The battle between Planned Parenthood and Texas has been the
hot issue, especially when Judge Jerry Smith of the Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals decided that the Texas funding for Planned Parenthood could be ended
after all. At a glance, this looks like just a pro-abortion vs anti-abortion
issue but the argument goes a little bit technical. Planned parenthood is fighting back saying
that if Texas cuts the funds, that just means it’s ‘war on women’ since more
women here won’t be able to get general treatments like birth control and
cancer tests. However, before the whole pro-abortion vs anti-abortion
controversy, Planned Parenthood brought this upon themselves by defrauding the
Medicaid Women’s Health Program out of millions of dollars. This was done by
“billing for medical services not rendered, billing for unwarranted medical
services, billing for services not covered by Medicaid and creating false
information in medical records which was material to billing for medical services.”
No wonder the government doesn’t want their taxpayer dollars to go to Planned
Parenthood. This is just evidence that Planned Parenthood has become a business
obsessed with ways to earn money using loopholes rather than fulfilling the
role of a healthcare system for women. This kind of unethical course of action
largely lost the government funding. They really need to stop defrauding and have a clean image in order for them to fully argue that Texas is violating individual rights. Unless Planned Parenthood majorly changes
their approach, Texas is right to start this journey protesting against Planned
Parenthood.
Friday, July 27, 2012
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
The Medicaid Issue
This blog commentary addresses the ongoing Medicaid
issue. The author firsts posts part of an article from Kaiser Health News,
which talks about how Gov. Rick Perry is rejecting the “Obamacare power grab”
and will block measures expanding health insurance to millions in this state.
Perry is one of more than half a dozen Republican governors resisting the
federal Medicaid support. After this article, the author of the blog comments
how Rick Perry is “a politician who loves to say no, especially when it comes
to something the Obama administration wants to do.” The author positions Perry
as ideological politician who is out to say no to anything the Obama
administration does. The author argues that Perry has no interest in improving
state services, fixing the problems of the uninsured, or supporting business
entities that live off funding for Medicaid. The author evidences how Perry is purely
ideologically driven by commenting how Rick Perry turned down federal
unemployment funds during the recession.
The author’s intended audience is mainly at the
people who support Rick Perry, because I think he/she wants to make those
supporters become to understand how irrational Perry’s actions are.
The author is credible because not only is it
written by the senior executive editor, Paul Burka, but it’s also the blog of
Texas Monthly which is an established newspaper.
I
think Paul Burka nailed it. I agree with both authors that Rick Perry is for
sure going to have a hard time fabricating some ‘sound reasoning’ as to why he
said no.
Friday, July 20, 2012
Maynard for State Board of Education
The editorial discusses about voting for the better representation on
the State Board of Education in this upcoming election. The author explains
that there are two equally qualified candidates, Rebecca Osborne (a teacher at
McNeil High School) and Tom Maynard (director of the Texas Future Farmers of
America). The author makes the claim that it would be a smarter choice to go
with Tom Maynard because he has the leadership and communication skills to
“help get the fractious board back on the right track.” The board is in such a
fragile shape, it is going to need firmer leadership than ever, which he believes
that Maynard’s wide variety of experiences will help take the board in the
direction needed. The author also advocates Maynard’s conservative approach,
meaning that he pledged to adhere to local control.
Another secondary argument that he
makes is that even though people aren’t as familiar with state boards, they
should pay attention because the state board does plenty that affects local
school districts and individual schools. They review textbooks and
instructional materials, sets curriculum standards for schools, and deals with
Permanent School Funds. Even though we don’t hear about State Board of
Education very often, it still plays a vital role behind the scenes. The author
ends the article by saying “ Doing nothing emboldens the hardliners. Please
vote. Do that next week, starting Monday.”
The author’s intended audience is
people who are eligible to vote and those who are involved in education in
anyway. It could be those who are passionately on the lookout for Texas’
education, or mothers, teachers, professors and etc. As for the credibility of
the author, I’m a little hesitant because there is no name of the author – it just
says “Editorial Board.” I understand why they want to keep it semi-anonymous,
but not knowing who the writer is and what kind of position they are in,
decreases the credibility a little. I agree with the author, that Maynard may
be the candidate because I believe in their local control approach. Something
that could be appropriate to b taught at AISD could be in appropriate for
another district, with a different background and needs.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Budget cuts effect Education
We are slowly on our way to recover from the recession. This
can be seen by the fact that Austin-area employers added 13,700 jobs in 12
months in 2011, which is a 1.8% annual gain. However, these additions of new
jobs are coming at a cost. The region’s
largest job sector is the government, which includes local school districts and
higher education. This sector took a toll with 600 jobs lost which equates to
0.3% decline. These cutbacks were even
more serious in other large cities in Texas, with Dallas loosing 3.200
government jobs for example. The article concludes with a prediction that
private sector employers will begin to hire more, which will make up for the
job losses in government and school district. Even though this article is more
about the economic state of Texas, it’s interesting because of the government’s
choice to cut their budgets on education – this was the result of the government’s
budgetary choice. Education is so important in economic, political, cultural
growth, and yet this is the sector that is taking the most hit.
http://www.statesman.com/business/austin-area-jobs-report-shows-first-hint-of-1546806.html?cxtype=rss_ece_frontpage
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)