Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Really Though?

Someone I love described a quote from dear old Abe as "everything" that the "greater man believed in." Of course not being able to let that go, I posted another of Abe's quotes, which didn't contradict the first, but certainly undercut the way it was being used. Vague? Maybe. Because neither quote is the point.

The point, rather, is that this person I love responded by posting the following:

You run to another country and still feel you have the right to say what happens in your homeland. Sooner or later those of us who are actually contributing can sit on their keesters will say enough is enough.

So why did I "run to another country"? Well let's examine that.

I worked well over a decade in social services. My employer paid for my health insurance, to the tune of over $600 a month out of the employer's pocket. When speculative real estate crashed the economy, counties cut services to abused children. The non-profit company I worked for, which provided services to abused children, was forced to cut their programs.

I have a wide variety of skills, so I became self-employed. That turned out to be a great choice for me, as over a decade of trauma had left its mark. That mark, however, in addition to health problems I've had since infancy, require that I have routine health care. As an ordinary responsible person, I applied for health insurance to cover that health care. I was turned down on the basis of "pre-existing conditions." No, "OK well we can insure you but it will cost xxx." Nope. Just, "You're not eligible for coverage."

So what are my choices?

  • I could pay for my routine care out of pocket. Except that I couldn't do that without earning at least $200,000 a year. 
  • I could use emergency room care as basic care. A lot of people do this. Even if you can't pay, they can't actually turn you away, leaving myself and other taxpayers with the extravagently high bill.
  • I could just slowly (or quickly in the "right" circumstance) die.
  • I could explore my other options.

My other options, because I have a very dear friend in NL, included moving to Holland. I was able to enroll in and begin paying for health insurance even before I had my residence permit. My health insurance costs less than 100E a month. I get excellent, full care, with a strong emphasis on preventative care. Because everyone in the country has insurance, because the general health (and exercise) conditions in the country surpass those in the US, and because the emphasis is strongly on preventative care, the numbers work out and the company is able to make a profit even with my pre-existing conditions and potentially (not actual but potential) high care costs at such a low premium.

So I moved here for completely selfish reasons. Plus there are a zillion things I love about the society, but all that aside....

The US Government still considers me a part of the country. I have the right to vote, and the duty to pay EXACTLY the same taxes I did when I lived in the US. OK not exactly, I escape state taxes, but I could have done that by moving to Nevada, for heaven's sake. So anyway....

If the US government says that I have the same fiscal duty now that I had when I lived in the US...

When did I lose my right to comment on US society?

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Classic

What it means to live in a country with history dating back to the dawn of man:

"Holland wasn't always known for its flowers. That only began in the 16th Century."

For those of us who always mix up the numbers, that's the 1500's.

The New World was still new to most Europeans. (The Norse had been there, done that, got the t-shirt.) In 1500 Columbus was arrested by the Spanish government. In 1503 DaVinci painted the Mona Lisa. In 1517 Martin Luther pinned his note to the church door. (The note said, "Now hang on a minute!" only in German.) You know, the 16th Century, that stuff that so did not happen yesterday by any stretch of the imagination.

Except in Holland. The oldest Dutch city (Voorburg) was 12 years past its 1500th birthday in 1500AD. The second-oldest city, Nijmegen, didn't get around to turning 1500 years old until 1505. Those are cities that are still around. Tools discovered in Holland date back some 370,000 years; human remains as old as 40,000 years (that's pre-homo sapiens sapiens, homo sapiens neanderthalis) have been discovered.

So to the Dutch, it's perfectly reasonable to say, "That only began in the 16th Century."

Kinda blows your mind if you didn't grow up with that span of history acknowledged in your society.