9 States Do Not Have Stay at Home Orders

posted by Jack

Although most states have enacted stay-at-home orders, 9 states have yet to take statewide action.  Arkansas response makes a lot of sense, read on:

ArkansasArkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson has repeatedly defended his decision not to issue a stay-at-home order, suggesting that such a measure would cause loss of jobs.

“We’re trying to make good judgement based upon good public health data that is scientifically based and makes sense for Arkansas,” Hutchinson said in a press conference on Thursday.

He argued that Arkansas residents are already taking precautionary measures by practicing proper social distancing and independently deciding to stay home.

“I understand there is a certain amount of political pressure to do what everyone else is doing,” Arkansas Department of Health Secretary Dr. Nathan Smith added at the press conference. “What we’re trying to accomplish here is not to be like every other state or tick off a box. What we’re trying to do is flatten that curve.”

Posted in Health and Medicine, Politics and Government | 16 Comments

COVID-19 UPDATED INFORMATION

by Jack

According to the statistics gathered by worldlifexpectancy.com influenza and pneumonia account for the 3rd leading cause of death in 2019 at 3,177,244. Heart disease ranked #1, at about 8.5 million deaths, followed by stroke at about 6.25 million. 

To put the current pandemic for Covids-19 aka “novel coronavirus” into perspective, in the first 4 months of 2020 there were 46,062 deaths worldwide out of 917,913 total cases reported. That is about a 5% mortality rate. However, this varies greatly from country to country, depending on the available healthcare and the prevention measures taken to mitigate the spread of the virus.

The most accepted forecast for coronavirus deaths in the USA for 2020 has a wide range between 100,000 and 200,000; with the highest risk for patients over 60 or those with underlying contributing factors. 

Polling reflects that over 75% of Americans are concerned that we (USA) have overreacted with quarantines that are going to run too long causing unprecedented financial loss; effects that could last for many years.  Similar polling numbers believes that closing borders in a timely manner and a quarantine period up to 3 weeks were reasonable measures.

In an unexpected benefit from the contagion, 9-1-1 calls in the bay area are down by nearly 50%.  Fewer people on the street has led to fewer accidents, fewer crimes and so on.

At this time bay area fire departments are being used for COVIDS testing.  The testing is being done by skilled EMS volunteers working 6-7 day shifts.

The Political Divide: A recent poll showed more women than men were anxious about the growing outbreak, with 81% of women indicated they were “very concerned” or “concerned” about the spread of coronavirus, compared to 64% of men. Democrats were most likely to report concerns, with 82% indicating concern, compared to 75% of independents and 58% of Republicans.  In my opinion, this proves that democrats are more likely to be intimidated by a crisis and guided by emotions, rather than hard data and logic.

 

Note: The average life expectancy in the USA is 78.5 years.  The USA ranks 34th among nations. Japan ranks #1 at 84.5 years.

Posted in Business, Industry and Finance, Health and Medicine, Politics and Government | 41 Comments

Random Thoughts

by Jack

It’s 10:42 am., and as usual I’m sitting alone in my office, working on article for our blog. I’m still sleepy, went to bed late and got up early.  A sure sign this quarantine is starting to wear on me.

The news on TV and internet is all bad.  That doesn’t help my somber mood.  I just heard some engineer deliberately tried to crash his locomotive into the hospital ship Mercy???  As you probably know, its now birthed in the harbor at San Diego to provide medical support for SoCal.  The kamikaze engineer thought the ship is part of a government takeover and he wanted to call attention to his conspiracy suspicions. His next trip will be on a one way ticket to the psychiatric ward.

10:45 a.m. I’m thinking it’s a really nice day out, I should take the dog for a walk in the park.  The park is only 200 feet from my front door.   At that moment the phone rings, its an 800 number. I answer and a recording begins and I am paraphrasing, “This is an alert from Butte County Health Department, the governor of CA is ordering you to stay in your home and avoid any unnecessary travel. Dang it, they got me and just as I was about to take old Riley for a walk! How did they know?

