedy government remains ensconced for a very long time.  Until they fail in some way and move along.

Speaking of moving along, another of our listeners sent along a laugh out loud bureaucratic story from Pennsylvania.  Seems the Department of Environmental Quality there sent a letter with self-righteous complaints about failure to get a permit for a debris dam built across the outlet streams of a pond.  They cited all the violations and demanded removal of the dams.  They sent the letter to a Mr. Ryan DeVries who shot back a reply to the bureaucrats that they would have to demand a permit beaverfrom, you guessed it, beavers. 

DeVries wrote, "My first dam concern is, aren't the beavers entitled to legal protection?"  He went on to write, "If you want the damed stream restored to a dam free-flow condition, please contact the beavers, but if you are going to arrest them, they obviously did not pay any attention to your dam letter, they being unable to read English." Bureaucrats caught between their own astounding lack of observation and Mr. DeVries fine sense of irony.

We hear locally that bureaucrats sometimes fail to truly study nature around the Eastern Sierra and understand the subtle relationships among animals, birds, weeds and grass as they conjure up bad regulations.

Another bad Verizon story today.  Yet another listener called in to report that he decided to closely examine his Verizon bill. It's a scarey thing, people. The result?  High blood pressure.  Seems the bill said that when his long distance calls add up to less than $30, he still has to pay the difference between that amount and $30.  This man used $1.76 in long distance calls, and Verizon charged him $28.24.  What???!!!!

We in the Bureaucrat Beat Newsroom put our heads together and came up with a word to explain what has happened in our racketeersworld today - racketeering.  Apply it all the way around.  Here's the dictionary definition:  "Racketeering - The activity of a person who commits crimes such as extortion, loansharking, bribery and obstruction of justice in furtherance of illegal business activities."

They still call these despicable acts by socially acceptable names - credit card interest rates, bank fees, phone bills, gas prices.  Oh, and let's not forget the biggest racket of all - Congress, where bribery and extortion have become Government 101.

And, to those who commented about the case of an Alameda man who drove to Mammoth to ski, broke his leg and spent eight days in a motel room as he struggled to get Mammoth Hospital to take care of him, we feel that in a country as rich as America it's citizens should at the very least have emergency care.  This man had no health insurance and that's when the trouble began, apparently.  We as a nation need to decide - do we want the pain of our people addressed or not?  Or do we want to say that only the rich and terrrrrrrribly intelligent deserve that consideration?

With that, this is Benett Kessler signing off for Bureaucrat Beat where we await your word on our lives in the Eastern Sierra and beyond.



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written by Tourbillon , March 10, 2010
"Do we want to say that only the rich and terrrrrrrribly intelligent deserve that consideration (of health insurance)?" Benett, that snarky comment gratuitously denigrates good faith observations posted on your page that personal responsibility should mean more than spending money on a luxury when you cannot or will not insure yourself from the foreseeable outcomes of exercising that luxury.

To be clear, it has NOT been argued that people should be deprived of health care. But the man in question was not a helpless indigent. He deprived himself of health care by choosing to spend a substantial sum of money skiing, leaving himself insufficient money for his own health care.

You ask, do we want the pain of our people addressed or not? Apparently your belief is that only government can do so, even when the "pain" is caused by avoidable irresponsible decisions. This is an extraordinarily paternalistic viewpoint and one that your readers should feel free to disagree with without being exposed to editorial snarkiness from a person who knows better.

EDITOR'S NOTE:
My only response is, would you prefer to let someone with a broken leg sit in a motel room until he gets gangrene?

By the way, this man did agree to pay $5,000 (maxed out his credit card) and $500 per month to cover his procedure.

My personal point of view would be that it's foolish to spend money on a ski trip and risk injury with no health insurance, but that's what he did. So, now what? Do we install the Ambassador of Correctness in the Emergency Room to determine who gets immediate help or not?

The fact that the hospital has declined to comment also leaves questions unanswered.

Benett Kessler

p.s. Come on, Tourbillon, can't you take a little snarky tete-a-tete?
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written by Jay Wheaton , March 11, 2010
The ignorance of some people is appalling. According to law, everyone in the USA can receive emergency medical care without having to prove the ability to pay or immigration status. The argument about The skier sitting in a motel room for 8 days without care is wrong or at the least incorrect. He did get excellent medical care in probably the best emergency room I have seen. I haven't seen any show of gratitude from Alameda skier to the citizens of Mono County for paying his hospital bill. If people are outraged at the hospitals actions (which I believe are correct and didn't break any laws) maybe the whiners should take up a collection to help him and maybe even include a ski pass for next time.

Editor's Note:
Wow. The cloud of self-righteousness over this guy is beginning to choke us in the Bureaucrat Beat Newsroom.

The guy is paying for his surgery. The hospital maxed out his credit card and he signed a payment plan agreement as many people do.

The problem, as best we were able to tell without getting the hospital's side of the story, seemed to be the lack of a direct plan from the start.

Benett Kessler
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written by whynotthink , March 12, 2010
Did someone tell him to sit in the motel for 8 days? Couldn't he get it splinted and drive home to have is local guvmint pay for fixing his problem? And he could afford a week in a motel, gas from back east, and lift tickets, but not health insurance? What's his priority?

EDITOR'S NOTE:

We understand some sympathetic locals helped the man. I guess you've never made a bad choice. Very fortunate for you. If per chance you ever do, I hope you don't injure yourself and fail to have the resources to take care of yourself.

Best,
Benett Kessler
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written by G. Adams , March 12, 2010
I think if you kids look into things, you'll find that many young, and otherwise healthy people don't have health insurance. I might add, although skiing is dangerous, so is driving to work, pumping gas, and apparently opening a verizon bill without ALS on standby. I wonder if it gets lonely on your pedestals??
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