I bet Perry will fold like a $.99 suitcase when his highway funds are revoked.I'd be sympathetic if the states had viable alternative plans. It's not like there are competing state and federal interests. This is just one state governor not liking what the federal gov't is doing, and wanting to stop it. AKA nullification. AKA pwned by Jackson a bazillion years ago.[Edited on July 24, 2009 at 1:47 PM. Reason : ]
7/24/2009 1:37:56 PM
Breaking news! Faux secessionist Rick Perry grandstands on states' rights. More at 11.
7/24/2009 2:08:01 PM
7/24/2009 3:52:41 PM
health care is not a right, unless someone wants to show me where[Edited on July 24, 2009 at 3:56 PM. Reason : or is it only a right to people who do not pay taxes or do not have health insurance]
7/24/2009 3:54:20 PM
rights are made up by humans.
7/24/2009 4:04:26 PM
rights are made by those who are in power
7/24/2009 4:10:39 PM
so then whats the problem?
7/24/2009 4:30:28 PM
here's a great interview from Bill Moyers a couple weeks ago, with Wendell Potter. He worked in insurance for 20 years and for Cigna for 15, leaving his job last year as the "head of corporate communications." His resume includes items such as:"With the chief medical officer and his staff, Potter developed rapid response mechanisms for handling media inquiries pertaining to complaints. ... This was highly successful in keeping most such inquiries from becoming news stories, at a time when managed care horror stories abounded."http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/07102009/watch2.htmlhttp://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/07102009/transcript2.htmlHe quit after realizing how fucked up the insurance industry is and how insulated he and his colleagues were from what actually happens on the ground in healthcare, and now is speaking out against them. He makes a lot of the same points about how bad insurance is as do a lot of reform-proponents, but his points should carry some extra weight considering his vast amounts of insider experience.
7/25/2009 3:35:15 PM
count down until some "scandal" surrounds him about how he is socialist or whatever they can find/make up on him.
7/25/2009 5:04:31 PM
7/25/2009 5:05:39 PM
Anyone else think Perry is gearing up for a presidential run? /irony
7/25/2009 10:15:57 PM
The article is too long to post the whole thing, but here is the gist of it:
7/28/2009 7:18:42 AM
7/28/2009 10:47:23 AM
What he's clearly saying, if anyone bothered to use their brains and not just copy and paste, is that there's no time to sit around reading the bill NOW, since The House legislation was unveiled in early June, http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/house-dems-show-caucus-first-draft-of-health-reform-bill-2009-06-09.html was circulated on June 9, and released in full on June 19.http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/house-dems-unveil-healthcare-reform-bill-2009-06-19.htmlBy now, anyone who wanted to would have read the bill. I'm sure Conyers / his staffers have done so.
7/28/2009 11:57:17 AM
don't think anyone can argue with this..... http://trueslant.com/matttaibbi/2009/07/28/the-health-care-bill-dies/
7/28/2009 12:13:48 PM
I don't want to agree with that. Maybe I do, but I don't want to.
7/28/2009 12:19:36 PM
7/28/2009 12:28:43 PM
7/28/2009 12:39:24 PM
i think it's stupid to assume that our health care system could not get worse. obviously it could.but this. . .
7/28/2009 3:09:19 PM
I have read little to none of this thread, but I would like to make this addition.A friend of my father emailed Rep. Etheridge concerning the Healthcare Reform Bill. I do not have a copy of the original email, but here is the response and his response to the response. Enjoy.
7/28/2009 3:42:57 PM
Part II
7/28/2009 3:43:22 PM
7/28/2009 3:48:01 PM
7/28/2009 5:34:14 PM
7/28/2009 9:33:56 PM
It's painful to watch how little testicular fortitude the congressional dems possess.
7/29/2009 12:04:24 PM
where can I find the bill as it stands?some of these claims are disturbing, but I'm not going to trust references to it without verifying it for myself. especially given the number of hits I get from google on the exact text. It's more like a chain email than anything else.
7/29/2009 1:52:41 PM
Some late breaking good news, the Dems in the House have come to an agreement on a bill that keeps the public option, but also throws in the ability for states to setup their own health care co-ops. Basically, this means the Blue Dogs are on board with the bill now and there should be enough votes to get it through the House, although the actual vote won't take place until after the recess.http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/07/house-retains-public-option-in-compromise.php?ref=fpa
7/29/2009 2:16:20 PM
mdozer73 your friend's dad made some pretty good points, minus that typo that everyone on here is going to jump all over. at least he took the time to stay informed and participate in government.
