No meds for ill Canadian child as demands rise for refugee applicants to receive health care

One of the most troubling questions for community members in a city or town where large numbers of refugees are arriving is—why are we doing this when we have our own needy people not being cared for?

I hear it all the time.  It goes something like this: ‘we have people (Americans/our neighbors) going hungry, homeless in the streets, or the elderly in need of attention and care and yet we can bring in tens of thousands of impoverished people from elsewhere in the world?  Why are our own needy so much less attractive?’

That is the question being asked in Ontario, Canada as Canadian health care can not afford Madi Vanstone, but are being pressured to care for refugee “claimants” who may or may not even be granted asylum.

Madi Vanstone’s meds vs. refugees’ meds?

Can you say “death panels” in Canada’s health care system?

Thanks to reader Joanne, here is the story at the Toronto Sun (emphasis mine):

TORONTO – Little Madi Vanstone is one beautiful child — with a major health problem.

The 12-year-old has a rare form of Cystic Fibrosis (CF) and requires a life-saving drug, Kalydeco, to keep her breathing.

The big problem is the drug costs $348,000 a year — and it’s not covered by OHIP.

[….]

Madi’s dad, Glen, a pipefitter, has insurance benefits that pay for 50% of her drug bill. The drug manufacturer picks up 30% — but that leaves the family paying $5,770 a month to keep their daughter alive.

[….]

They [the community raised money—ed] did what Canadians have done for generations — pulled together to help a child in need.

That’s what makes Monday’s announcement by the provincial health ministry so galling.

This province is trying to shame the feds into reinstating care for refugee claimants.

Really?

We can’t even afford life-saving drugs for a child who has lived in this province all her life. Whose family has paid taxes for generations.

But in a foot-stamping, blame-the-feds act of cynicism, apparently we have enough money to pay for health care for refugee claimants.

[….]

….the province adamantly won’t pay [for Madi—ed].

But we do have enough money to pay the very generous Ontario Drug Benefit Plan (ODBP) for people here as refugee claimants and those awaiting deportation.

Are we nuts?

And, here it is—one more sensible question from citizens regarding pressure from Canadian Doctors for Refugee Care. If these doctors care so much for the refugees why can’t they treat them for free!

Let refugee claimants hold bake sales for their health care, as Madi’s family has done.

….. Dr. Phillip Berger, of St. Michael’s Hospital and a member of Canadian Doctors for Refugee Care, said sick children and pregnant women can’t get care and cancer patients are denied chemotherapy.

If doctors care that much, they can treat refugees for free.

There is more, read it all (click here).

Update!  Doctors for Refugee Care win in Ontario—refugee healthcare reinstated.

Missouri: Tyson Foods’ transient labor creates more poverty in small town America

….and more tension among long-time residents.

We’ve written so many times about how ‘big meat’ is disrupting the demographics of heartland America that I’ve lost count.  But, here is a story that in its brevity summarizes a pattern that will be very familiar to longtime readers of RRW.

And, let me remind you, as I always do with stories like these, that before the meatpackers discovered illegal Hispanic workers, Americans were working in meatpacking at a higher salary (decades ago) than the starting wage of $9 an hour mentioned in this article.

From GPB News (emphasis mine).  Note the photo caption which says the town of Noel is thriving, but the article tells a different story.

For centuries, immigrants in search of a better life have been drawn to America’s largest cities. Now, in part because of the meatpacking industry, recent immigrants have been seeking out small, rural towns. But many of these towns are struggling to provide the social services needed by such a diverse population that’s largely invisible to most Americans.

Noel, Mo., has been dubbed the “Christmas City” and “Canoe Capital of the Ozarks” thanks to the Elk River, which winds through town. But this Missouri town of fewer than 2,000 residents thrives because of the Tyson Foods Inc. chicken processing complex located here it alone employs about 1,600 people. Just 20 years ago, Noel had only about half as many residents, and most of them were white. Then in the 1990s, Hispanics most of them Mexican moved to Noel to process chicken. Pacific Islanders and refugees from parts of Myanmar and Africa followed.