Poor old Riley, he’s been locked up here for 2 weeks. Three days ago, I tried to take him over to the dog park to play, but it’s been padlocked shut. Apparently the pooches were violating the mandatory 6 foot rule.

11:00 am, hey I found a little good news! Some Einstein’s apparently figured out that the price of oil can’t drop forever. Well, imagine that? And this has a caused a slight rebound in the market. The DOW JONES was up about 140 points. Unfortunately, yesterday the DOW was off a 1000 points and prior to that, the markets have given up all the gains since the crash of 29 or something like that.  This is what happens when business is told to stand down until to further notice.

However, this one bright spot of economic news is soon offset by news from MSNBC telling us that nationally, medical personnel are running low on surgical masks and protective gowns. National stock piles are similarly running out and we’ve got a few months to go before this pandemic has run its course. Wondering what’s our back up plan, garbage bags and handkerchiefs? Ok, bad joke, I know our industry is coming to the rescue, just as soon as we can get word to them in China. My hilarity is on a roll.

It’s now 11:30 a.m. I’ve run out of things to write, then I start thinking again about taking the dog out for a walk…then another thought races thru my so-called mind! My head turns slowly towards the Uniden phone sitting next to me in its cradle, “OMG, if that freaking thing rings and its an 800 numbers, I’m going to shoot it.’ Thankfully it does not…TTYL Hang in there, this too shall pass.

 

Posted in News Media | 10 Comments

Pandemic vs Epidemic

Posted in Health and Medicine, Politics and Government | 2 Comments

COVID News Briefs

On-scene British reporters say Chinese markets again selling bats, likely source of deadly pandemic.   By Rowan Scarborough – The Washington Times – Monday, March 30, 2020

  • China is permitting wild animal markets to resume selling bats, believed to be the source for the deadly coronavirus now killing people across the globe, including over 2,500 Americans to date, British reporters say.  Chinese authorities in January closed down the Wuhan city “wet” market after five of its workers were among the first diagnosed with what would become COVID-19.  A number of scientists say it is likely that bats either infected other market animals or humans directly. Bats carry a variety of coronaviruses and are blamed on for the 2002 SARS coronavirus epidemic that also originated in a Chinese market.
  • The British Daily Mail newspaper reported on Saturday that, “Will they ever learn? Chinese markets are still selling bats and slaughtering rabbits on blood-soaked floors as Beijing celebrates ‘victory’ over coronavirus.”
  • The Kennedy Center received a grant of 25M because of the quarantine and then the CEO fired the musicians.
  • Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo-D closed the state border to New Yorkers and orders a strict quarantine of 14 days for those persons allowed in. Rhode Island police began stopping cars with New York plates Friday. On Saturday, the National Guard will help them conduct house-to-house searches to find people who traveled from New York and demand 14 days of self-quarantine.   Right now we have a pinpointed risk,” Governor Gina Raimondo said. “That risk is called New York City.” Raimondo’s order is likely to be challenged as un-constitutional.  
  •  CA- COVID’s infections are climbing, 6447 known cases, mostly in bay area and Los Angeles and deaths are 133.  Nationally there are 153,246 known cases and 2828 deaths.
Posted in Health and Medicine | 12 Comments

Homeless and the Pandemic Part 2 of 3

The Destruction of Venice Beach Epitomizes California’s Idiocracy

Venice Beach used to be one of California’s great places. A Bohemian gem, nestled against the sand between big city Los Angeles and the vast Pacific Ocean, one encountered locals mingling with surfers, artists, street performers and tourists. People from suburbs further inland migrated to Venice’s beaches on sunny weekends year-round. Rents used to be a little lower in Venice compared to other coastal neighborhoods. Venice was an affordable, inviting and inclusive place. That was then.

Today, Venice Beach is off limits to families who used to spend their Saturdays at the shore. It’s simply too dangerous. On the sand, beached seaweed now mingles with syringes, feces, broken glass and other trash, and the ocean has become the biggest outdoor toilet in the city. At the same time as real estate values exploded along the California coast, the homeless population soared. Currently, more than 1,000 vagrants now consider Venice Beach their permanent home. In Venice, where the median price of a home is $2.1 million, makeshift shelters line the streets and alleys, as the affluent and the indigent fitfully coexist.

