Thursday, April 21, 2011

CONGRESSMAN PAUL RYAN – SLASHING SICK SENIORS by John P. Flannery



Republican Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI) heads the House Budget Committee and he’s on a harsh legislative mission to cut and slash health care for sick seniors and push others out of nursing homes. 

By the way, if you consider yourself middle class, no matter what may be your upper income aspirations, he’s not your friend either.  

If you are among the hoity-toity wealthy, then this is your man, the servant of your every selfish desire.

The government spending you want cut, is the spending on you he’s prepared to cut. 

The income tax you want reduced, is the tax on the wealthy that concerns him, not your taxes.

Ryan has publicly explained the personal philosophy that led him to his unconstitutional budgetary dystopia.  He’s a self-admitted Ayn Rand cultist. 

Rand, a Russian émigré wrote a book titled, “The virtue of selfishness.”  She decried any “altruism” – any hint of selflessness, or sacrifice for anyone or any thing else.

According to Rand, in a 70-page rant by her hero, John Galt, in her 1,168-page “philosophical” tome, “Atlas Shrugged,” it is all about “the man at the top of the intellectual pyramid” and he “contributes the most to all those below him.” 

Galt declared, “the man at the bottom who, left to himself, would starve in his hopeless ineptitude, contributes nothing to those above him, but receives the bonus of all of their brains.”  Thus, Galt’s oath: “I will never live for the sake of another man…”  So much for the golden rule.

In recent years, Rand’s newest recruits unsurprisingly arose out of the Tea Party movement – a “me movement,” funded by the Koch Brothers, and almost unparalleled for its selfish and elitist objectives. 

Ryan publicly praised the late Ms. Rand in D.C., stating, “The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand.” 

Ryan reportedly instructs his Hill staffers to study Rand’s elitist philosophy with its felicific calculus favoring the wealthy including the Koch Brothers, and declaiming the parasitic middle class.

It’s this core belief that became the bill he wrote that passed Congress last Friday.

Ryan’s bill kills Medicare dead 11 years hence, starting with slowly raising the age of eligibility, and then granting $8,000 vouchers to retirees to hand over to private insurance companies, no matter what the premiums cost, nor how they may increase over time, and without regard for how much health or prescription costs may go up.

Ryan’s bill cuts Medicaid $700 billion in the next decade.  No matter that Medicaid now pays for two-thirds of all nursing home residents.

Yaron Brook, President of the Ayn Rand Institute, explained Ryan’s medicare proposal in this way, people “must take care of themselves as they grow older.”

Ryan proposes to cut the wealthiest individual tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent, without reducing total tax revenue.  No money fairy is making up the difference.  They are going to have us, that “parasitic” middle class, pay the wealthy’s fair share.

Fortunately, Randian Ryan’s newly minted law has no legs in the U.S. Senate. 

But, if we’re not careful, we’ll yet awake to a Randian Ryan nightmare come true, a nation that no longer provides for our general welfare.

