I read Samantha’s commentary and it was interesting to me. Samantha’s commentary was
about the transportation in Austin. I agree with her opinion which
transportation would decrease the air pollution and heavy traffics in Austin. If
people use more public transportation than their own cars, emission that came
out from automobile and major cause of air pollution will be diminished a lot.
People would use subway if it will install in Austin because using subway is
way cheaper and more efficient than driving own car. Last year, 2016, was the
hottest year since 1880 and it mostly human-caused climate global warming.
Therefore, we should realize the seriousness of environmental pollution and
take an action of solving pollution problems. Also, increasing of public transportation
will solve terrible traffics. I really enjoyed her commentary. Thank you.
Friday, May 12, 2017
Friday, April 28, 2017
Stage Seven: Original editorial or commentary #2
Abortion laws
have been a fickle subject of much debate amongst Texans for quite a while.
However, a specific part of the abortion law concerning fetal disposal methods
have been hotly disputed when the law itself was supposed to be put in effect
on December 16, 2016. The main conflict point at hand is the argument over
whether fetal tissues are considered as human remains or not. Based on this
argument, it might impose a requirement from current fetal disposal into sanitary
landfills to mandatory cremation or burials. All of this stems from the core
argument of whether or not fetal remains should be treated humanely after
abortion.
The main
problems are not all based in ethics as cremation and burial requires
additional expenses for which who the payer is, is still being disputed in the
law. The cost estimation is coming out at about $400 to $700. My take is that
fetal remains should be considered as human lives and should be treated as
such. In terms of economic impacts, the law could allow mass cremation or
burials, which were estimated at $0.60 per patient, offering solutions for
possible additional costs. However, I do believe these additional costs should
not serve as a deterrent for people that wants to have an abortion. Although
this might cause additional health care coverage questions as well as opening
up questions on ethics and morality, I strongly believe the state should have a
hand in providing for abortion patients.
Perhaps requiring patients to be prompted on whether they care about the fetal remains and whether they should be treated humanely, or not care at all. For those that do not care about the outcome of the fetal remains, mass cremation and burials can be provided by the states for the hospitals or third-party as $0.60 is a manageable economic cost that the state can and should burden for the sake of ethics on fetal lives.
Friday, April 14, 2017
Blog Stage Six: Comment on a colleague's work #1
On Ridhi Patel’s blog, I read commentary about a gun on a college campus and I decided to make comment on this. Since Texas allow people who have the licence to hold firearms for defending themselves, many citizens included me were frightened and worried about their who do not have gun license safety. College is the place where students can study whenever they want and develop their dream and knowledge. However, if guns are allowed to carry on campus will terrify students and college could not be the safe place for studying anymore.
I think a gun is not the best choice to keep individual's safety and like Ridhi said pepper spray could be the good self-defense stuff. Beside pepper spray, there are many self-defense goods on sale in the market so gun should not be allowed on campus. For me, I often go to the library for studying and I would not concentrate on my work if I keep thinking that someone is carrying a gun and this person could present nearby me. Therefore, I agree that gun must not allow on the college campus at least college for the majority of students.
Friday, March 31, 2017
Stage Five: Original editorial or commentary #1
On Marche 28th, proponents of
tobacco products, especially the vapor shop owners, are testifying against a
bill that would effectively raise the smoking age from 18 to 21. There are many
pros and cons to both sides of the argument that will determine if Texas will
join two other states to raise their smoking age over 19.
I
believe the Texas government should be the third state to raise the legal smoking
age above the age from 18 to 21 years of age. Just from a basic ethical
standpoint, it is indisputable that smoking is detrimental to one’s health.
Although raising the smoking age only delays the eventuality of smoking for
some, the age of 18 to 21 still proves to be a developmental stage for bodies
of young men and women. Also, it would be hard to argue against the health
benefits of 3 years of delayed start in smoking.
From
a political standpoint, the main argument for raising the smoking age would be
the estimated $406 million in savings for health care costs over 5 years—equating
to approximately $5.6 billion in savings over 25 years as found by the
Department of State Health Services (per DallasNews). Tobacco products have
also proved to be a preventable cause of cancer that kills more people than
alcohol, AIDS, illegal drugs, car crashes, murders, and suicides combined in Texas yearly as stated by
Dr. Ganesh, a proponent of the bill that would raise the legal age of smoking.
