Letter from student government

by   Posted on March 25th, 2010 in Opinion

By Jennifer Mancini, Student Government Senator and James Nance, Student Government Senator

Student Government would like to welcome everyone back from what was hopefully a relaxing and fun-filled Spring Break. We hope you all are ready to finish out the semester as strong as we are.

The inevitable Student Government elections are going to be held March 30 – 31. Remember, this is an opportunity for your voices to be heard and we encourage everyone to take a few moments and vote through e-mail. If you don’t vote, you can’t complain.

The candidates on the ballot for the prestigious position of Student Body president and vice president are as follows: D’Leon Barnett and Jackie Yoo, Lynn Gold and Dominic Pody, Sean Hobaugh and Evan Massengill and last but not least, Shane Smith and Richard Everett. Elections are expected to be competitive this year with 44 candidates running for 30 senate seats. Good luck to everyone.

University Services has been working hard to institute a Housing Town Hall and the honorable Chairman Shane Smith would like everyone to be aware that there will be a meeting Tuesday, March 23 from 5 – 6 p.m. in the Johnson Center Cinema. It will be a room selection process and people should feel free to ask questions and voice any concerns they may have.

University Life has made progress with the car-sharing initiative. It will be very similar to University of Virgina’s program and will begin with five cars — four on the Fairfax campus and one on the Arlington campus. Car-sharing will hopefully be instituted by this upcoming fall. Student input on the car locations is greatly welcomed.

Student Government will be sponsoring Mason Munchie cookies and hot chocolate on the Monday night of Greek Week. We will also be co-sponsoring the Health and Fitness Expo Thursday, April 1 in Dewberry Hall from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. We hope to see you there!

On a lighter note, the One-Stop Patriot Shop has had several complaints about their patrons not wearing shoes or shirts during the night. Effective immediately, they will be implementing a “No shirt, No shoes, No service” policy.

Lastly, Student Government would like to remind everyone about the upcoming Academic Advising Expo on March 25 in Dewberry Hall from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. They will be raffling off an 8 GB iPod touch and the first 100 students to attend will receive a free 260 MB USB drive.

Remember students, this is an opportunity to get in touch with Mason’s academic advising resources, meet some of the advisers, and win free stuff! As with One-Stop, shirts and shoes are required.

Jennifer Mancini
Student Government Senator

James Nance
Student Government Senator

Enough on Global Warming: Opinion Editor Wishes for Something More

by   Posted on March 25th, 2010 in Opinion

By William Curtis, Opinion Editor

It boggles my mind how much information I have read on global warming, and having read about it from so many writers in past issues of Broadside, as well as this one, it has left me with one question: Is global warming the only item we have to discuss?

While going through my e-mails just the other day, I stumbled upon a Letter to the Editor that piqued my interest. The letter was written by Jason Von-Kundra and can be found in this issue on page seven. When I read this piece, it made me realize that we really have been debating the existence of global warming for far too long.

There are more important questions we should be asking ourselves. Is health care reform really going to happen, and if it does, will it benefit us all or make us hate the systems we put in place even more? Should Ken Cuccinelli continue to deny anti-discrimination laws for homosexuals in Virginia?

And if you are ignorant and foolish enough to believe that global warming isn’t real, then you too are denying the facts and the evidence that is right in front of all of our faces.

I have been studying global warming ever since my high school biology teacher explained it to me almost eight years ago. Then just last year, I took Mark Sample’s Disaster Fiction class, and you would be surprised what fiction involving the end of the world can teach you. I can honestly say that I learned a good deal about survival tactics from that class, which clearly ups my chances for survival in the future — if, God forbid, anything truly devastating does happen.

This class also made me realize, or rather only extenuated my belief, that we are nearing the end of times. I have my beliefs about 2012 and whether or not it will be some cataclysmic catastrophe, but the fact still remains that the earth is rapidly changing and adapting more quickly than we have ever seen.

One doesn’t need scientific evidence to know this. The proof can simply be seen by opening your eyes. As I sit here writing this piece, it is 72 degrees outside, and just under a month ago, Virginia, as well as the entire East Coast, accumulated record-breaking snowfall. Earthquakes, tsunamis, mudslides, tornadoes — these disasters are happening because of what we have done to our planet. And if you would like to stay in your little belief bubble and ignore what most people are realizing now, you are going to be in a world of pain . . . if you survive.

