Because we all could use a break. Hysterical Web site. I laughed out loud, a lot.
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The Arnold Palmer
10 hours ago
Read More......By now, you're probably used to hearing about the $900 billion health-care bill. But what about the 150,000-life health-care bill?At this point, the assistance to the people who need it most is the critical moral and policy decision. Would it be a band-aid? Yes, but even a band-aid can staunch bleeding, and right now that's what we desperately need. The insurance reforms matter a great deal, too, and can be passed through regular process. It will be a lot harder for Senators to stand up and vote to allow insurance companies to continue to deny coverage to the American people.
Oddly, that label hasn't made its way into the conversation. But it is, if anything, a conservative estimate. The Institute of Medicine developed a detailed methodology for projecting the lives lost due to lack of insurance. The original paper estimated that 18,000 lives were lost in 2000, and the Urban Institute updated that analysis with data for 2006, yielding an estimate of 22,000 lives. As for 150,000, well, that's almost certainly too low. That's just the 2006 number across 10 years, which is the time frame we generally use for health care, with a third of the lives saved lopped off, as we're not going to cover all of the uninsured. But since the population of the uninsured grows every year, and so does the death toll, it would surely be higher. So call it the 150,000-plus-life health-care plan.
The decade according to 9-year-olds from allison louie-garcia on Vimeo.
@markos Insurance companies win. Time to kill this monstrosity coming out of the Senate.Read More......
@HunterDK: Breaking: Senate agrees to drop healthcare reform from #HCR bill. Will be replaced with picture of Calvin peeing on you.
@johngcole: But hey- they got to posture for the Stupak amendment, so it isn't a total loss. Idiots.
@pourmecoffee Final health care reform now looking like mailer with healthy recipes from FLOTUS vegetable garden.
@stephanietaylor Sherrod Brown, asked what the bill DOES do: "30 million more people will be covered now." BECAUSE U R FORCING US TO BUY SHITTY INSURANCE.
@GregMitch In Japan, Harry Reid would have to, literally, fall on his sword.
@aravosis When it still feels like Bush is in the WH and Gingrich the Congress, I don't call that 'change'
@markos Bye bye, Reid. You weren't a bad MINORITY leader.
@HunterDK: Private mandate still in. Apparently Senate only feels they can regulate individual citizens already struggling to get by.
@Atrios: 2010 gonna be grim
@HunterDKT Well, I'm out. There's more to be gained from purging corporate whores in Dem party than having 60 votes... or even 55.
@SamSeder In the words of Mr. Rotten, "Ever get the feeling you've been cheated?" F U Joe Lieberman and the caucus you rode in on.
@markos They're still trying to stick us with the mandate, right? Another government bailout of a broken industry.
@HunterDK Somehow I don't see "Let Them Eat Cake" being a winning campaign slogan for senate Dems in 2010, but what do I know.
@pourmecoffee Children of Aetna management not allowed to go to sleep tonight before writing thank-you note to Lieberman.
@markos Insurance companies win. Time to kill this monstrosity coming out of the Senate.Washington Post:
Senate Democrats emerged from a special caucus meeting Monday night determined to pass a health-care bill by Christmas -- but without the Medicare buy-in plan that liberals had sought as an alternative to a government insurance option....Oh honey, the good left the barn of this administration and this congress so long ago you wouldn't even recognize it. Read More......
"To use an old cliche, the general consensus was we shouldn't make the perfect the enemy of the good," Bayh said.
The simplest explanation for Lieberman's pirouette is that he is in the pocket of the insurance industry. He has been criticized along those lines since his days as attorney general of Connecticut. Back in 1988, he was dogged for accepting campaign donations from the insurance company Advest Inc. one month after Connecticut Insurance Commissioner Peter W. Gillies had requested an opinion from his office in a case involving the company. Over the course of his career in the Senate, meanwhile, Lieberman has taken more than $1.04 million in campaign contributions from insurance companies, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.The religious right extremists at the bigoted American Family Association want Obama's Nobel.
