Free enterprise is a cruel joke as far as health care in this country is concerned.


 

Everyone knows this...It's like the fable of the Emperor's New Clothes, yet, nobody says a word about the nakedness of our dysfunctional health care system. We have let this madness go on for so long, that people just assume that's the way it is.

Doctors operate on intuition and not scientific principals, as an excellent article by David Leonhardt points out in last Sunday's NYT Magazine. There are no national standards for health care. Why do doctors in Sioux City use fewer stents for heart patients than doctors in Davenport? Why does it cost two and a half times as much to treat patients in Florida vs. Minnesota, according to studies from Dartmouth.

The rest of the developed world doesn't put up with this lunacy, which is why their healthcare bills average about two thirds less than the costs in the US, and their outcomes are often twice as good. US health care ranks 37th in the world. Life expectancy is 31st, tied with Kuwait and Chile.

That's why health reform is so important. The Republicans rail about how the free enterprise system will fix everything ... How our healthcare system is the best in the world.


Sure, that's why an American woman is 11 times as likely to die in childbirth as an Irish woman.

A Gaffe is When a Politician Tells the Truth


Michael Kinsley’s quote from 1992 has never been more appropriate.
 
There is nothing wrong with what Obama said this last weekend --- that people in small towns in Pennsylvania are bitter and cling to religion and guns out of frustration --.

It's all true and very perceptive. Political sociologists would say that it follows a Marxist economic (as opposed to a political) view that religious faith is rooted in economic anxiety. Obama is certainly no Marxist. In fact my issues with him are that he is not liberal or bold enough.

There is certainly a lot of anger and bitterness in small town America today.

But when you are running for President, you can't say this kind of stuff.

The Republicans began to crucify him immediately. “Snob-ama” was instantly coined coined by Michelle Malkin and the term spreads like wildfire around the right wing Republican blogs. .

“Snob-ama is not just out of touch, he is out of this world.” Wrote Michael Goodwin in Sunday's Daily News about his small town in Pennsylvania.” I know what makes people there 'bitter.' It's slick-talking politicians who look down on their beliefs and values."

This brouhaha exposes an existing political vulnerability -- the perception of an elitist Obama.

He will be tagged as the Harvard-trained candidate of the young and educated. The Republicans managed to stick a similarly crippling perception on the candidacies of Michael Dukakis and John Kerry. And the Democrats didn't stand a chance.

The Democrats have not lost elections because they are out of step with the white working class Catholic vote -- the key swing vote -- on economic or foreign policy issues.

They have lost because of cultural issues -- "God, guns, gays, abortion and the flag." And this is going to be a real problem for Barack Obama.

Not so much in the nomination struggle, but in the general election.

Come November, the Republicans are going to cram this elitist perception of Obama down the throats of voters. Dukakis, Gore, and Kerry never saw the cultural attacks coming……they thought the Reagan Democrats would vote their economic interests.

These current elitist attacks should serve as a wake-up call for Obama. Remember, the only Democrats who have been elected president since John Kennedy have been southern moderates.

In the heat of battle, the last thing you can tell voters is the truth.

Voters, ravaged by economic upheaval, don't want to hear the truth.

Michigan primary voters didn't want John McCain telling them that their old manufacturing jobs are not coming back.
So, instead, in January, they cast their votes for rival Mitt Romney, who offered them bromides.

America is coming into some rough economic times: you have to keep it simple.... Stupid!

The Republicans are going to seize these issues and whoever is the Democratic nominee is going to have to play along.

You can't tell the voters in Rust Belt America that you are not going to make everything all right....like it was before.

If you are a politician, you have to promise them that you are going to bring back the factories and the high paying jobs.

You have to tell them that you will build a wall on the Mexican border to keep out all those illegal immigrants who are taking their jobs..... even if it's not true.
 
And you have to promise to gut the free trade agreements like NAFTA. You don't dare mention that you really can't do this because the treaties are signed, and if you did Canada would stop sending us their oil and natural gas.

You don't tell them that if we closed our borders to all the foreign goods coming in from China, prices would skyrocket at Wal-Mart and the Chinese wouldn't buy our wheat and farm products and our farmers would go crazy.

You gotta keep it simple. Blame the immigrants, the Canadians, the Mexicans, the Chinese, Al Qaeda, Iran.....

Blame anyone, blame everyone, but make sure that finger is pointing away from American soil.

Jimmy Carter made this mistake in his 1976 "Malaise" speech, in which he admonished American "self-indulgence and consumption." It proved to be a fatal blow to his presidency -- and he lost his reelection bid.
 
I have long admired Obama's ability to talk in inspiring generalities about Hope and Change, without getting into specifics, but he seems to have stumbled this time.

