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    CON: Is Medicare Drug Benefit Legislation Heading in Right Direction?-No: Seniors Ill-served by Expensive Entitlement

    If you hire a contractor to work on your home, and the final bill ends up seven times the original estimate, you would probably be pretty upset. You might even refuse to pay.

    That is exactly the position American taxpayers may be in if Congress adds an expensive new Medicare entitlement to subsidize the cost of prescription drugs for seniors. The difference is that taxpayers do not have the option of refusing to pay.

    The drug benefit proposal now heading to conference committee in Congress would be the largest expansion of Medicare since the program was created in 1965. The new benefit, especially the Senate version, would subsidize the cost of prescription drugs for the nation’s 40 million seniors, and all future retirees, regardless of income, forever. When Bill Gates retires, taxpayers will help pay for his prescription drugs.

    The cost of the proposed drug entitlement is estimated at $400 billion over the next 10 years. Given the fiscal track record of past entitlements, the cost of the new program is likely to be much, much higher.

    Taxpayers have been misled before. Stephen Dinan reports in the Washington Times that when Congress created the Medicare program the projected cost in 1990 was $9 billion. The true cost in 1990 was $67 billion, 7.4 times higher. In 1987 Congress added a generous special hospitals subsidy to Medicare. The estimated cost was $100 million a year by 1992. The actual cost in 1992 was $11 billion. In 1988 Congress expanded Medicare again to include a home-care program. Lawmakers expected the new program to cost $4 billion in 1993. The true cost that year was $10 billion.

    Dinan cites further examples, but you get the idea. The upward pressure on costs is built into the very nature of entitlement programs. When something feels like it’s free, people tend to use it a lot. Once Uncle Sam is picking up the check, people on Medicare are likely to demand more drugs, want more expensive drugs and want to use them longer than they might have if they were more aware of the true cost.

    In one sense entitlements are the most brilliant political device ever conceived. For proponents, what could be better than putting the funding for a favored program on automatic pilot, separated from normal budget oversight, with virtually no limit on how much the government must spend?

    Elected officials today get to claim all the credit for enacting a generous spending program, while putting the unknown financial burden onto tomorrow’s taxpayers. Years from now, the feds might impose price controls on the drug entitlement in an effort to limit costs. And as always happens under price controls, the supply of the thing being controlled will begin to go dry.

    Doctors across the country already are turning away new Medicare patients because the government’s preset fee is too low. Once the price of drugs is similarly controlled, our amazingly innovative pharmaceutical industry, a business that seems to produce miracles as a matter of routine, will begin to lag. If pharmaceutical companies cannot recoup the enormous cost of discovering new drugs, they can’t afford the risk of doing the research in the first place.

    One sign of good leadership is knowing when to cut one’s losses and start over. Congress should take this project back to the drawing board. There are smarter ways to reduce drug costs for seniors, such as tapping the competitive forces of the free market, than reaching for the old model of entitlement spending.

    To see this article, go to: https://www.galen.org/news/070703a.html

    To read Grace-Marie Turner’s companion article, go to: “PRO: Is Medicare Drug Benefit Legislation Heading in Right Direction?”

    ”’Paul Guppy is research director at the Washington Policy Center. Write him at WPC, 155 108th Ave. N.E., Suite 820, Bellevue, WA. 98004. Distributed by Knight Ridder News Service.”’

    CON: Is Medicare Drug Benefit Legislation Heading in Right Direction?-No: Seniors Ill-served by Expensive Entitlement

    If you hire a contractor to work on your home, and the final bill ends up seven times the original estimate, you would probably be pretty upset. You might even refuse to pay.

    That is exactly the position American taxpayers may be in if Congress adds an expensive new Medicare entitlement to subsidize the cost of prescription drugs for seniors. The difference is that taxpayers do not have the option of refusing to pay.

    The drug benefit proposal now heading to conference committee in Congress would be the largest expansion of Medicare since the program was created in 1965. The new benefit, especially the Senate version, would subsidize the cost of prescription drugs for the nation’s 40 million seniors, and all future retirees, regardless of income, forever. When Bill Gates retires, taxpayers will help pay for his prescription drugs.

    The cost of the proposed drug entitlement is estimated at $400 billion over the next 10 years. Given the fiscal track record of past entitlements, the cost of the new program is likely to be much, much higher.