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Thursday, April 14, 2011

GAZETTE COLUMN: THE DUVALLS – A NEIGHBORLY REMINDER by John P. Flannery

Host Robert and Luciana Duvall
Photo by John Flannery
Everyone knows Academy award-winner Bobby Duvall - perhaps our greatest living actor. 
But he has also made a significant contribution to our region.
I first saw Duvall in the 60s in Greenwich Village playing Eddie Carbone in a revival of Arthur Miller’s “A View from the Bridge.”  He became that haunting Arthur “Boo” Radley, mentally disabled, appearing as if out of thin air from behind a slowly swinging door in an unforgettable scene with Atticus Finch (Gregory Peck) in “To Kill a Mockingbird.”  He was the Corleone’s mob consigliere to the “Godfather,” the Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore who loved the smell of napalm in the morning in “Apocalypse Now,” the Texas Ranger, Gus Macrae, who chose death rather than have his leg cut off in “Lonesome Dove,” and so many more sensational roles on stage and screen.
But Bobby is also a great neighbor. 
Bobby Duvall and his wife Luciana worked hard to help defeat the PATH transmission lines; they also resisted separate development plans by Disney and Walmart’s that might have destroyed the historic Bull Run Battlefield in Manassas.
Now, they are helping the PEC encourage us one and all to “buy fresh and buy local” from neighboring beef, pork and poultry farms, from vegetable and flower gardens, from Virginia wineries, and local bakeries. 
This way, our local farmers earn more than the discounted prices wholesalers pay them, remain viable, and continue to supply us with what’s fresh and healthy.
Bobby and Luciana hosted a “Meet the Farmer” gourmet tasting buffet prepared by Chef Claire Lamborne at their 360 acre horse farm, the Byrnley Farm in the Plains, to show us what’s available in the region.
But first you have to hear the story behind the venue where they convened their tasting.
Years ago, Bobby found he loved “the seedy” and “the sweetness” of the tango dance. 
While in Argentina working on a film, he met Luciana, a younger, striking, tall, dark-haired beauty. 
They shared an interest in the tango, and they made a film that Bobby wrote and directed. 
Bobby posed a critical question, by his character: “If I were younger, would I have a chance with you?” 
Luciana’s character answers, “You have a chance now.” 
And so he did.
They danced the tango on a finished polished barn floor at their farm. 
That’s where we had our tasting – at the soulful center of their homestead.
Bobby spoke before the dinner was under way. 
He insisted we had the richest soil in Virginia, praised the fresh chicken that was free of antibiotics, the beef better than that found in his beloved Argentina, without any hormones or steroids, the fine pork passed down through generations since James Madison, and the bread and exceptional wines. 
Bobby finished by declaring, without a murmur of dissent, that “Virginia is the last station before heaven.”
Former Congressman Tom McMillen said this was “a communal celebration of the produce, once tasted, that you can commend to others.”
Anne Donovan Larson said, “Loudoun was once the breadbasket of America, and could be significant once again.”
We must preserve and buy fresh produce from our local farms, and thank the Duvalls for reminding us of the treasure we have before it’s squandered.
# # #

Thursday, April 7, 2011

GAZETTE COLUMN: DENIED HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE BECAUSE YOU WERE SICK? THAT’S WRONG! by John P. Flannery


You may have health insurance now but can you keep it and can you be insured if you change jobs or, worse, become unemployed?
One of the significant bars to getting “new” insurance is a “pre-existing health condition?” 
According to the Department of Health and Human Services, anywhere from 50 million to 129 million non-elderly Americans have “pre-existing health conditions.”
It could be acne, hemorrhoids, toenail fungus, allergies, tonsillitis, bunions, but also chronic conditions including heart disease (affecting every third adult), cancer (affecting about 11 million Americans), diabetes, asthma, hay fever, lung disease, or a sports injuries; domestic violence is a pre-existing condition (in nine states).  It can even be a disease you’ve never had.  For example, if you have hay fever, you could have respiratory system diseases including bronchitis or pneumonia, and this possible affliction is treated as “pre-existing.”
Health Insurance companies in Virginia may discriminate against you if you have a pre-existing condition and seek to buy insurance in the individual insurance market.  This is particularly important when job-based health insurance group policies are declining, when those who separate from their employer can’t always afford the job-related insurance available under COBRA, and when we still have high unemployment.
Pre-existing conditions prompt insurers to charge higher premiums, demand larger deductibles, require bigger co-pays, set life-time benefit limits, and bar coverage entirely.
One 45-year old real estate agent had a kidney transplant and, afterwards, lost his insurance because he overlooked to complete a health questionnaire.  He couldn’t get new health insurance coverage to pay for the critical immunosuppressant medication required to guard against his body’s rejection of the new kidney; he had to pay $2,000 a month out of pocket.
The health insurance reform legislation passed by the U.S. Congress in 2010, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, HR 3590, signed into law by President Barack Obama, prevents insurance companies from refusing insurance because of your medical history or health risk.  Insurers also have to renew your policy provided you pay the premium, and they may not deny renewal or dilute coverage because you got sick.  But the rub is that this reform does not go into effect until January 10, 2014. 
Meantime, insurance companies, their lobbyists and our compliant public officials, are demanding this health reform be repealed.
One principal argument they make is that this health reform requires those who can afford health insurance to pay for insurance policies. 
The reason is that those who are healthy, if not required to buy insurance, could otherwise stay out of the insurance pool until they are sick and then free load on this reform granting them insurance coverage for any pre-existing condition. 
This program will only work if the insured pool is large, encompassing both those with relatively few claims (mostly the young and healthy), as well as those with serious medical challenges; in other words, only if the fund’s paid in premiums exceed the medical insurance claims that we file.
We need a law mandating insurance coverage for those with pre-existing conditions; a mandate that those who can afford health coverage get health coverage, and we have to resist those who would repeal this critical protection.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

