Bill Maher on Conan

Anthony Weiner, Barack Obama, Betsy McConaughey, Big Pharma, Blue Dogs, Broadcatching, California, Charles Grassley, Conan O'Brian, Glenn Beck, Healthcare Industry, Hlth Care Reform, Howard Dean, Insurance Companies, Kent Conrad, Marijuana, Max Baucus, Orrin Hatch, Politics, Public Option, Real Time, Rick Scott, Rush Limbaugh, Ted Kennedy, Tonight Show

Bill Maher on Conan

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FreedomWorks President Admits it Urges People to be "Agressive" at Health Care Town Halls

Bill Kristol, Blanche Lincoln, Chuck Grassley, Daily Show, Eric Cantor, GOP Shenanigans, Health Care Reform, Jim DeMint, John Kyl, Max Baucus, Politics, Susan Collins, Town Halls

Healthcare Reform: What a Week

Billy Tauzin, Broadcatching, GOP, Health Care Debate, Insurance Companies, Malkin, Pharma, Politics, Rick Scott, StephaStabClinton, Tea-Baggers, Town Halls
by mcjoan at D A I L Y  K O S

George_Takei

Mon Aug 10, 2009 at 07:16:03 AM PDT

These are times that try a progressive healthcare blogger’s soul. It shouldn’t be a surprise that a political establishment that looks at the fact that the Bush administration, led by Dick Cheney in every venal step, decided to start torturing people picked up in Afghanistan to amass false confessions about connections between bin Laden and Saddam so that they would have their “justification” for their war on choice, with nothing more than a yawn can report as straight across “news” that Sarah Palin thinks Obama is coming to kill her baby. But it still astounds that this is the new “normal.” Just unfathomable. And that’s what last week was.

The image that will be indelibly linked in my mind I saw in one of the reports on the Rachel Maddow show with video from a townhall meeting held by Rep. John Dingell, and referenced in gdunn’s diary. There’s a young, disabled woman (pictured in the diary), speaking to the group propped up by her crutches, trying to explain what she’s been through since her insurance company dropped her last year and her inability to get coverage now because of her “preexisting condition.” She’s trying to tell her story, and an older woman stands a few rows back from her and screams, her face distorted and ugly in it’s anger and ignorance and selfish extremism, “I shoudn’t have to pay for your health care.” And these are normal, patriotic, “concerned” citizens? The ones abusing disabled people, hanging people in effigy, destroying property, making death threats. (Oh, and also insurance and pharmaceutical industry shills and Republican operatives.) This is political discourse now, and Cokie Roberts says it’s the liberals’ fault. I guess she and Rahm Emanuel have that in common.

That’s the week we had.

Other stuff happened, too. The obscene amounts of money was in the news again. Hmmm, suppose there’s a link between the $1.4 million plus spent per day by industry trying to kill this and the townhall screamers?

Max Baucus set deadline number 578 for when he’d be done with his bill, September 15. Jon Kyl took his turn as the GOP concern troll to say that there’s no way. And to add to the bipartsan fun, Chuck Grassley, in an extreme display of Senate comity and decorum, used his colleague Ted Kennedy’s illness to lie about the proposed public option. So Democrats want to kill granny, Sarah Palin’s kid, and Ted Kennedy, for those of you keeping score at home.

Bipartisan negotiations in the Baucus committee seemingly continue unabated.

Billy Tauzin created a stir when he leaked a White House/Baucus deal with PhRMA that would have blocked proposals in the legislation to extract cost savings from them beyond an agreed-upon $80 billion through price negotiations or rebates. Then it got confusing, with some Dem Senators saying that the White House told them there was no deal, while at the same time the White House was reaffirming it. The week ended with the White House backing out of a chunk of the deal, and with many Dems (those not named Baucus) with a bad taste in their mouths. The most disturbing aspect of this story is the extent to which the White House is using Baucus, knowing what we already know about what is going to be lacking in the Baucus plan: namely, a public option.

This week, the primary media story is likely to continue to be the townhalls, since they’ll make good copy. The behind the scenes story will be the fight for a real public option, and not some watered down co-op system. Stay tuned.

