Wednesday, July 2, 2008

I Remember Mama...but oh that Obama! I rememeber the lies of last November...

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

Barack Obama’s 15 Million Lies

Barack Obama is lying repeatedly and without shame. Let’s examine Barack Obama’s tactics of hit and run lies.

Last Friday we wrote about how Obama is employing Ripublicans tactics to attack Hillary. We included in our review of Obama’s Ripublican tactics an article called Why Is Obama In Bed With Karl Rove?

Earlier today we posted an article which clearly provides the Obama template for attacking Hillary. The article was about the Hillary Clinton vs. Rudy Giuliani Senate race in 2000. Obama is melding Rove with Rudy tactics to slime Hillary. Here is the relevant paragraph from today’s earlier article:

Mr. Giuliani pounced on Mrs. Clinton’s slightest misstep, sensing vulnerability in this new and nervous candidate. The mayor, a former prosecutor, often exaggerated her misdeeds and slightly mischaracterized her positions, aides said, in a deliberate effort to goad her into correcting his version of her record — while Mr. Giuliani skipped on to his next attack. He was brash and theatrical, flying to Little Rock one day to announce that he would fly the Arkansas flag over City Hall in New York to highlight the fact that Mrs. Clinton was running for office in a state where she had never lived.

Get that?

Obama is lying about Hillary’s record in a blatant fashion so that Hillary supporters exhaust themselves defending Hillary on the lie. Obama then simply moves on to lie on something else.

Obama uses the tactic of repeated big lies frequently. In this past Tuesday’s Adult Experience we catalogued Obama’s outright lies regarding his “preconditions” statements and his “Probably the strongest experience I have in foreign relations is the fact that I spent four years living overseas when I was a child in southeast Asia.” statement. Obama has also blatently lied about his “attack Pakistan” statements.

Now Obama is lying about healthcare.

We are not going to drown ourselves in detailed refutations of Obama’s lies on healthcare issues. We are likewise not going to invest our energies in fighting off Obama’s lies about lies (Obama lies then he accuses others of lying - this tactic he acquired from Bill Bradley). Too many valiant Hillary supporters have already brilliantly explained the differences between Hillary’s truly universal healthcare plan and Obama’s plan which does not provide coverage for 15 million Americans.

For us the response is very simple - Obama says his healthcare plan is UNIVERSAL but Obama’s plan does not cover 15 million people - Obama is lying to 15 million people - its that simple. “Universal” means “universal”. “Universal” does not mean “partial”.

Obama is lying — deliberately and repeatedly and tactically — it is that simple.

* * *

For those interested in the policy dispute we will discuss the Universal Healthcare plan proposed by the experienced and intelligent Hillary Clinton and the not universal but lies that it is universal plan pushed by Obama - tomorrow.

In the meantime here is the plucky blond lady herself explaining the differences:

This entry was posted on Thursday, November 29th, 2007 at 4:09 pm and is filed under Hillary, Healthcare, Obama. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

93 Responses to “Barack Obama’s 15 Million Lies”

  1. Secret Says:

    Obama is becoming cockier by the day. I cannot wait until the day he falls. I have no mercy left. Not anymore and not for him.

  2. kostner Says:

    This is good. Hammer Obama on specific policies. He is an empty suit through through. His entire candidacy is an empty platform of hoopla…

    Per ‘First Read’…

    Another day, another Clinton campaign knock on Obama on the issue of health care. Today, the Clinton campaign released letters from health-care professionals across Iowa criticizing Obama’s health-care plan.

    Below are the letters…

    1) Health care professionals from Cerro Gordo, Hardin and Webster Counties:
    Senator Obama,
    We are health care professionals who work in Cerro Gordo, Hardin and Webster Counties and we are writing to urge you to support universal health care. Currently, too many Iowans are uninsured, including many of our patients. That’s troubling to us - those patients without health insurance do not get the preventative health services they need to stay healthy. Instead, they rely on costly emergency room care when their health severely deteriorates. This disturbing cycle puts a tremendous strain on our hospitals, public resources and, most of all, our patients’ health.

