Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Hypocrisy: The AARP Sells Out Seniors

Sponsored Content

OUTRAGE!!

Billion-dollar drug company hides astounding discovery of a natural cancer killer. 10,000 times stronger than chemo—but without the side effects!

One pharmaceutical company actually made the ‘discovery of the century’ – a miracle breakthrough that could save you or someone you love from the ravages of cancer.  But…

They hid the secret for SEVEN FULL YEARS…with no plans to tell anyone about it ever!

Click here to read the full story of this astounding breakthrough—and the dozens of other underground cures not yet available to mainstream medicine…

But while Humana was censored by the government from talking to its Medicare Advantage enrollees about proposed Democratic cuts, another Medicare Advantage provider - the AARP - has been left free to lobby its members.

Of course the Washington leadership of the AARP is working closely with Democrats on health care reform. Incredibly, the self-appointed voice of America's seniors supports "reforms" that will cut the benefits - if not the entire Medicare Advantage coverage - of millions of seniors.

How can this be? It's simple. The AARP is a liberal interest group like any other, and it cut a deal with the party in charge in Washington. In exchange for selling out the seniors it claims to represent, the AARP will get potentially millions in lucrative insurance contracts, and quite possibly something more.

Posted via email from Global Politics

Intimidation: Free Speech Rights of Insurance Companies Denied

Medicare Advantage was created to do what the Center for Health Transformation (CHT) has long fought for: To give all seniors more private choices of higher quality health care. It currently provides almost 11 million Americans coverage through private insurance plans. Recent data shows that these seniors have better health outcomes than those in traditional Medicare.

Current legislation in Washington will gut the program. H.R. 3200 in the House will cut Medicare Advantage by $172 billion. The bill sponsored by Sen. Max Baucus in the Senate will cut the popular program by $123 billion.

If you're just hearing about this now, here's the reason: When Humana (with whom we've worked with in the past at CHT) tried to inform its Medicare Advantage members that Democratic health care reform could lower their benefits, the government ordered them to cease and desist and opened an investigation of the company.

Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) subsequently introduced legislation in the Senate Finance Committee to protect the 1st Amendment rights of private insurance companies to criticize health care reform proposals.

Posted via email from Global Politics

Political Spectrum Being Taught in Public Schools

  1. Radical
  2. Liberal
  3. Moderate
  4. Conservative
  5. Ractionary

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Olympic-sized boondoggle: What Valerie Jarrett and Michelle Obama are up to


By Michelle Malkin  •  September 18, 2009 09:59 AM

In Culture of Corruption, I spotlight the intimate relationship between Chicago Mayor Richard Daley’s crony lawyer Valerie Jarrett and First Lady Michelle Obama.

Jarrett’s slum lord record in Chicago is highly relevant to her current and ongoing pursuit of Chicago’s 2016 Olympic bid — which will cost taxpayers nearly $5 billion and bring an untold windfall to developers and contractors.

From my chapter on Jarrett’s role as president and CEO of The Habitat Company, which the Boston Globe probed in a rare, non-fluffy look at the Obama’s consigliere:

In an uncommonly hard-hitting investigative piece, the Boston Globe’s Binyamin Appelbaum blew the whistle on the rodent-infested, sewage-clogged Chicago slums run by the Obamas’ most trusted confidante. Jarrett refused to answer any questions about Grove Parc, “citing what she called a continuing duty to Habitat’s former business partners.” A “continuing duty,” presumably, to whitewash the inconvenient truth about the failed public-private partnerships the Obamas continue to promote in the White House:

“They are rapidly displacing poor people, and these companies are profiting from this displacement,” said Matt Ginsberg-Jaeckle of Southside Together Organizing for Power, a community group that seeks to help tenants stay in the same neighborhoods.

“The same exact people who ran these places into the ground,” the private companies paid to build and manage the city’s affordable housing, “now are profiting by redeveloping them.”

In 2006, while Valerie Jarrett was executive vice president of Grove Parc’s management firm Habitat Company, federal inspectors graded the condition of the complex a bottom-of-the-barrel 11 on a 100-point scale. Another Habitat-mismanaged property called Lawndale Restoration was so run-down that city officials urged the federal government to take over the complex.

Jamie Kalven, a veteran Chicago housing activist, told the Boston Globe about Barack Obama: “I hope there is not much predictive value in his history and in his involvement with that community.” Kalven’s hopes will likely be dashed. As Chicago goes, so goes the nation. Obama has made a career of rewarding failure and no amount of overhyped “Hope” will change that. He sponsored a plethora of bills in the state Senate benefitting affordable housing developers. In February 2009, he unveiled a plan to set up a $1 billion Housing Trust Fund “to rehabilitate housing in the nation’s poorest neighborhoods.” “Trust Fund?” Try slush fund, bottomless pit, and eternal stimulus for the real estate moguls posing as saviors of urban America.

In one of those endless Chicago coincidences, Grove Parc Plaza Apartments—now targeted for demolition as a result of years of neglect by Obama’s developer friends—sits in the shadows of the proposed site of the city’s 2016 Olympics Stadium. Valerie Jarrett is vice chair of Chicago’s Olympics committee.

Ever since the Obamas moved to 1600 Pennsylvania, Jarrett has used her power to boost her old pal and employer Mayor Richard Daley’s bid for the Olympics.

Now, FLOTUS is getting in on the act and Jarrett is giddy:

A top White House adviser said first lady Michelle Obama is planning to make a dramatic presentation when she offers the closing argument for the bid by her hometown of Chicago to win the 2016 Summer Olympics.

“There won’t be a dry eye in the room,” said Valerie Jarrett, who plans to travel with the first lady to Copenhagen for the Oct. 2 International Olympic Committee vote.

“I’m sure that it will touch the hearts of each of the IOC members,” Jarrett, a senior adviser to President Barack Obama, said today in an interview.

Jarrett declined to say what the first lady will tell the IOC. The stakes are high because winning the games would be an economic boost nationally, as well as for Chicago, she said.

“It will be a huge economic engine for Chicago, but it will have a ripple effect throughout the country,” Jarrett said, adding that U.S. corporations have voiced support for Chicago’s bid.

That’s the same bogus economic development propaganda government cronies always use for taxpayer-funded corporate welfare(boondoggles I’ve consistently opposed whether championed byDemocrats or Republicans, by the way.)

