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Smith holds slim hope for health care compromiseTell North Platte what you think
 
Photo by George Lauby
Adrian Smith

President Obama and top Republicans in Congress meet this week to talk about health care reform, and Rep. Adrian Smith says there is a slight chance of an agreement.

NebraskaLand National BankFREE Mobile Banking NOW AVAILABLE!

Smith said Obama must be willing to compromise.

Smith, who is completing his second term in the House of Representatives, was in North Platte Thursday to address a meeting of Nebraska county officials. He stopped at the Bulletin office for a 30-minute discussion, then headed to Thedford to talk with constituents at a mobile office.

Smith said unilateral political party action in Congress prevents level-headed Republicans and Democrats from working together. Leading Democrats, especially Nancy Pelosi, push too hard to pass highly controversial legislation.

As Speaker of the House, Pelosi schedules House bills for floor debate and a vote.

A new Congress had only been in power for five months in 2009 when Pelosi pushed for cap and trade regulations to cut carbon use and overhaul the way the U.S. produces energy. It narrowly passed, 219-212.

So far, the Senate has not taken it up.

Spurred by Pelosi, the House also passed its version of health care reform – including a public insurance option – by just five votes, 220-215.

Smith said his repeated attempts to communicate with Pelosi and her staff brought no response.

Like Pelosi in the House, Sen. Harry Reid plays a strong hand in the Democrat controlled Senate. Health care reform passed the Senate by the narrowest of margins, but a new Republican Senator was recently elected in Massachusetts to replace Ted Kennedy. The Democrat's loss of a single vote put reform on hiatus again.

Meanwhile, health care costs continue to soar. Medical care costs increased 7.4 percent 2009 despite the sluggish economy, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

But if President Obama is really willing to bend on health care, Congress could get it passed, Smith said.


Energy

Smith said the U.S. must open offshore waters and drill for natural gas as well as oil.

Offshore drilling has been demonstrated to be safe and there are substantial supplies of energy in the coastal waters, he said.

Of the many oil drilling rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, none spilled during Hurricane Katrina. They shut down and weathered the storm. And, there is considerable clean-burning natural gas offshore, he said.

Capping fossil fuels under the cap and trade bill would greatly harm much of Nebraska’s economy, which receives relatively low cost electricity from the electrical plant at Sutherland and the coal it burns, he said.


Small encouragement

Smith is encouraged that President Obama is inviting Republicans to talk with him about health-care reform, but he is not convinced Obama will accept the Republican’s ideas for reform.

The House healthcare reform bill establishes 100 new government boards, committees and commissions, creating way too much bureaucracy, Smith said.

Smith favors tort reforms, greater use of health savings accounts and making insurance premiums tax exempt for all individuals, not just the employees of large companies, as is the case now.

The Democrat bill sets up a study of tort reform, but doesn’t set limits.

The majority of states already have limits in place, but more than a dozen do not.

In Nebraska, the tort limit is $1.75 million in total medical malpractice damages per incident. There is also a limit of $500,000 per doctor (or other health care provider).

Those limits, enacted when Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson was governor, are widely considered to be a model for a nationwide limit, Smith said.


More on Nebraska’s tort limits

• Statute of limitations -- two years. If the injury is not discovered within the two-year period, then the action must be filed within one year from the date that the injury was, or should have been, discovered, whichever is earlier.

In no event may a medical malpractice action be filed more than 10 years after the act giving rise to the injury occurred.

• Caps -- Total damages are limited to $1.75 million. Health care provider’s liability is limited to $500,000. Any excess of total liability of all health care providers is paid from a state Excess Liability Fund.


Notable health care reforms

Generally, both the Senate and House bills:

• Require most Americans to carry insurance and provide federal subsidies to those who otherwise cannot afford it.

• Large companies would have to offer insurance coverage to employees. Both consumers and companies would be slapped with penalties if they defied the government's mandates.

• Such insurance practices as denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing medical conditions would be banned.

• Insurers would no longer be able to charge higher premiums on the basis of gender or medical history.

• The insurance industry would lose its exemption from federal antitrust restrictions on price fixing and market allocation.

• The bills would create a federally regulated marketplace in each state in 2012 where consumers could shop for coverage.

