Archive for January, 2010
Review: Extraordinary Measures
I’m swamped at work, but just wanted to point out the new Brendan Fraser/Harrison Ford movie, Extraordinary Measures. (Warning: somewhat spoilerish.)
I had a mixed reaction to the film, which is about a father of three children, two of whom have a life-threatening and degenerative disease, who teams with a maverick scientist to look for a treatment that could save his kids’ lives. But the mixed reaction was not because the film was half Read more
No commentsReasons to be wary, and reasons to be excited
Scott Brown, soon to be senator of the bluest of blue states. Bless you, Massachusetts voters!
It’s not a total victory. Here’s why:
I didn’t know until today that Brown voted for RomneyCare in Massachusetts. This guy doesn’t want to be the forty-first vote for the sake of defending individual rights in medicine. He wants to be the forty-first vote so that he can block the Democrats from being able to take credit for any action, and Read more
Screw you, Nancy Pelosi.
“Let’s remove all doubt,” she says. “We will have health care one way or another.”
You mean, you’ll have it regardless of whether or not the American people want socialized medicine, and regardless of whether it’s right?
Mrs. Pelosi and her power-lusting ilk need to be stopped. As much as I’d love to see Scott Brown win today’s election, it won’t be enough. Even if he wins and the Democrats don’t get away with their slimy plan Read more
No commentsAsthma asininity
My husband has asthma. It’s a chronic condition. He’s had it since he was a child, and he takes two different inhaled daily medications for it. Barring some extraordinary development that has yet to occur, neither his asthma nor the medications he takes for it are going to change.
Nobody in government seems to have figured out that conditions like this exist, though. Both of my husband’s medications can only be obtained by prescription. Read more
No commentsExperimentation
Although I managed to get through the holidays without gaining weight, I’ve slipped a little bit off the wagon in early January. As a result, I started this week closer to 140 pounds than 135. Not a huge increase, but the way five pounds turns into ten and then into twenty is by not paying attention. So I’ve been following a 1500-calorie-per-day diet (plus more on days that I work out) this week.
I went into this week thinking, “I hate Read more
No commentsNanny city: A salt on our rights
Not satisfied with having violated rights and gotten a trans fat ban and calorie count posting mandates in NYC, Mayor Bloomberg is now talking about getting New Yorkers to cut their sodium intake by “encouraging” food manufacturers to reduce the amount of salt in their products. He claims he won’t legislate salt reductions, but a) that’s only because they’d be nearly impossible to enforce (what food manufacturer is going to come up with salt-free Read more
No commentsSchumer: It’s government intervention, stupid
Even as the pharmaceutical industry has been colluding with Washington in hopes of having healthcare “reform” be favorable to its bottom line, Congress has been investigating the industry’s pricing practices — and politicians don’t like what they see. They’re upset that certain drugs — those that are sold to smaller numbers of patients than, say, a blockbuster like Lipitor, but that are no less important to the patients who need them — have had Read more
No commentsGah! The double-talk!
So out of one side of their mouths, healthcare “reform” advocates bemoan the fact that health care is a limited resource. They cry because everybody can’t get all the health care they need, whenever they want it, regardless of whether or not they can pay for it.
But then White House spokesman Robert Gibbs came out with this gem, calling some insurance plans “far too generous”:
“The best way to bend that cost curve is to go after and Read more
One good point, and a lot of bad ones
Food Rules author Michael Pollan appeared on the Daily Show last night to plug his book — and to comment on how healthcare “reform” could impact America’s diet.
In the linked clip, Pollan correctly states that once insurance companies are forced to cover everyone, regardless of preexisting conditions, it’s going to be in their interest to prod you toward a healthier lifestyle so they have fewer payouts to make. This could lead to insurers Read more
No commentsGoals for 2010
I can’t think of any frustration to express with the Senate’s “reform” vote that I haven’t expressed already, so instead I’m going to go in a more positive direction: my health- and fitness-related goals for 2010.
First, I want to brag that I was very successful in 2009. Thanks to my favorite iPhone app, Lose It!, I went beyond my original goal of losing 15 pounds. I went from 157 pounds to 135, the same as I weighed as a senior in high Read more
No comments