What has happened in Venice is representative of what’s happened to California. If progressive extremists take back the White House in 2020, it will be America’s fate.

Laws Raise Costs
California’s cost-of-living is driving out all but the very rich and the very poor, a problem that is entirely the result of policies enacted by California’s progressive elite. They reduce to two factors, both considered beyond debate in the one-party state. First, to supposedly prevent catastrophic climate change along with other environmental concerns, the California legislature created more red tape. This includes laws like the California Environmental Quality Actthe Global Warming Solutions Act and Sustainable Communities and Climate Protection Act, which make it expensive and time consuming to construct new homes. These impose restrictive regulations that decrease the availability of entitled land, furthering hiking up costs for development.

At the same time, California has become a magnet for U.S. welfare recipients and the expatriates of the world. According to a 2018 report (presenting 2015 data, the most recent available) issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, of the 4.2 million recipients in America of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and Supplemental Security Income, an amazing 43 percent of them live in California. That’s more than 1.8 million people. According to the liberal Public Policy Institute of California, as of 2016, California was also home to 2.6 million undocumented immigrants. Could California’s promise of health coverage for undocumented immigrants, or sanctuary state laws, have anything to do with this?

When you enact policies to restrict supply (to save the planet) and increase demand (invite the world to move in), which is exactly what California has done, housing naturally becomes unaffordable. Supply oriented solutions are relatively simple – stop protecting all open space from development. Instead, invest in public-private partnerships to increase the capacity of energy, water, and transportation infrastructure, rather than rationing watergoing solar” and “getting people out of their cars.” Reform public employee retirement benefits instead of incessantly raising taxes and fees to feed the pension funds. It’s that simple.

Unfortunately, in California, nothing is simple. In 2006, the notoriously liberal Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Jones v. City of Los Angeles ruled that law enforcement and city officials can no longer enforce the ban on sleeping on sidewalks anywhere within the Los Angeles city limits until a sufficient amount of permanent supportive housing could be built.

And what is “permanent supportive housing” for the more than 50,000 homeless people in Los Angeles? In 2016, 76 percent of Los Angeles voters approved the $1.2 billion Measure HHH to “help finance the construction of 10,000 units of affordable permanent-supportive housing over the next 10 years.”

The passage of Measure HHH raises many questions. Most immediately, why hasn’t much of the money been spent? As reported by NPR’s Los Angeles affiliate in June, “so far only three of 29 planned projects have funds to begin construction.” Worse, the costs have skyrocketed. According to the NPR report:When voters passed the bond measure, they were told new permanent supportive housing would cost about $140,000 a unit. But average per unit costs are now more than triple that. The PATH Ventures project in East Hollywood has an estimated per-unit cost of $440,000. Even with real estate prices soaring, that’s as much as a single-family home in many places in Southern California. Other HHH projects cost more than $500,000 a unit.”

Demand Outpaces Supply
Spending a half-million dollars to build one basic rental unit to get a homeless family out of the rain sounds like something a bloated new bureaucracy might achieve, and even in high-priced California there’s no other way to explain this level of waste. What about the private sector?

A new privately funded development company, Flyaway Homes, has debuted in Los Angeles with the mission of rapidly providing housing for the homeless. Using retrofitted shipping containers, the companies modular approach to apartment building construction is purported to streamline the approval process and cut costs. But the two projects they’ve got underway are not cheap.

Their 82nd Street Development will cost $4.5 million to house 32 “clients” in a 16 two-bedroom, 480 square foot apartments. That’s $281,250 per two-bedroom apartment. The firm’s 820 W. Colden Ave. property will cost $3.6 million to house 32 clients in eight four-bedroom apartments. That’s $450,000 per apartment.

Is this the best anyone in L.A. can do? Because if it is, it’s not going to work.

Let’s accept the far fetched notion that $5 billion could be found quickly to construct housing for the 50,000 homeless people in Los Angeles, and this could be finished within a few years. Does anyone think the growth in subsidized housing would keep pace with the growth in the population of homeless? Why, when California is a sanctuary state, a magnet for welfare cases, and has the most forgiving winter weather in America?

