Category Archives: Life

Of Honor, Tradition And Things Cool

During the Civil War a family here in Raleigh lost several brothers.  They were buried and then…lost.  They were buried in graves marked with headstone and forget.  As urban sprawl sprawled, they were forgotten and lost.  Until recently:

Raleigh, N.C. — The bodies of two Civil War-era soldiers were re-buried Saturday in Raleigh.

Brothers Joel and Joseph Holleman died and were buried in 1862, but their remains were unearthed in Raleigh last month by development. Excavation near PNC Arena turned up the brothers’ bones.

On Saturday morning, the two men rested under honor guard at the North Carolina Museum of History.

A horse-drawn artillery caisson bore them to Oakwood Cemetery where the North Carolina Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans buried them with a military and Masonic service.

One of the men was a Mason; he received a full Masonic funeral.  I wish that I had known this was taking place; I’da tried to go.

In the photos you can see North Carolina Masons marching in procession, accompanying their fallen Brother.  A lambskin apron is resting on the alter, presumably to be placed upon the coffin which shall contain his earthly remains, and with them laid beneath the silent clods of the valley.  Finally you see a Mason holding a sprig of Acacia; the symbol to Masons that we are all walking through our probationary state to be reunited again with the Supreme Architect of the Universe in that temple not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.

I’m a sucker for pomp and circumstance; ritual and tradition.  This is good stuff today.

 

How We Payed For Healthcare In The Past

There was a time when the government didn’t tend to the care of her citizens like we do now.  I was researching another post or comment or something and came across this:

While the health care community and academics searched for a single insurance plan for delivering health care, the absence of regulation left individual Americans free to solve the problem on their own. They proceeded to do so, aided in the effort by a number of medical entrepreneurs.

In spite of the price increases, most people still paid for medical care out of their own pockets.  Estimated health expenditures in 1929 were $3,649 million. Of that, consumers paid $2,937 million, public sources paid $495 million, and philanthropy paid $217 million.

Employer plans covered only a tiny minority of people. Most sickness insurance was provided by mutual benefit associations unrelated to work—fraternal societies like the Loyal Order of Moose, the Knights and Ladies of
Security, the Ladies of the Maccabees, and the Société Française de Bienfaisance Mutuelle, which built San Francisco’s French Hospital in 1852. According to Stewart, there were thousands of fraternal societies operating in New York’s Lower East Side at the beginning of the 1900s. Existing for the benefit of their members and offering benefits that were not contingent on employment, many of the societies “employed or contracted with physicians to care for dues-paying members for as little as $1 to $2 per year per member. In some eastern and southern cities, a third to a half of some ethnic groups depended on these organizations for medical care. In New Orleans 88% of the entire population was said to be covered by some form of prepaid ‘contract medicine,’ also known as ‘lodge medicine’ by 1888.”

Historian David Beito estimates that in 1910 at least one-third of adult males belonged to fraternal societies that provided nearly every service of the modern welfare state “including orphanages, hospitals, job exchanges, homes for the elderly, and scholarship programs.”  Fraternal societies had a number of competitors including “commercialgroup plans, government workmen’s compensation programs, trade unions and industrial unions, company-sponsored mutual benefit societies, and other fraternal orders that provided life insurance or non-stipulated (discretionary) relief.”

Before the government intervened to solve our healthcare crisis, we were doing it ourselves.  We banded together, formed our own organizations and took care of each other.

However, there was one thing going FOR those social organizations that is missing from the government run programs; accountability:

The fact is that the fraternal societies knew their members gave them an advantage in issuing disability and sickness insurance. Lodges had home visiting committees that helped uncover false claims and one or two week waiting periods requiring members applying for aid to shoulder some of the financial load. Unlike many of the public proposals, the societies also had behavioral requirements that made life less attractive while receiving payments. Emery
reports that fraternal groups could require that “members receiving benefits could not drink or gamble and in some cases were not allowed to be away from their residence after dark.”

The fraternal societies were made up of friends, neighbors and associates.  Further, they worked to prevent fraud and ensure that a life of leisure while accepting benefits wasn’t allowed.

A sad cry from where we are today.

 

Musings On Trayvon Martin

I haven’t posted on the spectacle that is the Trayvon Martin case to this point.  Partly because I’m conflicted and partly – mostly – because I think that most of the commentators that I’ve seen to date are dealing in things emotional and not in things rationally.

