Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Palin’
Midnight Votes, Backroom Deals, and a Death Panel
Governor Sarah Palin writes the following:
Last weekend while you were preparing for the holidays with your family, Harry Reid’s Senate was making shady backroom deals to ram through the Democrat health care take-over. The Senate ended debate on this bill without even reading it. That and midnight weekend votes seem to be standard operating procedures in D.C. No one is certain of what’s in the bill, but Senator Jim DeMint spotted one shocking revelation regarding the section in the bill describing the Independent Medicare Advisory Board (now called the Independent Payment Advisory Board), which is a panel of bureaucrats charged with cutting health care costs on the backs of patients – also known as rationing. Apparently Reid and friends have changed the rules of the Senate so that the section of the bill dealing with this board can’t be repealed or amended without a 2/3 supermajority vote. Senator DeMint said:
“This is a rule change. It’s a pretty big deal. We will be passing a new law and at the same time creating a senate rule that makes it out of order to amend or even repeal the law. I’m not even sure that it’s constitutional, but if it is, it most certainly is a senate rule. I don’t see why the majority party wouldn’t put this in every bill. If you like your law, you most certainly would want it to have force for future senates. I mean, we want to bind future congresses. This goes to the fundamental purpose of senate rules: to prevent a tyrannical majority from trampling the rights of the minority or of future congresses.”
In other words, Democrats are protecting this rationing “death panel” from future change with a procedural hurdle. You have to ask why they’re so concerned about protecting this particular provision. Could it be because bureaucratic rationing is one important way Democrats want to “bend the cost curve” and keep health care spending down?
The Congressional Budget Office seems to think that such rationing has something to do with cost. In a letter to Harry Reid last week, CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf noted (with a number of caveats) that the bill’s calculations call for a reduction in Medicare’s spending rate by about 2 percent in the next two decades, but then he writes the kicker:
“It is unclear whether such a reduction in the growth rate could be achieved, and if so, whether it would be accomplished through greater efficiencies in the delivery of health care or would reduce access to care or diminish the quality of care.”
Though Nancy Pelosi and friends have tried to call “death panels” the “lie of the year,” this type of rationing – what the CBO calls “reduc[ed] access to care” and “diminish[ed] quality of care” – is precisely what I meant when I used that metaphor.
This health care bill is one of the most far-reaching and expensive expansions of the role of government into our lives. We’re talking about putting one-seventh of our economy under the government’s thumb. We’re also talking about something as intimate to our personal well-being as medical care.
This bill is so unpopular that people on the right and the left hate it. So why go through with it? The Senate is planning to vote on this on Christmas Eve. Why the rush? Though we will begin paying for this bill immediately, we will see no benefits for years. (That’s the trick that allowed the CBO to state that the bill won’t grow the deficit for the next ten years.)
The administration’s promises of transparency and bipartisanship have been broken one by one. This entire process has been defined by midnight votes on weekends, closed-door meetings with industry lobbyists, and payoffs to politicians willing to sell their principles for sweetheart deals. Is it any wonder that Americans are so disillusioned with their leaders in Washington?
This is about politics, not health care. Americans don’t want this bill. Americans don’t like this bill. Washington has stopped listening to us. But we’re paying attention, and 2010 is coming.
Copenhagen’s political science
Governor
Palin writes the following in the Washington Post:
With the publication of damaging e-mails from a climate research center in Britain, the radical environmental movement appears to face a tipping point. The revelation of appalling actions by so-called climate change experts allows the American public to finally understand the concerns so many of us have articulated on this issue.
“Climate-gate,” as the e-mails and other documents from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia have become known, exposes a highly politicized scientific circle — the same circle whose work underlies efforts at the Copenhagen climate change conference. The agenda-driven policies being pushed in Copenhagen won’t change the weather, but they would change our economy for the worse.
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Copenhagen’s political science (Washington Post)
Governor Palin again calls for Barack Obama to skip Copenhagen in this Washington Post commentary. She points to the need for real science, balancing real-world costs and benefits, and the inequitable proposals and expections among nations.
Commonsense from Governor Palin
No, I am not for amnesty. .… Illegal aliens are called illegal for a reason. .… If they are not going to follow the rules they need to get out. – Sarah Palin
Clear, direct, and absolutely correct.
