Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Monday.....Miscellaneous.....Braddock's Defeat... Redux

The NAACP today adopted a resolution tying the Tea Party movement to racism. One bright spot, one shining trend in the political atmosphere today, is the growing numbers of black people standing up to the Leftists who have taken over the Democratic Party. They are running for office and speaking out. Colonel Allen West who is running for Congress in Florida's 22nd district (www.allenwestforcongress.com) is one of the most articulate spokesman for conservative values in the country and Star Parker (starparkerforcongress.com), running in California's 37th district is another. Thomas Sowell's writing may the most incisive and intelligent in the debate in America today. This blog from December 12th  is about the closing of a hospital in a depressed community. It's not a socialist thread, it is an issue of coporational ethics. It's not about the government providing health care, its about a corporation keeping open a hospital that they purchased to begin with. It's about discernment that a hospital is as important as a police or fire department.

George Washington visited what is now Braddock, Pennsylvania at least twice in the 1750s. The Battle of the Monongahela, in the French and Indian War saw General Braddock's death, hence the name of the town. Andrew Carnegie's first Bessemer Process steel mill began there as did the first of his famous libraries. The November 29th, 1904 issue of the Braddock Daily News announced HOSPITAL AT LAST. It would open in 1906. My mother worked the switchboard at Braddock Hospital after World War II and had nightly visits from a returning soldier who was badly burned on a troop ship from a Kamikaze attack, treated in Cleveland and then recovering at his hometown hospital in Braddock. That soldier was my father whose friends would boost him up to his room window each night after a few beers on Braddock Avenue, that is until this was discovered and he was banned from the hospital for life (according to my mother anyway.) The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), also an insurance company, now runs the hospital and decided in October that it should close in January 2010 due to financial concerns and low patient occupancy. There have been numerous protests, candlelight vigils and claims that closing it violates Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, for Braddock is a depressed community. Financially, the number of citizens in Braddock who use the hospital may not be enough to justify keeping the hospital open, but someone at UPMC has to take in consideration that this community has been hit with one adversity after another. They do not need one last humiliation in being told to pack up the car and find their way to another hospital. There are not a lot of votes or political contributions from this area, just people, mostly black who do not have the transportation to just zip over to another community when their breathing is labored or the flu may be setting in, This decision to close Braddock Hospital needs to be put on hold until it can be ascertained that there is no choice but to close the facility, and that this is not just an economically wise decision. This is no a single payer medical insurance issue. It's a corporate issue that affects people's lives intertwined with their decisions.


Braddock Hospital closed this past January 31st.  When we close a hospital in a poor community for economic reasons, when we cut jobs for more attractive dividend offerings, when the health of employees is only important on a balance sheet, when the elderly are looked at as past their window of contributing to society instead of aging heroes that paid their dues, then we have indeed become racists and the object of our racism is humans, of any color, who, unless disposed of in one way or another, hinder our profit taking. Whether a member of a Tea Party or not, whether black or white, brown, red or yellow, those who are vehemently opposing a New World Order and tyrannies of any sort, are not racists, they are opposing those who promote racism of many and varied types.