Wednesday, July 14, 2010

N.J.'s Corruption Cuts Hurt AIDS Patients.

July 14, 2010 at 7:40 P.M. Only one "error" inserted since this afternoon is not too impressive. Ms. Marban, can you shed any light on this mystery as a Bergen County Prosecutor and former associate of Mr. Menendez's first law partner? Have you visited my sites, Mary Marban, Esq.? Lesbian Love-Fest, Mary? Friend of Lourdes Santiago, Esq.? Sybil R. Moses, Esq.? Debbie Poritz, Esq.? A "conspiracy to violate civil rights" is a federal crime under the U.S. Code. This includes any form of censorship or suppression of copyrighted works making use of state action.

July 14, 2010 at 1:58 P.M. "Bastille Day!" My mention of socialized health care in Cuba may lead to more attacks on my writings today. Mazeltov.


Lindy Washburn, "AIDS Patients a Budget Casualty: Some Lose Access to Free Medication," in The Record, July 13, 2010, at p. A-1.
"Fidel Castro Back in the Spotlight," in The Record, July 13, 2010, at p. A-1. (Fidel is said to enjoy "Inception.")
Karen Rouse, "Turnpike Workers Face Layoffs: 23 Told It's Part of Plan to Cut 67 Jobs Overall," in The Record, July 13, 2010, at p. A-1.
Alexander McInnes, "Garfield Cops Rally Against Layoffs of 7: Question of Concessions Unresolved," in The Record, July 13, 2010, at p. L-1.
Merry Firschein, "Latino Group Criticizes Cops in 3 Towns: Challenges Hiring Practices," in The Record, July 13, 2010, at L-3. (Cronyism in Fort Lee along with allegations of corruption and discrimination against Latinos. More corruption and tainted legal proceedings alleged in New Jersey. I wonder how Mary Marban, Esq. is doing? Do you write for local newspapers, Mary? Under different names maybe? Nydia Hernandez, Esq.? Conflict of interest, ladies?)
Stephanie Akin, "Looming Police Layoffs Called Public Safety Risk," in The Record, July 13, 2010, at p. L-3. (Lives may be endangered by loss of police officers resulting from years of corruption mostly at the hands of Democrats.)

"New Jersey will no longer provide free AIDS medications for 950 people who are HIV-positive, under a little-noticed provision of the state budget enacted this month."

This cut that may imperil the lives of people takes place in a state where BILLIONS have been stolen from the public treasury by politicians, corrupt judges, crooked lawyers and others who have mostly not been punished for their disgusting greed and criminality. ("Senator Bob, the Babe, and the Big Bucks.")

The opinions of New Jersey officials concerning my ethics are absurd insults to my intelligence and distractions for the residents of the Garden State -- residents whose welfare is imperiled by this continuing corruption and mismanagement in Trenton. ("Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics" and "Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")

Senior citizens and other disabled persons will be next to suffer from disappearing treasury funds -- after years of mismanagement and theft -- including bizarre "shortfalls" from the state pension funds. Amazingly, no one is going to prison for these "funny numbers" with the pension funds. ("New Jersey is $46 BILLION 'Short' in Pension Funds.")

"In letters received over the weekend, the state Health Department told patients about new income guidelines for a program that enables thousands infected with HIV or diagnosed with AIDS to receive life-sustaining yet expensive anti-retroviral drugs. As of August 1, a patient's income cannot exceed $32,490, instead of the previous threshold of $54,150."

When you factor in the costs of living, requiring people who are sick and often unable to earn the money they might have made without the illness or other damage suffered, to come up with hundreds or thousands of dollars in medication costs per month is to insist that they choose between food or clothing for their children and medicine that they need to stay alive.

This is a human rights issue, for example, that does not arise in societies with socialized medicine, like Cuba. ("Fidel Castro's 'History Will Absolve Me'" and "Does Senator Menendez Have Mafia Friends?" and "Is Senator Bob 'For' Human Rights?")

" ... 'We were blindsided,' said a southern Bergen County man, whose HIV-positive son, 35, has relied on the program for 10 years to pay for prescriptions, which now run more than $2,500 monthly. 'Through the mercy of God [because of] these pills, the HIV is undetectable in his body.' ..."

We are "saving" money by "losing lives" that, we are told by politicians, are not financially "worthwhile." Many Cuban-Americans in Hudson County -- I will be delighted to name them -- enjoy the thought that these suffering human beings will no longer burden the taxpayers of the state even as they look forward to years of "sucking on the public tit." How's it going, Mr. Menendez? ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State.")

These distinguished "public servants" and members of the bar in New Jersey "disapprove" of my ethics. I think that such persons are loathsome hypocrites, frauds, and thieves. You decide who is more "ethical." ("Da Jersey Code," "Cement is Gold," "New Jersey's Mafia Culture in Law and Politics," and "New Jersey's Xanadu Mess.")

If you or a loved-one is suffering from AIDS, then you may not be able to care for a human being whose death may remove an "obstacle to greater fiscal health" in the land of cranberry fields and carcinogens known as the Garden State.

Care for a Jersey tomato?

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