Starsight’s Weblog

February 29, 2008

Killing the Penny – Again

Filed under: Uncategorized — by starsight @ 9:28 pm



Mardi Gras Coin Collection

Originally uploaded by nodigio

http://www.newsweek.com/id/117132
Treasury secretary Henry Paulson wants to dump the penny. What is it with all these rich people who constantly want to eliminate the penny?

I say keep the penny. It doesn’t have to be copper. It can be of any metal because the penny isn’t dependent upon copper for it’s worth. The penny itself, whether of copper or of base metals, is invaluable to a majority of Americans – that majority who live at or below the poverty level and who glean the pennies dropped by their wealthier neighbors so they can buy a day old loaf of bread, or a bunch of blackened bananas discounted for their over-ripeness – or to eke out a bit of gasoline, hopefully enough to get them to work to earn their miniscule paycheck.

Not all Americans are rich enough to ignore the pennies, Mr. Paulson. They’re already carpooling and walking as much as possible to save on gasoline, and working longer hours so they work fewer days – a small but significant savings. They’ve stopped eating out because they lack enough of the pennies you so want to eliminate. They rarely could afford new clothes, now they can’t even afford used clothes. They no longer have cable TV, and some don’t even have TVs anymore because they can’t afford to pay the high electric bills that high fuel prices help cause, nor do they use their heating and cooling because of those fuel prices – and these are the people who work 40 or more hours a week – productive Americans who should be able to support themselves off their paycheck.

It’s a sad world we live in when hard-working people can’t support themselves off their wages. It means rich people like you, Mr. Paulsen, are hoarding the money instead of letting it “trickle down”.

The discrepancy in wages between the highest paid employees in a company and the lowest paid is shamefully large.

Yes, yes, the rich people deserve what they earn – but so do the poor people who work long hard hours and have to pass all sorts of onerous and intrusive tests and comply with onerous, intrusive and ridiculous restrictions.

The least paid employees should be able to afford a home, food, transportation, clothing, a small bit of leisure activities, and still be able to save a bit for emergencies and retirement. People like you, Mr. Paulson, are the reason people like me need those pennies you so scorn.

Make them of base metal, we don’t care what the penny is composed of so long as we still have pennies to glean and spend.

February 28, 2008

Leap Day Holiday

Filed under: Uncategorized — by starsight @ 4:07 pm



Remy on Wudjie

Originally uploaded by nodigio

I think Leap Day should be a National Holiday.

We get paid in February for working February 1- 28, and then we start earning on March 1st. Adding in February 29th means we work a day for free for our bosses (except those who are paid hourly). If we were all allowed to not work that day (because we’re not getting paid, don’t get comp time, and don’t get overtime for working it), I think we’d all enjoy the special day – and we’d get it only once every 4 years (except 2100 – a century not divisible by 4). That’s merely 23 days for the next 92 years.

I know my paycheck won’t reflect that extra day’s work and pay, but I’ll still have the expense of going to work, and still be expected to work it.

I say we who are salaried employees should get the day off since we aren’t getting paid for it anyway.

Hourly employees still get paid by the hour, whatever day of the week they work, or shift of the day. I suppose it would be a matter between them and their bosses.

Let’s campaign to have Leap Day declared a Work-Free Day.

February 26, 2008

All Starbucks are Closing

Filed under: Food, Reviews, Uncategorized — by starsight @ 8:10 pm
Tags: , , ,


Kitchen after inventory

Originally uploaded by nodigio

http://money.cnn.com/2008/02/25/news/companies/starbucks/index.htm?cnn=yes

Granted, it’s only for three hours, but they’ve chosen the after work rush hours. Presumably, it’s for training, and do they ever need it! Three hours isn’t enough time, but I’ll take what they will give. If this means the counter help (baristas or whatever they choose to call them) is faster and more accurate, then I’m all for it. If it also means the Starbucks shops will be cleaner, I’m all for that, too.

I won’t be inconvenienced by their shut-down since I stopped going to Starbucks when it took half an hour to get a plain cup of house coffee, black, no sugar. I could walk into any diner or restaurant in town and get a cup of coffee poured in under 5 minutes. But not at Starbucks.

