•Stop population control • This stinks • n favor of health care reform Stop population control Let’s expose what “Obamacare” HR 3200 truly is: government subsidized and legalized genocide. I choose to speak out for humanity and the fundamental right
•Stop population control
• This stinks
• n favor of health care reform
Stop population control
Let’s expose what “Obamacare” HR 3200 truly is: government subsidized and legalized genocide.
I choose to speak out for humanity and the fundamental right to life. To date, the mainstream media cast those who speak out as “racist.” Well today, I speak out for the human “race.”
HR 3200 is a recipe for genocide — read the bill. Do you know who John P. Holdren is? Do you care?
John P. Holdren is Obama’s “Science Czar” his revealed ideologies and writings are in the book “Ecoscience: Population Resources Environment,” co-authored by Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne B. Ehrlich published in1977.
What is written: The Blueprint for the American Holocaust.
For example pages, 749, 786, 787-789, 837-838, 917 and 942-944.
Read John P. Holdrens’ own words and truth will come to light. “Ecoscience” calls for a planetary regime to enforce totalitarian population control measures, i.e. coerced abortions, infanticide, euthanasia and sterilization as population growth solutions.
While in the Illinois Legislature in 2002, Obama voted against the Induced Infant Liability Act, an act to protect babies that survived late-term abortions.
A change we should believe in? Lord help U.S.
Simple advice: When you as a nation allow a panel albeit of totalitarian government to decide whose lives are worthy to be lived, one should rethink their solution, because the solution the government will choose for you is final.
Lori Patch, Kilauea
This stinks
As a visitor to your wonderful island in mid-August, I had the opportunity to walk along the beautiful coastline of Maha‘ulepu in the area of where the Korean Rock used to be.
Unfortunately, my walk was marred, first by several people on horseback trotting through the parking area near the beach. They were obviously tourists being led by a guide.
As I walked along the trail to the meadow, I came upon piles of horse manure right in the middle of the path. In addition, the droppings were right along the cliff side near the pristine waters where people fish and children play.
It is obvious that many people use that trail and no one should have to worry about stepping in horse manure or having the gorgeous waters contaminated by animal droppings.
I believe animals should be kept away from the beach and trails and stay in areas designated for them.
Virginia Bush, Volcano, Hawai‘i
In favor of health care reform
I applaud U.S. Rep. Hirono for her support of single-payer national health insurance and the HR 676 amendment, as she affirmed at the AARP forum in Kapa‘a on Wednesday.
— Single-payer national health insurance is a system in which a single public or quasi-public agency organizes health financing, but delivery of care remains largely private.
— Currently, the U.S. health care system is outrageously expensive, yet inadequate … the United States performs poorly in comparison (with the other industrialized nations) on major health indicators — other advanced nations provide comprehensive coverage to their entire populations, while the U.S. leaves 45.7 million completely uninsured and millions more inadequately covered.
— The reason we spend more and get less than the rest of the world is because we have a patchwork system of for-profit payers. Private insurers necessarily waste health dollars on things that have nothing to do with care: overhead, underwriting, billing, sales and marketing departments as well as huge profits and exorbitant executive pay.
Doctors and hospitals must maintain costly administrative staffs to deal with the bureaucracy. Combined, this needless administration consumes one-third (31 percent) of Americans’ health dollars. — Physicians for a National Health Program
In contrast, Medicare administrative costs are less than 4 percent.
— “We have 900 billing clerks at Duke (medical system, 900-bed hospital). I’m not sure we have a nurse per (each) bed, but we have a billing clerk per bed — it’s obscene.” — Dr. Uwe Reinhardt, hearing on health care reform, U.S. Senate Finance Committee, November 19, 2008
Susan Oakley, Kapa‘a