Terry Schiavo Schiuvit, It's All For Show
Farm and ranch work never ends, but let me tell you, it's a heck of a lot easier when it isn't so hot. These days of autumn are glorious, and ending them with all the neighbors gathered in the great room, sipping one of Schuyler's new concoctions, well, you can't beat it. Tonight he made us Perfect Manhattans, using rye whiskey, sweet and dry vermouth, and Angostura bitters. At the drinks table, he had a pitcher of nonalcoholic fruit juices.
Jim was telling us what Lady Macbush would famously say: "The poor? The dregs of humanity? Why should I trouble my beautiful mind with such filth? Besides, I don't have to, my two lovely holier-than-thou, dysfunctional sons take excellent care of them, if you get my drift," she foxily said as she dried her hands (even though she couldn't get all the blood off.)
President Lyndon Baines Johnson wisely, kindly, generously and bravely fought all who stood in his way until he got his Medicaid bill passed. And guess what, Jim said, he never went around trumpeting to the four corners of the world that he was holier than, can we say it, bull manure? He just went on and did the right thing, never once comparing himself to the Almighty, as the Bush boys do. You see, the one really did have cojones, the other two, to paraphrase Ms. Richards, were born with a silver spoon in their mouths, though the spoons were full of barnyard manure which through the years has slowly migrated to fill their empty skulls. And lo and behold, as Gabriel would say, it also migrated downwards to where their hearts should have been.
Well, after all the good President Johnson's Medicaid has brought to the poor who needed and continue to need Medicaid in order to stay alive, those two sons of, oh you know, I just can't think of the word right now Jim said, but anyway, those two are beginning to whack away at Medicaid, with every intention of dismantling it because it isn't something that helps the rich. On October 19, to the praises of secretary and health and human services [vomitus] Michael O. Leavitt, Jeb Bush, he of the cheeks like a bare baby's behind, began dismantling Medicaid in Florida.
Carmen, Jim's wife, wanted to know what all the hoopla was about, when cheeky Jeb Bush attempted to get the Supreme Court to intervene and forbid the removal of Terry Schiavo's feeding tube. His butchering Medicaid is proof that there's no compassion in him, so the Schiavo thing had to have been only a circus attempt to entertain the country and pull the wool over the country's eyes, making the foolish believe that the Bushes believe in caring for the disabled, like Mrs. Schiavo but, the truth is out. Just a big show folks! Carmen handed us copies of the following treatise, and after giving us a chance to read it, she quietly asked us to consider if any Republican can truly be a Christian when really they seem more instruments of Satan. How dare, she asked, the Republicans and their followers profess to be Christians when they cannot grasp even the most basic tenets of that faith?
The teaching of Jesus on poverty is firm, harsh and radical. Mark could not be more intense: Jesus looks steadily at the rich ruler and says: do not be possessed by possessions. And, looking just as steadily at his disciples he says: It's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle! The disciples are left to plead: if this is so, who can be saved? To understand Jesus' praxis and teaching on poverty we must look at the context of his times and social conditions. Jesus is not asking us to live as destitute beggars (ptochos), or as penury-stricken people (penes) although their welfare must attend to. But He urges us to be familiar with those who lack the necessities of life, since he lives in them: I was hungry, thirsty, naked, homeless, unemployed, despised. With these needy people we are all metaphorically united: the New Testament speaks of a pervasive, spiritual poverty or indigence (endees), as in God's house, we are all needy.
Sadness at the Bush brothers' destructive actions might have dampened our enthusiasm for dinner, but since Max and Charlotte were preparing most of our dishes.
Each of us found the Bush brothers' attitude towards Medicaid beneficiaries disgusting. Carmen apologized for the long religious treatise, but thought we should, even those of us who are not Christians, think about the message.
We enjoyed Max's after-dinner coffee back in the great room with the teenagers, hoping, with all our hearts, that if any of them at some time in the future needed good social services, they would be there for them.
If George and Jeb throw their arms up in rapture and profess to be holier than you know what Christians, how come they're dooming millions of poorer people to an early death by gutting Medicaid. Is that the culture of life, or is the culture of life only for the haves and the haves more?
©Copyright 2005 Grindstaff Chronicles. All Rights Reserved.
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Reprinted from The Grindstaff Chronicles Newsletter which is published in the USA by farmers, ranchers, and neighbors.
It is intended to share the thoughts and lifestyle of people who work hard, like to relax and enjoy life, and are often dismayed by news, politics, and the events of the day that defy common sense.
http://www.GrindstaffChronicles.com
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