Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Bottom Line. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Bottom Line. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Oh Dear, Doctors Put Profit Ahead Of Patient Care?

  Well, as a New York Times investigation reveals, it is tragic doctors can provide unnecessary billable care. But where did they learn this practice? Titling their exposé, Hospital Chain Inquiry Cited Unnecessay Cardiac Work, reporters Reed Abelson and Julie Creswell describe the problem. 
  In the summer of 2010, a troubling letter reached the chief ethics officer of the hospital giant HCA, written by a former nurse at one of the company’s hospitals in Florida. In a follow-up interview, the nurse said a doctor, at the small coastal city of Fort PierceLawnwood Regional Medical Center, performed heart procedures on patients who didn’t need them and put lives at risk.
  “It bothered me,” the nurse, C. T. Tomlinson, said in a telephone interview. “I’m a registered nurse. I care about my patients.” In less than two months, an internal investigation by HCA concluded the nurse was right. According to a confidential memo written by a company ethics officer, Stephen Johnson, and reviewed by The New York Times, “The allegations related to unnecessary procedures being performed in the cath lab are substantiated.”
  Punchline: The contract of the nurse, Mr. Tomlinson, was not renewed. A move Mr. Johnson said in the memo was in retaliation for his complaints. And no doubt The Times assessment of the ethics officer’s intent might be fairly accurate, but using the word retaliation in the memo is probably prosecutable and doubtful an ethics officer is that dumb.
  But the nurse’s complaint was far from the only evidence that unnecessary, even dangerous, procedures were taking place at some HCA hospitals, driving up costs and increasing profits.
  As noted by The Times, HCA is the largest for-profit hospital chain in the United States with 163 facilities. They uncovered evidence as far back as 2002, and as recently as late 2010, showing some cardiologists at several of its Florida hospitals were unable to justify many performed procedures. In some cases, doctors made misleading statements in medical records to make the procedures appear necessary, according to internal reports.
  Questions about medical procedures necessity, especially in cardiology, are not uncommon. None of the internal documents reviewed calculate just how many of such procedures there were or how many patients might have died or been injured as a result. But documents suggest HCA’s problems went beyond a rogue doctor or two.
  At Lawnwood, according to a confidential 2010 review, half the performed invasive diagnostic procedures known as cardiac catheterization, or 1,200, were determined to have been done on patients without significant heart disease. HCA countered recently with a different analysis, saying the percentage of patients without disease was much lower and within national averages. Seeming to contradict their uncovering improperly diagnosed shortcuts to revenue.
  Documents show at Bayonet Point, a 44-year-old man who arrived at the emergency room complaining of chest pain suffered a punctured blood vessel and a near-fatal irregular heartbeat after a doctor performed a procedure an outside expert later suggested might have been unnecessary. The man had to be revived and according to the testimony of Dr. Aaron Kugelmass in a medical hearing on the case, “They shocked him twice and got him back.”
  In another incident, an outside expert described how a woman with no significant heart disease went into cardiac arrest after a vessel was cut when a Bayonet Point cardiologist inserted a stent, a meshlike device, that opens coronary arteries. She remained hospitalized for several days, according to a person who has reviewed internal reports. Not good, but has it served a real purpose showcasing doctors as the scapegoats in the astronomical rising of medical care cost?
  On Monday morning, in an investors conference call, company executives disclosed that in July the civil division of the United States attorney’s office in Miami requested information on reviews assessing the medical necessity of interventional cardiology services provided at 10 of its hospitals, in Florida, and two or three in other states. In the conference call and in a Web site statement, the company also referred to inquiries by The Times. HCA’s stock ended nearly 4 percent lower Monday, at $25.55. But of course doctors aren’t under enough pressure as it is, so all of them should suffer for there not being a coherent bottom line.
  In a recent HCA statement, the corporation declined to provide evidence it had alerted Medicare, state Medicaid or private insurers of its findings. Or that, as required by law, the socialized entities were reimbursed for any of the procedures the company later deemed unnecessary. Accountants can count, so what’s the problem?
  The statement said, “When the company becomes aware of a situation in which we might have a reimbursement obligation, we assess, with outside resources, what our reimbursement obligations might be.” So really the actual cost of medical care is obviously distant and removed from the actual doctor/patient relationship with both helplessly lost in the customer management quagmire that no one entity such as a private enterprise or government can solve. But make a real effort, at least, of more substance than just calculating profit while ignoring how that became the only real bottom line worth striving for.
  HCA also declined to show that it had ever notified patients who might have been entitled to compensation from the hospital for any harm. While some doctors accused in the reviews of performing unnecessary procedures are still practicing at HCA hospitals, while the real problem seems to be an obvious misdiagnosis of who the real victims are?
  The cardiologists say the reviews of their work did not accurately reflect the care they provided. And HCA says the reviews “are not, by any means, definitive,” according to an e-mail company response. HCA says it took whatever steps were necessary to improve patient care. It also said “significant actions were taken to investigate areas of concern, to bring in independent reviewers, and to take action where necessary.” Get em. Sick em. How dare anyone want more compensation than our elected officials while under the Medical Industrial Complex watch?
