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Archive for September, 2009

Drunkblogging yet another health care speech

Posted by Richard on September 9, 2009

Vodkapundit is drunkblogging President Obama's 87th (or is it the 112th?) speech promoting government-run health care. I'm not going to watch the speech, but I'll check in on the drunkblogging after a while. I suggest you do the same; it's bound to be much more interesting and informative than the actual speech.

If you want to play the drunkblogging home game, I suggest taking a drink every time you hear "security." I understand that's the new focus-group-tested talking point. The previous one, "choice," didn't sell too well.

Cheers!

UPDATE: Steve's drunkblogging answered almost all my questions about the speech, except how often "security" was mentioned. Judging from his typically amusing and informative outbursts and various other reports and commentary (Instapundit has lots of great quotes, links, and observations), I'm glad I didn't watch. Nothing new to see here, folks, move along. 

Of course, there was apparently a passing reference to allowing some "experiments" in a few states with some unspecified form of tort reform, so another big question is this: How many Republicans will seize on this whisper of a hint of a bone that might be tossed to them to roll over, beg, and lick Obama's hand? My guess is that Steve's correct (at 5:53), and it will be more than a few. "Gutless," "unprincipled," and "Republican" are an all-too-common three-part oxymoron.

UPDATE2: Hugh Hewitt:

Talk about underwhelming.

Most telling was the laughter at the phrase "there remain some details to be worked out," which the president wasn't counting on.

"Misinformation," "bogus claims," "scare tactics," "such a charge would be laughable,' "it is a lie plain and simple" –welcome to the bipartisanship of hope and change.

This speech may be rallying the left, but it isn't doing anything to advance "bipartisan" solutions. It appears that the president has settled on a jam down, one built on the same lame arguments that have failed to persuade a majority or even a near majority of Americans.

Indeed™.

UPDATE3: Reason's Peter Suderman (emphasis added):

Philip Klein and my former colleague Greg Conko have a new paper out making the case against the current batch of health-care reform proposals.
The criticisms of liberal reforms are sharp, but what really makes the paper worthwhile are two aspects. The first is that, contrary to the president's accusation that those who oppose reform have no solutions of their own, they actually propose and detail a number of useful, specific reforms, including some that tend to get less attention, like curbing regulations on medical devices and new drugs that artificially increase scarcity (and, as a result, drive up costs).
The second is that they fully recognize that the current health-care system is a disaster, and that the reforms they propose wouldn't necessarily ensure that those with chronic preexisting conditions have access to health insurance. But, they say, the current patchwork of ill-thought-out government regulations of the health care market is so problematic—and, in fact, exacerbates our health care problems so much—that it must be fixed before addressing the few remaining problem cases.

… Conko and Klein have done some solid, capable work. More than that, they've proven, once again, that anyone who buys the president's argument that opponents of liberal reform don't have anything to offer just isn't listening.
 

(HT: Instapundit)

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Brigitte Gabriel in Colorado

Posted by Richard on September 9, 2009

Brigitte Gabriel, the founder of American Congress for Truth and its activist offshoot, ACT! for America, is going to be in the Denver area later this week for two events. I've written about Gabriel before (here, here, and here). As a Lebanese Christian, she spent seven years of her childhood living in a bomb shelter during Lebanon's civil war, and saw most of her friends killed by the Islamofascists. She's an articulate and passionate spokesperson for the war against Islamofascism and the author of Because They Hate: A Survivor of Islamic Terror Warns America and They Must Be Stopped

Here are the details of her two appearances (via email):

On September 11th, Brigitte will deliver a keynote address on the campus of Colorado Christian University.

This event is free and open to the public. After the event Brigitte will autograph copies of her New York Times bestselling book They Must Be Stopped. Books will be available for purchase.

When: Friday, September 11th, 7:30 P.M.

Where: The "Events Center" at Colorado Christian University

8787 W. Alameda Ave.

Lakewood, Colorado

On September 12th, Brigitte will be joined by ACT! for America Executive Director Guy Rodgers, National Field Director Kelly Cook, and Director of Government Relations Lisa Piraneo at the ACT! for America "Citizens in Action" Conference.