7/29/2009 2:58:42 PM
^ uhhh... none of those points were from his friend's dad, he simply copy and pasted a form letter.The seemingly original parts don't make sense either. The bill isn't written to be confusing, it's written to be explicit. The health care plan doesn't bypass our "capitalistic system," and under what conditions our capitalistic system will prevail is not clear either, because there are clearly numerous situations throughout our history where capitalism would have failed without government help. Overall it's a pretty generic complaint that might as well read "we hate the democrats" that is just going to be glossed over by Ethridges's staffers.^^^ http://edlabor.house.gov/documents/111/pdf/publications/AAHCA-BillText-071409.pdf Here's a supposed link to the billI scanned a few of the pages, and not a single one describes a process different than the current health insurance system. The point claiming it mandates an ID card for everyone is blatantly wrong, as is the point claiming that a gov. panel will determine what care you receive.Health care isn't "rationed" either, as they are asserting. The government isn't setting wages either, as the document asserts, there is just going to be standardized pricing structures, which already exist with existing insurance plans, as well as medicare/medicaid.I'm sure there are some shady things in the bill, but we'll never find them if idiots on the right regurgitate some of the disingenuous "analysis" like the post list.[Edited on July 29, 2009 at 3:26 PM. Reason : ]
7/29/2009 3:18:00 PM
this is pretty goodhttp://www.indecisionforever.com/2009/07/28/jon-stewarts-extended-bill-kristol-interview/
7/29/2009 3:31:33 PM
7/30/2009 7:03:26 AM
^They are not proposing a single payer system, so its not a monopsony. If you have a private plan you already like, you can stay there. You will just now have a public option along with today's private ones (are there private ones? you just get what your employer offers).
7/30/2009 8:45:48 AM
7/30/2009 9:28:17 AM
7/30/2009 9:35:05 AM
If I hear another politician lawyer complaining about our healthcare numbers to the rest of the world I just might break. The US has about 5% of the world's population. But we hold over 70% of the worlds lawyers and 94% of all lawsuits in the world are filed in the US.We have excellent medical care in this country, we also have very poor diets and an increasingly lazy society. Our medicaid population has free health insurance and free meds, fee food, etc... So why is obesity growing in this group? SHouldnt they be getting "healthier?
7/30/2009 9:44:03 AM
^ I've been noticing that right-wing pundits have been offering tort-reform as the cure-all for our healthcare woes. As if it's anything near a complete solution.Which of course it isn't, but hey.Maybe you all can also propose that doctors no longer give out lollipops to kids. I've sure that'd save us like 25% on healthcare costs, too.
7/30/2009 10:00:22 AM
7/30/2009 10:20:46 AM
Let's have the gov't fix one program first... just one.How about the Veteran's Administration? That is basically a gov't-run health care system which is not doing that great. Show us you can reform and make that system work efficiently and then we'll think about handing over the whole U.S. health care system to you politicians.
7/30/2009 10:43:52 AM
^ I kinda agree with this.those places are gross
7/30/2009 10:50:16 AM
7/30/2009 10:52:59 AM
Ive seen a republican plan boone, you gotta search for it bc its a lot easier to say the repubs are not offering an alternative. They dont want a mandate on businesses and they want individuals to buy thier own health ins. one includes a tax credit for doing just that.As far as tort reform, it will no doubt lower costs. I take it you were being sarcastic in your response, but do you doubt it would? Thats very naive if so.
7/30/2009 11:10:42 AM
I hope this law enforcement public option doesn't make it difficult for the private crime sector.
7/30/2009 11:38:38 AM
7/30/2009 12:43:52 PM
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2009/07/how_to_think_about_the_cbo.html
7/30/2009 1:36:15 PM
All the more reason to avoid policies that erode economic and personal freedom given the benefits are highly dubious and costs are unknown and likely irreversible.[Edited on July 30, 2009 at 2:27 PM. Reason : ,]
7/30/2009 2:26:45 PM
http://www.politico.com/blogs/glennthrush/0709/Weiner_introduces_bill_to_kill_Medicare.html
7/30/2009 9:17:51 PM
7/30/2009 10:10:02 PM
7/30/2009 10:25:02 PM
^Well said! That will be yet another underfunded program.
7/30/2009 11:19:36 PM
7/31/2009 9:37:16 AM