This post started innocently enough and morphed into quite something else.

Our country lacks vision. Our politicians lack gumption. They are elected for four year terms and cannot see their way past that constrained time-line.

Vision is what created universal health care, and old age pension and a host of other programs. Lack of vision is what is driving our cities into the poor house. Lack of vision is what prompts our politicians to stall transportation programs. Lack of vision is what stops our politicians from allowing Canada Post to create a national high speed internet service.

I have time to read a lot of newspapers. I also tend to read the inane comments people make. The health care issues are, of necessity closer to my heart than other articles.  Every article on any issue related to health care, invariably is greeted by someone (or more than one someone) saying that our health care system is broken. Broken. Crazy glue anyone? Broken. My experience would indicate that our health care system is not broken. It need constant attention and surveillance. It need tweaking once in while. It is far from broken.

Bahai’s believe in a concept called progressive revelation. Religions come about a thousand years apart. The main purpose of religion is to unify mankind. In spite of current issues, it has been working. Progressive revelation entails that religions follow one another building on the success of the previous religion. Religions are founded by Messengers of God, as opposed to philosophers, or Prophets. There have been 9 Messengers of God, starting with Adam, Moses, Buddha, Krishna, Zoroaster, Christ, Muhammad, The Bab, and Baha’u'llah. The latter two being the founders of the Babi and Baha’i Faiths. The Bab ended the Adamic cycle of religions. Baha’u'llah has started the Baha cycle which is supposed to last for 500,000 years. The next Manifestation of God is coming in about 1000 years.

One might look at Progressive Revelation as God tweaking his religions. Making changes to a system to perpetuate its success. One religion forbids the drinking of alcohols, another pork. Another allows the eating of pork. No shell fish for those of the Jewish persuasion. Hard to keep the things fresh and not die from them. But refrigeration and new food storage inventions have allowed us to eat shell fish. Baha’is are allowed to eat just about anything. No alcohol though.

If God needs to tweak his religions to keep up with the times, surely we can forgive our man made systems for requiring constant monitoring and tweaking.

I had my Chemo session this past week. The oncologist’s assistant is the one who sets up the appointments. She tends to get a bit confused with dates. We have become an old hand at this, after only 12 Chemo sessions. Imagine that. The assistant enters the dates into the computer, and these are confirmed at some point by the Chemo Daycare people. We get a print out of the new schedule. On this particular occasion, the confirmation was not coming fast enough. She sent us home asking me to call a number to confirm the dates. The confirmation was a bit weird. They had me scheduled for Chemo on both Tuesday and Thursday of last week. My blood work was scheduled for Thursday. The person confirming the schedule made it very clear that she could not change the schedule,as absurd as it appeared to be.

I skipped the Tuesday appointment. Got a phone call from the oncologist making sure I was OK. I pointed out the duplication, and all was well. I showed up as usual on Thursday, only to be told that I was supposed to have been there on Tuesday. There was no appointment for me on Thursday. I started to become a bit angry. That is a topic for a different day. Anger appears to well up and go out of control at some bizarre times. The nurse at the desk is familiar to me. We have dealt with each other before. She is a very nice person. Very calm and considerate.  I stood there, ready to boil over. She looked at me and smiled, and said ever so calmly, don’t worry, we will look after you. And they did. Three hours later. The system broke, and was fixed.

There was a situation about a month ago, when it was pointed out that the Avastin treatments were not being fully paid for by our health care system. Turns out that they would pay for all but the last nine sessions. Hue and cries abounded and the government decided to fork over the extra $9 million to pay for a full regiment of Avastin. Broken. Fixed. I am not sure what sort of discussion would have gone on resulting in the last nine sessions being cut off. But there you have it.

There was another case of a woman who was suffering from some rare form of something. Only 75 cases similar to hers in the whole country. The solution was a combination of two drugs that appeared to work, but did not appear to have any connection. One drug was covered, the other not. The government relented and is now covering both. Too few cases to worry about the funding.

The Ontario government is on a quest to lower the cost of generic drugs. They seem to think that the kick backs or whatever you want to call what the pharmaceuticals give to the pharmacies, increases the price of our drugs. The government negotiates the price of each drug and they seriously believe that this will reduce their costs by about $1.25billion. The lack of vision is astounding.

These kick backs are prominent in all kinds of businesses. Grocery stores receive money from manufacturers to include their items on their shelves. There is a lot of money at stake. The government should intervene there as well to lower the price of our foods. On the other and, these kick backs help bolster the bottom line of all the companies involved. The pharmaceuticals are protected by various patent laws. If they can afford to provide the kickbacks, then I suggest there is a lot more wrong with our systems than just kickbacks.

The government wants to take the high moral ground. Instead, they are going to bruise a system that is working reasonably well. No vision.

My father always said there is always money for education and health. I would like to add two more, communication and transportation.