The conference will be held at the Denver Marriott South Hotel in Littleton.

Topics covered include:

A basic understanding of radical Islam

Why the typical Western approach in dealing with radical Islam does not work – and what does

How to inform and persuade elected officials

How to communicate the truth about radical Islam more effectively

How to recognize and combat political correctness

How to detect tell-tale signs of suspicious activity

And much more!

For more information, or to register, click here.

The Sept. 12 conference is from 8 AM to 5 PM and costs $45 per person or $70 per couple, which includes a notebook, educational DVD, and ACT! for America lapel pin. Due to a prior commitment, I won't be able to attend, but if you're in the Denver area, I encourage you to do so. And maybe you could share some of what you learn with me. 🙂

 

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Labor Day Tea Party rally draws 10,000+ in Illinois

Posted by Richard on September 8, 2009

You midwestern tea partiers are putting us westerners to shame. The Tea Party Express bus tour stopped for a Labor Day rally in New Lenox / Joliet, Illinois (outside of Chicago). According to the sheriff, the crowd was over 10,000, and they had to shut down a portion of Interstate 80 for a time. Wow! Illinois Review has video.

It's only going to get more exciting on Tuesday. Joe "The Plumber" Wurzelbacher is scheduled to speak at one of the Michigan stops. Here are the details (from Levi Russell via email): 

(ON THE ROAD NEAR SOUTH BEND, IN) — Joe The Plumber (Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher) has confirmed with organizers of the Tea Party Express that he will speak at Tuesday's Tea Party Express rally in Brighton, Michigan.

The Tea Party Express will cross into Michigan on Monday evening for a 7:30pm rally in Battle Creek. Then on Tuesday the Tea Party Express will conduct rallies in Jackson (12:00 Noon), Brighton (3:30pm) and Troy (6:30pm).

For Monday's rally supporters will join the Tea Party Express convoy and caravan from Jackson to Brighton and then on to Troy.

National media outlets are traveling with the Tea Party Express and will be broadcasting reports from each Michigan tea party rally.

Here are the details on our Michigan stops.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7th at 7:30pm – BATTLE CREEK
Friendship Park (northeast corner)
Capital Avenue NE & State Street
Battle Creek, MI 49017

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th at 12:00 Noon – JACKSON
Cascades Falls Park
1401 S. Brown Street
Jackson, MI 49203
*We then invite all participants to caravan over with us to the Brighton rally!

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th at 3:30pm – BRIGHTON
Mill Pond (by the gazebo)
W. Main Street & Mill Pond Lane
Brighton, MI 48116
*JOE THE PLUMBER TO SPEAK!
*We then invite all participants to caravan over with us to the Troy rally!

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th at 6:30pm – TROY
City Hall (south lawn area)
500 W. Big Beaver Road
Troy, MI 48084

I wish I could be there in Brighton. I hope any Michigander readers I have will turn out for one or more of these events.

I've made another donation to the Tea Party Express to help them keep the momentum going all the way to Washington, DC, on September 12. If you'd like to help, too, go here

I can't wait until the big rally here in Denver next Saturday, Sept. 12, at the State Capitol, coinciding with the 9/12 March on Washington. I bet there's one near you, too — check the appropriate links in this post.

UPDATE (9/8): It sounds like they've had a great reception in Michigan, with thousands at each of the rallies despite off-and-on heavy rains. Check out the pictures and news videos at the tour blog's Michigan update, or just go to the home page and keep scrolling.

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Socialized legal care

Posted by Richard on September 5, 2009

Via another friend, I learned of "A Doctor's Plan for Legal Industry Reform," a wickedly funny Wall Street Journal op-ed by Richard B. Rafal, M.D. (emphasis added):

At a town-hall meeting in Portsmouth, N.H., last month, our uninformed lawyer in chief suggested that we physicians would rather chop off a foot than manage diabetes since we would make more money doing surgery. Then President Obama compounded his attack by claiming a doctor's reimbursement is between "$30,000" and "$50,000" for such amputations! (Actually, such surgery costs only about $1,500.)

