What New Labour Wants For The NHS

The danger of privatised health care:

Doctor Holds Patient Hostage Until She Pays Her Bill

A doctor named John Drew Laurusonis and two of his assistants in Georgia have been accused of locking a woman in an examination room “when concerns arose about her ability to pay the bill.” The three were indicted last week on charges of false imprisonment for the October 4th, 2007 incident.

For several hours, the staff refused to allow her to leave, locking her in for periods of time, [her attorney Joseph] Fried said. They had her log into her bank records from a computer while she was there, he said. “They said, ‘Don’t you have anyone who loves you who can come and help you? Because you’re not leaving until this bill is paid,’ ” Fried said. “They made her feel like she was a criminal. She was made to feel like she couldn’t leave without something bad to happen to her.”

One reason the patient couldn’t pay was that she was charged nearly eight times more for the visit than she was initially told by clinic employees, from $98 to $755

Via The Consumerist.

Happy Happy Day

Today is officially the happiest day of the year – really, it’s scientific, so it must be true so just ignore those negative vibes they’re not real – and in keeping with the theme, here is the happiest picture I can find.

California has an outbreak of love and common sense:

Californian gay couple happy to be married

Congratulations to all who are now able to marry the love of their life. Just don’t read the comments or that happy glow will vanish in a puff of bitter cynicism.

Worrying but cool

What you can do with a rapid prototyping machine and some imagination. Quite cool as an object, but the mindset that suggest you needs a foldable, collapsable gun in your back pocket “for self defence” is still strange to me. What neighbourhood is so dangerous that you need this kind of firepower to walk your dog?

Via Charlie’s

Victims of the American dream

In a story I would’ve missed if it wasn’t for Majikthise, it turns out about a dozen metalworkers from India are going into their fourth week of hunger strike in Washington, after having been lured to America with false promises of permanent visa and high paying job offers:

The workers, who walked off jobs in Gulf Coast shipyards in early March, say they were victims of human trafficking when they were brought to the United States under a temporary guest worker program. The hunger strike is meant to pressure federal officials, and comes as Congress is debating an expansion of the guest worker program, known as H-2B for the type of temporary visa the workers receive.

The Indian workers say they were deceived by Signal International and labor recruiters when they paid as much as $20,000 for visas they believed would allow them to work and live permanently with their families in the United States. In fact, the H-2B visas are for short-term contracts.

“Everyone has a dream,” said one of the protesters, Paul Konar, a 54-year-old worker from the Indian state of Kerala, speaking in Hindi through a translator. “If we could come here legally to live with our families, that was my dream.”

Reason 1,567,802

Hot on the heels of the news that the US government drugs people it deports comes the cautionary tale of an Italian man who fell in love with an American woman and visited America one time too many to see her:

But on April 29, when Mr. Salerno, 35, presented his passport at Washington Dulles International Airport, a Customs and Border Protection agent refused to let him into the United States. And after hours of questioning, agents would not let him travel back to Rome, either; over his protests in fractured English, he said, they insisted that he had expressed a fear of returning to Italy and had asked for asylum.

Ms. Cooper, 23, who had promised to show her boyfriend another side of her country on this visit — meaning Las Vegas and the Grand Canyon — eventually learned that he had been sent in shackles to a rural Virginia jail. And there he remained for more than 10 days, locked up without charges or legal recourse while Ms. Cooper, her parents and their well-connected neighbors tried everything to get him out.

His crime? Nothing. Visitors from the European Union do not need a visum to visit the States, as long as they stay no longer than ninety days and don’t come over to work, but admission isn’t automatic, as the article explains:

Though citizens of those nations do not need visas to enter the United States for as long as 90 days, their admission is up to the discretion of border agents. There are more than 60 grounds for finding someone inadmissible, including a hunch that the person plans to work or immigrate, or evidence of an overstay, however brief, on an earlier visit.

While those turned away are generally sent home on the next flight, “there are occasional circumstances which require further detention to review their cases,” Ms. De Cima said. And because such “arriving aliens” are not considered to be in the United States at all, even if they are in custody, they have none of the legal rights that even illegal immigrants can claim.

Emphasis mine on that last sentence, which is a key reason why I won’t visit America in this lifetime. It’s an admission that everytime you cross the border you run the risk of being disappeared if some border agent takes a dislike to you, with no recourse available to you. Fortunately for Salerno he had friends in high places, friends who knew how to use their influence to get the New York Times interested in his story. But if you’re not a well connected citizen of an EU country, you’re out of luck.

Apart from the danger it puts any visitors in, this idea that because you haven’t been formally allowed into the US even though you are incarcenated on US soil, you’re not entitled to the protection of the US law and constitution, is more evidence of a worrying trend to hollow out these rights by defining more and more categories of non-citizens; the same happened with Guantanamo Bay, remember?