CartMetrix - Do you know yours?

9/27/2005

The Other Costs of Hurricane Rita

The devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina was horrible. It was actually caused by a worthy adversary… a real storm. I have seen some of real devastation of Hurricane Rita, and I am in no way belittling the real, physical losses sustained in East Texas and Western Lousianna. BUT, a large percentage of the monetary loss and loss of life is a direct result of the unnecessary evacuations.

The ‘mandatory’ evacuations of cities and counties in all up and down the Texas Gulf Coast four days before landfall or even a halfway accurate projected landfall location has caused millions of dollars in lost business revenues, wages, wasted fuel costs and state and local infrastructure expenditures. The unwarranted mass evactuations from as far away as Corpus Christi, wasted hotel rooms that should have been available those that really might have been affected. For the sick and elderly who succumbed after fifteen hours of being stuck in a school bus with no a/c in the midday Texas heat, there is no excuse. What is that saying “Primum non nocere”, “First, do no harm”?

Too many people feel that we cried wolf on this one. If the next one happens anywhere near recent memory, NOBODY is listening.

***Note to Houston mayor
Before you decide to mandatorily evacuate two million people that aren’t in a flood plain, give the people that actually are in the storm surge warning more than an hour to get out of your way.

Popularity: 50%

8/3/2005

French Family Values

What are ‘family values’? How can quality of life be accurately measured? Having just returned from a semi-extended trip, these thoughts run through me. I love America. Love doesn’t mean you don’t find faults and try to improve. Finding faults doesn’t mean you want a divorce either.

French Family Values - New York Times

For example, I’ve found that many people refuse to believe that Europe has anything to teach us about health care policy. After all, they say, how can Europeans be good at health care when their economies are such failures?

Now, there’s no reason a country can’t have both an excellent health care system and a troubled economy (or vice versa). But are European economies really doing that badly?

First things first: given all the bad-mouthing the French receive, you may be surprised that I describe their society as “productive.” Yet according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, productivity in France - G.D.P. per hour worked - is actually a bit higher than in the United States.

Crystal, my traveling companion was on her first major trip outside of the confines and relative security of the USA. More than one fight (of more than a couple total :) ) was started by my comments on life outside the US versus life here. For me, life outside the US tends to focus more on interpersonal relationships, family and pleasure for its own sake (good and bad). Life here (again, in my opinion) leans more towards career, money and success (in a myriad of forms). Here I feel the need to suceed. Everyday. While I’m away I can relax and leave some goals for tomorrow and just enjoy being. Not trying to be anything, just be-ing.

Some of those feelings may be predicated on the fact that abroad, most times, it is a vacation for me. Given my history of extended (lengthwise… 1 month, 6 months etc.) travels I believe I do have a clear perspective that its not all vacation. At some point even extended trips turn into everyday life. Gotta eat, pay the rent, take a bath, get a haircut. Email starts piling up, funds get low, I have my computer, I can always find a job to do locally or back here. Its good for sanity’s sake too, a little bit of normalcy when the exotic becomes mundane. [Its hard to remember you’re an average looking guy when you hear ’sexy man’ catcalls on the street in Bangkok a hundred times a day for weeks on end. A client screaming for the final build of a project has a way of bringing reality crashing in.] I have a unique job that I can work from anywhere at any time, I just need a box and a job to do. Seeing the world while I do it is my biggest reward.

Democracy is a blessing on the world.

A free market economy fuels productivity.

Balance is key.

Popularity: 100%

8/2/2005

Bush Signs Medical Error Database Bill

Bush Signs Medical Error Database Bill

How to handle secure data?

  1. Access only through approved/compatible applications
  2. Multiple levels of access depending on credentials and need:
    • Application View (ie. me, my delegated recipients)
    • Application View/Modify (ie. nurse)
    • Application View/Modify/Delete (ie. doctor)
    • Raw Data (ie. root access)
    • Statistical View (personal identifiers scrubbed)
  3. Controls for requesting and approving access (ie. to my insurance company)
  4. Detailed audit logs of who is accessing

Is it possible? I can’t imagine a feature where it doesn’t exist, but I don’t see it being a smooth road ahead.

Control of my data needs to be put back into my hands! Why should medical file clearinghouses and credit bureaus be making money of my information. They exist to sell a product they can’t rightly own.

Popularity: 24%

7/8/2005

AlterNet: Who’s Watching the Watch List?

AlterNet: Who’s Watching the Watch List?:

Scary!

Popularity: 22%

7/6/2005

AlterNet: A World Without Bosses?

Found on AlterNet:
A World Without Bosses?

A handful of Northern California collectives take cues from an innovative Basque cooperative in Northern Spain.

Between the $17+/hr wages these owner/employees and their per-hour profit-sharing bonus’ these guys are making $30/hr for working in a pizza shop (that’s $60K/yr). Everyone makes the dough, everyone works the counter and everyone has a vote in business decisions.

From a comment below the piece:

For far too long have we enabled the elite class by providing our labor in return for far too little control and minisicule economic return. A prime example of this is pay ratios: in hierarchical corporation pay ratios can get as high as 200 to 1 (executives and owners get 200 times as much pay as the people near the bottom of their hierarchy) ; whereas worker cooperatives consciously limit their pay range to usually a maximum range of 6 to 1, and more typically 1 to 1 or 2 to 1.

Do we really want to work 60 hours a week to fatten someone else’s wallet so much more than our own?

Popularity: 33%

6/29/2005

Idlers and Idleness

Interesting article on AlterNet:

An Idler’s Life

Life is too short to be only about working. Thousands of years of progress and the number of hours worked per month is starting to increase again. What did we do before the instant communication of email and mobile phones robbed us of our nights and weekends?

The article lists a book by Tom Hodgkinson, ‘How to Be Idle’. Its on order.

Popularity: 35%

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