By Medicine Hat News Opinion on March 14, 2020.
Since I’ve been home sick the past couple days, and since COVID-19 is affecting everyone’s life at this point, I suppose it wouldn’t do much good to do my planned piece, Economists: For Cryin’ Out Loud, Quit Listening. At the same time, most everyone with a keyboard has the best course of action for dealing with this global pandemic, taking to social media and news comment sections to argue with all the other “experts.” Some are so worried that they think toilet paper will be the next currency, while others jump on our Facebook page to blame “the media” for fear mongering over something “not even as bad as the flu.” Frankly, I have no problem owning the fact that I don’t know much about this virus, other than having an ability to Google a few statistics, follow the advice of health officials and exercise common sense. Other than that, which most everyone could do, I’m doing what anyone else is – waiting to see what happens next. No one needs my thoughts on the seriousness of COVID-19, especially when the realization of that changes every day. Four days ago it was low-risk, and the next day the U.S. cut off travel to Europe. The day after that we cancelled large gatherings and began putting our lives on hold. Then Sophie Grégoire Trudeau caught it and the federal health minister said up to seven in 10 of us could join her. By the time this reaches you, things will no doubt have changed dramatically, and it doesn’t seem like many people have an overly educated guess on how that turns out. I think concern is smart, while fear is understandable, and I think we should all take steps to better each other’s safety. That’s all I’ve got for you. What I will do is discuss the obvious reality of this situation, which is Mother Nature is a force we can’t control and she doesn’t remotely care if she mucks with human creations like, say, the economy. Whether you’re sad you missed the Brad Paisley concert and can’t watch the Oilers finally not suck, or whether you’re wondering how you might get to work should your kid’s school close, the virus doesn’t care. Whether you’re rich and powerful, or poor and unassuming, the virus doesn’t care. Whether you’re young and likely to slide through it unscathed, or in your golden years and therefore at the highest risk of not making it through at all, the virus doesn’t care. But maybe most importantly, under this system, the virus does not give a damn how much money is in the budget to cover the cost of containing it. It doesn’t care about money you might lose from lack of work, or lack of customers, and it certainly doesn’t care if provinces or countries go deeper in debt. It seems to me like this would be a good time to realize that money (something we made up) has no business standing in the way of being alive (something we did not). And if it shouldn’t stand in the way of life, why should it stand in the way of wellbeing? Don’t get me wrong, on an individual level the monetary effects of something like a global virus can have real consequences – a loss of income always does – and if COVID-19 continues to escalate (see: Italy) those singular ramifications will combine for an economic nightmare. If that happens, we only have one place to turn – our governments. And in Alberta, should we reach the plausible stage where no one is safe from infection and we start losing lives, is anyone with a heart (or brain) going to care what the cost is to limit the deaths? Of course not. And that’s the point. We are social creatures who depend on others for survival, and we live under a system of every person for themselves. It doesn’t make much sense on the best of days, but when Mother Nature starts threatening people en masse, it becomes insane. Deep down everyone knows this, even if it takes a growing pandemic to surface the mindset. There’s no getting around it – I need your safety to ensure my own, and you need mine. This system creates winners and losers by definition, but if the losers can’t actually afford to stay safe and healthy, it doesn’t matter a lick if the winners can. In order to deal with that, we’re supposed to have a government that focuses on the preservation of its people. In Alberta, what we have instead is one that won’t even alter cost-cutting plans in the face of an immediate health crisis. New rules are set to begin April 1 for physicians, and even as the whole lot – especially those in rural areas – say your safety could be at stake, and as the severity unfolds, our health minister takes to the airwaves to attack their credibility. It’s pathetic, and it’s dangerous. A real leader would reverse those changes, if even temporarily, and they would’ve done it last week. Instead, most of the province is begging Tyler Shandro to do it, and he ignores them while his boss flies to Ottawa to ask the isolated PM for money. If this group won’t even drop the “Alberta is broke” charade long enough to protect people from pandemic… if it won’t prevent money from hindering human safety at a time when its needed most, can you imagine it helping out if we survive, but our bank accounts don’t? Scott Schmidt is the layout editor at the Medicine Hat News. Contact him at sschmidt@medicinehatnews.com or follow him on Twitter at @shmitzysays. All opinions are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of the News’ editorial board. 24
I waited a couple of hours before I responded.