Even Java Dave’s – notorious for being slow – is faster than than all of the local Starbucks I went to. And they were cleaner and friendlier and didn’t play games with your order or subject you to a 10 minute inquisition just to place your order.

For all ya’ll who frequent Starbucks, I hope this makes your ordeal easier.

As for me, I’m going to the Red Cup, or the Red Moon, or Cafe Bella, or Sober Grounds, or the Black Bean, or any of a number of other small local independent coffee shops that have quick, friendly service and clean shops.

For those who need a caffeine fix on your drive home, Dunkin Donuts is offering their small lattes, cappuccinos, and espressos for 99¢ from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. today to make up for Starbucks shut down.

February 25, 2008

Raven’s Meat

Filed under: Uncategorized — by starsight @ 5:36 pm



Itzl Investigating Broken Tree

Originally uploaded by nodigio

Itzl was playing outside at lunch when a flock of ravens decided to come play with him. Each raven was as large as Itzl, so it was an interesting sight. The birds weren’t afraid of this jingly-jangly dog (I keep bells on his collar so people don’t step on him), and he wasn’t afraid of them.

They sort “danced” together a bit, circling one another. The ravens flapped their wings and cawed, Itzl pranced around them and snatched a feather that fell.

He trotted back with the feather, very pleased with himself.

He laced the feather in his bed, ad settled down beside it to chew on his chicken jerky strip.

I wish I’d brought the camera today.

February 24, 2008

Adult Merit Badges

Filed under: fun, woodspirits — by starsight @ 10:24 pm
Tags: ,

Here’s a site where adults can earn merit badges and have fun.

February 21, 2008

Trust Your Gut

Filed under: science — by starsight @ 9:31 pm
Tags: ,


Itzl in the Heavenly Bamboo

Originally uploaded by nodigio

http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1714473,00.html

“When looking into the future, never trust your gut. That doesn’t mean it’s always wrong, you should just never trust it.”

I have to disagree with this conclusion. I disagree with it because of an earlier statement made in this same article: “Those who ate at a normal pace — one chip for every 15 seconds — came to the same misguided conclusions as other students: predictions did not correspond to their actual levels of enjoyment. Yet those who ate chips more slowly, one every 45 seconds, had very different results. Their forecasts were almost completely accurate.” It seems as if they’ve defined “gut instinct” as an immediate, knee-jerk reaction, and not a feeling that builds convincingly. My “gut” processes a lot of information, and if I give it time (as in the timed experiment demonstrated above), then my gut is “almost completely accurate.” I implicitly trust my gut instincts. They’ve been through a lot and remember better than I do.

The ability to think about something does help predict how you will feel about it. And I think you can compare experiences both past and current and arrive at a fair and accurate gauge of your happiness level about it your current experience. I also think some people dwell too strongly on the what-ifs and might-have-beens to appreciate the moment.

And I agree that “Once you make a choice in life, the unchosen alternatives evaporate.” We can’t go back and take a different path. All we can do is create a new path that may, maybe, lead to the result we are wanting to achieve. Speculation about the future is a Good Thing, in my opinion, but speculation about the past, worrying at the alternatives one might have taken, that’s a sure fire way to sow discontent and unhappiness. Accept what you did and move forward.

Mortgage Crisis

Filed under: Politics, homelessness — by starsight @ 2:49 pm
Tags:


Snoozing

Originally uploaded by nodigio

http://www.reuters.com/article/Housing08/idUSN2039245920080220

Jackson claims the mortgage crisis has its roots in lending discrimination. I say it had its roots in uber-PC and lending indiscrimination – people who didn’t qualify for mortgage loans were given loans they would never be able to afford to pay back. While it was heavily geared towards Hispanics and blacks, a large number of whites were also smacked by it. It wasn’t race that was the indiscrimination point – it was poverty – across the board poverty.

People who couldn’t get a prime mortgage either sought or were lured into getting sub-prime mortgages. I could easily have been one of those people but decades of volunteer work stood me in good stead when I was suddenly faced with either buying the house I was renting or moving. I was told of special programs assisting the low income first time home buyer, and applied for and got grants to pay the down payment and closing costs, and through a Federal program got a low interest rate. I have an assumable prime mortgage on my house because I did my homework.

