Tag Archives: satire
Two data points for Saturday
What’s next in scandal-filled football news?
So who’ll be the first investigative reporter(s) who claim(s) to have had the scoop on the scandal in Happy Valley/Second Mile years ago but the editor/producer/network executive(s) killed the story because it was detrimental to college football and the superconference goals of network broadcasting?
Inquiring readers want to know…
Federal whistleblower protection is an option. Plus financial independence, if you’ve got it.
In other words, if we don’t flush out all the places/people who could’ve protected children, the U.S. looks like it puts commerce ahead of its children.
Put that into the supercomputer and see which entities/countries look better in the long run and thus will lead us into the 22nd Century.
Hmm…
Honey, can this be true?
Buy local honey because the other stuff…well, you never know.
Two data points
Can you figure out how these two connect?:
- Carbon-based lifeforms using carbon – gee, who’d have thought of that?
- Is joblessness really the issue here?
Should Michael Bloomberg be cast in the remake of a movie that starred Paul Giamatti?
Do Italy and Greece matter when analysing the LHC test results?
When was the last time you paid attention to what’s going on in the Outback or Siberia?
Did you calculate the miniscule effect of YU55 on the orbits of Earth and the Moon?
Financial Medical Advice
When you go shopping, does your subculture encourage you to haggle over the price of the object you want to purchase?
Or do you walk into the market, see the price on display, and readily pay the posted amount without asking for a discount?
In my local subculture, I walk into a doctor’s office or hospital and see no posted prices for services to be rendered.
Instead, I hand the receptionist my medical insurance card(s) and after services are completed, I hand my credit card or cash to cover the cost of copay.
Days, weeks or months later, I receive a bill for the services.
The bill most often details the amount of money the doctor/hospital negotiated with the medical insurance company to cover the rendered services.
For instance, a recent surgery on my right wrist was listed as costing ~$9000 but the insurance company only paid about ~$900 and I owed a small copay ($250, if I remember correctly, that I paid before the surgery). [Followup office visits, usually $25 copay, were included for “free.”]
And now, I get to my mother in-law’s recent hospital stay that concluded in death.
Yesterday, a third-party payment company (which my wife jokingly calls an “ambulance chaser”) called to see if I planned to pursue payment from the nursing/assisted living home for the hospital bill.
Why would they do that?
Well, if my mother in-law’s insurance (Medicare plus supplemental) pays for the hospital bill, the negotiated amount will be substantially less than the hospital’s stated total (think “retail” (the hospital’s stated total) versus “wholesale” (the negotiated amount)).
However, if the third-party payment company (contracted by the hospital, if I understand their relationship to the medical community correctly, in this case) is giving given authorisation to pursue payment, they will try to extract the hospital’s stated total, taking for themselves, I’m sure, a flat fee or percentage, if successful in charging the nursing/assisted living company, where my mother in-law fell, for the full hospital bill.
In other words, should you find yourself having to pay for medical services, you will be charged the full amount. Therefore, be advised that you have plenty of room to negotiate a lower amount, easily down to the amount that insurance companies will pay; that is, if you have any haggling skills in you at all, unless you’re a retail shopper unaccustomed to bargaining for a deal.
In that case, ignore what you just read, and I’m going into the medical business, accepting only patients like you who are willing to pay retail.
By the way, this partially explains why doctors don’t perform as many free/pro bono services for the community as they used to, because it falsely gives medical insurance companies the right to claim that doctor services can be valued at zero.
More as it develops…
Augur Sanctions
I shall, I must, I will admit that it’s hard to believe in the dream of building a settlement for members of our species on another celestial body when our species, despite claims of higher brain functions — culture, religion, ethics, morals and other labels we bandy about like birds of paradise on display — contains serial rapists/murderers/financial exploiters/stalkers.
When while I sit here, quietly mourning, along with dozens of others who knew her, the loss of a dear, gentle person like my mother in-law, bloated egos point blame about the sad state of our species’ barter trade system of survival on this planet (a/k/a the economy) on each other like misbehaving schoolchildren in Bil Keane’s single pane comic, Family Circus, calling up the gremlins of “Ida Know” and “Not Me.”
Thank goodness the trees outside the window are stark evidence that the thoughts in my central nervous system are frivolous.
All supercellular existence like memes, including the label meme and the electronic means used to convey this message, seem meaningless right now.
Look, I don’t mind playing God with all your lives in a supercomputer simulation set. If my colleagues sit with me in the Committee while reviewing the simulation results and decide to take action against you in godlike manner, exposing your secrets, eliminating the greedy, elevating the needy, I won’t stop them.
None of us is more important than all of us.
The whining of professional sports team owners and players are just so much background noise.
