bandwagon

Where I Stand On Health Care Reform Now

Posted 12/22/09 at 8:59am by jamie

I’m not entirely on the “kill the bill” bandwagon. There is definitely some good being done in the bill, but it is being overshadowed by the bad.

One issue I haven’t seen addressed is the effect on charitable care. The bill supporters out there seem to either ignore the issue, or just aren’t aware of it. Let me explain.

There are numerous charitable organizations out there that help people with health care. On top of that there are numerous programs that also help, including programs offered by the pharmaceutical companies. Some of these programs are very generous, including the pharma ones that actually give out free medication to people who can’t afford them. Of course there is one big requirement for these programs – having no insurance.

With a lot of these programs their financial guidelines are much more lenient than those of the health care bill. Some even let people qualify at 250% of the federal poverty level. The problem is that once people are mandated to buy insurance, the lower income people will have a tough choice to make. Will it be cheaper to skip insurance, pay the fine and continue using these programs, or will it be better to pay for insurance and fork out the cash for the co-pay. There is no single answer here. It will all depend on each individual case; their finances, current medication and treatments, etc. But given that you can see that there are situations in which this bill can hurt people.

Firefox Jumping On The Bing Bandwagon?

Posted 12/11/09 at 10:29am by jamie

This is an interesting development in the browser wars:

Asa Dotzler, Mozilla's director of community development, used his personal blog to urge Firefox users away from Google and to use Microsoft's search engine Bing, instead. Dotzler cited privacy concerns, specifically pointing to comments recently made by Google CEO Eric Schmidt.

Dotzler points out that Bing’s privacy policy is much better than Google’s.

What really makes this interesting news is that Firefox has had a long relationship with Google. Google is Firefox’s default search engine and even the default home page is nothing more than a modified Google front page.

In a world where people worry about their searched becoming public or used in a court, I would have to say that Bing might be the better choice. Personally I use both, but recently I switched Firefox to using Bing as the default search engine. This wasn’t for privacy reasons, but rather performance. I find Bing results load much faster and for the past few weeks I have been suffering from horrible hangs on Google’s page.

Wouldn’t it be interesting if after all this time and failed attempts by Microsoft that they finally make an impact on Google?

Wingnuts Go Crazy Claiming Hypocrisy On Calling The President A Liar

Posted 9/15/09 at 10:46am by jamie

As the House prepares to take up a resolution of disapproval over Rep. Joe Wilson’s outburst during last week’s appearance by President Obama to a joint session of Congress, the wingnuts have found what they claim to be “hypocrisy” on the Democrats part.

This video is from 2007 when Rep. Pete Stark was saying how Bush lied:

Now let’s go back to the current event. The Democrats asked Joe Wilson to apologize on the House floor for his outburst and he flat out refused. It was that refusal that led to this motion.

What happened with Pete Stark? Well something the wingnuts aren’t willing to admit, yet I found out on HotAir – a rightwing blog:

Being Shot Down And Captured Is NOT A Qualification For POTUS

Posted 7/1/08 at 7:49am by jamie

Wesley Clark was on Dan Abrams last night standing behind his statement that John McCain being shot down and held prisoner is not a qualification for being President. Good for him. The right is in a frenzy over Clark's statement of truth regarding McCain.

John McCain bases everything in his run on his experience in the military. As MissLaura reminds us at DKos, McCain even tried to link his time as a POW to healthcare. In other words - McCain exploits what happened to him.

What I find most ironic is some of the people complaining the loudest about Clark's statement are some of the same people who jumped on the swift boating bandwagon against John Kerry, and a few who questioned Clark's service to our nation. Let's stop acting like Clark is a nobody. He was shot up pretty badly in Vietnam. Does he use that as a resume builder? No. He uses the fact that he stayed in the military and moved on to become one of the top leaders as a resume builder. Funny how being a general and the commander of NATO doesn't qualify someone to be President, but being shot down and captured does.

If McCain wants to set the record straight and use his military experience as his main qualification for being President then it's time for him to release his military service record. Include in it how many planes he actually lost. Let the people judge on facts, not on assumption or rumors. If McCain doesn't want to do that then we have every right to question his military service and we should. We also should question the mental health of someone who was held prisoner for five years. I'm sure McCain has some hidden issues from his time as a POW and the American people need to be certain those won't interfere with his job as Commander in Chief.

Was The FOX/GOP Debate A Propaganda Tool For The Terrorists?

