Health Care: Obsessing the cost while ignoring the value

From Thomas Sowell:

Let’s start at square one. Why is there alarm about American medical care? The most usual reason given is because its cost is high and rising.

That is certainly true. We were not spending nearly as much on high-tech medical procedures in the past because there were not nearly as many of them, and we were not spending anything at all on some of the new pharmaceutical drugs because they didn’t exist.

This general pattern is not peculiar to medical care. Cars didn’t cost nearly as much in the past, when they didn’t have air-conditioning, power steering and high-tech safety features. Homes were cheaper when they were smaller, had fewer bathrooms and lacked such conveniences as built-in microwave ovens.

We would like to have all these things without the rising costs that come with them. But only with medical care is such wishful thinking taken seriously, with government regarded as a sort of fairy godmother who will give us the benefits without the costs.

Leave it to an economist to put it in perspective. Obama and the Democrats socialization of medicine will eliminate the health care that we have become accustomed to. Even your if you desire to pay the price will be hindered as its availablility will not be the same. You are going to have to tell your congressmen not to do this. Those that voted for cap and tax will likely be voting to take over your health care.

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Why so many Czars, Mr. President?

We’re up to 20.

20 ?

Here’s Betsy Newmark:
Next week we’ll get one to deal with cbyer security. At some point isn’t Congress going to get jealous of its prerogatives and insist that the Senate should have the ability to confirm major appointments to the Executive Branch. They should want the same level of oversight over these appointments that they have over those administrators who go through the normal confirmation process. After all, why should he need someone outside of HHS to deal with domestic violence? Why can’t Homeland Security deal with cybersecurity? And if there is no budget or power for these individuals, are they anything more than just public relations gimmicks? And if they do have power will there be clashes among the heads of the various departments as they clash with czars who have overlapping jurisdictions.

Yet again, this would be a good reason for divided government. I can well imagine that if a Republican president had appointed so many czars, we’d have Democratic leaders, particularly Robert Byrd making a speech a day and planning legislation to limit such appointments. With a pliant Congress, we don’t hear a peep out of them guarding their separation of powers.

Czars do not have to go through Congressional approval and experience no oversight. Its a power grab by Obama that at some point even Democrats will have to say something at some point. How are all these Czars funded anyway?

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Why would the EPA suppress an internal study?

Well, because it doesn’t follow that narrative. It was skeptical of the existance of global warming. No wonder the rush to shove through Cap and Tax. We are following the world on this one folks. They are realizing its a hoax and are not going to the extremes of legislation and self-serving regulation that are Obama and Democrats.

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This post was written by bobsikes on June 29, 2009

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Off-the-chart feckless is Obama and his Democrat Party

What cowards. What a traitor is Obama to America. The Iranian mullachracy is weak beyond words while its people beg for a sign of support. Obama and his Democrat party sit idle, unable to provide a whimper of support to people whom yearn for the kind of freedom the American president is unable to comprehend.

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This post was written by bobsikes on June 20, 2009

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WH Counsel refuses to answer Senator Chuck Grassley’s direct questions on IG firing

It looks as if Norman Eisen will have to do the heavy lifting for this one and will ultimately be the fall guy. The WH will have to back off the Walpin dismissal and in Eisen’s ouster will serve as their scapegoat.

Eisen’s direct refusal to answer questions of fact indicate he’s protecting Obama whom badly wants to keep Americorps as Democrat field operatives.

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Let the Iranian Mullacracy keep defeating themselves

Pat Buchanan says Obama’s quiet outstreached hand to Iran not only works, but is the way to continue going.

The Obama policy of extending an open hand to Iran is working and ought not be abandoned because of the grim events in Tehran.

For the Iranian theocracy has just administered a body blow to its legitimacy in the eyes of the Iranian people and the world.

Before Saturday, the regime could credibly posture as defender of the nation, defiant in the face of the threats from Israel, faithful to the cause of the Palestinians, standing firm for Iran’s right to enrich uranium for peaceful nuclear power.