GAZETTE COLUMN: HIP SHOOTING PROSECUTORS CONVICT THE INNOCENT by John P. Flannery

Author John Grisham & John Flannery
(photo: Holly S. Flannery)

Best-selling crime-writer John Grisham’s recent thriller, “Confession,” discloses how an over-reaching prosecution can coerce an 18 year old black sports hero in Texas into making a false confession corroborated by a lying trial witness.  In Grisham’s story, just before the execution, the true murdering rapist comes forward to confess, the lying trial witness recants, but the Texas Governor, State AG and the federal and state courts allow this innocent man to die.
If only this couldn’t happen in the real world.
But right here in Virginia in February 1984, an 18-year old black high school drop-out with no criminal record was arrested when he went to the grocery to buy sweet potatoes and bread for his family’s Sunday dinner. 
He had not raped anyone.  But the police collected five witnesses who claimed he had. 
Thomas spent 27 years in prison until two weeks ago when DNA proved he told the truth – that he was innocent all along.
But even innocence isn’t enough. 
Raul Herrera pleaded with the U.S. Supreme Court in 1992 to allow him to prove he was innocent, charging it was cruel and unusual to execute an innocent man in Texas or anywhere else.  Raul had four affidavits proving his brother confessed to committing the murders.  But the Supreme Court said they did not have to allow “every conceivable step … to eliminate the possibility of convicting an innocent person;” there was no constitutional right, they said, to allow a condemned man to prove his innocence. Strapped tight to a gurney, Herrera shouted afterwards, “I am an innocent man, and something very wrong is taking place tonight.”  It was the lethal injection that immediately followed.
Our so-called system is broke because of the license that we grant prosecutors.
Jail house snitches sent Steve Barnes to prison in New York for 20 years for a murder he didn’t commit; snitches are wholly unreliable and should be barred if they cannot be corroborated, and by something stronger than another jail house snitch.
Investigators coerce confessions with shouts, threats and lies; in the Central Park jogger case in New York in 1989, the cops harassed five teens into confessing on video to raping a jogger that they had not raped.
Prosecutors sit on evidence of innocence before trial, conceal lying witnesses, hold back details of the charges that they file, all so they may ambush the Accused. 
Not all defendants are equal, particularly persons of color or the poor.  But even those who begin with resources to fight when they are charged, watch those resources evaporate with damaging media coverage prompted by the government, that often costs the Accused his job, and the trust he once enjoyed in the community.  The government may seize assets needed by the Accused to fight the charges, and often demand high or no bail that further shrinks his resources and ability to defend himself from behind bars.
If we don’t fix this system, we will continue to have innocents in custody and even executed – we just won’t know who they are.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