• In the House version, the government would also sell health insurance under the so-called “public option.”


 
The North Platte Bulletin - Published 2/20/2010
Copyright © 2010 northplattebulletin.com - All rights reserved.
Flatrock Publishing, Inc. - 1300 E 4th St., Suite F - North Platte, NE 69101
 
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So, Smith is the villain for wanting Obama to compromise? Isn’t that what bi-partisanship is about? Of course there was no talk of bi-partisanship prior to the Dems losing their super majority. They have kept the Republicans out of the whole process up until now. I don’t have much use for either party and I certainly agree that Smith is simply another politician. But why is it that somehow the arrogant majority keep using the minority as their whipping boy when they should have simply pushed their health care plan right past them? Early on they made it plain that they were going to do just that. When that didn’t work out it was the Republicans’ fault for being obstructionist. Both parties are wrong for considering this but it’s very hypocritical of the Democrats to claim that the Republicans are wrong for doing what they should as the opposition party.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Diogenes    - 2/23/2010 5:13:14 PM
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AS I said before, Smith is just another politican trying to keep his job any way he can. He's out for #1, and he knows that he's got the support to keep him there.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Friendly One    - 2/23/2010 2:51:52 PM
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Good Luck!! (http://moneynews.com/Headline/munger-buffett-economy-debt/2010/02/22/id/350529?s=al&promo_code=97C7-1)
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Hoghunter    - 2/23/2010 11:48:15 AM
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Walt, I've been treated fairly by many of government agencies. I'd hazard the statement that they all have some degree of success, including the biggest one of all -- the U.S. military. I'm with Platteman on the benefits of decentralized government. I once fought to keep small Nebraska school districts because they perform local, accessible, important public service, answerable to the property taxpayers that pay a good share of the money to operate them. But they were closed under the cry of more efficiency and the flawed theory that consolidated agencies are less costly to operate. Some people want to consolidate Nebraska's counties -- a proposal in the Legislature.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by George Lauby    - 2/22/2010 5:11:49 PM
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The constitution is wonderfully simple, and simply wonderful document, and every American should know it and demand their government follow it. It is intended to be the highest law of the land, and it's not thousands of pages long. If people don't want to follow then they should properly amend it, not just ignore it like currently happens. Since it is largely ignored, and liberally contorted and interpreted, we have a chaotic legal plunder system which results in all kinds of government mischief and overreach. The founders intended for us to have a small government with great personal liberty, protected by a strictly interpreted law. Nowadays, our leaders have complicated it, contorted it, skirted it, scoffed at it, and made a complete mockery of it on both sides of the isle. Then a bunch of attorneys run for offices and further impede access to a fair, impartial law. These fundamentals in our society need to change, and some of us will never rest until they do. It is a war for the hearts and minds of the American people, and we have no choice but to win, and to peacably vote these usurpers out and restore our government to it's constitutionally prescribed bounds. We're going to need new supreme court justices also.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 4:44:09 PM
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In order to learn to love the constitution, one must unlearn many false notions that are institutionalized in our society. It's a process. Also George-if we get rid of the EPA and regulate pollution a little more locally, maybe NPPD can continue to keep prices low, but I don't know much about it.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 4:34:59 PM
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I wrote this out of my heart,and I believe it with all my heart. I just hold some truths to be self-evident, but Ron Paul has a strong, passionate following because he teaches correct principles and he has stuck to them for many years, regardless of whether or not the principles were popular. It's the correctness of the approach that gets his people fired up. Kind of like the consistent running game philosophy Tom Osborn stuck to for so long. It's a thing of beauty. By the way George, NPPD is a state utility, and I find no constitutional problem with it since it is no Federally mandated, it is subject to potentially more intelligent, local control. At least the jobs are probably more likely to be created in Nebraska as well.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 4:32:31 PM
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Platteman....You need to give credit where credit is due. What did you copy from? Not saying I dissagree with everything you posted, maybe some, but it's obvious most of your post was copied from some other source. Was this from something Ron Paul put out? Just curious. Paul has some good points, but I don't necessarily agree with everything he has to offer. And he is certainly not someone I would vote for. Thanks.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by gizzmo    - 2/22/2010 4:21:20 PM
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George, any other well run government agencies that could be mentioned. There are hundreds if not thousands of agencies. One example doesn't seem like a good percentage. I know I am not coming up with any.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Walt    - 2/22/2010 3:54:46 PM
