The bastard can't even spell philosophy.
This sounds like a caricature, but it isn’t. The truth is that this good-is-bad philosophy has always been at the core of Republican opposition to health care reform. Thus back in 1994, William ["Meth"] Kristol warned against passage of the Clinton health care plan “in any form,” because “its success would signal the rebirth of centralized welfare-state policy at the very moment that such policy is being perceived as a failure in other areas.”
"Being perceived."
And broke, stupid Republicans, believing themselves wealthy because they can pay their credit card bills with their second mortgage, support ol' Meth's bullshit, not realizing the government they are dismantling is the only reason they could pay their bill for this long.
[TS] An Immoral Philosophy
By PAUL KRUGMAN
When a child is enrolled in the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (Schip), the positive results can be dramatic. For example, after asthmatic children are enrolled in Schip, the frequency of their attacks declines on average by 60 percent, and their likelihood of being hospitalized for the condition declines more than 70 percent.
Regular care, in other words, makes a big difference. That’s why Congressional Democrats, with support from many Republicans, are trying to expand Schip, which already provides essential medical care to millions of children, to cover millions of additional children who would otherwise lack health insurance.
But President Bush says that access to care is no problem — “After all, you just go to an emergency room” — and, with the support of the Republican Congressional leadership, he’s declared that he’ll veto any Schip expansion on “philosophical” grounds.
So what kind of philosophy says that it’s O.K. to subsidize insurance companies, but not to provide health care to children?
Well, here’s what Mr. Bush said after explaining that emergency rooms provide all the health care you need: “They’re going to increase the number of folks eligible through Schip; some want to lower the age for Medicare. And then all of a sudden, you begin to see a — I wouldn’t call it a plot, just a strategy — to get more people to be a part of a federalization of health care.”
Now, why should Mr. Bush fear that insuring uninsured children would lead to a further “federalization” of health care, even though nothing like that is actually in either the Senate plan or the House plan? It’s not because he thinks the plans wouldn’t work. It’s because he’s afraid that they would. That is, he fears that voters, having seen how the government can help children, would ask why it can’t do the same for adults.
And there you have the core of Mr. Bush’s philosophy. He wants the public to believe that government is always the problem, never the solution. But it’s hard to convince people that government is always bad when they see it doing good things. So his philosophy says that the government must be prevented from solving problems, even if it can. In fact, the more good a proposed government program would do, the more fiercely it must be opposed.
This sounds like a caricature, but it isn’t. The truth is that this good-is-bad philosophy has always been at the core of Republican opposition to health care reform. Thus back in 1994, William Kristol warned against passage of the Clinton health care plan “in any form,” because “its success would signal the rebirth of centralized welfare-state policy at the very moment that such policy is being perceived as a failure in other areas.”
But it has taken the fight over children’s health insurance to bring the perversity of this philosophy fully into view.
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Health Care for Children
Is George Bush so empty headed that he doesn't realize that the point of providing on-going medical care is to reduce and prevent emergency room visits? Is he really this stupid?
Yes, apparently.
Yes, apparently.
I keep on telling folks that they are just evil
How else can you describe them? Denying health care to children - can it get more evil than that? If so, please tell me how.
Not a dumb dumb, by a longshot
You cannot, canNOT, CANNOT have people running around out here with FREE TIME and no need to grind every day for health benefits because if they did that, one or two of them might begin asking questions, demanding answers, camping out outside your ranch/compound/bunker/foxhole and demanding accountability to that document W refers to as "a goddamned piece of paper." No, sir. Free time is power. Health benefits equate to free time and that, sir is mighty, mighty dangerous. Right now, the only people with free time are seniors and college students - and only 1 of those groups votes enough to scare anyone - and we pander to their asses enough to keep the ship afloat. We killed enough of the students in 60s and 70s to show 'em who was boss. This is no time to roll back to the time when we were transitioning people off of farms and into mines and slaughterhouses and public schools, oh yeah, public schools. Our industrialists didn't kill off all those miners for nothing. This is serious business. No free time, no free time, no free time. Whaddaya wanna du? Turn this into some kinda commie pinko soshulist popstand like France?
I believe the script reads something like that.
This is about control, not ethics. Am I jaded? LOL.
Jaded? No, Not At All.
Tom Hayden, one of the founders of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), argued more than 35 years ago in an essay that appeared in a book he co-edited titled The Great Society Reader: the Failure of American Liberalism that one of the lessons the Establishment gleaned from the anti-war and student protest movement was never to allow young people to have that much free time on their hands again.
This is one of the reasons why, for example, I am highly suspicious of the national service movement and refuse to allow my children to participate in so-called community service projects. Our lives do not belong to the government.