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Wal-Mart Disses Health Coverage

Chris (left, goofy) notified me about an article published in the Seattle Times yesterday reporting how more than 3,100 Wal-Mart employees in Washington were benefiting from state-subsidized health coverage, Medicaid, throughout 2004.

"What Scott saves from Wal-Mart he pays in taxes for its employees," Chris said.

According to the article, Safeway employs as many people as Wal-Mart in Washington, yet only 1,539 Safeway employees used state health coverage.

Medicaid is a state-federal program that provides health coverage to families on welfare and children in low-income families. More than half of the 3,100 Wal-Mart employees on Medicaid were full-time workers (read: Wal-Mart employees are paid in pennies).

Despite this report, Chris, I don't see any reason why Scott would discontinue supporting his neighborhood gun/fishing/auto/grocery/home furnishing/literature/apparel store, Wal-Mart.

Matt Wood Fears Iran Nuclear Standoff

Matt Wood called me over the weekend and expressed some concern about Iran's nuclear standoff. Now that I'm done moving Nina into her new apartment, I can rest my bulging muscles and join the conversation.

Iran broke U.N. seals at a uranium enrichment plant earlier this month and said it was resuming nuclear research after a 2ยฝ-year freeze. Western countries are in an uproar, and the UN, US and EU are taking action to stop Iran's nuclear advances. It's good that the UN and EU are taking the bull by the horns this time around because the US cannot (potentially) go to war against Iran alone. Our forces are strecthed too thin trying to stabilize and rebuild Afghanistan and Iraq.

The West received some bad news last week when Syria, to no one's suprise, announced its support of Iran's nuclear standoff.

"Considering that Syria is the steadfast party confronting Israel, and Iran is the defender of the Islamic revolution, this obliges us to have more consultation and cooperation," said Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Take note that Syria and Iran also border Iraq on opposite sides and harbor terrorists that attack U.S. troops. Terrorists don't just grow on trees in Iraq.

The US is bound, in my mind, to the Iran conflict by:

  1. Its own will (W.'s Axis of Evil proclamation)
  2. Its occupation of Iraq
  3. Most importantly, its alliance with Israel

Israel's defense minister accused Iran and Syria on Friday of masterminding a suicide bombing in Tel Aviv that wounded 20 people, and, while reinforcing Israel's committment to diplomacy, Israelโ€™s defense minister Shaul Mofaz said yesterday:

โ€œIsrael will not be able to accept an Iranian nuclear capability, and it must have the capability to defend itself, with all that that implies, and this we are preparing.โ€

The message is clear: Israel is ready to rumble. This is the reason why Matt Wood is so concerned. A history major at WWU, Matt recalls that in 1914 Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia and alliances elevated the conflict to The Great War, or WWI. I don't believe this conflict will escalate to that level (we should learn from, not repeat history), but I echo Matt's concern.

Random thoughts:

  • How is Osama bin Laden alive and able to cut audio tracks?
  • Will Harry Belafonte just shut the f&#! up?

Interesting op-eds I found at USAToday.com:

Motorcycle Diaries FTW

I watched "The Motorcycle Diaries" the day before yesterday, after Ally gave it a strong recommendation. I think Che and I could have been good friends as youths, though communicating via subtitles could be tough. I couldn't hang with the whole communism/guerrilla warfare lifestyle he led as an adult, but I really admire his charisma.

Both Focus Films (Motorcyle Diaries, Eternal Sunshine) and Fox Searchlight Pictures (Garden State, In America, Napolean Dynamite) have been producing amazing movies lately. I just wanted to say that.

Movies I'd like to see soon:

  1. Good Night, Good Luck
  2. Syriana
  3. Chronicles of Narnia
  4. The Producers
  5. Munich