Thursday, July 19, 2007

Moore, Gupta and Some Reality


If you missed it, CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta did a piece on Michael Moore's latest movie, "Sicko". I like Dr. Gupta and have always had the impression that he was a sincere journalist. However, his comments about Sicko sounded like they came from someone I'd never heard before. They were entirely out-of-character for Gupta, at least the character I'd come to know.

Moore then appeared on CNN with Wolf Blitzer and unloaded on him about that piece, the media, the war and seemingly every other wrong in the world. It was actually quite fun to watch. He pointed out several things Dr. Gupta got wrong in the piece and Wolf attempted to defend both the piece and Dr. Gupta. It was so heated that the next night Larry King hosted both Moore and Gupta for a follow-up segment and it went about the same as it did with Wolf the night before.

Finally, CNN came out and admitted that they'd blown a couple of things about their report and also admitted that they could find no errors in the data Moore used in his film. Meanwhile Dr. Gupta still contends that there are a number of "apples to oranges" issues with the way Moore chose his data. All of this Moore has detailed acceptably on his website but that doesn't seem to have much impact.

The main issue that bugs me about Dr. Gupta on this issue is that he keeps trying to sell people on the perception that health care is the other industrialized countries (all socialized) is not only not free because it's paid for by taxes (how stupid does he think we are?) but must be lacking because a number of people in these countries has supplemental coverage on top of it.

This is just pure fear-mongering of the worst kind. He paints this picture but gives no other facts about it. I work with people all over the world and worked for a Canadian company for some time. As you know I also broke my leg in Canada, got wonderful care incredibly cheaply and, irony of ironies, I'm still fighting with Blue Cross here to get my reimbursement for that expense more than a year and half later.

Yes, it's true that many people in these countries have supplemental coverage. What Dr. Gupta fails to mention is that much of it has NOTHING to do with a concern about the existing coverage. Most of it comes from employers who offer a supplemental package as an incentive to recruit better employees. In the Canadian company I worked for that supplemental coverage cost them a whopping $50 per employee per month. Whoop-de-doo!

Dr. Gupta also continues to suggest that these systems are crushing people with taxes. He meanwhile fails to compare it, apples-to-apples, with the costs we incur as a result of our system. How many people in these countries go bankrupt due to medical costs? Almost none. Here it's the leading cause of bankruptcy. He doesn't mention that many of these countries use those taxes to pay for drugs, college, day care, nursing and many other things we have to pay for out of our pocket. These expenses, when added to the cost of our health plans cost us much more than what people in these other countries are burdened with.

The last time someone did an analysis of how much it would cost to insure us all the number was in the billions. I see numbers ranging from $20 billion to $90 billion. Now, is that a lot of money? You betcha. People against the idea will tell you this is the kind of funding that's just not possible and yet we're able to come up with hundreds of billions of dollars for a war half of us didn't want and 80% of us now want no part of. How is it we can afford killing our kids but we can't afford less to heal them? That's what I want to know.

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Two More Movies and Libby as Hilton


We saw two movies today as everyone wanted to keep this July 4th low-key. First up was Transformers and then Ratatouille.

Transformers is a world I knew very little about. I was older when the toys hit the store shelves and never watched the cartoon series. In fact, I didn't even realize that they consisted of good and evil sides. I just thought they were a bunch of creative multi-function toys.

Turns out that none of that was a detriment to seeing this movie. From the first moment on I was hooked. Michael Bay has taken a rather limited concept and turned it into a wondrous movie experience. The ride the movie takes you on is one that will keep you entertained for the duration. The story is decent, the effects incredible and even boasts a wonderfully campy but mainly funny array of dialogue.

Yes, there is much about the story that could have caused a major disconnect with reality and yet it just didn't happen. By the first third of the movie you've already adjusted to just about anything being able to morph into a complex "autobot" within seconds.

The acting is notable simply for the humor of it all. No one here takes it too seriously with the possible exception of Jon Voight who seems a bit too professional for this role. The real winner of the show is the voice talent for the various Transformers, especially the one voicing Optimus Prime. If the voices were done wrong the movie literally would not have worked for me. I can't really say why they worked, they just did.

If there was anything to complain about it would be that some of the action was simply happening too fast. You often aren't entirely sure which Transformers are battling it out or who's winning.

This is a movie that I went into fully prepared to be disappointed. That does give a movie a leg up as it really has nowhere to go but up in its stock. I don't think this one gains its respect just for this however. I was entirely won over by all the various characters to the point of genuinely pulling for the Autobots throughout.

We followed this up by seeing the new Disney/Pixar film Ratatouille. I had seen nothing but wonderful reviews for this movie and due to this I also expected that I'd be disappointed. I find that when everyone loves a movie, I am left disappointed so now I go into such movies with skepticism. This entry from Pixar started off with a fairly funny short called, "Lifted" that was nominated for an Oscar. The interesting part is that it's pretty clear that the perpetually sleeping human in the short is the main human character from Ratatouille.

This movie is quite different from past Pixar efforts. It feels, from very early on, like a project right out of classic Disney. The look is purely Pixar but the story, emotions and ambiance are all Disney. I couldn't help but think of Disney's past classics like, Lady and the Tramp. It's an amazing thing to be able to take rats and manage to get the audience sympathetic to their plight. Ratatouille isn't filled with back-to-back laughing. It's not that kind of movie. It's much more a heartwarming story filled with can-do morality and well-done sweet, touching and romantic moments.

The story surprisingly works. The voice talent is solid. It does not benefit from a memorable soundtrack and does get a bit slow in a one or two spots.

In the end I think it will do alright and I liked it more than both Cars and The Incredibles and about as much as Monster's, Inc. but still can't put it in the league of Finding Nemo or Toy Story.

Finally, just a quick observation of the Scooter Libby situation. I find it quite interesting that the country got itself in a notable uproar when Paris Hilton appeared to be wiggling out from the sentence that was imposed against her and yet I'm hearing virtually nothing about indignation over what is going on with Mr. Libby. Doesn't make sense....

Monday, July 02, 2007

I Hate To Say I Told You So But....


As I said a while ago, big surprised, Scooter Libby won't be serving even a millisecond of time behind bars after being convicted of a jury of his peers for crimes against the country.

In a time when patriotism is supposed to be first and foremost, the man who had no compassion for those in the Texas prison system suddenly had all the compassion necessary to pardon someone in his inner circle.
 


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