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Saturday, January 06, 2007
Nathan Tabor :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Tsunami of a Problem
by Nathan Tabor
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Try to remember that time not so long ago when celebrities were flooding the airwaves, begging for help for victims of the tsunami. Only the most heartless of Americans could have possibly turned down those impassioned appeals.

Now comes word from the BBC that half of the billions of dollars pledged by individuals, businesses, and governments around the globe for tsunami aid has not yet been spent—two years after the disaster.

It should come as no surprise, however, that a number of foreign governments have completely reneged on their promise to send aid. Others have only given a small percentage of what they promised.

All told, some 6.7 billion dollars was pledged, but only 3.4 billion has been spent, according to the BBC report. Among the biggest deadbeats—China, which pledged 301 million dollars to Sri Lanka, but has actually given only a paltry million…France, which promised 79 million, but has forked over just a little more than a million…and Spain, which pledged 60 million, but has actually donated less than a million.

With friends like these, the tsunami victims need no enemies.

The BBC reports that the European Commission owes 70 million; Britain, 12 million. Meanwhile, the United States has donated about 38 percent of the dollars it promised. The Red Cross, one of the most trusted relief agencies in existence, promised to build 50,000 homes, but has finished only about 8,000.

The British Red Cross is defending its post-disaster performance, with spokesman Matthias Schmale telling the BBC: “It is incredibly difficult…we said from the beginning, this is happening in very difficult circumstances. We raised the money knowing it was difficult. It will take time to spend this money in a responsible manner.”

Schmale admitted that the speed at which houses are being built sounds like “slow progress.” However, he noted that the tsunami also swept away identity papers and legal documents, creating a bureaucratic storm. Continued...

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About The Author
Nathan Tabor organizes and educates Christians on their role in Politics.
 
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SWMichiganBill
The government does oversee the industry. But the function of collecting from the many and distributing to the few is in the insurance companies hands. Big corporations with great health care buying power cut good deals. The self employed are on their own, literally. If your self employed and have a pre-existing condition like diabetes, health care insurance is out of sight. You may as well just pay your own bills. Which are inflated to cover the cost of the game that provider and insurance companies play of; "Guess how much we are going to pay? Nope not that much!"

Zerubbabel says:
"nationalized health care doesn't mandate that government takes over "the entire health care system.""

Unfortunately, that is exactly what the people who are arguing for nationalized health care are proposing. All that really needs to occur is to standardize the forms that are filled out so the amount of paperwork can be reduced. This in turn should reduce the amount of bureaucracy involved, thus reducing costs and saving time. The government should only be an oversight body.
The government does very little well unfortunately and putting them in charge of anything only means more money out of everyone's pocket and less to give to any charity, local or otherwise.
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