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Obama Health Care

Americans Want Health Care Reform, not Republican Nonsense

Re:  POLL: Nearly Two-Thirds Of Americans Want Congress To Keep Trying On Health Care

Despite what you hear from the Republican leadership in Congress claiming that Americans don’t want health care reform, there is yet another poll out today that states otherwise:

A large majority of Americans still want Congress to pass health care reform, according to early results from a Washington Post-ABC News poll released on Tuesday.

The study showed that Democrats were twice as likely to support reform compared to Republicans, but that overall 63% of the country favors continued action.

Respondents were asked, “Do you think lawmakers in Washington should keep trying to pass a comprehensive health-care reform plan, or should they give up on comprehensive health-care reform?”

Democrats responded “Yes” 88% of the time, Republicans 42% and independents 56%.

The poll also found that the public puts slightly more blame on the GOP than President Obama — though there’s plenty to go around:

Nearly six in 10 in the new poll say the Republicans aren’t doing enough to forge compromise with President Obama on important issues; more than four in 10 see Obama as doing too little to get GOP support. Among independents, 56 percent see the Republicans in Congress as too unbending and 50 percent say so of the president; 28 percent of independents say both sides are doing too little to find agreement.

The GOP claims that they have had a bipartisan agenda on health care reform from day one. Can you believe that? The Senate HELP Committee bent over backwards to include Republican amendments to the mark-up, and they still try to blame Democrats as being partisan. The version that was passed was open to amendment on the floor of the Senate and the Republicans took advantage of it. Most of the Republican amendments failed. Why? Most were attempts to kill the bill, stall the bill, humiliate Obama, and offerings that were purely right-wing talking points meant to just waste time and grandstand. In other words, the Republican Senators offered nothing substantial. Here is a couple of the Republican amendments copied here from Slate.com, who kept track:

Republican Sen. Mike Crapo’s motion to strip the bill of any provisions that will result in a tax increase for individuals earning less than $200,000 or families earning less than $250,000 (text, floor statement). The obvious point of this amendment was to embarrass President Obama for violating his promise that health care wouldn’t impose taxes on this group (which, for the most part, it won’t). Failed Dec. 15, 45-54.

What makes Crapo’s amendment so stupid is that there are no provisions in the bill that imposes tax on those who make less than $200,000 in the first place.

Republican Sen. Judd Gregg’s amendment (2942) (text, press statement) requiring Medicare savings to be used to “save Medicare.” Gregg is the author of a Dec. 1 letter to fellow Republicans offering parliamentary tips on how to obstruct health reform. So don’t waste too much attention on this. Failed Dec. 7, 43-56.

They had their chance to add constructive measures to the health care bill, but they did not attempt any serious governance. Why? It is their position to set back an criticize putting all the responsibility on the Democrats. The Dems complained that the right has not offered anything useful, true, but the Republicans don’t care. They are playing a different game. Their agenda is to gain back power, not govern.

Republican leadership gets in front of the cameras at press conferences and make wild claims that a majority of Americans don’t want this health care bill. They are not entirely wrong because the key word is “this” bill. Right-wing mouth-breathing bottom-feeders got worked up to a froth this past summer over Obama’s plan to execute their grandparents and the reason I mention this here is because the those protests were not grassroots, rather top-down driven events for the purpose of spoiling any real insurance reform. The insurance industry and Pharma pumped cash into the organization of the protests and insured the media was on hand to televise the paid hecklers at Democratic Representatives and Senatorial town hall meetings. The campaign to smear health care reform worked to a degree. Now the Republicans in charge can boast that Americans are against it.

But, according to many polls like the one that came out today, a big majority of Americans are actually FOR health care reform.

Republicans aren’t concerned about the whims of the majority. What does concern them are the cares of the right wing minority, which they keep amply supplied with reasons to be against Obama and health care reform. They care about how they can use the health care debate to propel their propaganda.

What can the Dems do to counter their strategy? They can simply do the right thing and pass health care reform anyway, preferably with the public option.