So instead, let’s stop quarreling over the existence of whatever is eventually going to kill us, because arguing over this topic is almost like watching children fight over an invisible dog: slightly entertaining, but ultimately pointless.

I imagine that, although this is a great topic to discuss and one that is very intellectually stimulating, when it gets to the point where 11 professors need to voice their concerns on a scientific issue, denying that a student’s beliefs are accurate, I think it might be time to open your mind and look at the situation from a different angle.
Seeing or hearing someone else’s perspective can change everything, or at least allow the ideas of someone who may have a different and better perspective into your head.

William Curtis is an English major.

No Seats for the Obese? In Some Cases, Passengers Should Purchase Two Seats

by   Posted on March 1st, 2010 in Opinion

Justin Lalputan, Staff Writer

Obesity is a problem that many Americans face today. However, the other day, I heard a story about famed director Kevin Smith, who is widely known for his role as Silent Bob in the Clerks films, being removed from a Southwest Airlines flight because he was too fat to fit into a seat.

At first this astounded me; I never knew someone could actually be kicked off a flight due to body size. So I did more research on the story and learned that he was not ejected due only to his weight, but also because the flight was at capacity, he didn’t have the option to purchase an additional seat.

I researched the matter further and discovered that this is not only a common problem for airlines, but also for movie theaters. It seems that larger airline passengers and moviegoers alike are sometimes required to buy an extra seat to accomodate their size. My first reaction was that this was ridiculous. How can someone be discriminated against just because of their size? On top of that, I’ve also read that, in some cases, people cannot help being obese, but that is another story entirely. Then I started to think about having to sit next to a person on an airplane who was too large for one seat. That would not only be uncomfortable for the person sitting in the next seat over, but it would also probably be cramped for the large person, thus inconveniencing two passengers. Is the best answer really to make the large person purchase another seat?

In my opinion, the answer is yes. Not to sound heartless or to offend anyone, but a lot of the time, people wind up obese through their own actions. Therefore, people should live with the consequences of their actions and have to pay for an additional ticket. Naturally, there are some who share my opinion. But when others hear this, they start doing what I initially did and cry discrimination against fat people. This is not a case of discrimination. One thing that definitely needs to be taken into account is the number of people that this problem actually inconveniences. I know a lot of people who are “big” but who are still able to fit comfortably into airline seating. My father, for example, is somewhat overweight. But even he can fit just fine on an airline, so the actual number of people that this impacts is quite small.

The question is raised, what decides whether or not a customer needs to buy an extra seat? Southwest Airlines, the same airline that ejected Smith, has an established policy. They require that a passenger fit both comfortably and safely into a seat, which means that he must be able to put both armrests down and buckle his seatbelt. If one cannot comply with these conditions, he must buy an extra seat. I think this is a reasonable policy.

However, when airline employees request that someone purchase an extra seat, they should be nice about it. Body size is a sensitive subject for many people, and it only adds additional stress when it causes someone to be singled out. So, yes, I think that people who are too big for just one seat should be required to buy a second one, but the handling of this situation shouldn’t be inhumane. Regardless of size, everyone has feelings. And if enough people get angry, airlines — besieged as they already are — could have an even larger problem on their hands.

A Student’s Lessons Learned: Finding Wisdom From Past Mistakes

by   Posted on March 1st, 2010 in Opinion

Stephanie Tran, Staff Writer

It all started with the required reading book Walden Two written by psychologist B. F. Skinner.
The book described an idyllic, utopian commune that flourishes in post-World War II America, in a community where the subject of History is not taught.

When the founder, Frazier, is confronted with this fact, he replies that history has no use, because it is full of mistakes and human recording error.
His conclusion is that there is nothing to learn from the past when one can study and modify behavior in the present and future.

Nothing to learn from the past? As a wise person once said, “Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”

Just a quick glance at the current economy, the Great Depression and a trip to Google indicates that the U.S., like other capitalistic countries, seems to follow a cycle of economic growth and decay, otherwise known as the 50-60 year-long Kondratiev Wave.

While the person who coined the term, Nikolai Kondratiev, is often mocked for his theory, it still successfully predicted the Great Depression of the 1930s and seemed to describe the U.S. economy in November 2008.

You could also look at Haiti’s history and predict that foreign aid, while generous and helpful, might be harming the country’s economy and social structure even as it rebuilds them.
A perusal of Encyclopedia Britannica’s website shows that in Haiti’s history, foreign aid hasn’t helped its people much, who are dogged, as the country is, by governmental, economic and social problems.
The clear lesson here is that Haiti needs its institutions to be shored up as much as its buildings.