It would be sheer folly to expect complete honesty from politicians during an election, much less during a nominating process.

You can't really be a good politician, or a good president, without being somewhat of a morally flawed human being.

The too-good-for-this-world politicians -- George McGovern, Barry Goldwater, Adlai Stevenson, Michael Dukakis, Jimmy Carter -- have had an annoying habit of losing elections. A Presidential candidate shouldn't have the same opinions and concerns during the primaries as he has in the general election ... or during governing -- that would be stupid.

Campaigning politicians are expected to charm and cajole relevant constituencies, to pander, to bob and weave, and to continually cobble together disparate interest groups.

These are the skills - an effective president will need.

Good presidents should have an agenda - a strategic vision, a fundamental core of beliefs, ideas, and a burning passion; but they should also be pragmatic, flexible, cunning and be able to demonstrate the capacity to grow and change. This should be our modus operandi when picking a president.

We should judge a candidate on what, we believe, he (or she) is really going to do when he (or she) becomes president, and not by whatever gibberish they have to spout to win the nomination.

It doesn't really matter who opposed the Iraq war first. This has nothing to do with what we need for our future safety and prosperity. What matters is which candidate has the depth and dexterity to get us out of one of the stickiest and scariest situations America has ever faced. The maneuvering is going to take a deft and delicate hand.

These skills are, coincidentally, similar to the skills that it takes to get the nomination. You have to win the nomination first, and do whatever it takes, then you can think about what kind of campaign you want to run in the general election, how you want to govern, and what you want to, and can, accomplish.

The history of the great presidents of yesteryear has shown that campaign themes/promises and subsequent governing often have little to do with one another. Nor would we want them to.

All of our great presidents have shown -- for lack of a better phrase -- a great deal of "ideological malleability" and pragmatism.

Thomas Jefferson reviled public debt so much that in 1798 he proposed a constitutional amendment that would have prevented the federal government from borrowing. But in 1803, when presented with the opportunity to drastically increase the size of the United States by purchasing vast swaths of land known as the Louisiana Purchase, Jefferson quickly abandoned his fears about borrowing.

During the campaign of 1860, Abraham Lincoln persistently promised not to interfere with slavery in the Southern states. But when the Southern states declared their independence, Lincoln soon issued the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing slaves in states that had seceded from the Union.

Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1932 campaign was based on his pledge to cut taxes as a way to deal with the Great Depression. He did nothing of the sort of course. His opponent, Herbert Hoover, tagged him as a "chameleon in plaid," but FDR went on to become one of our greatest presidents by increasing taxes and spending.

In 1960, John F. Kennedy ran on a platform that shamelessly exploited fears that the U.S. had fallen grievously behind in the arms race against the Soviet Union-- the Phantom Missile Gap. We hadn't, of course, as later became obvious.

Lyndon B. Johnson pandered to his conservative southern roots during the 1960 election and yet, as president, he pushed through the most extensive civil rights reforms ever enacted.

Somehow the voters knew, when these wannabe presidents were running, that they were tough enough, nimble enough, and artfully pragmatic enough to successfully negotiate some of the thorniest problems this country has ever faced: Slavery and Rebellion,  the Great Depression, World War II, the threat from Communism, and the Civil Rights struggle. 

Ultimately, politicians who practice compromise and calculated obfuscation tend to be our most successful presidents. Had these great presidents clung steadfastly and bull-headedly to their campaign positions, our country would be far worse off.

write: jfleetwood@aol.com

A Gaffe is When a Politician Tell The Truth


 

A GAFFE IS WHEN A POLITICIAN TELLS THE TRUTH.

 

A GAFFE IS WHEN A POLITICIAN TELLS THE TRUTH.


Michael Kinsley’s quote from has never been more appropriate.

 

Obama Buys Hillaryclinton.com Keyword


What if you didn't own your name anymore?

I typed in Hillaryclinton.com on AOL Search -- powered by Google -- and up pops Obama's web site ( See below) inviting me to:

"Help elect Barack Obama President of the United States"

http://aolsearch.aol.com/aol/search?lookupType=11&sourceType=402&text=&q=&invocationType=wscreen-smallbusiness&query=Hillaryclinton.com

It must be quite a surprise to people who are trying to support Hillary and give her money.

How could this happen? Simple.

Obama has smarter tech guys and more money. With sponsored links, the more you bid on key words or phrases, the higher they will pop up on search engines. Obama has more money to bid higher for Hillaryclinton.com than Hillary has.

Or maybe Obama some good supporters in Google or AOL.