Physicians have never been so insulted. Because of these affronts, I will gladly volunteer for the important duty of controlling and regulating lawyers. Since most of what lawyers do is repetitive boilerplate or pushing paper, physicians would have no problem dictating what is appropriate for attorneys. We physicians know much more about legal practice than lawyers do about medicine.

RTWT. I especially like the idea of having committees of doctors determining what legal procedures are necessary and setting the fees.

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Best Bob Costas story ever

Posted by Richard on September 5, 2009

Bob Costas was on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon Friday night and told a wonderful story. He was walking down the street in New York and stopped at a corner. A young (~25-26), well-dressed black man ran up to him, going "Bryant! Bryant!" Costas responded, "You know, this is getting so old. I'm Greg Gumble. I know my brother's more well-known than me, but can't I get a little respect too?" Without missing a bit, the man replied, "Greg, I love you too!"

You can't make up a story like that.

BTW, I still have fond memories of "Later with Bob Costas" in the late 80s and early 90s. It was a one-on-one interview show with no studio audience, and that's when I developed my admiration for Costas. This wasn't sports (his current gig) — this was interviews with people like Martin Scorsese, Jerry Lewis, Julian Bond, Sonny Bono, Dan Rather, Barry Goldwater, …

He was terrific at interviewing his guests, getting them to open up and be themselves, treating them with respect and admiration, but not fawning and not throwing softballs. Some of those shows are among the best interviews ever, and I hope they've been preserved somewhere. I suppose I should see if any of them are available online so I can prove my point.

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Pledging to serve the President

Posted by Richard on September 5, 2009

Have you seen the "I pledge" video by Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher (it's produced by Oprah's company, Harpo Productions), and featuring a score of their whackjob Hollyweird friends? It dates all the way back to inauguration day, but someone has recently been promoting it anew (over 100,000 new views in the past few days). A friend sent me the link, and it was new to me.

I found it very disturbing, and I'm not going to embed it here for fear that someone might think I'm promoting, endorsing, or approving it. But here's "Ashton Kutcher's Creepy Pledge" (it's really Demi Moore who utters the creepiest part), a 48-second rejoinder that starts with the money quote from the Kutcher-Moore video: 

[YouTube link]

You might also want to check out "Pledging to be a Servant" (embedding disabled), Penn Jillette's 6-minute response. It's a bit rambling, but it expresses exactly the revulsion, disbelief, and sense of ickiness that I felt.

"I pledge" is the quintessential expression of both the cult of collectivism and the cult of personality. I wonder how long until these people start a movement to appoint Obama "President for Life"?

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Republican socialist health care

Posted by Richard on September 4, 2009

Inevitably, when the Democrats propose some radical, leftist, big-government program that moves us closer to socialism, some Republicans will support a slightly different radical, leftist, big-government program that moves us closer to socialism at a slightly slower pace or along a different path. Case in point: Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Robert Bennett (R-UT), Mike Crapo (R-ID), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Judd Gregg (R-NH) are co-sponsoring Sen. Ron Wyden's (D-OR) "Healthy Americans Act," S. 391 (PDF). Here are the first two paragraphs of the summary (emphasis added):

Requires each adult individual to have the opportunity to purchase a Healthy Americans Private Insurance Plan (HAPI), which is: (1) a plan offered by a state; or (2) an employer-sponsored health coverage plan. Makes individuals who are not enrolled in another specified health plan and who are not opposed to coverage for religious reasons responsible for enrolling themselves and their dependent children in a HAPI plan offered through their state of residence. Sets forth penalties for failure to enroll.

Establishes standardized coverage and state options for HAPI plans. Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to promulgate guidelines concerning the benefits, items, and services to be covered. Sets forth requirements for setting premiums. Requires the Secretary to establish the Healthy America Advisory Committee to provide annual recommendations concerning modifications to the benefits, items, and services required.

