Thursday, December 24, 2009

CHRISTMAS 2009

It’s been kind of a tough year for the Rankins in many ways. Some not-so-nice things happened. But still a lot of nice things also happened, and we manage to count a lot of blessings at the end of the year. First among those blessings is the continuing miracle of our son’s progress. We think of where we were just a few short years ago, and try to compare that to where we are today; it’s impossible because there is no comparison.

As it always was, and always shall be, this is the season of hope. Despite all of the not-so-nice things that have befallen us, we are hopeful for the days and years to come. My children give me that hope. Christmas ⎯ and all that it is and all that it represents ⎯ gives me that hope.

May you have a blessed Christmas and a hopeful New Year.

And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless Us, Every One!

P.S. Speaking of blessings and hope, GEAUX SAINTS!!!!

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

PHARMA HO-HO-HO


I decided to break out of my current blogging sabbatical to briefly comment on the Christmas present Julie Gerberding just got. For those who have not yet heard, the former head of the Centers for Disease Control ¬⎯ the federal agency responsible for formulating our government’s vaccination policies ⎯ has just been named to be the new president of Merck Vaccine.

She won’t be able to officially take the job until January 25, 2010. You see, there’s this pesky law that prevents government officials from taking jobs that might otherwise appear to be a conflict of interest for a period of one year after leaving the government.

Maybe it’s just me, but it seems a little contradictory of at least the spirit, and perhaps the letter of the law that this deal was cut well within the one-year period. That both Gerberding and Merck feel comfortable making this announcement less than a year after her leaving the government shows just how toothless the one-year requirement is. The waiting period should be raised to at least five years ⎯ and maybe more ⎯ if it is to mean anything. And discussions of a job should not commence until that period has completely elapsed.

Of course, even a requirement that employment negotiations should await the end of the waiting period would have been much of a safeguard in this “wink-wink/nudge-nudge” world. Rather than expound on that point, I simply refer you over to Ginger’s blog, where she lays out the coziness that has always existed between these parties. When Gerberding first stepped down from the CDC last January, Ginger correctly predicted the outcome, with the only question being whether the final resting place would be Lily or Merck.

The predictability of this appointment does not make it any less shameful. If those holding positions of public trust in our government felt any shame at all, there would be hearings into this appointment to determine all of the circumstances surrounding the negotiations for the position in light of Dr. Gerberding’s actions (or lack thereof) at the CDC. I won’t hold my breath waiting for those hearings, though. If those holding positions of public trust in our government felt any shame at all, the crisis that is the ASD epidemic would not likely be nearly as bad as it is.