Today, the regime, including the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is under a cloud of suspicion that they are but another gang of corrupt politicians who brazenly stole a presidential election to keep themselves and their clerical cronies in power.

While Buchanan uses his own strawman in pointing out hawks want to confront Iran now. No they don’t. No one has said anything remotely like that, Pat.

But at any rate, Buchanan may have a point:


What should we do now? Wait for the dust to settle.

No U.S. denunciation of what took place in Iran is as credible as the reports and pictures coming out of Iran. Those reports, those pictures are stripping the mullahs of the only asset they seemed to possess — that, even if fanatics, they were principled, honest men.

Like Hamas, it was said of them that at least they were not corrupt, that at least they did not cheat the people.

No more. Today, in the streets of Tehran and other cities, they call to mind “Comrade Bob” Mugabe in Harare, Zimbabwe.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will never recapture that revolutionary purity he once seemed to possess as the man of the people who was elected president in the upset of 2005. Today, he appears, as The New York Times puts it, “as the shrewd and ruthless front man for a clerical military and political elite that is more unified and emboldened than at any time since the 1979 revolution.”

There are other reasons Obama should not heed the war hawks howling for confrontation now.

When your adversary is making a fool of himself, get out of the way. That is a rule of politics Lyndon Johnson once put into the most pungent of terms. U.S. fulminations will change nothing in Tehran. But they would enable the regime to divert attention to U.S. meddling in Iran’s affairs and portray the candidate robbed in this election, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, as a poodle of the Americans.

I find myself agreeing to the general point that Buchanan is making. In the event, however, it becomes clear that the opposition to the Mullahs seeks US involvement -whether it be rhetorically or more – I hope that Obama has the will to go with Plan B.

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Reflections on Iran and Obama’s wrong way

by Victor Davis Hanson:

1) Why did we reject the Bush policy of non-engagement with a monster like Ahmadinejad, who oppressed his own and threatened nuclear destruction to Israel? Is it all that moral, or all that wise, or all that much in US realpolitik interests to apologize to a thug? Does it show solidarity with the Iranian people to court a nut? What is so smart in making Iran the center of our attention rather than the Maliki democratic government in Iraq? Hamas rather than democratic Israel? Is what we are now seeing in the streets of Iran proof of all the praise once heaped on theocratic “democratic” Iran by the likes of Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter and the NY Times?

2) Will someone please tell President Obama that when you send videos to Ahmadinejad, apologize for something that happened over a half-century ago, and ignore serial Iranian killing of Iraqi and American democrats in Iraq, you, well, send a message that implicitly you either approve of him-or are afraid of him? One of two things is happening in Iraq: either a boasting, cocky Ahmadinejad rigged the election, without worry that anyone-much less the present US-would care. Or, if the election result is semi-accurate (I doubt it), he energized his base, by showing the rural believers that even much worshipped Barack Hussein Obama was courting their all-wise leader and de facto agreeing to the new Persian Islamic nuclear hegemony.

3) So what constitutes Obama’s morality? Courting the Islamic street by distorting history? Being more critical of one’s own democratic open society than the autocratic Arab governments you seek to placate? Using your middle name abroad to court favor and separate yourself from America’s past, while insisting that those who invoke it at home are as illiberal as you are liberal in broadcasting it?

4) Much of Iran wants what they see going on in Iraq. How odd that the ‘experts’ assured us that Bush had empowered Iran by removing his rival Saddam. Perhaps in the short term-but in the long term TV, radio, and osmosis from free Iraq is proving more destabilizing to the theocracy in Iran than are Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and shaped charged IEDs to Iraq.

5) As Aristotle saw, amorality is as much an absence of moral judgment as it is a commission of sin. When Obama lavishes more attention on Chavez, Castro, Ortega, Ahmadinejad, or a Saudi royal than he does on our struggling democratic friends in Iraq, Israel, Columbia and eastern Europe, he sends a message: ‘I wish to be loved, adored, to be seen as absolutely even-handed, even more than I do to take risks for those of you who bravely risk even more by championing freedom and consensual government.’

