Re: Jim, I need your voice on health care--Sorry, sir

Comments

[this is good]
Well written. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
The lack of understanding of the Constitution of the United States in this rant is displayed in all its splender. The time to point out all the errors and then the lack of interest for the truth by its author is frustrating.
[this is good]
Brons. The constitution is strong too, and the nation.

JBodine's comment is unreadably incoherent. Is it an indictment of the schools' failure to teach English, or is it simply an idiosyncratic and individual refusal to communicate?

The future of the nation, and the future of rational, cooperative society, will rely more on people who can express themselves rather than on people who cannot. Thank goodness.
[das ist gut]
It is important to make public, in what desastrous situation a sudden illness or an accident can lead without accesss to health care. The insurance system in the US is elitary on the one hand and doesn´t care for the self-emlpoyed either.
I hope that your letter will have an wake up-effect!
Yes, they are strong, but still "eternal vigilance", as they say. Having seen habeas corpus weakened and posse comitatus discarded in the horrendous expansion of the Insurrection Act; having seen America not only torture, but to adopt a policy of torture; having seen us deploy mercenaries and put them above our laws and those in the occupied nation, let alone international law; having seen state secret and executive privilege abuse become the norm, I am I think, justifiably concerned for their health.

My whole Vox Libertas blog started when I was laid off on the day that the Military Commissions Act was passed and I realized that I was more worried about about habeas corpus than I was about being the unemployed head of household and sole bread-winner of a family of five (plus a series of young people who were having hard times on their own). When I realized that I was weighing things way it drove home how seriously I felt about the dangers to the Republic.

Similarly, in the midst of my simultaneous financial and health care crises, which have me for the first time in m life accepting rather than giving charity, I found that the issues of Civil Liberties, of the immunity of the most powerful, the shield of "State Secrets", the embracing of preventative prolonged detention, the public defense of torture weighed heavier on my mind that the need, the very serious need for financial and health care reform. And once again, it was a wake up call.

Yes, I am that concerned. And if that is so, then how can I not say so? How can I not reply to Obama and tell him my priorities, the depth of my feelings on this matter? I'm an agnostic and a Deist. The faith that I have tells me that when the Universe sends me a message, when opportunity comes, or startling revelation, I must act on it. Consider it a karmic debt, if you will, or a submission to the ways of Providence or the sheer practicality of enlightened self-interest played out with paying back and paying forward. My faith and duty, my love of Country, require that I not be silent.

I am bold enough to think that the Founders would agree with me, that their principles and devotion to reason and Nature's God is what lead them to create a Constitution and a nation as strong and as good as ours are. How can I not honor them and all thouse who have served this nation with their duty and blood, honor them by speaking out?
[this is good]

Glad you speak out. Also glad that you can form complete sentences and have something to say in them.

I too, like you, worry about the decay of legal principles. Like you I worry about people staying silent, staying ignorant, staying stupid.

I also worry about the long term and cumulative effects of bad thinking and incoherent expression on participative democracy.

But in spite of our faults, there is still great and abiding strength here. More strength when people speak out passionately and with substance.

oh. so thats whats important complete sentences!! incase you didn't know it,our founding fathers broke a couple of laws of their time,because of their beliefs they chose to do the right thing not the ''legal'' thing.that bush bendt the hell out of some laws, people were freed lives were saved and democracy was given as a gift to a couple more countrys.but like the people who will break laws for the greater good,there are people who will break laws for the greater''bad'' and considering half of obamas team has already spent time in jail or are one step away from going there,i think it will be a long time before he decides that the law applys to him..and look all that and no spell check..

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Brons

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Brons
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Engineer, Systems Architect, Team Builder, Philosopher, Amateur Historian (Vox Libertas also on LJ, MySpace, BlogSpot + dKos)
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