buggery: (Default)
[personal profile] buggery
(N.B. I'm not dead or incapacitated, I've just been busy.)

So the guest on tonight's The Daily Show was Christina Hoff Sommers, co-author (with Dr Sally Satel) of the new book One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Is Eroding Self-Reliance. The premise of this book is that, as a nation, we're doing kids a disservice by trying to encourage cooperation over competition and eliminating policies that enable bullying of schoolchildren by their peers. Sommers talked about how high self-esteem is actually bad, because sociopaths and murderers have high self-esteem, and conveniently left out the rather less-ridiculous fact that low self-esteem leads to eating disorders and suicide in children. She's also convinced that there's nothing wrong with traditional bully-friendly schoolyard activities like dodgeball*, and that school systems that ban dodgeball (rather than making it compulsory, which is what happens when it's allowed -- how many kids have you ever heard of organising a pick-up game of dodgeball where everybody actually wants to play and nobody who enjoys the game feels that it's diminished by the absence of hapless victims ordered into the circle by authority figures?) are going way overboard. Listening this woman made me want to get a bunch of people together to go to one of her book signings and throw dodgeballs at her as hard as we can.

Other things making my pants ranty of late:

Management companies running buildings set up as subsidised housing for disabled people discriminating against "younger" disabled adults (i.e. under fifty years of age) and lying about it (oh, the government program that provides the subsidies told us we can't have any more people under 50 in that building, so sorry, it's just out of our hands). Like it's not bad enough that half the programs that help the elderly don't provide services to younger people who are disabled and there aren't equivalent programs to provide the same services for the younger population. Yeah, we need people who agreed to provide services to us refusing to do so. And LYING ABOUT IT. Because people with disabilities, it's not like we need any extra help just to do things other people take for granted, right? And this is HOUSING. There's an actual shortage of subsidized housing available for disabled adults who are younger than retirement age. (I could do an entire rant just about the shortage.) 98% of us can't actually just get a nice high-paying job so we can pay a higher rent, and 98% of us don't have enough income coming in to allow us to afford ANY non-subsidised housing. So we're supposed to, what? Live on the street? Live with abusive family members? Get our doctors to have us admitted to nursing homes so we can be abused there? Get together with other people living on disability to pool resources so that 4 or 5 of us can afford one apartment, only to find out that doing so leads to us being denied many of the necessary services we'd otherwise be eligible for, on the theory that 'Oh, you're living with someone else, they can do those things for you.' 'Um, no, they're disabled too, and they need the same services.' 'Sorry, those are the rules!'

...On the bright side, this kind of discrimination in subsidised housing is in fact illegal, and the state office which handles complaints like this is investigating the situation in question and assures me that the management company will most likely be forced to cut it out. And I only had to call three different government agencies which ought to have at least been able to point me in the right direction (but didn't) before stumbling onto the "right" office almost by accident.

Also: The comics title formerly known as ROBIN, currently known as Unreadable Garbage. HOW LONG IS IT GOING TO TAKE TO GET THAT FUCKTARD OFF THIS BOOK?

Also: Weather. Two solid weeks of winter temperatures and/or high winds and/or heavy rains at the end of March/beginning of APRIL. Jack's body functions even more poorly than usual in weather like this, thank you so much, weather, have you talked to a CALENDAR lately? It is SPRING. Last week's one nice day of 80+F (25+C) weather was wonderful, thank you, being able to go outside without multiple layers of clothing and outerwear was a pleasure I had nearly forgotten, and that one nice day of 60+F (15+C) this week was also lovely before the mercury dropped and the skies opened up again. I really prefer to save my maximum painkiller-cocktail dosage for WINTER, when I expect to NEED it, when I expect winter weather. (*Winter weather. That is actually not meant to be an oxymoronic term, ok?)

Also: The Hallmark Channel. This cable network is currently airing reruns of Judging Amy, a really good (if non-fannish, though lots of actors better-known in fandom for other shows turn up here in recurring roles) drama which originally aired on (sarcasm alert!) that bastion of pushing the sexual/violent-content envelope, CBS. Hallmark Channel airs the JA reruns at 9 and 10pm on school nights with a 'parental discretion advised' warning. TNT network, incidentally, is also currently airing reruns of Judging Amy. TNT airs them at noon and 1pm weekdays. (The current CBS timeslot is 10pm Tuesdays.) TNT does not preface every episode with a content warning. The other difference, which becomes obvious if you watch reruns on both channels (Hallmark is -- a couple of weeks? Some number of episodes, anyway -- ahead of TNT) is that Hallmark Channel is editing the show for content. Even though they're showing it fairly late at night. Even though they put a warning on it... that refers to content in the episodes that they're CUTTING from the tapes. There's no little warning that the show has been edited from its original version for content. I'm not exactly a big Hallmark Channel viewer anyway, but discovering that they would so pointlessly and deviously abridge a show which in no way NEEDS to be so abridged makes me damned leery of watching anything else on that network.