This is not unusual in the dog-eat-dog world of search wars. If you type in British Airways, the first hit that often comes up is First Class Flyer, a nice travel newsletter, but not British Airways. When I type in United Airlines, I get Expedia, Orbitz and Cheapoair, before I got to the United site. Every search is difference. The same results don't come up all the time, but Obama pops up first on AOL more than not. It doesn't work in Google.

But wait wait!

Aren't politicians suppose to more ethical than crass commercial pandering. Isn't Obama's campaign for hope and honesty.... and not deceiving or ripping off other people?

How could ripping off Hillaryclinton.com --- outbidding her for her own name and redirecting them to Barackobama.com --- be anything less than completely straightforward?

What if somebody typed in talkingpointsmemo.com and Mattdrudge.com came up instead?

I remember when Dick Tuck --- the Democratic prankster --- dressed up as a railroad engineer in 1972 and waved Richard Nixon's train on in the middle of speech Nixon was delivering off the back.

These tricks used to happen all the time.

But those days when politics was fun are over aren't they?

jfleetwood@aol.com

Hillary's Only Chance Is To Win The Popular Vote


 

Right now Clinton has a more than 30,000 lead among Democrats who have voted in the primaries, including Florida and Michigan, according to NBC and RealClearPolitics.

Of course it would be unfair to count Michigan, but if they have a Do-Over in both states and Hillary wins both and also Pennsylvania, a Clinton popular vote win will be a real possibility. Certainly this seems to be Clintons best hope to win the nomination. She can't win the elected delegates, but if she wins the popular vote, the she will have an agrument with the Super Delegates.

 The figures from NBC are:
Including Florida And Michigan, Clinton wins by 30,657:
Clinton 13,521,832
Obama 13,497,175

In the Approved Contests: Obama wins by 598,266
Obama 12,920,961
Clinton 12,322,695

With Florida, where both were on the ballot, Obama wins by 303,494 votes:
Obama 13,497,175
Clinton 13,193,681

In Florida, it was kind of cool to see a primary with no campaigning. No money spent at all. Everyone on the ballot.

I don’t see why these 2 million votes shouldn’t count, now or in the future, – except to punish the Democratic voters of Florida, who really didn’t schedule the early primaries. The Republicans Governor and legislature scheduled the early vote and forced the Democrats to go along. Another interesting idea floated by Sen. Bill Nelson is to hold a mail in presidential primary.

Democrats should also be very wary of turning off Florida voters – a significant swing state that decided the last two presidential elections.

In Michigan, Obama supporters urged people to vote the uncommitted line, which may have been larger, or smaller, had Obama’s name been on the ballot. The betting is that Michigan will hold a new caucus.

Florida has 210 delegates at stake, and Michigan has 156.

What is fair? We should probably have new primaries in Florida and Michigan, and see how they come out. If nothing is done, one side is going to feel very aggrieved and the Democrats may lose the general election to the Republicans. 2.1 million Democrats cast votes in the Florida primary.

If the Super Delegates are going to be guided by the popular vote, we might as well get a good idea of what that popular vote is.

Considering that Clinton is favored in the Pennsylvania primary, it is likely that she will end up winning the popular vote.  Or maybe not. In either case should the Super Delegates be bound by the result of the popular vote, as many in the Obama camp have been arguing?

Complicating all this is the fact that much of the popular vote came from caucuses, which on the one hand may not be fair to Hillary – since her older voters don’t want to spend two hours arguing about who they are going to vote for – but on the other hand may not be fair to Obama, since caucus voters often only represent a small fraction of total Democratic registrants in the state. One figure I saw stated that only one in twenty registered voters comes to the caucuses. So caucus voters are over-represented in the delegate vote and under-represented in the popular vote.

One solution might be to have a re-vote in Michigan and Florida and allow no campaigning.  No Television. No Radio. No Newspaper ads. No ground operation. Maybe one more debate. There has already been more campaigning this cycle than in any other primary in history. People should know by now who they are going to vote for.

This would be a novel experiment in how to take the money out of politics.

Campaign contributions, of course, have been perverting and grossly distorting the political process for decades, as Obama has said many times.

Another idea that has been floated is a “firehouse” contest in Michigan in May or June, which would involve fewer polling places and shorter hours. What we need is a really rich guy, how about it Bloomberg or Soros? ... to come up with the money --- $25 million --- to show the rest of the world that democracy can work in the US.

Ironically, Florida and Michigan flouted the rules because they wanted to have more of an influence in choosing the next President. Now with a possible Do-Overs looming, they may be the decisive primaries.

It’s a crazy way to choose a president, but we ought to follow the will of the people, as much as we can. It will make the party stronger and work to repair the US reputation --- after the 2000 Election Florida chad debacle.
 

What if Hillary Wins The Popular Vote and Loses the Elected Delegate Vote?


Blake Fleetwood

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