Too many other people don’t do their homework, don’t look for help – or either assume there is no help or they refuse to accept what help there is. They let pride and ignorance both get in their way.

But that doesn’t mean these sub-prime mortgage companies were being discriminatory. It was exactly the reverse. They did what any criminal would do – took advantage of ignorance, haste, and greed. The people who took out these dreadful loans are every bit as culpable for their current situation as the lenders are because at any point, they could have said, “I can’t afford this. Let me keep looking.” Poverty doesn’t rob people of their brains. Poor people can be just as savvy as rich people.

What Jackson is saying is that he thinks Hispanics and blacks are too stupid to know what they were doing, and so the rest of America needs to step in and save the poor stupid idiots.

I hate that he does that to any American, let alone the group of Americans he purports to support. What good has Jackson ever actually done? As far as I can tell, all he’s ever done is get up and blather on about how the whites have oppressed the poor, dumb, stupid blacks and taken advantage of their ignorance, and now those whites have to bail the pitiful childlike blacks out of the trouble they’ve gone and gotten themselves into again. He’s very condescending towards blacks, and it angers me that he thinks so little of a significant part of the American population.

I have a much higher opinion of most blacks that Jackson does. I know blacks are just as smart, cunning, intelligent, mature, and capable as any other race. I just wish the people the blacks listened to also thought that.
What we need to do to fix this problem isn’t to halt foreclosures or to penalize the lenders for their indiscriminatory lending practices – although I do feel they should be penalized at some point in the future. The urgency right now is to balance the wrongs they did. If those people are still living in their homes and still meeting their current mortgage obligation (not the balloon interest rates, but the interest rate they started out with), I suggest that the lenders suck it up and convert those balloon mortgage loans into fixed rate loans at the current interest rate levels. This will allow many of those homeowners to keep their homes and pay off their mortgages. There are still those who would, in their normal course of events, be in default and heading towards foreclosure, and cruel as it sounds, that’s a choice they made and will have to fix themselves.

The lenders who created these ballooning interest rate mortgages will lose money, but that’s their fault for being such greedy, unscrupulous people to begin with. What they’ll mostly be losing is money they didn’t have to begin with – kind like counting their chickens before the eggs are all hatched. They’re losing “potential” money, not real money.

I know, this is probably a personal failing of mine, but I cannot get all worked up over “get rich quick” schemes, and this balloon mortgage scheme was just that. What prevented the homeowners from converting their loans into fixed rate prime loans after they proved they could meet the payments for a couple of years – before the rate exploded? Probably fear and ignorance. This is why I think they should be allowed to convert now with no penalties to the homeowner.

That won’t fix the whole economic structure that was built on potential and promises, but it will save a lot of people from the agonies and trials of being homeless and trying to get re-homed. Once you lose your home and are on the streets, it’s not easy at all to get off of them. Anything we can do to keep people in the homes they already have is Good, and we can deal with the economic fall-out of stupid lenders. Hopefully by collecting as much from them as possible and driving them so far out of business no one will ever want to try those schemes again.

February 19, 2008

Goldfish Bloom

Filed under: Uncategorized — by starsight @ 9:44 pm



Goldfish Bloom

Originally uploaded by nodigio

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,23231671-13762,00.html

Goldfish have long term memory.

February 17, 2008

Podcasting

Filed under: podcast — by starsight @ 5:37 pm
Tags:

I’m not the greatest at podcasting.  Being over 60, some of this technology isn’t exactly beyond me so much as the instructions are written in some other language I haven’t learned.  I can do it, I just can’t seem to get the refinements down.

Now, my podcast hosting site isn’t archiving my old podcasts fast enough for me to be able to post my newer podcasts.  Things I put up in January are still hanging around taking up current space and preventing me from uploading new podcasts.  I’m 2 weeks behind because of this, and it annoys me because I have no clue how to fix it.  I don’t want to buy more upload space because I won’t use that much.  I use between 90 and 105 MB a month – a weekly 30 minute all talk podcast.  When I started with this podcast host, they archived weekly, so I never ran out of space.  Now they seem to archive whenever they feel like it and I run out of space every single week.  My weekly podcasts are between 19 MB and 26 MB.  I should rarely use up the 100 MB I pay for each month, and yet – I do.