“We do have small towns that have had 100 to 200 percent growth that have really changed overnight over the past 20 years and have a much larger immigrant population than they used to,” says Lisa Dorner, a University of Missouri education professor who has done extensive research on immigrant children growing up in small towns and suburbs. Dorner thinks such major demographic changes don’t always sit well with local residents.

“When you find yourself, as a family especially, in a place that is pretty remote and hasn’t recently been used to welcoming immigrants, you may feel pretty lost,” she says.  [I don’t know that “lost” is the right word, unless she means hopeless!—ed]

For Somali newcomers, Noel has been particularly challenging. In a recent incident, tires on more than a dozen of their cars were recently slashed. Police didn’t have a suspect and have since dropped the investigation. Some Somalis say they also feel unwelcome at local establishments.

Maybe, just maybe, they aren’t feeling welcoming toward Somalis because they staged a strike at the plant in 2011—they wanted special religious accommodation on the job.

“Overall, this community, they are not welcoming to people [who] look different or [who are of] different religions. It’s like they are still in the 1980s …” says Farah Burale, a Somali-English translator at the Tyson plant. “Because of that reason, we are isolated, we see each other in the chicken plant or on the street without saying, ‘Hi.’ “

Tyson Foods wants the town to build more housing, but the town can’t afford the infrastructure costs.

Affordable housing is also a problem here in Noel. There’s a long waiting list for open units at the local housing authority.

“You cannot rent a house right now. If you look, try to find a house, you can’t,” says Faisal Ali Ahmed, a Somali refugee who works the night shift at the Tyson plant as a forklift driver. “It’s a very difficult life. If they shut down this company now, nobody stay in this bush.

John Lafley, the mayor of Noel, says longtime residents need to be sensitized to immigrants’ needs, and immigrants need to try to fit in.

“We’re trying to assimilate people that don’t understand the American way. And they want to keep their own ways, which is not that popular,” Lafley says.

Lafley says Tyson Foods is pushing the town to allow for more housing development, but he’s concerned that Noel’s infrastructure can’t handle more units.

The schools system (66% minority children!) has become the de facto social services department trying to stem poverty in the immigrant households.

The mayor says there’s no money in the budget either to provide the social services needed in this small, remote town, which sits not far from the Missouri-Kansas-Arkansas-Oklahoma borders. For rural Missouri, Tyson plant jobs pay decent wages that start at $9.05 an hour. Still, poverty looms large here. About 90 percent of Noel school students qualify for free or reduced-cost meals. The number of homeless children has doubled in the past five years. Because the nearest food pantry and free clinic are miles away, many plant workers turn to their children’s schools for help.

Whoever wrote the caption on the photo about the town “thriving” must not have read the article!

There is more about how the teachers in the school find food and other supplies for the poor children.  And, there is more about how Tysons doesn’t supply much help to the town and must continue to hire more transient immigrant laborers as earlier ones get out of this “bush” and move on to cities in hopes of finding better work.

Also, note as you read the article that there is still fear of deportations which means that Tyson Foods must still be hiring illegal immigrant labor.

For additional reading, check out this article from back in October about how the school system has become the “safety net” for the poor kids.

I continue to be convinced that a driving force pushing refugee resettlement in America is the meatpacking industry and a few other large industries always looking to keep wages down by hiring what amounts to legal captive slave labor—people who have nowhere else to go (and rarely can they return home, although some have). 

The business model!  ‘Big meat’ pays low wages and the other needs of the immigrant laborers are subsidized by you—the taxpayers.

Italy: Syrian refugees pose threat to European security

Yes, we agree.  And, we have Obama and Samantha Power to thank for the lawlessness that now rules Libya.  So much for the Power doctrine—the “responsibility to protect.” Protect the Jihadists?

Italian foreign minister Emma Bonino: Ex-jihadists or members of al-Qaida getting in with women and children.

From AFP (emphasis mine):

The exodus of refugees fleeing the conflict in Syria represents a security threat to the European Union, Italy’s foreign minister said Monday, warning that potential terrorists could be among the displaced.

“Like all major humanitarian crises”, the Syria conflict “has political aspects and consequences that can have devastating effects”, Emma Bonino told reporters in Rome.