As sports subsidy watchdog Neil deMause properly characterizes the Olympic pursuit:

“The winner gets to be on the hook for billions in dollars worth of velodromes and infrastructure; the losers get to watch on TV for free.”

Crook County will make out like bandits if Jarrett and the First Crony get their way.

I advise the International Olympic Committee to think long and hard about bringing the games to the fetid swamplands of Blago, Rezko & pay-for-play peddlers.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Battle Hymn of The Messiah

Many Americans don't realize how many Americans from the race of blacks ARE NOT supporters of Obama....do you?  Why is it, if your black and a Conservative, you are considered an Uncle Tom or an Oreo?  

http://www.pjtv.com/?cmd=video&video-id=2500

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Did you hear the one about the Secretary of State??

http://www.pjtv.com/video/Sonja_Schmidt's_Left_Exposed/Did_You_Hear_the_One_About_the_Secretary_of_State%3F/2413/

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Monday, September 28, 2009

Fringe Media

On the campaign trail, President Obama promised to 'fundamentally change' America. The mainstream media loves to call anyone who doesn't agree with Obama's reform angry, crazy, wacky, dumb, hicks, zealots, lunatic fringe, un-American along with about 100 other derogatory names. They are trying to paint you as out of touch; a bunch of agenda driven nutjobs who just want to stop this transformation. The mainstream media simply cannot comprehend that it is they who are out of touch.

That's why Glenn Beck has coined a new term: The Fringe Media. You understand how to live within your means, follow the rule of law, and use common sense. It's our politicians who are spending money the country does not have (Stimulus, Obamacare, Cap & Trade), arrogantly refusing to pay taxes (Rangel, Geithner, Daschle), and putting special interests and corruption (SEIU, ACORN, APOLLO Alliance) ahead of common sense solutions . Despite all of this, the fringe media refuses to ask the tough questions - instead deferring to the same old tired game of bickering about left vs. right or liberal vs. conservative. 

Glenn Beck is on a mission to expose every single corrupt and dishonest faction in our government today, one piece at a time. With the help of regular, everyday citizens (or 'Watchdogs' as Glenn calls them) like you, real change is happening - like the defunding of ACORN or the raised awareness on Obama's radical Czars. The big problem with Obama's transformation is he's trying to usher in socialism (as he told Joe the Plumber) but he's packaging it in centrist speak. He's trying to do it without you noticing. If you want to make sure this country has an open and honest debate about that transformationbefore it takes place - stay informed and hold their feet to the fire. Don't sit on the sidelines now, and then complain when we have DMV style government lines at the brand new Federal Doctor's Office.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Friday, September 25, 2009

U.S. to push for new economic world order at G20

By Alister Bull

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States will urge world leaders this week to launch a new push in November to rebalance the world economy, but there are doubts national governments will bow to external advice.

A document outlining the U.S. position ahead of the September 24-25 Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh said exporters, which include China, Germany and Japan, should consume more, while debtors like the United States ought to boost savings.

"The world will face anemic growth if adjustments in one part of the global economy are not matched by offsetting adjustments in other parts," said the document, which was obtained by Reuters on Monday.

The framework drafted by U.S. policy makers foresaw analysis of G20 members' economic policies by the International Monetary Fund to figure out if they were consistent with better balanced growth.

"We call on our finance ministers to launch the new framework by November," the document said, signaling a determined effort to maintain momentum for change created by last year's global financial crisis.

The United States envisages the IMF playing a central role in a process of "mutual assessment" by making policy recommendations to the G20 every six months.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the G20 countries are due to meet November 7-8 in Scotland.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said persuading Europe, the United States and China to accept IMF advice on economic policy may be difficult. In the past, many countries have ignored suggestions the IMF dished out in regular reviews.

Trichet told French newspaper Le Monde the G20 had made progress on reforms to make the financial system more stable after the crisis.

"The most difficult question is still open: Europe, America, China, are they ready to modify their macroeconomic policies in the future -- by following the advice of the IMF and under pressure from their peers, for the common good, and world economic stability?" he said in the piece on Monday.

G7 sources told Reuters there was a renewed determination to cooperate because the crisis had driven home the interconnected nature of the global system. That said, governments would not allow themselves to be told what to do.

"We can't get to a situation where any country is giving up its own decision-making," said one source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Germany, a major exporter to the United States, was singled out on Sunday by U.S. President Barack Obama as a country that, like China, exports a lot but does not buy much back.

But a top European Union official said that the euro zone, where 16 countries share a common currency, had to act as a collective.

"It is difficult to think about one country without taking into consideration what is the impact in the euro area," European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told reporters in New York.

Taxpayer money to the tune of $5 trillion has been pumped into the world economy to keep it from seizing up since the beginning of the crisis last September.

G20 leaders will maintain that pace of stimulus while acknowledging that at some point it will have to be wound down, the document said.

But, mindful of how a disorderly rush to raise interest rates could roil world markets again, they will also ask finance ministers to thrash out a "transparent and credible" exit strategy.

There were no details of how to achieve this in practice, but the document echoed the caution of G20 finance ministers at their meeting in London earlier this month acknowledging the pace of change would vary by country.

Simon Johnson, a former chief economist at the IMF, warned there was a risk the Pittsburgh summit would be an empty public relations exercise.

"The point of the meetings is to try to reassure themselves and everyone else that they're broadly on track and have a round of applause and some back patting," he said.

But John Bruton, the EU ambassador to Washington, said it was important not to ignore the summit's symbolic power.

"I think we're seeing the beginning of a conversation between world leaders," he told Reuters in an interview.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Another terrorist suspect arrested in Dallas

Published: Thu, September 24, 2009 @ 7:26 p.m.

By Associated Press

CHICAGO - Federal prosecutors arrested a 19-year-old Jordanian national and charged him with trying to bomb a downtown Dallas skyscraper. He was the second suspect to be arrested this week on charges they intended to blow up buildings.

According to a statement issued today by the U.S. attorney's office in Dallas, Hosam Maher Husein Smadi is charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction.

He was arrested Thursday after placing a decoy car bomb at Fountain Place, a 60-story glass office tower in Dallas.

FBI agents have been keeping watch over the man, who lived in the small North Texas town of Italy. Court documents did not show whether Smadi had an attorney.