February 15, 2008

Universal Health Care

Filed under: Uncategorized — by starsight @ 8:55 pm



Sleeping Itzl

Originally uploaded by nodigio

http://www.newsweek.com/id/111811

“Experts say the health care plans put forth by Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are very similar – and Obama himself has said his proposal has 95 percent in common with hers. But that other 5 percent is a source of contention.”

I am not an expert, but based on my own assessment of the universal health plans offered, Clinton’s imposes penalties and punishments for those who don’t want to pay for her universal health care plan while Obama’s allows people to refuse without penalties. Clinton would support wage garnishment and mandatory enrollment to force people to participate in her universal health care plan.

“Clinton says that her plan would save $2,200 for the average family. Obama’s campaign requested an analysis from three Harvard professors, who estimated an average savings of $2,500. Both intend to achieve these savings primarily through increased efficiency – electronic medical records and a focus on preventive care are paramount – and curbing incidental administrative expenditures like underwriting and prescription costs.
“Your average family’s spending,” he tells FactCheck, “should be around $4,500 out of pocket on their premiums and expenditures;”

Yanno, if I wasn’t forced to pay for medical insurance, my out-of-pocket medical expenses, averaged out over the actual cost of my medical bills over the last 25 years would be under $10.00 per year. Yep, that’s right – some of us don’t need medical coverage because we are supremely healthy. If my genetics bears out, I’ll live to be over 100 and remain healthy the entire time – I’ll die of some freak accident or an act of war. Not one of my family has ever died of old age or had a chronic ailment. Broken bones, the occasional cold, easily avoided allergy reactions, these are what we suffer from and all of these are easily and best treated at home with rest, food, and time.

I don’t like health insurance for one big and glaring reason – my medical care should be decided by me and my doctor, not some pennypincher who thinks the bottom line is more important than my health and well-being.

If my mother had been treated as the doctor wanted her treated, and not according to “standard procedure” to comply with insurance requirements, she’d still be alive. I don’t want the government deciding what health care I will receive, and denying me treatments my doctor and I think I need. I don’t want some nurse denying procedures because she’s in a bad mood – something I saw happen more than once while I worked at an insurance company. I don’t want the nurses hired to decide who gets which procedures and care to be working under quotas and dollar restrictions.

Money should certainly be a consideration, but it should be the consideration of the doctor and me – not someone who takes over $600 a month out of my pocket for “insurance” (that’s $7,200 a year) and insists I pay deductibles, co-payments, and a large variety of “uncovered” expenses on top of that. Yep – I’ve paid an average of $6,000 a year for 25 years for health insurance. I had to pay full price for the one and only doctor visit I made in those whole 25 years (last summer) because I still had to pay the co-pay and deductibles, so it cost me $150,150.00, just to be told I was suffering an allergy reaction they couldn’t treat because the insurance didn’t cover it; I’d just have to wait it out. I could have saved $150.00 by not going to the doctor.

I think universal health care will operate in much the same way – if I go to the doctor for some health issue, I will be told a) the problem isn’t covered (or treatment isn’t approved) andb) I’d have to cough up some co-pay or deductible dollar amount, then c) go home and take care of the problem myself. I’d rather opt out, thank you very much, and if I could opt out of the health insurance I’m paying now, I so very would!

In the end, both candidates are simply offering campaign rhetoric with no solid, workable facts behind it.

Medical costs exceed 2 trillion dollars a year and both Obama and Clinton say their universal health care plans will only cost Americans a few billion a year ($110 billion for Clinton, $65 billion for Obama and that their plans will save Americans about $150-200 billion a year. That doesn’t compute even for someone with discalculia. We’re still looking at medical expenses of around 2 trillion dollars. What they’re offering isn’t even a tithing of what is being spent.

How do they – either one of them – realistically expect this to work?

I can tell you what has a chance of working, and I noticed that we are quietly implementing some of these things without any government participation at all.