  Details about procedures and company knowledge are contained in thousands of pages of confidential memos. E-mail correspondence among executives, transcripts from hearings and reports from outside consultants examined by The Times, as well as interviews with doctors and others. A review of those communications reveal that rather than asking whether patients had been harmed or whether regulators needed to be contacted, hospital officials asked for information on how the physicians’ activities affected the hospitals’ bottom line. Logical. Whatever else would the purpose of the financial management sector be?
  HCA denies its decisions were motivated by financial considerations, but rather to “demonstrate the strong focus we have on quality patient care.” The company also says that more than 80 percent of its hospitals are in the top 10 percent of government rankings for quality. More people, doctors or not, involved in patient care should be a good thing. No?
  Although HCA has hospitals in about 20 states from California to Virginia and Alaska to Texas, Florida, with its large older population, is a critical and growing market for hospital chains and especially for HCA. HCA’s Florida hospitals provide about 20 percent of the company’s revenue, from which the doctors honestly receive ?.
  The need to root out Medicare fraud, billing for unnecessary procedures, for example, is high for all hospitals. In 2003, Tenet Healthcare agreed to pay $54 million to settle unnecessary cardiac procedure allegations that were performed over six years and billed to Medicare and Medicaid at one of its hospitals in California, Redding Medical Center.
  But the pressure is even greater for HCA. In 2000, the company reached one of a series of settlements with the Justice Department involving a huge Medicare fraud case that eventually came to $1.7 billion in fines and repayments. The accusations, which primarily involved overbilling, occurred when Rick Scott, now the governor of Florida, was the company’s chief executive. He was removed from the post by the board but was never personally accused of wrongdoing. How could anyone atop such large structures be personally accountable for anything? It’s not the military for gosh sakes.
  As part of the settlement with the federal regulators, HCA signed a 97-page Corporate Integrity Agreement that extended through late 2008. It detailed what had to be reported to authorities and provided for stiffer penalties if HCA failed to do so. Right, the corporation won’t stand still preparing more doctors’ heads to roll.
  Michael Hirst, a former assistant United States attorney in California, who oversaw the case against Tenet, said if there were intentional violations of such an agreement, it would mean “that a defendant, already caught once defrauding the government, has apparently not changed its corporate culture.” Mr. Hirst now represents whistle-blowers. Get em. Sick em.
  In its statement, HCA said it fulfilled any obligation it had under the agreement to report “substantial overpayment.” Certainly no confusion anything comes before that stack of money. However The Times states the revelations in the documents come at a significant time in the evolution of medical treatment in the United States, from independently owned hospitals to large, corporate chains.
  HCA exemplifies the trend, and uh oh further muddling the issue, political controversy. In 2006, HCA was taken private by a group of private equity firms, including Bain Capital, co-founded by Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney. Of course Mr. Romney by that time was no longer a Bain partner, just a dependent receiving free enterprise entitlements as everyone should know. But putting more carpenters to work, with medical coverage, should justify that. By mid-2010, the private equity owners were eager to start cashing out their investment. So HCA prepared for an initial public offering of its stock that took place in 2011, borrowing $4.3 billion to pay the private equity firms dividends. While the ability to take these financial steps hinged on HCA showing continued robust profit growth at its hospitals.
  And for that the company turned, in part, to cardiac care. As The Times titles the next section of their article, An Early Sign of Trouble stating two years after the 2000 fraud settlement, company executives uncovered problems in the cardiac catheterization lab at Cedars Medical Center, according to accounts that became public.
  An HCA hired outside consulting group provided a report that raised “questions regarding the medical necessity of some of the procedures,” the company said in a news release in early 2003. HCA said it was suspending eight physicians from doing certain cardiac procedures, and was providing the report to a United States attorney and would refund any inappropriately submitted hospital claims.
  Jack O. Bovender Jr., who was then the company’s chief executive, told investors in a conference call that February, “This issue at Cedars and the steps taken to investigate and resolve it should be seen and understood in the larger context of HCA’s commitment to quality care and patient safety.” However HCA will not say whether it had ever refunded payments for the unnecessary procedures. Medicare officials said they could not determine whether the agency had received payments, and the United States attorney’s office in Miami declined to comment. God bless transparency.
  According to HCA the hospital allowed four of the physicians to return under monitoring, and two did so. “We believe the hospital acted appropriately,” the company said in its recent statement. Still, the negative publicity swirling around Cedars worried HCA executives, according to internal e-mails. They wanted to avoid a replay when similar problems were discovered at another HCA hospital, Bayonet Point. Nestled along the west coast of Florida, about 45 miles northwest of Tampa, the town of Hudson, with its winding canals, is largely a quiet fishing community. But soon after the Cedars episode, HCA executives noticed that the hospital in Hudson, the 290-bed Regional Medical Center Bayonet Point, was implanting an unusually high number of cardiac stents, given the size of the population.