In earlier developments, a 29-year-old Illinois man who idolized American-born Taliban soldier John Walker Lindh was arrested after attempting to detonate what he thought was a bomb inside a van outside a federal courthouse, officials said.

It was unknown whether the two were involved in plot or if they had worked in conjunction.

Michael C. Finton, also known as Talib Islam, was arrested Wednesday and charged in a criminal complaint with one count of attempting to murder federal officers or employees and trying to detonate a weapon of mass destruction. Federal officials said the case has no connections with the major terrorism investigation under way in Colorado and New York.

"This alleged plot drives home the stark reality that we must avoid complacency and remain ever vigilant to the threats that violent extremists may pose to the public safety," Acting U.S. Attorney Jeffrey B. Lang said.

Finton appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Byron G. Cudmore in Springfield and said he was an unmarried, part-time cook at a fish and chicken restaurant in the central Illinois city of Decatur. He was ordered held in jail pending action by a grand jury.

An FBI affidavit said that in the months leading up to the arrest, Finton had been closely monitored by agents including a special officer who posed as a low-level operative of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network.

It said Finton was arrested after using a cell phone in an attempt to detonate a van filled with material that he had been told was explosive but was actually harmless. It was not immediately clear what the material was.

The affidavit traced two years of activities by Finton leading up to the alleged bomb plot and arrest. It said that in March 2008 Finton received funds from Saudi Arabia and used them to travel to the kingdom for a monthlong visit. No other details were immediately available.

Finton was introduced to the FBI special officer posing as an al-Qaida operative in February, according to the affidavit.

Finton expressed a desire to receive military training and fight in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia or elsewhere, agents said. In the months that followed, he talked about an attack within the United States and ultimately settled on the Paul Findley courthouse.

He also took an interest in the nearby office of Republican U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock as well, the affidavit said.

The maximum penalty for attempted murder of federal officers and detonation of a weapon of mass destruction is life in prison.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Men Behind Obama


Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Leaders see G20 as key stop on road to recovery

NEW YORK (Reuters) - This week's meeting of the Group of 20 (G20) nations offers a timely opportunity for nations to forge a lasting agreement on how to address global problems as the world economy moves toward recovery, leaders said on Tuesday.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), said it was easier to reach consensus when people are scared, as they were at earlier G20 meetings, but that the key is to keep the dialogue going.

"We need to have this consensus working again for the exit strategy, for how we get out of all what has been created during the crisis," Strauss-Kahn said at the Clinton Global Initiative, a philanthropic summit organized by former U.S. President Bill Clinton.

The G20 club of rich and developing economies holds a two-day leaders summit in Pittsburgh from Thursday and the United States wants to see rebalancing the world economy high on the agenda.

Strauss-Kahn reiterated the IMF's forecast for the world economy to return to growth in the first half of 2010. He went a step further to say that a double-dip recession was unlikely.

"It's a possibility, but I don't think the probability is so high. So my preferred scenario is that we will slowly go back to growth as expected, with global growth becoming positive in the first half of 2010," he said.

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez said she was looking for the meeting to address the growth prospects for countries that have been hit by the global economic slowdown.

"With my own country for the last six years we had growth at Chinese rates, 8.4 percent per year," Fernandez said. "This year we will have growth ... but of course not at the rate we had before the crisis."

"The countries of Latin America, emerging economies generally within the G20, convey this need to find a way to repair the damage."

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

How the G8 became the G20

  • | Posted: September 24, 2009 at 7:24 AM

NEW YORK—On the eve of the international political conference in Pittsburgh known as the Group of 20, President Barack Obama addressed a packed main hall of the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Wednesday. Making his first appearance before the international diplomatic and peacekeeping body, Obama stressed that expectations of global cooperation now drive American foreign policy.

"In an era when our destiny is shared, power is no longer a zero sum game," he said. "No world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will succeed. No balance of power among nations will hold. The traditional division between nations of the south and north makes no sense in an interconnected world."

After eight years of unilateralism under George W. Bush, the message of outreach and inclusion was received with enthusiastic applause. But as Obama lands in Pittsburgh, it's worth remembering that until recently, a smaller, more elite group of eight countries dominated global discussion. Leaders from those nations will have their own meetings during the two-day conference devoted to climate change, nuclear security and restabilizing the global economy. Yet it’s almost guaranteed that you'll hear more about the G20 than the G8. Suddenly, the organization, created in 1975, is "no longer the board of directors of the world," but a more inclusive organization, said David Wessel of the Wall Street Journal, while addressing the Council on Foreign Relations last week.

But just when did the G8 become the G20?

Originally, the G8 was the Group of 7—which included finance ministers from the U.S., Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan. In 1998, it became the G8 for "political reasons," according to former President Bill Clinton. The massive and resurgent Russian Federation could no longer be credibly excluded from the debate. Similarly, says Clinton, the dozen other countries at this week's G20 gathering have earned a seat at the table by representing the increasingly diverse elements of a more interdependent world order. "It's not a bipolar world, as it was during the Cold War, not a polar world, as it was briefly in the aftermath of the Cold War," Clinton told The Root.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

How the G8 became the G20

  • | Posted: September 24, 2009 at 7:24 AM

NEW YORK—On the eve of the international political conference in Pittsburgh known as the Group of 20, President Barack Obama addressed a packed main hall of the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Wednesday. Making his first appearance before the international diplomatic and peacekeeping body, Obama stressed that expectations of global cooperation now drive American foreign policy.

"In an era when our destiny is shared, power is no longer a zero sum game," he said. "No world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will succeed. No balance of power among nations will hold. The traditional division between nations of the south and north makes no sense in an interconnected world."

After eight years of unilateralism under George W. Bush, the message of outreach and inclusion was received with enthusiastic applause. But as Obama lands in Pittsburgh, it's worth remembering that until recently, a smaller, more elite group of eight countries dominated global discussion. Leaders from those nations will have their own meetings during the two-day conference devoted to climate change, nuclear security and restabilizing the global economy. Yet it’s almost guaranteed that you'll hear more about the G20 than the G8. Suddenly, the organization, created in 1975, is "no longer the board of directors of the world," but a more inclusive organization, said David Wessel of the Wall Street Journal, while addressing the Council on Foreign Relations last week.

