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Posts Tagged ‘health care reform’

January
18

Another Super Tuesday!

by ForeverPlaid News

Scott Brown (left) annd Martha Coakley

Scott Brown (left) annd Martha Coakley

This coming Tuesday is an important day for USDemocrazy. We’re going to see Avatar for the sixteenth time!

But apparently it’s also a big day for blue people that have nothing to do with James Cameron: the Democrats.

Tuesday there will be an election for a Massachusetts Senate seat occupied by the late Ted Kennedy. This election is tightly tied to health care reform, an issue Mr. Kennedy was very passionate about.

Here’s the contenders: Democrat Martha Coakley vs. Republican Scott Brown. And it’s going to be a close one, folks.

Why is this a big election for health care reform? Says the Wall Street Journal:

If Brown wins, ObamaCare dies. He would be the 41st vote to prevent any compromise legislation from coming to the floor of the Senate.

And if ObamaCare dies, then Mr. Obama himself won’t look so great. Hence why he has been right there with Coakley, campaigning hard for a Democrat to keep the seat.  (check out above video that doesn’t include hecklers) …read more.

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Thanks, Wikicommons!

Thanks, Wikicommons!

We here at USDemocrazy love discourse, particularly when it involves us telling our editors what we think of their pathetic ideas. Thus, we have been very excited to follow the special election in Massachusetts.

Paul Kirk, the interim replacement for the late Senator Edward “Ted” Kennedy, will not be seeking to serve out the remainder of Senator Kennedy’s term.

This has led to much interest in political circles. Kirk, a Democrat was one of the sixty votes in the Senate that helped health care reform squeak in.

For awesome sites this week, therefore, we want to share some interesting info on that important Massachusetts race. Most notably… the candidates and Health Care. …read more.

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Thanks to Wikicommons.

Thanks to Wikicommons.

Time to Break out the Champagne Club soda!!

A health care bill is close to making its way out of the Senate (despite the Republicans best efforts to stop it).

President Obama expressed his happiness calling the possible law

a big victory for the American people.

Republicans (of course) are unhappy about this bill.

Should we, the American People, be celebrating this current policy?

Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman thinks that this health care reform will provide long term cost reductions despite the laws initial costs.  Check out his nifty graph below:

Thanks to Paul Krugman

Thanks to Paul Krugman

Not everyone agrees.

Our free market friends at Reason Magazine note, in the video below, that this health care bill may cost more and do more than anyone anticipated.

Of course it’s not just the Government’s expenses that people are debating. …read more.

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December
7

What’s Up Today?

by Lady_bug Whatzup

Courtesy of Google Images

Courtesy of Google Images

Why the gift of a HUMAN BRAIN is driving scientists simply wild!

The Catholic Church is writing an amendment to the Health Care Reform Bill?!? Why the issue of abortion might be a bigger road block than public option…

Let’s get pumped for Copenhagen and practice BOYCOTT “Going Green” ! Read why one columnist thinks “Going Green” is actually hurting our efforts to save Mother Earth!

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November
10

Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting

by MZ Hammmer News


We at US Democrazy may  not have been working last Saturday night, but our friends on Capital Hill were.

Recently you may recall that there has been a bit of a tussle about health care reform. (Okay.. it wasn’t a tussle, more like a mud wrestling match).

Well, a health care bill has taken its first tentative steps towards life after a close 220-215 vote in the House of Representatives.

What does the bill entail?  A lot, it’s over 1000 pages short long.  For a more sane, digestible look, here is the official summary.

…read more.

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courtesy of TMP Photo Gallery

courtesy of TMP Photo Gallery

There is honestly too much going on in the world of politics for any one person to follow (At least without getting a massive migraine).

So equipped with pain killers and a stack of cold compresses, we at USDemocrazy have set out to provide highlights from the wonderful world of partisan politics.

On Thursday, thousands of angry protesters descended on our nations Capitol. …read more.

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http://cooltrainpix.blogspot.com/2009_08_23_archive.html

http://cooltrainpix.blogspot.com/2009_08_23_archive.html

We at USDemocrazy often have trouble with our words (unfortunately so do our editors). We mangle, muddle and missspell misspell our metaphors.

