29 Times Later: The Definition of Insanity is...
I must have read someone who miscounted earlier; the speech that President Obama is planning to give in just a few moments is his 29th attempt to sell the American people on the idea that the steaming pile of crap healthcare he's pimping is actually a bouquet of roses.
Based upon the excerpts already released, his delivery could run the gamut of emotions from angry and exasperated to shrill and preachy. Don't you bitter clingers get it? Yeah, I think I might just live blog this. Almost showtime... 8:03--Someone turn down the volume of Hillary's suit. 8:09--I can't recall ever seeing so many false smiles in one place. Well, since the last time Congress was on TV, at least. 8:11--The Won walks in. The camera flashes to Michelle, and quickly cuts away from the sour expression on her face. Wonder what her issue was? 8:14--Michelle again as Barack takes the podium. She's irritated at someone or something... doubt we'll ever find out what. 8:16--Pelosi officially presents Obama. And it begins... 8:17--Proudly claims we have "pulled this economy back from the brink." I hope he's not counting his chickens. 8:19--to the meat, and first of his pre-released comments about health care reform. 8:20--the scolding begins. Not doing too bad in his tone just yet. Think he can keep it under wraps for long? 8:22--Did Pelosi have more work done to her face? It looks like a too-tight mask. 8:23--They cut again, briefly, to the First Lady. Scowling. Again. 8:26--"Build on what works, and fix what doesn't." Who can disagree with that? Apparently, those writing the bills... 8:27--He's not doing bad with the tone of his delivery, but the message itself sounds week. 8:28--Spoke too soon. Got preachy, but settled back down after the applause line. 8:30--Going into his promises, starting to get a bit of attitude... not bad, but you can see the frustration. 8:32--Making all sorts of promises that make private insurance tough, if not untenable when competing against the government. He's not offering anything substantially different that what the American people have already decided that they don't want. 8:37--Spend 8 hours in a project management class today. Now I'm watching what some claim is a very smart man attempting to lie to the American people, claiming that a series of goals is a plan. There is no plan. I repeat. HE ISN"T OFFERING A PLAN. HE'S JUST A OFFERING A WISHLIST. 8:38--Someone shouted out "LIE!" when he claimed his plan wouldn't insure illegal aliens. I didn't know the GAO was being represented here tonight... 8:41--tuned out for a minute. sorry. 8:43--health care is somehow like college... McCain is looking at Obama like he's an idiot. 8:44--Claims he won't sign a plan that adds "one dime" to our deficits, now or in the future. Ballsy, to lie that boldly. And yes, Obots, the GAO agrees that this is a blatant lie. 8:48--Won't touch (or reform) Medicare... and wants an additional system? Why? Are Social Security and Medicare not inefficient or bankrupting what is left of the economy fast enough? 8:54--Can't focus...claims "my door is always open, though he hasn't asked a Republican to come through it to work on Health care since April. 8:56--cue violins... here comes Ted Kennedy's body being propped up on top of Paul Wellstone. 8:58--still pimping the bloated corpse. 8:59--still pimping the bloated corpse. 9:00--tries to compare Social Security and Medicare to his plan. Utterly ignores that both of those plans had popular public support, and this plan is in the negative and losing ground every day. 9:01--Claims more government is the answer to our problems. And he was serious. 9:03. Finally, mercifully, over. 29 times, and still sounding the same flat note. President Obama is still lying and claiming he has a plan. A laundry list of unsupportable wishes is not a plan.What a waste of time. What a waste of an Administration.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 08:00 PM
Comments
Posted by: HumboldtBlue at September 09, 2009 09:24 PM (GGSii)
Posted by: m at September 09, 2009 09:39 PM (tTufe)
I laughed, I cried... it was phenomenal.
Posted by: jana at September 09, 2009 09:44 PM (vSRlG)
Posted by: Jayne at September 09, 2009 09:46 PM (dwIL0)
I liked how he claimed the "public option" wouldn't need any subsidies, then bragged it up by comparing it to public colleges, some of the most subsidized institutions in existence.
I said it all last year after hearing him speak, with this simple observation:
Obama will give you everything you ever want or need. And a pony! Unless you're rich or Bush, then we're going to eat you because you're evil.
But he had no suggestions as to how to actually PAY for giving everybody everything they want. Other than eating the rich. And Bush. (News flash from reality--there aren't nearly enough rich to go around, nor, despite their fecundity, enough Bushes.) At a ballpark guess, tripling the discretionary federal budget would be insufficient to fulfill the promises made. But he shore do talk purty.
The Reader's Digest version of the speech: America needs to come together. Our bitter divisions are everyone else's fault. Especially Bush and the rich. We'll eat them, Obama will wave his magic Hope-Change™ leadership unity wand as we dance around the bloody bonepiles singing Kumbayah, and then we can all have everything we want and live happily ever after.
I wrote that a year ago last February, BEFORE The Won doubled the national debt. Nothing has changed.
Posted by: Tully at September 09, 2009 09:48 PM (tUyDE)
What the president is saying is that our system is broken. We pay more and get less than any system in the developed world. To do nothing is disaster. To lie about what has been proposed, and there are bald-faced lies, is counter-productive.