But just when did the G8 become the G20?

Originally, the G8 was the Group of 7—which included finance ministers from the U.S., Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan. In 1998, it became the G8 for "political reasons," according to former President Bill Clinton. The massive and resurgent Russian Federation could no longer be credibly excluded from the debate. Similarly, says Clinton, the dozen other countries at this week's G20 gathering have earned a seat at the table by representing the increasingly diverse elements of a more interdependent world order. "It's not a bipolar world, as it was during the Cold War, not a polar world, as it was briefly in the aftermath of the Cold War," Clinton told The Root.

Posted via email from Enviromenment

The Story of Stuff...Being Shown in Schools

Posted via email from Enviromenment

The Story of Stuff...Being Shown in Schools

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Gadhafi slams Security Council in 1st UN visit


http://www.ap.org" class="provider-logo ult-section" style="">AP

UNITED NATIONS – In his first U.N. appearance, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi issued a slashing attack on the Security Counciland chastised the world body on Wednesday for failing to intervene or prevent some 65 wars since the U.N. was founded in 1945.

Gadhafi called for reform of the council — abolishing the veto power of the five permanent members — or expanding the body with additional member states to make it more representative.

"It should not be called the Security Council, it should be called the "terror council," he said.

The veto-wielding Security Council powers -- the United States, Britain, China, France and Russia -- treat smaller countries as "second class, despised" nations, Gadhafi said.

"Now, brothers, there is no respect for the United Nations, no regard for the General Assembly," Gadhafi said.

His speech followed President Barack Obama's first General Assembly address, but not before a recess of some 15 minutes was called by the Libyan president of the General Assembly so diplomats could be take new seats.

The U.S. Mission was represented by two low- to mid-ranking diplomats. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice departed before Gadhafi ascended the podium.

After waiting for the room to settled, Gadhafi rose and swept his robe over him and strode to the stage, using the handrail on his way up. He wore a shiny black pin in the shape of Africa pinned over his heart, on his brown and tan Bedouin robes.

Gadhafi laid the yellow folder in front of him and opened some of the handwritten pages as he received scattered applause.

The chamber was half-empty as Gadhafi gave his first speech and held a copy of the U.N. Charter in his hands, each with a large, shiny ring. For a moment, it seemed he lost his place in his speech while he sorted through the pages of his yellow folder.

He appeared to be speaking without a text, looking at a set of notes before him on handwritten pages. He was not reading from the TelePrompTer.

Gadhafi welcomed Obama as the leader of the host nation for U.N. Headquarters, and hailed Obama's maiden U.N. General Assembly speech.

He railed against the "inequality" of U.N. member states, quoting from a copy of the U.N. Charter that calls for equality of nations, and then noting that five nations hold veto power on the Security Council and can block actions contrary to their interests: the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France.

Speaking rapid-fire Arabic, Gadhafi said the use of military power was contrary to the spirit of the U.N., unless such actions are sanctioned by the United Nations.

Since the world body was founded in 1945, Gadhafi said it had failed to prevent or intervene in dozens of wars around the world.

"But 65 aggressive wars took place without any collective action by the United Nations to prevent them, Gadhafi said.

Gadhafi was dressed in flowing brown robe, and a black beret that he patted at times. As he listened to speeches before he took the stage, aides huddled around him; he kept his glasses, a red handkerchief and a rumpled yellow folder in front of him on the desk.

There was a commotion in the room as President Barack Obama appeared. Gadhafi lightly applauded with others then listened raptly with the earpiece held to his left ear.

Gadhafi, introduced as the "king of kings" by his countryman and assembly president Ali Treki, remained in his seat for long after the introduction.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Excuses BeGone

If you can’t elevate the thoughts about your past that are causing you to remain unhappy, unsuccessful, and unhealthy, you stay stuck where you are. You have the unquestionable ability today to elevate your consciousness to explore ways to relieve self-consciousness and attract people you want to be with, rather than continuing to explain to yourself that you can’t attract those people because your father didn’t pay enough attention to you. Remember, your life is happening now, in the present moment.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

Mexico is outraged over influx of its own citizens

  • The shoe is on the other foot, and the Mexicans from Sonora don't like it one bit. Can you believe the nerve of these people? It's almost funny.
Advertisement

The state of Sonora is angry at the influx of Mexicans into Mexico. Nine state legislators from the state of Sonora traveled to Tucson to complain about Arizona's new employer crackdown on illegal immigrants from Mexico. 

It seems that many illegal immigrants from Mexico are returning to their hometowns, and the officials in the Sonora state government are ticked off about it. A delegation of nine state legislators from Sonora was in Tucson recently to say Arizona's new employer sanctions law will have a devastating effect on the Mexican state. At a news conference the legislators said Sonora, Arizona's southern neighbor comprised mostly of small towns, cannot handle the demand for housing, jobs and schools it will face as Mexican workers here return to their country without jobs or money.

The Arizona law, which took effect Jan. 1, punishes employers who knowingly hire individuals who don't have valid legal documents to work in the United States. Penalties include suspension or loss of business licenses. Because more companies are complying, illegal immigrants are finding it more difficult to find work, so they are going home.

The Mexican legislators are angry because the influx of their own citizens is placing a burden on the state government.

"How can they pass a law like this?" asked Mexican representative Leticia Amparano-Gomez, who represents Nogales.

"There is not one person living in Sonora who doesn't have a friend or relative working in Arizona," she said, speaking in Spanish. "Mexico is not prepared for this, for the tremendous problems it will face as more and more people working in Arizona and sending money to their families, return to their hometowns without jobs."

"We are one family, socially and economically," she said of the people of Sonora and Arizona.

Wrong!

The United States is a sovereign nation, not a subsidiary of Mexico, and American taxpayers are not responsible for the welfare of Mexico's citizens. It's time for Mexico - and its citizens - to stop parasitically feeding off the United States and start taking care of its citizens' own needs.

I believe it's high time for all American states to pass a law like the one in Arizona. Perhaps that would solve many immigration problems that the U.S. Congress refuses to address.