    Taxpayers have been misled before. Stephen Dinan reports in the Washington Times that when Congress created the Medicare program the projected cost in 1990 was $9 billion. The true cost in 1990 was $67 billion, 7.4 times higher. In 1987 Congress added a generous special hospitals subsidy to Medicare. The estimated cost was $100 million a year by 1992. The actual cost in 1992 was $11 billion. In 1988 Congress expanded Medicare again to include a home-care program. Lawmakers expected the new program to cost $4 billion in 1993. The true cost that year was $10 billion.

    Dinan cites further examples, but you get the idea. The upward pressure on costs is built into the very nature of entitlement programs. When something feels like it’s free, people tend to use it a lot. Once Uncle Sam is picking up the check, people on Medicare are likely to demand more drugs, want more expensive drugs and want to use them longer than they might have if they were more aware of the true cost.

    In one sense entitlements are the most brilliant political device ever conceived. For proponents, what could be better than putting the funding for a favored program on automatic pilot, separated from normal budget oversight, with virtually no limit on how much the government must spend?

    Elected officials today get to claim all the credit for enacting a generous spending program, while putting the unknown financial burden onto tomorrow’s taxpayers. Years from now, the feds might impose price controls on the drug entitlement in an effort to limit costs. And as always happens under price controls, the supply of the thing being controlled will begin to go dry.

    Doctors across the country already are turning away new Medicare patients because the government’s preset fee is too low. Once the price of drugs is similarly controlled, our amazingly innovative pharmaceutical industry, a business that seems to produce miracles as a matter of routine, will begin to lag. If pharmaceutical companies cannot recoup the enormous cost of discovering new drugs, they can’t afford the risk of doing the research in the first place.

    One sign of good leadership is knowing when to cut one’s losses and start over. Congress should take this project back to the drawing board. There are smarter ways to reduce drug costs for seniors, such as tapping the competitive forces of the free market, than reaching for the old model of entitlement spending.

    To see this article, go to: https://www.galen.org/news/070703a.html

    To read Grace-Marie Turner’s companion article, go to: “PRO: Is Medicare Drug Benefit Legislation Heading in Right Direction?”

    ”’Paul Guppy is research director at the Washington Policy Center. Write him at WPC, 155 108th Ave. N.E., Suite 820, Bellevue, WA. 98004. Distributed by Knight Ridder News Service.”’

    Small Business Views – July 2003-Taken from Small Business News, a Publication of Small Business Hawaii

    0

    The 2003 Legislative Session is now officially over with the Governor issuing nearly 50 vetoes during the last week of June. Meanwhile, lawmakers are still holding meetings, informational briefings and making site visits to UH and its 10 campuses. The Senate-House Felix Special Education Committee is on the road with hearings held on Molokai last month and Hawaii island and Maui visits scheduled next.

    SBH founder, businessman and civic volunteer Lex Brodie announced his retirement from the State Board of Education because of poor health and eye problems. The 89-year-old business legend will spend more time on his native Kauai. Lex: Thank You Very Much! The Governor will appoint an interim replacement to fill the BOE vacancy.

    Other SBH members have made the news in recent weeks too. SBH director and Copy Shop (Hawaii Kai) owner, Brian Zinn, was appointed to the newly invigorated Small Business Regulatory Review Board by Gov. Linda Lingle. The Governor also appointed former director, treasurer and restaurateur, Kenny Lum, to an interim position on the Hawaii Paroling Authority. E Noa corporation head, Katsumi Tanaka, was nominated for the Hawaii Tourism Authority Board by Speaker of the House Calvin Say. Several SBH members were recently elected to Neighborhood Boards including: Tracy Ryan, Dick Rowland and Jack Schneider.

    Among the “Excellence in Journalism” top winners at the annual Society of Professional Journalists banquet June 14 were John Pritchett (Outstanding Editorial Cartoon) and Hawaii Reporter’s Malia Zimmerman for Outstanding
    Investigative Reporting (“Exposing a Garment Factory” about Vietnamese workers
    in American Samoa. Mainland judges selected the pair as well as recent SBH business reporting awardees, Lee Cataluna (The Honolulu Advertiser), Darryl Huff (KITV4) and Kam Napier (Honolulu Magazine) as additional top awardees.

