lundi 17 août 2009

A votre santé


We live in three countries, in a way. There’s the country in which we spent the first 40 years of life, then there’s the country we live in physically, and then there’s the country in which we listen to the radio. This radio station talks about politics a lot – the Prime Minister and some very colourful (sic) politics. (We’re not always attentive, having shook ourselves awake one day saying, it is no use being moved to vote for the leader of the Kingdom in Which One Listens to the Radio.)

Currently, the Kingdom in Which We Listen to the Radio is spending a lot of time tangled up with The Former Colonies right now, that country having cast aspersions on The National Health Service - and if we can believe the radio, the claims are not without merit.

Risking sounding like we are indulging in a kind of schadenfreude (a word that comes from neither of the languages we speak), we are comforted that we physically reside in another country altogether. Our health care est un miracle, carrement. But should it be such? It was not until we’d lived in L’hexagone for some time before we came to understand what it was to have problems, worries and challenges, yes, but that getting a doctor’s care or affording medicines or landing in the hospital is not one of them. What a massive relief.

And it set us to thinking about health care in the native land, and wondering who would not want this, who does not deserve this, remembering being a freelancer and being worried literally sick about this – and thinking but yes:. there are people in our country of birth who believe in their hearts that people who have not managed to snag a decent health plan from a decent job are losers. The American dream – the American responsibility – is to earn the daily bread and the hospital, too.

But now that we have lived in the country where – day by day - one does not live in fear of doctor’s bills - now that we have tasted this non-fear – and knowing that it is for everyone – and seeing just how it recedes into the landscape where it belongs – we feel ever so strongly that there are areas in which market must not rule. Yes, ok, it costs a bomb, and humans know how to abuse it – so we can’t continue like this forever, and it will be necessarily adjusted – but doucement, doucement. Our hearts are in the right place, and thank God we’ve got them covered.

5 commentaires:

Barry a dit…

Hey ! Nice self-promotion !
I'm following a bit of the health care problem... I'm still surprised that so many americans live in the fear of Obama's "socialism"
And, seriously, when somebody is gonna shut Fox News down, i can't believe that it's the most viewed channel...

Hey, a litthe funny pic
http://imgur.com/5RkJK.png

Maxim L

CoS a dit…

Great post once again from someone who has the "don d'ubiquité", apparently there's no such word in your Kingdom... :)
"She could, at will, multiply herself, and be at the same time, in body and spirit, in as many places as she pleased." (Marcel Aymé - Le Passe-Muraille)

About Health care we see so much the mind gap between Europe and America... it's hardly understandable for us who have always lived in some kind of socialism, even if lately it seems to be falling apart : crisis is so used about everything it won't be a surprise for me if one day we wake up and find no "public" hospital any more...

Mathieu B.

Shadow Blogger a dit…

You're right about that - it IS the issue that highlights the difference.

I like the quote!

As for me, when people ask me why I live where I live, I seem to only come up with, "everyone has to be somewhere"...

Check out Barry's link!

Martin a dit…

So happy I found your blog. This article is great. Nice explaination of this health care discussion US have.

Also, The "SchadenFreude" reminded me of a discussion we had during a class. Great moment, bon souvenir :).

Nice to read you.

CoS a dit…

Sure Barry's link is so true. Hard to believe this is on 4chan ... :D

Chan so asks you why you leave there tell him it's for the weather ;)

Mathieu "the innefable communist" B.