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Friday June 29, 2007

Friday Ramblings

School is out! Yesterday my son finished up his last day of grade one and my daughter had her last day of junior kindergarten on Wednesday, so today marks the official beginning of summer vacation. School ends about a month later in Canada than in the U.S. but also begins a month later (the Tuesday after Labour Day).

This is a long weekend in Canada as July 1 happens to be Canada Day. Since that day falls on a Sunday this year, Monday will serve as the day that all the businesses are closed. We don’t have any big plans this year, but will probably just spend the day as a family. And that sounds good to me.

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iPowerWebiPowerWeb, a hosting company I often recommend to my clients, is offering a special deal from now until July 4. A hosting plan that is usually $7.95/month is now discounted to $4.95, based on a 12 or 24-month plan. So if you are in the market for hosting, this is a good opportunity to get setup and to get setup at a very reasonable cost. Click the banner for more information.

Speaking of hosting, I’ve been noticing that things are beginning to slow down a little it around here. When you post a comment now it often takes 30 or 60 seconds for the page to rebuild. I expect this is an indication that I am stretching my server a little bit. Movabletype, the software I’m using, tends to be a little resource-intensive at times. So it may be that I’ll need to move to a new server (again) before long. The problem is that I’m kind of on the edge of the budget hosting and if I move I fear it’s going to dramatically increase hosting costs. But I’ll worry about that when it becomes absolutely necessary.

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Sorry to keep shilling Discerning Reader, but I recently added a preview of a feature that may be of interest to some people here: Mini-Reviews. These will be very short book reviews that will be suitable for including in church bulletins or for archiving in a church library. They will give an at-a-glance look at a particular book, giving people a very brief overview of the book’s content and an idea of what audience is most likely to enjoy it. We expect churches will want to use them either to showcase books that are currently available to borrow in the church library or to showcase books the members of the congregation may wish to purchase. If you make your way over, you can download some samples. Do let me know if you find them useful and if this is something you’d be willing to use in your church.

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Now that Sicko, Michael Moore’s latest film has been released, Americans are bound to hear a lot about the wonders of the Canadian health care system. As I understand it, Moore’s ultimate proposed solution to the American health care conundrum is to adopt a socialized system similar to what we enjoy in Canada. The truth is, though, that the Canadian system simply isn’t all that and a bag of chips. The system works, but it comes with a cost that most Americans would be unwilling to pay: a heavy tax burden.

This article, which a friend sent to me, does a good job of explaining a few of the system’s shortcomings. Despite what Moore says in his film, we do have long waits in the emergency rooms of our hospitals. It is not unusual to wait five or six hours (or more) for basic emergency care. Waiting times for some procedures such as MRIs or mammograms can be so long that people end up driving across the border into the U.S. where it can be done the same day and for a reasonable cost. Some American clinics even advertise to Canadians, letting them know about this alternative. Elderly people also find that they tend to be deprioritized in the system as there are more patients than doctors, more surgeries needed than slots to do them. Many of our best and brightest doctors head to the States where they can begin a private practice and make more money than they could dream of making here. While it is unconstitutional for the rich to receive better care than the poor, the rich can afford to go to the U.S. and have their needs met there. And this is exactly what they do.

I seem to recall Michael Moore visiting Canada during the filming of Bowling for Columbine and declaring that most Canadians don’t lock their doors. This is, of course, a preposterous lie. We lock our doors good and tight, just the same as our American neighbors. Moore is lying again in Sicko. Our health care system is good, but it has some serious problems. It is certainly not the ultimate solution, and especially so if you dislike 45% tax brackets. And I don’t know too many who do.

Comments (16) »


1. Heather
June 29, 2007
10:47 AM

Speaking as student who went to school in Pennsylvania for all 12 grades, I can say that we started school the Tuesday after Labor Day as well and were usually finished by the 9th of June. And the local public schools only finished a week later or less. From my southern cousins’ experience, I can testify that they did start mid-August, but were done by late May. So why do Canadian schools go longer? That’s what I’ve wondered about every June for the past 5 years.


2. Brendt
June 29, 2007
11:37 AM

I recently read a mini-review of Sicko. The last sentence summed up Moore better than anything I’ve ever seen:

He was really fortunate to find out that everything was exactly as he thought it would be, because he makes documentaries, which are true.

(tongue-in-cheek, of course)


3. Dallas Pymm
June 29, 2007
11:46 AM

“Sorry to keep shilling Discerning Reader, but I recently added a preview of a feature that may be of interest to some people here: Mini-Reviews. These will be very short book reviews that will be suitable for including in church bulletins or for archiving in a church library.”

Forget the church bulletins I would like this for myself who is way to lazy to read a proper review. ;o)


4. Brendt
June 29, 2007
11:46 AM

Heather,

I went to elementary school in PA in the 70s, and we generally went from the day after Labor Day to June 12, give or take a day or three. Then we moved to GA and school (in the late 70s and early 80s) was generally one week before Labor Day to the end of May (so about the same amount of time minus snow days, and just a bit earlier).

But now, school in GA runs from about Aug 8 to just before Memorial Day. So it is longer than it used to be, a lot earlier, and pretty close to the length of time that Canadians spend in school.

Seeing as how Tim’s info on US schooling probably comes from GA, his statement is accurate.


5. Tim Challies
June 29, 2007
11:56 AM

“Seeing as how Tim’s info on US schooling probably comes from GA, his statement is accurate.”

That could be. But in the past couple of weeks I’ve had several Americans remark, “Your kids are still in school!?”


6. Mark
June 29, 2007
12:26 PM

Ugh.. I’m not a big fan of Michael Moore.