Or you could even look at your own history and learn from it. One of my father’s favorite sayings is, “I was going to say something, but I wanted you to learn from it.”

While some of those lessons involved frustrated tears and angst, there’s no doubt that the best teacher is experience.

For instance, during my first semester here at Mason, I often forgot my keys while heading off to my morning class. Fortunately, I had a roommate who happened to be both compassionate and a student of late morning classes, so she would let me back into my room to retrieve my keys.

While I’m extremely thankful for her kindness, the fact remains that I continued to forget my keys and did not work too hard to hang on to them.

A snowball fight a few weekends ago quickly taught me to zip up my jacket pockets to secure my keys.
Only one wet and miserable hour’s search in the foot-deep snow and a bill for both a new key and a new door lock now has me double- and triple-checking my pockets wherever I go.
To move ahead in life, you need to learn from your mistakes, and the past is an able teacher.

As Rafiki in The Lion King once said, “The past can hurt. But the way I see it, you can either run from it, or . . . learn from it.” I know where I stand on teaching and learning history. Which do you think is the best way? Running or learning?

Rebuttal to Climategate Response: Bring It On: ‘Debate on the Hypocrisy of Anthropogenic Global Warming’

by   Posted on March 1st, 2010 in Opinion

Alan Moore, Staff Writer

Apparently, there are still a minor few out there who drink the climate change alarmist Kool-Aid.
While people like George Mason University Sustainability Assistant Colin Bennett and seemingly the entire Office of Sustainability would prefer to mudsling, I am happy to level some truth.
I’m thrilled to report that support for this eco-radical farce is dwindling and that the lies are being exposed.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, recently came under attack by one of its former lead supporters, John Christy, a professor of atmospheric science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. “The temperature records,” Christy insists, “cannot be relied on as indicators of global change.”
IPCC then asked Professor Ross McKitrick of the University of Guelph in Canada to formally review its latest report. “We concluded,” said McKitrick in his review, “with overwhelming statistical significance, that the IPCC’s climate data are contaminated with surface effects from industrialization and data quality problems. These add up to a large warming bias.”

In other words, the IPCC scientists lied, much like Mr. Bennett has done.
I understand why Mr. Bennett is upset that I called for his office to be eliminated. I also understand his frustration in seeing his eco-radical crusade exposed as a lie. That would frustrate the heck out of me too — so no hard feelings.

I imagine he will eventually have a revelation much like the disgraced Professor Phil Jones, who is at the center of the Climategate scandal and who recently admitted that for the past 15 years there has been “no statistically significant warming” and that the world was warmer in medieval times, showing that global warming may not be caused by man after all.

Whether you want to believe what was found in the Climategate e-mails or not, here is an indisputable fact: Dr. Jones has been ordered, through the Freedom of Information Act, to reproduce scientific data used for the famed hockey stick graph, but he has failed to do so. Apparently the data has now mysteriously disappeared. If the debate on anthropogenic global warming rests on this data then these arguments are truly bush-league. Is there any professor at Mason who will admit to losing scientific data on anything they have ever published?

Are eco-radicals really using the “dog ate my homework” defense?
It’s obvious that Mr. Bennett is more interested in keeping his job than anything else. If he was really more concerned with the merits of global warming then he wouldn’t take the unprecedented and highly unethical stance of publicly attacking a student in the school paper. He has exemplified how venomous the Left can be when backed into a corner; they resort to unsubstantiated arguments and personal attacks.

Do not be swayed by his published tripe. Mr. Bennett does not represent rational thought or popular opinion. In fact, he represents a radicalized ideology that has been proven to be foolhardy and nothing more than a laughable annoyance to those who simply seek truth and substance.

That is why I didn’t feel the need to respond last year; but now, I just can’t help myself. When you’re in a hole like Mr. Bennett currently is, you don’t keep digging. The comic value of watching him continue to dig is too rich of an opportunity to pass up.

The radicalism is best illustrated by Mr. Bennett, who has publicly supported and defended the disgraced former White House environmental adviser and fellow climate change alarmist Van Jones. Mr. Jones was forced to resign his post after it was revealed that he believes that 9/11 was a conspiracy perpetrated by the Bush Administration. Jones also supports commuting the sentence of a convicted cop-killer and was once a member of the Marxist radical group Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement.
Is there truly guilt by association? This question might not be able to be answered, but there is, however, something to be drawn from those who idolize Marxists and 9/11 truthers. Mr. Bennett thinks Jones should run for president.