  So late in 2003, executives from HCA’s headquarters in Nashville dispatched a group that oversees its hospitals’ cardiac care to investigate. In a confidential memo, the team cited incidents at Bayonet Point where patients were treated for multiple lesions, or blockages, even when “the second lesion (or third) did not appear to have significant disease.” The team went on to note “several cases” in which patients were treated even though their arteries did not have significant blockages. Hindsight I’m sure all of us wish we could afford to keep us in line at our own jobs. And who watches the watchers exactly?
  In a transcript of confidential hearings held later, the lawyers for HCA were blunt. In looking at one physician, Dr. Sudhir Agarwal, Dr. Martin I. Kalish, a physician who served as an outside lawyer for HCA, said the “style of clinical practice leads to unnecessary procedures and unnecessary complications.” Yet who is responsible this kind of practice became seen as a shortcut to prosperity in the medical field? Weren’t oaths taken to protect customer rights at all costs? Maybe once the number involved, who’d never taken the Hippocratic Oath, was so overwhelming corruption became the major game and player in all our communities across America?
  On the team’s recommendation, HCA brought in an external company, CardioQual Associates of Franklin, Mich., in 2004 to examine medical records from Bayonet Point. In a December 2004 confidential memo reviewed by The Times, CardioQual concluded as many as 43 percent of 355 angioplasty cases, where doctors performed invasive procedures to open up a patient’s arteries, were outside reasonable and expected medical practice. Worse, the investigation revealed some physicians had indicated in medical records that the patients had blockages of 80 to 90 percent when a later, more scientific analysis of a sampling of cases revealed the blockages ranged from 33 to 53 percent.
  Cardiologists generally do not operate on any blockage less than 70 percent, said Dr. Rita Redberg, a prominent cardiologist at the University of California, San Francisco. The significant disparities between the magnitude of blockage being cited by the doctors at Bayonet Point and the CardioQual review “raises real concerns that this wasn’t just error, but it was intent” by the doctors, she said.
  After receiving the CardioQual report, Bayonet Point suspended the privileges of nine physicians in late 2004. But unlike the Cedars episode, when HCA turned over its findings to regulators and authorities, HCA took steps to withhold details of its conclusions to the media and others, according to internal communications. In January 2005, David Williams, who was then the chief executive of Bayonet Point, wrote in an e-mail: “Clearly, we have protected ourselves under the peer review umbrella and have released very little information.” The recipients of his message included Dan Miller, who then oversaw HCA’s hospitals in western Florida, and Charles R. Evans, a Nashville executive who was president of all of HCA’s hospitals on the eastern side of the country.
  In his response, Mr. Evans thanked Mr. Williams for the update and asked for a “summary as to the business impact.”
  But in a later internal communication, a representative for HCA said the company had successfully used confidentiality rules to withhold the damaging CardioQual report from the Florida attorney general, whose Medicaid Fraud Control Unit had started an investigation of the physicians. In response to questions from The Times, however, HCA said it had provided “substantially all of the information in the report” to state regulators. The attorney general’s office did not return calls seeking comment.
  One of the subjects of that investigation was Dr. Agarwal. The CardioQual review of 20 of his cases concluded fewer than half were within reasonable and expected practice. Dr. Agarwal did not return a call to his office.
  Anthony Leon, a lawyer for Dr. Agarwal and the other eight Bayonet Point physicians, said in a statement: “There is absolutely no merit to any allegation that any of these doctors were performing unnecessary procedures or performing procedures that led to unnecessary complications as a style or pattern of practice.” The suspensions of Dr. Agarwal and another physician were found to have been done in error by an outside panel in hearings in 2005 and 2006, Mr. Leon added. A doctor on the panel said Dr. Agarwal’s procedures were found to be within established medical practice, and his full privileges were reinstated in early 2006. Uh oh. Everyone has reports and findings they want to hear as business remains as per usual. As Dr. Agarwal and the other eight physicians have filed defamation lawsuits in county court, claiming the actions and statements of the hospital and HCA ruined their practices. HCA has denied the claims.
  In for the kill the last section is titled A Moneymaking Practice by The Times.
Cardiology is a lucrative business for HCA, and the profits from testing and performing heart surgeries played a critical role in the company’s bottom line in recent years. Some of HCA’s busiest Florida hospitals perform thousands of stent procedures each year. Medicare reimburses hospitals about $10,000 for a cardiac stent and about $3,000 for a diagnostic catheterization. But in recent years, doctors across the country have been less quick to implant stents, instead relying on drugs to treat blockages. Medicare has also questioned the need for patients who receive cardiac stents to stay overnight at the hospital, cutting into the profitability of the procedures at many hospitals. You just have to lovingly hate the willingness to belittle the needs of the individual patient under the system’s care.
8/7/2012
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Oh Dear, Doctors Put Profit Ahead Of Patient Care?
8/7/21012 concluded: Medicare has also questioned the need for patients who receive cardiac stents to stay overnight at the hospital, cutting into the profitability of the procedures at many hospitals. You just have to lovingly hate the willingness to belittle the needs of the individual patient under the system’s care.

