TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
What are the odds that if and when she does have a baby she won't vaccinate it?Agreed. I hope she doesn't pass her stupidity to another generation. The ◊◊◊◊ with her!
What are the odds that if and when she does have a baby she won't vaccinate it?Agreed. I hope she doesn't pass her stupidity to another generation. The ◊◊◊◊ with her!
Yeah, I think that, in looking at campaign promises and whether or to they get kept, it becomes important to distinguish between: "legitimate aspirations that he ultimately failed to deliver" and: "empty stuff he just said to get people to vote for him." They represent different sorts of failure, and call for differentiated critique.Minor note:
From reading various versions of her story, she WAS aware of the problems Trump was causing. She just didn't care as much as she did about getting her "free IVF treatment".
There's a lot of spin involved here. The request wasn't specifically to stop spending, it's to reduce the number of individual people authorized to spend. Which isn't a bad idea, and it's pretty common throughout every other industry. Especially when there's financial stresses involved for the company. Last year, my company took corporate cards away from many people, because there was just too much spending without any reasonable oversight involved. Now, corporate cards are only available to a limited set of people unless a special request is made. All of our purchase orders have to go through a centralized group of 4 people for approval before we can set up invoices of any sort, and if they're for large amounts they have to go up through the CFO for approval.The Regime cuts off funding for VA P-cards, which will cause severe damage or death to veterans in care.
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VA gets GSA request to slash total number of employees who hold purchase cards
GSA has asked 15 other agency heads “to reduce their agency charge card limits, and the number and usage of cards.”federalnewsnetwork.com
There's an EO issued focused around making IVF an essential health benefit with very limited costs.Did she have any reason to think that he would make IVF free ?
Perhaps its best that she not get IVF treatment. After all, last thing we need is more genes for stupidity being passed on to the next generation.
I appreciate you guys are just venting but don't forget that these are eugenic sentiments. I probably wouldn't have brought it up but Shemp making a boo Hitler post RIGHT after a 'haha eugenics are appropriate in THIS case' post kinda. Threw me.Agreed. I hope she doesn't pass her stupidity to another generation. The ◊◊◊◊ with her!
There's a lot of spin involved here. The request wasn't specifically to stop spending, it's to reduce the number of individual people authorized to spend.
I see it less of a "eugenics" sentiment, and more of a "Darwin Awards" sentiment.I appreciate you guys are just venting but don't forget that these are eugenic sentiments. I probably wouldn't have brought it up but Shemp making a boo Hitler post RIGHT after a 'haha eugenics are appropriate in THIS case' post kinda. Threw me.Perhaps its best that she not get IVF treatment. After all, last thing we need is more genes for stupidity being passed on to the next generation.
Stop the pearl clutching.'haha eugenics are appropriate in THIS case'
I appreciate you guys are just venting but don't forget that these are eugenic sentiments. I probably wouldn't have brought it up but Shemp making a boo Hitler post RIGHT after a 'haha eugenics are appropriate in THIS case' post kinda. Threw me.
My recollection is that the number of cardholders will be reduced to around 500. If this is correct, it means that there will only be around 500 people who can order supplies. This is for all the VA hospitals and clinics. And since hospitals, and some clinics, run 24/7 operations and many other clinics are open more than 8-5 Monday thru Friday, the probability that a hospital or clinic will need an emergency supply order and have no one available with a card to pay for the order is pretty high.There's a lot of spin involved here. The request wasn't specifically to stop spending, it's to reduce the number of individual people authorized to spend. Which isn't a bad idea, and it's pretty common throughout every other industry. Especially when there's financial stresses involved for the company. Last year, my company took corporate cards away from many people, because there was just too much spending without any reasonable oversight involved. Now, corporate cards are only available to a limited set of people unless a special request is made. All of our purchase orders have to go through a centralized group of 4 people for approval before we can set up invoices of any sort, and if they're for large amounts they have to go up through the CFO for approval.
Yeah, it's a pain, yeah it's going to be difficult for the VA to adapt... but on the other hand, it seems egregious that 1 in 50 employees of VA have the ability to spend large amounts of money with no notable approval process too.