I urge you, my dear, fellow students, to not allow radical ideology to overtake our beloved campus. If we continue to capitulate in this manner then you will see more harebrained ideas like those from the Environmental Awareness Group who wants to tax students to support their eco-radical agenda.
I do find this proposal to debate intriguing. If Mr. Bennett is only interested in using a public forum to throw his childish insults, as most liberals who lack intelligent and substantive positions do, then he can forget about it. However, if he seriously wants to have a civil and genuine debate on the hypocrisy of anthropogenic global warming, then I say bring it on.

Burger King Economics: Attaching Dollar Signs to Everything Doesn’t Bode Well

by   Posted on March 1st, 2010 in Opinion

Brandon T. Minister, Staff Writer

My brother-in-law once said to me, “What I love about economists is the way they can put a dollar figure on everything. They can say, ‘Sitting at one additional traffic light costs a driver $5.37.’”

It is nice of him to tell me what he loves about my profession, especially since I’ve never once returned the favor with, “You know what I love about energy traders . . . ?” However, I can’t tell if he means he loves economists like he loves his wife, or if he just loves us like he loves watching Dumb and Dumber. Is what he loves about the cost-benefit analysis-laden world of economics the ridiculousness of it all?
It’s true that economists try to attach a dollar figure to everything. The opinions of haughty arts majors aside, this is a helpful practice. Dollars are the universal common denominator, allowing us to compare two unlike things. If a shirt or a painting has no quantifiable value, I can never know how many paintings to give you as compensation for taking one of your shirts. When we turn them both into dollars, we can start trading.

Most people don’t have a problem with assigning dollar amounts to typical goods and services. Where economists push the envelope — to the delight of my brother-in-law and the consternation of the local poet — is the pricing of less numerically calculable quantities such as children, contentment and love.
Buying love outright is only legal in Nevada, but buying it indirectly is par for the course everywhere. Whether it’s the price of the gifts we give or the opportunity costs we incur for missed chances, love and money are inseparably entangled. That’s what economists call “the price of love.”

It gets trickier still when pricing abstract concepts, like “pain and suffering.” But like anything else, this has a price, too. Agreeing on that price is difficult. One of the worst ways to arrive at a figure is to ask the person who’s about to receive the money what he thinks is a fair amount. Mississippi juries aside, most of us understand that this is a formula for unreliably high estimates. How much compensation do you need to allow me to slap your face? Would that number change if I were poorer than you? What if I were richer than you?

We want a standard that’s a little more scientific unless we work in news media, in which case we go with whatever number helps our story. In a Wall Street Journal article entitled “As Sales Drop, Burger King Draws Critics for Courting ‘Super Fans,’” reporter Julie Jargon decided to ask former Burger King regular Noah Rubin how much he was saving by trading up Whoppers for organic vegetables. His answer: $100 each week.

I don’t think this claim withstands scrutiny. First of all, supposedly his savings came from trading Burger King bacon cheeseburgers for organic vegetables. That means his original Burger King tab was $100 plus the cost of a week’s supply of organic vegetables, every week. This number also doesn’t hold up when seen in the big picture. A $100 weekly tab comes to more than $5,000 a year. Now, I don’t know much about Rubin, but I do know that he’s in his 20s, he’s unmarried and until very recently, he regularly ate at Burger King. Statistically speaking, it is incredibly unlikely that he could afford spending $5,000 each year on Burger King.

Finally, this number doesn’t survive a more in-depth analysis. Burger King offers a lot of things, but they don’t serve filet mignon. Most burgers cost less than $5, which means $100 a week buys 20 burgers. A week only has 21 meals in it. Unless you’re a hobbit, like my youngest son who’s usually finished with his second breakfast before I wake up on Saturdays, you don’t eat that much. Lest you think, “But you’re forgetting the cost of fries and a drink,” I remind you that you’re forgetting the $100 is his savings. Surely his weekly organic vegetable bill covers the cost of the upgrades to extra-value meals.

The real news story here should be headlined, “Man Spends Year Eating Burger King Nearly Three Times a Day, Doesn’t Die, Sources Say.” Now that’s a news story even an economist can buy.