October 4 - November 7, 2018
Our Noblest, Best and Brightest Compromised
  Pursuit of truth's veritably muddled, to the extent the exacting sciences have their own problems with crafted knowledge diluted to the extent the public digests little we knew even years ago. Perhaps led by the doctor patient relationship that's been clearly scattered to the winds of economic oblivion by not being, taken in hand, faced, and solved. Doctors wouldn't know how to keep prices down was one riddled excuse of a premise behind the myriadical infrastructure latched onto what's actually, supposed to be, medical care. 
  The price of everything is out of context to the consumers' actual ability to pay. Co-pay should be an out-of-pocket charge for an actual cost, and not a bill of dimensions so endlessly carved and picked apart that nothing's really to do with the health of health care. Where underutilized doctors and nurses aren't really the full focus of our huge piled up conglomerations. The relationships are with statistics and not patients with their doctors. The horror and shame of this nightmare, on everyone's shoulders, hinges on everyone's absolution from direct blame. Avoiding actual responsibility. No one can change what's been done, since the screw's in, but can't be taken out. Well then, the nightmare is just so lucrative that, however deflected, too many nonchalant people are to blame. Amnesty and fix the machine? Just because all out exploitation was where everything went, doesn't mean change has to remain the same inconclusivity.
  Files aren't patient-doctor relationships. 
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Climate Change
  Too serious. Not serious enough. The denial's been back-brakingly regressive in the ongoing experienced future. Tree lover or tree shrugger's the cutthroat philosophy. Tied to economic levers rather than moving them. Choked off by a heartless contrarianism? Yeah, that'll maintain things. Wrap economic growth however you please, a clear conscience isn't exactly as self-granted as its still proving to be. That look at what I can do attitude's that's quite similar to what's gotten away with.
  When toxicities lasting past our lifetimes is evidence of time marching on despite, and not because of, us. It's not all that realistic to make any claims of greatness, no matter the venue, in Mother Nature's eyes. Be realistic? Selfish. Bah. Humbug. We're smarter than this? Why, when not having to be has proven so therapeutic? 
  But voting a particular view doesn't absolve sins. Neither has it proven anywhere near facing responsibility unless deflecting every sling and arrow possibly suffices. 
November 6, 2018
  Wisconsin voted out their redneck. Texas and Florida renewed theirs. 
  "We're the hottest country in the world." So then there's no reason to not face whatever's misplaced in understanding our world? Perhaps face the notions of entitlement that've so twisted our universe. Entitlement's meaning and usage made so repetitious - that's all - repetition. Such that nothing's faced portraying confronting anything at all. Starting for instance with the situation in the city where the above quote's deliverer's from. Where adequately supervised and financed housing supported a very lucrative career. However the balance sheet's tallied. So then to justify some things at least on a culture-wide understood level we're told to see public housing as an under-appreciated failure. The marketing of less expensive housing hardly describes what we built for ourselves. Going on the prejudices of his time, and his own, Robert Moses designed New York City Public Housing barracks style, such that when you walk the narrow halls the only thing that separates you from the feeling this is exactly like a prison is the absence of cell bars. And even prisons are better supervised than the systematically shortsighted management of public housing. Saving money by not having Front Desk Personnel as thoroughly run buildings have and maintenance crews assigned to individual buildings they're responsible for. As is, but they're supposedly addressing, maintenance can seem to roam looking for the next apartment scheduled for maintenance when no one's home. One thing the working poor do is work. Scapegoating those who don't is just an excuse. This is a modern world that should handle anything, and that means shouldering the blame.
     Fleeing lawlessness results from the predatory Criminal Enterprise System's roots that're the source of all these nonsensical human relations with authority we've cast ourselves in. Generations of illegal immigrants were profitably exploited and now don't fulfill the business plan. Uh huh. If only everyone wore a uniform we'd feel safer? People need to take responsibility for how cultures develop and stop hiding behind, and scapegoating, the law. Exploiting morality like a toy. 
The Soapbox View pursues the ornery Legacies of Murphy BrownAndy Rooney 
and I.F. Stone.

