Archive for History Today

Aug
19

History Geeks Rejoice!

Posted by: Tamahome Jenkins | Comments (0)

If you like podcasts, American History, and free stuff, head on over to the website for the Gilder Lehrman Institute. The list is immense, and you can find podcasts on just about anything. Get to listening and you might be as awesome as me someday…though I doubt it cuz I’ll be listening, too.

Posted via web from The Online Vacation Home of Tamahome Jenkins

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Aug
19

World Humanitarian Day

Posted by: Tamahome Jenkins | Comments (0)

The United Nations is holding its first ever World Humanitarian Day to honor international aid workers. More aid workers are killed every year than peacekeeping troops. Today marks the 6th anniversary of the death of Sergio Vieira de Mello, the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights, in a car bombing in Baghdad which killed 22 aid workers.

Posted via web from The Online Vacation Home of Tamahome Jenkins

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There has been some form of discussion on universal health care in the U.S. since 1915. FDR wanted to implement it as part of Social Security during the New Deal, but knew Americans weren’t ready for it. His successor, Harry Truman tried to implement it as part of his Fair Deal, but it was shot down by Congress. Lyndon Johnson was finally able to secure some form of health care in 1965 by creating Medicare. (Trivia: Harry Truman was the first American enrolled in Medicare. LBJ credited Truman with “planting the seeds of compassion and duty which have today flowered into care for the sick and serenity for the fearful.”) Bill Clinton attempted to overhaul Medicare and it expand it to more people in 1993, but that plan was shot down by Congress. So far, the presidents with the greatest contribution to health care reform have been Democrats. Not to be outdone, even George W. Bush had his part, signing the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act in 2003.

Despite these efforts, the future still looks bleak. There were 47 million uninsured Americans in 2006, a number that no doubt has increased considering the rise in unemployment. Furthermore, according to a report in the August issue of The American Journal of Medicine, 62% of bankruptcies in 2007 were due to excessive medical bills. Of those filings, 75% had health insurance. Steffie Woolhandler, M.D., lead author of the study says, “If an illness is long enough and expensive enough, private insurance offers very little protection against medical bankruptcy, and that’s the major finding in our study.” Additionally, the legislation signed into law in 2003 is estimated to cost $1.2 trillion dollars over the next 10 years, while still leaving the underlying problem unresolved.

Is ObamaCare perfect? No, far from it. But it is a step in the right direction. If conservatives really want a voice in crafting this debate, they need to come up with a real alternative to ObamaCare, not just maintaining the status quo. Why is it that so many of the members of Congress opposed to spending money for health care were so willing to spend it on war? By the way, the budget for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan provide for universal health care for those countries. If conservatives have a real alternative to ObamaCare, I would love to hear it, but if all you trumpeting is the status quo, pardon me while I ignore you.

Posted via web from The Online Vacation Home of Tamahome Jenkins

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Reading, after a certain age, diverts the mind too much from its creative pursuits. Any man who reads too much and uses his own brain too little falls into lazy habits of thinking.

– Albert Einstein

kindle iphone ebook reader

I’m not what you would call an avid reader. To be sure, I read magazines, newspapers, and stuff on the Internet all the time. But on average, I generally read 3-4 books (novels, non-fiction, etc.) per year. However, in the last month, I have read 4 books, and am currently working on my 5th. I’ve also discovered a newfound interest in classic literature, having read several short stories and essays by various authors including George Orwell and F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Why the Sudden Burst in Reading?

It’s no secret that I am an enormous geek, and I love all things tech. I have an iPod Touch with 3 ebook readers on it, and the only reason I don’t have an Amazon Kindle is for fiscal reasons. That’s right, I’ve read the last 4 books this past month on my iPod Touch; and comfortably I might add. Steve Jobs famously said about the Amazon Kindle in January 2008:

It doesn’t matter how good or bad the product is, the fact is that people don’t read anymore. Forty percent of the people in the U.S. read one book or less last year. The whole conception is flawed at the top because people don’t read anymore.

How ironic then, that the device that has renewed my interest in reading is an Apple device. Even more ironic is the fact that technology is the main reason people don’t read anymore, yet technology just might change that. From the availability of a whole library or bookstore in the palm of your hand, to the persistent connections offered on most newer ebook readers, including the Kindle and the iPhone, the convenience afforded by these devices is unparalleled. Of course, many of the details, such as licensing, need to be addressed, but I whole-heartedly believe that ebooks will overtake traditional books within my lifetime.

What do you think? Are ebook readers here to stay, or just a geek-fad?

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During my daily Hansel and Gretel exercise through Wikipedia, I came across a map that shows the spread of obesity in the U.S. from 1985-2006. Watch as the states turn colors year by year as if succumbing to a foreign invasion. I thought this map was appropriate considering the current debate on health care reform, and the concerns of most people that it will cost too much. You wanna lower the cost of healthcare? Put down the fork.

Obesity Increase 1985-2006

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Look Closely...

Photo by: krazydad / jbum on Flickr

Every year since 1960, the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture has calculated how much it costs to raise a child. They’ve come out with their numbers for 2009, and it ain’t pretty: $221,000 to raise a child born in 2008 to adulthood. Ouch! So why publish these numbers? According to the USDA, “the report is a valuable resource to courts and state governments in determining child support guidelines and foster care payments.” And you thought, you couldn’t put a price on human life.

U.S. data point of the day: What it costs to raise a child | Money & Company | Los Angeles Times.

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John Quincy Adams

Image via Wikipedia

Twitter may be a 21st century invention, but that’s not going to stop John Quincy Adams, the nation’s 6th president, from joining in on the fun. Thanks to the Massachusetts Historical Society, that is. Seems that like many historical figures, Mr. Adams kept a series of one-line, Twitter-friendly diary entries during his lifetime. I’m following him, now, and you can follow him, too. Just swing on over to http://twitter.com/JQAdams_MHS and start following his updates. While you’re at it, you might also consider following Abraham Lincoln as he tweets during the Battle of Gettysburg.

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