Twitter to the Rescue!: Social Networking Sites Create New Adventures for Amateur Journalists

by   Posted on March 1st, 2010 in Opinion

Evan Benton, Staff Writer

On February 12, 2010, two Metro cars on a six-car train jumped the rail. While there were no serious injuries, over 300 passengers were left stranded, and once again the thousands of people using the D.C. Metro system every day were left wondering: What the hell is going on here?
There are many reasons to be alarmed. This is the third such incident since mid-June of last year, when the area experienced the deadliest Metro crash in history: a collision of two trains resulted in nine deaths and over 76 injuries.

Since then, two Metro employees were crushed by a runaway utility vehicle on the tracks on January 27th; and now there’s this. Granted, cars jumping the rail is better than cars colliding, and in this case an “automated derailer” threw the trains off the tracks before they could collide with each other.
Really? An automatic derailer system? I wasn’t aware that the threat of train collision was so ominous and frequent that a derailer system was even necessary.

What’s worse is the fact that actual news stations didn’t pick up the incident until 15 hours after the derailment, leaving the populace ignorant to the event for even longer. What’s most embarrassing for a city proud of its journalistic history is that local news only got wind of the event from one dutiful member of the Twitter nation, whose simple Tweet, “Can’t believe a metro train was just derailed . . . *sigh*,”started a whole mess of Tweeting, to the extent that News 4 noticed and shrewdly decided to send a panel van down to Farragut North and start some actual reporting.

Unfortunately, this was not until long after the incident occurred, and hundreds of dumped riders had already made their way home. Journalism is not dead. In fact, apparently anybody can be a journalist nowadays. In a society where everyone has an iPhone with perfect 3G capability and bookmarked tabs to Facebook and Twitter just within fingertips’ reach, a status update or a Tweet can be a news tip like no other — instantaneous, reliable and easy.

Anyone with Internet capability can get information out to the public in a variety of ways, and news organizations that have started to embrace blogs and Twitter are finding themselves well ahead of the competition. When a serious incident occurs in the middle of the nation’s capital and remains uncovered by the news for hours, something is dismally wrong.

The woman whose Tweet brought the attention, Jada Bradley, is a columnist for The Examiner.
This makes me wonder just how much longer it would have taken if she had been a rider not affiliated with a news organization.

For the future, my advice to the local news is to keep someone posted on their Twitter and Facebook accounts, monitoring all the local Tweets and keeping a look out. People rely on the integrity, the fairness, but most importantly the swiftness of the news.

When Metro riders are the first journalists on the scene of a derailment, the actual newspeople are rendered obsolete.

Spirituality As I See It: A Walk Through GMU Campus is a Personal Pilgrimage

by   Posted on March 1st, 2010 in Opinion

Vincent Ali, Broadside Correspondent

Every day I walk the paths of George Mason University waiting for someone to hand me a flier explaining why I should follow their path to God and leave my heathen lifestyle behind without a second thought. I politely listen to them, giving them a chance to convince me.
However many times I am approached, their aim is always the same. A five-minute conversation to convince me to change my ways is not an effective method to change the beliefs I have had for the past 23 years.

How can you possibly fathom the idea that I will change my life after five minutes? It blows my freaking mind. Half of the time it feels like these preachers just want more people to join their following. They see it as a way to strengthen their faith, even though they assure me that they are just trying to spread the word. It is kind of selfish when I look at it that way.

Most of my experiences with religion and spirituality have been pretty generic. Someone comes up to me saying that they have the cure to all of life’s problems — all you have to do is surrender yourself to their faith.

Leave all your false beliefs at the door and follow us, they say. We will guide you to nirvana. Essentially the same ideal of life is a privilege given to you. You should bow down to God’s will. I mean, it’s too much for me.

There are so many things I question. Why is my current path wrong? What if I join yours and I am still wrong? What then? Why would you forever damn me to hell? What makes your belief better than everyone else’s? Why does the cross look like a sword? There are, however, special cases that make my head hurt.
Brother Micah is a man on a “mission from God.” He believes that we are all going to hell if we do not follow him. He travels across the country seeking out sinners to “rescue.”

I have seen numerous videos of the man getting spat at, yelled at and even punched in the face because of the outrageous things he says. He wants someone to start a fight. He wants to get people riled up. It feels like he wants the world to know that in his mind he is righteous. Pretty much, if you are a woman, man, Middle Eastern or anything else he is not, you are hell-bound.

