Woah crude jokes about his daughters. Classy.
1/19/2010 10:40:33 PM
1/19/2010 10:47:28 PM
One final thought, the only thing the Democrats still have going for them is that the Republican Party is still in disarray. If that ragtag bunch ever reemerge from the woods with a real agenda, it could be a repeat of 1994.Then again, maybe that's not such a bad thing. A divided government between a Democratic White House and a Republican Congress (pre-Lewinski) actually got a lot of good things done without either side going over the deep end.
1/19/2010 10:48:49 PM
don't act like the Lewinski scandal wasn't some good shit done, dude. We all got to learn what to say after sticking a cigar in a chick's pachoochoo, for cryin out loud. That was VERY edumacational
1/19/2010 10:51:40 PM
This is another example of the need for a real third party. The two party system now in place distills every issue down to unrealistic polar extremes. The checks and balances we cling to were not created with this type of legislative clusterfuck in mind.
1/19/2010 10:52:17 PM
LOL
1/19/2010 10:52:41 PM
1/19/2010 10:55:15 PM
1/19/2010 11:05:20 PM
1/19/2010 11:10:50 PM
^My house just burned down...I'd like to buy a homeowner's policy now.My wife just died, I'd like to buy a life insurance policy on her please.My car just got in a wreck, I'd like to buy some insurance from that pasty progressive chick.I just found out I got cancer, I'd like some health insurance now.How much do you think it will cost?[Edited on January 19, 2010 at 11:16 PM. Reason : .]
1/19/2010 11:15:33 PM
^ that’s where mandatory coverage comes in to play
1/19/2010 11:16:32 PM
Well, on the bright side we can now dispense with the myth that the dems had a true supermajority. There wasn't one before thanks to Lieberman, and now there is no way to fool oneself into thinking one exists.Now, hopefully the dems in the senate will quit wasting time fighting with the conservadems and start actually fighting with the repblicans. Laying bare all of the obstructionism no matter what the issue is. But then, that's probably overl optimistic and i don't have any real confidence in Reid to manage this properly.
1/19/2010 11:17:03 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/01/19/obama-calls-brown-congratulate-senate-election-victory/ Obama Calls Brown to Congratulate Him on Senate Election Victory
1/19/2010 11:17:37 PM
If you think that is the only reason pre-existing conditions should be covered, then you don't understand the issue. You lose your job, you lose your healthcare, that you have PAID for years, and you try and get insurance to cover your cancer. You can't. Thats fucking bullshit. I dont even have health issues (yet) and see how fucked up that is. That happens all the time. I know people that have suffered, of no fault of their own.[Edited on January 19, 2010 at 11:19 PM. Reason : /]
1/19/2010 11:18:45 PM
^ i would wager it’s the most common cause of not having existing coverage when someone gets sick.How does having existing coverage help someone out anyway? You spend, let’s say, $5000/year on health insurance.If you get cancer, that’s a good $200-300k down the drain for the insurance company. You would have had to have insurance for 50 years to break even. Health insurance is DESIGNED to take a loss when people get sick, the whole denial is pre-existing coverage is to block scammers (supposedly), but it serves to block people who just had something unexpected happen. If mandatory coverage gets passed, there’s no way that limiting insurance companies to deny coverage for preexisting conditions can break them. It can’t mathematically happen.[Edited on January 19, 2010 at 11:23 PM. Reason : ]
1/19/2010 11:20:06 PM
I am in tears right now and dancing in the streets because I can't believe this happened... I never thought I would see this in my lifetime: a white man, much less a republican would win a senate seat in Mass.oh wait.. Wrong electionYes We CanYes We Can[Edited on January 19, 2010 at 11:22 PM. Reason : ]
1/19/2010 11:22:11 PM
I guess its because I am in middle class america, but I have witnessed several people get screwed for conditions like I mention above.I dont believe someone should be able to be careless, go without coverage, then expect to get healthcare when things get expensive. But there are a lot of honest people that get screwed by pre-existing condition clauses.
1/19/2010 11:24:53 PM
^^oh, you're mocking black people.good one.[Edited on January 19, 2010 at 11:26 PM. Reason : /]
1/19/2010 11:26:14 PM
^^yea i agree about pre-existing conditions... theres no question that health care needs to be reformed, but ran by gov't, no thanks[Edited on January 19, 2010 at 11:27 PM. Reason : ^ I try.. need humor on this way too serious board]
1/19/2010 11:26:43 PM
i'm loling at moron
1/19/2010 11:27:19 PM
that was insightful
1/19/2010 11:27:52 PM
^I could get into a long drawn out explanation as to why, a plan for improvement, etc.. but i gotta go to bed so that I can get up and work. That way I can pay for my health care like a good us citizen
1/19/2010 11:30:08 PM
lol @ jwb9984. must be the best night of ur life. lol
1/19/2010 11:32:29 PM
1/19/2010 11:40:27 PM
I don't recall any serious suggestion that involved a "single-payer system," EarthDogg.But anyway...What worries me is that the Republicans are playing chess while the Democrats play checkers, but the Republicans are only playing a move ahead. We're clearly not looking past the short- to medium-term.The reality is, we've been squandering opportunities to appeal to African American voters for years. I don't like the religious right, but if we're gonna have it, why the fuck aren't we using it to get religious black people to vote with their beliefs (which often happen to line up with the religious right?)We've done jack-all shit to appeal to Hispanics. Apparently our brilliant plan is to try to keep some of them out of the country so they can't vote against us. Never mind the fact that plenty get in anyway, and the ones that are already here have more babies than rich white people. It's like we don't even give a shit that it's a matter of (fairly little) time before they're the bloc to court.Then there's the matter of semi-intelligent white people who see Republican tactics and think, "Wow, that's a dick move, no way I'm voting for you." Think the Bush strategy against McCain in 2000, or Dole's atheist move against Hagan in 2008, or any of another really terrible ideas we've had.I guess there's something to be said for standing on principle. But I don't see it, especially not when the end result of digging your heels in over everything is that before long we won't have enough heels to dig in over anything.Yeah, we won this election. Good for us. But sooner or later we'll have to pay the piper, and the only way we'll pull it off as a party is by radically changing our platform at the last minute, or by getting broken up into other groups that won't win for several cycles. Good on us.