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Infamy's Sobriety Test. Guy Babylon & my Supper's Ready

    There we were three, visiting stereo stores along the highway between Guy's parents' and Baltimore. Guy driving and touring from home up to, and through, Pennsylvania's Gettysburg Battlefield to Baltimore. Where Guy, animatedly enough, showed he knew he'd be more celebritized. Obviously among Maryland's champion swimmers, The Michael Phelps would have grown up admiring. A Florida competitive swimming environment illustration used in The Hammer and Cycle Messenger Service

    You have to understand my friend had said, sometime, during our university focused years. Guy had worked hard to establish himself in a lot of bands before meeting him, on swimming scholarships, then me. BOTTOM LINE GUY knew the previous generation held the music entertainment franchises, (merchandising), so, ta da, ELTON, guess who?

    Our friend ended up with a nice sound system. And I kitchen announced my week later starting my "long-awaited" Russian and Soviet History year at a different Florida school. Eleven years before 1988 when Malcolm Forbes said, "what if he knows who you are" about Occidental Petroleum Industrialist Dr. Hammer. - Hammer has an unusual tie to the story: great grandfather, Armand Hammer, spent time in Hoover's crosshairs. 

    "Crosshairs." Bullshit. Hoover signed letters that said he's a front for pretending to fight something we can just as well pretend spending money on guns on so adequate luxury destroys any and everything. Pinhead Revenge himself said military rocketry in space, wee. Dark Aged planning is history's inadequacies. While history is not made up stuff. The made-up stuff's still history. 

    I think all the politically positioned, well enough commercially, were in on the lie the world's idealisms aren't worth a good focused try. Because 21st Century results? So much mediocrity in Mar-a-Lago prime inmate cell decor. 

    "What if he knows?" Hammer's chocolate pudding. Groveland 4 symbol of racist aristocracyWillis V. McCall  lived infamously a block from where I was raised. END RESULT sorry Hammer. Historically lit, however marketed. Racist nuts So Guy's driving, I'm in backseat. We'd driven a lot and I hadn't brought pot, for my nausea, thinking Guy arrested in Maryland means me and I'm just visiting. So I'm nausea drowsy and Guy's entering Baltimore, turning to see my head down and wonders. Looks at our friend and made the decision. Sorry we have to turn around even though we both so wanted to see Baltimore and loved the Baltimore Colts.  

    Honestly I threatened to jump out of the window in Buenos Aires that near Guy. Loud and I was still laughed at with that Mike Hammer taunt, "you don't know Guy." Guess what? Why in GOD's name would I think I should explain why that's more than little enough information than I'm comfortable with. Right Hammer? When I said I was afraid? I still am afraid of how sorry I am, I'm sorry forgiving, because Jesus Christ can tell you. Happy Charles Malcolm Fraser is more than fed up with nonsense sparkling in the subjective pattern of mediocrity's self-involved advertising failure-ing. Signaling little is nothing. Spilling oil meaning money's done damage our fault's not fixed.

    Guy and I never bothered each other. He wrote a GRAMMY and I something else. But Bottom Line? No one can say I am satisfied not seeing each other in Buenos Aires was accidental, other than idiots thinking wasting my time's an occupation. I take responsibility. I didn't know and told my editor among people about wondering about Guy. He just said you better find out for yourself. Mike Hammer etc. used I don't know Guy enough or at all too many times. My fault. But judgement's not something I conceive as running from at all. Yeah I'm mad and burnt out. Investigate me, please?  

    No. The size of Argentina's and world's disproportional economic exaggerations are out of my league, so that probably rests my case. Just more centuries of generational excusing.  Really looking for reasons to call a lawyer. Directions? Apparently though walking directions are left for figuring out on your own. "Clients ancases stay with you forever.- Ronald L. Kuby

History Donald John Trump. I met Guy Babylon, first tune? Photo op you 

Thursday, August 3, 2023

CHARAS ... C Squat ... MORUS

“Shameless Feminists” cover GIRL for @worldwar3illustrated issue 50, 2019. #feministart #womenincomics #womenwhomakebooks 

     End The Criminal Enterprise System ... Yip Harburg, Village Cultural Icon Did you mean: John Birch Scapegoat Extraordinaire hassle

Search Results It looks like there aren't many great matches for your search SCAPEGOAT - Idiot John Birch - Republican National Trauma

EV Grieve An award-winning news site covering the East Village of NYC 

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Artists feel inspired to create murals for the former Charas/El Bohio Community Center

    A group of local artists continues to paint a series of murals on the Ninth Street side of the former Charas/El Bohio Community Center here between Avenue B and Avenue C. 
    The artists include (aboveSeth Tobocman ... Sabrina Jones...
...Jenny Gonzalez-Blitz...
... and Ariel Kleinberg ...
    The work, which started on March 5, comes before the landmarked building heads to a foreclosure auction tomorrow, Wednesday, March 22, at the Hilton New York Midtown Fifth Avenue. (There is a Facebook invite to "Stop the Auction.")
    Meanwhile, there's a petition in circulation titled, "Save Charas Community Center! Stop the Private Auction!" Per the petition, which states, "Demand Mayor Adams use eminent domain to return the center to the people!" You can find the petition here.
    "We are operating on the assumption that we will get the community center back, and we are using permanent material that will last," Tobocman said. 
    He was quick to note that the participating artists are not involved with the various political groups and their plans for tomorrow's auction. 
    "We are just artists inspired to paint, inspired by the art that was painted on the other [10th Street] side," Tobocman said. "Sabrina Jones had a studio in the building before it was evicted. Some of us taught art classes to kids there back in the 80s. We have a Wednesday deadline due to the auction." 

AND WHY DO IDIOTS STILL AIM AT PEDESTRIANS ON THE QUEENSBOROUGH BRIDGE MR. MAYOR? CHARAS' TURN 

Paving Paradise’s Amphitheaters For Luxurious People Parking Lots

    The, premeditated, 1988 Tompkins Square Park Riot served various cornered interests’ illusions. Illuminated in that debilitating Park Event remaining a drama transparently illustrating Modern America’s Political, Psychobabble, Delusions.