So we were thrilled to find a public figure who shares our inadequacies.

Republican National Committee Chairman Micheal Steele proclaimed boldly on Wednesday that he was the cow on the tracks, and the health care reform train was going to have to stop for him. …read more.

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October
14

What’z Up Today?

by kaltoons Whatzup

credit Owl-pictures.com

credit Owl-pictures.com

You don’t mess with this owl: Talk about one tough bird. Police in southern Indiana said a great horned owl flew through the pre-dawn darkness into the front of a moving Ford F-250 pickup truck — and survived even as the collision mangled the truck’s radiator.

Politics part… Senate Finance Committee has approved the health care reform bill on a 14-9 vote, with Sen. Olympia Snowe the only Republican who voted “yes.”

Russia says “Nyet”… “Russia Resists U.S. Position on Sanctions for Iran”

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Courtesy of NPRs Political Junkie blog

Courtesy of NPR's Political Junkie blog

We at USDemocrazy woke up 0n Wednesday to the news about the death of celebrated and controversial Senator Edward “Ted” Kennedy. When started to look closer at his career (after a very strong cup of coffee) we started to realize just what a complicated a political character he was. …read more.

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August
20

What'zup today?: Deluxe Edition

by ForeverPlaid Whatzup

We at USDemocrazy have a pretty stacked social schedule for this weekend. (Filling in at our grandmother’s bridge game counts, right?)

Imagining that you might too, we’ve decided to expand our classic “What’zup today?” section to help you catch up on some of the important, or just interesting, or maybe bizarre, stories floating around the world wide web. You know, so you have something to talk about at all the parties you’ve promised to attend in the coming days.

Here goes nothing…

Here, The Daily Beast explores the possibility of “The Next Sarah Palin?” Can there be a “next” when the original is still hanging around? We smell a rivalry…

Kelly Ayotte, New Hampshire’s GOP rising star, is a folksy, gun-loving mother of two who has her eyes on a Senate seat. And, you betcha, she married a dude who puts Todd to shame.

The new “the FBI made me do it” defense makes its debut… A blogger charged with making threats against lawmakers and government officials claims the FBI taught him how to do it all.

“His job was basically to publish information which would cause other parties to act in a manner which would lead to their arrest,” Orozco said.

Robert “Mr. Smug” Gibbs gets dizzy more often than you think. Why? A photo.

The “burqini” for Muslim women gets banned in northern Italy. One would presume it just doesn’t show enough skin for the Italians.

A modest fit burqini, thanks to: http://www.ahiida.com/

A modest fit burqini, thanks to: http://www.ahiida.com/

“The sight of a ‘masked woman’ could disturb small children, not to mention problems of hygiene,” mayor Gianluca Buonanno was quoted as saying.

Who is better at swimming: Shaq or Michael Phelps? We will soon find out….

America loses another pioneer in news… The inventor of the news magazine and the televised presidential debate, Don Hewitt, has passed away.

We’ve heard about the uproar at health care town hall meetings, but have we seen the best protest signs? The Huffington Post helps us out in finding the most amusing. Our favorite:

What this country needs is more Arrested Development.

What this country needs is more "Arrested Development."

You think American news outlets have major spin going on? Try living in North Korea. (OK, that wasn’t fair…)

Last week, KCNA took a similarly rose-colored look at the fact that the country’s capital city still has no traffic lights and relies instead on a corps of women who direct traffic the old-fashioned way, by hand, in an article headlined: “Traffic Control Platform beneath Umbrella Installed at Intersections of Pyongyang.”

Must be cool under there.

Must be cool under there.

Is Putin back in the saddle? (Come on, that one’s worth a little smile.) The presidency may be in his future (despite also being in his past…).

See why were funny?

See why we're funny?

Apparently, T-shirt-making is a science. That ragtag collection in your dresser doesn’t pass muster when it comes to T-shirts being fashionable, you know.

This shirt, if you’ll excuse me for sounding ridiculous, may be the most perfect garment I own. The fabric is thin to the point of almost being sheer, made of high-gauge long-fiber Sea Island cotton that is difficult to describe without resorting to clichés: soft as a buttered, cashmere baby’s bottom? Yes, that soft!