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Well said Platteman. Diogenes, you asked for an example of a good government program -- Nebraska Public Power is often mentioned. Despite some problems they provide nearly the lowest cost electricity in the country.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by George Lauby    - 2/22/2010 2:53:50 PM
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platteman, most of what you wrote flew 10 Thousand feet over the head of some who post here. Absolutely Perfect.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Hoghunter    - 2/22/2010 2:01:53 PM
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Bravo Platteman!!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Diogenes    - 2/22/2010 12:52:12 PM
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Or worse yet, give me a government job because these days the silver spoon government worker's get 30% or so more than the private sector and are less productive! Or how about the business of war? How about a job at Raytheon or Lockheed, I hear profiteering from war is a pretty good racket these days-maybe we should send little Joey to engineering school so he can design missiles and make great money doing it? But you know, since we're still the best country in the world, we don't need to criticize ourselves or improve they way we go about our business, just let the big bankers, big pharma, big military, big government people run the show-they are better equipped for it than we are. No need to trust common sense when you have so many experts to warn you about global warming or protect your vulnerable little self from the underwear bomber! Why didn't the IRS building in Texas last week collapse into it's own footprint? I thought that's what always happens when planes fly into buildings.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 11:03:40 AM
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Our founders said "Give me liberty or give me death" and now many of us say "Give me the best healthcare at an affordable price, give me the remote so I can watch the superbowl, and give me a forty hour week, guaranteed pension, and a 6-pack of Bud and I'm happy! This people needs to be worthy of freedom and take responsibility for themselves!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:58:36 AM
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Does anyone even know the difference between a democracy and a republic anymore?
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:56:10 AM
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Taxation itself should be levied equally, through a consumption tax, not unequally, through income and property taxes. What is wrong with this picture? How did our nation get this messed up? Why do we live with an entitlement generation? Where is the discernment of the people? How did they get brainwashed into accepting this quagmire of lies, and allow their natural rights to be trampled almost beyond recognition? Is it just a bad dream? Or a nightmare?
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:55:08 AM
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We must teach freedom and personal responsibility instead of the nanny state. The family is the fundamental unit of society. If the beauracrats listen more to the corporate lobbyists than the people, then the people suffer from taxation without representation.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:51:30 AM
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By the way, Mr. Paul was an OBGYN and delivered over 4000 babies- I suppose he would know a thing or to about how the medical system should work.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:48:43 AM
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I have children in that age category and they do not dirty water. I take care of them because I love them and when we had them I knew I would need to shoulder that responsibility. I do contribute to charities when I can, and I would contribute more if the government would quit stealing my money through taxation to redistribute it. You cannot commit an immoral act such as theft and justify it by calling it compassion for the poor. True compassion is voluntary, not compulsory. The government is the most intrusive element here and needs to be much more limited so that we can properly take care of ourselves. We are much more efficient and loving than the government beaurocracy ever can or will be!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:46:39 AM
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Platteman, what I wrote below about Diogenes and Walt goes for you and Mr. Paul too, but I'll add that you and Mr. Paul must want children from ages 4 to 11 to drink dirty water.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Hoghunter    - 2/22/2010 10:31:50 AM
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There needs to be a massive deregulation of the healthcare industry. We need as much competition allowed in the industry as possible, so prices will come down again. Tort reform, break the AMA, allow more competition in the insurance side of the business, and trust a free, unfettered market to solve the problem. If prices continue to skyrocket, eventually demand destruction will kick in and protect consumers at some level, which would help. We need to eliminate the FDA, which blocks competition for favored big pharma companies. The government has really created the barriers to competition in the market, and so if the constitution were strictly adhered to, we could unravel a lot of the intervention in the market which has caused these prices to skyrocket. Healthcare providers should provide pricing before they do the work, so that shoppers can shop around. Alternative medicines, budget clinics, all kinds of stuff could crop up into the market place if the barriers to entry were reduced through deregulation and tort reform. We do not need more compromises between republicans and democrats. What we need are wholesale repeal of unconstitutional laws and the abolition of unconstitutional federal agencies. Healthcare is not a right! It is a good to be bought and sold by providers and consumers. Not everybody will ever be able to afford the latest greatest medical care when it first hits the market, but over time, as competition enters, things which used to be expensive become more affordable so long as we break the monopolies and unrighteous laws which hold prop those monopolies up in the market.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:31:38 AM
