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Jeff says...

It's no wonder the Obama administration doesn't like to talk about jobs. It's obvious from the chart below that few in the administration have ever created a job in the private sector - or even worked outside of government. It also explains why they downplay the impact of radical legislation like health care reform or cap-and-tax on American businesses.

A friend sends along the following chart from a J.P. Morgan research report. It examines the prior private sector experience of the cabinet officials since 1900 that one might expect a president to turn to in seeking advice about helping the economy. It includes secretaries of State, Commerce, Treasury, Agriculture, Interior, Labor, Transportation, Energy, and Housing & Urban Development, and excludes Postmaster General, Navy, War, Health, Education & Welfare, Veterans Affairs, and Homeland Security—432 cabinet members in all.

obamacabinet

When one considers that public sector employment has ranged since the 1950s at between 15 percent and 19 percent of the population, the makeup of the current cabinet—over 90 percent of its prior experience was in the public sector—is remarkable.

Filed under: HCR

Jeff says...

From John Stossel's piece at Real Clear Politics...

"I happily suspend disbelief when a magician says he'll saw a woman in half. That’s entertainment. But when Harry Reid says he'll give 30 million additional people health coverage while cutting the deficit, improving health care and reducing its cost, it's not entertaining. It's incredible."

Read it all - http://bit.ly/7qfPu5

Filed under: HCR

amywebb says...

watch all three parts of this interview via thedailyshow.com

 

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Filed under: hcr

amywebb says...

New Orleans, La. — - It happened as I watched a 50-something woman walk out, after spending several hours being attended to by volunteer doctors. "She's decided against treatment. A reasonable decision under the circumstances," the doctor tells us as she heads for the next patient. The president of the board of the National Association of Free Health Clinics tells me why: "It's stage four breast cancer, her body is filled with tumors." I don't know when that woman last saw a doctor. But I do know that if she had health insurance, the odds she would have seen a doctor long ago are much higher, and her chances for an earlier diagnosis and treatment would have been far greater.

Just how sick this country is.

If you think we don't need universal health CARE now, get your head out of the sand.

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Filed under: hcr

yogeek says...

(download)

I got a little creative with my daily video in November. I had a plan as to what I wanted to shoot today. We were going to go to Babies R Us to stock up on some essentials for Hunter. I thought it would be great to share some of the stuff that we like.

But, the Saturday was taken over by Healthcare Reform. 

We ended up staying at grandma's house and watching CSPAN basically the whole afternoon. 

Well, I must admit that I didn't watch. I'm a bit too overwhelmed by all of it, and my mind can't really capture what's going on.

So, I got creative and expressed it via my daily vid for NaVloPoMo09 or National Vlog Posting Month

Peace

Filed under: #hcr

juniorsrealm says...

It's here. November 4th, 2009-- the anniversary of the day that thousands of young people turned out to the polls and made change happen. This year, YOU can be a part of change again by pushing for quality, affordable health care for all Americans. Join us for Y.I. Still Want Change Day. I hope that you will take a small part to help such a large cause. It only takes a moment to speak out and contribute.

Here's 3 things you can do in 5 minutes to make an impact now:

1. Change Your Facebook Status to:
One year ago today we made history.  Let's make history again by delivering quality, affordable health care to all Americans.  If you agree, click on the link, sign the petition, and repost this message. http://bit.ly/1zMnGs 

2. Sign the Y.I. Want Change Photo Petition on Facebook:
Click here to sign the Y.I. Want Change photo petition that's going to be sent to your senators: http://bit.ly/3Mex3X 

3. Tweet this message:
I just told Congress the time for #hcr is now. It's Nov 4, the anniversary of change. Join me http://bit.ly/1zMnGs #yiwc

Filed under: HCR

JCred says...

Like many of you, recent events have forced the "staff" at the JCred Times to ask some very difficult questions, often pushing us to the brink of losing our J-School minds.  
Has all of the anti-socialist propaganda been misguided? Maybe capitalism is truly evil. Like Blue Cross, hack-happy surgeons and the local funeral home, now Walmart wants in on lucrative business of death proliferation.

Sam Walton once showed the world that two government chickens in every pot is totally gay (not that there's anything wrong with that) in contrast to 24 rolls of private-sector TP in every bathroom. Buying the Charmin at Walmart often afforded me the ability to buy four chickens, an extra pot and some veggies. All of these luxuries and zero dictators, up to their knees in shit over a national TP crisis.

                                                    

With America getting ready to get it's Dracula on and the sequel to Twilight hitting theaters in November, Walmart's decision to venture into e-tail carcass storage solutions may seem totally awesome and raise little suspicion. But as an ethical and unopinionated journalist I know that - when it comes to Walmart -there's always an ulterior motive.

