Prytania

Prytania

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Can You Comment?

I've been getting messages from my readers who are unable to post comments to this blog. I hope I've figured out the technical glitch that's been thwarting these commentators. If you see the line "0 comments" at the end of this posting, click on it and it should take you to a site where you can type in what you want to say. Unfortunately I can't get the "0 comments" link to show up on old posts, just new ones. You do have to be signed in to the Blogger system but that part's easy.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Go To Jail and Say "Ahhh..."

If you've been paying attention to the national discussion on health reform, I bet you've heard this argument: " We already have a national healthcare system to take care of the poor. It's called Medicaid!"

Well, not so much. In most states, people without children cannot get Medicaid, no matter how poor they are. And in lots of places even poor families with children can't get Medicaid, unless their income is hideously, unsurvivably low. Where I live* a family of four making $5000 a year (take a moment to imagine trying to get by on that) is too rich to get any help from Medicaid.

So, how often does someone die in America because of a lack of insurance? A 2004 report from The National Academies of Sciences** says it's one person every half hour, which amounts to 18,000 American deaths a year. (And this calculation, remember, was made before the economy crashed.) Look at it another way: every two months more Americans die from not having medical insurance than Al Qaeda managed to kill on September 11. Then, we went to war and spent a trillion. And people are arguing now that we should do nothing?

Nicholas Kristof, in September 13's New York Times***, offers another suggestion for sick, uninsured Americans: commit a crime and get locked up. In the USA, our imprisoned felons are entitled to medical care. Unlucky enough to be law-abiding? Take your chances with those warmhearted philanthropists at Blue Cross.


*Alabama
** Insuring America's Health: Principles and Recommendations , the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Science
***"The Body Count at Home"

Monday, August 24, 2009

No "Right" to Medical Care?

When I was handed the microphone at last week's Town Hall Meeting I asked my senator if medical treatment should be the right of every US citizen. The crowd roared "NO!!! and the senator agreed.

This got me thinking about what we mean by "rights."

One lady yelled ,"We only have the three rights guaranteed in the Constitution: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness! The Constitution doesn't say anything about health care!"

Never mind the fact that life, liberty etc. are mentioned in the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution. She had launched me on a quest.

Okay, I admit my first thought was, No right to bear arms? Funny, she didn't look all that liberal.

A cascade of rights flooded my mind. The rights to vote, speak freely, choose your own religion, decline to testify against yourself, express grievances against the government, and give up your property or liberty only under due process--all these are granted by the Constitution and its amendments.

But many of our rights are not declared in the Constitution. Supreme Court decisions, like the 1954 ruling that banned racial segregation in schools, bind the entire country with the same force as constitutional provisions. Laws enacted by Congress and signed by the president similarly confer rights with nationwide effect. Other rights are granted by actions of state, county, or city governments and affect smaller groups of people.

American children's right to a free public education is an interesting example. The Constitution makes no mention of any such right. Congress has passed no law mandating it. The Supreme Court has never ruled that our government has to pay for all American kids to attend grades K-12 tuition-free. This vital matter is left entirely up to the individual states. Laws on schooling differ from state to state. Rules about teacher qualifications, classroom hours, and curriculum can change whenever you cross a state line. Shockingly, for example, Alabama’s constitution still mandates separate schools “for white and colored children,” though the law is not enforced and would certainly be unconstitutional if tested.

We usually think of a right as something we can choose to do or not, as we please. "You have the right to remain silent" when arrested, yet you're free to discuss your case with police if you choose. But consider the difference between the right to education and, say, the right to vote. Voting is considered a sacred right, with elections paid for by government, not the voter. Still the choice is yours: nobody is forced to vote or punished for staying home on election day. Sending your children to school, on the other hand, is not only your right but your legal obligation. If your kids don't go to school, you the parent can go to jail.

This loops me back into whether medical care is, or should be, a right. How weird would it be if parents had to see to it that their children were in school, but no such thing as free, public, universal education existed? Parents unable to afford private school tuition could face criminal charges. I argue that the lack of universal, affordable medical care puts American citizens in a similar bind.

Medical neglect --failure to provide necessary medical treatment for one's injured or ill child--is legally defined as a form of child abuse, with penalties ranging from loss of custody of the child to imprisonment of the parent. This puts families without health insurance or money to buy medications at greater risk of these punishments than the wealthy. Doesn't that violate our Fourteenth Amendment guarantee of "equal protection of the law"?

