Jim’s Page

Ah walmart

April 2, 2008 · 1 Comment

Read more here
Debbie Shank was a Wal-Mart employee when she was left “brain damaged, disabled and penniless” from a car accident seven years ago. But after the Shank family received a settlement from the trucking company at fault, Wal-Mart demanded reimbursement for every cent it had paid for Debbie’s medical bills – plus interest and legal fees. Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Debbie Shank’s case, leaving her family no choice but to pay Wal-Mart $470,000.

Now her family doesn’t know how they’re going to be able to afford Debbie’s nursing home bills. Wal-Mart’s lawyers may be following the law, but they certainly aren’t following their hearts.

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80’s Party

March 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

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Mike Rowe and some funny stuff

February 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

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Disgusting but cool!

February 24, 2008 · Leave a Comment

SOUTHGATE, Mich. (AP) — A Detroit-area restaurant owner believes he has broken the world record for “largest hamburger commercially available.”

After 12 hours of preparation and baking, the 134-pound burger emerged Saturday at Mallie’s Sports Bar and Grill.

The “Absolutely Ridiculous Burger,” made with beef, bacon and cheese, was delivered on a 50-pound bun, The Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press reported. It sells for $350, and orders require 24 hours’ notice.

 

DETROIT FREE PRESS VIDEO: Grill aims for Guinness record

Flipping the burger required three men using two steel sheets.

Owner Steve Mallie told The News he wanted to show that he has the biggest and best burgers.

Authenticating Mallie’s claim could take a few weeks. His burger would outweigh the 123-pound burger made last year by Denny’s Beer Barrel Pub, of Clearfield, Pa.

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I love insurance companies!

February 24, 2008 · 1 Comment

Insurer fined $9M for dropping cancer patient

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A woman who had her medical coverage canceled as she was undergoing treatment for breast cancer has been awarded more than $9 million in a case against one of California’s largest health insurers.

Patsy Bates, 52, a hairdresser from Lakewood, had been left with more than $129,000 in unpaid medical bills when Health Net Inc. canceled her policy in 2004.

On Friday, arbitration judge Sam Cianchetti ordered Health Net to repay that amount while providing $8.4 million in punitive damages and $750,000 for emotional distress.

“It’s hard to imagine a situation more trying than the one Bates has had to endure,” Cianchetti wrote in the decision. “The rug was pulled out from underneath, and that occurred at a time when she is diagnosed with breast cancer, one of the leading causes of death for women.”

Bates, a mother of two, said she screamed when she heard about the damage award.

“I am elated,” she said.

Bates’ attorney William Shernoff said he wanted other insurers to take notice of the award.

“We are going to put a stop to this practice,” he said.

Health Net said it was implementing a freeze on policy cancelations that would last until the company sets up a third-party review panel to scrutinize cases.

“Obviously we regret the way that this has turned out, but we are intent on fixing the processes to maintain the public trust,” spokesman David Olson said.

The award came a day after the Los Angeles city attorney sued Health Net, claiming it illegally canceled the coverage of about 1,600 patients. City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo also said the company illegally ran an incentive program in which it paid bonuses to an administrator for meeting targets of policy cancelations.

Health Net acknowledged that such a program existed in 2002 and 2003 but was subsequently scrapped.

“It’s hard to imagine a policy more reprehensible than tying bonuses to encourage the recision of health insurance that helps keep the public well and alive,” Cianchetti wrote in the Bates decision.

Bates had been insured with another company but was persuaded to switch over to a Health Net policy after an agent suggested she could save money.

She said she had undergone surgery to remove a tumor and had received her first two chemotherapy treatments when doctors stopped treating her because her bills were going unpaid.

“I was devastated. I didn’t know what was going to happen,” Bates said. “It’s boggling that someone can do that to you.”

Bates went on to complete her cancer treatment through a state-funded program.

Health Net also said it would review its practices and the way its brokers and agents are trained.

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Thank god these ads will finally go away!!

February 23, 2008 · Leave a Comment

   

CINCINNATI (AP) — A federal court jury has found the owner of a company that sells “male enhancement” tablets and other herbal supplements guilty of bank fraud and money laundering.

Steve Warshak is founder and president of Berkeley Premium Nutraceuticals, distributor of Enzyte and a number of products alleged to boost energy, manage weight, reduce memory loss and aid restful sleep.

Television ads for Enzyte feature “Smiling Bob,” a goofy, grinning man whose life gets much better after he uses the product.

Warshak could face more than 20 years in prison and his company could have to forfeit tens of millions of dollars

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Do you think this really works?

February 11, 2008 · 2 Comments

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Damm

February 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

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Our pathetic goverment and another sad loss of life

February 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Our military has killed another one,  yet this man was not a victim of war.  He died from the lousy medical care they offer our soldiers.   This is a sad story.  Fuck the US Government!

The whole story here

Carmelo Rodriguez was dancing with his niece just last year. By all accounts Rodriguez, a 29-year old, loved life, his family and the Marine Corps. He was also an artist, a father, and a part-time actor. He once appeared with Katie Holmes in a scene on the TV series Dawson’s Creek.

An image of Sgt. Rodriguez with his Marine buddies in Iraq in 2005 shows him as a fit, gung-ho platoon leader.

CBS News correspondent Byron Pitts met Rodriguez two months ago. That once-buff physique had been whittled down to less than 80 pounds in 18 months by stage 4 melanoma. He was surrounded by family, including his 7-year-old son holding his hand. It was Rodriguez’s idea we meet.

When Sgt. Rodriguez was in Iraq, military doctors, he says, misdiagnosed his skin cancer. They called it “a wart.”