One may take issue with the whole concept of taxpayer subsidized housing, but that is almost beside the point. There are more urgent strategic questions that aren’t being honestly confronted in California. For example:

Why is the national average construction cost per new apartment unit somewhere between $65,000 and $85,000, yet it costs five to 10 times that much in Los Angeles?

Is it wise to have subsidized housing that is of better quality than the apartments that many hard working Californians occupy and pay for without benefit of subsidies?

Why has there been no serious attempt to get useful statistics on the homeless population, in order to apply different approaches depending on who they are? For example, how many homeless are mentally ill, criminals, or substance abusers, sexual predators, undocumented immigrants, willfully homeless with other housing options or hard working sane people who have encountered hard times (yes, “intersectionality” would exist among these categories)?

Why not immediately allocate open land to create campsites where the homeless can move their tents and belongings, to get them off the streets?

Why not then study the refugee camps set up around the world, an activity where U.S. NGOs have in-depth expertise, and replicate these in areas of L.A. County where there is cheaper, available land? These semi-permanent structures are far less expensive than solutions currently offered.

Does inviting millions from impoverished, politically unstable nations help those nations, when for every person who makes his way to California, thousands remain? And if not, why not directly help the people who are staying in those nations, which would be far more cost-effective?

Wouldn’t it make more sense to moderate the inflow of unskilled workers across the border into California, in order to eliminate the oversupply of cheap labor which depresses wages? Wouldn’t that be better than mandating a higher minimum wage?

Doesn’t offering welfare and subsidized housing to people capable of work make it unlikely they will ever seek work? While striking a balance is a compassionate necessity, has that balance perhaps been violated, since California is home to 43 percent of America’s welfare recipients?

When will California loosen restrictions on land development and building code mandates, in order to bring the cost of new housing construction back down towards national averages?

When will the elected officials in a major California city stand up to the litigants who use the Ninth Circuit to impose rulings such as Jones v. City of Los Angeles, and take a case to the U.S. Supreme Court? While many homeless people have genuine stories of hardship and bad luck, must we be forced to cede to all of them our most desirable public spaces?

No Good Resolution in Sight
What has happened in Los Angeles is a perfect storm of progressive pressure groups and rent-seeking bureaucrats and profiteers, working together to amass money, power, and prestige. If they were efficiently solving the problem, that would be just fine. But they aren’t, and until they accept tough answers to tough questions, they never will.

As Venice Beach continues to reel from the impact of the homeless invasion, Los Angeles city officials are fast-tracking the permit process to build a homeless shelter on 3.2 acres of vacant city-owned property less than 500 feet from the beach. This property, nestled in the heart of Venice’s upscale residential and retail neighborhoods, if commercially developed, would be worth well over $200 million. Shelter capacity? About 100 people.

In a less utopian, less corrupt society, that single property could be sold, and the proceeds could be used to set up and monitor a tent city housing thousands, if not tens of thousands of people. But not in California. Under the warm sun, against the indifferent ocean, the idiocracy endures.

Posted in Politics and Government | 1 Comment

My Corona!

By Pie Guevara

Pie Guevara appears in Posts Scripts through the gracious courtesy of Jack Lee and Tina Grazier and is an unregistered trademark of Engulf and Devour Investments LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Walton Industries which, in turn, is wholly owned by David Walton.  So there!

OK, I can’t put that up bit from PolitiZoid without giving a nod to the original from back in the day…

“My Sharona” was debut single by The Knack released in June of 1979 and written by band members Doug Fieger (lead vocalist) and Berton Averre (lead guitar). The single was simultaneously released along with their debut album Get The Knack which included an album version of the song. The inspiration for “My Sharona” was Fieger’s long time love interest Sharona Alperin, to whom he was once engaged but never married. They remained lifelong friends and Alperin was at his bedside the week Fieger died of cancer on February 14, 2010. He was 57.

