My grandmother used to be a big Trump supporter, but this year her mail-in ballot was cast for Joe Biden.


No way would she have done that if she were still alive.

 

Speaking of still being alive…

 

I want to thank everyone who's sent me well wishes for a speedy recovery from the heart attack I had last week. While my little heart is on the mend, my brain is still trying to wrap itself around how extraordinarily lucky I was.

 

I keep thinking about many men my age, like former House Minority Leader Hugh McKean, who also had heart attacks but lost their life.

 

The word “grateful” doesn't come close to expressing how fortunate and blessed I feel to have such incredible people in my life, to make a living out of my passion of promoting liberty, and to live in a country where the quality of life is so splendid that strangers can reach into my heart and fix it.

 

By any historical measure the average American lives better than the kings of old.

 

Next week we celebrate our nation's independence and our Declaration of Independence, the namesake of our organization. 

 

Our Founding Fathers created something wholly unique in all human existence. Some believe they created democracy. They didn't.

 

They created a form of government based on the unheard-of idea that individuals are sovereign unto themselves. The state, or the monarch, or the thug in charge doesn't give us our autonomy. Instead, as naturally sovereign individuals we give limited power to the state.

 

This idea was a complete reversal of all held doctrine. Yes, our revolution was a military uprising, but really our revolution was an intellectual uprising.

 

Sadly, that intellectual revolution is still raging, even in this country. Thanks to your support for nearly four decades Independence Institute has been on the forefront of that battle in Colorado.

 

As a sovereign nation unto myself I have certain rights just as a nation would I have the right to own property, the right to speak freely, the right to worship the way I desire, the right of self-defense, and most importantly the right to have free associations with others who are sovereign.

 

And over the years that free association among free people they developed the technology and talent to save my life last week.

 

My column this week, found below, was written while I was in the Intensive Care Unit the day after my heart attack.

In Complete Colorado, columnist Cory Gaines calls out media “fact-checkers”.


Columnist Ari Armstrong recounts how Colorado voters repudiate party extremism.


Lastly, Joshua Sharf says what we are all thinking: the state of Colorado has no businesspolicing “misinformation”.

In remembrance of Colorado House Minority Leader Hugh McKean, revisit our last Devil’s Advocate on why Colorado's legislature made it illegal for hospitals to reveal the Hospital Provider T̶a̶x̶ Fee on their patients' bill. He may be gone but he is not forgotten.

PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke discuss Colorado's Clean Heat Plan, the push of swapping gas for electric, and who is going to end up paying.

My very first heart attack

By Jon Caldara

(You can listen to this column, read by the author, here.)


I am writing this from my hospital bed in the intensive care unit at Denver Health.


I’m recovering from my very first heart attack. You can only imagine my pride of reaching my goal of a heart attack before 60.


While driving to my job at Independence Institute my chest started feeling, well, really weird — like someone was sitting on it, and not someone I liked. My jaw felt sore. I rarely make good decisions, but just blocks away from my office I turned right instead of left and somehow got myself to the emergency room.


It may well have saved my life. I imagine I’m like most guys my age — I will do just about anything to avoid going to the doctor. It has as much appeal as watching a stranger shop for purses.


Medical care comes down to two factors. One, “wait.” Waiting to get an appointment. Waiting in the waiting room. Waiting in the exam room for the doctor to finally come and talk to a computer screen instead of you.


And the second factor is “more.” No matter what, they send you off to another doctor, or specialist, or for more testing, all of which requires exponentially more waiting. The cycle never stops. It cascades.


All of which leads to the reasonable decision to avoid health care altogether until one has a heart attack.


Just for those keeping record at home, my cholesterol has always been in the normal range as I do get it checked at least yearly. I am a little overweight but not completely inactive. Nothing stood out as a warning for a heart attack other than being male and getting older.


I shouldn’t have had a heart attack, but here I am.


Health care has changed since I was younger. Most notably everyone in the industry is now tattooed. At the ER, the tattooed nurse took my blood pressure and said “Oh, I don’t like that.” Just what you want to hear.


So, they quickly got me into an examination room where the tattooed male nurse, obviously taking time off of his day job as a Hells Angel, gave me an EKG. Then he said, “Oh, I don’t like that.”


It wasn’t much longer that I found myself in the “cath lab.” They hoisted me on a table as what seemed like 15 tattooed people ran around like a well-oiled race car pit crew. One pit crew member immediately took to shaving off my pubic hair. I told him I was not interested in a Brazilian and if what was left looked like Hitler’s mustache I would come after him.


Then I asked what should have been the first question. “My heart isn’t down there, my brains are, so why are you shaving me?” Turns out they were going to catheterize me to run a cable up to my heart. If the artery in my arm wasn’t big enough, they were gonna go through my crotch. Lovely.


By the time I woke up, I was told I had a blockage in what’s called (by everyone but the doctors) the “widowmaker” artery to my heart. They cleared it and put in a stint. I got in early enough the damage to the heart itself was minimal.


Since then, I’ve been staying in a room in the ICU where they come in every few hours to draw blood and explain the 300 different medications I’ll be taking for the rest of my life. The hospital saved money by painting their hospital rooms with surplus green paint from former Soviet prisons.


The most important thing I have learned since being here is there is a TV station that does nothing but show re-runs of “Seinfeld.” After two days of exhausted research, I’m proud to report Seinfeld still holds up 30 years later.


I am a lucky son-of-a-bitch. Lucky to get treatment in time. Lucky people care about me. Lucky to live in America. We take the miracles of our times for granted. The wealth our nation has created has made it possible to reach into a stranger’s heart, fix it and have him watching “Seinfeld” a few hours later.


My thanks to my tattooed heroes. And, may you never take your health or the wonders of the free market for granted.


Now go get a physical.