    Fortunately, Hillary Clinton has proposed a universal health care plan that will cover all Americans, lower costs, give Iowans choices and make health care more affordable. Given our medical experience, we think those are the fundamental reforms this system needs. Knowing that every patient we see will have health insurance is important to us because they will be more likely to seek preventative care, which helps us preserve their long term health and keep overall costs down.

    We understand you have introduced a health care plan as well and that, unlike Hillary’s plan, yours does not cover 15 million people. As a result, over 100,000 Iowans would go without health insurance. We’re disappointed in your plan because we believe that the goal of universal health care is something all candidates should embrace. In fact, all the Democratic candidates but you have proposed universal coverage.

    We also understand that your campaign claims that proposing universal health care is excessively ambitious. But we know that Hillary has the strength and experience to achieve her plan to cover each and every American - leaving not one of the 270,000 uninsured Iowans out of her plan.

    The numbers of uninsured patients we see each year will only grow if we do not act boldly. On behalf of the uninsured Iowans we encounter in our work, we urge you to propose a new plan that, like Hillary’s, calls for universal health care. We can’t stand to see any Iowan remain without health insurance.

    Sincerely,
    Lee Hundson, Dougherty, RN;
    Sharon Kropman, Mason City, RN;
    Nancy Larson, Plymouth, LPN;
    Rhonda True, Mason City, RN
    Lorie Lyman, Iowa Falls, RN;
    Dolores Wolf, Iowa Falls, LPN,
    Kathy Lucero, Ft. Dodge, RN;
    Susan Evers, Badger, RN

    2) Health care professionals from Johnson County:
    Dear Senator Obama,
    We are medical professionals in the Johnson County area, and we treat uninsured Iowans every day. We know first hand that too many of our fellow Iowans who lack insurance often go without basic care and wait to seek help until a simple medical problem turns into something more dangerous.

    Hillary Clinton has put forward a universal health care plan that will cut costs, give Iowans choices and make health care more affordable. Given what we see day in and day out, we think those are the fundamental reforms this system needs. Knowing that every patient we see has health insurance is important to us because they will be more likely to seek care early, which gives us a better shot at helping them.

    We understand you have introduced a health care plan as well, and that it does not call for universal coverage. As a result, over 100,000 Iowans and 15 million people across the country could go without health insurance.

    We also understand that your advisers have said proposing universal health care is excessively ambitious. To hear that sentiment from a Democrat is beyond disheartening - in fact, you are the only Democratic presidential candidate to not call for universal health care in your plan. It is not overly ambitious to expect our government to provide basic health insurance coverage for our citizens.

    We urge you to reconsider your position. The number of uninsured patients we see each year will only grow if we do not act boldly, both for their sake and for the sake of Iowans working two and three jobs to be able to afford health insurance for their families.
    The last thing we need is a Democratic presidential candidate taking hope away from uninsured Iowans, leaving them to wonder if they will be among the over 100,000 left out in the cold, uncovered by your plan.

    On behalf of the uninsured men, women and children we treat, we ask you to go back to the drawing board and develop a plan that ensures that no Iowan will ever have to go without health insurance again.

    Thank you,
    Lynne Himmelreich, Oxford, ARNP, CNM, MPH;
    Jill Vibhakar, Iowa City, MD

    3) Health care professionals from Wapello and Mahaska Counties:
    Dear Senator Barack Obama -
    As health care professionals who routinely care for those who cannot afford health insurance, we are writing to urge you to support universal health care in your campaign. We understand from first hand experience the dangers of going without basic care. Every day many of our patients wake up hoping that they can get through the day without needing medical treatment that they can’t afford.

    Hillary Clinton has introduced a health care plan that will cover every American. Her plan provides people with the choice of keeping their own insurance or selecting another quality plan. We know that you have introduced a health care plan, but it doesn’t cover all of us. In fact, your plan would leave 15 million Americans - including over 100,000 Iowans - without insurance. Moreover, we were saddened to read that your campaign thinks that proposing universal health care is excessively ambitious.