And if they can reduce it to just 500, why not just one. Save even more money.My recollection is that the number of cardholders will be reduced to around 500. If this is correct, it means that there will only be around 500 people who can order supplies. This is for all the VA hospitals and clinics. And since hospitals, and some clinics, run 24/7 operations and many other clinics are open more than 8-5 Monday thru Friday, the probability that a hospital or clinic will need an emergency supply order and have no one available with a card to pay for the order is pretty high.
I appreciate you guys are just venting but don't forget that these are eugenic sentiments. I probably wouldn't have brought it up but Shemp making a boo Hitler post RIGHT after a 'haha eugenics are appropriate in THIS case' post kinda. Threw me.
The very first paragraph, emphasis mine:Yes, it was. I suspect you just looked at the headline and didn't read the report. All cards were to limit their spending to $1. And the memo only allowed the possibility for removing that limit on a very small minority of cards. How is this anything other than a measure intended to stop spending?
If the intent were to review who does and does not hold a card, where are the provisions that would accomplish this? Spin indeed!
The Department of Veterans Affairs is being asked to severely limit the number of employees who can make purchases through a governmentwide charge card program — a decision that could impact billions of dollars in the department’s annual spending. The General Services Administration, in a memo obtained by Federal News Network, is asking the VA to reduce the spending limit of all its purchase and travel cards through its SmartPay program to $1,with a few narrow exceptions
My recollection is that the number of cardholders will be reduced to around 500. If this is correct, it means that there will only be around 500 people who can order supplies. This is for all the VA hospitals and clinics. And since hospitals, and some clinics, run 24/7 operations and many other clinics are open more than 8-5 Monday thru Friday, the probability that a hospital or clinic will need an emergency supply order and have no one available with a card to pay for the order is pretty high.
Is the concern here that workers are buying themselves stuff on the cards? Cuz otherwise I'm not seeing any huge difference in less cardholders, except that those few cardholders now have to dedicate more time to making purchases, instead of doing other aspects of their jobs.The very first paragraph, emphasis mine:
Dropping the limit on almost all cards with some few exceptions can be done very quickly and efficiently, and also allows for that limit to be raised upon evaluation. It's arguably a better approach than revoking all the cards and then having to issue new ones in the future.
You can make an argument that it should be more than 500, absolutely. At present... it's 12,000, which is about 2.5% of the entire VA workforce.My recollection is that the number of cardholders will be reduced to around 500. If this is correct, it means that there will only be around 500 people who can order supplies. This is for all the VA hospitals and clinics. And since hospitals, and some clinics, run 24/7 operations and many other clinics are open more than 8-5 Monday thru Friday, the probability that a hospital or clinic will need an emergency supply order and have no one available with a card to pay for the order is pretty high.
has about 12,000 authorized cardholders
...
479,000-employee workforce
The VA spends about $6 billion annually on its purchase cards
...
estimated that the department sees less than 1% of its spending on those cards are fraudulent
I have no problem reducing the number of authorized cardholders from 12,000 to 850. I would support that argument.The actual number is 479 (0.1% of the total number of employees). To have someone in a hospital who can order supplies 24/7 requires having 5 cardholders (because of vacations and holidays). The VA runs 170 hospitals, so it requires 850 cardholders just for the hospitals.
I can speculate, but I don't have direct knowledge.Is the concern here that workers are buying themselves stuff on the cards? Cuz otherwise I'm not seeing any huge difference in less cardholders, except that those few cardholders now have to dedicate more time to making purchases, instead of doing other aspects of their jobs.
Like, it might make sense to have a bunch of people using a half hour of their day buying the stuff that needs to be bought for their division, rather than one spending all day buying for everyone. The end result of purchased materials should be the same, and be verified anyway, in the same volume, shouldn't it?
first off, your math is way wrong. 6,000,000,000 / 100 = 60,000,000. But, I fully expect you to keep arguing its $600 million.You can make an argument that it should be more than 500, absolutely. At present... it's 12,000, which is about 2.5% of the entire VA workforce.
And of course, only about $600,000,000 of fraud hitting taxpayers, so no biggie.