    Parallel to today’s American Southwest Front. The United States’ Mexico Border is an emblematic billboard for Evacuation Mentalities. Demeaning our Southwestern Hemisphere’s Migrants as having no rights in their unnecessariness in being hereCenter of not solving circulating money within coercive, private and government, sectors. Creating nightmarish manipulations. Hiding from the responsibility for Mexicans being short of the opportunities to even fully house themselves behind their own border. A world, scapegoat-captivated into a drug war fueling a belief morality overrides everything.

    Contributing to an overabundance of Bad Drugs done through every socially networked imbalance possible. Ron and Nancy Reagan’s figure-heading the hooking of the country on cocaine. When Columbia could have been providing the world’s best marijuana all along. But Ronnie chased and the opportunities followed burrowing ourselves in the hopeless belief scalawags were defending justice when it was only their sincere belief in their worths being above everyone else. Elitists, pure and simple, run the world in the ground Capitalist. Socialist. Whatever game’s the town.

    Authorities demanding obedience to a collective rule, is why this country was founded to stop that from having a specifically damaging effect. Crime clearly has legally evolved aspects. In magic marker, folks, bottom line. Whitey perpetrated, goofing off, playing off, imagining ruling the moon too.

    In the case of The 1988 Tompkins Square Riot, everyone’s a blemished pawn. Peaceful Protestors manage protests peacefully. Police and protestors both, obviously infiltrated by unrest. For landlords, yearly rising tax rates buttress their ideally crawling under or on top of neighborhoods’ economic calculations. Known on Real Estate’s Battlefield Chart as the wedge-word gentrification. That neither side has political wiggle-room from at the convenient will of Government and Real Estate’s combined power. And State’s pragmatic attention to a top down economy exaggerating their own bottom line. If people were good with money the poor could pay to feed themselves.

    So as Mayor Adams was quoted, weeks back, on morning CBS Radio. New York has the “best hotel industry in the world.” Devastated, as everywhere else was, by a shocked middle class losing their home/retirement investments. Why Rent-To-Own isn’t considered a national Housing Industry standard is on someone(s).

    American-Issue Migrants, even at the south of our border’s home, are perpetually used, and stand as a self- housed border defiant entity. Their use as a strategy of pawning off blame is well documented. New York City’s Tompkins Square Park Riot was confusingly concealed within a riot of faceless participants. No matter the charges, or everyone’s martyrdoms. Notice OCCUPY Wall Street did not allow their being duped into Aggression’s Tactic that would would have meant the demeaning of everything the casual demonstration stood and stands for.

    Right, the Tompkins Square Park Riot is explained by focusing on the poor, wretched, homeless itching to fight? And why such a representation of a professional militaristic Police Force? Even before King Rudy ruled only he and his Henchmen knew, impossibly, everything?

    A lethargic pattern of ignoring community responsibility became a polished park. A destroyed amphitheater that contained so much more real history than anything anyone decides to ever destroy in New York City ever again. Even that pathetic charade to debilitate a neighborhood another generation around Madison Square Garden, is still nowhere near the embellished meaning in destroying a public free speech opportunity podium in Tompkins Square Park. The Tompkins Square Park Riot Bandshell should be returned to its proper place in Tompkins Square Park.

    I remember the encampment made around the Tompkins Square Park benches. Leveraged, but always under siege to a (Peace) police (Officer) force enforcing poverty’s menagerie vision that it is something they’d not gotten across as a border all on their own. Where charity’s something the poor are seen as not affording at their own cost. Because money lost touch with just enough? Not only The Financial Question. But managing money is the answer for everyone.

An Open Letter to NYC Mayor Eric Adams

RE: The CHARAS Cultural and Community Center and Public Vocational School

Dear Mayor Adams:

Regarding the decades-long stalemate over the reclamation of the CHARAS cultural and community center (formerly PS 64), you once said“This nonsense has to stop, and once I am elected Mayor we will issue a building permit and move this project forward.” Now, following the property’s foreclosure, and pressure from the East Village community, you have indeed ordered substantial work onsite. But we wonder: Why now? To what end? And for whom?

    As you are aware, built in 1905 and recently designated a landmark, Public School 64 functioned until 1977 when it was shuttered for health reasons (asbestos, lead). Soon after, NYC leased the building to the CHARAS community arts and cultural organization until the late 90s when former Mayor Giuliani auctioned it, evicting the community center. It now appears that the building is back in the hands of the city. Meanwhile, a private auction of the building has been set for March 22, 2023! That’s right! A private auction of a “community use” space! We are opposed to selling our beloved community center which for decades was a place of positivity and enrichment in our community. We demand that it be made anew!

To that end, we address the following proposal to you regarding the building’s future: We ask that as Mayor you reclaim the site through your powers of eminent domain as a “hybrid” public vocational school and cultural and community center to provide a wide range of training opportunities including; computer coding, construction trades, ESL and literacy, nursing, pre-law, public school teacher training, training in the arts, in aviation, and programs for differently abled and neurodivergent individuals, as well as programs for migrants recently arrived in our city.