Note the double-talk: It seems to "require" us only to "have the opportunity," but there are "penalties for failure to enroll." And the "guidelines" that it requires the Secretary of HHS to "promulgate" are essentially mandatory. Other key features:

  • It raises federal health care spending by over six times as much as Obamacare.
  • It outlaws all plans that don't meet the detailed government requirements, thus severely limiting our choices.
  • It requires all employers and individuals to "make shared responsibility payments for HAPI plan premiums," with stiff fines for those who don't.
  • It directs the IRS to collect the money, with employees' "shared responsibility payments"  withheld from their paychecks.
  • It restricts the tax deductibility and controls content of pharmaceutical advertising, and it lets the FDA determine whether a new drug intended to treat a condition for which other drugs exist offers "new value." 
  • It puts virtually all aspects of health care under the control of the federal or state governments, establishing among others: 
    • "school-based health centers" 
    • Chronic Care Education Centers
    • state Health Help Agencies to administer HAPI plans and "promote prevention and wellness"
    • State Choices for Long-Term Care Program
    • Healthy Americans Public Health Trust Fund

I think it's pretty awful, but I'll give the senators this: They accomplish all this and more in only 168 pages, compared to the 1018 pages of H.R. 3200. That brevity and efficiency of language earns a bit of grudging respect.

The Club for Growth has specifically targeted Sen. Bennett (who is up for re-election in 2010), sending a letter about S.391 to 3200 likely delegates to the Utah GOP convention and running a TV ad state-wide. You can see the ad here and click through to the letter. You can also help fund the ad, as I did.

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The inherited bad economy

Posted by Richard on September 4, 2009

President Obama and the Democrats endlessly remind us that they inherited the current economic mess from the Bush administration. The only current political leader who's used the phrase "I inherited" more than Obama is Kim Jong Il.

I agree that the Bush administration shares in the blame for the out-of-control federal spending, the housing collapse, the financial meltdown, the job losses, and the steep decline in the economy. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continued and accelerated their irresponsible lending practices on Bush's watch, leading to the housing bubble that burst. The ill-conceived and ultimately harmful "stimulus packages" and "bailouts" began under the Bush administration. Throughout the Bush administration, domestic spending grew at an outrageous rate.

But the Democrats have a lot of nerve pointing a finger at the Republicans. The harmful policies of the latter are precisely what the Democrats clamored for them to do (and complained bitterly because the Republicans didn't do enough).

The Republicans are to blame entirely to the extent that they embraced Democratic ideas, accepted Democratic demands, compromised with Democrats on domestic policy, and bent over backwards to prove that they were "compassionate" (i.e., spendthrift, big-government) conservatives — with the emphasis decidedly on the "compassionate" part. 

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Canada’s sperm shortage and related matters

Posted by Richard on September 3, 2009

Mark Steyn was the "undocumented guest host" today on the Rush Limbaugh Show. I listened to a bit of it at lunch, and he totally cracked me up. It seems that Canada is suffering from a sperm shortage. The entire nation of 30 million people has only 33 sperm donors.

I figured Steyn had probably written a funny column about that. But before I got around to looking for it, a friend had sent me the link. It's quintessential Steyn — brilliant writing, wicked humor, and groan-inducing word play sprinkled with enough serious truths to make it more than an amusing trifle. Canada's sperm shortage, you see, was created by the government:

… Apparently, the 2004 Assisted Human Reproduction Act makes it illegal to pay donors for sperm. I mean, it wasn’t even the usual Canadian Wheat Board-type racket whereby you’d only be able to sell your seed to the Canadian Sperm Board at a price agreed upon by representatives of the federal-provincial Semen Commissions. Instead, they just nixed the whole deal, and, once Johnny Canuck found out he wasn’t going to be remunerated, virtually the entire supply dried up.

As a result, this once proud Dominion now has to import sperm. According to CTV, 80 per cent of Canadian women who conceive through donor sperm are getting it from the United States, mainly from men in Georgia and northern Florida. Canada’s future is now in American hands.