Posted via email from kleerstreem's posterous

A Breath of Fresh Air at a Climate Change Conference

Vaclav Klaus

The Heartland Institute along with 20 other supporting organizations sponsored the First International Conference on Climate Change in New York City on March 2-4. Over 500 people attended, with a cross section of specialties – climatologists, meteorologists, geologists, physicists, chemists, astrophysicists, biologists, economists, engineers, government officials, policy makers, and the media – from Australia, Canada, England, France, Hungary, New Zealand, Poland, Russia, Sweden, and of course, the U.S. Many were current and former members of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change who had participated in the reports but did not support the conclusions. Some have quit the I.P.C.C. in disgust.

In his opening remarks, Joe Bast, the Heartland’s president, called the event historic and addressed the questions that the I.P.C.C. had ignored, such as how reliable are the data used to document the recent warming trend? How much of the modern warming is natural, and how much is likely the result of human activities? How reliable are the computer models used to forecast future climate conditions? Is reducing emissions the best or only response to possible climate change?

He noted the attendees have stood up to political correctness and defended the scientific method at a time when doing so threatened their research grants, tenure, and publishing ability. And the attendees should be heard, because the stakes are enormous. Last October, in a column published in Newsweek, George Will wrote that if nations impose the energy use reductions that Al Gore and the folks at RealClimate call for, they will cause “more preventable death and suffering than was caused in the last century by Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot combined.” With regard to the scientific debate, Will wrote “People only insist that a debate stop when they are afraid of what might be learned if it continues.”

Bast noted that Heartland and the attendees had been attacked as shills for Big Oil in the alarmist media and blogs. He said Heartland gets less than 5 percent of its income from all energy-producing companies combined: “We are 95 percent carbon free.” Heartland invited Al Gore to speak, and even agreed to pay his $200,000 honorarium. He refused. We invited some of the well-known scientists associated with the alarmist camp. They also refused.

Bast ended his remarks with this message: “It is my hope, and the reason Heartland Institute organized this conference, that public policies that impose enormous costs on millions of people, in the U.S. and also around the world, will not be passed into law before the fake ‘consensus’ on global warming collapses. Once passed, taxes and regulations are often hard to repeal. Once lost, freedoms are often very difficult to retrieve.”

Over 100 scientists and other attendees spoke in the two sessions (I’ll discuss mine in a story to come). Keynote addresses by Pat Michaels, Bob Balling, Ross McKitrick, Bill Gray, Tim Ball, Fred Singer, Roy Spencer, and John Stossel were all excellent. The most inspirational moments came in an address, “From Climate Alarmism to Climate Realism,” given by Czech President Vaclav Klaus, the only head of a major nation who “gets it.” Klaus, with a Ph.D. in economics, was elected president in 2003.

“I am afraid there are people who want to stop the economic growth, the rise in the standard of living (though not their own), and the ability of man to use the expanding wealth, science, and technology for solving the actual pressing problems of mankind, especially of the developing countries. This ambition goes very much against the past human experience, which has always been connected with a strong motivation to go ahead and to better human conditions. There is no reason to make the from-above-orchestrated change just now – especially with arguments based on such an incomplete and faulty science as is demonstrated by the I.P.C.C.

“I am also afraid that the same people, imprisoned in the Malthusian tenets and in their own megalomaniac ambitions, want to regulate and constrain the demographic development, which is something only the totalitarian regimes have until now dared to think about or experiment with. Without resisting it we would find ourselves on the slippery ‘road to serfdom.’”

In other keynote talks, Ross McKitrick and Bob Balling addressed the contamination issues of global data bases. These include station drop-out, urbanization, and land use changes, which have been improperly adjusted for, resulting in a warming overestimation of up to 50 percent. Similar results have been found in numerous peer reviewed papers in recent years but have been ignored by the I.P.C.C. and the global data centers.

Tim Ball showed how, over time, temperatures have led, NOT followed, rises in carbon dioxide levels. He showed that the sun was more likely to blame for the changes over the millennia, and suggested a cooling on our doorstep. Fred Singer introduced “Nature, Not Human Activity, Rules the Climate,” a report by 24 scientists (including myself). Based on meetings held last year in Vienna and Rome, it found that the major greenhouse signature is supposedly warming in high atmospheric levels in the low to mid-latitudes. But in actual fact, observations from weather balloons show no warming or even a slight cooling there, invalidating these models as forecast tools.

Bill Gray’s address, “We Are Not in a Climate Crisis,” discussed the importance of the multi-decadal ocean cycles in climate cycles and hurricane frequency, which he explained are the result of regular thermohaline circulation changes. He also explained how water vapor is an issue the climate models get wrong, making them unreliable for climate forecasting. Roy Spencer’s presentation supported this view. Using the new satellite results from National Aeronautics and Space Administration data, he showed how current assumptions about water vapor are wrong. From satellite measurement of water vapor and the resulting cloudiness, it appears that vapor serves as a negative feedback, reducing any greenhouse warming from increasing carbon dioxide.

The results from all these studies show that the evidence is tainted for carbon dioxide’s supposed role in global warming. There is no “DNA match” between the models and observations. In a court of law, carbon dioxide would be acquitted.

The final output from the meeting was a document called “The Manhattan Declaration” (available at http://www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=22866), which summarizes the meeting’s findings.

The attendees left the conference with renewed enthusiasm and new ideas. Many told of others who had wanted to attend but could not get time off from their jobs or afford the trip, or feared their attendance might affect their employment. The 500 attendees are likely just the tip of the iceberg of a silent majority of scientists in climatology, meteorology, and allied sciences who do not endorse what is claimed to be the consensus position.

Major media coverage was limited. The Washington Post brushed over the conference details but went on to call it a sort of global warming doppelganger (the I.P.C.C.’s evil twin), a conference where everything was reversed. It published critical quotes from environmentalists who poked fun at the conference, calling it “Custer’s Last Stand” and referring to attendees as “flat-earthers.” John Tierney of the New York Times provided the only positive coverage from the mainstream media. He published a blog item about the first day of the meeting, and told his readers, “I welcome substantive comments – by which I don’t mean denunciations of ‘deniers’ or ‘eco-Nazis,’ or lazy ad hominem attacks and conspiracy theories about who’s being paid off by whom. Let’s stick to the science, or lack thereof, in this particular critique.” When readers did not listen, he re-blogged in an angry piece called “Global Warming Payola.” “I still find it baffling. Do the critics really think there’s more money and glory to be won by doubting global warming than by going along with the majority?”