Utilizing the buildings’ ample 135,000 square foot space, the Community also envisions CHARAS once again serving the neighborhood as a cultural and community center, comprised of various “walk-in” social services (employment, food, housing and health), along with after-school and evening programs such as theater and film, tutoring, GED classes, harm reduction services, rehearsal space, dance classes, artists’ work space, children’s theater, and activists meeting space, with a portion of the ground floor housing the Armando Perez Community Auditorium.

After decades of determined opposition to the destruction of our community center, it is clear that our Lower East Side community wants CHARAS to once again become a beacon of light and hope after sitting so long in disrepair. We can make it a green space, a state of the art facility using renewable energy (solar and wind power), a green roof for urban farming, carbon capturing technology, and composting and recycling programs. The top two floors of the building can serve as a school for ecology, preparing our youth for careers in sustainability and tackling climate change.

Mayor Adams, we hope you are as inspired with this vision as we are! We call on you to reclaim the building through your powers of eminent domain and then transfer it to the NYC Department of Education (DOE). The New York City School Construction Authority
(SCA) can “green” renovate and upgrade the building. The SCA, charged with keeping NYC public schools safe, attractive, and environmentally sound, maintains hundreds of historic school buildings, and designs, constructs and renovates capital projects in over 1,400 public school buildings, (half of which were constructed before 1949) and is therefore the ideal means by which to reclaim CHARAS.

Your appointee, (interests purposely conflicted?) David Banks, NYC DOE Chancellor, is Chair of SCA’s Board of Trustees . The DOE currently offers Career and Technical Education connecting students to a wide range of career pathways. Furthermore, Public Art for Public Schools, the country’s only public art education program, maintains nearly 2000 existing artworks in the NYC DOE’s collection and provides schools with art to enhance the learning environment and inspire students. How great it would be to offer vocational training in the arts as part of its mission, and to facilitate the participation of East Village neighborhood artists in the project!

The CHARAS Community and Cultural Center and Public Vocational School is a visionary project. But we also believe that it is a realistic means of reclaiming the site as a “city-wide” center of social and educational activity consistent with your recently announced “Apprenticeship Accelerator” initiative. And it’s a vision consistent with the legacy of the former CHARAS, supporting our sisters and brothers striving for a better future, offering hope to the under-served in our community in need of attainable, accessible and affordable vocational training.

Thank you Mayor Adams for considering our proposal.

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Sliwa Admits Faking Crimes For Publicity
Credit...The New York Times Archives
See the article in its original context from 
November 25, 1992, Section B, Page 1Buy Reprints
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The Guardian Angels' founder and leader, Curtis Sliwa, has admitted that six of his group's early crime-fighting exploits were actually faked and former and present associates contend that even more of the group's activities were publicity stunts. Derogatory _sshole.

GUARDIAN ANGELS: AN ASSESSMENT OF CITIZEN RESPONSE TO CRIME VOLUME II TECHNICAL REPORT October 1985 San Diego ASSOCIATION OF GOVERNMENTS 1200 Third Avenue Suite 524 Security Pacific Plaza San Diego, California 92101 (619) 236-5383 Susan Pennell Christine Curtis Joel Henderson, Ph.D. Prepared for the U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Justice









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I delivered to 100 GOLD for years in the two thousand oughts. What's going on? Housing luxury, killing New York City?

    The property that developer Gregg Singer purchased during a city auction in 1998 for $3.15 million fell into foreclosure last year. Through the years, Singer wanted to turn the one-time P.S. 64 into a dorm (more here), though those plans never materialized. Some residents want to see the space used again as a community center, as it was during its time as Charas/El Bohio Community Center. Singer evicted the group on Dec. 27, 2001.  
John Penley said...

CHARAS , MORUS and others held a rally at City Hall last week to ask the City to give the building back to the community. There is some video on You Tube of this. Apparently , the city ignored them and they got no press coverage so I assume the auction is still on. This leaves the protest , not rally , at the actual auction at the Hilton as the last hope to stop the sale so everyone , including the muralists featured here should go and I suggest bring chalk to add messages to potential buyers on the sidewalks around the Hilton. There is one final option and while I don't want anyone to say that I advocated it but it is each individuals choice and that is to re-squat CHARAS and stop the turnover that way !

35 YEARS OF WORLD WAR 3 – AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW

It’s been thirty-five years of World War 3. 

As momentous as it sounds, no one could have known in 1979 that this self-published periodical based in New York City would become the longest-running anthology of political comics in the world–at least, that we’ve been able to find. Doonesbury