    As the only Democratic presidential candidate to not propose universal health care, we hope that you will rethink your health care plan. If we do not act quickly to ensure health coverage for every man, woman, and child in our great nation, insurance will grow even more unattainable for so many people just like our patients. We believe that universal health care is an achievable dream - and we want all of the democratic presidential candidates to show they are willing to work tirelessly until all of the 270,000 uninsured Iowans have health care.

    Hillary has pledged to use her strength and experience fighting special interests to make this dream a reality - will you?

    Sincerely,
    Judy Dejong of Oskaloosa, Mahaska County, RN;
    Nancy Emanuel of Ottumwa, Wapello County, RN;
    Carol Holmes Skinner of Ottumwa, Wapello County, Retired Nurse

    4) Health care professional from Muscatine County:
    Senator Obama -
    I am writing to you as a registered nurse who has cared for many Iowans, both young and old, in and around Muscatine County. I am active in the community and feel strongly that all of us deserve access to quality and affordable health care.

    I am writing to you because your campaign’s comments that proposing universal health care is excessively ambitious are worrisome to me and many folks in the Muscatine and Quad Cities area. Uninsured Americans have enough challenges; not knowing if they would be among the people covered (or the 15 million people not covered) under your plan only intensifies their situation.

    Hillary Clinton has a universal health care plan that will provide affordable, quality health care coverage to every single American. Iowans will have more choices, and health care would be more affordable. However, if they are happy with what they’ve got, Hillary’s plan lets them keep their current coverage.

    Your plan doesn’t make the same promise - over 100,000 Iowans could likely stay uninsured if your plan comes to fruition. That’s 100,000 too many. On behalf of the uninsured men, women and children in our community, I ask you to give Iowans - and our country - a plan that gives us the same hope as Hillary Clinton.

    Sincerely,
    Linda Reichert, of Muscatine County, Muscatine, RN

    5) Health care professionals from Pottawattamie County:
    Dear Senator Obama,
    As active and retired members of the medical community, we are writing to urge you to reassess your health care plan and instead support universal health coverage for every American man, woman, and child. While we admire your interest in changing the health care system, we do not understand why you have proposed a plan that leaves 15 million Americans without health insurance - including over 100,000 Iowans.

    Every day, our local hospitals treat patients who could have avoided health crises with simple preventative care. Instead, emergency rooms have become the primary care facilities for Iowans that have nowhere else to turn; driving up costs, overwhelming hospitals, and lowering the quality of health of many residents.

    Hillary Clinton has proposed a health care plan that would provide universal coverage for every American. Her plan allows those satisfied with their health care plan to keep it, while providing cost-effective alternatives to those who want to switch plans or are currently uninsured. This universal health care solution is what we need to reverse the trend of rising costs and record numbers of uninsured Americans.

    Your campaign recently said proposing universal health care was excessively ambitious. We want to point out, however, that you are the only Democratic presidential candidate who has not proposed a plan to provide universal health care coverage.

    We believe it is Senator Clinton who has the strength and experience to make universal health care a reality. In thinking about the stark reality facing uninsured members of our community, we ask that you reconsider your position on this important issue.

    If John F. Kennedy could challenge America to reach the moon in 9 years - a feat that required American ingenuity, imagination, and technology never before dreamed of - surely we can meet the challenge of providing health insurance for every American. We already have the technology, skills, and know-how. Now we just need a President who believes we can do it.

    Sincerely,
    Karole Anastasi, Honey Creek, RN and manager for clinics division of Alegent Health Systems, retired;
    Vivian Dau, Oakland, RN, school nurse, retired;
    Bobbie Moore, Honey Creek, RN, University of Nebraska Medical Center

    6) Health care professional from Woodbury County:
    Dear Senator Barack Obama -
    As a practicing nurse, day in and day out I see patients who wait far too long to see a doctor for fear of not being able to pay for necessary medications or procedures. It is because of my life experiences that I strongly encourage you to support a universal health care plan. Each one of the many patients I see daily would be more likely to solicit a medical opinion if they had the health insurance to help cover their costs.

