Senator Elizabeth Warren lambasted Republicans for focusing on repealing Obamacare with no plan to replace it.
“For eight years, Republicans have complained about health care in America,” Warren opened. “They have blamed everything in the world on President Obama. They’ve hung out on the sidelines, name-calling, making doomsday predictions, and cheering.”
“What’s the first thing on the Republican agenda now that they are in control?” Warren asked.
“The first thing: massively raise the costs of health insurance for everyone who has it. The first thing: create chaos for hospitals, clinics, and insurance. The first thing: abandon the people they were elected to represent. The first thing: repeal and run away,” she warned.
Just two weeks before Donald Trump’s inauguration, Mike Pence rallied Republican members of Congress to at least look like they are planning an alternative to Obamacare, which they are intent on repealing.
“And they are shocked—shocked—to discover that guaranteeing Americans access to health care is a complex business and they don’t have any good ideas,” Warren added.”
Some 20 million Americans will lose their health care if Obamacare is repealed. It took two years to hammer out the details of Obamacare yet Trump wants a replacement plan immediately.

Good!
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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Chaos can be very profitable; the Republicans and their patrons will make out like bandits, literally.
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AND: while this type of a deregulated free-for-all chaos brings short-term wealth for the few, it seduces those who would jump eagerly into the gambling pit — until suddenly the game ends in financial ruin for the many.
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Republicans should revise Cato’s admonition “Carthago delenda est” (Carthage must be destroyed) to “Obama delenda est” and make it their party’s motto. Two points, one aside, and one comment:
My family has been self-insured for the past 18 years and our annual premiums went down by more than $18,000 in the first year of the Affordable Care Act and we got better insurance. In my experience, its most virulent opponents know nothing about it. I’ve also found that some who get their insurance through the ACA don’t realize that it IS Obamacare. Yesterday I saw a post on the Crooks and Liars website listing some tweets confirming this including: “I’m not on Obamacare. My health insurance is through the ACA (Affordable Care Act), which was what they had to come up with after Obamacare crashed and burned as bad as it did. So I’m gonna be fine.”
(As an aside, I think the President’s decision to embrace the term “Obamacare”—I do not use this term at all—was a great strategic blunder. It unnecessarily personalized and politicized a seminal public policy issue. Consider, as David McCullough describes in his biography of Harry Truman, that Truman expressly wanted his idea to be called the Marshall Plan. He knew that attaching his name to it could be politically toxic and therefore convinced George Marshall, whose reputation among Republicans and Democrats alike was impeccable, to allow his name to be used for the policy. Or, think about who much more difficult, in the early days, it would have been to institutionalize Social Security had it been called Roosevelt Social Insurance.)
Secondly, I suspect, especially after Donald’s (we should no longer refer to him by his last name, it drives him crazy) “presser” yesterday when he said “repeal and replace” of the ACA would take place simultaneously, that his endgame strategy is one of rebranding, not reforming or changing. Just as he licenses his name to make most of his money, he will, I strongly believe, do all he can to do the same with public policy. Much has been written about the coming age of kleptocracy he will bring. The most valuable asset he can bequeath his children is his name with the added value of the cachet of the presidency. In order to increase its value, Donald will unconsciously (because I’m sure he has no idea who Cato or what Carthage was) follow Cato’s dictum with respect to the Obama legacy. Much like the Stalin-esque practice of scrubbing history of facts, his rewriting of history will focus on eliminating as many traces of anything that goes counter to his desired narrative and rewrite past history to inform the future.
When I was a government teacher in the 1980s, the Cold War guided foreign policy and our greatest fear was nuclear war with the Soviet Union, I spent time teaching about Stalin, using Orwell’s “Animal Farm” as a text to explain to students that the scrubbing of history and desecration of language of was just as great a threat as the Soviet bloc military threats posed. For the final exam, I used the opening page of Milan Kundera’s novel “The Book of Laughter and Forgetting” to ask the students to write an essay comparing the passage with what we had learned over the past semester. I share it here because I think it speaks to a central tenet of Trumpism, which, sadly has many echoes in the dark ages of Stalin:
“In February 1948, Communist leader Klement Gottwald stepped out on the balcony of a Baroque palace in Prague to address the hundreds and thousands of his fellow citizens packed into Old Town Square. It was a crucial moment in Czech history—a fateful moment of the kind that occurs once or twice in a millennium.
“Gottwald was flanked by his comrades, with Clementis standing next to him. There were snow flurries, it was cold, and Gottwald was bareheaded. The solicitous Clemintis took off his own fur cap and set it on Gottwald’s head.
“The Party propaganda section put out hundreds of thousands of copies of a photograph of that balcony with Gottwald, a fur cap on his head and comrades at his side, speaking to the nation. On that balcony the history of Communist Czechoslovakia was born. Every child knew the photograph from posters, schoolbooks, and museums.
“Four years later,” however, “Clementis was charged with treason and hanged. The propaganda section immediately airbrushed him out of history and, obviously, out of all the photographs as well. Ever since, Gottwald has stood on that balcony alone. Where Clementis once stood, there is only a bare palace wall. All that remains of Clementis is the cap on Gottwald’s head.”
It is chilling to think that a relic of history in 1948 is as relevant today, in 2017, as it was then. The fate of the Affordable Care Act is about more than health care.
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Did anyone reading this watch the 60 Minute interview with alleged mobbed-up, President Elect Littlefingers Donald Turmp?
I heard Mobbed-up Littlefingers say that Obamacare would not be repealed. It would be replaced with a better health care system.
Watch the video and hear it from Littlefingers own serial-lying, con-man mouth.
Can we trust anything that comes out of Littlefingers’s mouth, even the polluted exhaust from his breathe?
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Proud to live in Massachusetts with Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey as my Senators! She put Ben I’m a Neurosurgeon Carson under the gun, too, at the HHS hearings today.
Some other gray-heads may recall that in 1972, we were the only state not to vote for Nixon’s re-election. Right then, right now. 😉
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Show off! 🙂
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