The
basic arguments against not raising the legal age would be that the revenues
from taxing tobacco products would be a big loss. However, it is estimated at
$64 million in tax revenue savings, which is not enough to overcome the savings
from health care. Not only does the savings from health care outweigh the loss
in tax revenue, the immeasurable lives that would be spared from less smoking
outweighs any argument for not raising the smoking age. It would be wise to not
put short-term gains in tax revenue over ethical as well as long-term health
care savings that would result from raising the smoking age.
Background article: Vapor shop owners and doctors go head-to-head during hearing to raise smoking age to 21
Friday, March 10, 2017
Stage 4: Critique an editorial or commentary from a Texas blog
On March 10th, 2017 the author, Larry
Elder posted an opinion title "Obamacare can't be 'fixed’" on Texas
Insider blog. Republican argued that Obamacare must not just be repealed but
“replaced”. Larry targeted Republican people, Doctors, and citizens who get
benefits from some features of Obamacare; that insurance carriers must allow parents
to keep their “children” under their insurance plans until age of 26; and that
insurance companies cannot drop people under any circumstances because Trump’s
replacing plan included those the most popular features of Obamacare. He claimed
that number of doctors are decreasing because of tighten regulations but an
aging population, people need more doctors. He showed strong evidence by a
quote of Mark Perry, a professor of economics and finance at the University of
Michigan and an American Enterprise Institute scholar, about decreasing numbers
of doctor per 100,000 Americans. He also mentioned that some problems of
tighten regulation. Lastly, he exclaimed that yet when it came to nearly
one-seventh of our economy — health care — we ignored our own advice. For
health care, we don’t write ourselves the proper prescription. I do not agree
with his opinion about loosening regulations even though it prevented would-be
doctors from entering the field because I think quality over quantity so doctors
must be a profession who fully learned and completely licensed because it
directly related to patients’ life. I think if less-schooled and
less-credentialed paraprofessionals will do things that only licensed doctors
can now do, mistakes and errors on patients’ can increase.
Friday, February 24, 2017
On Wednesday, Feb 22, 2017, The Dallas Morning News published an editorials titled “Republicans' repeal of gun
restriction for mentally ill exposes hypocrisy”
The editor targeted republican people and
spoke to people who has chance to exposed by gun violence claims because there
are more than 33,000 lives every year but restrict on gun purchases is not
clear.
The editor posted diagram about partisan view
of gun proposal which survey conducted from Pew Research Center on July 14-20,
2015. The source showed that both Republican and Democrat highly agree on Laws
to prevent mentally ill from buying guns. However, earlier this month, both
houses of the Republican-led Congress voted to undo a new rule aimed at
improving the accuracy of the federal database used for instant background
checks already required by law.
An editor said “lawmakers worked overtime
to show fealty to a dangerous absolutism about the Second Amendment” in the
last paragraph and it impacted on me because I thought and editor touched the
core of the problem. The one thing that I wanted to know was the percentage of
the gun violence by mentally ill people because it could more support an editor’s
claim about why Republican’s act is hypocrisy.
I
liked that editor showed diagram because it was easy to recognize the
percentage of partisan view of gun proposal. Also, editor used quote of Justice
Antonin Scalia, author of the most powerful articulation of Second Amendment
rights in our history. I think an editor showed clear evidences and credibility
about claim by providing an diagram and quote from expert. I agree with author about the restriction on gun purchase by mentally ill and not proper act of Republican.
Friday, February 10, 2017
On Tue, Feb 7, 2017, the Texas Observer published an article titled Dan Patrick Invokes Bathroom Bill at Prayer Rally, Spars With Business Group Over Economic Impact. This article is written by John Wright and it is talking about speech of Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick at Prayer Rally about bathroom bill. Patrick highlighted that on Friday, PolitiFact Texas, a media fact-checking service gave a “mostly false” rating to a Texas Association of Business (TAB) study that concluded that the bathroom bill could cost the state up to $8.5 billion and 185,000 jobs. Patrick said “If we are true Christians we pray for them, because all of us have been in the darkness.” I think this article awaken the importance of information coherence. People needs to know how LGBT related law flows in Texas government and voice our opinions.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
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