You know how it is: you wait ages for a good sperm story and then they all come at once. It seems there’s also a shortage of the stuff in Sweden. But, in contrast to Canada, this is caused not by government intervention in supply but by a surge in demand, from Swedish lesbian couples anxious to conceive. Inga and Britta had been trying for a child for ages but nothing seemed to work. Then it occurred to them this might be because they’re both women. So they headed off to the sperm clinic, whereupon the Sapphic demand ran into the problem of male inability to satisfy it. There appear to be higher than usual levels of non-functioning sperm.

Don’t worry, I’m not being Swedophobic in mocking the watery emissions of Nordic manhood. It’s a widespread problem: “Concern As Sperm Count Falls By A Third In UK Men” (the Daily Mail, 2004). … Still, even for a demographic doom-monger such as myself, you could hardly ask for a more poignant fin de civilisation image than a stampede of broody lesbians stymied only by defective semen, like some strange dystopian collaboration between Robert Heinlein and Russ Meyer set in a world divided into muff divers and duff donors.

 Read the whole thing . Then delve deep into the 490+ comments — really, it's worth it. Some are unintentionally funny, and others are intentionally funny (a call for a "cash for spunkers" program). Some add useful information and insights (another cause of Canada's problem: their courts have held sperm donors liable for child support!). And some are just good comments:

george: I'm shocked that anyone alive today is still able to write like this.

Kevin: The idea that sexual freedom is the only freedom left is met by an immediate cry to censor. Who said Irony was dead?

reliapundit: liberty without natural law isn't libertarianism; it's libertinage.

the postmodern left has rejected natural law and embraced moral and cultural relativism.

these people want a paternal state in which the parent supplies food, shelter, clothing an allowance but also let's them stay out all night uses drugs sleepo with anybody and anything and not be required contribute a penny to household expenses or work doing any hopusehold chores.

iow: postmodern lefists are the functional equivalents of teenagers.

I think reliapundit is onto something. In my experience, we are simply awash in mature adults who are the functional equivalents of teenagers. And the vast majority of them are leftists.

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Organizing the Obama Youth Brigades

Posted by Richard on September 2, 2009

On Sept. 8, President Obama will address America's schoolchildren and urge them to work toward personal and civic goals. Educators in all 57 states will assemble their K-12 students to hear Dear Leader instruct them on what it means to be a good, productive, obedient citizen.

(I can't help but wonder: if Pres. Bush had scheduled an unprecedented address like this, how many teachers and principles would have eagerly participated?)

The Dept. of Education is providing schools with teaching materials to support the students'  indoctrination learning. One of the teaching materials is a PreK-6 Menu of Classroom Activities (PDF), which includes suggested questions to ask students, such as: 

Why is it important that we listen to the President and other elected officials, like the mayor, senators, members of congress, or the governor? Why is what they say important?

TeaPartyPatriots.org doesn't care for that question: 

Shouldn't it be the other way around?
"Why is it important that the President and other elected officials, like the mayor, senators, members of congress, or the governor listens to the people? Why is what the people say important?"

The teaching guide includes lots of other questions for students, exercises for students, and activities to reinforce their indoctrination learning. For instance, it suggests that teachers can "extend learning by having students" (emphasis added):

  • Create posters of their goals. Posters could be formatted in quadrants or puzzle pieces or trails marked with the labels: personal, academic, community, country. Each area could be labeled with three steps for achieving goals in those areas. It might make sense to focus on personal and academic so community and country goals come more readily.
  • Write letters to themselves about how they can achieve their short‐term and long‐term education goals. These would be collected and redistributed at an appropriate later date by the teacher to make students accountable to their goals.

Yes, teachers, focus on personal and academic goals first, and once the kids are hooked, reel them into the community and country goals — but only after asking them questions like "What do you think the President wants us to do?"

Need it be said explicitly that teachers should make students accountable for the community and country goals, too? Does ACORN have a youth brigade? If not, I'm sure that will soon be remedied (using some of their stimulus billions).