I know Republicans don't want to give this president the biggest progressive advance in health care since 1946, but some of their claims should make them hang their heads in shame.
And yet, Republicans lost all sense of shame years ago.
Still, for Tully to bring up doubling our national debt, after Reagan, Bush and Bush, reaches new lows.
Posted by: David L Terrenoire at September 09, 2009 10:13 PM (Bx4FB)
Posted by: Jayne at September 09, 2009 10:57 PM (dwIL0)
Posted by: john at September 09, 2009 11:01 PM (VHuhG)
I'm for tort reform. I believe if you bring a suit and lose you should pay the other person's legal fees, etc.
But in places where malpractice claims have been limited (see Texas), costs have not come down.
Insurance companies use malpractice as the boogeyman without ever addressing their systemic flaws.
Do the research and you'll see this isn't the silver bullet.
Posted by: David Terrenoire at September 09, 2009 11:11 PM (Bx4FB)
As for the topic at hand, I don't think that our government should steal from citizens. That's just me.
Posted by: brando at September 09, 2009 11:22 PM (LjEkE)
Very nice. Urine and time travel. Yeah, that's me. I'm crazy. And yet, I'm the one who is trying to discuss this from an adult place.
As far as the government stealing from us, that makes a nice teabag slogan, but what does it mean? Do you object to all taxes? Should your police and fire departments be private businesses or should they be there for all of us, regardless?
Do you think our soldiers should be paid and provided for according to the whim of our individual citizens?
Do you think the Bush tax of 36 percent is OK but 39 percent is treason?
If you think Social Security is stealing from you, are you prepared to put up Grandma in the spare room? Because my tax money is most likely supporting people in your family and, frankly, I'm OK with that.
So let's try to move on beyond bumper stickers, brando, and I'll hold back on the urine and time travel.
Now, which one of us sounds like a loon?
Posted by: David Terrenoire at September 09, 2009 11:34 PM (Bx4FB)
Posted by: Warren Bonesteel at September 09, 2009 11:41 PM (EEy2h)
Posted by: BR at September 10, 2009 12:04 AM (VDzyK)
I literally mean that I don't think it would be good if the United States Government seized all goods and wealth from the free citizens of our country. Could we at least agree on that?
Nope, we can't. Cause you stated it's loony.
Agree to disagree, I guess. You can't agree now.
As for the Teabag fixation you're stuck on. Um. Cut out the weirdness. I've heard about this behavior from some other Liberals, but I don't understand the need to proclaim that private stuff on a forum about socialism/healthcare/the President/insurance.
Posted by: brando at September 10, 2009 12:24 AM (LjEkE)
Posted by: SirKnob at September 10, 2009 12:41 AM (YtqX/)
IMHO, the highest cost of lawsuits isn't in the awards themselves. The cost is in the insurance and the added tests and procedures to provide CYA for doctors and hospitals.
Reduce the potential for ruination and these costs may come down, but until tort reform is seriously addressed, these costs will remain high. One big jury award and the premiums will go up and additional tests will be ordered.
Posted by: SouthernRoots at September 10, 2009 01:08 AM (FJRFk)
What the whole debate comes down to is the fact that private insurance companies, being for profit businesses, are skimming as much as 14% off the top to cover administrative costs, executive salaries and create profits for their stockholders. To do this they must ration care and charge their customers significantly more than they pay out to doctors and hospitals. You can eliminate waste and reduce malpractice lawsuits all you want, but there is no way to substantially reduce the cost of health care and make it possible for those who are uninsured to get health care coverage without the amount that is being taken out of the system off the top by insurers. And there is no incentive for private insurers to reduce how much they take off the top without there being an alternative in the marketplace that will cost less.
If a government run or supported option or co-op cannot provide health care more efficiently or effectively than private insurance companies, it will fail-which will serve to prove the point that conservatives have been making for years and open the door for them to reform health care to their liking. If, on the other hand, a public option is able to provide health care effectively for less, either private insurance companies will have to adjust to compete with that option or they will fail-which conservative, who constantly talk about letting "the marketplace" determine economic outcomes, should also welcome.
It is strange, then, that conservatives, who constantly harp about trusting "the marketplace" are so reluctant to trust "the marketplace" when it comes to dealing with any form of public option being introduced into the health care marketplace.
Is some sort of tort reform necessary to relieve good doctors of the onerous burden that malpractice insurance has become? Yes. Should waste and abuse be rooted out of the entire health care system. Of course. Should the AMA be required to allow more doctors to be educated in US medical schools? Certainly.
But until the amount that is being taken out of the system off the top that has nothing to do with the actual delivery of health care is reduced and the growth of that amount is limited, it will be impossible to reduce the costs that Americans have to pay for health care, let alone extend basic health care to those who presently cannot afford to pay for coverage and rely on services that those who have health insurance are currently paying for.
I know that the very notion of limiting the profits that can be made by any area of private industry is painful for conservatives, but the rising cost of health care must be controlled if the rest of the economy is to be allowed to grow. And the way to bring about the biggest savings is to offer a lower-cost alternative that is presently not available in the marketplace. If private industry is not willing to provide that alternative, then there is no alternative but for the government to arrange for one to be created before costs get even more out of control.