Barney Frank loses his cool over health care “Nazi policy” accusations come up. Well, it is August…

After all the uncomfortably testy town-hall footage we’ve seen this month, watching Frank deal with an over the top Obama-as-Nazi accusation is pretty entertaining. Nothing like an accusation of Nazism to lighten up August.

Time has come for the Afghan vote! (Catch up on the Afghan election situation here.)

And to wrap up, a bit of fake news: Obama gets tangled up in coat hangers! (Via The Onion.)

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We at USDemocrazy know this health care debate is important and all… but it can get awfully confusing…

For example…  many conservatives are opposing health care reform… but Dr. Andrew Weil, a Huffington Post blogger says the health care reform being offered IS CONSERVATIVE!

In fact it is three times more conservative that you think!

In his words, Weil labeled current health care reform as …

1. “…philosophically conservative in that it aims to restore core values of medicine that were strong in the past, such as a reverence for the healing power of nature and the importance of the therapist-patient relationship.”

2. “…medically conservative in stressing prevention and advocating lesser rather than greater intervention — the least invasive, least harmful, least expensive treatments that the circumstances of illness demand. IM practitioners always observe the Hippocratic precept of “First, do no harm,” relying in simpler interventions whenever possible and turning to more drastic ones only when the former fail to produce desired outcomes.”

3. “…fiscally conservative in its willingness to look beyond the blinders of high-tech medicine to identify inexpensive therapies that may be useful and in its insistence that they be held to the same standard for clinical- and cost-effectiveness in well-designed outcomes trials.”

What are your thoughts on Dr. Weil’s interesting take?

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August
13

What'zup today?

by ForeverPlaid Whatzup

Michael Steele laughs at Arlen Specter on T.V. Did we just hear a collective “Awwwww…” from the left?

I’ve search your person, you pockets, and your luggage. Now may I have your D.O.B. to make sure you’re not lethal?

Hey Google! Thanks for saving our butts! Love, Twitter.

“Russian Vodka Consumption Shocks Even Russians.” We believe that is enough said.

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August
11

What'zup today?

by ForeverPlaid Whatzup

A misunderstanding over which male’s opinion a student wanted Hillary Clinton to give causes her to snap!

Nancy Pelosi says that protesting health care reform is “un-American.” Meanwhile, everyone else backs away from her slowly.

Britney Spears wins the Teen Choice Awards’ highest honor. Awesome.

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August
11

To euthanize a rumor…

by ForeverPlaid News

Did somebody say my name? asks Dr. Kevorkian

"Did somebody say my name?" asks Dr. Kevorkian.

Raise your hand if you think you’ve heard enough about health care!

Well, the truth is that we at USDemocrazy think there’s a whole lot still to say. So, whether you have or have not read our most recent post on the big overhaul, this post is still an important read.

Why? One word: euthanasia.

Now, we have heard a lot of euphemisms for this nasty term (which, you know, may be a euphemism too…). When we typed “euthanize the elderly” into Google we discoverd that euthanasia is getting alot of attention these days…

One reason is thanks to a Betsy McCaughey, former Republican lieutenant governor of New York, when she wrote an opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal:

But legislation now being rushed through Congress—H.R. 3200 and the Senate Health Committee Bill—will reduce access to care, pressure the elderly to end their lives prematurely, and doom baby boomers to painful later years.

Now, where did this notion of ending the lives of seniors prematurely come about? Presumably from a provision in the oft-talked-about bill.  The bill suggests Medicare cover a consultation between the elderly and their doctors every five years. (If you’re feeling ambitious, it’s on page 425 of the bill.)

According to a fact-finding piece aimed at debunking the euthanasia belief, Talking Points Memo pointed out,

These consultations include “an explanation by the practitioner of the continuum of end-of-life services and supports available, including palliative care and hospice, and benefits for such services and supports that are available under this title.”

Additionally, the White House has launched its own site (www.whitehouse.gov/realitycheck) in hopes of dispelling such rumors… which, you know, don’t make Obamacare sound so appealing. (Here’s the link directly to the expert debunking of the euthanasia myth.)

It would seem that what started out as a discussion on helping seniors explore their options has turned into a monster that wants to pull the plug on America’s more mature generation.