Rahm Emanuel visited Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in his Capitol office on Sunday evening and personally urged him to cut a deal with recalcitrant Sen. Joe Lieberman, two Democratic sources familiar with the situation said.Read More......
Emanuel, President Obama's chief of staff, has long been identified as leading a faction of White House advisers who have been pushing the Senate simply to pass any health care bill, no matter how weak.
His direct message to Reid (D-Nev.), according to a source close to the negotiations: "Get it done. Just get it done....
The report, however, according to the two sources, was entirely accurate. "We're long past time for these kinds of games," one source said.
I agree with Chris Bowers that in a lot of ways the real story here is that the Senate leadership has, at every step of this process, underscored that a “reconciliation” path to a health care bill is off the table. That means Lieberman has unlimited control over what happens, and no incentive to compromise, so it shouldn’t surprise anyone that he’s being uncompromising.FDL on the Liebocrats winning control of the Senate.
After months of negotiation, compromise, and horse-trading, we're getting close to a health reform bill that will come to a vote - probably in the next couple or three weeks. There's much work to be done to get to the magic sixty Senate votes, but it looks like no compromise, concession, or giveaway is too big to stand in the way of this must-pass (for the Democrats) legislation.Read More......
Yet after all this, we're going to end up with a bill that won't work - it will not appreciably reduce health care costs today, tomorrow, ever.
Sure, we'll end up with lots more Americans covered, better/smarter regulation of insurers, and maybe even lower Medicare costs. But ten years from now, the system will be pretty much the same - a fee-for-service based health system with costs increasing well above inflation.
Why, you say? Aren't there cost controls in the bill? Pilot programs that promise to reduce cost inflation by rationalizing the care delivered to patients?
No, there aren't. What we have is a mishmash of ideas that have long been on the table, demonstrated to work, and completely without traction. Not to mention the huge costs not addressed in the current bill - like the current quarter-billion dollar deficit in the Medicare physician reimbursement program, a deficit that will have to be added to the total cost of any reform initiative that changes how docs are compensated under Medicare.
Three top bankers invited to the White House on Monday will not be able to attend in person because their flight was delayed due to bad weather but will participate by phone, the White House said.It's quite amazing, actually. They could have taken the Bolt bus, for Christ sakes. It's not like they needed to get to D.C. from Siberia.
The three are: Lloyd Blankfein, chairman and CEO, Goldman Sachs (GS.N); John Mack, chairman and CEO, Morgan Stanley (MS.N); and Dick Parsons, chairman, Citigroup (C.N).
A source familiar with the situation said all three were on the same plane and the flight was delayed due to fog.
This appears to be the downside of not having a private plane to fly in, or not traveling to Washington the night before the meeting or not thinking to take the train.John adds: Or not fearing the President. Read More......
To put this in context, Lieberman was invited to participate in the process that led to the Medicare buy-in. His opposition would have killed it before liberals invested in the idea. Instead, he skipped the meetings and is forcing liberals to give up yet another compromise. Each time he does that, he increases the chances of the bill's failure that much more. And if there's a policy rationale here, it's not apparent to me, or to others who've interviewed him. At this point, Lieberman seems primarily motivated by torturing liberals. That is to say, he seems willing to cause the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people in order to settle an old electoral score.Ezra, quoting Sam Stein, notes a few options that Reid has. Most include appeasing Lieberman, or finding a GOP Senator to vote for the bill instead of Lieberman. Sam misses an important additional option: Beat the crap out of Lieberman. That is, after all, what we were told Rahm was so good at. So where is he?
This pattern has been repeated for like the tenth time. Liberals in Congress create a “compromise,” their supposedly left-wing media apologists rush to say how great it is, and the conservative Democrats move the football again. No one should be surprised by the rapid death of the Medicare buy in idea.Read More......