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The government intervention on many levels has created the high costs of healthcare. Republicans and Democrats are all guilty of allowing lobbyist influence to clamor more for their attention than the discipline of upholding a free market posture on the issue. To expect those who have caused the problem to begin with to now compromise to fix is naive at best. It's time for the American people to wake up and place blame where it belongs, at the feet of big government beauracrats on both sides of the aisle. Vote the incumbents out and replace them with anyone who will cut federal government spending by 50% across the board. Abolish entire departments, phase out social security, abolish the IRS, bring many troops home unless there is a formal declaration of war. Free ourselves from the national debt which threatens to destroy the dollar. Stop meddling in the affairs of other nations and creating enemies around the world in the process, quit telling people what they can or cannot do with their private lives unless they actually encroach on others. Let freedom truly ring!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:29:23 AM
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Strict adherence to the constitution is the only right answer which should be considered here. Government intervention in the marketplace, allowing lobbyists to influence policy in Washington is a big problem here. If Congress followed the constitution, the lobbyist wouldn't have all of this power! The free market would correct these problems if we simply deregulate the healthcare industry. We need competition in healthcare provision at every level. We need tort reform at the state level. And we need to realize that healthcare is good to be bought and sold between consumers and providers. The government should have nothing to do with how a person decides to meet their healthcare needs. If a person has no ability to pay for their care, that is a matter for private charities, or to be negotiated with a provider, or whatever, but it is not the role of government. Representative Smith and President Obama, and many American people are obviously confused about this. The government's job is to ensure as much as possible a smooth operation of an unencumbered free market, so that the healthcare business can operate as efficiently as possible. It's vain to think that governments are smart enough to regulate a market like this, and when they try, we get these crazy prices, and all of these distortions. Ron Paul 2012
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Platteman    - 2/22/2010 10:20:33 AM
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Diogenes and Walt, stop with your crazy tinfoil hat talk, you hate babies and want good food to spoil. You know darn well old people will have to sit on cold blocks of ice with your insane selfishness!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Hoghunter    - 2/22/2010 9:32:17 AM
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Congress has no Constitutional authority to impose national health care. Nearly all of the nation’s legislators, from both parties, are oath breakers. How can they be trusted to pass legislation that will truly help the nation when they won’t keep their word on so weighty a matter as defending and protecting our highest law? They seem to have W’s attitude that it’s just ‘a damn piece of paper.’ It was intended to be a check on just this kind of behavior not a license for unlimited federal power. Where are the statesmen who put the nation above their own personal agendas, who aren‘t controlled by special interests? Just a reminder of what we used to hold dear since we ceased to be governed by the Constitution a long while ago. The interchange of leaders from big business to government and vice versa reeks of conflict of interest and has led us to the fascist/socialist monster that rules us. As a practical matter, when has the government ever run anything efficiently or in a cost effective manner? Are we so naïve that we think that whatever they pass will be better than the mess we have now? I find it hard to believe that this will be good when those voting on it either don’t have the time or the interest to even read what’s in it. I still believe that the nature of what they want to impose on us is revealed by the fact that they exempt themselves form it.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Diogenes    - 2/22/2010 8:46:23 AM
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People voted for Obama because all he said was hope and change. There were some hints of what he would do, but the press basically kept that under wraps. The public is waking up. Despite what some of you want to believe, we are not a left leaning country. We are for health reform, but not this type of reform. The U.S. wants reform that works, that makes sense, that won't lower the quality of care.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Walt    - 2/21/2010 9:04:38 PM