Consider the following:
  • Walmart endorses Obama/Baucus/Reid/Pelosi/ care
  • I happen upon my local Walmart after contracting the swine flu, only to discover their "equate" branded knock-offs of Tylenol and Depends adult diapers are out of stock.
  • Digging deeper, I find that they have rolled-back the rollback savings on the coveted 24 pack of Charmin 2-ply. It's now at $1.79 (up from $1.74 in 1993).
  • Pepsi is suspiciously in plentiful supply. Nobody likes Pepsi.
  • Coke is sold out and Sam's left me with no other Choice. I'll die of dehydration before I'll drink anything but Coca-Cola.
  • Walmart.com becomes a virtual funeral home

Clearly, the case has been made that Walmart's actions continue to be unacceptable in a polite society. But, I'm left with an even bigger question: If capitalsim and talk of free-market economics is really just code for greedy "Republicans want you to die", why are capitalists selling the caskets for so fucking cheap and offering 0% financing?

 

               

 

 

Feel free to use the comments section (that all 3 of you have yet to use) to insert your own dumbass teachable moments about Walmart/capitalism/Dick Cheney profting from the deaths of "hundreds of billions" brought on by global warming/greed/right-wing extremism, with the blood dripping from the hands of Walmart/capitalists/Dick Cheney, themselves.

Filed under: HCR

terrykinder says...

Howard Dean, Newt Gingrich to Debate hcr at SEMO in Cape Girardeau, MO. tcot tlot @myen http://ow.ly/ww8s

Filed under: hcr

amywebb says...

Thanks for the tipoff @mollyfulton.

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Filed under: hcr

amywebb says...

Let me offer a modest proposal: If Congress fails to pass comprehensive health reform this year, its members should surrender health insurance in proportion with the American population that is uninsured.

It may be that the lulling effect of having very fine health insurance leaves members of Congress insensitive to the dysfunction of our existing insurance system. So what better way to attune our leaders to the needs of their constituents than to put them in the same position?

About 15 percent of Americans have no health insurance, according to the Census Bureau. Another 8 percent are underinsured, according to the Commonwealth Fund, a health policy research group. So I propose that if health reform fails this year, 15 percent of members of Congress, along with their families, randomly lose all health insurance and another 8 percent receive inadequate coverage.

Congressional critics of President Obama’s efforts to achieve health reform worry that universal coverage will be expensive, while their priority is to curb social spending. So here’s their chance to save government dollars in keeping with their own priorities.

Those same critics sometimes argue that universal coverage needn’t be a top priority because anybody can get coverage at the emergency room. Let them try that with their kids.

Some members also worry that a public option (an effective way to bring competition to the insurance market) would compete unfairly with private companies and amount to a step toward socialism. If they object so passionately to “socialized health,” why don’t they block their 911 service to socialized police and fire services, disconnect themselves from socialized sewers and avoid socialized interstate highways?

I wouldn’t wish the trauma of losing health insurance on anyone, but our politicians’ failure to assure health care for all citizens is such a longstanding and grievous breach of their responsibility that they deserve it. In January 1917, Progressive Magazine wrote: “At present the United States has the unenviable distinction of being the only great industrial nation without universal health insurance." More than 90 years later, we still have that distinction.

Theodore Roosevelt campaigned for national health insurance in 1912. Richard Nixon tried for universal coverage in 1974. Yet, even now, nearly half of Congress is vigorously opposed to such a plan.

Health care has often been debated as a technical or economic issue. That has been a mistake, I believe. At root, universal health care is not an economic or technical question but a moral one.

We accept that life is unfair, that some people will live in cramped apartments and others in sprawling mansions. But our existing insurance system is not simply inequitable but also lethal: a very recent, peer-reviewed article in the American Journal of Public Health finds that nearly 45,000 uninsured people die annually as a consequence of not having insurance. That’s one needless death every 12 minutes.

When nearly 3,000 people were killed on 9/11, we began wars and were willing to devote more than $1 trillion in additional expenses. Yet about the same number of Americans die from our failed insurance system every three weeks.

The obstacle isn’t so much money as priorities. America made it a priority to provide tax breaks, largely to the wealthy, in the Bush years, at a 10-year cost including interest of $2.4 trillion. Allocating less than half that much to assure equal access to health care isn’t deemed an equal priority.

The plan emerging in the Senate is no panacea. America needs to promote exercise and discourage sugary drinks to hold down the rise in obesity, diabetes and medical bills. We need more competition among insurance companies. And conservatives are right to call for tort reform to reduce the costs of malpractice insurance and defensive medicine.

But those steps are not a substitute for guaranteed health coverage for all Americans. And if health reform fails this year, then hopes for universal coverage will recede again. There was a lag of 19 years after the Nixon plan before another serious try, and a 16-year lag after the Clinton effort of 1993. Another 16-year delay would be accompanied by more than 700,000 unnecessary deaths. That’s more Americans than died in World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam and Iraq combined.

The collapse of health reform would be a political and policy failure, but it would also be a profound moral failure. Periodically, there are political questions that are fundamentally moral, including slavery in the 19th century and civil rights battles in the 1950s and ’60s. In the same way, allowing tens of thousands of Americans to die each year because they are uninsured is not simply unwise and unfortunate. It is also wrong — a moral blot on a great nation.

I invite you to visit my blog, On the Ground. Please also join me on Facebook, watch my YouTube videos and follow me on Twitter.

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Filed under: hcr