It seems the only choice left for progressives in Congress is reconciliation or the nuclear option. Joe Lieberman, Blanche Lincoln, and Ben Nelson have so completely gutted the bill that there is almost nothing of value remaining in it. The few remaining pieces worth passing are quickly being picked apart at the request of industry lobbyists. What is remains is only one of the biggest corporate give-aways in history.
Eighty-one percent of Democrats said they would like to see the senator's chairmanship -- which he was allowed to keep despite campaigning for Sen. John McCain in 2008 -- taken away should he sustain a filibuster. Only 10 percent of Democrats said there should be no punishment. Even fewer (nine percent) said they had yet to make up their minds, underscoring just how divisive Lieberman is within the party.Read More......
An additional 43 percent of independents agreed that Lieberman should lose his post, with 30 percent saying no. Only ten percent of Republicans, meanwhile, thought Lieberman should be punished under such a scenario -- while 66 percent said he should not.
All told, 47 percent of the public said Senate leaders should remove Lieberman from his chairmanship if he joins the Republican filibuster; 32 percent said they should allow him to keep the post; 21 percent said they weren't sure.
You procrastinate until the last minute, then pull an all-nighter the night before your thesis is due (well, actually, instead of finally buckling down, you only half-heartedly study) - and the next day you flunk your thesis. Your final grade isn't lowered from an A- to a B+.It's telling that Obama's doesn't qualify his remarks with regards to what kind of health care package gets passed. Any package is apparently sufficient. And thus the reason, I'd argue, that Joe Lieberman, Ben Nelson, and all the rest feel that they can hold Harry Reid and Barack Obama hostage on any and every provision of the bill - they know that passing a bill is more important to the Democratic leadership than passing a good bill.
Said Obama: "A good solid B-plus. I think we have inherited the biggest set of challenges of any president since Franklin Delano Roosevelt. We stabilized the economy... We are on our way out of Iraq. I think we've got the best possible plan for Afghanistan. We have reset our image around the world."Read More......
Why only B-plus?
"B-plus because of the things that are undone. Health care is not yet signed. If I get health care passed we tip into A minus."
More than 110 heads of state, mainly from developing countries, are due to begin arriving on Thursday for an intense 24 hours of final negotiations.Read More......
Delegates hope for a deal on Friday that will ensure temperatures do not rise by more than 2C, and that hundreds of billions of pounds is pledged to help poor countries adapt to climate change. But tonight it appeared that many did not want to risk being pressured into signing an agreement they believe would be against their national interests.
"The industrialised countries want to hammer out a large part of the deal on the last day, when the heads of state arrive," one senior African negotiator told the Guardian on the condition of anonymity. "It's a ploy to slip through provisions that are not amenable to developing country efforts. It's playing dirty."
Berlusconi, 73, had been signing autographs and shaking hands with the public minutes after addressing thousands of people at a rally for his People of Freedom party in front of the city's Duomo, when he was hit in the mouth.Read More......
He fell to the ground and was quickly ushered into a car by aides, but he repeatedly tried to get out again to show his bloodied face to the crowds and cameras in the square.
He was taken to a Milan's San Raffaele hospital, where an x-ray showed he had suffered a small fracture to his nose, damage to two teeth and cuts to his lip. Medical staff said he would be kept under observation there for 24 hours.
Appearing on ABC’s "This Week," Larry Summers, the White House’s top economic adviser, defended the president’s economic record and predicted unemployment rates to decrease significantly in just a few months.Actually, not "everybody agrees." In fact, Summers' colleague, Christine Romer, had a different take, since millions of Americans are suffering:
“Today, everybody agrees that the recession is over, and the question is what the pace of the expansion is going to be,” he said.
“For the people on Main Street and throughout this country, they are still suffering, the unemployment rate is still 10 percent,” she said on NBC’s "Meet the Press."In this administration, as Chris in Paris as so often pointed out, we've usually seen Wall Street win. Read More......
Romer also said the jobless rate could go up before it comes down.
“I would anticipate some bumps in the road before [a full economic recovery],” she said.
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