Communication and transportation have been the backbone of economies from time immemorial. Waterways creating transportation systems. Various forms of communication tools including messengers on foot, pigeons, the telegraph, the telephone, and now, of course the Internet. Any country with an extensive network has prospered. Any country lacking these amenities has fallen behind.

We can blame government corruption for the lack of progress in Third World countries. Ultimately, they will not prosper until their communication and transportation systems are improved.

First World countries are facing their own set of problems. The most prominent one is that our infrastructure is failing under its own weight and we do not seem to have the resources to fix these. We can find billions to save the banks, but not to fix our infrastructure. We think in short term bursts, and ignore long term solutions.

Our roads were created by the Romans about 2,500 years ago. We are using Asphalt on a concrete base, instead of cobblestones on a sand base. We have added a sewer system and a bunch of conduits to allow for the passage of various utilities. All of these additions are causing problems that can be solved with a little bit of vision.

The dome road, that we all take for granted is flawed. We place sewer grates on each side of the road to take away the rain waters. These same grates break up the pavement around them. The breakup of the pavement causes water to enter into the asphalt and further deteriorate the road necessitating costly repairs. The deteriorating pavement also makes it dangerous for bicycles.

The domed structure forces water to the edges of the road where pedestrians get soaked by passing motorists. Water also collects at intersection where the sidewalk is lowered, ostensibly to make it accessible to handicapped people. The side effect of this lowering is that water gathers at these intersections making it inaccessible. These issues are particularly exacerbated by winter countries.

The solution is simple but requires a bit of long term vision from our politicians. I heard a report recently that talked about the number of times our pavements are cut open for various reasons. In Toronto, our pavements are opened 40,000 times a year. Various companies are involved in this tear up, from the gas companies, to all the telcos. Every tear up requires the city to go and inspect the work. They have to invariably send in a crew to fix what was supposed to have been done properly in the first place.  This all comes at great cost to everyone.

The joke in a lot of our cities is that there are two seasons, winter and construction. We can get rid of the latter.

We can reduce the number of tear ups by changing the structure of our roads. The Romans designed three types of roads, the dome, the road that is angled to one side, and the road that curves to the middle.

The last one is the one we should be using. Imagine a road that slopes to the middle with the sewer grates in the middle of the road instead of the edges. We would need one sewer instead of two, a larger one, albeit, but one only. The sewer grates could also be used instead of paint to mark the center of the road.

We would build a tunnel underneath the road that would include conduits for all the utility companies including the electricity providers. The tunnel would be accessible through the grates. In fact, there would be a line of grates that gave access to the tunnel. All changes that are required such as the installation of new cables, or water pipes would be done through the grates.

This is not a cheap solution. In most major cities, it would take 40 years to implement fully. It requires vision and thought and planning. It requires our politicians to think far into the future. The effects of this will go beyond the 40 years it will take to build.

There are numerous such examples that would greatly improve life in our cities. The costs of building these system is offset slightly by the jobs that are created, generating taxes at many points, additional spending since people have jobs.

Our communications systems are controlled by private enterprise. They are supposed to be more efficient. They are driven by profits and will not invest in the future until forced to do so. Canada has a number of telecommunication companies. One of the largest is Bell Canada. They recently upgraded their systems to include a 3G network. Just when others are investing in 4G. No vision.

We should provide the tel-cos with a little bit of competition. Canada Post, our venerable government owned post should be in charge of providing us with a high speed Internet service. There are about 30 billion pieces of eMail traveling through the Internet. Since Canada Post is in charge of delivering mail, it makes absolute sense for them to be also in charge of setting up the infrastructure to deliver eMail.

We need vision. We need leaders with guts.

5 Responses to “Vision – or a lack of it”

  1. The challenge for leaders with vision and guts is finding the fine line where they can play the system well enough so they can get re-elected and continue on their good work. Cause they do have to play the system to ever get into a position of influence to start with! And then they always seem to get caught up in getting re-elected (which involves their fellow politicians as well as their constituents) and their vision starts getting blurred and I'm not sure what happens to their guts but they seem to disappear even faster than the vision!!

  2. about those roads, Farokh – do you think that would work with the snow? I was riding my bike to work today trying to imagine the drains in the middle of the road…would we have to change the snow ploughs too?? It's very tiring to have vision… have a good chemo day…sending you, Jan and Devin a big hug, as always…Di

    • The thought process started abut 10 years ago because of the snow. Right now snow accumulates next to the sidewalk creating slush ponds. It also creates parking mayhem. People have to climb over snow banks to get off the street to feed the meters then return over the same snow bank to get back into their cars. We could move the snow bank to the centre of the road freeing the sidewalk for pedestrians.

      No changes to the snow plows. The angle of the slope does not change, just its direction. This gets more involved the more you think about it.

  3. these are good ideas. good visions… still not as good as your one about the hospital gowns.

    • The gown solution was brilliant because of its simplicity and the fact that existing gowns can be retrofitted.

      This one is far more controversial and expensive making less attractive.

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