6) In Obama’s morally equivalent universe, when all leaders are alike, when there is no moral difference between nations, when a handful of classical texts that survived only in Arabic written by Muslims are equivalent to the entire transmission of classical learning through thousands of manuscripts in Europe, then there is no A or B, just AB, then there is no bad or good, no nothing really. Yes, he certainly is not a “Manichean” like Bush, who saw the world in moral absolutes. Yes, but he is certainly also a moral relativist, who cannot distinguish an Ahmadinejad from a Maliki, a Netanyahu from Abbas, a Chavez from an Uribe.

Everything is contingent on being liked, or rather worshipped. I was proud of Bush when Chavez trashed him, when Ahmadinejad blasted Bush, when Putin slurred Bush-and very worried when they began to court Obama whom they either saw as a patsy to be used or a friend–to be used. Years from now do we really think there will be some great revisionism and the world will come to love the ‘peacemaker’ Chamberlain or Baldwin, and despise the troublemaker Churchill?

I think not.

Obama has applause for the moment, it is true, but for all our sakes, he better start thinking of respect from the ages.

While the aggrieved opponent, Mousavi, is a proponent of Iran’s nuclear program and regional agendas, the protest says something about the Iranian people. The Mullahs still are the controlling authority, but it appears even they are taken aback by the passion of the opposition.

So what of Obama? He still is silent. How uncharacteristic. Can someone say feckless?

More from Amir Taheri.

Mr. Ahmadinejad’s victory has the merit of clarifying the situation within the Islamic Republic. The choice is now between a repressive regime based on a bizarre and obscurantist ideology and the prospect of real change and democratization. There is no halfway house.

The same clarity may apply to Tehran’s foreign policy. Believing that he has already defeated the United States, Mr. Ahmadinejad will be in no mood for compromise. Moments after his victory he described the U.S. as a “crippled creature” and invited President Obama to a debate at the United Nations General Assembly, ostensibly to examine “the injustice done by world arrogance to Muslim nations.”

Iran’s neighbors are unlikely to welcome Mr. Ahmadinejad’s re-election. He has reactivated pro-Iranian groups in a number of Arab countries, notably Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain. He is determined to expand Tehran’s influence in Afghanistan and Iraq, especially as the U.S. retreats. He has also made it clear that he intends to help the Lebanese Hezbollah strengthen its position as a state within the state and a vanguard in the struggle against Israel.

Even Latin America is likely to receive Mr. Ahmadinejad’s attention. The first foreign leader to phone to congratulate the re-elected Iranian leader was Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez, whose “brotherly message” received headline treatment from the state-controlled media in Tehran. Later this year, Mr. Ahmadinejad plans to attend the summit of the nonaligned movements in Cairo to claim its leadership, according to Iran’s official news agency, with a message of “unity against the American Great Satan” and its allies in the region.

Buoyed by his dubious victory, Mr. Ahmadinejad appears itching for a fight on two fronts. He thinks he can have his way at home and abroad. As usual in history, hubris may turn out to be his undoing.

Is this the moment? If so, President Obama cannot remain silent.

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Obama’s sacking of AmeriCorps IG covers up misdeeds of political ally

Obama and the Democrats are becoming the most corrupt ever.

The question needs to be asked: who gave WH counsel Norman Eisen the order to strong arm the IG of AmeriCorps? Did someone on Obama’s staff get a call from Kevin Johnson? It clearly stinks in Sacramento. Read the following comment from my earlier post on AmeriCorps Gate:

As often is with “personnel issues” we’re not given the real reason for Walpin’s dismissal. Here in Sacramento, many are disappointed that someone who was willing to take on Kevin Johnson is now being fired. Some of us had known about the grant money abuses that took place in 2004 but had no idea who was the correct authority to complain to. Some of us went to the Secretary of State’s office and the FPPC to complain about his use of Americorps volunteers to support certain incumbant candidates for school board who had voted to close
Sacramento High and turn it over to Johnson. Others were aware of the religious component that was part of the Volunteers obligation because it was reported in the Sacramento Bee. What got the Inspector General interested was the allegations of sexual abuse involving Johnson and two Americorps volunteers. Reports in the Bee of Johnson’s settlement made to an underage girl in Phoenix
gave some credence to the stories. The settlement that was reached between Johnson and Americorps means he once again escapes real scrutiny. It’s unlikely he’ll ever repay a dime of the money. I don’t want this story to be about Obama. I want it to be about Johnson. That he his given any kind of weight as a political and public figure on the state and national stage is pathetic. Here in Sacramento it is just laughable when we’re not cryin’ about it. Obama needs to pay more attention to the actions of
those he calls his allies.

With all due respect to the commentors point of view, I doubt that Obama cares at all about Kevin Johnson motives. He knows he’s a Democrat ally. This fact alone reaches above all others.

At any rate, while thre world watches Iran, Obama must deal with issues of political patronage. Party first.

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Did Jeremiah Wright brain wash Obama on history? Or did his speech writers get their historical background from Samantha Power?

Ivy League educated president fancies himself a “student of history”, but he gets schooled by a real professor of history in Victor Davis Hanson.

In his speech last week in Cairo, President Obama proclaimed he was a “student of history.” But despite Barack Obama’s image as an Ivy-League-educated intellectual, he lacks historical competency, both in areas of facts and interpretation…

In the recent Cairo speech, Obama’s historical allusions were even more suspect. Almost every one of his references was either misleading or incomplete. He suggested that today’s Middle East tension was fed by the legacy of European colonialism and the Cold War that had reduced nations to proxies.

But the great colonizers of the Middle East were the Ottoman Muslims, who for centuries ruled with an iron fist. The 20th-century movements of Baathism, Pan-Arabism and Nasserism — largely homegrown totalitarian ideologies — did far more damage over the last half-century to the Middle East than the legacy of European colonialism.

Obama also claimed that “Islam … carried the light of learning through so many centuries, paving the way for Europe’s Renaissance and Enlightenment.” While medieval Islamic culture was impressive and ensured the survival of a few classical texts — often through the agency of Arabic-speaking Christians — it had little to do with the European rediscovery of classical Greek and Latin values. Europeans, Chinese and Hindus, not Muslims, invented most of the breakthroughs Obama credited to Islamic innovation…

Obama also insisted that “Islam has a proud tradition of tolerance. We see it in the history of Andalusia and Cordoba during the Inquisition.” Yet the Spanish Inquisition began in 1478; by then Cordoba had long been re-conquered by Spanish Christians, and was governed as a staunchly Christian city.

In reference to Iraq, President Obama promised that “no system of government can or should be imposed upon one nation by any other.” Is he unaware of how the United States imposed democracies after World War II?

After the defeat of German Nazism, Italian fascism and Japanese militarism, Americans — by force — insisted that these nations adopt democratic governments, for their own sakes and the world’s. Indeed, it is hard to think of too many democratic governments that did not emerge from violence — including our own.

Surely Obama took History, but a grasp of facts is not really the issue here. The devil is in his interpretation. Where did he get such a twisted take on the history of the Middle East and Europe?

Obama obviously used a speech writer, who used numerous sources to craft his address clearly intended to curry favor with his persumed audience – the Arab street. And they got their favorite version of events. So where did Obama get this particular take?

There are two possible places. One is from documented Israel hater Samantha Power who is on Obama’s National Security Council. She was an advisor early in his campaign before being bounced for insulting Hillary Clinton. She likely has maintained a professional realtionship with Obama’s speechwriters.

The other is Jeremiah Wright. While Wright probably doesnt have the acumen that does a Power on history, one only need imagine what listening to his rants for 20 years might have done to Obama’s judgement. Spending a developmental life of indulgement and adulation in a world of leftism deprived the young man of opportunity to really experience debate.

Or then again maybe he did. His debate partners were straw men.

H/T: Gateway Pundit

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