Early Morning Wow Links

With my con­cen­tra­tion nee­ded elsewhere I post some links. Sug­ges­tions I think you will enjoy. Something for ever­yone. I know you all pretty well by now.

The famous “Just Wow” link for the day is, Wal­ter Reed Offi­cials Asked: Was Hasan Psycho­tic?. They asked this some time ago, long enough ago to have pre­ven­ted this. There is something very strange, very wrong, and com­ple­tely mes­sed up here. We live in a country where you can get kic­ked out of high school, or at least expe­lled for the term, for carr­ying Motrin or Tyle­nol, but they won’t kick you out of the mili­tary, or even do a pro­per inves­ti­ga­tion if you are pos­sibly psycho­tic and anta­go­nis­tic toward the country you are serving?

The highly regar­ded “I’m loving it” link goes to The Hiking Artist.

The drea­ded “you should vote” link goes to The World Cha­llenge 09 fina­lists. There are 12 cho­sen fina­list all inno­va­tive and awe­some in their own right. My four choi­ces use sun, shit, refuse, and disas­ter for the grea­ter good. My top picks are Fuel Cell Kenya, Solar Sis­ters India, The Love in Haiti Pro­ject which many of you have pro­bably already heard plenty about, and Old School Thai. Go find your favorites.

The rare “I’m sad I no lon­ger live in N.Y. because I can’t go to this” link belongs to 33rd Annual Mar­ga­ret Mead Film & Video Fes­ti­val .

The cove­ted link, “My favo­rite non fic­tion blo­ge­lle” (a short piece pos­ted to a blog), for this week is Get a Wife from the tra­vel series Nowhere Slow at the Bygone Bureau.

The final and usually igno­red must read link, Over 2,200 vete­rans died in 2008 due to lack of health insu­rance.

A research team at Har­vard Medi­cal School ( yea, yea, pro­bably socia­list), esti­ma­tes 2,266 U.S. mili­tary vete­rans under the age of 65 died last year because they lac­ked health insu­rance and thus had redu­ced access to care. That figure is more than 14 times the num­ber of deaths (155) suf­fe­red by U.S. troops in Afgha­nis­tan in 2008, and more than twice as many as have died (911 as of Oct. 31) since the war began in 2001.

The researchers, who relea­sed their analy­sis today [Tues­day], poin­tedly say the health reform legis­la­tion pen­ding in the House and Senate will not sig­ni­fi­cantly affect this grim picture.

Peace

Share This
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • SphereIt
  • Mixx
  • FriendFeed

20 Comments

Post a Comment

Your email is never shared. Required fields are marked *