The single of “My Sharona” became an instant international number-one hit. After selling a half million copies in the US it was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America making it Capitol Records’ fastest gold status achieving debut single since The Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand” in 1964. In June it rocketed to number-one on the Billboard Hot 100 singles list, maintained that rating for 6 weeks and finished out the year in the number-one slot on Billboard’s 1979 Top Pop Singles year-end chart.

The Knack’s debut album, Get The Knack, was recorded in just two weeks at a cost of a mere $18,000. Following its release it spent five weeks at number-one on the Billboard 200 album chart. It went Gold just 13 days after its release, went Platinum when it sold over a million copies in less than two months and marked another milestone for Capitol Records that summer as their fastest selling debut LP since Meet the Beatles! in 1964.

In the late 70’s and well into the 80’s I commuted from “Laughing Yet” to “Liver Gulch” every afternoon to work swing shift in Target Diagnostics on the Shiva Laser Fusion project at LLNL. Needless to say that as an aficionado of The Knack I cranked up the car radio every time one of their songs was played and rocked out.

This ultimately led me to not paying attention to my speed one day. On a Sunday morning I was rocking to The Knack while traveling to Livermore to work overtime in order to get off the last shot of a month’s series of experiments that had to be completed before we could move on to the next series. It was a tough morning as I had been up the night before running diagnostics on the previous laser shot and had not gotten home until 2am.

I must have been going 70mph on 580 (which was the speed limit before Carter approved the nation-wide 55mph limit) when a CHP officer I had not noticed behind me lit up and hit the siren. That ticket wiped out my entire weekend of overtime. Man it hurt. Aiee, aiee, aiee, aiee ya! My big boner!

“My Sharona” inspired lots of covers here and abroad by artists from the famous to the obscure. The half a dozen or so that I have found audio or video clips of are uninteresting so I won’t bother posting them here. Perhaps at the pinnacle of pointless cultural radiation and reverberation is the cover by Alvin and the Chipmunks but it is so obnoxious that I’ll let readers go look it up for themselves. I guess anyone who has been covered by Alvin and his crew must know that they have landed on a plane of cultural influence so rarefied that a bunch of cartoon  rodents will try and make a buck out of you.

Then there are the parodies but for the most part when they aren’t merely lame they are just plain crude. Of course there was Weird Al back in 1979 taking his  shot…

And there is this gem also from 1979. “My Sharona” had made it’s first mark in the world affairs arena. Of course my favorite line is “And you know if you were here…you were here, we’d hit you in the  face with a pie-atollah!”

Finally, as a last ditch effort to entertain all you social distancing shut-ins, this young lady is quite talented and just as cute as can be…

If you would like to spend some time noodling around on the internet one of my favorite authors, columnists and bloggers is James Lileks. He wrote a column for years at the Minneapolis Star Tribune and currently writes a wide ranging cultural column for National Review — James Lileks, National Review

You could spend days wandering around his blog site LILEKS (James).

Be sure not  to miss The Gallery of Regretable Food.

Posted in Culture, Health and Medicine, Humour, Politics and Government, World | 11 Comments

Homeless and the Pandemic Part 1 of 3

While Cities’ Homeless Populations Surge, California’s Homeless Industrial Complex Grows

Which came first – California’s homeless or the government, non-profits and businesses benefitting?

By Katy Grimes, July 30, 2019 9:39 am (worthy of a second look)

Cities throughout the state of California saw their homeless populations surge in the last two years. Yet, Democrat politicians try to normalize homelessness, while at the same time, try to make California residents accept epidemic levels of homeless as a standard population component of any city.

Earlier in July, Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg called for an enforceable statewide “right to shelter” mandate that would require cities to have enough shelter space or other housing to accommodate their homeless populations. Steinberg made this proclamation only one month after the Volunteers of America homeless shelter lost state and local funding and had to shut down.

Steinberg wants the State of California to require cities to offer the homeless places to stay. But politics are at work here, and somehow VOA fell out of favor.

The Sacramento Bee reported in June, “The nonprofit leaders asked Sacramento County for additional funding in its new budget, but did not receive it.”