It is quite unsettling how much of an abhorrent human being this man can be. He was explaining how women should stay in their place and implied that he beat his wife in one instance.
I always believed that God loved his children. Why would this man choose to express His word so angrily? I thought to myself, perhaps he does it not for selfish reasons but to inspire others.

While this is going on, there are countless religious groups surrounding him. Countless groups try to reason with this bible-thumping lunatic. I will never understand the kind of people that let people like Micah represent them.

Religion is a beautiful thing, but some people’s interpretations of it scare the living daylights out of me. I dated (or tried to date) a Mormon girl in high school. She was a real sweetheart, until she started trying to convert me every five minutes.

In her view, you marry the one you date. The relationship ended badly when she proclaimed that she would choose me over another man, as long as I was Mormon. She couldn’t comprehend that I was a good person without religion. How do people come up with that mindset? A world with good people cannot exist without religion?

There is a great quote from USA Network in which a woman says, “I believe in all paths to God.” That rings a wonderful tone within my existence. Finally someone that understands that life is full of possibilities.
Maybe, just maybe, people can reach some form of a happy afterlife by being who they are. I mean, isn’t that why most people believe God gave them the power of choice?

American Media Today: Where Did The News Go?

by   Posted on February 22nd, 2010 in Opinion

Justin Lalputan, Staff Writer

The American media has changed from what it used to be. The American media used to play a watchdog role, being there for the people and giving the people access to information that they wouldn’t otherwise have. From what I see in today’s media, there is almost nothing that resembles that.

First, I have to address the fact that media is changing. Newspapers used to be the main source of news — people would pick them up and actually subscribe to them — but now, newspapers are dying. Sure, newspapers like The Washington Post and The New York Times will always stay in business, but they are cultural icons. Most other smaller newspapers are shutting down.

However, this doesn’t mean that the role of the media has to change. With the advent of the Internet, the popularity of TV media and their integration in our society, the media should be even closer to the people and people should be well-informed about current issues. Sadly, this is not the case.

I turn on the TV and, the majority of the time, I am greeted with biased news, not even in an editorial section, but in the actual news. There should never be a time when two news stations look at the same event and report that two different things are happening. Again, I don’t mean this in an editorial sense — I’m talking about news.

Take the tea party that was held recently in protest of paying taxes. Some news stations considered it a proud movement of red-blooded Americans, while others considered it to be unpatriotic. I don’t watch the news to be told what to think or feel. I watch it to learn the facts. I don’t care that some people think something is great. I will decide that for myself. All I want to know is how many people there were and what they were doing.

And as far as being a watchdog, I don’t see that happening in our media either. For example, when Obama was elected, we had people who basically worshiped the ground he walked on. For them, he couldn’t do anything wrong even when he messed up, but we also had people who were accusing him of some of the most ridiculous things that I had ever heard of.

Why is it so hard for me to find a place where I can receive simply the facts without all the bias?

Now that’s not to say that there aren’t news sources without bias, because that simply isn’t true. There are a couple of websites and sources that are without bias, but I actually had to look for those. Most people aren’t willing to do that when they can simply turn on their TVs and get what they think is fair and accurate news.

So are there any examples of good news media out there? Well, like I said before, there are, but one example that I think will probably shock people is The Daily Show. Let me explain. Though the show is on Comedy Central and meant to be laughed at, if you actually watch the show, the host Jon Stewart often does a spectacular job of playing a watchdog.

He actively criticizes both liberals and conservatives; this is something that most major media networks seem to miss. And when Stewart does an interview, even though he does tend to have a liberal bias, he still grills the majority of his guests and, in most instances, does it better than most major media outlets.

The media is supposed to help the people with information, not confuse them with bias. Half the time when they do report on something, it’s something insignificant.

It seems that major news outlets would rather report on what the first lady is wearing than make an informed report about the horrific conditions that many people in Peru suffer through due to the drug trade that people in the United States help fund.

The media needs to change, and they need to change soon. Knowledge is power, and right now the media isn’t giving the people very much.

Of Friends and Health Care Reform: My Money Is Your Money, Is The Entire Country’s Money

by   Posted on February 22nd, 2010 in Opinion

Brandon T. Minister, Staff Writer

Some of my friendships make sense; my friends and I do or like the same things. Others, though, make less sense. Still, regardless of our differences, I value these friends. No matter how far apart we are on many issues, I think the world of them.