Eight minutes after Pitts met Sgt. Carmelo Rodriguez, and CBS News was preparing to interview him, he died.

At his family’s insistence, Pitts and the camera crew stayed. With his body in the very next room, Pitts sat down with his relatives.

Pitts asked: “Why have us here for such a painful moment for your family?”

“[It was] His wish to have this known, because he doesn’t want any other soldier to fight for his country and go through what he had to go through,” said Rodriguez’s uncle, Dean Ferraro. “To be neglected.”

“He said, ‘don’t let this be it. Don’t let this be it. Fight!’” his sister, Elizabeth Rodriguez, said. “That’s what we’re doing. We’re gonna fight for him.”

The “fight,” as they call it is over what’s known as the Feres Doctrine, a 1950 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that bars active-duty military personnel and their families from suing the federal government for injuries incidental to their service. In other words, unlike every other U.S. citizen, people in the military cannot sue the federal government for medical malpractice.

“When he enlisted in 1997, from his initial medical checkup – you know what I mean, physical – the doctor documented that he had melanoma, but never told him ‘have anyone follow up on it,’” Ferraro said. “And that was back in ‘97. If we would have known back in ‘97, he would still be with us.”

CBS News was given a copy of that medical report. The doctor notes skin as “abnormal.” In further details he describes it as “melanoma on the right buttocks.” There’s no recommendation for further treatment.

Eight years pass. Sgt. Rodriguez is in Iraq.

“If a birthmark is about that big [she holds up two hands], and … it has a raise like that and is pussing, just let it go and say it’s a wart??” his sister, Elizabeth, said. “Who does that; how does that happen? It’s not right. It’s not right.”

His uncle Wilfredo Negron said: “Twenty-nine years old! You know all his life is good. Never into drugs, never into partying. Served his country faithfully. Served his Lord faithfully! He held on positive because he’s a warrior. He’s a Marine. He fought for his country and also for his family.”

According to a veterans group that tracks soldiers who are misdiagnosed, there are hundreds of misdiagnosed cases across the country.

Twenty-five-year-old Air Force Staff Sgt. Dean Patrick Witt was one of them. Witt’s family says his appendicitis was repeatedly misdiagnosed. After emergency surgery, Witt ended up brain dead.

He later died.

Pitts spoke with Military law expert Eugene Fidell, who is an attorney.

“You talk to military families who believe they have a malpractice case against the military and you tell them what?” Pitts asked.

“It’s very very difficult when I get these calls, and I get these calls repeatedly over the course of a year. I probably get one ever couple months,” Fidell said. “These people have to be made to understand that the law simply doesn’t permit them to bring a lawsuit. They can bring a lawsuit, but their lawsuit will be a complete waste of time.”

Pitts showed Fidell a copy of Rodriguez’s medical records.

Military emails show that Sgt. Rodriguez’s commanding officer, Lt. Col B.W. Barnhill, quotes a military nurse who called Rodriquez case “a major screw up.”

An email also reads: “He should have been immediately seen and the wart removed and we may not have gotten to where we are now.”

Pitts said to Fidell: “When he’s in Iraq, the doctor says we’ll have someone look at it when you get back to the states in five months.”

He shook his head. “If I had a comparable condition myself, or a member of my family had, and somebody would have said, ’sorry, no one can see you for five months,’ I would have fired the doctor!”

But Rodriguez didn’t have that option.

“No, he didn’t. I hope members of Congress are watching this show,” Fidell said. “The law has got to change.”

What’s the military’s response?

“I’m not prepared to discuss the Feres Doctrine,” said Navy Capt. William Roberts, the medical officer of the Marine Corps.

Three weeks after CBS News’ initial request, the Pentagon granted an interview with Roberts.

But he wouldn’t discuss the Feres Doctrine, or Rodriquez’s case, saying it was “under investigation.”

As for how many cases like the sergeants?

“I do not have those numbers at all,” Roberts said.

Is that because those numbers don’t exist or he can’t provide them?

“I certainly don’t know them,” he said.

“If Carmelo Rodriguez was a civilian, his family would have the right to seek damages,” Pitts said.

“I am sorry but I can’t comment on the legality of that type of redress,” he said.

For the Rodriguez family – the best they can hope for is a final report?

“They will get a final report if they ask for it,” Roberts said.

Because he was a Marine, Sgt. Carmelo Rodriquez received a military funeral. But, it was an honor his family paid for.

As it turns out, Rodgriquez was forced into retirement due to his illness. Since he was retired, the military was no longer obligated to pay for his funeral.

His son, Carmelo Rodriquez IV, was shown the gratitude of a grateful nation: An American flag – and 55 percent of his father’s benefits.

For those who would say these young men and women sign that line saying I turn my life over to the U.S. Military, hey willingly give up some of their rights?

“George Washington said that when a person puts on the uniform, he does not cede being a citizen,” Eugene Fidell said.

Rodriguez was a citizen.

But to his family and his friends, he was a so much more.

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Catalog Choice Eliminate unwanted catalogs you receive

January 24, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Try it here

Did you know?

Forestfacts3

Each year, 19 billion catalogs are mailed to American consumers.

What’s the impact?

  • Number of trees used – 53 million trees
  • Pounds of paper used – 3.6 million tons of paper
  • Energy used to produce this volume of paper – 38 trillion BTUs, enough to power 1.2 million homes per year
  • Contribution to global warming – 5.2 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions, equal to the annual emissions of two million cars
  • Waste water discharges from this volume of paper – 53 billion gallons of water, enough to fill 81,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools

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