Obama's Health-Care Bill

Started by Warph, August 05, 2009, 05:58:05 PM

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pamsback

 I figured it up.........number 1 tho, I spend eightyfive dollars a year to go get my prescriptions renewed and eightysix dollars a month to buy them. I havent seen the US governments name on any of the receipts. Anyway...just what the government SAYS it spends MORE than any other country on every person adds up to 300000 dollars over ten years for my base family of five. That's not even adding in for the two daughter-in-laws and three grandkids. So do we get like a refund???????????


mtcookson

I feel another revolution coming... if it passes, i feel it coming soon. :o

Teresa

Quote from: mtcookson on August 06, 2009, 10:02:01 AM
I feel another revolution coming... if it passes, i feel it coming soon. :o

TAMPA — Bitter divisions over reforming America's health care system exploded Thursday night in Tampa amid cat calls, jeering and shoving at a town hall meeting.

"Tyranny! Tyranny! Tyranny!" dozens of people shouted as U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Tampa, struggled to talk about health insurance reforms under consideration in Washington, D.C.

"There is more consensus than there is disagreement when you get right down to it,'' Castor offered, immediately drowned out by groans and boos.

She pressed on, mostly unheard among screams from the audience estimated by Tampa police to be about 1,500.

"Tell the truth! Tell the truth!" "Read the bill!" "Forty-million illegals! Forty million illegals!"

The spectacle at the Children's Board in Ybor City sounded more like a wrestling cage match than a panel discussion on national policy, and it was just the latest example of a health care meeting disrupted by livid protesters. Similar scenes are likely to be repeated across the country as lawmakers head to their home districts for the summer recess.

Thursday's forum/near riot was sponsored by state Rep. Betty Reed, D-Tampa, and the Service Employees International Union, who apparently had hoped to hold something of a pep rally for President Barack Obama's health care reform proposal.

Instead, hundreds of vocal critics turned out, many of them saying they had been spurred on through the Tampa 912 activist group promoted by conservative radio and television personality Glenn Beck. Others had received e-mails from the Hillsborough Republican Party that urged people to speak out against the plan and offered talking points.

An overflow crowd of critics was left waiting outside the building — and in some cases pounding on the meeting room doors — while health care reform activists complained that Democrats and union members were guided into the room for prime seats. Tampa police officers maintained control the entire night.

"They can't even run a meeting, and they want to run health care?'' scoffed Kevin Grant, a Tampa printing business owner, standing near someone wielding a "Shame on you America. You sold your soul to the Devil" sign.

The nationally televised images of protesters lashing out at politicians sympathetic to Obama's health care proposal certainly drive home the health care plans' keen opposition. Some Democrats, though, argue that engaged, disruptive protesters only serve to depict the GOP as unwilling to work on solutions.

"These groups are not concerned about Americans' access to quality heath care, but are extreme ideologues, only interested in 'breaking' the president and thwarting the change Americans voted for last November," said state Democratic chairwoman Karen Thurman.

Polls show mounting public concern about the nation's debt and deficit, and a CNN poll released this week found 50 percent of those surveyed support the president's plan and 45 percent oppose.

Castor said a strong debate is healthy but suggested that many of the protesters who have shown up at town hall meetings in recent weeks would have staunchly opposed the creation of Medicare and Social Security a few decades ago.

"The insurance industry and ... Republican activists are manufacturing a lot of these phony protests,'' said Castor, who has been closely involved in the health care debate and said she won't support any bill lacking a government-run insurance option.

She left before the forum ended, which drew more boos. State Rep. Reed said she encouraged Castor to leave because nobody could hear her anyway.

Protesters said there was nothing phony about their strong showing, just a bubbling of grass roots anger.

"It's the backlash to the arrogance of our government that you're seeing here,'' said Brad Grabill of Temple Terrace.


http://www.tampabay.com/news/politics/article1025529.ece

LOTS of comments at link
Well Behaved Women Rarely Make History !

Teresa

n Denver too.

Rally protests government plans for health care
By STEVEN K. PAULSON Associated Press Writer
Posted: 07/28/2009 05:01:11 AM MDT
Updated: 07/28/2009 02:24:13 PM MDT

Protesters gather outside the Capitol for a health care reform rally. (THE DENVER POST | RJ SANGOSTI)
Related
Health Care Reform
Aug 6:
Pelosi visits Denver clinic, says Dems united on health reformPelosi to talk health care at Denver clinicColorado lawmakers brace for health care fight that moves to their home districtsDENVER—Several hundred people, many of them carrying signs warning "Hands off my health care," rallied at the Colorado state Capitol on Tuesday to protest what they call government-run health care.
Jeff Crank, state director for Americans for Prosperity, a public policy group backing free enterprise, told supporters the current health care system has problems, including lack of coverage, but he said a program run by the government would only make those problems worse.

"We're building an army," Crank told the cheering crowd on the Capitol steps.

Crank said people who have insurance should be allowed to keep it when they move to other jobs, health policies should cover pre-existing conditions and the number of lawsuits should be reduced.

Jon Caldara, president of the Independence Institute, a conservative think tank, said two of his children needed emergency surgery and he questioned whether proposed changes to health care now before Congress would have provided the same care.

"This is not about good fiscal policy or bad fiscal policy, this is about my children," he said.

Dale Auer, who retired from the military and lives in Colorado Springs, said he got the treatment he needed when he was diagnosed with cancer two years ago. Auer said he was given an experimental treatment under his insurance policy, a treatment that he believes would have been barred under programs now being considered by Congress.

"The procedure I had was leading edge and risky," he said.

Michael Huttner, spokesman for ProgressNow Colorado supporting Democratic Party agendas, said Tuesday's protest was part of a national effort to discredit the Obama administration.

"These out-of-state interests are misrepresenting both themselves and the citizens of Colorado who desperately need health care reform," Huttner said.
Well Behaved Women Rarely Make History !

redcliffsw


Jo McDonald

IT'S NOT WHAT YOU GATHER, BUT WHAT YOU SCATTER....
THAT TELLS WHAT KIND OF LIFE YOU HAVE LIVED!

Warph

#16



Obama Sucks!!
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

dnalexander

SuperWarph the other day you said I made you do something. I said I the day I made you do something was the day I quit reading your posts. Would you consider changing your icon from your little communist dog Che? I find it off putting for you. I have a suggestion:



JimmyO ;D

Warph

#18
Obama Sucks!!
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

dnalexander

I understand your dilema  Had you changed it I guess I may have created my own dilema as to whether I could read your posts had you done so.

:D

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