1/20/2010 12:33:10 AM
I personally would love to see the health insurance industry wiped out. I am one who feels health care is a right and nobody should be able to stand between you and your doctor as the insurance industry does now. You shouldn't have to die because of your financial situation. With all of that said I feel the senate bill is a joke and a gift to the insurance industry and I wouldn't mind seeing it die. I do want to ask Republicans what their idea of real reform is and if they are willing to give up their medicare since that is a government program?
1/20/2010 12:34:58 AM
That makes me think of the letter that the President got from a woman saying:
1/20/2010 12:38:45 AM
I'm a Republican, but I'm not one who can't read the writing on the wall when it's right in front of my face.The countries in the world that have the best healthcare have national programs of some sort or another. We're the only industrialized nation that doesn't have such a program, and our health sucks in comparison. Meanwhile there's a large well of support for public healthcare in this country.It's gonna happen. We'll probably be better off with it. If I could dictate the Republican party, I'd say embrace it as much as possible (within reason), so that if it works we can claim credit for supporting it in spite of our usual stance, and if it doesn't work we can say that yeah, we went along with it, but it was the Democrats' idea.
1/20/2010 12:42:06 AM
I did want to add that the real people in power are Goldman Sachs and other special interests. That is the unfortunate truth regardless of which party is in power.
1/20/2010 12:44:55 AM
1/20/2010 1:54:11 AM
He's anti-health-care, and that seems to be all that matters anymore.
1/20/2010 2:08:47 AM
Also this:
1/20/2010 2:11:14 AM
1/20/2010 8:38:48 AM
1/20/2010 8:44:57 AM
1/20/2010 8:46:10 AM
1/20/2010 9:15:12 AM
1/20/2010 9:21:55 AM
El Oh Elmoveon
1/20/2010 9:27:56 AM
1/20/2010 9:29:22 AM
Insurance companies are completely fine with removing allowing all pre-existing conditions as long as health-insurance becomes compulsory.[Edited on January 20, 2010 at 9:48 AM. Reason : grummers]
1/20/2010 9:48:00 AM
So here comes the voter fraud (you knew it was coming):the Coakley campaign held an afternoon news conference Tuesday to complain that voters in three places received ballots already marked for Brown.Kevin Conroy, the Coakley campaign manager, said the "disturbing incidents" raised questions about the integrity of the election."Reports that the Coakley campaign is making reckless accusations regarding the integrity of today's election is a reminder that they are a desperate campaign," Daniel B. Winslow, the counsel for the Brown campaign, said in the statement.
1/20/2010 10:24:19 AM
1/20/2010 10:32:08 AM
The Voter Fraud claims started before the election was over. Google Isabel Melendez
1/20/2010 10:42:11 AM
Hahahaha I'm sure the republicans stole an election in Massachusetts of all places!Get real people... More likely these were either planted or completely manufactured by dem operatives who wanted an excuse to claim fraudp.s. U can't fake 100,000+ votes. Brown won fair and square.
1/20/2010 11:44:00 AM
Pretty sure no one here has said anything to the contrary.
1/20/2010 12:04:08 PM
Three Reasons Why The Dems Are in Big, Big Trouble. And One Reason Why They're Not.
1/20/2010 1:27:49 PM
1/20/2010 1:31:39 PM
I think people may confuse "supported by the majority, some of the time" with "popular." If 49% is staunchly against it, I don't think reform is popular, nor should those 49% be dragged along simply because the 51% have determined that they know what is best for everyone.
1/20/2010 1:33:17 PM
1. A totally misleading assertion. According to the studies, the current health-care reform bill is unpopular, not health-care reform in general. Destroyer you are really eroding your credibility by allowing this.2. Obvious to everyone, refuted by no one.3. See 2. Also note that the vast majority of Americans have no idea what's best for the country in terms of foreign policy.
1/20/2010 1:46:37 PM
I think we can all agree that doing nothing about the Healthcare crisis is unacceptable. Since doing nothing is the GOP's favorite tactic, what will be their solution to this insurmountable problem? Who will go toe-to-toe on this policy issue and convince the American people? I have not seen a single compelling candidate to lead this effort against the dems, yet.
1/20/2010 1:49:40 PM