    SBH’s Susie Weisbrod participated in the annual Small Business Fair at Leeward
    Community College on June 21. The SBH cosponsored Scholarship Awards Luncheon featuring Erin Brockovich (the real one, not Julia Roberts) was a huge success for the ABWA. Several hundred people attended the June 22 luncheon at the
    Hilton Hawaiian Village.

    Something’s up with the State Department of Labor: an unusual number of challenges to employers with non-employee independent contractors occurred during the past month. SBH is investigating. Many Jeremy Harris City & County of Honolulu fees and permit costs up as of July 1 to add to your cost of doing business. The Mayor also has threatened to close the brand new (January, 2003) Hawaii Kai Satellite City Hall, not for fiscal reasons, but because of
    political reasons. Area Councilmember is Republican Charles Djou, a strong vocal critic of the Mayor’s spending and debt spree, The office has had increasing business, good employees and is set to do driver re-licensing.

    It’s twins for SBH director and Edward Jones (Kaneohe) owner Geal Talbert due in September. Congratulations!

    SBH’s Dave Muldoon sold his Xvertx communications company to Maui.Net but still operates All Products Corporation.

    SBH and Aloha Petroleum will soon roll out a new member benefit: discount Aloha
    gasoline. None too soon!

    Interisland airlines, Aloha and Hawaiian, both in red ink, complain their local routes are less profitable. Let’s see, they raised rates to around $100 each way between islands (remember years ago when competition with a third carrier allowed $25 rates?), cut the number of flights and seats, and the security wait and check-in is 1-2 hours for a 20-minute interisland flight. Hawaii needs competition. Likewise, University of Hawaii sees reduced sports season ticket purchases after raising ticket prices and adding additional
    “contributions” for most seats. This is needed to pay the new $.8 million salary for head coach June Jones and the many assistants.

    A good business investment would be to get behind U.H.’s efforts to have the world’s largest and newest telescope technology atop Mauna Kea (the current largest ‘scope

    Small Business Views – July 2003-Taken from Small Business News, a Publication of Small Business Hawaii

    0

    The 2003 Legislative Session is now officially over with the Governor issuing nearly 50 vetoes during the last week of June. Meanwhile, lawmakers are still holding meetings, informational briefings and making site visits to UH and its 10 campuses. The Senate-House Felix Special Education Committee is on the road with hearings held on Molokai last month and Hawaii island and Maui visits scheduled next.

    SBH founder, businessman and civic volunteer Lex Brodie announced his retirement from the State Board of Education because of poor health and eye problems. The 89-year-old business legend will spend more time on his native Kauai. Lex: Thank You Very Much! The Governor will appoint an interim replacement to fill the BOE vacancy.

    Other SBH members have made the news in recent weeks too. SBH director and Copy Shop (Hawaii Kai) owner, Brian Zinn, was appointed to the newly invigorated Small Business Regulatory Review Board by Gov. Linda Lingle. The Governor also appointed former director, treasurer and restaurateur, Kenny Lum, to an interim position on the Hawaii Paroling Authority. E Noa corporation head, Katsumi Tanaka, was nominated for the Hawaii Tourism Authority Board by Speaker of the House Calvin Say. Several SBH members were recently elected to Neighborhood Boards including: Tracy Ryan, Dick Rowland and Jack Schneider.

    Among the “Excellence in Journalism” top winners at the annual Society of Professional Journalists banquet June 14 were John Pritchett (Outstanding Editorial Cartoon) and Hawaii Reporter’s Malia Zimmerman for Outstanding
    Investigative Reporting (“Exposing a Garment Factory” about Vietnamese workers
    in American Samoa. Mainland judges selected the pair as well as recent SBH business reporting awardees, Lee Cataluna (The Honolulu Advertiser), Darryl Huff (KITV4) and Kam Napier (Honolulu Magazine) as additional top awardees.

    SBH’s Susie Weisbrod participated in the annual Small Business Fair at Leeward
    Community College on June 21. The SBH cosponsored Scholarship Awards Luncheon featuring Erin Brockovich (the real one, not Julia Roberts) was a huge success for the ABWA. Several hundred people attended the June 22 luncheon at the
    Hilton Hawaiian Village.