The answer is no. The attendees were there because they care what will happen to science and the people and economies of the world if the alarmism is not checked.

Posted via email from Enviromenment

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

What Obama Doesn't Get About Americans and Health Care

Supporters of Obama's health care reform plan are all about "cost curves." While it's important to keep costs down, the curves that the American people really want to see bent are the curves of sickness and disease. Bend those “disease curves” downward, and the American people, currently deeply skeptical of the whole political crew in Washington, would rally in support.

But what if the Beltway curve-benders are missing the point? Think about it this way... Let's agree that the true point of health care is healing. What if the real goal is not to bend curves down or flatten them, but rather to bend them up?

The curves we really want to bend--and bend upward--are health curves. Cost curves are important, and nobody wants them to go up unnecessarily but the curves that the American people really want to see bent--bent downward--are the curves of sickness and disease.   Bend those “disease curves” downward, and the American people, currently deeply skeptical of the whole political crew in Powertown, would rally in support.

 

We’ve done disease-curve downward-bending before.  We’ve bent down the curves for tuberculosis, polio, AIDS, and many other diseases. Is anybody you know suffering from scurvy?Or rickets? Or whooping cough? No? Good-- mission accomplished. 

 

The curve of those diseases has been bent downward, they're gone from being huge killers and disablers to comparatively minor afflictions. Polio has virtually disappeared, tuberculosis is a minor problem for the public as a whole, and even AIDS deaths in the U.S. have fallen by more than two-thirds in the last fifteen years. We might pause to think more about AIDS: Just two decades ago, we were told that AIDS had the potential to be a mass plague in America and yet now, thanks mostly to massive scientific intervention, AIDS has been reduced to a chronic disease, which kills every year just a fraction of the number currently dying from diabetes. 

 

Every life lost is a tragedy, of course, and so there’s much more to be done.  But the medical urgency of better health only underscores the moral necessity, as well as the political popularity, of bending death-and-disease curves, down to zero wherever possible. 

 

We Americans think that life is precious. And so we are willing to spend a lot to improve, lengthen, and enhance life. In addition, in the back of our minds, we understand that good health is good economics; healthy people make for more economic output and invention than do sick people. Moreover, if we invent good medicines and treatments here, in this country, we can sell them to the rest of the world, creating jobs and generating economic benefits. In addition, if we wanted to, we could give such medical goods away, for either humanitarian or foreign-policy strategy reasons. What I have called the Serious Medicine Strategy is the ultimate example of “enlightened self-interest.”

 

It’s this larger view of the moral and economic value of good health that seems to elude the current crop of “experts” in Washington. They seem focused on the “cost” side of the ledger, while they mostly ignore the “benefit” side.   If one only focuses on the “cost” side, then it makes sense, for example, to chop away at health care spending--to bend those cost curves downward.   And if old people go untreated and die earlier?  Well, as in Great Britain (sample headine: “Sentenced to death on the National Health Service”), that’s cheaper isn’t it?  Isn’t rationing of health cheaper?   

 

And if young people get sick and die from preventable diseases?  Or if veterans cost an “inconvenient” amount of money in V.A. hospitals? Deaths in those categories are losses to both society and the economy--to say nothing of the families--but they could be, and are, seen as savings in the eyes of government bean-counters.   Seen only a short time-horizon, the scarcity model is cheaper. 

 

In contrast to the number-crunchings of cost-obsessed bureaucrats, if one looks at the whole of life, including all the benefits of being alive, then one further sees that the benefits of a healthy, happy, and productive people far outweigh the costs. 

 

And by the way, someone should tell elected politicians, who are more sensitive to public opinion than the unelected bureaucrats who do the policy advising and agenda-setting: The folks out there will re-elect only the politicians who seem to be rooting for them to succeed at living long and happy lives. 

 

But in the meantime, at least until the next midterm election, both the political and policy elites are locked into their vision of curve-bending cost containment. Testifying before Congress in June, Christina Romer, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, declared, “In discussing cost containment, I want to focus on slowing the rate of costs.  This is the so-called ‘curve-bending’ that can last for decades.”  And not to be outdone on curve-bending, Aetna Insurance has created a whole Web site, entitled “bending the cost curve.com.”  

 

For the most part, political appointees, such as Romer, and insurance companies, such as Aetna, are careful to say that they want to see no loss in the quality of treatment. And if pressed about the prospect of future medical improvements-- which might lead to new cures, and a long-term reduction of costs, by making people healthier-- they would undoubtedly say, yes, they are for those kinds of improvements.   But such talk about medical improvements is strikingly absent from their testimonies and advertisements.  And why is that?  Because Romer, Aetna, and all the rest are cost reducers, not benefit increasers

 

Indeed, sometimes Obamacare supporters tip their hand, showing that they worry about cost control--and little else.    A case in point is Ezra Klein, writing for The Washington Post, who clearly empathizes with the Obama agenda, never hesitating to offer helpful suggestions to his team.  On Sunday, he conceded that the problem faced by the would-be cost-curve-benders is that their ideas are “abstract, speculative and, at times, even unpopular.”  Yes, “unpopular.”

 

That’s for sure.  People don’t like scarcity and rationing.   And so there are times when Obamacare--predicated on cost-curve-bending, a.k.a. scarcity and rationing--is “unpopular.” Like now. Today, 56 percent of Americans say that they are opposed to Obamacare and to the Democratic vision of “curve-bending.”

 

But then Klein, the staunch Obamacare guy, added a revealing sentence in his Post piece, as he mulled over what might worry the White House health care policy team:  “What if it finds that some brand-new and incredibly expensive treatments are wildly effective? That could raise spending.”  [emphasis added]   Well, yes, a “wildly effective” treatment could “raise spending.”  But here’s a not-so-bold claim: People would love to learn about a great new treatment. The average American would cheer. But Klein’s choice of words reveals much about how Washington elites see the issue of medical innovation; such progress is to be dreaded, not heralded. 

 

Obviously, some curves are meant to be bent, with or without medical breakthroughs. Sometimes less is good. If one is overweight, one should eat less. If one smokes, one should stop. But the politics of nagging and nudging people about their health-styles are tricky, full of human-nature-based boomerangs and backlashes.  And as we have seen twice now, during “Clintoncare” in 1993 and now Obamacare in 2009, the politics of cost-curve reduction are toxic.

