I’m afraid this is a little
prissy. Thus the title. Sometimes one is impelled to state the
obvious, even at the cost of wit and charm.
I was struck in New Orleans,
where I spent Mardi Gras hanging around two hospitals after my friend Mary was
scraped off the pavement, how silly it was I couldn’t ask the clean, efficient
medical people who bustled around me there for help with my own wounds. I’d been hit by a car moments before Mary
had her accident. I’d walked away, but
as I sat in the hard little chairs in the waiting room my leg started to swell
and throb until I was crippled and every fifth word I said was AUGHHH.(I’m working on an account of “Robin and Mary’s Not-So-Excellent Mardi Gras Adventure” for a future edish, by the way. Hold your breath!)
But the hospital people didn’t
even offer to help because they understood the problem: Money.
Poor Mary had no choice, but I could wait until Monday and limp off to
where the bill was something my credit card, if not checking account, would
cover.
So it’s stupid! Whether it’s because medical costs are
artificially inflated or because people at the top are robbing people at the bottom or
for whatever reason, the money system prevents hospitals from taking care of
hurt people, just like it prevents most humans from doing whatever it is we
were put on earth to do.
The system doesn’t work! It’s broken!
OK, that’s not prissy, it’s rabid. I’ll leave you to read the column already.
No
Kale In Cabbage: An Earnest Treatise on
the Root of All Evil
By
Robin Ford Wallace
You can’t be much
of a writer if you care about money.
Everyone dreams of
writing the breakthrough novel but for most of us the reality is nobody pays
you to write anything amusing. The
best-paid writing job I ever had was for a company that told car dealerships
why their customers hated them:
“You treat them
like dirt. Next!”
Not really. That would have saved time, but instead I
had to blather on for 20 to 30 pages about listening skills, crap like
that. Still, it beat the gig before
that, penning PR pieces about plastic pipe for plumbing publications.
I was desperate
enough for fun to enjoy the alliterative possibilities: “PVC, pliable and practical, puts paid to
plumbers’ persistent partiality for pricier products.” But they didn’t let me get away with much of
that and in fact they didn’t let me get away with much actual English. If I wrote “cheap,” they thought it made the
product sound – well, cheap. They liked
phrases like “relatively inexpensive” and “innovative yet affordable,” which if
you are any kind of writer at all is the kind of thing that makes you ache for
your old job waiting tables.
Writers wait a lot
of tables.
So do
artists. You can’t be much of an artist
if you’re interested in money. You may
have noticed that the ones who fetch the serious bucks tend to be dead. The living ones tend to cut off their
ears. What earthly use are ears to an
artist? It’s hard to concentrate on
painting with the noise of trucks whizzing by over your home bridge, to say
nothing of everyone yelling at you to get a real job.
We
can go on with this. Tony Hillerman,
author of the Joe Leaphorn Navajo novels, wrote in one of his books that you
couldn’t have money if you were much of an Indian. Indians must listen to the land and their sacred spirits, not the
siren call of the big bucks.
I
read in the newspaper recently about Atlanta policemen moonlighting as
bodyguards for drug dealers. They
patrolled parking lots during narcotics sales, and one even volunteered to
shoot people if the drug lord gave him the high sign. You can’t be much of a cop if you care about money.
How many
politicians lose their power when they get caught selling it for money? How many evangelists? No, you can’t be much of a leader if you
care about money.
You can’t be
anything real if money is what you want, not even a basic person. Mothers don’t get paid for birthing babies
or fathers for nurturing them. Farmers
have never made squat for growing food.
Hardly anybody gets paid to think.
This isn’t
new! Jesus was fussing at the
moneychangers 2000 years ago. Everybody
knows money is the root o’. It’s why
priests and nuns take vows of poverty and lamas carry begging bowls. Yet we keep basing civilization on money
anyhow.
I maintain,
though, this is finally going to change.
Money was originally a placeholder, to facilitate trade: Instead of swapping your carrots for
cabbage, you’d get a coin you could use either to buy cabbage or save for a
later purchase of bricks or camels or a new wife. It was handy.
Now, though, we
don’t think of money in terms of stuff it will buy but stuff in terms of how
much money it’s worth, even quite necessary stuff. That’s why farmers grow soy and corn for the processors instead
of produce that will keep people healthy:
There’s no money in carrots and cabbage.
So money isn’t
handy anymore, it’s topsy-turvy. A
couple of weeks ago, that was brought home to me when I was dragging my leg
like Quasimodo, occasionally yelping in pain, because I’d been hit by a
car. Meanwhile, I was in a hospital
surrounded by doctors and nurses whose training and education, whose whole
purpose in life, was to take care of hurt people.
But they didn’t
help me and I didn’t ask them to, because everybody knew I couldn’t pay the
thousands they’d charge to treat me.
Instead, they referred me to a clinic across town and I limped off into
the crazy world.
You can’t be much
of a hospital if you care about money.
But that’s not why
I think things will change. That’s
normal.
It’s the free
stuff! The trend has been toward
commodifying things that used to be free, like death – old women in the family
used to lay out corpses; now we pay $12,000
– but now technology makes things free that used to cost money.
Information,
obviously. Why buy reference books when
there’s Google? But entertainment,
too. Writing this, I’ve been listening
to a medley of music custom-mixed for my preferences (protest songs, what did
you think?) by a free Internet service that did a better job than a DJ, or my
husband, could have.
And now there’s
this “3-D printer” thing that’s basically a Star Trek replicator. Put in a little toner and it spits out
anything, not just “Earl Grey, hot,” but tools with moving parts, or human ears
and vital organs, all with no manufacturing costs.
Add to that the
existing social organization – at that hospital, if I’d been on welfare or in
prison, they’d have looked after me gratis – and you’ll admit that money is no
longer a logical way to organize the world.
I don’t have an
alternate plan, but I’m rooting for a system that allows farmers to grow food,
mothers to mother, doctors to heal, police to protect the innocent and maybe
even writers to write.
But never more
than 950 words! So: Until next time.
END
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