Posted 5/17/07 at 12:22pm by jamie

Considering how FOX likes to ask questions like that, I decided to focus one at their debate, and in particular the section on torture. We heard such things as "I would call Jack Bauer" and other cute little comments all supporting torture. Of course the crowd at the GOP debate loved these responses and cheered for them.

Now let's think about that. We have 3 soldiers currently missing in Iraq. Al Qaeda is believed to be holding them and this was going on during the debate. Now we got one of our front runners, Rudy Giuliani, along with a candidate and current member of Congress, Tom Tancredo, talking about torture and how we should engage in it. Even worse - they are doing it on television. I wonder if al Qaeda was watching FOX? Everytime the Democrats say something about pulling our troops out of Iraq, the Republicans quickly jump on the bandwagon of saying our enemies are watching. Well I got a feeling they would be much more interested in who the next leader of our country might be than what Congress is doing.

Who Supports Bush's Plan?

Posted 1/12/07 at 4:03pm by jamie

Yesterday CNN ran clips of the same 3 or 4 people saying they support Bush, but the clips of the people against the escalation plan were numerous. One clip they ran for support of the plan came from Iraq, where a member of the military thought it was a good idea. Now we got the WaPo with a story of another soldier, who feels it is not a good plan:

A few hours before another mission into the cauldron of Baghdad, Spec. Daniel Caldwell's wife instant-messaged him Thursday morning. President Bush, Kelly wrote, wanted to send more than 20,000 U.S. troops and extend deployments in Iraq. Eight weeks pregnant, she was worried.

Caldwell, a tall, lean 20-year-old from Montesano, Wash., wondered whether he would miss the birth of his child. He walked outside and joined his comrades of Apache Company, 1st Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment, Stryker Brigade. They, too, had heard the news.

Moments before he stepped into his squad's Stryker -- a large, bathtub-shaped vehicle encased in a cage -- Caldwell echoed a sentiment shared by many in his squad: "They're kicking a dead horse here. The Iraqi army can't stand up on their own."

(emphasis mine)

Before people jump on the "well of course there are a couple of soldiers who disagree" bandwagon, stop and think about this. You have a soldier publicly speaking against their commander in chief's new policy. This is something that is relatively unheard of. These soldiers are nearing wits end in Iraq, and Bush is doing nothing to help that.

So What Is Racist and What Isn't In Today's Blogosphere?

Posted 8/5/06 at 12:54am by jamie

When a post was made on Huffington Post the other day with a picture of Bill Clinton standing with Joe Lieberman, who was in black face, the wingnuts came out looking for blood. They started talking about the racist left and how hypocritical we are. Of course Matt Drudge was one of the wingnuts jumping on this bandwagon.

So now I must ask the question - what in the hell does this mean?

drudgesnastyrace.jpg

(click to view larger screen shot).

Now I know what Drudge is saying - that the race for McKinney's seat is getting rough politically, but why show a picture of the two African American candidates and subtitle it "Nasty Race..."? Here is the article the link goes to:

The closer Cynthia McKinney and Hank Johnson get to Tuesday's runoff, the nastier the race seems to be getting.

At a community forum Thursday night in North DeKalb, the two candidates for the Fourth Congressional District again traded barbs in their efforts to secure crucial votes.

And for one of the first times publicly, Johnson took off the gloves. After McKinney accused him of being under the thumb of Republicans because of the money he has gotten from GOP-leaning donors, he struck back.

"I can accuse her of being under the control of terrorists, but I won't" Johnson said, because of the money that her campaign has gotten from Muslim interests.

CSM Explains The Carroll Video

Posted 4/1/06 at 2:48pm by jamie

Here is a little update on my story yesterday regarding the right being pissed Jill Carroll is free. First off I do have to compliment Michelle Malkin on this. When it the right started blasting her for the videotape she made, Michelle actually did give this piece of advice:

In fairness to Carroll, a lot of people would say a lot of things they didn't mean in those circumstances. Let's see whether she defends it now. Assuming, that is, that anyone in the media bothers to ask her.

Of course instead of taking the advice other bloggers on the right still kept up the attacks. The popular right wing blog Little Green Footballs was one of the first to jump on this bandwagon of blaming Jill. Here is what they had to say about her video:

Note that even after her release, Carroll maintained that she had been treated well by her captors—so it would appear that this journalist for the Christian Science Monitor made these anti-American comments voluntarily.

Of course they also sound disappointed there is no Jill Carroll beheading video on the internet for their nightly enjoyment.

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