Friday, June 29, 2007

Michael Moore is the Real "Sicko"

I came across this article and thought it was just too good not to pass along. With Michael Moore's so-called "documentary" film Sicko coming out this week, let's try to remember the facts and not get swept up in the sensationalism and hypocrisy of a smart but seriously misguided Hollywood propagandist.

"Paradise Island"
The myth of Cuban health care.
By Fred Thompson
May 02, 2007, 11:10 p.m.

You might have read the stories about filmmaker Michael Moore taking ailing workers from Ground Zero in Manhattan to Cuba for free medical treatments. According to reports, he filmed the trip for a new movie that bashes America for not having government-provided health care.

Now, I have no expectation that Moore is going to tell the truth about Cuba or health care. I defend his right to do what he does, but Moore's talent for clever falsehoods has been too well documented. Simply calling his movies documentaries rather than works of fiction, I think, may be the biggest fiction of all.

While this P.R. stunt has obviously been successful — here I am talking about it — Moore's a piker compared to Fidel Castro and his regime. Moore just parrots the story they created — one of the most successful public-relations coups in history. This is the story of free, high quality Cuban health care.

The truth is that Cuban medical care has never recovered from Castro's takeover — when the country's health care ranked among the world's best. He won the support of the Cuban people by promising to replace Batista's dictatorship with free elections, and to end corruption. Once in power, though, he made himself dictator and instituted Soviet-style Communism. Cubans not only failed to regain their democratic rights, their economy plunged into centrally planned poverty.

As many as half of Cuba's doctors fled almost immediately — and defections continue to this day. Castro won't allow observers in to monitor his nation's true state, but defectors tell us that many Cubans live with permanent malnutrition and long waits for even basic medical services. Many treatments we take for granted aren't available at all — except to the Communist elite or foreigners with dollars.

For them, Castro keeps "show" clinics equipped with the best medicines and technologies available. It was almost certainly one of these that Moore went to, if the stories in the NY Post and the Daily News are true.

Nothing about this story inspires doubt, though. Elements in Hollywood have been infatuated with the Cuban commander for years. It always leaves me shaking my head when I read about some big-time actor or director going to Cuba and gushing all over Castro. And, regular as rain, they bring up the health care myth when they come home.

What is it that leads people to value theoretically "free" health care, even when it's lousy or nonexistent, over a free society that actually delivers health care? You might have to deal with creditors after you go to the emergency ward in America, but no one is denied medical care here. I guarantee even the poorest Americans are getting far better medical services than many Cubans.

According to Forbes magazine, by the way, Castro is now personally worth approximately $900 million. So when he desperately needed medical treatment recently, he could afford to fly a Spanish surgeon, with equipment, on a chartered jet to Cuba. What does that say about free Cuban health care?

The other thing that irks me about Moore and his cohort in Hollywood is their complete lack of sympathy for fellow artists persecuted for opposing the Castro regime. Pro-democracy activists are routinely threatened and imprisoned, but Castro remains a hero to many here. According to human rights organizations, these prisoners of conscience are often beaten and denied medical treatment, sanitation or even adequate nutrition.

If Moore wants a subject for a real documentary, I would suggest looking into the life of Cuban painter and award-winning documentarian Nicolás Guillén Landrián. He was denied the right to practice his art for using the Beatles' song, "The Fool on the Hill," as background music behind footage of Castro climbing a mountain. Later, he was given plenty of free Cuban health care when he was confined for years in a "mental institution" and given devastating, repeated electroshock "treatments."

There are many other artists and activists who have enjoyed similar treatment. I suspect we'll see movies with sympathetic portrayals of terrorists held in Guantanamo before we ever hear about the torture of true Cuban heroes. Even Andy Garcia's brilliant fictionalized movie about the real Cuban experience, The Lost City, was given the Hollywood silent treatment. My bet, though, is that we'll hear lots about how Michael Moore showed that Cuba's socialized medicine is better than ours.

So go ahead and start working on the Oscar speech, Michael.

© ABC Radio

Saturday, June 2, 2007

The Final Chapter of a New Beginning

This is the truck's butt...



Robbie and I rode together for the last couple days, and that's what we've been watching that entire time.

Yesterday morning, the brake alarm on the moving truck started beeping, so we spent half the day at the Penske place in Knoxville, Tennessee, in the heart of Appalachia in eastern Tennessee. After spending 4 hours inspecting the brakes and the engine, the team of mechanics informed us that, since they hadn't been able to find anything wrong with the truck, they had disabled the alarm so it wouldn't "annoy" us. Not exactly reassuring. We then said our goodbyes to Brian just in case the brakes really did go out. He was pretty convinced he was going to die. The whole incident was kinda funny in a slightly morbid way.

Robbie and I had an interesting adventure driving through Knoxville and going to Wendy's for lunch. I think his exact words to me were, "Wow, I had no idea that white trash was a culture!" Yes, yes it is.

We crossed the border from Tennessee to Virginia yesterday afternoon.

We debated whether just to drive all the way to Arlington last night, but decided to only go as far as Lexington, about 3 hours south. I'm so glad we did, because we ended up staying in a beautiful, 170-year-old southern mansion that had been converted into a hotel! It was amazing!!






It was a wonderful experience. We all got a good night's sleep, had a great breakfast, and then drove about an hour to drop off the trailer before heading into the city. We then caravaned the rest of the way, I drove the Highlander, Rob drove the Jetta, and Brian drove the truck the rest of the way to DC.

With a few initial complications, we got everything settled to move into our new apartment. Robbie signed his first lease...


...and then we began the monumental task of actually moving all of our stuff into the apartment. 4 hours later, we cleared enough of a path to get to the bathrooms, the kitchen and our beds, and then, exhausted and relieved, went to bed in our new home.

Friday, June 1, 2007

Bathroom Humor

This made my day... :)


Since we have been driving a 26 foot truck with a 10 foot trailer on the back of it, the only places we are able to stop are truck stops. We've seen some pretty interesting characters at some of these places. Think McDonald's employees meet trailer park residents meet Jerry Springer guests, and you've got a pretty good idea of what kind of folks I'm talking about.

Who knew they were policy wonks, as well?

Apparently, some of these folks like to engage in a little heated political debate every now and then...

...on the back of a bathroom stall door? Sure, why not?! (This is America, after all.)






To translate for all you fine folks (all spelling and punctuation preserved):

"Sorry McCain... you looked like a fool in Iraq. Not so safe is it? Just another Republican liar... Go Away!!"
"You & Bush go to Iran!!"
"another bleeding heart democrate... loser!"
"Idiot, you fucken spelled democrat wrong genius"
"Fool? Who is the one complaining to the bathroom door at a truck stop"
"Well said!"
"There is no better place for a political debate than in a bathroom stall."


Well said.