    Hillary Clinton has a comprehensive quality health care plan aimed at covering all Americans. Her plan provides every man, woman, and child the choice of keeping their current insurance or selecting another quality plan. I understand that your plan leaves many families out.

    Under your proposed health care plan, Senator Obama, over 100,000 Iowans would remain uninsured. The idea of health care being universal and offered nationwide is neither ambitious nor excessive, it is absolutely necessary.

    As a lifelong Democrat, I really cannot understand how you can be the only Democratic presidential candidate to propose a health care plan which is not universal. I strongly urge you to reconsider the implications of your proposed plan. It is imperative for this and future generations that every person is eligible for quality health care coverage.
    Hillary Clinton has vowed to fight for health care for every single American. Will you join her in this important fight?

    Sincerely,
    Madonna Griffith, Lawton, RN

    7) Health care professional from Kossuth County:
    Dear Senator Obama,

    With the abundance of qualified candidates in the race for the Democratic nomination it was difficult for me to decide who I would be supporting. But as a health care professional, I know it is imperative that universal health care be achieved in the next presidential administration.

    It was incredibly disheartening to hear your campaign advisers say that proposing universal health care is excessively ambitious. Under your current plan for virtually universal health care, over 100,000 Iowans and 15 million Americans will be left uninsured. They will continue to rely solely on emergency care, which is expensive for the individual and the government.

    Hillary Clinton’s universal health care plan gives the consumer the advantage by offering more choices and lowering costs. It allows consumers to keep the insurance they have if they like it and change it if they don’t or aren’t currently covered.

    Hillary Clinton has worked her whole life for change. She has taken on the Republicans and special interests to work for real change. Nobody has worked harder or longer to improve health care.

    As the only candidate in the Democratic presidential campaign to not propose universal health care, I think it will behoove you to re-evaluate your decision to exclude 15 million people from your health care plan. The country is ready for change and we need a leader who will get us there.

    Sincerely,
    Dona Tebben of Corwith, Kossuth County, Home Health Aid and Family Support Worker

    8) Health care professionals from Story and Warren County:
    Senator Obama,
    As health care professionals we both deal with uninsured Iowans every day. It pains us when we see patients who come for care in poor condition because they waited too long before seeking the basic care they need.

    This is an extremely serious problem that demands bold action, not half-hearted attempts. With over 270,000 uninsured Iowans and over 47 million uninsured nationwide, we need a president who has the strength, experience and political courage to end this fight once and for all. Senator Obama, we encourage you to change your plan and take the necessary steps to ensure all Americans will be covered.

    Hillary Clinton has a plan to insure every single American - including the over 100,000 Iowans who would lack coverage under your plan. We have decided to support Hillary because in our opinion you cannot run for president today without putting forward a plan that will insure each and every American. Hillary understands that in order to achieve this important goal we need to fully commit ourselves to this cause.

    We were disappointed to hear that your campaign thinks proposing universal health care is excessively ambitious. You are the only Democratic presidential candidate to not propose universal health care and, unfortunately, efforts like yours that vow to take universal coverage slow and work towards coverage as a long term goal shows a lack of commitment. Insurance companies will certainly exploit that weakness and use it to their advantage at the negotiating table.

    Hillary’s plan will give consumers the choice of keeping their own coverage or selecting from a menu of other quality insurance plans while keeping premiums under a locked percentage of their income. With the power of choice, insurers will have to compete for their consumers, which will drive down costs and finally make the consumer the center of health care coverage.

    Fifteen million Americans and over 100,000 Iowans would still lack coverage under your plan. For us and for Hillary Clinton, that is 15 million and 100,000 people too many.