    And gist is just a mockery how history is twisted not to mean the reality of war and violence existing from the financial profit. Figure the CHARAS location on Ninth Street, backed by the Tenth Street Side location, should be considered the complex in its' entirety because REAL ESTATE already owns its' stake in The East Village. And stood idly awaiting their own way that's exactly like the idea of demolishing the more than adequate Madison Square Garden to build an entertainment complex to highlight the dismal results of Real Estate not developing around the GARDEN, MR. KNICKS, CLYDE THE DRIVE, was reduced to years, now closed, on far away Tenth at 47th. The cab driven luxury elite probably no longer enticible? As HONKY'S done throughout racist history scapegoating everything. 
    World War 3's meaning was/is the illusion that the Nationalist Fabrications only muddle the public's awareness of why countries need to be defended, since altering our Middle Ages' Arrangements should have ended over these last centuries. But no. The Military Industrial Complex can't legitimate the reason for stockpiling weapons. So Media colors media hysterically in having common sense laughed down in THE US HOUSE OF McCarthy Cultural Court Jesters. So there's been a dance through history through NOW. That includes itinerant Russian Generals pretending someone could actually be fully in charge of such ridiculous madness. Crimea should be run by Crimeans, and not whoever was planted to kill them whenever. Partly why Zelenskyy smiles, the broad comedian smile, touring the world for money. Money that the shell shocked Chinese will throw anywhere just to not face that their Slave Labor Force should have evolved by selling themselves their own products. While the elite rewarded themselves czar-driven success unable to grow up as America was also deformed. HOPEFULLY NO GOD DAMNED MORE

A Revived CHARAS revives all of New York City's Village Hope

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Some faces (if ever?) seen in The East Village, distinctly 👇👇👇👇👇👇👇 shine PUPPET. 👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇
    IMPEACH GERALDO! Kurt Vonnegut DETESTS you. Nonsense. https://openlibrary.org/authors/OL9776726A/Charles_M._Fraser In LITERATURE it's not news there's reasons Vonnegut is publicly recognized hating that man pictured. Geraldo Rivera. Him and his idiot reasoning no doubt. Whoopi, more words for the DAMNED Honky? !!! Wrote on The View page. THIS POST then REMINDED 23 hours left suspended. Though told what I see isn't what people are getting. OPEN FORUM deemed not worthwhile by hierarchical wisdom that's led through war after hysterical skirmish blamed on the other Guy unwilling to be told what to do most likely.  - - - The official news site of the College of CharlestonMore than 50 years after its release, Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five (aka The Children’s Crusade: A Duty-Dance with Death) is not only still relevant: It’s inspirational.
    Kurt says your move dirtbag Geraldo and Scum Dump Trump. 
I and Ron Kuby defend Leonard Lopate to the New York City Audience too. Celebrity shouldn't be two full strikes against anyone. Especially accused by idiots in The National Enquirer ConspiracyLeonard Lopate-At-Large on WBAI.
Fug You traces the flowering years of New York's downtown bohemia in the sixties, starting with the marketing problems presented by publishing Fuck You / A Magazine of the Arts, as it faced the aboveground's scrutiny, and leading to Sanders's arrest after a raid on his Peace Eye Bookstore. The memoir also traces the career of the Fugs -- formed in 1964 by Sanders and his neighbor, the legendary Tuli Kupferberg (called "the world's oldest living hippie" by Allen Ginsberg) -- as Sanders strives to find a home for this famous postmodern, innovative anarcho-folk-rock band in the world of record labelsFUG YOU: AN INFORMAL HISTORY OF THE PEACE EYE BOOKSTORE, THE FUCK YOU PRESS, THE FUGS AND COUNTERCULTURE IN THE LOWER EAST SIDE by Ed SandersBernard Stollman, the founder of ESP-Disk, in 2009.Bernard Stollman, the founder of ESP-Disk, in 2009.
    Bernard Stollman, whose staunchly independent record label, ESP-Disk, provided an indispensable chronicle of the free jazz of the 1960s, and a series of provocations from the psychedelic counterculture. London's First Happening provider brother Steve ... "Yeah, you heard huh?" About the disgruntlement everyone felt knowing what Kerouac knew and Ginsberg set Kerouac commercially culturally free in degrees. "I was traveling the country(!) too." And I saw his eyes go slightly up seeing the dawn of Simon and Garfunkel's waking AMERICA up.
    Steve and I talked upstairs at 49 East Houston and Ed Sanders made a few shekels describing why culturally the Establishment wasn't facing anything. Accepting that to hide and speak up, and accept cultural mockery from the fools, is completely facing those bastards self-perpetuating enjoyed, defenseless, miseries. 
FUCK YOU, hippies RULE too.
    And Supreme Court Justices Are Cast Defending the right to words and the American Republic's responsibility is to actually listen and not reinterpret jargon as just among friends designed to eliminate more noble competition. Wrote yourselves into history, idiots. These two women could be both president and on the court and do more than you hypocrites have undone for more than a century of amusing yourselves and charging everyone else because LIARS willingly accept anything. 

The CIA, Tuli Kupferberg and Me

CIA Man, written by the late, great Tuli Kupferberg, is one of the Fugs‘ oldest songs. I first heard it live at the Harry Smith Memorial Concert in DC produced by the Smithsonian Institution about ten years ago (I think that’s the version I’ve linked to here.)  To my delight, I recently discovered that “CIA Man” plays at the end of the Coen Brothers’ movie Burn After Reading. It’s worth it to see the movie just to hear the song. FANS PAY RESPECTS 

 Ed Sanders' History Class
CHURCH PRESENTATION 
on the Nature of Sacrifice 
for the American Flag and our country's honor."Abbie Hoffmanthe Jim Thorpe of Social Action."  "Jim Fouratt and Abbie throw money on the floor of the Stock Exchange."28:00 "Out demons out at the Pentagon."