I certainly do not wish harm, ill health or death on anyone.
It’s sad that some people may have to isolate, not be able to work and survive with limited income to budget.
If there are any people in society that understand what you may have to go through, it is the people with disabilities on AISH that live this every day.
I’ve always said to people, “You’re only a crisis away from being in the same situation as us.”
Please remember this as you read or hear someone saying people on AISH lazy and abusing the system.
Les Landry you are absolutely sort of correct. A great number of disabled people are not on AISH and a great number of people should NOT be on AISH. I know of four people on AISH and two of them are very deserving of AISH and AISH was designed for people like them.
The other two people, well I heard one of them bragging how easy it was for her to get AISH. She lives in the bars, parties hard 4 or 5 night a week, sleeps in until it is time to get up and do it again. Bring up the word AISH to her and academy award should go to her. The other person just likes playing video games until 6:00 am and then getting up at 5:00 pm demanding his mom make something good to eat.
A great ride for a 40 year old kid who loves going golfing and concerts and movies and mention the word AISH and then another academy award winner is on stage.
Yes AISH is much needed in our society, but there are always the freeloaders, abusers and plain ol’ lazy ass people. I believe at least 25% of people do not deserve AISH and countless folks that fell through the cracks do deserve it.
Hello Mr. Black
Many people are confused or do not know the difference between AISH and income support. AISH is not as easy to get on as some people may believe or be lead to believe.
In my case, I needed medical reports from Dr. Hill, my “heart and stroke” specialist and with more qualifications than the people judging his assessment of my condition. He’s a professor and an associate dean at the U of C. He is one of the leading heart and stroke specialists in the country. AISH forced me to get his report three times and I will get to that later. I had to get a report from my General Doctor on my treatments and frequency of visits. I then had to get a report from two separate and independent psychiatrist about my PTSD, ( even though I was not applying for AISH because of my PTSD ).
My AISH application was based on a very rare and deadliest form of Blood Pressure. It’s called, “Malignant Resistant Hypertension” and my resting blood pressure was 273/168. I had three minor strokes and developed epilepsy. I was walking dead and did not know if I was going to finish the day when I woke up in the morning. Blood pressure is one thing that nobody can “fake” and I even took my blood pressure machine to Alberta Works (income support) and showed them my BP.
The people at AISH kept saying, I did not turn in Doctor Hill’s report and that they did not have it even after I turned it in twice. The next time it was turned in was by my “income support” worker and AISH still said it wasn’t turned in.
I filed a complaint with Alberta Privacy Commissioner saying, “AISH lost some confidential and personal medical information about me and cannot tell me where it is.” And the strangest thing happened, they found Dr. Hill’s report and it took another four months to have my AISH application accepted.
Now some people will see me and think, “He doesn’t even ‘look’ like he has a disability.” Some will say and many have said, “He’s ‘faking’ it.” Yeah, I went from making over 80 grand a year driving truck to struggle in poverty with less than 2 grand/month by choice.
Some people may have seen me in Locals about two weeks ago, I was having a “steak dinner” with some friends. I know people commented because they said it loud enough for me to hear it. What they did not see was how I was a guest of my friend from Calgary and she paid for my meal and coffee.
And how the people that does not see me when I isolate because of my PTSD. They do not see me when I wake up screaming in the middle of the night with my service dog trying to ground me, because I’m in a full-blown PTSD night terror. They do not see me when I have to sleep during the day, because my PTSD keeps me up all night and it’s not from playing video games.
My point is, AISH is not as easy to get on as some people may believe and why many people on AISH, look okay on the outside.
There’s a saying I use from time to time. It is;
“We ought not to criticize the things we do not understand,
but rather let’s try to understand those that criticize.”
Thank you,