    Sincerely,
    Catherine Bagley of Nevada, Story County; RN;
    Marilyn Kirkpatrick of New Virginia, Warren County; CPC

  3. kostner Says:

    This is good. Hammer him on specific policies day in and day out. This guy is the emptiest suit I’ve never seen. His entire platform is hoopla…

    Per ‘First Read’…

    Another day, another Clinton campaign knock on Obama on the issue of health care. Today, the Clinton campaign released letters from health-care professionals across Iowa criticizing Obama’s health-care plan.

    Below are the letters…

  4. kostner Says:

    Edwards also comes out swinging, although he’s also criticizing Clinton, he’s certainly getting a bit smarter these days…

    Per First Read.

    DES MOINES, IA — Citing “very substantive policy differences” between his health care mandate and those of his leading opponents, Edwards began a press conference by reiterating his charge that Obama’s health care plan is “not universal.” Obama has been facing off with Clinton over their health care mandates the last few days.

    “[Sen. Obama’s health-care plan] does not require that everyone be covered,” Edwards said, “and as many as 15 million Americans would be without coverage. And I’ve seen an estimate that up to 90,000 Iowans would be without coverage.”

    The former North Carolina senator also continued to differ with Clinton on the issue, largely repeating his campaign’s charge from yesterday. “Sen. Clinton’s plan, which came out in September, is very similar to mine that came out in February. But I have not seen any specifics about how her mandate would work or how she would enforce her mandate,” he said. “I’ve laid out exactly how my mandate would work and we have a way to make sure it’s enforced.”

    Edwards said that in his plan, subsidies would be available to help low-earning families. “The fundamental structure of the plan provides subsidies and the subsidies go up to about $100,000 of income. So for lower-income families, they will be basically 100% subsidized, and the subsidy decreases as they go up toward $100,000 of income, so that’s how they afford it. The way we bring people into the system is anytime they have contact with the health care system or the government they get enrolled, basically.”

    Edwards’ media avail on health care followed his address at a meeting of the Iowa State Association of Counties. He released a list of 52 county elected officials from 37 counties who endorsed him ,and spoke to the audience about forging a “new partnership with local communities.” Highlighted at the meeting were proposals to invest in rural economies, help local governments by using the federal government’s power to negotiate prices for what they need, and ensure that federal funding for transportation is sufficient.

    Edwards was the last presidential candidate to speak at the meeting. Joe Biden and Chris Dodd spoke to the group yesterday morning.

  5. kostner Says:

    When Edwards stops attacking Clinton, his numbers are up.

    The dumbest stragetist Trippi was certainly doing Obama’s bid.

  6. B Merryfield Says:

    Ok .. now you’ve got me off on another tangent. It’s amazing what you can find when you do a simple Google. Try the words Obama, lie and see what you find.

    Sorry, but my first find comes via RedState (truth is truth regardless of the source):

    redstate.com/blogs/rc/2007/mar/05/barack_obama_lies_about_his_fathers_story_in_his_selma_speech

    The whole speech is posted here by Lynn Sweet of the Chicago Sun-Times:

    blogs.suntimes.com/sweet/2007/03/obamas_selma_speech_text_as_de.html

    When someone will tell lies like this about their family and create a myth for themselves, what else will they lie about? Well, we know the answer to that one.

  7. basement angel Says:

    Kostner

    Dems don’t like watching Dems attack other Dems. It’s never a good strategy and it’s a sign that a candidate is simply content with cheering the supporters he already has. When a Dem candidate starts savaging another Dem candidate, it frequently means the race is over and the savager has given up on winning. At the point, he’s just going to hurt his opponent to any degree that he can.

  8. kostner Says:

    By By Susan Estrich

    “Fluid” is the word of the day.

    That’s how one of my savviest friends described the situation on the Democratic side with the opening bell little more than six weeks away. No locks. No sure things. Fluid.

    The conventional wisdom is that Iowa is the four-letter word for Demcrats. But that’s only partly true. Iowa picks losers. New Hampshire picks winners. Iowa winnows down the candidates. Hillary can lose Iowa and be just fine, if she turns around — almost literally, in just five days — and wins New Hampshire. But if she loses them both, we’re in for a marathon.