 

But the elites are so in love with their rationing vision that they keep pushing their same cost-curve-reduction ideas.  Just last week, two blue chip outfits, The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) and the Peterson-Pew Commission on Budget Reform (PPCBR), released a report calling for “a strengthened Medicare advisory panel tasked with recommending Medicare savings.” In so advocating, CRFB and PPCBR are referring to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), an independent agency created by Congress in 1997, to advise the federal government on Medicare issues.

 

It’s no secret that fans of the current MedPAC want to see it grow much stronger in its ability to control costs.  They hope that MedPAC could become as secretively powerful over health care as the Federal Reserve Board has been secretively powerful over monetary policy.  It is better, Obamacare advocates figure, to kick “tough” decisions over to an an un-elected group of obscure experts-- and such a plan would be good, of course, for the ongoing employment of the expert class.  Indeed, would-be Obama health czar Tom Daschle proposed a “Federal Health Board” last year in his book, "Critical: What We Can Do About the Health-Care Crisis." Echoing Daschle, CRFB/PPCBR budget experts made a (very) little joke, calling their strengthening idea “MedPAC on steroids.”

There’s a certain logic in trying to sneak such curve-bending cuts under the political radar, but there’s no logic if the curve-bending stratagem is guaranteed to be “outed” as scarcity and rationing, and thus guaranteed to be voted down. And yet that sort of politically fatal exposure is a certainty in today’s media environment-- a world of Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh and any number of Internet-based diggers and bloggers. 

There is simply no chance that a “MedPAC on steroids” would be effective in its work in a small “d” democratic society.  By herself, working from her Facebook page, Sarah “death panels” Palin alone could beat back a MedPAC. 

The cost-curve controllers have driven head-on into the trap of what free-market economists call static analysis.  What they need is dynamic analysis, which could point the way toward better health and lower costs.

Posted via email from Global Politics

Climate Change

I don’t know if it’s the product of alarmists, but I can get for you astrophysicists at Harvard who could explain to you that variations in the earth’s temperature are very closely related to variations in the output of the sun
; and some of these people believe that what we have seen in recent decades is solar related; and even this cooling that we’ve seen recently in global temperature is often explained away as a reduction in solar output.

So it’s not just a matter of people calling each other names – there are very credible scientists at MIT and Harvard, and Stanford and elsewhere who are writing in a way that would put them in the skeptical camp, which is enormous by the way.

The most fundamental questions, like, is the planet warming – in reality there’s quite a debate about that very subject:

** Literally true, but false in any meaningful sense . There’s no longer any debate about it in the climate science literature, just among people who aren’t working climate scientists (plus a vanishingly small proportion of climate scientists – there’s a reason why the same 8 or 10 names come up over and over again

; as I tell people, you would just discover that the climate change issue is very much more complicated than it is often presented to the public. And that’s somewhat the message I have on the circuit, is that no matter what thing you ask about, you find out there’s an incredible story behind it and quite a debate going on in the scientific community.

** Again, not true, at least not in the sense that he’s trying to convey; it may look that way, but typically the things that *are* settled aren’t being debated in the scientific community, and so – unless there’s an industry-funded effort to make them appear unsettled – they’re not news.

Posted via email from Enviromenment

Who Pays for Health-Care Reform, and Is It Fair?

Tuesday, September 22, 2009; 12:36 AM


No one is against expanding health coverage on principle. As we come down to crunch time, the health-reform debate is all about money.

Once you accept that health insurance plans must meet some minimal criteria and that everyone has to have one (or pay a penalty), you are left with the issue of funding. If 30 million to 45 million additional people will have health insurance, then someone has to pay for it. But the first thing to bear in mind is that, seen from the perspective of American society as a whole, this isn't money that we lose; it's money that we spend on health care for members of society and that goes to health-care providers who are, by and large, also members of society. In this view, in other words, it's a question of redistribution.

This should not be surprising. Insurance itself is a mechanism for redistribution. Take homeowners insurance: Money flows from people who don't lose their houses to people who do. In homeowners insurance, the general principle is that the premiums you pay should be proportional to your expected losses (the damage you could suffer times the probability of that damage). We generally consider this to be fair; if your insurance premiums are too high, you could sell your house and move to a smaller one.

The analog to this would be to force everyone to pay the expected cost of his health care. This would be "fair" in the sense that each person's costs would be proportional to his expected burden on the system. But it would break down because you cannot trade in your body for a healthier one that is cheaper to insure. As a result, the health-care bills on the table require that insurers charge the same amount to all people of the same age.

But even after taking differences in people's health status out of the equation, the numbers still don't add up on their own. The median household income in 2008 was $50,000. The average family health insurance policy provided through employer coverage cost more than $13,000. About 8 million people in households making $50,000 to $75,000 (and 29 million in households making less than $50,000) are uninsured. Asking them to suddenly start paying $13,000 per year for health insurance -- and potentially thousands more in out-of-pocket expenses -- is not going to work.

As a result, health-care reform has to involve redistribution. But this should not come as a big surprise. Social Security, for example, is a vast redistribution scheme. The amount you contribute depends on how much you make (up to the income cap, which makes little sense); the amount you receive depends partially on how much you contribute, but also on many other factors, most notably how long you live.

The real question is: Who pays? The House bill has the most generous subsidies, reaching up to 400 percent of the poverty level, and pays for them in part through an increase in income taxes for the very rich. Sen. Max Baucus's bill has less generous subsidies, and instead of taxing the rich directly, it imposes new fees on insurers, drugmakers and medical device manufacturers, and also has an "excise tax" on expensive health insurance plans. (It also includes a shockingly stupid provision to tax employers for hiring low-income people if they don't provide health insurance, but let's assume someone in the Senate Finance Committee comes to his senses and they kill that.)

Once you've made health care mandatory, lower subsidies are a tax on the middle class, plain and simple. The individual mandate -- the requirement that everyone have health insurance -- is itself a tax. The difference from Social Security and Medicare -- other redistribution schemes with mandatory taxes -- is that the individual mandate taxes the very people who are supposed to benefit from the program. Subsidies lower that tax but don't eliminate it. So the main people paying for health care reform are middle-class Americans who don't have insurance now and will probably get insurance after reform. Is that fair? It depends on whether you think taxes should be an even trade between taxpayer and government -- you get what you pay for -- or you think taxes are a way of spreading the benefits that government provides to all of society.

