The New York Slimes is getting aboard.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/16/opinion/david-brooks-elizabeth-warren-can-win.html?_r=0
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/16/opinion/david-brooks-elizabeth-warren-can-win.html?_r=0
Just one problem with your analysis young whippersnapper. You've lost your mind. "Single Payer"???. Just how do you think "Single Payer" would have fared in the Senate??? Have you forgotten about Max Baucus, Chair of the Senate Committee on Finance. HE IS A "DEMOCRAT!" There was no way the "public option" would have gotten by Baucus, except over his dead body, let alone "single payer". You're hilarious. Sure right, the democrats could have passed anything they wanted! Well Baucus is a Democrat, and he wanted the public option killed, and he certainly wasn't going to even pay lip service to "single payer." So they could have passed anything they wanted huh? Well, have you considered that Baucus wanted one thing and the majority of democrats wanted another? Don't be an idiot.piezoe... your obamacare take is no way attached to reality.
1. Obama Pelosi and Reid had the votes to pass Single payer or whatever they wanted to pass.
Remember that passed the act without a single Republican vote.
2. McCarron - Ferguson is something you big govt types love... lets read what your beloved Daily Kos actually stated before it went all spin.
The The McCarran-Ferguson Act gives states the authority to regulate the "business of insurance" without interference from federal regulation, unless federal law specifically provides otherwise. The Act provides that the "business of insurance, and every person engaged therein, shall be subject to the laws of the several States which relate to the regulation or taxation of such business."
In short the act declares that States get to make laws unless Congress trumps them.
Obamacare was an atomic trump.
We have no idea what you think M-F does... but as a supporter of Obamacare... you won. Right? Obamacare trumped the states framework.
you can't have it both ways, first bitch about how bad government is and then defend white males, since they have been running things for 200 years, and then claim they are better than blacks or Mexicans who until Obama haven't even had a crack at it
Just one problem with your analysis young whippersnapper. You've lost your mind. "Single Payer"???. Just how do you think "Single Payer" would have fared in the Senate??? Have you forgotten about Max Baucus, Chair of the Senate Committee on Finance. HE IS A "DEMOCRAT!" There was no way the "public option" would have gotten by Baucus, except over his dead body, let alone "single payer". You're hilarious. Sure right, the democrats could have passed anything they wanted! Well Baucus is a Democrat, and he wanted the public option killed, and he certainly wasn't going to even pay lip service to "single payer." So they could have passed anything they wanted huh? Well, have you considered that Baucus wanted one thing and the majority of democrats wanted another? Don't be an idiot.
Speaking of Single Payer:baucus was hand selected by obama to shepard the legislation.
it was Obama Reid and Pelosi who did not want single payer.
go watch this...please... you will see how dirty it was from the get go.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/obamasdeal/view/
To navigate the process of health reform, President Obama turned to his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, a consummate deal maker, who helped stock the West Wing with an all-star lineup of congressional insiders. But almost immediately, a key member of the team was forced to step down, and the country's greatest champion of health reform, Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.), was sidelined with incurable brain cancer. The administration's hopes for reform rested with Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), the powerful head of the Senate Finance Committee, who also happened to be one of the Senate's top recipients of special interest money from the health care industry.
The White House encouraged Baucus to quietly negotiate deals with the insurance lobby, drug companies and other special interest groups, despite promises to run a different kind of White House. "The president said that having people at the table is better than having them throw stuff at the table," White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer tells FRONTLINE.
Jem, You're a good man, or woman!, but you are so politically naive sometimes that it astounds me. Obama, Pelosi and Reid wanted what they thought they could get passed through both houses. It is as simple as that young man. They represented the party's leadership and their job is to get legislation through a cantankerous Congress. The only thing you will see presented for public consumption is what their strategy is calling for at the moment. Early on there was some push for the public option, particularly from his nibs. That's because the public option is code for "single payer". But once it was recognized that that would be impossible to get through both houses, that feature was abandoned. It was recognized from the outset that single payer would have zero chance, so let's try it by the back door and call it the "public option". We are against single payer but for a public option! This is just politics, pure politics!baucus was hand selected by obama to shepard the legislation.
it was Obama Reid and Pelosi who did not want single payer.
go watch this...please... you will see how dirty it was from the get go.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/obamasdeal/view/
To navigate the process of health reform, President Obama turned to his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, a consummate deal maker, who helped stock the West Wing with an all-star lineup of congressional insiders. But almost immediately, a key member of the team was forced to step down, and the country's greatest champion of health reform, Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.), was sidelined with incurable brain cancer. The administration's hopes for reform rested with Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), the powerful head of the Senate Finance Committee, who also happened to be one of the Senate's top recipients of special interest money from the health care industry.
The White House encouraged Baucus to quietly negotiate deals with the insurance lobby, drug companies and other special interest groups, despite promises to run a different kind of White House. "The president said that having people at the table is better than having them throw stuff at the table," White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer tells FRONTLINE.