Republicans Propagating Falsehoods in Attacks on Health-Care Reform

Bill Kristol, Blanche Lincoln, Chuck Grassley, Daily Show, Eric Cantor, GOP Shenanigans, Health Care Reform, Jim DeMint, John Kyl, Max Baucus, Politics, Susan Collins, Town Halls

WASHINGTON POST

doughy pantload

By Steven Pearlstein
Friday, August 7, 2009

As a columnist who regularly dishes out sharp criticism, I try not to question the motives of people with whom I don’t agree. Today, I’m going to step over that line.

The recent attacks by Republican leaders and their ideological fellow-travelers on the effort to reform the health-care system have been so misleading, so disingenuous, that they could only spring from a cynical effort to gain partisan political advantage. By poisoning the political well, they’ve given up any pretense of being the loyal opposition. They’ve become political terrorists, willing to say or do anything to prevent the country from reaching a consensus on one of its most serious domestic problems.

There are lots of valid criticisms that can be made against the health reform plans moving through Congress — I’ve made a few myself. But there is no credible way to look at what has been proposed by the president or any congressional committee and conclude that these will result in a government takeover of the health-care system. That is a flat-out lie whose only purpose is to scare the public and stop political conversation.

Under any plan likely to emerge from Congress, the vast majority of Americans who are not old or poor will continue to buy health insurance from private companies, continue to get their health care from doctors in private practice and continue to be treated at privately owned hospitals.

The centerpiece of all the plans is a new health insurance exchange set up by the government where individuals, small businesses and eventually larger businesses will be able to purchase insurance from private insurers at lower rates than are now generally available under rules that require insurers to offer coverage to anyone regardless of health condition. Low-income workers buying insurance through the exchange — along with their employers — would be eligible for government subsidies. While the government will take a more active role in regulating the insurance market and increase its spending for health care, that hardly amounts to the kind of government-run system that critics conjure up when they trot out that oh-so-clever line about the Department of Motor Vehicles being in charge of your colonoscopy.

There is still a vigorous debate as to whether one of the insurance options offered through those exchanges would be a government-run insurance company of some sort. There are now less-than-even odds that such a public option will survive in the Senate, while even House leaders have agreed that the public plan won’t be able to piggy-back on Medicare. So the probability that a public-run insurance plan is about to drive every private insurer out of business — the Republican nightmare scenario — is approximately zero.

By now, you’ve probably also heard that health reform will cost taxpayers at least a trillion dollars. Another lie.

First of all, that’s not a trillion every year, as most people assume — it’s a trillion over 10 years, which is the silly way that people in Washington talk about federal budgets. On an annual basis, that translates to about $140 billion, when things are up and running.

Even that, however, grossly overstates the net cost to the government of providing universal coverage. Other parts of the reform plan would result in offsetting savings for Medicare: reductions in unnecessary subsidies to private insurers, in annual increases in payments rates for doctors and in payments to hospitals for providing free care to the uninsured. The net increase in government spending for health care would likely be about $100 billion a year, a one-time increase equal to less than 1 percent of a national income that grows at an average rate of 2.5 percent every year.

The Republican lies about the economics of health reform are also heavily laced with hypocrisy.

While holding themselves out as paragons of fiscal rectitude, Republicans grandstand against just about every idea to reduce the amount of health care people consume or the prices paid to health-care providers — the only two ways I can think of to credibly bring health spending under control.

When Democrats, for example, propose to fund research to give doctors, patients and health plans better information on what works and what doesn’t, Republicans sense a sinister plot to have the government decide what treatments you will get. By the same wacko-logic, a proposal that Medicare pay for counseling on end-of-life care is transformed into a secret plan for mass euthanasia of the elderly.

Government negotiation on drug prices? The end of medical innovation as we know it, according to the GOP’s Dr. No. Reduce Medicare payments to overpriced specialists and inefficient hospitals? The first step on the slippery slope toward rationing.

Can there be anyone more two-faced than the Republican leaders who in one breath rail against the evils of government-run health care and in another propose a government-subsidized high-risk pool for people with chronic illness, government-subsidized community health centers for the uninsured, and opening up Medicare to people at age 55?