Taxing the rich is, by contrast, a tax on people who are most able to pay, but also the people who will benefit the least from health-care reform. Because the marginal utility -- the amount of extra enjoyment gained -- of one dollar is much lower for a rich person than for a middle-class person, it is also the most painless way to generate tax revenue. Is that fair? Again, it depends on how you see the relationship between taxpayers and the government.

The excise tax is more complicated. All other things being equal, it should affect the rich more than the poor. But other things are not equal. Some people need more expensive plans because of their health conditions. Health care is more expensive in some states than in others. So who pays will depend on a lot of factors that most people have little control over. (The one thing we can be sure of is that insurers won't pay; though this is billed as a tax on insurers, they will just pass the costs to consumers.) The excise tax would also have knock-on effects: As employers start hitting the threshold at which their plans become taxed, they and their employees will shift into cheaper plans with higher deductibles and higher copays -- which means that more of the net costs will shift to employees. Is that fair?

The challenge today is that politicians are wary of voting for anything that is called a tax, even though we know we need to pay for health-care reform somehow. In the end, if you think that individuals are responsible for dealing with their problems on their own, you probably see health-care reform as a special interest program for the uninsured and think the uninsured should pay for it (through lower subsidies). On the other hand, if you think that all Americans should have the right to a minimal level of health insurance, you probably think health-care reform is good for America, pure and simple, and favor increasing taxes on the people who can actually pay them.

Posted via email from Global Politics

Who Pays for Health-Care Reform, and Is It Fair?



Tuesday, September 22, 2009; 12:36 AM

No one is against expanding health coverage on principle. As we come down to crunch time, the health-reform debate is all about money.

Once you accept that health insurance plans must meet some minimal criteria and that everyone has to have one (or pay a penalty), you are left with the issue of funding. If 30 million to 45 million additional people will have health insurance, then someone has to pay for it. But the first thing to bear in mind is that, seen from the perspective of American society as a whole, this isn't money that we lose; it's money that we spend on health care for members of society and that goes to health-care providers who are, by and large, also members of society. In this view, in other words, it's a question of redistribution.

This should not be surprising. Insurance itself is a mechanism for redistribution. Take homeowners insurance: Money flows from people who don't lose their houses to people who do. In homeowners insurance, the general principle is that the premiums you pay should be proportional to your expected losses (the damage you could suffer times the probability of that damage). We generally consider this to be fair; if your insurance premiums are too high, you could sell your house and move to a smaller one.

The analog to this would be to force everyone to pay the expected cost of his health care. This would be "fair" in the sense that each person's costs would be proportional to his expected burden on the system. But it would break down because you cannot trade in your body for a healthier one that is cheaper to insure. As a result, the health-care bills on the table require that insurers charge the same amount to all people of the same age.

But even after taking differences in people's health status out of the equation, the numbers still don't add up on their own. The median household income in 2008 was $50,000. The average family health insurance policy provided through employer coverage cost more than $13,000. About 8 million people in households making $50,000 to $75,000 (and 29 million in households making less than $50,000) are uninsured. Asking them to suddenly start paying $13,000 per year for health insurance -- and potentially thousands more in out-of-pocket expenses -- is not going to work.

As a result, health-care reform has to involve redistribution. But this should not come as a big surprise. Social Security, for example, is a vast redistribution scheme. The amount you contribute depends on how much you make (up to the income cap, which makes little sense); the amount you receive depends partially on how much you contribute, but also on many other factors, most notably how long you live.

The real question is: Who pays? The House bill has the most generous subsidies, reaching up to 400 percent of the poverty level, and pays for them in part through an increase in income taxes for the very rich. Sen. Max Baucus's bill has less generous subsidies, and instead of taxing the rich directly, it imposes new fees on insurers, drugmakers and medical device manufacturers, and also has an "excise tax" on expensive health insurance plans. (It also includes a shockingly stupid provision to tax employers for hiring low-income people if they don't provide health insurance, but let's assume someone in the Senate Finance Committee comes to his senses and they kill that.)

Once you've made health care mandatory, lower subsidies are a tax on the middle class, plain and simple. The individual mandate -- the requirement that everyone have health insurance -- is itself a tax. The difference from Social Security and Medicare -- other redistribution schemes with mandatory taxes -- is that the individual mandate taxes the very people who are supposed to benefit from the program. Subsidies lower that tax but don't eliminate it. So the main people paying for health care reform are middle-class Americans who don't have insurance now and will probably get insurance after reform. Is that fair? It depends on whether you think taxes should be an even trade between taxpayer and government -- you get what you pay for -- or you think taxes are a way of spreading the benefits that government provides to all of society.

Taxing the rich is, by contrast, a tax on people who are most able to pay, but also the people who will benefit the least from health-care reform. Because the marginal utility -- the amount of extra enjoyment gained -- of one dollar is much lower for a rich person than for a middle-class person, it is also the most painless way to generate tax revenue. Is that fair? Again, it depends on how you see the relationship between taxpayers and the government.

The excise tax is more complicated. All other things being equal, it should affect the rich more than the poor. But other things are not equal. Some people need more expensive plans because of their health conditions. Health care is more expensive in some states than in others. So who pays will depend on a lot of factors that most people have little control over. (The one thing we can be sure of is that insurers won't pay; though this is billed as a tax on insurers, they will just pass the costs to consumers.) The excise tax would also have knock-on effects: As employers start hitting the threshold at which their plans become taxed, they and their employees will shift into cheaper plans with higher deductibles and higher copays -- which means that more of the net costs will shift to employees. Is that fair?

The challenge today is that politicians are wary of voting for anything that is called a tax, even though we know we need to pay for health-care reform somehow. In the end, if you think that individuals are responsible for dealing with their problems on their own, you probably see health-care reform as a special interest program for the uninsured and think the uninsured should pay for it (through lower subsidies). On the other hand, if you think that all Americans should have the right to a minimal level of health insurance, you probably think health-care reform is good for America, pure and simple, and favor increasing taxes on the people who can actually pay them.

Posted via email from Global Politics