If you can't go that far with me, consider at least this from Christopher Dickey: "...governments spend money to acquire assets. That includes bridges and nuclear reactors, but also hard-to-price, intangible assets like a well-educated and healthy population."

I hold that to be a self-evident truth.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

"Screw You, We're From Texas" (1)

Governor Rick Perry suggested recently that because “Washington continues to thumb its nose at the American people” Texas might just secede from the United States. Hendrick Hertzberg (2) imagines fondly what the nation might be like after such a schism.

Hertzberg speculates we might be better off just to let Texas--and whatever other parts of the old Confederacy wish to join the exodus--go ahead and leave.

What was left of the Congress, he guesses, would promptly enact sensible gun control, universal health insurance, and ample support for science, education and the arts.

The new Lone Star Confederation could then get on with the business of protecting the sanctity of marriage, making sure creationism is taught in its schools, and mandating organized prayer sessions in all public places. Freed from meddlesome federal judges, the LSC could proceed with mass executions, freeing up prison space for abortion providers.

Realizing that not every Southerner would be eager to go along with the new order, Hertzberg proposes that certain locales might have to be designated “free cities,” like Danzig was between the world wars. (Peacekeeping troops could be sent in if necessary to thwart illegal aliens desperate for a better life.)

Please pray for us in Huntsville, Alabama, to be included on the list.

(1) song by Ray Wylie Hubbard
(2)“So Long, Pardner" The New Yorker, May 4, 2009, p 17-18

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Return to Prytania

“Sorry, already taken,” the site genie simpers again. I have already submitted every stupid user name I can invent, old addresses, siblings’ nicknames, all those aliases we need as our cyber-umbilicals.

With a cleansing breath I empty my frustrated mind. In floats a lovely word: “Prytania.” I enter it, and the site cheers, “It Rocks!”

But now I am paying no attention. I’m remembering Prytania Street. Frenchman, Annunciation and Tchoupitoulas Streets. Desire, Rampart, and Gentilly. Where the peeling, multicolored shotgun houses sit by the great sliding brown river.

New Orleans.

I’ll tell you about my first time there. As I lay beside my mother in a narrow bed, my father leaned over to kiss us. Everything about him was in perfect order. His Army Air Corps captain’s uniform had not a wrinkle, the shirt carefully pinched into a single pleat at each side where he had tucked it into his trousers. His black hair was sleekly combed back. I am sure that he smelled good, slightly astringent and clean, like pressed laundry. My mother wore a nightgown with white lace forming a V along the top. The hospital sheet, folded back smooth and tight, came across her body just below the breasts. My parents had joined their right hands with odd formality, like two dignitaries, but their expressions were full of tenderness.

I have no idea who took the little photograph I hold, now curling its crenulated white margins inward. It surely could not have been a grandparent; the trip from Alabama would have been unthinkably extravagant that wartime year. My tiny dark eyes seem to study the photographer. My parents are seeing only each other.

Is it possible that I could remember sucking milk from my mother’s pink nipples? If not, why do I have this magnified vision of them, big as rosy saucers, with thumb-sized papillae? A redhead, mama had fair skin and roseate nipples. I inherited my father’s black hair but got her complexion.

Although I was born there, my parents always said they absolutely did not conceive me in New Orleans. More likely in Carlisle Barracks or Keesler Field. I have had to take their word for it, zygotically speaking. But how I conceive myself is another matter, and New Orleans is my soul’s rootstock.

As a girl in Alabama I loved having been born in Charity Hospital, not some boring hospital named for the stupid town a person lives in. I loved it that for “County of Birth” on my school papers my mother would neatly print “Orleans Parish.” I knew it made me very special. Nobody around here even knew what a Parish was!

It is said that at age four, propped by my daddy on a tall stool at Felix’s Oyster Bar, I consumed some legendary quantity of half-shell oysters, I am tempted to say several dozen. I remember that. At least my body remembers it: the cold salty tang, the squirting lemon, the sweet slippery rush of the mollusk down my throat. Sucking the last of the oyster juice out of each empty shell. And my delighted parents, laughing and laughing.