    Something’s up with the State Department of Labor: an unusual number of challenges to employers with non-employee independent contractors occurred during the past month. SBH is investigating. Many Jeremy Harris City & County of Honolulu fees and permit costs up as of July 1 to add to your cost of doing business. The Mayor also has threatened to close the brand new (January, 2003) Hawaii Kai Satellite City Hall, not for fiscal reasons, but because of
    political reasons. Area Councilmember is Republican Charles Djou, a strong vocal critic of the Mayor’s spending and debt spree, The office has had increasing business, good employees and is set to do driver re-licensing.

    It’s twins for SBH director and Edward Jones (Kaneohe) owner Geal Talbert due in September. Congratulations!

    SBH’s Dave Muldoon sold his Xvertx communications company to Maui.Net but still operates All Products Corporation.

    SBH and Aloha Petroleum will soon roll out a new member benefit: discount Aloha
    gasoline. None too soon!

    Interisland airlines, Aloha and Hawaiian, both in red ink, complain their local routes are less profitable. Let’s see, they raised rates to around $100 each way between islands (remember years ago when competition with a third carrier allowed $25 rates?), cut the number of flights and seats, and the security wait and check-in is 1-2 hours for a 20-minute interisland flight. Hawaii needs competition. Likewise, University of Hawaii sees reduced sports season ticket purchases after raising ticket prices and adding additional
    “contributions” for most seats. This is needed to pay the new $.8 million salary for head coach June Jones and the many assistants.

    A good business investment would be to get behind U.H.’s efforts to have the world’s largest and newest telescope technology atop Mauna Kea (the current largest ‘scope

    Small Business Views – July 2003-Taken from Small Business News, a Publication of Small Business Hawaii

    0

    The 2003 Legislative Session is now officially over with the Governor issuing nearly 50 vetoes during the last week of June. Meanwhile, lawmakers are still holding meetings, informational briefings and making site visits to UH and its 10 campuses. The Senate-House Felix Special Education Committee is on the road with hearings held on Molokai last month and Hawaii island and Maui visits scheduled next.

    SBH founder, businessman and civic volunteer Lex Brodie announced his retirement from the State Board of Education because of poor health and eye problems. The 89-year-old business legend will spend more time on his native Kauai. Lex: Thank You Very Much! The Governor will appoint an interim replacement to fill the BOE vacancy.

    Other SBH members have made the news in recent weeks too. SBH director and Copy Shop (Hawaii Kai) owner, Brian Zinn, was appointed to the newly invigorated Small Business Regulatory Review Board by Gov. Linda Lingle. The Governor also appointed former director, treasurer and restaurateur, Kenny Lum, to an interim position on the Hawaii Paroling Authority. E Noa corporation head, Katsumi Tanaka, was nominated for the Hawaii Tourism Authority Board by Speaker of the House Calvin Say. Several SBH members were recently elected to Neighborhood Boards including: Tracy Ryan, Dick Rowland and Jack Schneider.

    Among the “Excellence in Journalism” top winners at the annual Society of Professional Journalists banquet June 14 were John Pritchett (Outstanding Editorial Cartoon) and Hawaii Reporter’s Malia Zimmerman for Outstanding
    Investigative Reporting (“Exposing a Garment Factory” about Vietnamese workers
    in American Samoa. Mainland judges selected the pair as well as recent SBH business reporting awardees, Lee Cataluna (The Honolulu Advertiser), Darryl Huff (KITV4) and Kam Napier (Honolulu Magazine) as additional top awardees.

    SBH’s Susie Weisbrod participated in the annual Small Business Fair at Leeward
    Community College on June 21. The SBH cosponsored Scholarship Awards Luncheon featuring Erin Brockovich (the real one, not Julia Roberts) was a huge success for the ABWA. Several hundred people attended the June 22 luncheon at the
    Hilton Hawaiian Village.

    Something’s up with the State Department of Labor: an unusual number of challenges to employers with non-employee independent contractors occurred during the past month. SBH is investigating. Many Jeremy Harris City & County of Honolulu fees and permit costs up as of July 1 to add to your cost of doing business. The Mayor also has threatened to close the brand new (January, 2003) Hawaii Kai Satellite City Hall, not for fiscal reasons, but because of
    political reasons. Area Councilmember is Republican Charles Djou, a strong vocal critic of the Mayor’s spending and debt spree, The office has had increasing business, good employees and is set to do driver re-licensing.