Health reform is a test of whether this country can function once again as a civil society — whether we can trust ourselves to embrace the big, important changes that require everyone to give up something in order to make everyone better off. Republican leaders are eager to see us fail that test. We need to show them that no matter how many lies they tell or how many scare tactics they concoct, Americans will come together and get this done.

If health reform is to be anyone’s Waterloo, let it be theirs.

Steven Pearlstein can be reached at pearlsteins@washpost.com.

Real Time With Bill Maher ~ Aug 7th 2009: Tweetle Dee and Tweetle Dum

Barack Obama, GOP, Health Care Reform, Politics, Republican Buffoonery, Town Halls, Tullycast

Real Time With Bill Maher

Bill Kristol 's Ego Tells Him to Go on Jon Stewart Again and We Are All Better For it

Bill Kristol, Blanche Lincoln, Chuck Grassley, Daily Show, Eric Cantor, Health Care Reform, Jim DeMint, John Kyl, Max Baucus, Politics, Susan Collins

Note to Kristol:

Hire Publicist.

Fire Publicist.

jt

Senate Turns Aside New Attempt to Scrutinize Fed

Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve, Goldman Sachs, Hank Paulson, Politics

bailoutREUTERS

Mon Jul 6, 2009 5:59pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve, facing growing pressure as it tries to heal the ailing economy, dodged a bullet on Monday when the U.S. Senate cast aside a new effort to increase scrutiny of the central bank.

On procedural grounds, the Senate blocked a bid to permit the U.S. comptroller general, who heads the investigative arm of Congress known as the Government Accountability Office, to audit the Federal Reserve system and issue a report.

Republican Senator Jim DeMint, who has been pushing for greater transparency at the Fed, failed to get the provision attached to the must-pass annual spending bill that includes funding for the GAO for the upcoming 2010 fiscal year.

The audit would have included details about the Fed’s discount window operations, funding facilities, open market operations and agreements with foreign central banks and governments, DeMint said on the Senate floor.

“The Federal Reserve will create and disburse trillions of dollars in response to our current financial crisis,” DeMint said. “Americans across the nation, regardless of their opinion on the bailout, want to know where the money has gone.

“Allowing the Fed to operate our nation’s monetary system in almost complete secrecy leads to abuse, inflation and a lower quality of life,” he said.

Democrats who control the Senate blocked the South Carolina Republican’s amendment on the grounds that it violated rules prohibiting legislation attached to spending bills.

Fed officials were not immediately available to comment.

The move comes as some lawmakers have increasingly become wary of the Fed’s actions, particularly for its handling of the real estate market and the meltdown of major financial institutions like investment bank Bear Stearns and insurance giant American International Group.

A non-binding provision in the fiscal 2010 budget blueprint Congress approved in April called on the Fed to provide more information about collateral posted against Bear Stearns and AIG loans.

That measure also sought a study evaluating the appropriate number and costs of the regional Fed banks.

The U.S. central bank has a seven-member board in Washington whose members are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. It also has 12 regional banks whose presidents are appointed by banks and other businesses in their local districts, with the consent of the Washington board.

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky and Alister Bull, editing by Dan Grebler)

FCC Chairman Nominee: ‘I Do Not Support’ Reinstating Fairness Doctrine

Douchebaggery, Fairness Doctrine, FCC, Politics

Wednesday, June 17, 2009
By Edwin Mora

Bloomberg Intrepid
U.S. Capitol (AP Photo)

Washington (CNSNews.com) – Julius Genachowski, President Obama’s nominee to become chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, told a Senate committee Tuesday that he does not plan to resuscitate the “Fairness Doctrine”– a rule that regulated how broadcast stations covered controversial issues, until it was repealed in the ‘80s.

“No, senator I don’t support reinstatement of the ‘Fairness Doctrine.’ I feel strongly about the First Amendment and I don’t think the FCC should be involved in censorship of content based on (limiting) political speech,” Genachowski told the members of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee.

The nominee’s comments were in response to Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison’s (R-Texas) question of whether he favored reviving the doctrine through any existing regulations, including “localism” standards.

“As I understood, you said that you do not support reviving it (the Fairness Doctrine) or anything like it, directly or indirectly through ‘localism’ and that sort of thing, and I just wanted to have for the record that I am correct stating your position that you would like to reinstate it,” Hutchison asked the nominee.

