While he has not released his college grades he is supposedly learned on the Constitution and worked briefly for a law firm.
Seems to me he is totally clueless of legislative mandates and framework.
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I saw those town meeting on TV that looked more like riots, and I was wondering if he changed his proposal to make those people a bit happier? I’m writing a paper, and the main idea is that by people stating their opinions, they can influence change. Maybe a quick little timeline would be nice, too. Like what he originally wanted, and which principles caused the backlash, and then what (if anything) he changed afterward.
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Why do we need President Obama’s big-bang health-care reform at all? What’s the real agenda here? If it’s really to cover the truly uninsured, a much cheaper, targeted, small-ball approach would do the trick.
But on the other hand, maybe the real goal is a larger, ultra-liberal plan aimed at a government takeover of the U.S. health system.
In a recent column, Larry Elder points to an ABC News/USA Today/Kaiser Family Foundation survey that shows 89 percent of Americans are satisfied with their health care. That means up to 250 million people could be happy with their plans. So why is it that we need Obama’s big-bang health-care overhaul in the first place?
In a new Pew Research Center poll, only 41 percent of those surveyed believe the U.S. health-care system needs to be completely rebuilt.
In early 1993, when Mr. and Mrs. Clinton started on health-care reform, 55 percent said the system needs a complete overhaul. So something has changed.
In a new CBS/New York Times poll, 38 percent says the economy is the most important problem facing the country, 19 percent says jobs, and only 7 percent says health care. In an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll on the same question, 24 percent says the budget deficit is today’s most worrisome problem, while only 11 percent says health care. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_c…
3 Comments »
Why do we need President Obama’s big-bang health-care reform at all? What’s the real agenda here? If it’s really to cover the truly uninsured, a much cheaper, targeted, small-ball approach would do the trick.
But on the other hand, maybe the real goal is a larger, ultra-liberal plan aimed at a government takeover of the U.S. health system.
In a recent column, Larry Elder points to an ABC News/USA Today/Kaiser Family Foundation survey that shows 89 percent of Americans are satisfied with their health care. That means up to 250 million people could be happy with their plans. So why is it that we need Obama’s big-bang health-care overhaul in the first place?
In a new Pew Research Center poll, only 41 percent of those surveyed believe the U.S. health-care system needs to be completely rebuilt.
In early 1993, when Mr. and Mrs. Clinton started on health-care reform, 55 percent said the system needs a complete overhaul. So something has changed.
In a new CBS/New York Times poll, 38 percent says the economy is the most important problem facing the country, 19 percent says jobs, and only 7 percent says health care. In an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll on the same question, 24 percent says the budget deficit is today’s most worrisome problem, while only 11 percent says health care. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_c…
3 Comments »
Why do we need President Obama’s big-bang health-care reform at all? What’s the real agenda here? If it’s really to cover the truly uninsured, a much cheaper, targeted, small-ball approach would do the trick.
But on the other hand, maybe the real goal is a larger, ultra-liberal plan aimed at a government takeover of the U.S. health system.
In a recent column, Larry Elder points to an ABC News/USA Today/Kaiser Family Foundation survey that shows 89 percent of Americans are satisfied with their health care. That means up to 250 million people could be happy with their plans. So why is it that we need Obama’s big-bang health-care overhaul in the first place?
In a new Pew Research Center poll, only 41 percent of those surveyed believe the U.S. health-care system needs to be completely rebuilt.
In early 1993, when Mr. and Mrs. Clinton started on health-care reform, 55 percent said the system needs a complete overhaul. So something has changed.
In a new CBS/New York Times poll, 38 percent says the economy is the most important problem facing the country, 19 percent says jobs, and only 7 percent says health care. In an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll on the same question, 24 percent says the budget deficit is today’s most worrisome problem, while only 11 percent says health care. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_c…
3 Comments »