    It’s twins for SBH director and Edward Jones (Kaneohe) owner Geal Talbert due in September. Congratulations!

    SBH’s Dave Muldoon sold his Xvertx communications company to Maui.Net but still operates All Products Corporation.

    SBH and Aloha Petroleum will soon roll out a new member benefit: discount Aloha
    gasoline. None too soon!

    Interisland airlines, Aloha and Hawaiian, both in red ink, complain their local routes are less profitable. Let’s see, they raised rates to around $100 each way between islands (remember years ago when competition with a third carrier allowed $25 rates?), cut the number of flights and seats, and the security wait and check-in is 1-2 hours for a 20-minute interisland flight. Hawaii needs competition. Likewise, University of Hawaii sees reduced sports season ticket purchases after raising ticket prices and adding additional
    “contributions” for most seats. This is needed to pay the new $.8 million salary for head coach June Jones and the many assistants.

    A good business investment would be to get behind U.H.’s efforts to have the world’s largest and newest telescope technology atop Mauna Kea (the current largest ‘scope

    Venice: A City of Commerce

    0

    Venice is a city of commerce. Its purpose is to sell … everything. The city draws about 12 million tourists annually and the merchant’s goal is to extract as much money from each one of us as possible.

    In Venice, they don’t even give you a free taste of gelato (ice cream). You pay your money and takes your chances.

    How much free information do you give away? How much time do you spend educating customers who don’t buy from you?

    Or preparing reports, analysis and white papers, and then are told, “Thanks for the wonderful information, we’re going to put this out for bid, would you like to put a proposal together?”

    Be like the Venetians: Don’t give away free ice cream Your business is to ask questions, solve problems, and close sales. Not to give away free information and services so your prospective customer will like, respect and trust you — and then do business with someone else.

    Murano Island: The Glass-Blowing Capital Of The World Venetians have been blowing glass in Murano for a thousand years.

    One of the things you MUST do when you visit Venice is visit a Murano glass factory where you can see the glass being blown using the same techniques developed by the masters long ago.

    The tour books suggest you ask the hotel concierge about a tour to Murano. Which is what we did. He told us that he would arrange a water taxi for us, and have someone walk us to the dock. This would normally cost 50-60 euros, but this was on the house.

    Little did we know what the value of a free water taxi was worth.

    It was about a ten-minute walk to the dock, and another 15 minute ride across the open channel to Murano. We were dropped off at a glass factory’s dock.

    A very pretty woman welcomed us and introduced us to Sergio, who would give us a tour — and demonstration — of the factory.

    For 15 – 20 minutes we watched a craftsman demonstrate how to blow glass. He made a bowl, and a figurine horse. To show us how hot the glass was, he put a piece of paper on the glass bowl. It immediately burst into flames.

    After a quick walk around the factory Sergio brought us into the showroom, a collection of rooms with hand-blown glasses, vases, goblets, figurines, plates and more.

    DeLaine, my daughter saw a pretty chandelier hanging from the ceiling and asked the cost. It was 28,500 euros.

    This showroom had a very unique selling model. There were no listed prices. When we found something that looked interesting we had to ask Sergio the price. He pulled out a calculator and then told us.

    (I watched how he did it. He took the product code number and multiplied by six.)

    For the next 30 minutes we walked from one showroom to the next. Each piece of glass was prettier and more exquisite than the one next to it. When we worked our way to the last showroom, I noticed something interesting: There was no marked exit.

    We had to ask permission to leave. Begrudgingly, Sergio showed us out. His final words were “If you buy something you can have a ”’free”’ water taxi ride back to Venice.”

    We thanked him very much for his time, and walked out the door.

    For the next two hours we wandered around Murano, visiting the local shops and galleries. Had a delightful lunch at a local outdoor caf

    Venice: A City of Commerce

    0

    Venice is a city of commerce. Its purpose is to sell … everything. The city draws about 12 million tourists annually and the merchant’s goal is to extract as much money from each one of us as possible.