California Globe spoke with different non-profits about why this happened, but no one was comfortable assigning blame. The one constant mentioned is always Sacramento County, which was found to be hoarding funds supposed to be used for homeless services. A 2018 State Audit found Sacramento County had stashed $98.4 million in the county’s pot of funds allocated under the state Mental Health Services Act. The Sacramento Bee reported that the county spends about $40 million on all of its homeless services every year. That’s in addition to the $6.5 million that supervisors agreed earlier this year to spend on transitional housing and a new, 75-bed “rehousing” shelter, as well as another $5 million to roust homeless people for camping and dumping trash on the parkway.

Priorities

California’s homeless epidemic could be solved relatively quickly if politicians had the political will to actually solve it rather than hold roundtable discussions, media events, planning sessions and creating commissions to oversee it.

The California Legislature passed Assembly Bill 101, to require cities to build housing in some areas and “attempts to allow for faster construction of homeless shelters” by scrapping some environmental reviews and making it harder for local officials to delay projects,” CBS reported. Politicians exempt certain favored projects from state-mandated environmental review, when it is politically expedient. “There is a law, and you’ve got to abide by the law,” Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters. “And if you don’t, it’s nice to have a tool to encourage you along. And that’s all this is.”

Remember, Gov. Gavin Newsom sued the Orange County city of Huntington Beach for failing to provide enough additional “affordable housing,” while his own home county of Marin is enjoying a moratorium on affordable housing building requirements until 2028, California Globe reported.

The explosion of California’s drug-addicted and mentally-ill homeless can be directly linked to Democrats’ determination to empty out the jails and prisons through legislation and ballot initiatives, claiming to be for safe neighborhoods and the well-being of our children. Combine that with the outrageous housing prices and high rents, and California is ground zero.

Add in the Homeless Industrial Complex, which has grown exponentially recently, and it becomes evident this is an opportunity for local government to grow, and funnel funding to favored non-profits.

“Every major city in California is spending tens of millions or more on programs for the homeless. But most of the money is being wasted,” Edward Ring wrote at California Globe recently. “Why? Because there is a Homeless Industrial Complex that is getting filthy rich, wasting the money, while the homeless population swells.”

Additionally, city Mayors have required retraining police departments to “engage” with homeless, and connect them with local government services. While police are spending time “engaging” with homeless, they are not able to respond to crime calls.

Here is the Sacramento Police Department’s explanation:

The Sacramento Police Department’s Impact Team provides outreach and engagement services throughout the City of Sacramento.  The Impact Team responds to community concerns regarding homelessness and engages with our homeless community members. The Impact team connects them with resources that can provide housing and other services. Additionally, our Impact team collaborates with service providers to help address the underlying causes of homelessness, and multiple options are available to assist each person. Below is a partial list of our partners:

Pomona is spending $4 million to help Pomona police officers and mental health counselors address homelessness. Assemblyman Freddie Rodriguez (D-Chino) squeezed the $4 million in the 2018-19 state budget for the City of Pomona.

Pomona is expected to:

  • Provide annual training for officers on interacting with homeless individuals
  • Provide full-time homeless liaison officer positions, dedicated solely to homeless outreach efforts
  • Provide mental health clinician positions to accompany homeless liaison officers during their work in the field, including one position that can provide assistance around the clock
  • Annual reporting requirements and data collection

Making Dangerous Cities Even Worse

“The so-called reforms succeeded in promoting crime by decriminalizing many crimes, and reclassifying violent crimes as ‘non-violent,'” I explained. “Gov. Jerry Brown’s A.B. 109, ‘realigned’ California’s overcrowded prison system, shifting responsibility of repeat, newly classified ‘nonviolent’ offenders from state prisons to county jails. Those released were assigned county probation officers rather than state parole officers. Those newly ‘non-violent’ criminals let out of county jails due to overcrowding are living on the streets, living on our parkways, rivers, and canals, and using the streets as their toilets.”

Assembly Bill 109Proposition 47Proposition 57 decriminalized theft, drug crimes, sex crimes, and emptied out California prisons. Proposition 47 also reclassified shoplifting, grand theft, receiving stolen property, forgery, fraud, and writing bad checks as “non-serious, nonviolent crimes,” and any theft valued at $950 or less as a misdemeanor, even if committed every day.

