Friday, September 18, 2009

Gold Spandex and Ghetto Fabulous

Has anyone else seen this? Leslie Hall is an Iowa native, living with her parents, whose main goal in life is to never have a desk job. I guess that leaves time to pursue other passions, like being a garage-band rapper. And rap-it-up she did. This girl has style, 'tude, and most importantly, beats. You've got to listen to her. Ready, go!

Thursday, September 10, 2009

A Moral Issue

When something is important to me, I find it difficult to express my feelings publicly. I'm concerned they will be misinterpreted or even worse, ignored.

But I've held out for too long on the moral issue of our times, also known as the United States healthcare debate.


I loathe those two words because there are so many unclear, confusing messages associated with them.

Instead, I’m going to refer to the control of people’s life expectancy and well-being through medicinal practices as a moral issue.

This is the moral issue of our times.

First, two simple facts:
  1. The United States spends $4,631.00 per capita on health care. That’s #1 in the world.
  2. The average life expectancy of an American at birth is 78.11. That’s #50 in the world.
#1 in spending. #50 in life expectancy. For a country I believe to be very efficient in other areas, This. Does. Not. Make. Sense.

Simple facts such as this make me curious, and I don't understand why others aren't more intrigued. I've been shocked in the last few months by ignorance and un-Christianlike attitudes that I've witnessed in several fellow Americans. People (rightfully so) gripe about making their insurance payments, but when asked about the best way to help others, the response too often seems to be an “every-man-for-himself” type of answer.

This is where the morality of the issue comes in. Every man has the right to life, but the current United States healthcare system (a profit-driven industry) prevents that.

I urge all of my friends and family who are unsure where they stand on this moral issue to search, ponder, and pray about a change in American healthcare. Do so without fearing change. Instead, do so with the aim of helping others.

After some brief travel abroad over a year ago, I’ve had the opportunity to observe American culture through a foreigner’s lenses (some call it reverse culture shock), and what I’ve seen is an attitude that Americans tend to ignore reality when it is “just too sad.” Joseph Smith, the first Latter-day Saint prophet said, “We cannot be saved until we have risen above all our enemies, not the least of which is ignorance.”

Please rise above ignorance and do what you can to help others.

The following story brings a visual element to the issue, which is hard to find in the mass of misinformed speeches and text flooding our news sites and televisions. Click here, scroll to 1:10:17, and watch a 2-minute story.

This. Should. Not. Happen.

People are dying prematurely in our country, and it doesn't need to happen. Our country was not founded to survive without work. Work is required to fulfill the promises of the Constitution, including the promise of life.

I urge you to keep the debate going. Stay or get informed. Pay attention to facts and don’t be swayed by opinions.

Write your congressperson. Write something on your blog, or facebook page, or twitter page. Make a comment at the dinner table. Do something.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Insightful...

Just discovered this wonderful blogger, Joanna Goddard. She just got married, is currently on her honeymoon, and is having a different writer each day add their "secrets to a happy marriage." I like this one. And this one.


I also just read this insightful essay on marriage from the New York Times. It's very raw, scary, but incredibly mature.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Go Cougars.


BYU 14 OU 13

Keep us going, Bronco!