GAZETTE COLUMN: WHAT A GAS! by John P. Flannery


We have a lot of folk who wouldn’t see it -- if they didn’t already believe it
We are talking about those who believe the Oil and Gas Energy Industry’s PR hogwash – that the Industry is there to help us - even as the Industry misleads and exploits homeowners by contaminating their water with their deep well gas drilling. 
Let’s consider a few facts.
Fact: The Oil and Gas Industry is shattering the earth two miles beneath our feet, “fracturing” they call it, a recent drilling “innovation,” that pumps two to seven million gallons of water as well as sand and toxic chemicals including diesel fuel, into the earth below, at 13,500 pounds of pressure per square inch, to shatter the shale that is trapping bubbles of natural gas that industry is harvesting for a profit; incidentally, industry denies the use of diesel but it has been repeatedly confirmed. 
Fact: When the Oil and Gas industry fought to pass the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Congressman Joe Barton of Texas wrote a provision for oil and gas that excluded “hydraulic fracture” from any regulations that would protect underground sources of drinking water.
Fact: When the industry drives those drill bits into the earth, at the rate of 35,000 wells a year, they are making new migration pathways for natural gas, and they are compromising the aquifers, our drinking water, the air we breathe, therefore the homes we can inhabit, bringing on headaches from the evaporated gases, nausea, possible brain damage, and risking life itself.
Fact: There are thousands of families with contaminated water across the nation including those found in Garfield County, Colorado; Pavilion, Wyoming; DISH, Texas; Dimock in Bradford County, Pennsylvania; and Hickory, also in Pennsylvania. 
Fact: Oil and gas companies are giving these families hauled “replacement water” -- if they’ll agree to keep their mouths shut about their contaminated wells. 
Fact: One dramatic illustration of contamination is that fire may result when you light a match near your faucet’s water.  Deeper gas (thermogenic methane) appears to be pushing the surface natural gas (biogenic methane) into the water wells.  That’s what appears to have happened in Colorado.  In Dimock, Pennsylvania, the state agency first said that the methane in the water was surface gas as well (biogenic methane), but then, when forced to test it again, they admitted it was from the deepest layers (thermogenic).  It is possible that Pennsylvania got it right both times, and the surface gas had been pushed out of the way by the deeper gases.  The state agencies also admit that they’re not only finding natural gas but also contaminants related to oil and gas production in these water wells. 
Fact: These same wells had no contaminants, gas or other toxic materials in the waters, before the fracturing wells were drilled.
Conclusion: we’ve got to stop this toxic drilling before we contaminate our underground water system for good as we don’t know how aquifers work well enough to know that we can fix them again if we contaminate them.  If we get this wrong, we’ll all be hauling replacement water from some other smarter nation.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

PURCELLVILLE COLUMN: QUAKE, FLOOD, FIRE AND RADIATION by John P. Flannery

Nuclear Meltdown?

The plates of the earth shoved Japan with the force of an unprecedented earthquake that lifted the ocean floor causing a Tsunami wave that traveled at 600 miles an hour eastward across the Pacific where 6 and 8 foot high waves slammed into these Western United States.
People have been terrified, displaced, drowned, struck by falling debris, radiated, disabled and killed. 
Yet Republican House Speaker John Boehner and his coterie of leaders, in disregard of the constitutional obligation to provide for the “general welfare,” intoxicated at the thought of slashing spending, insist on gutting $126 million out of the National Weather Service budget including the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center. 
Senator Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) said: “I hope my Republican colleagues in the House are now aware that there was a horrific earthquake and Tsunami in the Pacific.”
Nor is that the end of congressional insensitivity.
 On February 22, 2011, 29 international humanitarian groups including Catholic Relief Services, the American Jewish World Service, and the International Rescue Committee told Speaker Boehner it was “shocking to imagine that in the next major global humanitarian crisis – the next Haiti, Tsunami, or Darfur – the United States might simply fail to show up.”  The Speaker proposed in H.R. 1, a bill to cut “global disaster aid by 67%, global refugee assistance by 45%, and global food relief by 41%.” 
A German philosopher once wrote that honor isn’t won; it’s only lost, and these members of Congress have dishonored themselves and this nation.
Consider, by contrast, that Robert Zoldos II, the Vice Mayor of Lovettsville, has been deployed as a Battalian Chief of a search and rescue team of 74 to go to Japan; he was last deployed to Port au Prince in 2010.  This is what real patriots do when we allow them to serve.
We really should have learned something else from the explosion and possible meltdown of Fukushima Daiichi’s nuclear reactor – and it’s how fragile are the industry’s assurances of safety.  In Japan, there were falsified safety records.
I’m not saying it could happen here the same way.  But, as early as 1774, we had a “severe” earthquake in Richmond that covered 150,000 square kilometers.  In 1828, the epicenter of another quake was southwest Virginia, so strong a shock that President John Quincy Adams wrote of it in his diary.  There have been 10 other noteworthy quakes that spanned an expanse as large as 725,000 square kilometers.  So don’t presume we can’t suffer a quake.
For the record, we have 104 reactors at 65 power plants across the nation and 4 of them are at two sites here in Virginia, North Anna (1,806 megawatts) in Louisa County and Surry (799 megawatts) in Surry County.  We are playing with our health and safety as we can’t trust a thing these plants say.
In conclusion, this disaster reminds us again that no man is an island.  More than a clod of earth has been washed away by the sea.  Each of us is diminished by these deaths.  But we have the opportunity to be involved in mankind and to make a difference - as Bob Zoldos already has in Japan.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