    Iowa is, right now, up for grabs. Could Obama win? He could. Could Hillary win? She could. Could Edwards win? Also possible. Hillary has yet to seal the deal. Obama has yet to translate the media’s sense of momentum into real movement on the ground. Edwards is still in there, kicking, with more strength, particularly in rural areas, than Washington-based insiders are likely to acknowledge.

    And then there’s the Huckabee of it all. The question in Iowa is always which side gets the most attention. A Huckabee win is good for the Democratic second and third place finishers in Iowa because it limits the attention that the Democratic winner gets, and raises questions as to what winning Iowa really means.

    If the headline the next day is “Who’s Huckabee?” it’s not “What Happened to Hillary?” There’s only so much space, air time, and attention to go around. If Iowa Republicans cast their vote for someone who no one thinks could go the distance, how much credit do Iowa Democrats get for their choice?

    In 1988, Dick Gephardt won Iowa, and got almost nothing from it, in part because of the upset on the Republican side, where George Bush finished third behind Bob Dole and Pat Robertson. Pat Robertson? He got so much ink that it was only a week later that the two bronze medalists from Iowa finished first in New Hampshire.

    In Iowa, most of the talk is domestic. The war matters, but it’s the economy and the bread and butter issues that are commanding the most attention. Not so, from what I hear, in New Hampshire. There, the top three issues are the war, the war, and the war.

    If you want to know what’s about to happen in politics, you can always tell by paying attention to the smartest guy in the game. Bill Clinton, I mean. His comments about where his own opposition to the war is may be nitpicked to death by the factcheckers, but no one should doubt the acumen that lies behind them. Neither Obama nor Edwards have yet to succeed in drawing clear lines between themselves and Hillary when it comes to how they would handle the war as president, as opposed to who was against it first, but that’s where the danger, or opportunity, lies.

    In the real world, there may well be reason to believe that a much scaled-down but continued U.S. presence in Iraq could be useful in preventing the possible bloodletting that an immediate and total withdrawal might unleash. Certainly, the experience of the Clinton administration in Yugoslavia suggests that there are occasions where this country can play an invaluable role in preventing the sort of genocide that preceded our involvement there, and that unrestrained ethnic rivalries can produce.

    But that’s a real world position, not a political stance in an anti-war Democratic primary, which is what New Hampshire is likely to be. In the real world, it may be that you can be too far left on the war, but in the political calculus that is New Hampshire, it’s not clear that such real world rules apply. New Hampshire voters, especially some of the so-called “independent” voters who could go any way, are overwhelmingly anti-war voters.

    Who will they vote for? Fluid is the word. Which is another way of saying, who knows? At this point, don’t believe anyone who tells you that they do.

  9. gladiatorstail Says:

    right.. I think dailykooks are naderite “dems” who realized at later stage how their votes hurt gore, and how he was “greener” than nadar. so now they with guilt remorse, support a democrat candidate with strong populist messages, no matter if he is totally phony, like edwards. They are NOT democrats with party affiliation. They are independent nadarites. so arguing with them is like arguing with a brickwall. its not that you can change their minds. ask them how many had voted for nader, and you can immediately see 90% figure.

    also, their newfound “love” for Obama is JUST BECAUSE he is their “anti hillary”. howevr, like taylor marsh, obama is NOT anti hillary. he wants to make america a gods garden. when I pointed it out last night on mydd, saying he was too close to religion, there were tonnes of links thrown at me. do these people actually think I dont have any clue of his positions/stances?

    As for core obama supporters on blogs, I think they are MOSTLY young college kids who got sucked into this “obamania”. these kids dont care about issues, they care about how popular it is to support him. in my univ, half of the girls support him because he is cute, and guys because they feel closer to agreeing with him because he is “young”. Now how many of these so called “cute” groupies will come out to vote for him in primaries will be anybodys guess. these guys actually believe that the so called NH discussion forum on foreign affairs was an excellent podium to show his expertise in the issues. they didnt even bother to care about the fact that all the members he had in the panel were supporters of his campaign, and that not a single panelist was there to challenge him. the phony forum was a farce, yet he got awesome reviews from his supporters and media really thought he was a know all “expert” on foreign affairs. so I can rant on and on but I guess I have made my point clear on this phony self absorbed nutwit.