    In Venice, they don’t even give you a free taste of gelato (ice cream). You pay your money and takes your chances.

    How much free information do you give away? How much time do you spend educating customers who don’t buy from you?

    Or preparing reports, analysis and white papers, and then are told, “Thanks for the wonderful information, we’re going to put this out for bid, would you like to put a proposal together?”

    Be like the Venetians: Don’t give away free ice cream Your business is to ask questions, solve problems, and close sales. Not to give away free information and services so your prospective customer will like, respect and trust you — and then do business with someone else.

    Murano Island: The Glass-Blowing Capital Of The World Venetians have been blowing glass in Murano for a thousand years.

    One of the things you MUST do when you visit Venice is visit a Murano glass factory where you can see the glass being blown using the same techniques developed by the masters long ago.

    The tour books suggest you ask the hotel concierge about a tour to Murano. Which is what we did. He told us that he would arrange a water taxi for us, and have someone walk us to the dock. This would normally cost 50-60 euros, but this was on the house.

    Little did we know what the value of a free water taxi was worth.

    It was about a ten-minute walk to the dock, and another 15 minute ride across the open channel to Murano. We were dropped off at a glass factory’s dock.

    A very pretty woman welcomed us and introduced us to Sergio, who would give us a tour — and demonstration — of the factory.

    For 15 – 20 minutes we watched a craftsman demonstrate how to blow glass. He made a bowl, and a figurine horse. To show us how hot the glass was, he put a piece of paper on the glass bowl. It immediately burst into flames.

    After a quick walk around the factory Sergio brought us into the showroom, a collection of rooms with hand-blown glasses, vases, goblets, figurines, plates and more.

    DeLaine, my daughter saw a pretty chandelier hanging from the ceiling and asked the cost. It was 28,500 euros.

    This showroom had a very unique selling model. There were no listed prices. When we found something that looked interesting we had to ask Sergio the price. He pulled out a calculator and then told us.

    (I watched how he did it. He took the product code number and multiplied by six.)

    For the next 30 minutes we walked from one showroom to the next. Each piece of glass was prettier and more exquisite than the one next to it. When we worked our way to the last showroom, I noticed something interesting: There was no marked exit.

    We had to ask permission to leave. Begrudgingly, Sergio showed us out. His final words were “If you buy something you can have a ”’free”’ water taxi ride back to Venice.”

    We thanked him very much for his time, and walked out the door.

    For the next two hours we wandered around Murano, visiting the local shops and galleries. Had a delightful lunch at a local outdoor caf

    Venice: A City of Commerce

    0

    Venice is a city of commerce. Its purpose is to sell … everything. The city draws about 12 million tourists annually and the merchant’s goal is to extract as much money from each one of us as possible.

    In Venice, they don’t even give you a free taste of gelato (ice cream). You pay your money and takes your chances.

    How much free information do you give away? How much time do you spend educating customers who don’t buy from you?

    Or preparing reports, analysis and white papers, and then are told, “Thanks for the wonderful information, we’re going to put this out for bid, would you like to put a proposal together?”

    Be like the Venetians: Don’t give away free ice cream Your business is to ask questions, solve problems, and close sales. Not to give away free information and services so your prospective customer will like, respect and trust you — and then do business with someone else.

    Murano Island: The Glass-Blowing Capital Of The World Venetians have been blowing glass in Murano for a thousand years.

    One of the things you MUST do when you visit Venice is visit a Murano glass factory where you can see the glass being blown using the same techniques developed by the masters long ago.

    The tour books suggest you ask the hotel concierge about a tour to Murano. Which is what we did. He told us that he would arrange a water taxi for us, and have someone walk us to the dock. This would normally cost 50-60 euros, but this was on the house.

    Little did we know what the value of a free water taxi was worth.

    It was about a ten-minute walk to the dock, and another 15 minute ride across the open channel to Murano. We were dropped off at a glass factory’s dock.

    A very pretty woman welcomed us and introduced us to Sergio, who would give us a tour — and demonstration — of the factory.

    For 15 – 20 minutes we watched a craftsman demonstrate how to blow glass. He made a bowl, and a figurine horse. To show us how hot the glass was, he put a piece of paper on the glass bowl. It immediately burst into flames.

