The LuLac Edition #3666, December 12th, 2017
Tonight the rest of the 49 states in this wonderful (I pretty much stopped using the word "great" because it has been bastardized by the landslide President), country will see a few things. America will see whether the Deep South is still the home of people who embrace mediocrity and hatred over common sense and real American values.
Never mind the allegations against Roy Moore over underage women. Moore's views on even a Muslim American born here, being banned from serving in Congress are troubling. Last night, Moore's wife came off with a patronizing comment that is widely viewed as anti Semitic.
I understand the pro life citizens wanting a representative for their state but what I question is why in that bargain, they will tolerate a person who will set the image of Alabama back to the 1950s era of segregation and lynching.
There is a reason why Atlanta, Georgia, equally on the same footing with Alabama back in pre Civil Rights days, is now a booming, technological powerhouse while Montgomery is still struggling.
The reason is candidates like Roy Moore.
Tonight, we'll see not only what the future of the national Republican party looks like but what the state of Alabama wants the world to know about it.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) serves approximately 40,000 individuals with limb loss due to combat-related injuries or chronic illness each year. Fortunately, advances in medical technology have greatly increased the survival rate for these wounded servicemembers, but our country is facing a shortage of O&P-trained practitioners. There are just over 7,100 practitioners specially trained in O&P nationwide. Of those, one in five is either past retirement age or eligible to retire in the next five years.
Many O&P practitioners rely on personal experience and trial-and-error methods, rather than empirical data, to determine which prosthetic device would work best for a patient. The Wounded Warrior Research Enhancement Act would award $30 million in grants to establish a centralized O&P outcomes-based research collection in order to capture the useful information gained by today’s seasoned practitioners.
“We have a moral obligation to provide our soldiers with the best quality health care available,” said Rep. Cartwright. “With a large portion of orthotic and prosthetic practitioners facing retirement, we need to harness this tremendous resource of institutional knowledge before we lose it forever. Comprehensive research would save time and money by providing practitioners with the knowledge they need to improve the likelihood that a veteran’s first prosthetic device will also be the best match.”
Earlier this year, Rep. Cartwright introduced the Wounded Warrior Workforce Enhancement Act (H.R. 3696), which would support colleges and universities seeking to establish degree programs to train specialists in O&P. Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) introduced companion legislation to H.R. 4587 and H.R. 3696 in the Senate.
1 Comments:
Even if Trump's policies weren't so objectionable, he's such a vile person. On the bright side, maybe that's what finally will bring him down.
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