Posted by: masters2cents at September 10, 2009 01:34 AM (+KhZ1)
Posted by: redc1c4 at September 10, 2009 01:50 AM (d1FhN)
Posted by: Neo at September 10, 2009 01:56 AM (tE8FB)
Ok, for the umteenth time we'll explain this to the Obamabots how it will work. A subsidized government option will offer coverage at lower rates than comparable private policies. Employers will be told that if they don't provide insurance coverage meeting certain government guidelines they will be penalized; a way to avoid this is to cease offering private coverage and just pay a government penalty estimated to be 8% of payroll costs - a cost typically less than offering private insurance policies to employees. So, the government incents employers to abandon private coverage in favor of dropping that benefit and forcing its employees to buy into the government option.
As to saving money by shifting to a government bureaucracy, you must be kidding. Perhaps you have missed the reports that show government employees are paid a premium wage and higher benefits than comparable private sector workers. Whatever "profit factor" is removed will be made up for in higher wages and bonuses for the government managers. As for advertising costs, the state of California paid a firm $500MM for a 4 year contract in essence to market S-CHIP healthcare policies to potential customers.
Pointing to the expertise demonstrated by government run operations such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, the VA hospitals, the post office, Amtrack, etc. doesn't exactly make taxpayers confident the "won't cost taxpayers a dime more" promises will hold up.
Posted by: in_awe at September 10, 2009 02:37 AM (/NIOg)
brando,
Sorry. I shouldn't have said you sounded loony. No, this sounds more like paranoid delusional.
Posted by: David Terrenoire at September 10, 2009 05:00 AM (Bx4FB)
Buckle up, folks, and prepare for Government-run utopia!
Posted by: Badnewzbearz at September 10, 2009 05:55 AM (lX87e)
Mental health insult? This is... how did you put it in an earlier comment... "discussing in an adult place"?
You lose. Thanks for playing.
Posted by: Balthar at September 10, 2009 08:52 AM (wYTGF)
Mental health insult? This is... how did you put it in an earlier comment... "discussing in an adult place"?
You lose, David. Thanks for playing.
Posted by: Balthar at September 10, 2009 08:53 AM (wYTGF)
CY nails it -- the President did not offer a plan, just a wishlist phrased as promises, just as he did during the campaign. He's going to achieve these miracles with fairy dust and a magic wand.
If there's so much waste and fraud in Medicare and Medicaid to pay for all of this, why isn't he taking on that waste regardless of his wishlist?
If preventative care is such a cost-saver, why do study after study show that 80% or more of preventative care fails cost-benefit testing, and actually costs more in the long run? (Oh never mind, once we get a rationing board in place we can fix THAT!)
Where'd those other 17 million uninsured go, back over the border?
If we're going to pump up demand for health care services by covering everybody, where's the extra supply going to come from to meet that demand? We're already woefully short of primary care physicians, and they don't appear overnight. The high cost of medical care and most of the excess cost growth in in the US is directly due to inelastic demand and limited supply, so where's that new supply going to come from? Without it increased demand can have only two effects, shortages and/or price boosts.
One could go on, but arguing with LibTurfers is pointless. They can't deviate from their programming and accept no input from anyone but their programmers.
Posted by: Tully at September 10, 2009 09:40 AM (tUyDE)
Mr. brando brings out a time travel and urine attack, I suggest that if he thinks Obama is out to steal all his stuff he's may suffer from paranoia and you find equivalent maturity in those two statements, am I reading that right?
And then you cap it off with "Thanks for playing?"
Tell me, Balthar, do you actually read these comments or do you have quips circa 1994 just on hand at Control V? Because "Thanks for playing" was mildly amusing back when the Internet ran on gerbil-power, but today it suggests a laziness, maybe even a deficiency in wit, sir.
I suggest you try harder.
Posted by: David Terrenoire at September 10, 2009 10:00 PM (Bx4FB)
Is this not your confession? "Urine and time travel. Yeah, that's me. I'm crazy."
I know.
You're an integrity violator to say that I have a mental illnes. It's objectively false. At least you can admit that you're crazy. Just don't forget it.
I suppose it's a catch-22, trying to get a full-blown admitted crazy to understand. But you can't blame me for trying. I'm a giver.
Posted by: brando at September 11, 2009 10:37 AM (IPGju)
There would be no problem with the "public option" if four basic rules were followed:
-- The public option must not receive any taxpayer money whatsoever
-- The public option must pay its own bills from its own revenue, rather than "borrowing" buildings, utilities, collections, administration, and other functions from the Federal government
-- The public option cannot write off any debt or deficit to the Federal government; if it doesn't make enough on premiums, it has to raise them.
-- The public option itself must pay taxes on its revenue
In other words, the "public option" would be forced to abide by the same rules as private insurers and pay the same expenses.
It would tip over and die within a year.
Posted by: North Dallas Thirty at September 12, 2009 02:52 AM (ABFN0)
Did you try to defend stupid with something you think is stupid?
Stupid!
Posted by: Matt at September 12, 2009 08:06 AM (54Fjx)
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