2009/09/09
Uninsured won’t see benefits until 2013
Tonight:
Obama also urged Congress to stop "bickering" over health care reform and get to work fixing a system that is at its "breaking point."
"The time for bickering is over. The time for games has passed. Now is the season for action," Obama said. "Now is when we must bring the best ideas of both parties together … Now is the time to deliver on health care."
Apparently, now is the time to deliver on health care in four years.
First comes the pain. In 2011, the government would start collecting higher taxes on upper-income people to pay for the overhaul. The uninsured would have to wait until 2013 before they started receiving the benefits — after the 2010 and 2012 elections.
You got that? Obama doesn’t want the experience of ObamaCare to tarnish his re-election bid, so it won’t actually go into effect until after the next presidential election. What a puss.
Filed under Uncategorized by kodewords
2009/09/03
Urgent Care
Finger bitten off during California health protest
Ventura County Sheriff’s Capt. Frank O’Hanlon says about 100 people demonstrating in favor of health care reforms rallied Wednesday night on a street corner. One protester walked across the street to confront about 25 counter-demonstrators.
O’Hanlon says the man got into an argument and fist fight, during which he bit off the left pinky of a 65-year-old man who opposed health care reform.
So a pro-ObamaCare guy confronted a bunch of anti-ObamaCare protesters, and ended up biting the finger off of one of an elderly anti-ObamaCare protester.
Filed under Uncategorized by kodewords
2009/08/29
Obama’s czars
From here
"The biggest problems that we’re facing right now have to do with George Bush trying to bring more and more power into the executive branch and not go through Congress at all. And that’s what I intend to reverse when I’m president of the United States."
- Sen. Barack Obama, March 31, 2008
FAIL
Here’s a list of Obama’s "czars" who apparently work in the White House, are paid by the federal government, directly advise the president, may or may not wield any direct power, and who did not have to be confirmed by Congress, and are unaccountable to Congress for their actions:
- Herbert Allison Jr., bailout czar, [replaced Bush bailout czar Neel Kashkari, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability confirmed by Senate]
- Alan Bersin, border czar
- Dennis Blair, intelligence czar [Director of National Intelligence, a Senate confirmed position]
- John Brennan, counterterrorism czar
- Carol Browner, energy czar
- Adolfo Carrion, urban affairs czar
- Ashton Carter, weapons czar [actually Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics and so subject to Senate confirmation]
- Aneesh Chopra, technology czar
- Jeffrey Crowley, [openly gay white man] AIDS czar
- Cameron Davis, Great Lakes czar
- Nancy-Ann DeParle, health czar
- Earl Devaney, stimulus oversight czar
- Joshua DuBois, religion czar, aka God czar
- Arne Duncan, education czar
- Kenneth Feinberg, pay czar
- Daniel Fried, Guantanamo closure czar
- J. Scott Gration, Sudan czar
- Melissa Hathaway, [soon to be] cybersecurity czar
- David J. Hayes, water czar [a Deputy Interior Secretary and therefore subject to Senate oversight]
- Richard Holbrooke, Afghanistan-Pakistan (Af-Pak) czar
- John Holdren, science czar
- Kevin Jennings, safe schools czar [nominated to be Assistant Deputy Secretary of Education, Office of Safe and Drug Free Schools, a newly created post; openly gay founder of an organization dedicated to promoting pro-homosexual clubs and curricula in public schools]
- Van Jones, green jobs czar
- Gil Kerlikowske, drug czar
- Ron Kirk, trade czar
- Vivek Kundra, infotech czar [Shoplifted four shirts, worth $33.50 each, from J.C. Penney in 1996 (source)]
- Douglas Lute, war czar [retained from Bush administration, married to Jane Holl Lute, currently a Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security]
- George Mitchell, Mideast peace czar
- Ed Montgomery, car czar [replacing Steve Rattner, who stepped down amid controversy over his former firm’s role in a possible kickback scandal]
- Lynn Rosenthal, domestic violence czar
- Dennis Ross, Mideast policy czar
- Gary Samore, weapons of mass destruction czar
- Todd Stern, climate change czar
- Cass Sunstein, regulatory czar
- Larry Summers, economic czar
- Michael Taylor, food czar
- Arturo Valenzuela, Latin-American czar (nominee) [although this post is referred to as a czar, he is nominatied to be Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs and so is subject to Senate confirmation]
- Paul Volcker, economic czar number two
- Elizabeth Warren, TARP czar [chair of the [Congressional Oversight Panel for the Trouble Assets Relief Program; note that Herb Allison is more frequently called the TARP czar]
- Jeffrey Zients, government performance czar [replaced original nominee Nancy Killefer who withdrew her name after issues with her personal income tax filings surfaced]
Filed under Uncategorized by kodewords
Filed under Uncategorized by kodewords
2009/08/26
Politicizing Kennedy
Sen. Robert Byrd wants to rename the health care bill after Ted Kennedy
In his honor and as a tribute to his commitment to his ideals, let us stop the shouting and name calling and have a civilized debate on health care reform which I hope, when legislation has been signed into law, will bear his name for his commitment to insuring the health of every American.
Other libs are already calling for passage of the health care bill because Teddy died
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office sent an email to reporters at around 2:30 a.m. today, just hours after his death, calling for the passage of health care overhaul. “Ted Kennedy’s dream of quality health care for all Americans will be made real this year because of his leadership and his inspiration,” the statement read.
South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn, the House majority whip, said: “As we move forward with health reform legislation, his absence will be palpable. But let us use his inspirational words as our guide, to rise to our best ideals and finally provide decent quality health care to all Americans as a fundamental right, not a privilege.”
Andy Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), also issued a statement this morning calling for the passage of health care overhaul. “Let us continue his cause,” Stern said. “Let us take action this year to pass health care reform. And let us continue to build Kennedy’s vision of America.”
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