(Note: I may not be able to post blog entries of much substance between now and about August 1. To learn why, see end of this entry.)
I know, I know-- you're probably more interested in my health and activities than in the arcane political jockeying among progressives on issues of health care reform. So I'm not going to go into detail on the politics, but just give you a heads-up on what apparently is going on. It's the old debate about different means to an agreed-on end, applied to a "new" old issue. To be specific: do we insist on pushing for a single-payer plan, or do we assume that's not going to happen in the near future, so we support incremental change that somehow mixes existing private insurance plans with some sort of subsidized insurance for people who can't afford or aren't eligible for private coverage?
Here's how the debate seems to be shaping up:
Rep. John Conyers has sponsored single payer legislation in Congress. HR 676, the U.S. National Health Insurance Act (also sometimes referred to as "Medicare for all") was endorsed in late June by the U.S. Conference of Mayors, and has received more media attention than one might expect for a "radical" proposal.
And you may have heard about the HCAN campaign that's ramping up. HCAN is an acronym for Health Care for America Now, a $40 million organizing and media campaign sponsored by a fairly broad coalition including unions, Move On, Planned Parenthood, and others. Maybe AARP? I haven't checked on that. According to a Move On fundraising plea, the campaign will fund 100 organizers "on the ground" (which doesn't seem like very many, considering the size of the country), plus TV and radio ads, etc. HCAN advocates an incremental, "any reform is better than what we have" approach.
You can find out more about both these approaches by Googling HR 676 and HCAN. I'd be interested in knowing which strategy you favor.
And now a few things about me: I've been home for a week now, and am getting ready for my next trip, a week plus a couple of days on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. I'm going with five friends who are signed up for a bike tour sponsored by the League of Michigan Bicyclists; they'll do a 6-day loop, including one rest day, starting at St. Ignace (near the famous Mackinac Bridge) and heading first north and a little east, and then west and south. I'm signed up as a "non-rider," since there's no way I can ride 60 miles a day, and will spend time entertaining myself while the others are riding, but eating breakfasts and dinners with them and also hanging out with them in the evenings and on the rest day and the day before the ride starts, when I think we'll go to Mackinac Island.
I'm planning to do some sight-seeing (the tour organizers promise a special sight-filled route for non-riders) and also, I think, will be proof-reading Facing Fear, which is supposed to go to the printer in early August. And I'm taking my bike; I hope that I will be able to ride a little of the route in reverse from the end each day, and meet my friends as they're coming into town.
As I said above, my blog posting may be a little spotty, or even non-existent, between now and late July or early August. Next Monday (7/21) I will be traveling between St. Ignace and De Tour Village, Michigan. If there's a library with internet connection for non-natives in the Village, and if I have time, I'll post something Monday, but it might be more likely to find both time and internet on Tuesday or Wednesday, when we'll be in Sault Ste. Marie.
I'm not taking my computer with me; in fact, my current laptop will spend my time in Michigan with the people who are selling me a new laptop, so they can move stuff from this hard drive to the new one. I'll probably pick up the new computer on Monday 7/28, and it should be ready to go--except for my wireless connection, which I'll have to re-install. So maybe I'll be able to post on 7/28, and maybe not. You know how it is with new technology.... No promises! Except that my sons, who lobbied heavily for replacing this admittedly cranky four-year-old beast, and who even made the initial phone calls to the vendor, assure me that I will be thrilled with the new laptop. Even though it will be a PC, not a Mac.
Now a word about my health: it's terrific to be off chemo! I can tell the neuropathy is getting better because my balance is much improved. And so's my digestion. Not to mention my mood. And I think so far the tumors are behaving themselves.
One more thing-- for those of you in Chicago, or inclined to visit Chicago for a day, I will be reading at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum in Lincoln Park on Tuesday, August 5, at 6:30 PM. The reading is part of the Chicago Public Library's Read Green, Live Green program; I and other contributors will be reading from the anthology Fresh Water: Women Writing on the Great Lakes.
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1 comment:
Dear Judith -- My long-term and knee-jerk reaction is that single-payer is 'what I want' (and 'what we need'). The fact that Conyers is the sponsor just reinforces me in that opinion (since Paul and I helped elect him to Congress in the first place, way back when!) However, I will do my civic duty and check out both those plans -- thanks for spurring me on to do this!
As for your upcoming vacation-in-the-UP, I hope you have a grand time, both on and off your bike! ... If
you like murder mysteries, and haven't already read Nevada Barr's =A Superior Death= -- I suggest you borrow it from your local public library and take it along for some 'light' reading (in between stints of galley-reading, that is). The story takes place on and around Isle Royale, and is chock full of Lake Superior 'lore' ...
In the meantime, I'm going to see if I can find out DeTour village library's internet access policy for you ... I'm hoping they have a way to let non-local visitors buy connect time by the hour (or some such) ... which is what my local library here in
central Wisconsin does. I'll let you know what-
(ever) I find out :D))
-- Dot Shields
PS: I'm really looking forward to reading your 'forthcoming' book! Is its publication date set yet?
That is, do you know about how long it will take after you deliver it to the printer in early August, for it to arrive on bookstore and library shelves? Your readers are eagerly waiting and wondering!
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