Nowadays I repeat this story to the shuckers who prise open their heaps of scabby bivalves behind the bar at Felix’s. Prompted, they always say, sure, they remember me. And pour me another Sazerac.

After the storm, dreading what I might see, it was more than two years before I could make myself return to New Orleans. Needing a businesslike excuse I signed up to attend a large conference in a giant hotel and went by myself.

Like everybody else, I’d seen the pictures. I knew Charity Hospital was no more. And I’d heard a lot about the city being “Back in Business.” But what for God’s sake might that mean? As sad as a dispirited, beaten down New Orleans would be, a plasticized theme park of a place would be unbearably worse.

I walked my feet to blisters. I rode a bus all over the 9th ward and took pictures of gutted houses with spray-painted numbers showing how many dead humans and animals had been found there. I rambled (Didn’t I ramble?) through the Quarter. People were still practicing saxophones on doorsteps, instrument cases lying open and seeded with some little currency.

And I rode down Prytania. At one end, a restored old mansion was for sale for five million dollars. Ten blocks away, the hind end of a FEMA trailer jutted from the wall of a mostly collapsed gray frame house. A woman sitting beside it in her white plastic chair waved her cigarette at me.

The trailer’s top and sides were draped with Mardi Gras beads. A huge flag -- purple, green and gold-- flapped from a pole.

Completely covering the end of the trailer that faced on Prytania, someone had spray-painted a tremendous crimson heart.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

From Rome, A Stone

“While the family of a 9-year-old incest victim’s abortion is excommunicated, the perpetrator never even made it to the ecclesial radar screen. Let this case signal the end of any credible claim to authority of bishops and the dawn of a new era when local communities determine their own members. I daresay the world will be a safer, kinder place.” Mary E. Hunt

An eighty-pound, nine-year-old girl in Brazil is impregnated with twins by her stepfather’s rape. Her doctors advise abortion, explaining that her tiny body will not carry to term without horrible damage or death. The Catholic church, having failed to block the abortion in court, excommunicates the girl’s mother.

The case has caused a furor. Abortion is illegal in Brazil except in cases of rape or when the mother's life is in danger, both of which apply in this case. Legality is not what counts in this human and spiritual tragedy. Mary Hunt of the Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual (WATER) lays it out masterfully.

Here are excerpts from Hunt’s piece, printed in full at:
http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/humanrights/1206/rdpulpit:_excommunicating_the_victims/

“The details of the case are grim. The little girl went to the hospital with stomach pains only to discover that she was four months pregnant. By any measure, the family involved is in big trouble. The father is gone, the mother has at least two children, one of whom is handicapped, and the stepfather is a sexual predator…

“The pregnancy happened because an adult male assaulted a girl child; an oft-told story, tragic every time. The mother endeavored to do the best she could in a bad situation… But the Roman Catholic Church used the tragedy to make a theo-political point...

“It is sickening and morally repugnant to realize that abortion, in this case the most humane solution to a terrible problem, is the cause of excommunication while sexual abuse is not. Something is seriously wrong with this picture, and it is the Roman Catholic Church...

“My sadness in this case comes not only from what has been done in the name of God to people who are living a nightmare, but from what might have been done to help. Sexual abuse, especially incest, is hard to stop. But once perpetrated it need not be made worse by ecclesial sanction...

“A proper pastoral response would include: support for the pregnant child as she lives through an abortion; care for the mother who is responsible for the child and the rest of the family; protection for the family from the stepfather whose arrest may trigger backlash behavior; sensitive work with the other daughter who has also been sexually abused; HIV and venereal disease testing for the girls and the mother; economic support for the family; counseling for the family, the community, even the neighbors and parishioners who have been affected by this trauma; prayer and pastoral attention, including reception of the sacraments according to the family’s wishes. They need a spiritual community more than ever. Instead they got excommunication.

“‘Is there anyone among you, who if your child asks for bread, will give a stone?’ (Matthew 7:9). Apparently there are several in Rome and Brazil...

“I believe that this case serves as further proof that the jig is up for Catholic clerics who dare to excommunicate a mother who has already suffered enough while they continue to embrace priest pedophiles and the bishops who hide their crimes. Let this case signal the end of any credible claim to authority such bishops might make, and the beginning of a new era when local communities determine their own members. I daresay the world will be a safer, kinder place.”