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innocent ... i agree with some of what you are saying but dont forget the minority party has the ability to sabotage legislation. far as i'm concerned ... it is less liberal vrs. conservative then it is corporatism vs middle american ... i'm tired of the old party labels personally. hell bring me a GOP type who is willing to limit the powers of corporate america and i would him/her ... hopefull the tea party supporters can see this in the future ... they might actually get some real traction instead of being the tools of the corporatists.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by durwood patch    - 2/21/2010 5:16:30 PM
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I agree, why would Pelosi talk to Smith, the Democrats had the super-majority. And for this majority they had, what did they accomplish the last year??? Well, according to our Vice President, Iraq is what Obama accomplished his first year. Are you serious? Maybe it's the stimulus, that's what we will remember from the last year. Unfortunately more people believe Elvis is alive that believe the stimulus was successful. For you liberals and health care reform lovers, just pass it if its so wonderful. Blame republicans all you want, but its the democrats who had the majority and couldn't get their crap together. But oh yeah, I'm sure that is Bush's fault too. Vote all of them out as far as I'm concerned. Democrat or Republican, they have shown little ability to accomplish anything.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by innocentbystander    - 2/21/2010 4:04:45 PM
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amazingly smith is still touting the trite and hackened GOP line when trying to make excuses for their unwillingness to what a majority of americans want. for anyone who says americans dont want health care reform ... you are wrong ... just wrong. the election and subsequent polls have made it clear americans want reform. oh, as to Smith and Pelosi ... why would Nancy listen to a back bencher like Smith unless he was truly looking for a workable compromise ... she knows he has no power and a quick persusal of his positions reveals his limited thinking. unless of course you think tort reform is even part of the solution ... the fact is ... every state that has passed tort reform has experienced an increase in insurance rates for doctors. think again Mr. Smith before you so willingly open your mouth!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by durwood patch    - 2/21/2010 3:07:23 PM
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None of you who are supporting Smith are denying what the Republicans have done - refusing to work with the new administration and selling out to the insurance and health care establishment at the epxense of the American people. New to Flatrock has it exactly right - it will be open season on the pocketbooks of Americans by health insurance companies if health care reform dies. Yes, the truth, there have always been partisan politics but it hasn't been like this where one side completely refuses to work with the other and dmonizes the other as unAmerican and worse. By the way, what positive legislation of any major importannce has Rep. Smith introduced and had passed? Yeah, I can't think of any either. Both sides need to come up with SOLUTIONS and WORK TOGETHER to get something done. Disagreements are one thing but it has gone far beyond that in this Congress.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by I use several    - 2/21/2010 2:37:19 PM
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there will be healthcare reform before summer.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by outsider    - 2/21/2010 1:53:09 PM
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Keep up the good work, Representative Smith.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Walt    - 2/21/2010 11:57:31 AM
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Smith tried to talk to Pelosi and got...nothing. Yet, people on TALK BACK are blaming Smith. That makes zero sense. The country doesn't want socialized medicine. It doesn't work. Think, why have members of the Canadian government come to the U.S. for health care? Yes, health care needs reformed, however, the U.S. does not need or want socialized medicine.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Walt    - 2/21/2010 11:56:45 AM
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thetruth has spoken just that, the truth. Well said!!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Hoghunter    - 2/21/2010 11:42:57 AM
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I'm going to start buying stock in anything health care related! We are going to see a "boom" in those stocks......and soon. As the health care reform dies, just wait all you "good old boys"....we haven't seen anything yet as to equal what we will be spending for health insurance. We had a chance for reform...we blew it and whether you are a Republican or Democrat, a conservative or progressive we will all pay.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by new to flatrock    - 2/21/2010 11:18:00 AM
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I use, that doesn't even make sense as as reply. It might be the truth, but it doesn't make sense.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by annoyed......    - 2/21/2010 10:54:03 AM
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The Democrats had the votes to ram this through with no Republican votes and they couldn't do it. This shows there are a few Democrats of conscience. The majority of Americans don't want this bill in it's present form either. Obama's big mistake, as the amateur he is, was allowing Pelosi and Reid to lead the charge on health care reform. Thank god these two losers were in charge and allowed Americans to see their arrogant and condescending approach to law making. The result has been the removal of Democrats in recent elections and the retirements of many others. Obamas next big mistake is bringing this debate up so soon after the recent elections and defections. He will bring his own party down with him. You go 'pres!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by bigsky    - 2/21/2010 10:37:53 AM