Also: Healthcare coverage for the disabled. We don't get insurance at work, because, oh yeah, we're not well enough TO work. We couldn't buy private coverage even if we could afford to, because, SHOCK, for-profit insurance companies don't want to pay even a percentage of the costs for anybody who needs more than one or two routine checkups and maybe one or two prescriptions a year. So what do we get? Federally-administered Medicare (which many disabled people aren't even eligible for) and state-administered Medicaid (which the states work hard to keep people off of as a cost-saving measure, or saddle with $3000 deductibles -- I WISH that was a typo, believe me, three thousand dollar annual deductible for people with incomes barely over $10,000 per year in some states). Sounds great... until you try going to a doctor or dentist. Both programs offer reimbursement rates well below even the ever-decreasing amounts authorised by HMOs and other private carriers, so many doctors don't participate with one or the other, or both.

Predictably, this results in the best care, which is what people with the most serious problems need, not being available to people on disability. Oh, sure, we could go to a doctor who doesn't participate with either Medicare or Medicaid, but the "out-of-network" coverage is ZERO -- neither program will pay non-participating doctors directly, and they won't reimburse patients' out-of-pocket expense either, even for the amount that would be covered. Then, when we DO find a doctor who will take the only insurance available to us, we frequently have to wait a month or more for an appointment... only to find, all too often, that the quality of care is so substandard as to be worthless. And this doesn't exclude emergency situations. 'Part of my tooth broke off and the root is exposed.' 'The doctor can't see you until a week from tomorrow.' 'Uh... by then there's a good chance the tooth will have become infected and I'd need a root canal or extraction.' 'Oh, for an extraction you'd have to wait three weeks, and we don't do root canals here.' Alternately: 'Hi, I'm having a crisis, and I need to talk to my psychiatrist as soon as possible.' 'I'm sorry, that doctor is only available to clinic patients on Mondays, and doesn't take your insurance at the private-practice office. Be sure to pick a nice tall bridge now!' And if you think substandard care is better than none... Would you want to go to a doctor who prescribed thalidomide for your morning sickness, and insisted, when you pointed out that course of treatment was contraindicated by your condition, that your nausea was caused by something else and that physical examination didn't conclusively show you were pregnant -- even if you had your pregnancy test lab results in your hand? That's equivalent to what doctors I've seen in the past on Medicare or Medicaid have said to me, though the details of diagnosis and treatment are different; I picked on thalidomide on the theory that most people would know what was wrong with the proposed treatment without needing to go google.

If it were up to me? Any doctor who wanted to practice medicine in my state would be REQUIRED to participate in both Medicare and Medicaid. They make lawyers do pro bono, and those lawyers typically don't get any reimbursement at all for those cases. It makes no sense for people with crippling neurological complaints not to be able to see a neurologist, or people with crippling mental health problems not to be able to see a psychiatrist, or people with crippling metabolic dysfunction not to be able to see an endocrinologist, just because the doctors all want more money than Medicare or Medicaid are able to provide. I have sympathy for the predicament that privatised health insurance complications and malpractice insurance costs have put doctors in, but if they're not going to put patients' need for care first, maybe they should be in a different line of work anyway.

*I have no issues with adults choosing to play dodgeball recreationally. Or, okay, I have issues with it, but they're my issues -- I'm not going to say that grownups can't or shouldn't get involved in their local dodgeball league if that's something they enjoy. But coercing kids who may or may not want to participate in a 'sport' where the OBJECT is to HIT other kids, in a school setting, is as horribly inappropriate as having a boxing tournament as part of a mandatory physical education curriculum for ten-year-olds.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled comics squee. Please stand by.

edited to add cut tags, because I, uh, kinda went off on some rants there...

Date: 2005-04-28 02:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sharpest_rose.livejournal.com
I see your Ranty McRantpants and offer you a Wordy McWordpants on the disabled healthcare stuff. Australia's currently undergoing both Medicare and Welfare reform, and I like to call the new policies the "HAY, SUCKS TO BE YOU GUYS, LOLZORS!". Well, I don't like to call them that, but it's appropriate nonetheless. I have some personal horror stories about the doctors I've been forced to see ("I'm coughing up blood!" "Here, take this." "... that's an earache medication, which I've already told you I'm allergic to." "Better just rest, then."), and that was under the old "indulgent", "enabling" system that's being reworked.

But I'm sure you don't need more ire to bolster your own, it seems quite healthfully rageful by itself. So I'll just say "thanks for putting anger into more coherent, idea-imparting phrases than most are capable of" and be done with it.

Date: 2005-04-28 02:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jamjar.livejournal.com
*Ouch*. The NHS is a long way from perfect, but it's a hell of a lot better than the alternatives.

