Archive for September, 2009

Graham Support for Wyden-Bennett Health Reform Plan

Sometimes Sen. Lindsey Graham frustrates the heck out of me, and other times I think this is a guy that can provide the type of leadership that is required from our members of Congress. From the Greenville Online.com’’s South Carolina Senator Graham willing to compromise on health care:

“The key to getting health care changes passed, Graham said, is a compromise in which Republicans agree on universal coverage, Democrats agree that it be run by the private sector, and the cost doesn’t add to the country’s deficit….

The bill is an overhaul of the current system and would be funded by the money now being spent on health care, Graham said. It features incentives to reduce costs for people who adopt a healthy lifestyle, such as not smoking, he said.

If Graham agreed to mandatory coverage as a compromise, he has come to believe that allowing people not to carry health insurance isn’t an option in meaningful reform.

“The only way that works is if you can say no to people who don’t get coverage,” he said. “Well, nobody says no to anyone. You go to the emergency room, you get whatever you need. It’s called cost shifting.

“You and I are paying for people who are uninsured. Many of them are capable of paying, they just don’t. The ones who are truly needy and can’t pay, it’s our obligation to help them.”

Graham indicates that he is very willing to work outside his comfort zone, but is also going to hold President Obama accountable. Perfect, a reasoned opposition providing leadership on a key issue:

His main criticism is that Obama’s promise that he won’t sign a health-care bill that isn’t deficit-neutral can’t be kept.

For example, he doubts Obama’s claims that health-care reform can be financed partly using money from cutting Medicare waste and claims that “triggers” can be built in that require Congress to reduce costs when spending reaches a certain level.

“He’s trying to use his talents and his tone to take on a legitimate problem (health care), but he says things that need to be challenged,” Graham said. “He says things like, ‘I won’t add a penny to the deficit.’

“But when you talk about how you are going to pay for these bills, cutting Medicare is not going to happen,” he said. “Triggers, we’ve never pulled one of those triggers before.”

Obama says he is confident a health-care bill he can sign will reach his desk. Graham is hoping lawmakers and the president are up to the challenge.

“Health-care inflation in the private and public sectors is unsustainable,” he said. “So we do need to fix the system.”

Living Outside the Healthcare System

CNN is running an article “45,000 American deaths associated with lack of insurance” about three individuals who died primarily because they could not afford health insurance or feared the high list costs of a visit to the hospital.

Hannum thought he had a stomach flu or food poisoning from bad chicken. On Monday, his brother saw him looking ashen and urged him to go to the hospital. “He had a little girl on the way,” his older brother Curtis Hannum said. “He didn’t want the added burden of an ER visit to hang on their finances. He thought ‘I’ll just wait,’ and he got worse and worse.”

By the time Hannum got to the hospital and was admitted to surgery, it was too late. Paul Hannum, 45, died on Thursday, August 3, 2006, from a ruptured appendix. His daughter, Cameron was born two months later.

Federal Budget Pie Chart Update

whereourtaxdollarsgo_mostofbudget.jpg

The Center On Budget and Policy Priorities report, Where Do Our Federal Tax Dollars Go? , has recently been updated (Compare to last years chart). The report breaks down how the Federal Government spent $3 trillion in fiscal year 2008. The big tickets remain:

  • Defense and international security: 21 percent of the budget, or $625 billion
  • Social Security:  21 percent of the budget, or $617 billion
  • Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP: 20 percent of the budget, or $599 billion. ($391 billion went to Medicare)

Characters That Encouraged Financial Crisis Remain In Charge

Peter Schiff in The Devil We Know is dead on with his comments that we will not experience change if we leave those individuals in leadership positions who  were responsible for creating the problem in the first place.

Bernanke’s re-nomination is a politically safe decision for President Obama, and at least Bernanke is a devil we know. However, this lack of a ‘change’ for the better should squash any ‘hope’ for a genuine recovery. If the Bush years were as bad as the Democrats claim, then it is curious that they are mimicking and magnifying the same mistakes. No one has been held accountable for a financial crisis that the professors, pundits, and politicians told us would not come. All the same players are running the game, always changing the rules so they stay on top. Real ‘change we can believe in’ would be a return to our roots in the rule of law and a system of sound money – but it’s hard to stay grounded when you’re throwing money from helicopters. (emphasis added)

Here’s to some new blood and some old ideas.

No Government Accountability in “Rule of Nobody”

Jane Mayer, the author of the diligently researched Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals“,  points to the observations of Hannah Arendt (New Yorker: Calling Hannah Arendt) in considering accountability for the use of torture by American personnel. She writes “Those on the top can claim to have clean hands, while those on the bottom can claim they were following ostensibly legal orders. What’s left, Arendt suggests, is an all-powerful government that is beyond accountability.”

Hannah Arendt:

These definitions coincide with the terms which, since Greek antiquity, have been used to define the forms of government as the rule of man over man—of one or the few in monarchy and oligarchy, of the best or the many in aristocracy and democracy, to which today we ought to add the latest and perhaps most formidable form of such dominion, bureaucracy, or the rule by an intricate system of bureaux in which no men, neither one nor the best, neither the few nor the many, can be held responsible, and which could be properly called the rule by Nobody. Indeed, if we identify tyranny as the government that is not held to give account of itself, rule by Nobody is clearly the most tyrannical of all, since there is no one left who could even be asked to answer for what is being done. It is this state of affairs which is among the most potent causes for the current world-wide rebellious unrest.