This entire endeavor strikes me as an exercise in "critical pedagogy," chief tenets of which include:

  • all education is inherently political and all pedagogy must be aware of this condition
  • a social and educational vision of justice and equality should ground all education
  • issues of race, class, gender, sexuality, religion, and physical ability are all important domains of oppression and critical anti-hegemonic action.
  • the alleviation of oppression and human suffering is a key dimension of educational purpose

Many contemporary critical pedagogues have embraced postmodern, anti-essentialist perspectives of the individual, of language, and of power, "while at the same time retaining the Freirean emphasis on critique, disrupting oppressive regimes of power/knowledge, and social change." …

… Much of the work draws on anarchism, feminism, marxism, Lukács, Wilhelm Reich, Khen Lampert, postcolonialism, and the discourse theories of Edward Said, Antonio Gramsci and Michel Foucault. Radical Teacher is a magazine dedicated to critical pedagogy and issues of interest to critical educators. The Rouge Forum is an online organization led by people involved with critical pedagogy.

Saul Alinsky would be so proud of his fellow Chicagoan, community organizer, and disciple.

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DeGette holding health care meeting

Posted by Richard on September 2, 2009

Congresswoman Dianne DeGette is meeting with constituents this Thursday about health care. In person this time, unlike her earlier "phone forum." Of course, it's mid-morning on a weekday, so those of us who are gainfully employed are pretty much shut out unless we want to take time off from work. I'm going to pass, but if you're free (and one of her constituents — they'll probably check IDs), by all means attend. Here are the details:

When: Thursday, September 3 at 10:00 AM

Where: The Molly Blank Conference Center, National Jewish Health (1400 Jackson Street, Denver)

What: Discussion with constituents of the First Congressional District about health insurance reform


As you know, Congress is currently debating legislation that aims to provide health care coverage for all Americans and reduce costs.  I appreciate your communication on this issue and hope that you will continue to share your thoughts with me.

Please check my Web site (http://degette.house.gov) for other upcoming events.

If you go, maybe you could ask her why H.R. 3200 mandates fewer choices instead of more (only four "qualified" plans are allowed, and their coverage, deductibles, co-pays, etc., are strictly defined) and why Health Savings Account plans are not allowed. And please report back in the comments.

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Join the Whole Foods buycott

Posted by Richard on September 1, 2009

About three weeks ago, the Wall Street Journal published an excellent article by Whole Foods CEO John Mackey in which he proposed eight health care reforms that would move us toward "less government control and more individual empowerment" and would lower costs dramatically for everyone. This outraged some of the rich leftists who go to Whole Foods for their organic arugula, free-range chicken, and soy milk, and they organized a boycott of the grocery chain.

The backlash has begun, in the form of a "buycott" encouraging fans of John Mackey and his proposals to shop at Whole Foods. The Nationwide Tea Party Coalition is promoting the buycott, and the first two organized buycotts are scheduled for tomorrow, Tuesday, Sept. 1, at Whole Foods stores in St. Louis and Dallas. The coalition is planning more such events throughout Sept. and is encouraging people to sign up to sponsor events at their local Whole Foods Market. But I'm not going to wait. 

I don't shop at Whole Foods often. But tomorrow after work, I'm going to the Whole Foods Market on South Washington St. near where I live, and I'm going to splurge a bit on groceries. Maybe I'll get a bison strip steak and some of the fine deli salads and produce they have. I might even try that free-range chicken. 

If there's a Whole Foods store in your area, drop by tomorrow and pick up a few things. Don't forget to bring your reusable grocery bags (although you can buy some there or get paper bags if you forget). And if you haven't read it yet, please read John Mackey's outstanding article.

UPDATE (9/1): Well, I dropped thirty bucks at Whole Foods after work (passed on the bison steaks, though). It was quite busy, but I'm not there enough to know if it was any different than an average Tuesday evening. Later, I caught a report on the St. Louis buycott on Fox News. In the first half hour, about 300 people showed up, there was a line out the door, and there were no carts available. Oh, and there was one boycott supporter in an Obama shirt.  

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