    After a quick walk around the factory Sergio brought us into the showroom, a collection of rooms with hand-blown glasses, vases, goblets, figurines, plates and more.

    DeLaine, my daughter saw a pretty chandelier hanging from the ceiling and asked the cost. It was 28,500 euros.

    This showroom had a very unique selling model. There were no listed prices. When we found something that looked interesting we had to ask Sergio the price. He pulled out a calculator and then told us.

    (I watched how he did it. He took the product code number and multiplied by six.)

    For the next 30 minutes we walked from one showroom to the next. Each piece of glass was prettier and more exquisite than the one next to it. When we worked our way to the last showroom, I noticed something interesting: There was no marked exit.

    We had to ask permission to leave. Begrudgingly, Sergio showed us out. His final words were “If you buy something you can have a ”’free”’ water taxi ride back to Venice.”

    We thanked him very much for his time, and walked out the door.

    For the next two hours we wandered around Murano, visiting the local shops and galleries. Had a delightful lunch at a local outdoor caf

    God and the High Court

    0

    WASHINGTON, July 15 (UPI) — What with jihads, invasions and epidemics, you’d think God would be pretty busy.

    Now the Rev. Pat Robertson has put yet another side dish on the Lord’s already rather full plate: The televangelist is asking the Almighty to prod at least three Supreme Court justices into retirement.

    Robertson launched “Operation Supreme Court Freedom” — a “massive prayer offensive” — this week while appearing on his Christian Broadcasting Network. The televangelist said he felt compelled to ask God to make the retirements happen because of a series of anti-morality decisions since the 1960s. Those decisions include taking prayer and the Bible out of public schools, support of abortion and making it “illegal for little elementary school children to give thanks over their milk and cookies at snack time.”

    That last ruling might be a little hard to find, but the others are there all right. You can look them up.

    The latest outrage, according to Robertson, occurred at the end of the court’s current term.

    “Now, the Supreme Court has declared a constitutional right to consensual sodomy and, by the language in its decision, has opened the door to homosexual marriages, bigamy, legalized prostitution and even incest,” Robertson said on the CBN Web site.

    In Lawrence vs. Texas, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that there is a “privacy and liberty interest” implicit in the Constitution’s guarantee of “due process,” or fair treatment, that gives consenting adults the right to have the kind of sex they want behind closed doors.

    “But there is a higher tribunal than the United States Supreme Court,” Robertson assured the nation. “There is the Judge of all the Earth. We must earnestly come before Him now and cry out for redress of our grievances. He loves America as much as we do, and He does not wish to destroy it.”

    Robertson was very specific about what he wants his listeners to do.

    “Would you join with me and many others in crying out to our Lord to change the court? If we fast and pray and earnestly seek God’s face,” Robertson said, “then He will hear our prayer and give us relief.”

    Robertson was less specific about which justices he has targeted for divine manipulation.

    “One justice is 83 years old, another has cancer and another has a heart condition,” Robertson said. “Would it not be possible for God to put it in the minds of these three judges that the time has come to retire? With their retirement and the appointment of conservative judges, a massive change in federal jurisprudence can take place.”

    There’s no problem in identifying Justice John Paul Stevens as one of the Gang of Three. The leader of the Supreme Court’s liberal bloc is also the oldest justice at 83.

    However, two of the court’s members have recovered from a form of cancer: moderate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor from breast cancer and liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg from colon cancer.

    The identity of the justice with heart problems is anybody’s guess. Stevens recovered from heart problems years ago, but he’s already on the list. O’Connor’s husband had a pacemaker implanted in 1999, but he’s not a justice.

    Some might find the idea of asking God to push three justices into retirement a trifle off-putting. Asking God to tweak their health problems into a deciding retirement factor is just a bit too close to asking the Lord to become a Celestial Hit Man.

    I’m sure, however, that Robertson is just asking God to let nature take its course.

    But what about God’s playful sense of humor, which the Lord tends to display from time to time? What if God reaches down and — “doink!” — flips the wrong court member, say conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, off the ledge of retirement?

    Then, O Lord, the Rev. Pat Robertson will have a bone to pick with Thee. — On a more serious note, though they won’t say so publicly, Supreme Court police are less than thrilled with Robertson’s campaign. Too often, overly impressionable people hear the message of a religious leader, misunderstand the leader’s reference to “the tyranny of a non-elected oligarchy” and then try to become the armed instruments of God in eliminating the problem.