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A Second Look | Even Huffington Post Hates Obama

via Obama Plans “New Season” Of More Direct Health Care Advocacy.
AP/Huffington Post   |  CHARLES BABINGTON
First Posted: 09- 2-09 08:53 AM   |   Updated: 09- 2-09 12:00 PM

Yet another AP article that is published in the so called “liberal media’s” leading on-line news source that slams President Obama. If Huffington Post wants to promote the progressive viewpoint, then they need to start editing these articles submitted by the

The Huffington Post

Associated Press because this article that begins with David Axelrod speaking about Obama’s new strategy quickly turns into a right-wing bragging session. This snippet is where things start to get contentious:

Congress’ August recess was brutal for Obama and his allies, as lawmakers faced raucous crowds denouncing Democrats’ health proposals. When Congress comes back Tuesday, Democratic leaders hope to change the dynamic by holding quiet, closed-door sessions with nervous colleagues and arguing that far-reaching health care changes can be good politics as well as good policy.

There’s not one word about how these “raucous crowds” were planted inside the town halls, or about how the whole fake grassroots activism was organized and seeded by AHIP, the nation’s largest insurance lobbyist. These phony protests are nothing short of a well funded insurance corporate campaign to kill much needed healthcare legislation.

The Associated Press, with the help of Huffington Post has once again broad-brushed the Democratic Party. This time as somehow inferior or weak by having to calm “nervous” colleagues.  If we left things up to Huffington Post, the right-wing news monkeys could start posting their hate-filled vitriol as legitimate news. Who needs FOX when we have the Huffington Post?

This next snippet is the last two paragraphs of the article and they are what Huffington Post wants you to walk away with – the last word per se:

Republicans approach Labor Day feeling upbeat about the ground they gained during the August recess. Some are confident that no amount of closed-door hand-holding of nervous Democratic lawmakers will reverse the momentum.

“After a disastrous month at home, the fact that Democrats’ new health care strategy is to hide in Washington from the people who elected them to get health care passed shows what bad shape they’re in,” said Antonia Ferrier, spokeswoman for House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio.

It would do the Democratic Party much good if these headlining articles in the Huffington Post would end on a positive, progressive note instead of a blatant endorsement of the right-wing echo chamber’s talking points.

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A Second Look | “The Wrong Diagnosis” Is All Wrong

via Dr. Andrew Weil: The Wrong Diagnosis.

In HuffPo today there are at least two articles that deal with the same subject that the health care reform debate is missing the point – that talk about becoming healthy and staying healthy is somehow left off the table.

I disagree. I think the health care debate in Congress is dead on target.

Dr. Andrew Weil address what he considers to be the answer to the health care problem in the U.S. in an op-ed called, The Wrong Diagnosis.

And, what’s true in personal health care is just as true in national health care reform: Healing begins with the correct diagnosis of the problem.

Washington is working on reform initiatives that focus on one problem: the fact that the system is too expensive (and consequently too exclusive.) Reform proposals, such as the “public option” for government insurance or calls for drug makers to drop prices, are aimed mostly at boosting affordability and access. Make it cheap enough, the thinking goes, and the 46 million Americans who can’t afford coverage will finally get their fair share.

But what’s missing, tragically, is a diagnosis of the real, far more fundamental problem, which is that what’s 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. It’s not a health care system at all; it’s a disease management system, and making the current system cheaper and more accessible will just spread the dysfunction more broadly.

Somewhere in a fictitious classroom…

“Children, class, the good doctor makes a statement that our current health care industry doesn’t help people stay healthy. Can anyone think of a reason why our health care industry doesn’t keep us healthy?”

A hand shot up from the back of the class. The teacher is a bit cautious because this child is sometimes unruly. “Yes”, she says nodding to the anxious student.

“My Dad said that Mom can’t go to the nutritionist ’cause she’s fat ’cause the insurance won’t cover it,” he says. There’s snickering around the classroom. His hand shoots up again, “What does that mean, the insurance won’t cover it?”

The teacher replies, “Your mother is in a predicament that millions of American citizens find themselves in. We are willing to use the medical industry’s methods to keep us healthy, but sadly, many of us don’t have insurance coverage that will pay for us to see the specialists we need to guide us down a healthy path. Oftentimes, treatment such as dietary planning and supplements, even gastric bypass surgery, is just out of reach for many of us on the lower end of the income ladder. We just don’t make enough money, and our employee insurance is restricted to regular medical treatments. So our access to the special treatment is severely limited. Does that answer your question?”

The student’s eyes turned downward and a tear rolled down his cheek. “Mom sure would be happy if she could go do it,” he whispers.

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