Yet these friends don’t always feel the same way. I lost one friend by questioning President Obama’s qualification for the Nobel Prize. I might have lost another with a Facebook status update. I innocently posted a link to an article in The Atlantic by Megan McArdle. The article points out that mortality statistics don’t seem to support the idea that there are Americans currently dying for want of health care coverage.

Immediately a friend of mine posted an emotional comment in response. This is my friend who, despite my overlooking her volunteering with ACORN, can’t overlook my listening to Rush Limbaugh.

I could backtrack, begging her forgiveness, but I decided instead to respond to the issue at hand: Should some people’s high health insurance costs require others to pay the bills?

I knew I stood to lose another friend, but I figured I was better off finding out how much of a true friend my friends really were.

What I wrote was that life is a terminal event, or, to get all Jim Morrison on you, no one here gets out alive. That fact imposes costs on all of us. We might not like this condition of mortality, but we have no way to escape it.

To dodge some of these costs, we sometimes incur other costs, which we call “health care.” To talk about whether health care should have costs is misguided, even somewhat juvenile. Costs are what are given to get something, and there’s nothing on earth that can be had without foregoing something else. The only question to ask is, “Who should bear those costs?”

There are two simple answers: the individual seeking health care, or someone else. If your answer is “someone else,” I would ask two additional questions: who and why?

Those who advocate for government involvement in health care would answer the first question with “Those who can afford it,” and answer the second question with “Because they can afford it.”

And now the debate is completely off the rails, because making statements about what others can and cannot afford is just guesswork fueled by envy.

How can you know what someone else can afford? And who’s to say that, when made to finance the health care of others, these people will continue to make the life decisions that will enable them to “afford” the bill in the first place?

We hear a lot of complaining about the current economy, but why — given these economic conditions — would we want to increase the tax on productivity right now?

As bad as this idea seems from the payer’s perspective, the biggest problem with this solution is what it does to the other side of the equation. How expensive will health care be when everyone is getting care paid for by “someone else”? If you’re unsure how to answer this question, just ask yourself how expensive your dinner entrée is when someone tells you “I’m buying”?

No one denies that health care costs are rising faster than we want, and faster than most other sectors of the economy. But the proposed solution, to further remove those placing the orders from those picking up the tab, is prescribing more of the cause in hopes that, eventually, it will become a cure. It is akin to someone trying to smoke the cancer out of his lungs.

If there is so much national outrage at the costs of health care, why is it limited only to the monetary costs? Surely most health care costs can’t be put in dollar terms.

When my newborn son had heart surgery, I got hopelessly behind in a college class and ended up failing. I repeated the class without the worry of an infant cardiac case and I earned an A, but the F was still on my transcript. No doubt it played a role in determining which graduate schools admitted me, which will impact my future salary for the rest of my life.

Is this a cost of health care? I would argue that, in the end, the biggest cost of my son’s heart surgery will be the lost wages I would have earned had he been healthy. Why is there no talk of spreading that cost around?

I can complain about it, but I know that a modern American complaining about anything is unbecoming.

For most of the world’s population, when they lie down at night and dream of being rich, what they imagine is not half as nice as your living conditions.

The health care debate is just basic avarice made civil with a patina of government sanction. While few among us would respond to our neighbor having more cars than we think he “should” by stealing one whenever we need a ride, many among us have no problem with the result if the government does the stealing for us.

When was the last time you responded to a large medical bill by breaking into your neighbor’s house and stealing his TV? If you would feel bad about that, why do you not feel bad about the government taking the cost of the TV out of your neighbor’s paycheck for you?

Government, as a representation of all citizens, has no right to perform any task that a single citizen in the absence of government has no right to perform on his own. If I never have a right to your property, I can’t charge my government to lay claim to your property.

Those who favor reform call their opponents greedy, while it is the reformers themselves who are after what they have no right to take.

Health care’s problem is that it is emotional. When the patient is our kin, we rankle at those who would dare raise issues like “cost-benefit analyses.” But your tragedy is your friend’s sad story, your friend’s friend’s gossip, and everyone else’s statistic.

This doesn’t mean we’re bad people; it means we’re human. We have tragedies of our own. Reformers aren’t fighting against special privilege or immoral capitalism.

They’re fighting against the line from The Princess Bride, “Life is pain.” We who oppose them are those who remember the rest of the line: “Anyone who says differently is selling something.”