“Is the Government Going to Euthanize my Grandmother?” asks Ezra Klein pointedly on his Washington Post blog, to which Georgia Republican senator Johnny Isakson replied with an explanation about end-of-life directives:

In the health-care debate mark-up, one of the things I talked about was that the most money spent on anyone is spent usually in the last 60 days of life and that’s because an individual is not in a capacity to make decisions for themselves. So rather than getting into a situation where the government makes those decisions, if everyone had an end-of-life directive or what we call in Georgia “durable power of attorney,” you could instruct at a time of sound mind and body what you want to happen in an event where you were in difficult circumstances where you’re unable to make those decisions.

Well, that makes sense to people in all fifty states, as Isakson later points out. He also mentions that the aforementioned consultations between patients and doctors about end-of-life treatment options is voluntary, too.

Yet, none of this talk about euthanasia has been helped by the assertion by former Alaska Republican governor Sarah Palin that the new health care plan will include so-called “death panels” to determine who will and who will not get the full level of care they need. Says Palin, via Facebook:

And who will suffer the most when they ration care? The sick, the elderly, and the disabled, of course. The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down Syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s “death panel” so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their “level of productivity in society,” whether they are worthy of health care. Such a system is downright evil.

The truth is, most people would agree that this system is evil. But the question may be is such a system is less fair than our current one?

On the complete opposite of the debate spectrum is Robert Wright at the Atlantic, who writes:

But let’s be clear: the people who are trying to sabotage reform by telling mind-boggling lies about its hidden rationing agenda seem, in fact, pretty content with rationing; they seem happy with a system in which the least “productive” members of society get bad health care, including, occasionally, health care so bad that it leads to death.

For more background, we suggest you check out Politics Daily’s bullet points on the euthanasia issue.

And for the other side, see what the Wall Street Journal says about how Obamacare will treat seniors.

Then, tell us what you think: will we be seeing more Jack Kevorkians under the new health care plan, if it passes? Or can seniors, and the rest of us, rest easy?

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We at USDemocrazy aren’t health policy wonks so we’re having a bit of trouble keeping up the congressional health care bills in the making…

especially since these bills seem to change every other minute!

But we are sure of one thing: Things are not going according to Democrats’ plans.

Here’s what we have learned…

First, we know the health bills on the table will lack a couple aspects Obama REALLY hoped for including:

- mandates for businesses to offer coverage to their workers.

- A government insurance option.

Secondly, despite Democrats’ attempts to get Republicans to link arms with them and sing Kumbaya , senators who wished to remain anonymous have announced,

“That no agreement has been reached…and…there is no guarantee of one…numerous key issues remain to be settled, including several options to pay for the legislation.”

It appears that much of what Democrats have at present is a significantly watered-down version of their original health care plan.

And speaking of water, it looks like the Democrats’ health care bills will have to wait till after summer vacations at the beach– and maybe lose some steam in the process.

While the House is ready for a vote according to Speaker Nancy Pelosi the Senate is not. The Senate has decided to postpone a vote on top health care bills to September.

While Congressional bill-writing sessions have remained very private. Here is what we found out about the bi-partisan healthcare reform bill in the making:

- Democrats hope to expand the ranks of non-profit health care insurers (these would not be government run) to provide competition to the current largely for-profit health insurance industry.

- As part of a compromise plan: potential health care legislation would not penalize businesses who refused to provide health care insurance to their employees but would provide incentives to those who did.

- The bill’s crafters hope to create of a commission which would recommend long-term savings in Medicare and expand Medicaid.

The cost of the plan will be according to Congressional leaders will be under 1 trillion dollars.

How will we pay for this? The following options are in consideration:

- An excise tax of as much as 35 percent on insurance with very high annual premiums (perhaps over $25,000).

- Fees on the manufacturers of medical devices and on the makers of both brand name and generic drugs coming onto the market.

- Limiting Flexible Savings Accounts to $2,000 annually.

So that seems to be the plan so far…but looking at the changes made ALREADY to Obama’s original health care plan, we’re sure more changes are on the way.

Stick with us and we’ll keep you updated with news on this STICKY health care mess.

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