GAZETTE COLUMN: FIRE WATER IN YOUR SINK by John P. Flannery

Perhaps you’ve seen those videos where a person turns on the faucet and fire spills into the sink.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMS8VsG2LSY
There’s something unsettling about a lit match that ignites water. 
Water ordinarily quenches fire.
So why is this happening? 
It’s because the energy industry is mining natural gas in a new and perilous way – and the pipe to that faucet carries an unexpected mixture of water and natural gas.
Energy moguls have been trying to capture and collect bubbles of natural gas, as much as 516 trillion cubic feet worth, found in a 573 square mile expanse of shale 8,000 feet below the surface running from Alabama to New York, and running along Virginia’s western border.  
Energy CEOs are getting a rush at new technology that can shatter the shale so they can harvest the gas and huge profits as well.
The rub is how do they do it – how they get at the gas.
They’ve found a cheap method of extraction called “fracking” – short for hydraulic fracturing. 
They drill down vertically as far as two miles into the earth and then the drill turns at right angles (horizontal drilling) parallel to the surface (and perhaps even under your retirement ski cottage off I-81). 
They then put a high pressure pump with a mixture of crushing sand, hazardous materials, chemicals that are carcinogens, and millions of gallons of water, and force fractures in the shale so that gas may escape into the drill bore.
There have been complaints from Alabama, Virginia and West Virginia of impaired or polluted drinking water near these gas wells. 
The wastewater contains terrible by-products including reproductive toxicants, arsenic, hydrogen sulfide, mercury, barium, radium, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) including benzene and xylene – so we are haunted by the possibility of a latter day disaster like the Hooker Chemical Company’s Love Canal - if we don’t get smarter.
Worse, this drilling takes millions of gallons of water from existing streams, compromising farmers and the ecosystem. 
There’s no good way to handle the highly salted toxic wastewater that comes up with the drill. 
Normal municipal treatment facilities don’t treat for carcinogens or remove radioactive materials. 
Dumping wastewater into streams used by nearby communities is no answer. 
Pumping wastewater back into the earth is very likely to compromise our underground aquifers. 
As a matter of law, we are almost defenseless.
We are not protected by the Clean Water Act, the Superfund law (CERCLA), the Safe Drinking Water Act, or the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.  The Oil and Gas Industry lobbied and won exemptions from all these safety regulations.  Nor does the public have any right to know what these gas companies are doing under the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Acts.
How did we do to this to ourselves?  Nothing new here!  Our public officials are “too compliant,” compromised by their large contributors, and covering up the health hazards with a goulash of industry disinformation and false promises to reassure curious constituents.
The most important question we should ask ourselves about this industry debacle is simple.
Is our health more important than a 10 year supply of natural gas? 
I think it is! 
But there are those taking profits who heartily disagree.