Memo to VA: First do no harm

This is great news, he said sarcastically.

Thousands of veterans are reportedly at risk for HIV after receiving colonoscopies using apparatus with unclean water pumps at both the Miami and Augusta, Ga., VA hospitals. The Miami Herald reports:

“The hospital discovered March 4 that the pumps — which are attached to the tubes used in the procedures — were being rinsed but not disinfected. This, (Miami VA chief of staff John) Vara said, creates the slight chance that back-flow from the pumps could lead to serious or potentially deadly infections.”

The revelation comes after almost 6,500 veterans in “Murfreesboro, Tenn., were urged to get blood tests after the VA discovered there had been improper handling of equipment used for colonoscopies,” the Herald article by Robert Samuels went on to say. This happened back in February.

You can only guess how safe that makes me feel after having a colonoscopy a few months ago at the Houston VA hospital. Even though it isn’t one of the hospitals mentioned, something like that shaves off a little confidence. What the hell is going on with these folks anyway? Getting a colonoscopy isn’t a great bundle of fun as it is. VA Secretary Gen. Eric Shinskei needs to kick some butt, no pun intended.

A treatise light on government and the ignorant class

The ignorant class — all upper, middle and lower — can find all kinds of reasons to hate “government.” This is even though those same people can’t seem to find reason if was implanted into their brain and written inside their eyelids.

Government. Bad. Bad government. Big government. Big, bad government. They want to take your guns and your money. They want to make you wait in long lines. They want to ruin your day that big, bad government.

Well I tell you what, pal. It isn’t always so good from here among us who work for the government, even part-timers like MemyselfandI. The government expects its employees to divine all its policies. Ignorance of the law, or the rules, is no excuse. The government doesn’t want you to work when you are not supposed to be working. Wink. Wink. But if you don’t work when you shouldn’t how is the work going to get done?

It’s time to take a breath after a day of fighting. I wasn’t fighting a person or persons. I was/am fighting a big brick Berlin Wall of frustration called government. That same government the ignorant class so despises until they need something from it.

All hail the ignorant class.

Maybe Obama won't be a future guest host but …

As a rule I don’t normally watch Jay Leno or only in very small amounts. I don’t dispute that he is funny but his show and I have never clicked. Perhaps no one can ever live up in my eyes to the King, Johnny Carson. Last night, however, I did watch the president’s appearance on “The Tonight Show.” I am not a TV critic, nor a pundit, nor do I play one on TV. Nonetheless, here are some observations.

Overall I thought Obama came off remarkably well. He didn’t go super-serious or wonkish nor did he try to be too cute. Obviously, he bombed on his remark about his bowling looking like the Special Olympics. Oops.

What Obama was able to show during his appearance is his ability to talk like an adult about some very serious and complex issues, yet convey his message in an easily understood and even-handed manner.

No doubt people who hate Obama will find some reason to hate him more and ping him on his role as First Guest. After all, such people really don’t need another reason to hate him other than the fact that he is president. Still others, pundits, historians, people who have to think between the beginning of one sentence and the next, will say Obama put the presidency into the bottom rungs of that dreaded “popular culture” by appearing on “The Tonight Show.” Well, they are only partially right. Obama really should have appeared on Letterman.

Creeping constructionism

 

Posted by Picasa

Like some slow moving locust infestation eating its way across the Corn Belt, the construction work on Calder Avenue in my town of Beaumont, Texas, slowly creeps westward. Today it was near the Exxon station and Calder Avenue Washateria where the avenue intersects with Ewing Street. Tomorrow, who knows? Wilcox, Arizona?

The busy four-lane thoroughfare which leads to downtown has been chopped up like so much concrete ice blocks for some time now. For one who has to drive into town such as I do — whenever I have to go to my office — it has been a rather frustrating exercise because one never seems to know what streets will be blocked off leading to Calder.

Our City-Government-At-Work indicates the construction is all for a good cause, to make badly needed drainage improvements. For a city built on a river only 45 miles from the Gulf of Mexico and only 16 feet or so above sea level, it would seem worthwhile to have decent drainage.

Indeed areas around Calder are flood prone and not just from those inconvenient little hurricanes but from massive rain storms as well. So I shouldn’t bitch about the construction and having to take alternate routes each and every day. One can even view the problem this way, it’s good training for getting around all those downed trees and power lines when the next hurricane blows through. Smile, brother, smile.

I am not outraged, just perhaps a bit raged

During the peak of the “awl” boom of the early 1980s the owner of a successful oil services industry company named Eddie Chiles became semi-famous by proclaiming: “I’m Mad.”

Chiles, then owner of the Western Company of North America, had a series of right-wing radio commentaries on which an announcer would ask: “Are you mad, Eddie Chiles?” Chiles would reply that “Yes I’m mad” and would then launch into a tirade against liberals in government and the virtues of capitalism. Chiles, who died in 1993, was quite a pitchman who would conveniently use government largess when it suited him. His company also had an ad campaign in which bumper stickers would trumpet: “If you don’t have an oil well, get one … ” Of course when the bubble burst in the mid 1980s you would see more bumper stickers which would say: “God, Just Give Me One More Oil Boom. I Promise Not To Piss It Away” or “Don’t tell my momma I work in the oil patch, she thinks I play piano in a whorehouse.”

The oil bust not only hit Chiles in the pocketbook it also cut into his ownership of the Texas Rangers baseball team, which he eventually sold to a group of businessmen which included future president George “Gee Dubya” Bush.

One can only imagine that if Chiles were around today he would be in hog heaven what with a Democratic-run government and fiscal disasters such as the fallout from the AIG bonus controversy. Instead of saying he was mad, however, Chiles might pick up the buzz word of the day “outraged.”

The cable news channels today make it seem like everyone within the borders of the United States is nine kinds of pissed off over AIG execs receiving mega bonuses after after the company was given a huge government handout. Perhaps that type of perception might play to the national security profile. If our enemies believed the whole country was mad as hell, combined with Americans and their private arsenals in states such as here in Texas, then it might just scare away potential adversaries.

Oh sure, a lot of people are pissed or say they are pissed about the AIG deal. From what I can see though is mainly a bunch of politicians — bipartisan but mostly Republicans — playing to the cameras. But the larger question in all of this is just how many people are genuinely angry and to a certain extent, why are they so angry?

Do I think that a bunch bean counters whose exceptional greed caused them to run their company in the ground deserve million-dollar bonuses? Of course not. Do I think the people responsible for the whole ball of wax should be punished in some form or fashion? Yes. But am I mad, or perhaps to be more trendy, am I outraged? No, I am not mad, or outraged, if you wish.

These types of screw-ups or examples of outright thievery have been going on for years. Remember the $800 toilets for Air Force planes? And for years the business culture in this country has been get yours and screw everyone else. A million here, a million there and eventually you’re talking a lot of money.

Our president said today that this type of mindset needs to change. But I have seen it most of my life, so we’ll see. Even though Obama wasn’t the one who gave the AIG people their tons of dollars, he stepped up to the plate once more today and said: “The buck stops with me.” Or something to that effect. That is so refreshing compared to the “I don’t do any wrong” mantra of the Bushites that perhaps it will provide some impetus for change. I am kind of cynical though.

In the meantime, if you want to get mad or outraged or even a little raged then do whatever floats your boat. As for me, there are plenty things within sight and out my window, figuratively speaking, to potentially piss me off. The AIG debacle is certainly something I can’t change right away, so why should I be outraged?