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Well said, thetruth!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by gizzmo    - 2/21/2010 9:13:27 AM
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Dear Several, are you saying that it is now my responsibility to pay even more for the health care of the masses? I have been paying for all this welfare for 50 or so years. Our government has done its damnest to put our entire country on welfare. You don't work, you get a check, you wont take a job that is beneath you, so you stay unemployed, our government extends benefits, you still don't have to work, so our government extends your unemployment again, and so on. Then you qualify for food stamps, WIC, housing vouchers, free medical, free daycare, free utlities, fuel vouchers, free education, then you get grants. WHEN will our government start making people work? Enough about the heakth care debate. GET A JOB and get off your lazy asses people. In my day, you didn't work, you didn't eat. So, In closing Mr Several, who cares about partisin politics? Politics have been and always be divided by the Democrat-Republican party lines.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by thetruth    - 2/21/2010 6:38:07 AM
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Well, annoyed, listen up because that is exactly what has happened. You don't understand much of how Congress works if you don't see what has happened. What amazes me is that may people have experienced a huge rate increase in their health insurance premiums in the last few months (BC/BS for example just raised theirs an average of 36 percent) and most everyone says "we need health care reform" but you would think from the way the Repulicans and the insurance company lobby have acted that any type of health care reform is a "socialist plot" and an act of anti Americanism! I get all of these mailings from the Republican National Committee that are fund raising letters saying "We Must Stop Obama" and "we must win the mid term elections so we can take our country back". From what? A president who was elected to change the status quo but who has had the Republicans oppose each and every step and made outrageous claims and slander. There has been little or no attempt by "conservatives" to work with the president and his party to make needed changes and govern together. Instead we have the conservative media (talk radio which dominates AM radio, Fox News, etc) all denouncing everything our President is trying to do and the well heeled insurance lobby (with help from the RNC) paying for ads on TV which which greatly played on people's fears - especially the elderly. Yet, there have been no Repunlican ideas on this issue other than to "slow down and get it right." In other words, don't do anything until we can figure out a way to take credit for it. That grin on Adrian's face in thie picture accompanying this story says it all - used car salesman personified.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by I use several    - 2/21/2010 6:07:29 AM
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The minority stopping the majority?....Now I've heard everything!
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by annoyed......    - 2/20/2010 11:41:10 PM
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Can you spell "OBSTRUCTIONIST" people? Whether is it this "simple" man or anyone in the Republican party, they have no plans to work with President Obama on any level. I'm ashamed of the lack of respect that nearly all of the conservatives and Republicans are showing for our President. It's really sad. The likes of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck seem to indicate the direction of the new Republican party.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by new to flatrock    - 2/20/2010 10:33:27 PM
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The manner of action Mr. Smith and others of his ilk are engaged in is unconscionable: it is a tyrannical act.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by FreewheelingFranklin    - 2/20/2010 8:57:09 PM
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You are right friendly one. There is no real reason to delay this any longer. The biggest issue right now is that Adrian Smith and his conservative buddies don't like to be told their ideas are pointless and it's delaying the progression of the country.
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by DonMega    - 2/20/2010 7:03:16 PM
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How about YOU Adrian Smith, be willing to compromise? You and the conservative Republicans are stone-walling anything that Obama tries to accomplish for the rest of us, cause you don't want to lose you positions in Washington DC. Why is it that Congress (Democrats included) are more concerned with pleasing the people who will re-elect them! I believe in this President and I just wish to H--l that people could just see that! He's been there 1 year, things are not going to get better overnight. It takes time to make a difference and no president is perfect. Bush rode in on daddy's coattails and was more concerned with his golf swing! OK, I'm done. I'm sure I'll hear all about my thoughts...
Report Talk Back AbusePosted by Friendly One    - 2/20/2010 6:13:09 PM
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FLAG LEGEND:
Green Flag = No current warnings. Any past warnings have expired.
Yellow Flag = Minor offense. Post was edited where neccessary. Yellow flags fly for 7 days.
Red Flag = A more serious offense. This user can't post to Talk Back for 7 days. The offending post has been permanently blacked out. Red flags fly for 7 days.
Black Flag = The most serious offense. This flag is reserved for those with multiple or particularly agregious offenses. Last step before permanent banishment. Black flags fly for 30 days.
Skull & Crossbones = Banned.
 
 
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