    If you’re reading this column and you’re thinking of coming to Washington and doing the Lord’s work by personally making changes at the Supreme Court, think again. Federal time is hard time.

    And everyone will think you’re an idiot.

    ”’Mike Kirkland is UPI’s senior legal affairs correspondent. He has covered the Supreme Court and other parts of the legal community since 1993.”’

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.

    God and the High Court

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    WASHINGTON, July 15 (UPI) — What with jihads, invasions and epidemics, you’d think God would be pretty busy.

    Now the Rev. Pat Robertson has put yet another side dish on the Lord’s already rather full plate: The televangelist is asking the Almighty to prod at least three Supreme Court justices into retirement.

    Robertson launched “Operation Supreme Court Freedom” — a “massive prayer offensive” — this week while appearing on his Christian Broadcasting Network. The televangelist said he felt compelled to ask God to make the retirements happen because of a series of anti-morality decisions since the 1960s. Those decisions include taking prayer and the Bible out of public schools, support of abortion and making it “illegal for little elementary school children to give thanks over their milk and cookies at snack time.”

    That last ruling might be a little hard to find, but the others are there all right. You can look them up.

    The latest outrage, according to Robertson, occurred at the end of the court’s current term.

    “Now, the Supreme Court has declared a constitutional right to consensual sodomy and, by the language in its decision, has opened the door to homosexual marriages, bigamy, legalized prostitution and even incest,” Robertson said on the CBN Web site.

    In Lawrence vs. Texas, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that there is a “privacy and liberty interest” implicit in the Constitution’s guarantee of “due process,” or fair treatment, that gives consenting adults the right to have the kind of sex they want behind closed doors.

    “But there is a higher tribunal than the United States Supreme Court,” Robertson assured the nation. “There is the Judge of all the Earth. We must earnestly come before Him now and cry out for redress of our grievances. He loves America as much as we do, and He does not wish to destroy it.”

    Robertson was very specific about what he wants his listeners to do.

    “Would you join with me and many others in crying out to our Lord to change the court? If we fast and pray and earnestly seek God’s face,” Robertson said, “then He will hear our prayer and give us relief.”

    Robertson was less specific about which justices he has targeted for divine manipulation.

    “One justice is 83 years old, another has cancer and another has a heart condition,” Robertson said. “Would it not be possible for God to put it in the minds of these three judges that the time has come to retire? With their retirement and the appointment of conservative judges, a massive change in federal jurisprudence can take place.”

    There’s no problem in identifying Justice John Paul Stevens as one of the Gang of Three. The leader of the Supreme Court’s liberal bloc is also the oldest justice at 83.

    However, two of the court’s members have recovered from a form of cancer: moderate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor from breast cancer and liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg from colon cancer.

    The identity of the justice with heart problems is anybody’s guess. Stevens recovered from heart problems years ago, but he’s already on the list. O’Connor’s husband had a pacemaker implanted in 1999, but he’s not a justice.

    Some might find the idea of asking God to push three justices into retirement a trifle off-putting. Asking God to tweak their health problems into a deciding retirement factor is just a bit too close to asking the Lord to become a Celestial Hit Man.

    I’m sure, however, that Robertson is just asking God to let nature take its course.

    But what about God’s playful sense of humor, which the Lord tends to display from time to time? What if God reaches down and — “doink!” — flips the wrong court member, say conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, off the ledge of retirement?

    Then, O Lord, the Rev. Pat Robertson will have a bone to pick with Thee. — On a more serious note, though they won’t say so publicly, Supreme Court police are less than thrilled with Robertson’s campaign. Too often, overly impressionable people hear the message of a religious leader, misunderstand the leader’s reference to “the tyranny of a non-elected oligarchy” and then try to become the armed instruments of God in eliminating the problem.

    If you’re reading this column and you’re thinking of coming to Washington and doing the Lord’s work by personally making changes at the Supreme Court, think again. Federal time is hard time.

    And everyone will think you’re an idiot.

    ”’Mike Kirkland is UPI’s senior legal affairs correspondent. He has covered the Supreme Court and other parts of the legal community since 1993.”’

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.