Michael Moore is one of those guys who even on an issue where I agree with him (which is probably somewhat rare), I tend to cringe when he speaks.

There’s something about his tone which to me emits sensationalism.

I thought he did a good job with Canadian Bacon. Its a pretty funny movie.

He is wrong about Canadians not locking their doors. In fact, I’ve often come home from a short walk around the neighbourhood to find myself locked out :)

And.. yes, our health care system is nice in some ways, but not any sort of utopian solution. And we pay heavily for it through our taxes. The greatest proportion of U.S. income tax goes to Military spending. We don’t have such large military spending. So if we had a U.S.-style health system, with our low military budget, we could really see very minimal taxes (assuming there is minimal waste, which may be very hypothetical). I’d be heavily in debt in a U.S. style system, but I can also see how having non socialized health care can be good and ideal in some ways. Moore, on this issue as with others, doesn’t show much flexibility in his understanding.

I think Moore is good at what he does, namely preaching to his own choir. He’s rarely calm or reasonable enough to convince people from the “other side”.

He’s more of a hype guy than a fact guy, though I suppose he has uttered some true facts over the years. I feel he’s done more damage than help though.


7. Katrina
June 29, 2007
12:35 PM

Thanks for the info on Canadian healtcare. The article was well worth the read!


8. Katrina
June 29, 2007
12:35 PM

Thanks for the info on Canadian healthcare. The article was well worth the read!


9. Randy
June 29, 2007
1:37 PM

Tim,

Have you even considered Drupal? It is, in my opinion, about the best CMS out there and a lot of hosts have it setup already with PHP/MySQL support. They have a cool throttle feature which temporarily disables CPU intensive features during high-traffic periods and helps immensely on shared hosting. Check it out: http://drupal.org/handbook/modules/throttle.
All of the functionality of challies.com and discerningreader.com could be handled smoothly with Drupal.

I grew up in Minnesota, and I assume like Canada, we finished school in mid-June and started after Labor Day because summer didn’t really start until mid-June. Also, we had some 15-20 extra days on the calendar for possible “snow days”. Unfortunately, the district superintendent rarely canceled school for snow. If fact in all my years the Jesse “The Gov” Ventura was the only one who canceled school for snow/bad weather.


10. Heather
June 29, 2007
7:20 PM

Tim,
Please don’t think I was saying your information about the American school year was faulty. I was just expressing that as an American I started school the same time as Canadians but finished sooner.
I also realize that the school schedules are different in other areas of the US.
And if I had been talking to you in the past three weeks, I also would have been one of the Americans expressing amazment that your children were still in school yet.


11. threegirldad
June 29, 2007
7:34 PM

“That could be. But in the past couple of weeks I’ve had several Americans remark, ‘Your kids are still in school!?’”

Your kids are still in school?! Oh, wait…no, they aren’t. ;-)

Mine have been out for six weeks now (KS).


12. Brendt
June 29, 2007
8:32 PM

Yeah, Tim — I just meant that your assessment was right regarding the length of the school years being similar in the US (at least here in GA) and Canada.

Plus, I’d have to guess that you have a few more snow days up there than we do down here.

But, it’s definitely later. :-)

Regardless of when it starts/ends, I hope this gives you some good time to enjoy your chilluns.


13. donsands
June 29, 2007
9:31 PM

“I seem to recall Michael Moore visiting Canada during the filming of Bowling for Columbine and declaring that most Canadians don’t lock their doors. This is, of course, a preposterous lie. We lock our doors good and tight, just the same as our American neighbors. Moore is lying again in Sicko.”

People seem not care about lies so much, if the lies agree with their bias. I have a thousand more thoughts on this but I’ll hold my tongue.

Thanks so much for keeping the truth out there. I’m sure our Savior is pleased.
Have agreat lord’s Day.


14. Flora Compton
June 30, 2007
8:14 AM

Tim,

I was rather disturbed by your criticism of Canadian Health Care. Are you basing your comments on your own actual experience or merely repeating the myths of ‘whiners’ ? Nothing is ‘perfect’ in this imperfect world but I am convinced that we Canadians are very blessed.

As Seniors, who have used the system extensively, I cannot relate to any of the facts you mentioned. My husband was diagnosed with a brain tumour twenty years ago. He was operated on the next day although it was the Holiday Season. The care he received at Toronto Western Hospital was truly impressive. It did not cost us a cent and he made a full recovery. We have had the same experience with other health problems. Hy husband has experienced hearing loss recently. The doctors could easily have said that it was to be expected at the age of 76. They didn’t. On the contrary they sent him for all kinds of tests including two M.R.I’s. In each instance he had an appointment within a week. We arrived at one Ottawa Hospital for an M.R.I to be told that their machine had broken down. They sent us to another hospital where we had to wait a mere two hours. If there are people travelling to the U.S, they must be very impatient!

I’m an immigrant to Canada. I’ve travelled extensively and have family all over the world. I’m convinced that God, in His providence, brought me to live in one of the best countries in the world. As Seniors on government persions, we have more disposable income than we ever had on a Pastor’s salary and no worries about paying for medications and health-care as we age.

I have family and friends in the U.S and when I hear stories of ‘deductibles’, ‘pre-approval’ and having to travel out of State for specialists, elderly people who can’t afford their medications etc, I thank the Lord that I live in Canada.


15. matthew lipscomb
June 30, 2007
10:27 PM

Tim,

does your host support cold fusion? We have a home grown system that needs to find a way to a faster server.

-matthew


16. TulipGirl
June 30, 2007
11:47 PM

Happy Canada Day!