Amateur athletes who destroy their bodies for the sake of personal pride seem so misguided.
Office workers who deteriorate their health to stay within subcultural norms seem so unfortunate.
Military and police who abuse their authority for personal ego boosting seem such a waste.
My mother in-law never drank, never smoked, never directly criticised anyone (rather, she questioned the validity of a person’s behavioural intent) — to some, she might have led a smalltown life which would not appeal to them.
And, yet, she inspired everyone she met to be better than their negative surroundings.
There comes a moment in the clash of cultures when subculture leaders cannot inspire the populace as a whole due to historic teachings about the superiourity of one, each or every subculture over another.
Who can we believe is telling the truth?
Who is truly impartial?
Which fairy tale, which myth, and/or which legend is the most universal?
That’s why, when the Committee put me in charge of telling the story, the running commentary, the plots and subplots of our species from the perspective of the reluctant leader, I’ve tried to take my ego and personality out of the equation by taking your personal stories and mixing them into a supercomputer simulation, an electromechanical device that crunches numbers unfeelingly while processing the behavioural traits of feelings/emotions unique to our species and shared with the rest of the sets of states of energy around us in this part of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Of course, a supercomputer can only do so much.
Its output is subject to interpretation. Every character, word, space, sentence, formula and conclusion has separate meanings to those who read/view them.
Which means, I suppose, despite trying to create an impartial judge/oracle in the form of a supercomputer networked into our lives, we are still left, at the end of this blog entry, having to trust one another to put species first, subculture second and self last.
Where will this lead us?
In a culture where literacy is important, illiteracy in one’s early childhood school years is a key indicator of low employment capability and most likely high criminal activity tendency later on. But these are culture-based measurements.
What about the innate concepts of right and wrong, regardless of specific cultural training?
How malleable are we?
What is “right” and what is “wrong” when all subcultural references are removed?
As our species superculture continues to take shape, will we define rules/laws and punish people for exploiting our trust in one another to put species first and self last while preserving individual freedoms/rights?
I am unimportant. I can die today or tomorrow and won’t regret anything I have or haven’t done.
It is you, our species within the global ecosystem, that matters most. What are we doing to protect the weakest and most trusting of us from the worst of our behavioural tendencies?
= = =
Thanks to Dr. Reed for calling and sharing his memories of my mother in-law during her medical office visits of the past; Billie Young; Mrs. Knowlton; Peggy Shuck; Pearl Manis; Brandi and her baby near Burem Road; Amis Mill Eatery; Stephanie and Sarah at Beauregard’s; Rave; Shirley Price; Sarah Evans; Barbara Malpas; Janet Netherland-Brown; Melinda Miller; Rogersville Presbyterian Church Business Women’s Circle; Rev. Rose; Sue Livesay; Oles Miller; Rev. White; Maurice Davis; Jim Forgey; David Miller; Jonathan Berry; Brian Givens; Tommy Logan; Broome Funeral Home; McKinney Cemetery; David Testerman; Sweet Tooth Cafe; Pal’s Sudden Service; Kingsport Times-News; Rogersville Review; WRGS; Mike at Rocky Top Markets.
What does paleobiology say about ants’ weather forecasting abilities?
7-Nov-2011
Am I the only one to notice that hearing aids have become fashion accessory statements?
Seems like when I was a kid, people wore “flesh” coloured hearing aids to hide them, and later in-ear filtered amplifiers to protect a person’s vanity.
These days, bright, neon-coloured contraptions sit in or over the ear with “skins” that depict a person’s favourite football team, racecar driver, musician or religion.
I even saw one that had tiny light-emitting fiber art fronds displaying a changing rainbow of little dots waving in the air like ear hairs on fire.
Another person had rigged a miniature LCD screen that turned incoming sounds into an infographic soundwave frequency “music video” dangling like an earring attached to the hearing aid.
Leave it to the Baby Boomers to make their health failings a positive experience.
= = =
BTW, the supercomputer predicts one future where former religious opponents — Christian vs. Muslim, for instance — join forces to oppose the immoral/unethical wealthy elites. Actually, the prediction keeps popping up over and over in different scenarios, including urban-vs.-rural wars, suburban skirmishes, etc.
I’m not one of those survivalist types but the latest supercomputer musings sure make me think about clearing a space in the subbasement network wire closet for canned food and a comfortable cot for two.
Time for a leisurely walk in the woods to see what my nontalkative neighbours have to say about global warming and human warring factions.
How…
Data points for the day
I am taking a much-needed sabbatical – here are a few data points to ponder while I deprogram my computer programmers who are reprogramming the supercomputer that keeps me in touch with my network of colleagues and business associates: