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 Thursday, 12:40 PM


It's Done: Senate Approves Health Care Overhaul, 60-39
David Lightman and William Douglas, McClatchy Newspapers: "The Senate Thursday voted 60 to 39 to overhaul the nation's health care system - President Barack Obama's top 2009 domestic priority - moving the nation closer to near-universal health care coverage early in the next decade. It was a vote, said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, 'to live a healthy life.'"
Read the Article

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 Thursday, 12:01 PM

Okay, this is why it's so hard to say bad words on Obama.. he sends me email (okay, his staff sends pre-packaged email - but still I never even got a "%#&!*% you!" from Bu$h-Leaguers!)

Yvonne --

Although it's Christmas Eve, I wanted to share some exciting news: The Senate just passed a historic health reform bill.

In all the back and forth, it's easy to lose sight of what this incredible breakthrough really means. But consider this: This Christmas, there are millions of Americans without health insurance who risk losing everything if they get sick.

There are mothers and fathers who wonder how they'll provide for their children because an illness has wiped out their savings. There are small business owners who worry that they'll have to lay off a long-time employee because the cost of insurance is rapidly rising.

If we finish the job, all this can change. We will have beaten back the special interests who have for so long perpetuated the status quo. We will have enacted the most important piece of social policy since the Social Security Act in the 1930s, and the most important health reform since Medicare in the 1960s.

In Decembers to come, millions more will have access to affordable coverage. Parents will have the security and stability of knowing their insurance can't be revoked at a moment's notice. And the skyrocketing costs plaguing our small businesses will be brought under control.

When you make calls, write letters, organize, this is the change you're making -- a better life for your family and for men and women in every state.

There is still more to do before I can sign reform into law -- a last round of negotiations and final votes in the Senate and the House -- and I'm counting on your help every step of the way. But for now, I hope that as you celebrate this holiday season, you remember that the work you are doing is making our union more perfect, one step at a time. For that, I am grateful to you.

Merry Christmas and happy holidays,

President Barack Obama

P.S. -- Organizing for America supporters are signing a note of appreciation to all the senators who have worked so hard to make this possible. I hope you'll join them:

http://my.barackobama.com/SenateLetter

 

 [ send green star]
 
 Thursday, 11:52 AM

http://www.moveon.org/healthcaroling.html?id=18412-4568688-QYPwI0x&t=1  [ send green star]
 
 Wednesday, 3:36 PM

Five Critical Flaws in the Senate Health Care Bill

The Senate bill would:

#1—Deny Americans the choice of a public option. In contrast, the House bill contains a national public option, the key to real competition, greater choice, and lower costs.1

#2—Leave insurance unaffordable for some lower income and working people. Both bills require virtually all Americans to buy insurance. But even with the subsidies provided, some families could have to pay up to 20% of their income on health care expenses.2

#3—Impose dangerous restrictions on women's reproductive health care. Unfortunately, both bills do this and the House provision is worse. Both versions would be a dangerous step and neither should be in the final bill.3

#4—Tax American workers' health coverage to pay for reform. The Senate would pay for part of reform by taxing the hard-won benefits packages of some working Americans. The House, on the other hand, pays for reform with a small surcharge on only the wealthiest Americans—a far better approach.4 

#5—Allow insurance companies to remain exempt from anti-trust laws. Under current law, insurance companies are actually exempt from laws designed to prevent monopolies and price-gouging. The House bill would fix this, but the Senate bill leaves it in place.5

Of course, these aren't the only problems with the bill. Most glaringly, both the Senate and House bill would leave millions uninsured,6 a far cry from the vision of universal coverage so many of us have fought for. That remains a long-term goal.

But these five things need to be fixed immediately—and we need to spread the word to make sure House and Senate leadership and the White House get the message we're counting on them to craft a final bill with these key fixes.

Can you spread the word? Forward this email, and click here to post on Facebook, or here to post on Twitter.

Thanks for all you do.

–Kat, Carrie, Michael, Joan, and the rest of the team

 [ send green star]
 
 Wednesday, 3:34 PM

This is it.

One month ago, the House of Representatives passed an historic health care bill - one that would make great strides towards the guarantee of quality, affordable health care for everyone in America. It would tightly regulate insurance companies and give us the choice of a public health insurance option.

The Senate has taken the first step towards passing its health care bill. While the Senate bill includes significant reforms, it looks small in comparison with the House. Progressives are very, very angry and disappointed with the Senate bill.

The Senate bill cannot be the final bill sent to President Obama's desk for his signature. We have one last chance to fix it.

The Senate bill will shortly head into "conference" with the House bill, where Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Majority Leader Harry Reid and President Obama will come up with a final bill by merging the two. Conference is an opportunity to fix what's wrong with the Senate bill and stand up for what's right in the House bill. It is our last chance - we must stand up for what we believe in and demand that our leaders finish health reform right.

Click here to send a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Majority Leader Reid and President Obama, demanding they finish reform right. I've sent it, can you join me?

http://healthcareforamericanow.org/site/finish

What should we be asking for in conference? Two things:


Make good health care affordable:

Low and middle income families must be able to afford health insurance if they do not get it through work, and employers must be asked to provide good health coverage for their employees so health care is affordable at work. Health reform should not be paid for by taxing our health care benefits.


Hold insurance companies accountable:

If the insurance companies win, we lose. Insurance companies must be held accountable with strong regulations and consumer protections, and we must be given the choice of a national public health insurance option available on day one.

Raise your voice right now: Click here to sign and send this letter to Speaker Pelosi, Majority Leader Reid and President Obama:

http://healthcareforamericanow.org/site/finish

We're nearing the end of this fight. Please stand up with me and finish reform right.

Happy holidays!

 [ send green star]
 
 December 18, 2009 1:54 PM

Stop a bad bill

Hi,

The latest Senate health care bill has no public option. No expansion of Medicare. And it does too little to guarantee that uninsured Americans will actually be able afford the coverage they'll be required to purchase.

But it's not too late to fix the bill. And as Joe Lieberman has shown, just one senator willing to stand in the way can force legislation to be changed dramatically.

Senator Bernie Sanders has already made clear that he's opposed to the legislation in its current form. I just signed a petition urging him and other progressives to block it until it's fixed. Will you join me?

http://pol.moveon.org/block/?r_by=18359-4568688-ZRXx2Gx&rc=confemail

Thanks! 

 [ send green star]
 
 December 04, 2009 12:13 PM

Dear Yvonne:

The idea of a Medicare for All type, single-payer healthcare system will be heard on the Senate floor. This week, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont filed Senate Amendment No. 2837, and there are two additional original co-sponsors of this amendment, Senator Roland Burris of Illinois and Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio.

The idea that healthcare is a basic human right that could and should be delivered to each and every person in this nation is not a new one. Our President knows that; our Congress knows that. But this struggle to reform the broken, profit-driven system has carried us a very long way from the spot that would allow us to finally extend that basic human right to all.

We've drifted off to talking about excise taxes and insurance exchanges and bending the cost curves. Amendment 2837 brings us back to the basics.

What's in a number? 45,000 people die every year in this nation without access to healthcare.

Medicare has its flaws, but overall it has provided seniors and the disabled with the best access to care that this nation could offer since the 1960s. But the rest of us have not been so lucky with our access to healthcare. Among those not covered by Medicare or the VA, the numbers of unnecessary deaths have soared; personal bankruptcies due to medical crisis have soared.

What is a number? Poverty among seniors has dropped more than 60 percent since the adoption of Medicare.

The healthcare reform effort has largely ignored the single-payer solution. Public financing and private delivery of healthcare through a Medicare for All type system would be an elegant, cost effective and proven way to fix much of what is broken while retaining that sense of personal choice over healthcare decisions that Americans value so highly. Yet, the discussion has been muted by the powerful profit-based insurance and health industry interests that stand to gain so very much by expanding and entrenching their hold over the U.S. healthcare system through this reform process.

What's in a number? Millions of Americans file for personal bankruptcy - one every 12 seconds - because medical crisis hit them too hard. And of those bankrupt folks, two-thirds had health insurance.

The time draws short to weigh in clearly with your Senators.

To call and find a script, go here. It's easy and toll free! Or, if you know your Senators, call the Capitol Switchboard at 866-220-0044. To email your Senators, go here.

What's in a number? Everything. Senate Amendment No. 2837. Everyone in, nobody out.

 

Thanks for all that you do,
Healthcare-NOW! National Staff Actions are being planned next week on Dec. 10th on Human Rights Day. Find out more here.

P.S.

Call your Senators. Tell them you want them to vote for Senators Sanders, Burris and Brown's amendment number 2837. Call today. Call now. Insist on a vote for moral and fiscal sanity.
And with a yes vote on this amendment, Senators send us the message that they heard us, that they will keep fighting with us until the day when this nation no longer leaves the weak, the sick and the poor behind in the delivery of its most basic human rights.

 [ send green star]
 
 November 23, 2009 4:32 PM

Thanks so much for signing our petition telling Harry Reid to either get lobbyist-owned democrats in line, or use reconciliation to pass the public option with a majority vote.

Forward the email below to your friends and family and ask them to do the same. 

Thanks!

--Jane Hamsher
Firedoglake.com

P.S. - If you're on Twitter, tweet this, too:

I just signed a petition telling Harry Reid to keep reconciliation on the table. Click here to sign: http://bit.ly/7tB8TA #hcr #publicoption

---

Hi,

A few corrupt Democrats are willing to stand in the way of a public option and only Harry Reid can stop them.

As the Senate Majority Leader, Reid can use reconciliation to pass a public option with a majority vote.

Let's make sure Reid knows majority rules.

I just signed this petition telling Harry Reid to use reconciliation and pass a public option with a majority vote.  Can you join me in signing?

<a href="http://action.firedoglake.com/reconciliation" target="_blank">http://action.firedoglake.com/reconciliation</a>

72% of Americans support a public option, to end insurance monopolies, increase competition and control healthcare costs.  51 Senators said they would vote for a bill with a public option.

Tell Harry Reid to give Americans what they want and use reconciliation if he has to.

Thank you.
 

 [ send green star]
 
 November 16, 2009 2:16 PM

Dear Yvonne,

We already knew that a majority of Americans support the inclusion of a public health insurance option in the final health care reform bill.

But now that the results of our online poll are in, something else is now clear: the American people who voted for change last November will settle for nothing less than a robust public option.

Over 80,000 people have responded to our poll, proving Americans know the difference between a strong public option and a weak one -- and a weak one just won't do.

Click here to review the results of our public option poll.

Median
Preference Ranking Summary

Our poll results show that Americans want the strongest possible public option that can pass the Congress:

  • Four out of five survey respondents voiced full support for a "50 state public option."

  • A majority of respondents voiced moderate to high support for a public option that includes a state "opt-out" provision.

  • Roughly three out of four survey respondents voiced little or no support for a public option bill that requires states to "opt-in" before they can participate, and

  • Only 12% of respondents voiced moderate to full support for a so-called "trigger," with 65% completely opposed to such a compromise.

Click here to review the results of our public option poll.

I am sharing these results with my colleagues in the Senate this week. If any member of the Democratic caucus thinks no one will notice the absence of a robust public option in the final health care reform bill, they have another thing coming.

I hope you'll take a moment to review the results of our poll as I continue pushing for the strongest possible public health insurance option to pass the Congress. Your feedback will no doubt help me make the case that Americans demand a public health insurance option that is made available to Americans in all 50 states starting on day one.

Thank you for your engagement on this critical issue.

Sincerely,

Dick Durbin
U.S. Senator

 [ send green star]
 
 November 16, 2009 2:13 PM

 Sign the petition, send a coathanger

Dear Friend,


Why did pro-choice Democrats vote to approve the Stupak amendment, the most serious assault on abortion rights in a generation?

According to FiveThirtyEight.com, 20 of the 64 Democrats who joined Republicans to pass the measure are nominally pro-choice. We need to tell these 20 Democrats to reconsider their vote and urge Congressional leadership to do everything they can to ensure the health care bill that comes out of committee does not take us back to an era of coat hangers and back alley abortions.

I just signed a petition to the 20 formerly pro-choice Democrats -- all of them men -- who voted to take away women's rights. For every person that signs the petition a coat hanger will be sent to remind these politicians what happens when women can't get access to reproductive health care including abortion.

Please have a look and take action.

http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/send_a_coathanger/?r_by=-1492483-3AJM.Ex&rc=confemail1
 

 [ send green star]
 
 November 12, 2009 10:49 AM

When the House of Representatives passed health care reform late Saturday night, there was a new, last-minute addition.

Conservative Rep. Bart Stupak's (D-MI) amendment would severely limit a woman's right to choose. In fact, his restrictions are far more severe than Republicans were ever able to pass during the Bush presidency.

Now 40 Democratic congresswomen have written an open letter demanding that these restrictions be taken out of the final bill.

Can you join these women leaders and sign on, too? Click here.

Then, please pass this to others.

Rep. Diana DeGette (D-CO), who helped write the letter, said:

"There's going to be a firestorm here. Women are going to realize that a Democratic-controlled House has passed legislation that would prohibit women paying for abortions with their own funds."

Every member of Congress needs to hear that outrage now. This health care battle is one of the big civil rights fights of our time. We cannot let conservatives make it a giant step backward for women.

This is one of the reasons Kucinich voted against the House bill!

 [ send green star]
 
 November 12, 2009 10:46 AM

Last month Majority Leader Harry Reid introduced a merged Senate health care bill -- a bill that includes a public option. And last weekend, the House of Representatives passed an historic health care reform bill that included a robust public option as well.

The question is no longer if we will have some sort of public option in the final health care reform bill, but instead what form it will take.

There are several interpretations of what a public option should look like, and I just shared my preferences with Senator Dick Durbin through his online public option poll at:

http://www.DickDurbin.com/PublicOptionPoll

Please click this link to voice your preferences for the public option included in the final health care reform bill:

http://www.DickDurbin.com/PublicOptionPoll

 [ send green star]
 
 November 09, 2009 2:08 PM

Dennis Kucinich on MSNBC, "The Ed Show"

Dear Friends,

Congressman Dennis Kucinich will be a guest on:

     MSNBC, The Ed Show
     Monday, November 9th, 2009, at 6:00pm EDT
     Subject: Health Care


The Re-Elect Congressman Kucinich Committee


Read more about Dennis Kucinich on Health Care:

The Media & Obama are trying to pretend only Blue Dogs & RepubliCONs voted against this Health Bill - but Kucinich is NOT a CONservative, he's the Last Real Liberal!! The House screwed us & the $enate is even worse..

 [ send green star]
 
 November 08, 2009 7:14 AM

THE 39 DEMOCRATS WHO VOTED AGAINST PELOSI'S HEALTH CARE BILL

Below are the 39 House Democrats who voted against Pelosi's health care reform bill on Nov. 7, 2009.

1. Rep. John Adler (NJ)

2. Rep. Jason Altmire (PA)

3. . Rep. Brian Baird (WA)

 [ send green star]
 
 November 06, 2009 2:23 PM

Mary Susan Littlepage | House Leaders Refuse to Reconsider Kucinich's Single-Payer Amendment
Mary Susan Littlepage, Truthout: "After Congressman Dennis Kucinich, (D-Ohio), lobbied throughout the past week to get his amendment calling for a single-payer health care system modeled after Medicare back on the table, the House rejected Kucinich's attempts to reinsert the amendment in the bill. That's after a committee stripped the amendment from the House health care bill without giving him any advanced explanation."
Read the Article
 

I already hate my "Representative" J. Shimkus (RepubliCON).. now I hate all of them, except Kucinich &  Conyers!

 [ send green star]
 
 November 06, 2009 2:16 PM

From Congressmen Dennis Kucinich and John Conyers

Dear Friends,

We thank you for your continued devotion to the cause of health care for All Americans. We have worked together for many years to write, promote and campaign for HR676, a single payer, not for profit health care system. Your work, in communities across America, has been instrumental in helping at least ten states create single payer movements, with many more states to come.

Tomorrow, the House of Representatives is scheduled to consider a single payer bill. As the two principal co-authors of the Conyers single payer bill, we want to offer a strong note of caution about tomorrow's vote.

The bill presented tomorrow will not be HR676. While we are happy to relinquish authorship of a single payer bill to any member who can do better, we do not want a weak bill brought forward in a hostile climate to unwittingly accomplish what would be interpreted as a defeat for single payer.

Here are the facts: There has been no debate in Congress over HR676. There has not been a single mark-up of the bill. Single payer was "taken off the table" for the entire year by the White House and by congressional leaders. There has been no reasonable period of time to gather support in the Congress for single payer. Many members accepted a "robust public option" as the alternative to single payer and now that has disappeared. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has scored the bill scheduled for a vote tomorrow in a manner which is at odds with many credible assumptions, meaning that it will appear to cost way too much even though we know that true single payer saves money since one of every three dollars in the health care system goes to administrative costs caused by the insurance companies. Is this really the climate in which we want a test vote?

While state single payer movements are already strong, the national single payer movement is still growing. Many progressives in Congress, ourselves included, feel that calling for a vote tomorrow for single payer would be tantamount to driving the movement over a cliff. The thrill of the vote would disappear quickly when the result would be characterized not as a new beginning for single payer but as an end. Such a result would be seen as proof that Congress need not pay attention to efforts to restore in Conference Committee the right of states to pursue single payer without fear of legal attacks by insurance companies.

We are always grateful for your support. We are now asking you to join us in suggesting to congressional leaders that this is not the right time to call the roll on a stand-alone single payer bill. That time will come. And when it does there will not be any doubt of the outcome. This system of health care injustice will not be able to endure forever. We are pledged to make sure of that.

Sincerely,
Congressmen John Conyers and Dennis Kucinich
 http://healthcare.kucinich.us/petition/

 [ send green star]
 
 November 02, 2009 2:32 PM

Leading Doctor: Vaccines-Autism Worth Study
May 12, 2008, CBS News
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/05/12/cbsnews_investigates/main4086809.shtml

Jordan King was a typical baby. His parents called him vocal and vivacious. Then just before age 2, after a large battery of vaccinations, he simply withdrew from the world. "The real scary thing was when I noticed he wasn't looking at us any more in the eyes," Mylinda King, Jordan's mother, said. William Mead was a Pottery Barn baby model and met all the typical milestones. Then, also at age 2, after a set of vaccinations, William became very ill and he, too, changed forever. In both children, batteries of tests revealed dangerous levels of the brain toxin mercury in their systems. Their only known exposure: the mercury preservative once widely used in childhood shots. Dr. Bernadine Healy is the former head of the National Institutes of Health, and the most well-known medical voice yet to break with her colleagues on the vaccine-autism question. In an exclusive interview with CBS News, Healy said the question is still open. "I think that the public health officials have been too quick to dismiss the hypothesis as irrational," Healy said. Healy goes on to say public health officials have intentionally avoided researching whether subsets of children are “susceptible” to vaccine side effects - afraid the answer will scare the public. CBS News has learned the government has paid more than 1,300 brain injury claims in vaccine court since 1988, but is not studying those cases or tracking how many of them resulted in autism.”

Note: For a powerfully revealing article by Robert Kennedy, Jr. showing a major cover-up of this issue, click here. For another suppressed article on a published University of Pittsburgh study with strong evidence of an autism-vaccine link, click here.

I'm including this because they are pushing H1N1 vaccines - even though FEW people actually had/have that flu! YMW

Swine Flu Cases Overestimated?
October 21, 2009, CBS News
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/10/21/cbsnews_investigates/main5404829.shtml

If you've been diagnosed "probable" or "presumed" 2009 H1N1 or "swine flu" in recent months, you may be surprised to know this: odds are you didn’t have H1N1 flu. In fact, you probably didn’t have flu at all. That's according to state-by-state test results obtained in a three-month-long CBS News investigation. Why the uncertainty about who has and who hasn't had H1N1 flu? In late July, the CDC abruptly advised states to stop testing for H1N1 flu, and stopped counting individual cases. CBS News learned that the decision to stop counting H1N1 flu cases was made so hastily that states weren't given the opportunity to provide input. When CDC did not provide us [CBS News] with the material, we filed a Freedom of Information request with the Department of Health and Human Services (HH. More than two months later, the request has not been fulfilled. We also asked CDC for state-by-state test results prior to halting of testing and tracking, but CDC was again, initially, unresponsive. We asked all 50 states for their statistics on state lab-confirmed H1N1 prior to the halt of individual testing and counting in July. The vast majority of cases were negative for H1N1 as well as seasonal flu, despite the fact that many states were specifically testing patients deemed to be most likely to have H1N1 flu, based on symptoms and risk factors, such as travel to Mexico. With most cases diagnosed solely on symptoms and risk factors, the H1N1 flu epidemic may seem worse than it is.

Note: Some states found that less than 2% of cases claimed to be swine flu turned out to be the real thing. The numbers have been greatly exaggerated. For more reliable information on this, click here.

 [ send green star]
 
 October 28, 2009 12:59 PM

On Monday, Majority Leader Harry Reid introduced the merged Senate health care bill -- a bill that includes a public option.

The question is no longer if we will have some sort of public option in the final health care reform bill, but instead what form it will take.

There are several interpretations of what a public option should look like, and I just shared my preferences with Senator Dick Durbin through his online public option poll at:

http://www.DickDurbin.com/PublicOptionPoll

Please click this link to voice your preferences for the public option included in the final health care reform bill:

 [ send green star]
 
 October 27, 2009 2:13 PM

 Reid: Public Option Will Be in Health Care Bill

  Trumka: Health Care Reform Must Include Public Option, No Benefits Tax

  U.S. Health Care System Wasting Billions, and Other Health Care News

 [ send green star]
 
Reid backs health care public option October 26, 2009 1:21 PM

Sen. Harry Reid hopes his proposal will appeal to both liberal and conservative senators.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced Monday that he intends to move forward with a health care bill including a public insurance option allowing states to opt out.

Reid, a Nevada Democrat, has been melding legislation from the more conservative Senate Finance Committee and the more liberal Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee. The Health Committee included a form of the public option in its bill; the Finance Committee did not.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has insisted that the House of Representatives will pass a health care reform bill including a public option.

President Obama has indicated his preference for legislation including a public option but has not indicated he would a veto a bill without one. Several top Democrats have previously expressed concern that the traditionally conservative Senate would not pass a bill with a public option.

The public option is "not a silver bullet" but will ensure healthy competition and a more level playing field for consumers, Reid said on Capitol Hill. Polls show that a wide majority of Americans support a public option, he said.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Majority leader melding measures from two Senate committees
  • Public option will ensure healthy competition, he says
  • Reid does not have commitments from 60 senators, sources say
  • That number would break Republican filibuster

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/10/26/health.care/index.html

 [ send green star]
 
 October 21, 2009 12:35 PM

I just signed a petition to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to stop protecting corporate Democrats who are willing to filibuster a public health insurance option.

Can you please add your name? 

Click here to sign: http://action.firedoglake.com/harryreid

Thanks!

 [ send green star]
 
 October 18, 2009 4:46 PM

At least I know my Senators (Dick Durbin & Roland Burris, both Democrats) will push the Public Option! Freakin' RepubliCON Congre$$man Shimkus is Bu$h-League-ing it all the way..

 

 [ send green star]
 
 October 15, 2009 6:02 PM

Congressman Dennis Kucinich to Appear on Jay Leno Tonight

Dear Friends,

Usually when I message you, it is a call for action or for support of our campaign's efforts.

I'm writing today on a less serious note - to make sure you tune in to the bipartisan appearance by myself and my colleague, Congressman Steve LaTourette, on the Jay Leno Show tonight, Thursday, October 15th on NBC.

Please check your local listings to determine what time the show airs in your area.

I hope you enjoy the show!

Sincerely,
Dennis 

 [ send green star]
 
 October 09, 2009 6:57 PM

I put this link on my Facebook page too!

Yvonne,

Thanks for signing our petition to Senator Harry Reid. We need an up-or-down vote on health care -- can you help spread the word?

If you're on Facebook, click here to share the petition.

If you're on Twitter, click to automatically Tweet this message: PETITION @SenatorReid: Dems who join a Republican filibuster on health care must lose leadership titles. Sign: http://bit.ly/63DYH #p2 #reid

Or simply forward the below email to your friends.

Thanks for being a bold progressive,
--Adam Green, PCCC co-founder


Hi. Rachel Maddow announced an amazing idea on Wednesday night on MSNBC.

And the Progressive Change Campaign Committee immediately took action with this petition to Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid:

"Any Democratic senators who support a Republican attempt to block a vote on health care reform should be stripped of their leadership titles. Americans deserve a clean, up-or-down vote on health care."

If all the Democrats stick together, Republicans won't be able to block a vote. Health care is too important to allow Democrats to act like Republicans -- this petition will be delivered Monday. Can you join me in signing? Click here.

Thanks!

 [ send green star]
 
 October 08, 2009 4:33 PM

INSIDE WASHINGTON: GOP raising money from docs http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091008/ap_on_go_co/us_health_overhaul_soliciting_doctors;_ylt=Areoc5LBH2NL_ZJrIL7bWR2MwfIE;_ylu=X3oDMTM4N3FmODlxBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMDkxMDA4L3VzX2hlYWx0aF9vdmVyaGF1bF9zb2xpY2l0aW5nX2RvY3RvcnMEY3BvcwM3BHBvcwM3BHNlYwN5bl90b3Bfc3RvcmllcwRzbGsDaW5zaWRld2FzaGlu By RITA BEAMISH and ALAN FRAM, Associated Press Writers Rita Beamish And Alan Fram, Associated Press Writers – 1 hr 4 mins ago The Republican Party is harnessing the furious debate over health care to raise campaign cash from doctors, dangling the promise of including donors' names in advertising that attacks President Barack Obama's overhaul plan. The GOP's House campaign arm says it has raised $1.3 million since June by targeting thousands of physicians across the country with phone calls and faxes, inviting them to join the fight "against any proposal that creates a government-run health care system in America." Some 5,000 doctors have donated, said GOP spokesman Paul Lindsay, and another 10,000 have lent their names as supporters without donating. Some of the appeals also have gone astray. Paul Kramer, an occupational and family medicine doctor in Henderson, Ky., initially liked the idea when he was called about joining the Physicians' Council for Responsible Reform, but then perceived it as "a bald fundraising effort." "When I told the woman I wouldn't be interested in making any financial contribution, the call was quickly ended. I want reform and wanted to tell them that not all physicians were interested in seeing this effort tank," Kramer said. "I never got the chance." The campaign is not only an example of opportunistic fundraising, but also of how both parties are vying to show backing from the nation's doctors, who polls indicate rank among the country's most trusted professionals. Obama had scores of doctors flanking him at the White House Monday as he spoke on the issue, members of a physicians group that supported his presidential campaign. Republicans responded with a conference call for reporters with former American Medical Association president Donald Palmisano, who no longer speaks for that organization, and Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., one of several GOP members of Congress who are doctors....

 [ send green star]
 
 October 08, 2009 4:22 PM

Oct. 8, 2009

Union leaders
More than 100 grassroots union leaders are taking to Congress tens of thousands of letters supporting health care reform from union members. Among them, from left: Richard Burke of CWA in Maine; Jeanine Maury of CWA in Washington S       tate; Rick Bender, president of the Washington State Labor Council; and Mark Froemke, president of the West Minnesota Area Labor Council
.

Members of unions and Working America wrote nearly 50,000 letters to their senators and House members asking them to pass a comprehensive health care reform bill. And yesterday, people across the nation took part in a union movement-backed National Call-in Day for Health Care Reform and grassroots union leaders are making personal visits to Capitol Hill as part of a massive push to win affordable, quality health care.

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 October 08, 2009 4:02 PM

Even if Democrats pass health reform with a public option, it won't be up and running until 2013. Former Vermont governor Howard Dean suggested that Democrats should open up eligibility to Medicare for people over age 50 so that a "'certain mass' of people will already have benefit from health reform" by the 2010 elections.

House progressives said yesterday they have enough votes to pass their preferred version of health care reform. Progressive Caucus co-chair Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA) revealed in a caucus meeting that her internal whip count shows 208 votes for a health care bill with a "robust" public option, only 10 votes short of passing the bill.

 [ send green star]
 
 September 15, 2009 2:41 PM

 [ send green star]
 
 September 14, 2009 8:15 PM

Why the Public Option Is Not "Fading" -- Just the Contrary

Political organizer, strategist and author

The cynicism over a public option is the same cynicism that convinced most of the "sophisticated" in-the-know Capitol Hill insiders that Barack Obama could never be elected president.

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 September 14, 2009 7:16 PM

NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN.... Recently, President Obama has made a more conscious effort to note that while right-wing detractors are bashing the idea of health care reform now, their forebears were doing the same thing when previous progressive presidents tackled major challenges.

As the president reminded Congress last week, "In 1935, when over half of our seniors could not support themselves and millions had seen their savings wiped away, there were those who argued that Social Security would lead to socialism, but the men and women of Congress stood fast, and we are all the better for it. In 1965, when some argued that Medicare represented a government takeover of health care, members of Congress -- Democrats and Republicans -- did not back down. They joined together so that all of us could enter our golden years with some basic peace of mind."

But there's more than a just a general parallel here -- in many instances, conservatives have used the same language to stand in the way of domestic policy progress. Media Matters had a great report on this in March, and I was encouraged to see Bloomberg News have a similar piece today.

The debate is about health care. The threat is of a march toward "socialism." The words come from a famous voice.

Not Sarah Palin in 2009. It was Ronald Reagan in 1961.

"From here, it's a short step to all the rest of socialism," Reagan, then an actor, warned in a 1961 record sponsored by the American Medical Association after President John F. Kennedy created a commission that laid the foundation for Medicare. [...]

In 1945, the AMA helped portray Truman's proposal for national health insurance as a creep toward communism. Three years later, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce produced a pamphlet, "You and Socialized Medicine." [...]

The experiences of Truman, Kennedy and Clinton offer lessons for Obama, said Richard Rapaport, a visiting scholar at the University of California at Berkeley who has researched the AMA's initiative in the 1960s, dubbed "Operation Coffeecup."

Once the public associates the word "socialism" with a plan, it's hard to change the impression, he said. In 1945, when Truman addressed Congress about a national insurance plan, 75 percent of Americans supported the proposal. By 1949, after it was targeted by opponents, only 21 percent did.

When JFK first raised the prospect of Medicare, Reagan warned that it had to be stopped or that generation would "spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it once was like in America when men were free." When FDR proposed Social Security, a Republican congressman said, "If this bill becomes law, the lash of the dictator will be felt."

Glenn Beck and his minions are annoying, but they're not exactly breaking new ground.

—Steve Benen 3:45 PM Permalink   | Comments (24)

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 September 14, 2009 7:11 PM

* The House Committee on Education and Labor put this interactive graphic together, and I really like it.

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 September 14, 2009 5:45 PM


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 September 12, 2009 10:22 PM

America's new soup line: Health care


An offer of a free dental clinic had hundreds of Coloradoans waiting in the cold overnight in line. It's hard to see this and not think that we have a problem.

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 September 12, 2009 1:53 PM

President Obama's "Health Care For All" plan:

http://www.barackobama.com/pdf/issues/HealthCareFullPlan.pdf

 [ send green star]
 
 September 11, 2009 10:35 AM

The Final Sprint for Health Care Has Now Begun

Former Secretary of Labor, Professor at Berkeley

The real political race for health care has just begun. Obama's speech should be seen as the starting gate of a two-month sprint between two competitors -- and they're not Democrats and Republicans.

Read Post | Comments  [ send green star]
 
 September 10, 2009 4:29 PM

Moving Forward with Meaningful Health Care Reform

The President hit a home run last night. The time for bickering, myths, and flat out lies by those who want to block reform is over. We will move forward with health care reform and get it done this year.

 [ send green star]
 
 September 08, 2009 3:36 PM

HEALTH CARE ROUND-UP.... It's the first day back from the August recess on Capitol Hill, and there were quite a few developments of note.

* A few weeks ago, 60 progressive House members said a public option is "essential" in a health care reform bill. Today, Roll Call reports that at least four of them would be satisfied with a "trigger" compromise.

* Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) has finally released his reform bill. Putting another nail in the coffin of the Gang of Six, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is reportedly unimpressed with the Baucus plan.

* President Obama will lay out his vision for reform tomorrow night, but as of today, the White House does not intend to present Congress with a bill of its own.

* House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) told reporters today the House may be able to pass a reform plan without a public option. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said the opposite.

* We haven't heard too much from Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) lately. Today, she said she's "opposed" to a public option, and described the "trigger" as a "better approach." She stopped far short, though, of endorsing the policy.

* Any chance that a "trigger" compromise might satisfy the concerns of right-wing lawmakers? Of course not. Today, Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, said a public option a "terrible idea," whether it comes now or in the future. He also insisted, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, that the public is "clear" in its "firm opposition" to a public option.

* Similarly, Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Texas), the co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, also believes the "trigger" policy is unacceptable. "The vast majority of CPC is not prepared to wave a white flag on public option," he said today. "A trigger would be a surrender."

* Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) noted today that Senate Republicans haven't negotiated in "good faith."

* Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) told reporters today that if President Obama drops the public option and the idea of non-profit co-ops, there could be "tremendous progress" on bipartisan reform. (Note to White House: please don't believe him -- Crapo's Lucy holding the ball, you're Charlie Brown.)

* There are 435 members of the House, 256 of whom are Democrats. To pass a bill, the majority will need 218 votes, meaning the Dems could afford to lose only 38 members of their own caucus (assuming no Republicans vote for reform, which seems like a safe bet). The Hill reports that "at least 23" House Dems are now on record opposing existing reform efforts.

Not exactly slow on the first day back from the break.

—Steve Benen 4:45 PM Permalink   | Comments (10)

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 September 07, 2009 1:01 PM

The best health care system in the world



Tom Walsh of the Detroit Free Press (via JenJen):

In the past few days, 114,000 Michigan households have received bad-news letters from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, socking individual health insurance subscribers with premium increases averaging 22%, effective Oct. 1.

Blue Cross could have said, “Hey, things could have been worse. We asked for a 56% rate hike first and dialed it back to 22%”—but that probably would have just made folks angrier.

Instead, the Blue Cross letters simply stated, “We know every Michigan resident faces financial challenges, and we thank you for your business and loyalty to the Blues.”

That, my friends, is a statistic, not a hypothetical.

Domestic Affairs | 3:54 pm

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 September 07, 2009 12:33 PM

"Republicans Want to End Medicare"   video 
The plan, drafted by Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, top Republican on the House Budget Committee, called for eventually replacing the traditional Medicare program with subsidies to help retirees enroll in private health care plans. Current beneficiaries would
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 September 06, 2009 9:09 PM

The 3 Lost Lessons of Healthcare History: Will Obama Re-Learn Them in Time?

Political hack

The New York Times recently reported that the Obama administration is heeding a list of six lessons from previous efforts to reform health care. Unfortunately, the three most crucial lessons were left off the list.

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 September 06, 2009 9:04 PM

Health Reform and a Strong Medicare Program

AARP’s Executive Vice President of Policy and Strategy.

After months of being bombarded by myths about death panels, socialized medicine and rationed care, AARP members are asking legitimate questions about how they would be affected by health reform.

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 September 06, 2009 9:00 PM

Bill Moyers: "We Should Be Treating Health As A Condition, Not A Commodity"
Moyers
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 September 04, 2009 2:20 PM

WATCH: Canadians Defend Their Health Care System   video 
Canadians, who use a nationally-funded single-payer system, aren't going to sit back and let American politicians slag the health care that they love, either! So, from Karoli at U.S. Health Crisis comes a video of several Canadians offering up some real
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 September 04, 2009 12:07 PM

Why I love Britain's socialized healthcare systemAs I learned when my newborn daughter was very sick, in U.K. hospitals, people take care of each other


Right-wing cynics and America's third-world healthcareWhile the media covers Astroturfed outrage, thousands of underinsured Americans line up for free healthcare in L.A.


How to get great healthcare for just $50? Go to India http://bit.ly/18C4cQ


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 September 03, 2009 10:10 PM


Why Health Insurance Reform Will Pass This Fall -- It's the High Political Ground

Health insurance reform represents the high political ground for four major reasons:

1). Most Americans - including swing voters - can't stand the health insurance industry. As Congress reconvenes, the Administration and its allies will unleash a major drive to correctly define the battle as a contest between the interests of private health insurance companies and ordinary Americans. Health Care for America Now (HCAN), the big coalition of progressive organizations and Labor, will put it this way: If the insurance companies win, you lose. ....

2). The Obama Administration will use every ounce of its political capital to win this battle. The President and his top advisors understand that -- when it comes to health care -- failure is simply not an option. They know that defeat on health care would be a huge blow to the President's ability to pass his entire agenda and his own standing with the voters. People follow successful leaders - not those who fail.

As a result, the President will use every bit of his charm, his persuasive ability and the formidable powers of the Presidency to secure the votes to win.

And make no mistake. While Barack Obama would prefer a bi-partisan bill passed through the regular order with broad consensus, he has an iron will and will pass a bill by one vote using special budget procedures if that is necessary to win. He is a huge fan of Lincoln's Team of Rivals, but in matters of legislation his model is Lyndon Johnson.

Anyone who doubts the strength of his resolve - or his resourcefulness - doesn't yet understand Barack Obama.

be sure to read the entire article ...

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 September 03, 2009 8:53 PM

Nicholas D. Kristof: Health Care That Works

Government, for all its flaws, manages to do some things right, and one area that government intervention has been a step up is in medical care.

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 September 03, 2009 8:24 PM

Obamas On Covers Of Four Health Mags To Push Health Care 
PRESIDENT OBAMA is taking his argument for a health care plan to a new place: Rodale magazines, where he or his wife appear on coming covers of Prevention, Men's Health, Women's Health and the new publication Children's Health.
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 September 03, 2009 2:37 PM

Health Care : Obama Is Right, His Critics (Right and Left) Are Wrong 
 
 
Where Obama offers bipartisanship the right only knows hate, pure and simple. To the right the truly insane, the armed, the deluded and the outright liars dwell. To the left the impatient and jaded dwell. What will President Obama do? Appease neither.
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 September 03, 2009 10:36 AM

25 Best Twitter Feeds to Follow the Health Care Debate 
With Twitter feeds written by doctors, politicians, journalists, and consultants, these posts will provide you with all the latest news and opinion without all the confusion.
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 September 02, 2009 8:55 PM

The Public Option is Popular, Moral and Inexpensive, Therefore it Must Die

Political Author, Blogger, and New Media Producer

There's no ambiguity about it. The public option is resoundingly popular, fiscally conservative and morally sound. It's centrist, it's liberal, it's conservative. Unless you don't believe in, you know, numbers.

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 September 02, 2009 12:14 PM

Why Care About Public Plan?

veteran bloviator

The insurance market is highly concentrated. It will take a while for any new entrant -- including a public plan -- to become a major player able to squeeze major price concessions.

Read Post | Comments  [ send green star]
 
 September 01, 2009 6:57 PM

Are Americans Dumb Enough to Believe Republicans Are Defending Medicare?  [ send green star]
 
 September 01, 2009 2:00 PM

WATCH: "Great White Hope" Rep. Laughs Off Uninsured Single Mother At Town Hall  [ send green star]
 
 September 01, 2009 1:55 PM

Some Anti-Reform Doctors Using Scare Tactics On Patients
Votes
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 September 01, 2009 1:49 PM

The Corporate "Alliance" For Health Care Reform: III. The Hospital Industry 
Faced with increasing political momentum toward some kind of health care reform, the hospital industry, together with other major stakeholders, wanted to retain a place at the negotiating table and protect its interests in whatever legislation resulted.
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 September 01, 2009 12:53 PM

Health Insurance Lobbyist Karen Ignagni Won't Talk About Her Health Care Coverage 
What kind of health care coverage does the nation's top health insurance lobbyist have? Her trade group refuses to say.
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 August 31, 2009 2:16 PM

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 August 31, 2009 12:13 PM

Roger Hickey: Let's Pass Ted Kennedy's Health Plan

Roger Hickey is Co-Director of the Campaign for America's Future: www.ourfuture.org.

Until last year, Sen. Kennedy's health care bill was known as Medicare for All. Not expensive private insurance for some, but Medicare (a public insurance plan) for All. I feel the need to remind people of this because conservatives are trying to promote the idea that, if he were still alive, Ted Kennedy could have gotten the Democrats to fold and embrace a weakened, bipartisan, compromised health reform strategy. And some are suggesting that the best tribute to the great man's memory would be to pass such a watered-down health bill that could win the support of Republicans.

 [ send green star]
 
 August 27, 2009 10:24 AM

Anti-Health Care Reform Group Pulls Ads, Citing Respect For Kennedy 
"With the sad news of Senator Kennedy's passing Conservatives for Patients Rights is immediately suspending our ad campaign for health care reform out of respect to the Kennedy family as well as the Senator's colleagues and supporters, to whom we extend
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 August 26, 2009 2:03 PM

A Pollster's Advice: Don't Trust the Polls on Health Reform's Demise

Executive Vice President at Greenberg Quinlan Rosner

If polls about policy proposals don't accurately predict legislative outcomes, why do so many people focus on them?

 [ send green star]
 
 August 26, 2009 1:48 PM

Is It Unconstitutional to Mandate Health Insurance?
 
Prof. Hall on the constitutionality of an insurance mandate. Contrary to some recent musings by some attorneys in various media and reports.
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 August 26, 2009 1:04 PM


Gang Of Six Republican Admits He's Just Blocking Health Care Reform 
Mike Enzi told a Wyoming town hall crowd that he had no plans to compromise with Democrats and was merely trying to extract concessions. Enzi's blunt portrayal of his real role in the negotiations makes bipartisan compromise that much less likely to emerg
 [ send green star]
 
 August 26, 2009 12:25 PM

Krugman: "The Argument Against the Public Option is Sheer Nonsense"

Paul Krugman lets 'em have it on "This Week with George Stephanopoulos." Read more »

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 August 25, 2009 1:12 PM

Why Wasn't THIS Townhall on TV? 
Maxine Waters, Congresswoman of Los Angeles, CA, recently held this townhall meeting on Health Care Reform. No angry protesters, no gun-toting haters, no disrespectful outbursts. To a packed hall, Maxine gave a reasoned, informative talk on why Single-Pay
 [ send green star]
 
 August 22, 2009 6:28 PM

Months to Live: At the End, Offering Not a Cure but Comfort

Palliative care specialists, doctors who manage patients’ last months, study how to deliver a grim prognosis.

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 August 22, 2009 2:12 PM

Why the Gang of Six Is Deciding Health Care for Three Hundred Million of Us

Former Secretary of Labor, Professor at Berkeley

We have a Democratic president. Democrats control sixty votes in the Senate, enough to overcome a filibuster. Democrats control the House. So why does the fate of health care rest in Grassley's hands?

 [ send green star]
 
 August 22, 2009 2:08 PM

Dr. Andrew Weil : Should You Get Your Drug Information From An Actor? 
Sally Field is a talented actor. But what qualifies her to promote Boniva, an osteoporosis drug that is of limited benefit, has worrisome side effects, and for which there are natural alternatives that merit careful consideration?
 [ send green star]
 
 August 22, 2009 1:35 PM

Single Payer

Single-payer advocates have been excluded from debate not because our premises or facts are wrong but because special interests, including the private health insurance industry and the big drug companies, have been allowed to define the limits of “olitically feasible.”

 [ send green star]
 
 August 20, 2009 12:26 PM

Bob Cesca: Bipartisanship Porn

What we've been witnessing during this health care reform process can easily be defined as "bipartisanship porn." It's a display of bipartisanship so obscene and excessive that it borders on perverse.
 

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 August 19, 2009 1:29 PM

 Sam Stein


First Posted: 08-18-09 01:53 PM   |   Updated: 08-18-09 03:03 PM

One of the country's most prominent union officials is warning that big labor may pull its support from Democrats who don't fight for a government-run insurance plan.

In an interview with the Huffington Post on Saturday, Richard Trumka, the secretary-treasurer and likely next president of the AFL-CIO, said his federation is drawing a line in the sand when it comes to a public option in the health care bill. Lawmakers who don't support the provision, he said, shouldn't take anything for granted.

"We'll look at every one of their votes," Trumka said after his speech at the Netroots Nation convention. "If they're against the Employee Free Choice Act, if they're against health care for that reason, I think it'll be tough for them to get support from working people."

Trumka's remarks were echoed privately by several other labor officials at the convention in Pittsburgh. In particular, the emerging Senate Finance Committee plan - which seems unlikely to contain a public option and could end up taxing pricey health care packages - seems almost guaranteed to incite the unions.

"We'll oppose it," Trumka said, when asked about any bill that ends the tax exemption for employer coverage. "It's actually a stupid concept because if you tax those that have it to pay for those that don't, eventually those that have [benefits] won't. Then who do you ultimately tax?"

Trumka's warning shots come at a time that the AFL-CIO is charting out a more aggressive campaign to target lawmakers who, as one official put it, "take labor's help but don't vote for labor's interests." Part of that process is to hold out the prospect of electoral consequences.

Former DNC Chair, Howard Dean, likewise predicted that Democrats who vote against the public option would have to deal with a primary challenge.

Meanwhile, a group of progressive members of the House of Representatives made it clear on Monday that they will not support a health care bill that doesn't include a government run option for insurance coverage.

The AFL-CIO also intends to campaign against targets within the Republican Party and conservative media. In his speech on Saturday, Trumka called out "the entire cast at Fox News," for perpetuating fear and mistruths about the President's health care agenda. He also called Rush Limbaugh a "loudmouth," and decried the fake-grassroots movements being orchestrated in opposition to Democratic reform.

"We are going to continue to mobilize and counter the lies and the myths that they're trying to create to defeat this," he told the Huffington Post. "The special interests, the pharmaceutical industry, the health care industry are so vested in the current system they'll so anything to keep it this way and we have a job to do there.

"We're also going to keep politicians strong so that they don't listen to the moneymen and continue to erode away or negotiate away a program [so much that it] ultimately becomes useless. Right now, without a public option [reform] becomes useless. It won't change the current system."

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 August 19, 2009 7:44 AM

Anatomy of American Ignorance

By Bill Noxid

The astonishing amount of rage demonstrated during the course of this fallacious healthcare debate has exposed a great many unfortunate realities about the United States.  This country's inherent ability to avoid the truth about its own origins and behaviors has become increasingly apparent during the first six months of this presidency.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23289.htm

===

This Is Reform?

By Bob Herbert

It's never a contest when the interests of big business are pitted against the public interest. So if we manage to get health care "reform" this time around it will be the kind of reform that benefits the very people who have given us a failed system, and thus made reform so necessary.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23299.htm

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Why Single-Payer is the ONLY Sensible Health Care Reform
(Explained in Plain English)
 
By Carmen Yarrusso

Our "representatives" are diligently keeping single-payer "off the table" for one reason only: single-payer would easily win in any honest, open debate. Once again our "representatives" are selling us out to special interests.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23292.htm

 [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 8:41 PM

Analysis: Liberals tired of health care compromise

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090819/ap_on_an/us_health_care_overhaul_analysis

WASHINGTON – Frustrated liberals have a question for President Barack Obama and Democratic lawmakers: Isn't it time the other guys gave a little ground on health care? What's the point of a bipartisan bill, they ask, if we're making all the concessions?

A case in point:

Sen. Charles Grassley, a key Republican negotiator on health care, was on a winning streak as Congress recessed for August, having wrung important concessions from Democrats, including an agreement to back away from a government plan to compete with private insurers.

How did Grassley reciprocate? With an attack that struck Democrats as stunning and baseless. Grassley told an Iowa crowd he would not support a plan that "determines when you're going to pull the plug on Grandma." The remark echoed conservative activists who wrongly claim a House health care bill would require Medicare recipients to discuss their end-of-life plans with doctors.

For liberals supporting far-reaching changes to the nation's health care system, it was another sign that months of negotiations have been a one-way street. It's time to move on without Republicans, they say.

On Tuesday, liberals were fuming over Obama's recent remarks suggesting he might also yield on the federally run insurance option he's been promoting. Many saw it as a huge concession that could leave them with nothing more than watered-down insurance cooperatives.

But the Senate's second-ranking Republican, Jon Kyl of Arizona, dismissed even such co-ops as a "Trojan horse" leading to government control of health care.

Many liberals are fed up.

"It is clear that Republicans have decided 'no health care' is a victory for them," Andy Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union, said in an interview. "There is a point at which bipartisanship reaches a limit, and I would say it's reaching that limit."

The growing liberal unhappiness sets a difficult stage for Obama this fall. Political pragmatists want him to keep seeking a middle ground that will attract at least a few Republican lawmakers as well as moderate Democrats who could prove crucial to passage in the House and Senate. Even modest achievements, such as preventing insurers from refusing to cover pre-existing medical conditions, would allow Obama to claim a victory and perhaps try for more later, they say.

Liberal activists say there's no point in the Democrats winning the House, Senate and White House unless they use their clout to enact the major measures that Obama campaigned for — with or without some Republican support.

For now, Obama seems on the defensive. He spent valuable time this month knocking down claims that Democratic plans could lead to euthanasia of the elderly. And his chief spokesmen spent much of Monday and Tuesday insisting that Obama still supports a government-run health insurance option despite mixed signals from the administration.

On Saturday, Obama told a Colorado crowd, "The public option, whether we have it or we don't have it, is not the entirety of health care reform. This is just one sliver of it."

While liberals are discouraged, the endgame remains unclear. Some still hope that Obama and congressional Democratic leaders will use all their parliamentary powers — which could prove especially divisive in the Senate — to pass a far-reaching bill that would include a public option for health insurance and more palatable consumer costs for prescription drugs and other needs.

The pivotal decisions will be made this fall, with administration officials saying the debate cannot lapse into the midterm election year of 2010.

What seems clear is that the room for compromise between Republicans and Democrats is shriveling to almost nothing. Some Democrats found Kyl's remarks particularly galling. Even if Democrats manage to produce a health care bill that won't increase the federal deficit over 10 years, Kyl said, "that doesn't mean Republicans would support it."

And Grassley has said he's uninterested in a compromise that draws only three or so Senate Republicans' votes.

continued below:

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 August 18, 2009 8:40 PM

The continued outreach to Republicans, meanwhile, is testing Democrats' unity. This week, more than 50 House Democrats issued a letter saying: "Any bill that does not provide, at a minimum, for a public option with reimbursement rates based on Medicare rates — not negotiated rates — is unacceptable."

Some of them told House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., in a conference call Tuesday that discussions with Republicans are pointless.

White House spokeswoman Linda Douglass played down the intraparty fuss, noting that it's far from clear how the final legislation will turn out. She said negotiations involving Obama have led drug manufacturers to agree to reduce costs for the nation's health care system by $80 billion over 10 years, while hospitals have agreed to an additional $155 billion.

Those concessions will carry weight with lawmakers as they "look at enacting reform that will lower costs and increase stability and security," Douglass said in an interview.

But such concessions cut several ways. Pharmaceutical industry leaders say the $80 billion agreement should end efforts to allow the government to negotiate lower prices for prescription drugs used in Medicare and other programs.

Liberals say such price reductions are precisely the type of change Obama called for in his presidential campaign. And now, they say, is the time to turn those promises into reality.

 [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 8:33 PM

Talking heads bite Barack Obama

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0809/26215.html

   [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 8:16 PM

First I want to say that I had an incredible time at Netroots Nation. What a treat to see so many in the liberal blogosphere gather to discuss health care and virtually every other issue we face. Kudos to all the politicians who showed up to represent their positions as well.

Anyway, a huge topic that was raging through the weekend was the state of the 'public option.' Since the Baucus Dogs haven't finished their bill we still don't have the goods to really make any sense of what the House of Lords is going to put forth. We do have the Senate HELP committee bill, but the Baucus Dogs are trying to muck up the works by stalling the process and trying to empower the teabaggers. Any member of Congress that is affected by the lunatic fringe appearing at these events should resign immediately.

I was talking to Digbyat length about it over the weekend and she said she had a meeting with Mike Luxand he laid out a possible scenario to her that could come to pass even if Grassley, Bayh, Conrad, Baucus, Nelson and the rest of the paid off shills of the health insurance industry come out with a bill that doesn't have a 'public option.'

He later wrote about it in his piece: The News of Its Death Is Greatly Exaggerated

Here are a couple of possibilities for getting a bill passed:

A. The first is that conservative Senators are given a fig leaf compromise on the public option, so that they can say to people they forced a compromise, and then are brought over with all kinds of other incentives that make them more comfortable with the bigger bill.

B. The second is that the conference committee simply breaks the bill in half, one half being the less controversial part that everyone agrees upon, the other being the public option and the financing, both of which can go through the reconciliation process. Then Obama and Reid muscle the 50 votes they need for support.

Continue reading »

 [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 8:02 PM

* Even Joe Scarborough realizes a public option is not a "government takeover."

* More astroturf letters emerge on cap-and-trade.

* The RNC's talking points on co-ops are factually wrong. Imagine that.

* Sen. Ben Nelson is surprisingly thin-skinned.

* Nicholas Beaudrot explains health care reform in a very helpful flowchart. It's far more coherent than that thing John Boehner's office came up with a while back.


 [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 6:10 PM

Swine flu closes Ky. school for a week 18 Aug 2009 A central Kentucky public school has been closed for the week after students and teachers became ill and an eastern Kentucky school is shut down because of swine flu. In Boyle County, Junction City Elementary School is closed until next week. School officials said dozens of students and several teachers were absent on Monday -- most of them with flulike symptoms.

A third of nurses will refuse to have the swine flu jab 18 Aug 2009 Up to a third of nurses will say no to the swine flu jab because of concerns over its safety, a poll has found. NHS workers are first in line for the vaccine, but a survey of 1,500 nurses found many will reject it. The poll, by Nursing Times magazine, will raise questions over the Government's planned mass vaccination programme.

 [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 4:15 PM

Health Reform Supporters Start To Outnumber Critics At Town Halls 
While television cameras have focused on vocal opponents to health care reform, in many cases they have been outnumbered by supporters of the legislation in general and a public option in particular.
 [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 2:27 PM

GOPers: Co-Op Compromise Won't Get Our Votes Either  [ send green star]
 
 August 18, 2009 12:39 PM

Health Care: Two Countries, Two Stories

Actor, author, director, satirist, musician, radio host, playwright, multi-media artist

I have two family members, one in America and one in England, each of whom has had a recent experience with the local health system. I offer their experiences for your consideration.

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 August 18, 2009 12:22 PM

NYT: Co-Op Health Care Plan Has Serious Drawbacks
Health Care Town
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 August 18, 2009 8:39 AM

Three Reasons Why a Strong Public Option is Likely to be Part of Health Insurance Reform

Political organizer, strategist and author

A public option has none of the bureaucratic complexity of rate regulation and uses competitive forces to keep rates down. It is simple and elegant.

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 August 17, 2009 11:04 PM

CODE BLUE
Rockefeller, Feingold, Pelosi Call Public Option Essential
Erin Andrews
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 August 17, 2009 10:56 PM

Don't Panic. Howard Dean Says Bill Will Pass - With The Public Option  [ send green star]
 
 August 17, 2009 10:55 PM

Gibbs: Nothing Has Changed, We Are Still Expecting The Public Option  [ send green star]
 
 August 17, 2009 10:05 PM

Britons Unite To Defend Health Care Amid US Debate. 
As Britain's NHS has become slagged off by Fox ,Republicans and some Democrats,British people have rushed to defend our universal system,pointing out that it is open to all-and that we wouldn't wish to swap it for a US style system.






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 August 17, 2009 6:29 PM

The News of Its Death Is Greatly Exaggerated

Author, The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be

Kathleen Sebelius said the public insurance option is not essential, adding to a steadily growing conventional wisdom that the public option is now dead. Not so fast.

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 August 17, 2009 9:39 AM

Howard Dean On Public Option: "You Can't Really Do Health Reform Without It"
Dean
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 August 17, 2009 9:29 AM

Krugman: All That Stands In Way Of Universal Health Care Is Greed, Lies And Gullibility
Health Care
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 August 16, 2009 10:22 PM

WHITE HOUSE'S
MIXED MESSAGES

Sebelius: Public Option Not "Essential"... Gibbs: WH Supports Public Option... Douglass: Obama Prefers Public Option... WH Official: Sebelius "Misspoke"
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 August 16, 2009 10:21 PM

Paul Abrams: Some Ammo for Health Care Reform: A Little Help for Your Friends

Entrepreneur, biotechnology, law, economics, politics, professional iconoclast

Here's help for those struggling with friends and family who may be shaken by what has occurred during our own August recess in the health care debate.

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 August 16, 2009 4:20 PM

WHITE HOUSE STILL BACKS PUBLIC OPTION  [ send green star]
 
 August 16, 2009 1:59 PM

The brutal truth about America's healthcare vs Stephen Hawking, who said, "I wouldn't be here today if it were not for the NHS. I have received a large amount of high-quality treatment without which I would not have survived.." And a student who suddenly found himself unable to move and had to be supported by his wife would not have been able to get that sort of care in the United States at all, let alone be kept alive and allowed the time to think that made it possible for him to become *the* Stephen Hawking.

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 August 15, 2009 2:19 PM

WENDELL POTTER IS MAKING SENSE.... I wish Wendell Potter was a household name right now. His message and perspective is arguably as important as any in the country. Potter first came to public attention about a month ago, when he sat down with PBS's Bill Moyers. We learned that he's a former executive at a major health insurance company, who's become a whistleblower, explaining the way the industry "put profits before patients" and is doing everything possible to block health care reform now.

Slowly but surely, he's gaining more prominence. Last night, he spoke with CNN's Anderson Cooper, who almost seemed surprised by what he heard.

"The way it works is that the [insurance] industry will hire big PR firms that create these front groups that have names that have no association with the insurance industry," Potter said." And it is these front groups that do the things that you're seeing right now that try to destroy health care reform by using terms like 'government takeover' of the health care system. Or we're heading down toward a 'slippery slope toward socialism.' Or we're going to 'kill your grandpa' because of this health care reform bill.

Cooper asked, "You're saying that language is written by insurance companies?" Potter responded, "Absolutely."

Asked about the right-wing activists, Potter explained that the industry has "very close ties with the conservative radio talk show hosts and commentators and editorial page writers and they feed the talking points."

Potter was also spoke to Rachel Maddow this week. "I think that the health insurance industry deserves a great deal of the blame because they're very much behind the town hall disruptions that you see and a lot of the deception that's going on in terms of disinformation that many Americans apparently are believing," he explained.

Asked about a public option, and whether private insurance companies would be able to compete alongside a government-run non-profit plan, Potter added, "Well, they could, absolutely. I've seen the health insurance industry change its business models many, many times. The insurance companies who operate now are very different from the companies that operated a few years ago. They adapt very quickly. And the one thing they know how to do is make money."

Here's hoping that Potter, given his background and unique insights, gets a whole lot more media opportunities.

—Steve Benen 9:25 AM Permalink   | Comments (21)

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 August 15, 2009 1:32 PM

* After all the fuss about every lawmaker reading every word of the health care bill, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R) of Kentucky opposes reform despite not having read the legislation.

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 August 15, 2009 1:27 PM

John Sides has a fascinating item, taking all of the fact-checking items on health care reform from Politifact.com, and categorizing claims from "true" to "pants on fire" for the president, Republicans, and Democrats. Care to take a guess which contingent has been the least honest?

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Compare Health Care ... August 15, 2009 9:32 AM

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 August 15, 2009 9:25 AM

President Obama : Weekly Address: Real Conversations About Health Insurance Reform   video
"Those who would stand in the way of reform will say almost anything to scare you about the cost of action. But they won't say much about the cost of inaction. "
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 August 15, 2009 8:08 AM


10 AWESOME THINGS THAT WOULD HAPPEN IF HEALTH REFORM PASSES...and it will!
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 August 15, 2009 8:08 AM

Thanks, Michelle, I've been watching that "thread" on Twitter!

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 August 12, 2009 9:34 PM

If you Twitter, you need to search #welovethenhs. The comments that people who actually use the NHS are making are great!

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 August 12, 2009 9:31 PM

Working Together
Drug And Hospital Lobbyists: We Cut Deals With White House, Senate Finance In Tandem
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 August 12, 2009 2:50 PM

Professor Stephen Hawking Enters U.S. Health Care Debate 
"I wouldn't be here today if it were not for the National Health Service," he told The Guardian. "I have received a large amount of high-quality treatment without which I would not have survived.
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 August 12, 2009 12:58 PM

Family Values, American Style

Screenwriter and author.

I've lived in Europe for 20 years; my son has had juvenile diabetes for seven of those. The cost of all that health care over seven years: zero. I've seen the European system up close -- it works.

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 August 11, 2009 4:37 PM

President Obama's town hall this morning answered many of the questions on Health Care Reform, and pointed out the scare tactics being used to mislead us.  [ send green star]
 
When do we get to debate health care reform? August 11, 2009 11:46 AM


Grand Rounds, Vol. 5.47 - Cost Containment In Healthcare : The Covert Rationing Blog  [ send green star]
 
 August 10, 2009 6:27 PM

$1.2 TRILLION WASTED : The 6 Biggest Ways Our Health Care System Throws Away Money 
More than $1.2 trillion spent on health care each year is a waste of money. That's half of the $2.2 trillion the USA spends on health care each year, according to the most recent data from accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers' Health Research Institute
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 August 10, 2009 3:40 PM

Health Insurance Reform Reality Check 
Get the facts about the stability and security you get from health insurance reform instead of listening to industry and right wing hype. Still know that SINGLE PAYER IS A BETTER OPTION!!!
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 August 10, 2009 2:44 PM

We Already Have 'Death Panels.' If You Can't Pay the Bill, You're Sent Home to Die.  [ send green star]
 
 August 10, 2009 1:57 PM

The Wrong Diagnosis

Founder and director of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine

Even worse than its stratospheric cost is the fact that American health care doesn't fulfill its prime directive -- it does not help people become or stay healthy.

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 August 10, 2009 1:30 PM

George Soros Pledges $5 Million To Bankroll Health Care Push
Soros
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 August 10, 2009 1:26 PM

Resuscitating Health Care Reform

Medical Editor, The Huffington Post, Founder and President of Preventive Medicine Research Institute

We need to provide coverage for the 48 million Americans who don't have health insurance. It's morally indefensible that we haven't already. But we also need to transform what is covered.

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 August 09, 2009 9:46 PM

Two Words for Palin, Gingrich and the Rest of the GOP Who Fear an Imaginary Federal "Death Panel"

Sun Hudson

Thank you. And thanks, Kaybee, for the reminder.

Doctors say he had a genetic deformity, a lethal form of dwarfism in which the lungs do not grow large enough to support life. Doctors felt that further treatment was futile. His mother, Wanda, argued that all he needed was time to develop. The court sided with the doctors and allowed them to disconnect the ventilator. This is allowed in Texas under the Advance Directives Act, signed into law in 1999 by Gov. George W. Bush.

And the 2005 decision to remove the ventilator was made under the watchful eye of Republican governor Rick Perry.

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 August 09, 2009 6:11 PM

WHAT ARE THEY SO MAD ABOUT?.... Reader B.A. asks a question about the health care debate via email:

I don't understand why the wingnuts are so angry. Conservatives will be better off if reform becomes law, just like liberals and independents. Please explain the rationale for the fury.

Well, I'm not sure I can. It seems like one of those easy, basic questions that should have an obvious answer: what do conservatives want out of the health care debate? "Wingnut, smash" isn't an especially compelling answer.

B.A. is right about the broad benefits for Americans. Some of Rush Limbaugh's listeners are one serious illness away from bankruptcy. Some Michele Bachmann voters can't get coverage because of a pre-existing condition. Some Glenn Beck viewers will see their insurance companies drop them when they need their coverage most. Many of Bill O'Reilly's fans already enjoy the benefits of government-run health care. Some RNC donors may want to start their own business, but can't because they can't afford to pay the monthly premiums. Some of the same people who attended "Tea Parties" in April saw the insurance for themselves and their families disappear after they lost their job.

There's nothing partisan or ideological about this -- everyone is getting screwed by the status quo. We're all paying too much for too little. A huge chunk of the country is uninsured, underinsured, or uninsurable, and the system is blind to how you voted in the last election.

Now, this is not to say that the Democratic proposals are flawless; they're not. But what's striking about the opposition to reform -- at least the loudest opposition to reform -- is that the right has chosen to completely ignore the actual flaws in the plan(s) and focus on imaginary, delusional nonsense.

So why are far-right activists so apoplectic? Why would people who stand to benefit from health care reform literally take to the streets and threaten violence in opposition to legislation that will help them and their families? President Obama supports an approach to health care reform that emphasizes competition and choice, doesn't increase the deficit, and wouldn't raise middle class taxes ... and conservatives are comparing the plan to the Nazi Holocaust?

B.A.'s confusion is understandable. I don't get it, either.

Continue reading...

—Steve Benen 4:30 PM Permalink   | Comments (141)


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 August 09, 2009 5:32 PM

The consequences of a conservative 'victory'  [ send green star]
 
 August 09, 2009 1:50 PM

There is a phenomenal video on YouTube of Durbin on health insurance. It tells why Americans need Universal Health coverage.

It is EXCELLENT! It needs to go viral. Please watch it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pE9t4nmtAos&feature=player_embedded

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 August 08, 2009 6:30 PM

Hospitals Develop Brilliant New Term for Kleenex

Writer, filmmaker and international ambassador of good will.

"Disposable Mucus Recovery System" is a brilliant term for a $11 box of tissues. Our current health care set up has evidently been great for creativity in the field of billing.

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 August 07, 2009 5:22 PM

James Kwak | You Do Not Have Health Insurance
http://www.truthout.org/080709A?n
James Kwak, The Baseline Scenario: "Right now, it appears that the biggest barrier to health care reform is people who think that it will hurt them. According to a New York Times poll, '69 percent of respondents in the poll said they were concerned that the quality of their own care would decline if the government created a program that covers everyone.' Since most Americans currently have health insurance, they see reform as a poverty program - something that helps poor people and hurts them. If that's what you think, then this post is for you. You do not have health insurance. Let me repeat that. You do not have health insurance. (Unless you are over 65, in which case you do have health insurance. I'll come back to that later.)"  [ send green star]
 
 August 07, 2009 12:39 AM

Pharma Lobbyists Quietly Fund Independent Groups, Gain Cover  [ send green star]
 
 August 06, 2009 11:56 PM

Fight Back Against Health Insurance Lies

Filmmaker and Political Activist; Founder, Brave New Films

Huge insurance corporations like UnitedHealth Group treat the physical livelihoods of average Americans as commodities to exploit for shareholder profits and outsized executive compensation packages.

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 August 06, 2009 11:51 PM

The Health Care Bubble: The Status Quo Is Unsustainable

Defenders of the status quo seem unable to see the big health insurance bubble for what it is: an unsustainable, out-of-control behemoth headed for a huge collision.

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 August 06, 2009 11:50 PM

WATCH: Denied Claims Placed At Health Insurance CEO's Doorstep
Helmsley
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 August 06, 2009 11:45 PM

White House: We Could Use Reconciliation To Pass Health Care
Dems
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 August 06, 2009 5:38 PM

Pelosi: Protests Won't Derail Health Care Overhaul
 
...said she welcomed protests but that Democrats would not be dissuaded from a health care overhaul to extend insurance to some 47 million Americans with no health coverage.
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 August 05, 2009 6:05 PM

Keep Your Goddamn Government Hands Off My Medicare!

Political Author, Blogger, and New Media Producer

Senior citizens disrupting town halls are participating in a corporate lobbyist-driven campaign to prevent the rest of us from acquiring the same affordable, reliable public health care they enjoy.

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 August 05, 2009 5:38 PM

Digby writes:

I'm sure the Democrats all remember this and are prepared for it this time. Right?

If you haven't read the entire PBS timeline on how health care reform was derailed in 1994 recently, do yourself a favor and read it. The legislative side has an eerily familiar feel to it, especially the part where the Democrats in the Senate preen egomaniacally while selling out reform to the insurance industry and the Republicans. You'll recall that the Republicans consciously pumped Whitewater in the press to create a distraction for the public and fuel mass protest among their own base. It's a sign of their impotence that the best they could come up with this time was a fringy clown show like the birthers, but it's certainly done its job among the 58% of Republicans who now aren't sure if Obama is actually an illegal alien. This stuff is evergreen.

If you can, please attend any town hall meeting in your area and try to bring some sanity to it or expose these phony populists for what they are. If you can, interview the teabaggers and send me the video at crooksandliars@gmail.com or crooksandliarsvideos@gmail.com. It will be up to the progressive groups also to organize activists to offset what Republicans hope to accomplish. The Democratic party should have expected this. That's why I asked President Obama to demand that Congress work through the August recess. You can depend on Max Baucus to do his part and screw up health care for all Americans. He sold us out before.

August will be littered with images of the Zombie Plumbers disrupting town hall meetings because the media just loves this stuff. As usual, they won't give proper context or explain who these teabaggers are, and Americans will view these wackos on the news as a legitimate effort by patriotic Americans who are against changes to the health care system instead of explaining who they really are. I hate to bring this up, but do you remember how the media handled the six weeks leading up to the Pennsylvania Democratic primary? It was pretty frightening. That's what we can expect this month, and it won't be pretty.

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 August 05, 2009 5:30 PM

WE HAVE A WINNER.... The competition has been fierce, but I think we can safely hand out the award for The Most Spectacularly Ridiculous Column Written About Health Care Reform to Pat Buchanan. This 840-word monstrosity is hard to read without wincing.

Ed Kilgore does a terrific job highlighting the blisteringly stupid errors of fact and judgment Buchanan makes, but let's quickly run through the highlights.

Buchanan's basic pitch is that health care reform will necessarily prompt the government to encourage senior citizens to die. In fact, the far-right demagogue said "there is little doubt as to what is coming" -- a U.S. system that resembles "de-Christianized Europe," where, apparently, governments routinely try to snuff out their grandparents.

Beneath this controversy lie conflicting concepts about life.

To traditional Christians, God is the author of life and innocent life, be it of the unborn or terminally ill, may not be taken. Heroic means to keep the dying alive are not necessary, but to advance a natural death by assisting a suicide or euthanasia is a violation of the God's commandment, Thou shalt not kill.

To secularists and atheists who believe life begins and ends here, however, the woman alone decides whether her unborn child lives, and the terminally ill and elderly, and those closest to them, have the final say as to when their lives shall end. As it would be cruel to let one's cat or dog spend its last months or weeks in terrible pain, they argue, why would one allow one's parents to endure such agony?

Yes, the same man who helped popularize the phrase "culture war" in 1992 believes health care reform should be defeated because its proponents' moral and spiritual failings might lead to the death of millions.

Buchanan proceeds to compare the non-existent Democratic campaign to kill off old people to "Hitler's Third Reich, marrying Social Darwinism to Aryan racial supremacy."

As Kilgore concluded, "So in one short column, Buchanan manages to associate 'Obamacare' with the intentional infliction of pain on seniors to encourage them to commit suicide, as part of an anti-Christian and proto-Nazi drive to destroy 'the sanctity of life.'"

I'd just add that Buchanan, merit notwithstanding, remains a prominent political figure. A column like this would, under sane circumstances, make him something of a laughing stock, and yet we can probably measure in days, if not hours, how long it will be before he's back in front of a national television audience.

—Steve Benen 8:35 AM Permalink  | Comments (35)

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 August 05, 2009 3:24 PM

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 August 04, 2009 2:51 PM

* The Democratic National Committee released a pretty hard-hitting statement this afternoon, slamming Republicans for "inciting angry mobs" or "rabid right-wing extremists."

* On a related note, "Town Halls Gone Wild" continued today in a variety of locations.

* CBS News offers a good example of how not to report on the right-wing harassment strategy.

* Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D) of Texas hasn't changed his mind at all after his run-in with a right-wing mob: "I am more committed than ever to win approval of legislation to offer more individual choice to access affordable health care. An effective public plan is essential to achieve that goal."

* What's more, Doggett told CNN today, "I'll tell you, unless more Americans who are suffering under the insurance companies get out there and express their opinion, write their letter to the editor, call these talk shows -- if they don't get their message out the insurance companies will win in September and we just cannot let that happen."

* HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius reminds folks of "the reason we're even having this conversation" about reform in a WaPo op-ed.

* Nice to see Blue Dog Rep. Mike Ross (D-Ark.) have a few unkind words about George W. Bush and health care today.


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 August 04, 2009 2:06 PM

Death, Dishonesty and the GOP

Democrats don't want to "kill Granny," but Republicans want to ensure that "Granny" suffers needlessly in death, and that her family deals with the confusion of not knowing what "Granny" wanted.

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Health Care, Universal Health Care, SCHIP, etc...(10) August 04, 2009 2:05 PM

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Health Care, Universal Health Care, SCHIP, etc...(9)

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