  1. The violent death of anyone is a time of sadness and loss.  The younger, all the more tragic.  Trayvon was a young man with a full life in front of him.  Having that life cut short is devastating.
  2. I have an imbedded distrust of “cop wanna be’s”.  These are the guys that get a hard on for carryin’ a gun and wearin’ a badge that let’s ’em use it. I love cops who’re cops because they’re afraid of what the world would be like if they weren’t there.  I have a deep seated fear of cops who wanna be cops for any other reason than that.
  3. Sanford, FL is a dangerous place.  It’s safer than 3% of the rest of America.
  4. I agree that we are given the right to carry guns.  I don’t.  Perhaps out of naivete, I stay away from situations that might require me to have a gun.
  5. Hoodies, anywhere but in a boxing gym, make a person look like a thug and a hoodlum.  There is no valid argument to this truth.  You could put a hoodie on Mother Theresa and she would look suspicious.
  6. I think that Zimmerman profiled Trayvon.  I think Zimmerman saw a young man wearing a hoodie at night in a gated community walking where people don’t normally walk.
  7. Zimmerman called 9-1-1.  He reported the situation.  When told he didn’t need to follow the individual, he said, “okay.”  It sounds like he quit following Trayvon.
  8. I think that a young black man in Sanford, FL would be reasonably alarmed to see a man following him.  If I were him, I would think that the man, Zimmerman, did not have my best interests at heart.
  9. Zimmerman is as white as President Obama.  Neither claims to be white.  Both self identify as a minority; Obama as black and Zimmerman as Hispanic.
  10. It’s reasonable that an arrest is made.  A boy is dead and the circumstances surrounding the shooting aren’t clear.
  11. Jackson and Sharpton are douchebags.  The race baiters present in this case are as viscious and immoral as the one in the Duke Lacrosse case.  I have not heard one single apology from any of the “outraged minority” for the damage they inflicted on those buys.
  12. Hiring strippers is a bad idea.
  13. The evidence seems to be pointing to the fact that Zimmerman “broke contact” with Trayvon and then was later assaulted by Trayvon.  At the heart of this will be Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law.

In the end, there’s death and murder all over these great United States.  All of it tragic.  Zimmerman is either guilty or he’s not.  What really matters to me, however, is the absolute RAGE that people have in this case.  I mean nationally.  I get the family and friends.  The neighbors and associates.  But the nation?  The racism?

I don’t see it.

NCAA Tournament: The Real One

In full disclosure both my finals teams are in the Dance; I have Kentucky Beating Kansas for the National Championship.

This breaks my heart.

I love Carolina and my only regret is that it took me 31 years to get here.   I do so wish that it was going to be the Tar Heels beating Kentucky, but, sadly, our boys in Blue didn’t have the guns for the fight.

However, all of this is secondary.

You see, the University of Minnesota is in the Frozen Four having defeated The University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux to get there.

There maybe one team we hate more than any other team, and that’s the bastard Badgers of Wisconsin.  After that comes North Dakota.  Historically we simply love to hate BU.

Here’s to what really matters.  College hockey; there isn’t a better game in all the world.

Thoughts On Hoods: Posted Without Comment

My daughter dances and her Spring Show was the past week.  The show is put on in a local high school.  While walking around during intermission, I saw this:

 

An Open Letter To Occupy Raleigh

I want to be very clear; I openly mock the Occupy movement.

There isn’t one single characteristic about #OWS that distinguishes it from any other leftist movement.  Listening to the rhetoric coming from Occupy you would not be able to identify whether or not your are listening to:

  1. A Greenpeace protest to save seals in Greenland.
  2. A university protest to bring attention to the wages of house keepers on campus.
  3. NAACP protests concerned about the treatment of an individual.
  4. A communist party meeting discussing the evils of profits.

There is nothing that distinguishes you from anything that we’ve already seen.

It’s anger unleashed on the world with no discernible focus.  There is no clear indication that you have a point.

You are open to mockery.

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The Liberal Left: Open And Tolerant

The wrap is that the far right wing-nut is intolerant and hateful.  The message is that the conservative is unwilling to embrace ideas that might be different, or strange or new.

The right.  The republican.  The conservative is the one unwilling to listen to opposing ideas, to embrace an open mind, to allow differences of thought.

That’s the narrative.  The left, the liberal left, is open to thoughts and ideas that are different.

It’s not true.  It’s the liberal that’s intolerant.

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New Trends In Hiring

Incentives drive behavior.  I firmly believe this.  Because I believe this I would look to see the number of additional Facebook accounts increase:

SEATTLE — When Justin Bassett interviewed for a new job, he expected the usual questions about experience and references. So he was astonished when the interviewer asked for something else: his Facebook username and password.

Since the rise of social networking, it has become common for managers to review publically available Facebook profiles, Twitter accounts and other sites to learn more about job candidates. But many users, especially on Facebook, have their profiles set to private, making them available only to selected people or certain networks.

Companies that don’t ask for passwords have taken other steps — such as asking applicants to friend human resource managers or to log in to a company computer during an interview. Once employed, some workers have been required to sign non-disparagement agreements that ban them from talking negatively about an employer on social media.

Not sure how I’d handle this if I was out of work for an extended period of time or if my current employer asked me to for the same information.  However, now that I see this growing trend, I may just create a duplicate Facebook account that I keep for just such occasions.

Ugh.

Morals And Ethics: How We Make Our Laws

Moral

Ethical

Are we a nation of moral and ethical people?

Is there a difference in laws that prohibit poor behavior and laws that require good behavior, between laws that say you CAN’T do this and laws that say you MUST do this?

Just wondering.

 

The Wealth oF Being Alive Today

I’m reading more and more on the topic of equality.  What it means and how to measure it.

But I have to maintain that we are the richest humans who have ever lived.  Today, in the USA have life better than the richest capitalists, pontiffs or kings who lived just in the last 100 years.

I recently discovered Spotify whereby I can listen to virtually any song I can think of.  That is, I have access to digital stereo playlists of every single Mozart piece he wrote.  Ever.  For free.  On demand.

Next up?  Haviah Nagilah by Neil Diamond.  After that?  The Lucky One by Alison Krause And Union Station.

We are wealthy beyond measure.