1. Doctors offering discounts for cash-paying patients – the doctor gets paid better and the patient gets a financial break – and both get to make the medical decisions without a penny-pinching third party ixnaying what they decide. Did you know many doctors are paid only pennies on the dollar by insurance companies and Medicare/Medicaid?

2. Quick in/out clinic staffed by physician’s assistants and nurses for minor problems (colds, strep throat tests, sprains, simple stitches, well-baby check ups, monitoring blood sugar/pressure, etc.) springing up in or near pharmacies (Walgreen’s, CVS, Target…) so people don’t have to go to ERs for non-life-threatening yet still urgent medical care.

3. Low cost generic pharmaceuticals. Still can’t buy good Sudafed without giving up your first born, but it’s getting cheaper (other than the loss of your first born, that is).

4. Availability of home tests for a myriad of minor or chronic health problems so people don’t have to visit a doctor weekly or monthly anymore.

5. Information on preventive care for a variety of ailments is being spread around so people dohn’t have to visit the doctor as often as they don’t get sick as often.

6. Low cost vaccinations which reduce or eliminate certain diseases are more widely available (some are free, depending upon your age and the venue where you get the vaccination).

7. Lots of treatment and symptom information is widely available, although this can backfire as some people scare themselves into thinking they have some rare or fatal disease when all they have is a kidney infection. On the flip side, they’ll reassure themselves they have indigestion when they have an esophogeal ulcer or worse. u, the need to visit one of those quickie clinics at Walgreen’s, where they can be referred to a doctor or a specialist.

With those spontaneously coming into existence, health care is becoming more convenient, more in the control of the patient (where it squarely belongs), and more cost effective even for lower income people.

There are ways to boost the positive effects of these things that won’t impose a financial burden on the working Americans or the rich. Instead of insisting on everyone being treated under some sort of insurance policy – either a privately adminsitered one like most current health care insurances or government administered ones like Medicare, Medicaid, or the Universal Health Care Plan being pushed by politicians – we ought to consider ways that would further empower the patient and the doctor/patient relationship.

One way would be to set a portion of the tax dollars we pay into a special Health Care Account. We’d have a debit card for that account that we could use to take money out of it to pay for our health care – quickie clinic visits, prescriptions, durable medical equipment, physical therapy, bandaids, aspirin, eye exams, glasses, hearing exams, hearing aids, tooth cleanings, dentures, etc. people could choose to set aside a portion of their paycheck (pre-tax dollars!) to contribute to this account, and employers could choose to contribute to it in place of a heath insurance plan (or they could split – contribute some to the Health care account and some towards some kind of health insurance plan). The money in this account would be tax-free.

Newborns would be set up with an account paid for by the state and federal government until they were 18, when the would take over the accounts themselves. Parents and grandparents could contribute to this account as a tax deduction so long as the child was a minor or in college. 100% of the money put into such an account would be tax-free and tax-deductible for employers and family members contributing to it.

There needs to be some work on how chronic conditions, permanent birth defects, and disabilities owuld be handled, but it shouldn’t be too hard to come up with some workable combination of Health Care Account, insurance, and Medicaid to help with their healthcare.

Yes, there will be those who abuse it – can you think of a single system that doesn’t have someone clever enough to find some way around t or to abuse it? Should we allow those few to prevent all the rest of us from enjoying the benefits of it?

Private health insurance would still be available for those who want it – and the premiums could be paid for out of the Health Care Account. They could opt for a comprehensive health insurance plan, a major medical plan, a hospitalization plan, or any combination or variety of plans.

See, I believe people will be more careful of spending money for health care if they know what it really costs, if they have to actually see the money exchanging hands (as it were) and get an itemized receipt for the care.

I believe doctors will be able to charge a fair and reasonable price to all their patients without having to consider what the insurance companies and government agencies would really pay them.

With people more conservative in their doctor visits, the healthcare industry would be less stressed and mistakes caused by over-work would be reduced. Mistakes happen, and we can at least eliminate the ones cauesd by too little sleep, too much stress, and overwork.

Since we are already shifting in this direction anturally, I think we should encourage it.

Next Page »

Powered by WordPress.com