Source: Radio interview with Lars Larson, December 3, 2009.
Mr. President: Boycott Copenhagen; Investigate Your Climate Change “Experts” – Sarah Palin
Governor Sarah Palin on Climategate:
The president’s decision to attend the international climate conference in Copenhagen needs to be reconsidered in light of the unfolding Climategate scandal. The leaked e-mails involved in Climategate expose the unscientific behavior of leading climate scientists who deliberately destroyed records to block information requests, manipulated data to “hide the decline” in global temperatures, and conspired to silence the critics of man-made global warming. I support Senator James Inhofe’s call for a full investigation into this scandal. Because it involves many of the same personalities and entities behind the Copenhagen conference, Climategate calls into question many of the proposals being pushed there, including anything that would lead to a cap and tax plan. Policy should be based on sound science, not snake oil. I took a stand against such snake oil science when I sued the federal government over its decision to list the polar bear as an endangered species despite the fact that the polar bear population has increased. I’ve never denied the reality of climate change; in fact, I was the first governor to create a subcabinet position to deal specifically with the issue. I saw the impact of changing weather patterns firsthand while serving as governor of our only Arctic state. But while we recognize the effects of changing water levels, erosion patterns, and glacial ice melt, we cannot primarily blame man’s activities for the earth’s cyclical weather changes. The drastic economic measures being pushed by dogmatic environmentalists won’t change the weather, but will dramatically change our economy for the worse. Policy decisions require real science and real solutions, not junk science and doomsday scare tactics pushed by an environmental priesthood that capitalizes on the public’s worry and makes them feel that owning an SUV is a “sin” against the planet. In his inaugural address, President Obama declared his intention to “restore science to its rightful place.” Boycotting Copenhagen while this scandal is thoroughly investigated would send a strong message that the United States government will not be a party to fraudulent scientific practices. Saying no to Copenhagen and cap and tax are first steps in “restoring science to its rightful place.
Obama’s War of 1,000 Cuts
Yes, Afghanistan is now Obama’s War. It was his since inauguration but make no mistake, from last night’s speech, it is clearly his and we can no longer blame Bush for the mess. Obama has now created the recipe for his own disaster:
- First, the military asked for as much as 60,000 troops, Obama gives them half, and
- Second, while Obama says and repeats that his goal is “defined as disrupting, dismantling, and defeating al Qaeda and its extremist allies”, he spends more time Vietnamizing the war with talk of how he’s going to shift the effort (and responsibility of achieving his goal) to the Karzai’s hapless and corrupt government. As he clearly states “these additionalAmerican and international troops will allow us to accelerate handing over responsibility to Afghan forces, and allow us to begin the transfer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2011.”
What does this mean?
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Sarah Palin, version 2009: Going rogue, getting even (San Francisco Chronicle)
Debra Saunders writes a review of Sarah Palin’s Going Rogue, “She’s folksy and quotable. She has delivered a book that will thrill a base that loves to shout, “They done her wrong.”
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Those who follow Sarah Palin are sowing the seeds of their own destruction (Guardian)
Another British column, this time by Gary Younge, trying to explain Sarah Palin. One interesting point: “…the very things that liberal commentators ridicule her for – being inarticulate, unworldly, simplistic and hokey – are the very things that make her attractive to her base. Indeed, every time she is taunted she becomes more popular because it reaffirms the (not entirely mistaken) view that the deeply held values of a sizable section of the population are being disparaged.” George Bush, Jr. was really simply a Palin-lite. She’s the real thing.
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Obama inspires, Palin connects (Globe and Mail)
Rex Murphy offers a comparative take on Obama – losing his lustre, his appeal is dimming – and Palin – who is staking her claim. “Mr. Obama “bestows” himself”.… while Palin “will never speak in front of faux Greek columns. She walks on the stage much the same way she’d go into a gas station. But she’s shrewd in her choice of themes, has a marvelous feel for her audience, and a confidence that will never be confused with arrogance.”
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Publicity tour turns fresh page on ‘Palin Power’ (The Times)
A report of the crowds who started waiting over 24 hours before Governor Palin arrived in Michigan to kick off her book tour. It captures nicely the passion of her supporters and the potent power she holds. The clear message is that people see her as real, someone easy to support, and worthy of support. “It was like 2008 had never ended.”