Genachowski’s response was similar to that given by the White House in February.

“As the president stated during the campaign, he does not believe the Fairness Doctrine should be reinstated,” White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said on Feb. 18.

Concern about reviving the doctrine had surfaced a few days earlier, on Feb. 15, when Obama advisor David Axelrod told Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday,” that he would “leave that issue (reviving Fairness Doctrine) to Julius Genachowski, the new head of the FCC, and to the President to discuss.”

Conservatives are concerned that even though the administration has said it does not endorse bringing back the “Fairness Doctrine,” several Democratic members of Congress have indicated that they would like to reinstate the policy.

What’s more, conservatives say the new administration may try to use existing FCC regulations, such as its “localism” policy, to bring back the requirement that broadcast stations either present “both sides” or avoid talking about controversial issues.

Under localism, which is already in place, “local content boards” would be created to ensure that a broadcasting station is up to par with community standards.

But conservatives and some broadcasters say that local content boards could add additional burdens to broadcast stations, which already have to answer to advertisers and listeners.

Worse, they say, the boards would likely bow to political influence to determine what should – and should not — be aired – in some localities, which could wind up excluding some conservative talk radio shows that dominate the talk radio airwaves.

Genachowski clearly stated his opposition to any attempt to bring back the Fairness Doctrine.

Sen. Mike Johanns (R-Neb.) brought up the concern during his opening statement, but rather than staying to question the prospective FCC chairman, Johanns left after making his initial remarks saying he would rather deal with the issue at a later time.

“Maybe sometime you can stop by the office, I would love to visit with you about the community advisory boards (local content boards),” said Johanns. “I can’t say there is huge controversy out there, but there is some controversy.”

He added: “There is some concern that, if a local broadcaster doesn’t know the community who can possibly know the community? But again I don’t want to sidetrack you.”

Hutchison and Johanns were the only Republican committee members, out of 11, who asked Genachowski questions. Johanns left after his opening statement, and no other Republican members attended the hearing.

The Republican members of the committee — Sens. Olympia Snowe (Maine), John Ensign (Nev.), Jim DeMint (S.C.), John Thune (S.D.), Roger Wicker (Miss.), Johnny Isakson (Ga.), David Vitter (La.), Sam Brownback (Kan.) and Mel Martinez (Fla.) — were not at the hearing. DeMint was briefly present, but left soon after the hearing started.

Committee Chairman Sen. John Rockefeller (D-W.V.) said he was embarrassed about senators leaving right after their opening statements, given the importance of the FCC.

“I am not pleased by the way — this is my fault I take full responsibility for it, that people made their statements and left. Some happen to come back . . . but it’s wrong it this particularly immensely important hearing, nomination hearing,” Rockefeller told the nominee.

“This is an embarrassment to you (Genachowski), it’s an embarrassment to me, an embarrassment to the United States Senate, and to this committee,” added the Senator. “So, from now on, we will not have opening statements except for the chairman and the ranking member.”

The chairman criticized those committee members who included their questions and concerns in their opening statement and left soon thereafter.

Kinky Friedman is Rick Perry's Big Texas Nightmare

Kinky Friedman, Politics, Rick Perry, Texas

Kinky Friedman sends Rick Perry a gift

kinkKinky Friedman sent Gov. Rick Perry a set of training wheels last week in response to the governor breaking his collarbone in a biking accident.

“The little note said, ‘Sorry you got hurt. Too bad they don’t make training wheels for a legislative session,'” Friedman said in an interview last week.

The humorist and writer is seriously weighing a second run for governor— this time as a Democrat.

He said lawmakers have to head back to Austin because of Perry’s failed leadership. Friedman said he could do better.

“My style is like Obama,” Friedman said. “We don’t get down there like LBJ and twist arms in the Legislature. We try to inspire the public.”

Friedman also took issue with Perry’s regular reminders that the Texas economy is doing better than the rest of the country under his leadership.

“A baboon could have led us and we’d still be doing OK,” Friedman said. “It’s a big rich state. Good weather. A lot of people like to come here.”

-Aman Batheja