And the thing is, it took a really short space of time for doctors to change their minds (in the UK) about the NHS. Most doctors, most medical organisations were not proNHS at the start of it, whereas now they are, by a significant majority, pro-NHS, anti-privatisation.

I'm still bitter over Thatcher hacking away at it. My uncle (the severely schizophrenic one) lost his place at a good facility when it was closed, and was in and out of short term for close to twenty years because of hospital closing.

Date: 2005-04-28 02:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] some-stars.livejournal.com
*spreads tasty frosting of own rage over yours*

BASK in the hatred. baaaaask.

Date: 2005-04-28 03:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparklebutch.livejournal.com
*tries to ignore world and the human race*

*except you. hi.*
(deleted comment) (Show 1 comment)
(deleted comment) (Show 1 comment)

*hearty agreement*

Date: 2005-04-28 05:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rubynye.livejournal.com
Eowyn in my icon raises her sword in salute to you.
(deleted comment) (Show 1 comment)

Date: 2005-04-28 06:36 am (UTC)
minim_calibre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] minim_calibre
Pardon me while I beat my head against my desk in sympathy/outrage.

It just makes me mad enough to spit.

Date: 2005-04-28 06:42 am (UTC)
ext_2280: (do not taunt happy fun Greta.)
From: [identity profile] holli.livejournal.com
Augh. Medical care in this country? So fucked up. My dad's a podiatrist in private practice in D.C. Fully a third of his patients are on Medicare or Medicaid, and every year he gets paid less for providing the same amount of care, and he has to jump through more bureaucratic hoops to get even that. It's ridiculous. I don't know if it's a comfort to know that doctors are every bit as frustrated by the situation as you, but they really are.

Date: 2005-04-28 08:56 am (UTC)
mtgat: (Mandy bitch)
From: [personal profile] mtgat
*growls on your behalf*

And then you get folks like my mother, who is on disability from the Navy and says socialized health care would be awful because what she has is practically socialized and it's not great. Not of course getting the point that it means she has health care that she doesn't have to pay for, and that if she can't afford other health care, maybe other disabled folks can't either. Sorry, long, involved, and ultimately useless anger at Someone's failure to get a clue.

Dodgeball sucked when I was a kid. The other kids showed pack behavior to tag out the weakest and slowest kids (i.e. me). For the life of me, I have yet to figure out what it was supposed to teach other than "Beat people who are weaker than you."

Date: 2005-04-28 10:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] darthhellokitty.livejournal.com
KILLS PEOPLE RESPONSIBLE FOR NON-CON DODGEBALL.
BUILDS A BETTER HEALTH CARE SYSTEM FROM THEIR BONES.

OK, now I feel a little better...

Date: 2005-04-28 11:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mirth-fell.livejournal.com
Glad you're back! "Ranty McRantypants" made me laugh. And though I'm not nearly intelligent enough to comment on most of the post, I can say this: THE WEATHER! Why do I get a tad sunburnt on Monday, and then have it SNOW the next day? WHY?
(deleted comment) (Show 1 comment)

Date: 2005-04-28 03:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] badficwriter.livejournal.com
Willingham is writing MY SPECTRE in Day of Vengeance.

::glares at book::

Date: 2005-04-28 04:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] teot.livejournal.com
I've always loved that icon.

Date: 2005-04-28 05:57 pm (UTC)
thawrecka: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thawrecka
Christina Hoff Sommers is an idiot. I once read one of her books, wherein she stated that all girls are nurturing but not competitive and all boys are competitive but not nurturing, that little girls never like to play rough games and that all boys don't like doing gentle girly things. She has no clue about anything.

I want to throw dodgeballs at this woman, quite a lot.

Date: 2005-04-29 11:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] c-elisa.livejournal.com
Not only did Sommers evade the question every time Jon tried to pin her down on her anecdotal evidence, she was either deliberately misleading or just ignorant about why sane PE teachers have gotten rid of dodgeball. It's not just that being eliminated might be humiliating, or even just that the whole game is hitting people with things as an organized sport, but that the students who are least skilled get hit right away, sit on the bench for the rest of the game, and therefore get no practice or exercise. It's about taking physical education seriously as actual education, which my high school certainly didn't.

About Medicaid

Date: 2005-04-29 01:16 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I don't know if this is what sparked the rant, but I thought I make sure that everyone here knew about the Medicaid cuts. Congress just passed the 2006 budget which included $106B more in tax cuts, and $35B to federal benefits progams, with Medicaid getting the largest cuts.

-Malthus

Date: 2005-05-02 06:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] joran.livejournal.com
That woman was such a ridiculous cunt I had to turn the interview off. I'll sit through Jon talking to conservative nutholes. I'll listen to Jon talking to asinine actors. She was unbearable.

I think bullies say stuff like she does in order to justify their own bullying.

As the bullied, I don't share the sentiment.

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