Proposition 57, “The California Parole for Non-Violent Criminals and Juvenile Court Trial Requirements Initiative” allows criminals convicted of rape, lewd acts against a child, and human trafficking to be released early from prison. Prop. 57 allows career criminals to be treated as first offenders, and it overturned victims’ rights legislation like Marsy’s Law, “three strikes,” Victim’s Bill of Rights, and the Californians Against Sexual Exploitation Act.

Making dangerous cities even worse, in 2017 the California Legislature passed Senate Bill 180, entirely on a party-line vote, to limit the ability of law enforcement to send chronic drug abusers back to prison. Judges were already neutered by Prop. 47 in 2014, which removed their ability to sentence drug offenders to drug treatment programs, rather than prison.

Now, California cities are even repealing anti-begging and loitering laws.

And don’t blame the homeless population in California on former Governor Ronald Reagan – he did not close the state’s mental hospitals as the leftist media has incorrectly repeated for 50 years. It was President John F. Kennedy who in his October 31, 1963 legislation -The Community Mental Health Act of 1963 — ordered the building of 1,500 mental health centers, while closing many mental health hospitals over time, known as deinstitutionalization. Governors were just required to execute on the President’s Executive Order, while at the same time, Congress failed to fund the mental health centers.

NOTE:  The centers were a total failure because they counted on the mentally ill to seek counselling and keep their appointments.  Makes me wonder who was more crazy, them or the people who dreamed up the Community Mental Health Act?

Posted in Environment, Health and Medicine, Police, Crime, Security, Politics and Government | 2 Comments

A Failure of Government to Supervise Ventilator Production

Posted by Jack, with highlighted commentary inserted by Jack

New York Times 3/29/20 – Thirteen years ago during the George W. Bush presidency, a group of U.S. public health officials came up with a plan to address what they regarded as one of the medical system’s crucial vulnerabilities: a shortage of ventilators.

The breathing-assistance machines tended to be bulky, expensive and limited in number. The plan was to build a large fleet of inexpensive portable devices to deploy in a flu pandemic or another crisis.

Money was budgeted. A federal contract was signed. Work got underway, sort of, and then things suddenly veered off course when the Obama Administration moved into the White House.  A multibillion-dollar maker of medical devices bought the small California company that had been hired to design the new machines. The project ultimately produced zero ventilators.   The transitioning oversight or rather the lack thereof, allowed this project to slip through the cracks. 

That critical failure delayed the development of an affordable ventilator by at least half a decade, depriving hospitals, states and the federal government of the ability to stock up. The federal government started over with another company in 2014, whose ventilator was approved only last year (during the Trump Administration) and whose products have not yet been delivered.

“The stalled efforts to create a new class of cheap, easy-to-use ventilators highlight the perils of outsourcing projects with critical public-health implications to private companies without diligent follow up; their focus on maximizing profits is not always consistent with the government’s goal of preparing for a future crisis.

Posted in Business, Industry and Finance, Health and Medicine | 5 Comments

Economic Impact of Car Wrecks

Ever wonder why your car insurance is darn high, even though you haven’t had an accident or ticket in 20 years?

Stats from the website Safer America.   

The Economic Impact of Car Accidents…..

101 The annual economic cost of car accidents in the United States is an estimated $242 billion.

102 From 2007 to 2012, the average claimed economic losses (such as medical expenses and lost wages) increased by 8 percent among personal injury claimants and by 4 percent among bodily injury claimants.

103 In 2013, the average automobile liability claim for property damage was $3,231. The average liability claim for bodily injury was $15,443.

104 In 2013, the average collision claim was $3,144. The average comprehensive claim was $1,621.

105 Private insurers pay about half of all car accident costs, while individual crash victims pay 26 percent, and third parties pay 14 percent.

106 In 2010, the cost of medical care and productivity losses due to injuries from car accidents was more than $99 billion – nearly $500 for each licensed US driver.

Posted in Police, Crime, Security | Leave a comment