“If you consider displaced people, refugees and immigrants, we have millions of people moving around the southern Mediterranean,” she said.

“We have many reasons to believe that among the women and children, there are also less friendly immigrants — ex-jihadists or members of al-Qaida.”

“It is clear that uncontrolled landings on our shores have implications for the security of the European Union.”

While Bonino underlined the war in Syria as the main reason for displacement, she said poverty in the Sahel, insecurity in Somalia and lawlessness in Libya added to the problem.

“In the absence of any control over its territory, Libya is today becoming a sort of freeway where anything gets through — weapons, drugs,” she warned.

The EU has been examining proposals to beef up border surveillance and open up legal channels to reach Europe to deal with the boats packed with Syrian refugees that have been arriving in southern Italy.

New York Times slobbers over David Miliband’s arrival in NYC to lead refugee contractor

David Miliband (of course you should know) is the former British foreign secretary who now runs one of our largest refugee resettlement agencies—the International Rescue Committee—and makes a cool $400,000 plus salary doing it.  See our archives for more on the man who was a “celebrity” in the UK, but is virtually unrecognizable in NYC.  The New York Times (in its name-dropping story) makes sure we know throughout the article how much he is enjoying his anonymity when he surely was entitled to be among the recognized.

Hillary reportedly said of Miliband, “if you saw him, it would be a big crush.”
Photo: Times of London

The article is long, and long on gush, but gives us one more look at the glitz and glamor that surrounds the human rights industrial complex these days.

From the NYT (emphasis mine):

The speakers at the fund-raising gala in New York last month had come to praise the guest of honor: the new president and chief executive of the International Rescue Committee, David Miliband. Amid all the charity-circuit one-liners delivered by big-ticket names like Bill Clinton, George Soros and Samantha Power, a remark by Madeleine Albright, the former secretary of state, hit closest to home.

“I would like to dispel the rumor,” Ms. Albright said, “that David himself has sought refuge in America from that most terrible of democratic tyrannies, the British tabloids.”

She may be right, but surely no one would blame Mr. Miliband — a former British foreign secretary, candidate for leader of the Labour Party and newspaper torture victim — if escape had indeed been one of his motives for fleeing England at the end of the summer.

IRC staff not so welcoming to man who says he wanted to deal with “knotty” issues:

Some longtime I.R.C. staff members responded to news of his appointment with a certain wariness, mainly because of Mr. Miliband’s foreignness, his celebrity, his lack of experience running nonprofit agencies and because they did not know what his management style would be. (He started the job in September, installing two longtime advisers from Britain as top executives, and said he was spending the first few months getting his head around the organization and the job.)

We are not informed if he has won them over.

Read the whole thing if you feel like it by clicking here.

Central African Republic: Get ready for it, new wave of refugees thanks to Muslims taking power

Christian refugees look for help at the Bangui airport Friday. AP photo

They are slaughtering us like chickens said one Christian refugee over the weekend (here)!

Meanwhile, UN Ambassador Samantha Power begs the Muslim leader of the largely Christian country to play nice!

From AFP:

Power: We have “deep concern.”

New York — Washington’s United Nations envoy called the Central African Republic’s interim President Michel Djotodia on Sunday to express “deep concern” over the rising tide of violence in the country.

Ambassador Samantha Power urged Djotodia to “ensure the arrest of perpetrators of recent atrocities,” urging him to denounce violence and call for an immediate return to law and order, her office said.

Power also asked Djotodia to “use his influence to reduce inter-religious tensions and protect civilians” and to give “full support” to French and African Union forces that are deploying to the Central African Republic.

Hundreds have died in a fresh outbreak of bloodshed in the Central African Republic, which has been in turmoil since a coalition of Muslim fighters led by Djotodia known as the Seleka overthrew the country’s leader Francois Bozize in March.

Djotodia became interim president following Bozize’s ouster, making him the first Muslim leader of the mostly Christian country.

[…..]

Reports have described a series of horrors, with security forces and militia gangs razing villages, carrying out public killings and perpetrating widespread rapes.

So, just looking at the official photo of Samantha Power, one knows Muslim leader Djotodia doesn’t take her seriously.

Top photo is from a story with more details at the South China Morning Post.