  10. B Merryfield Says:

    Another pro-Hillary website

    http://www.guerillawomentn.blogspot.com/

  11. terrondt Says:

    gladiatorstail, you are soooo right on. these so called gore converts hated gore in 2000 and love him now. SUCH F*CKING PHONIES.

  12. kostner Says:

    Just caught CNN reporting a new Florida poll. Clinton creamed both her democratic opponents and Rudy by a wild margin. Damn, even if punk Obama wins every early state, does it really matter when we go into Feb 5th? Only media are hyping that ridiculous IA race…

    Florida:

    Clinton 51
    Obama 21
    Edwards 11

    I believe Clinton/Rudy matchup is 51:42….

  13. hwc Says:

    Kostner:

    Even crazier, it is abundantly clear at this point that Edwards, Obama, and Clinton — no matter the actual order — are going to come out of Iowa with roughly the same number of delegates in their columns, give or take two or three. In effect, the Democratic party will have wasted tens of millions of dollars in a lily white state with an arcane caucus where 95% of the population can’t even be bothered to participate. And, will have done serious damage to the Democratic prospects in Florida as part of the bargain. For what? A difference of two or three convention delegates among the three top candidates.

    If anything good comes of this ridiculous process it will be kicking Iowa to the curb and scheduling its next caucus for July 2012.

    The entire Iowa caucus is nothing but a neighborhood block party for the Georgetown Social Club…something that gives them an opportunity to gather and cluck over the rubes in the heartland and spin narratives that are wholly divorced from the issues facing our country.

    Color me disgusted.

  14. hwc Says:

    The thing that really disgusts me is that the structure of the Iowa caucus means that a non-representative sample of Democratic party voters gets first crack. It’s like letting the DailyKos straw poll be the first widely reported event of the Presidential selection process. Hard core activists drive the caucus. Rank n’ file Democrats, especially the diverse elements of the Democratic constituent groups, are systematically excluded.

  15. MJS Says:

    There will be a particularly large group of Illinoisers this coming weekend in Iowa for Barack!

  16. mj Says:

    I disagree with Susan. Being a neighbor of NH, the voters want a withdrawal from Iraq, but don’t assume that makes them anti-war. I think they will come home to Hill because they want a responsible withdrawal.

  17. united 12 Says:

    mjs,

    i so agree, WHO, AND WHERE THE F—, IS IOWA?

    its pathetic, that we let this little drop in the ocean, hold our democratic process blackmail…

    and thats why people here in san francisco, and other places in san francisco, voted for the fefb 5th date…
    it was big talk around here. we hope this election will show the country that, iowa is nice, but no longer in the big picture…

    is that mean? i dont mean it to be.
    just need to right wrongs…

  18. united 12 Says:

    sorry, others in california, is what i was trying to say.

  19. united 12 Says:

    oh by the way admin, can you put in an edit button?

    thx

  20. mj Says:

    Oh, now, don’t disparage Iowa. I think they will come out for our girl in the end.

  21. ra1029 Says:

    Any idea where Hillary campaigned today?

  22. gladiatorstail Says:

    and the surprise is that Iowa voted for bush in 2004 :)

  23. RalphB Says:

    I agree with what Howard Dean said is ‘04 about the Iowa Caucuses being fundamentally undemocratic. I’m sorry he didn’t chuck them overboard when he became party chairman. I really thought he’d try to dump them.

    For a long time, the Iowa Caucuses have forced democratic candidates further left in order to win, and in the general election that’s always a handicap.

  24. MJS Says:

    MJS and MJ are two totally diff people. lol just to let u know :)

    anyways, yeah…personally…I don’t understand who the heck though iowa as first was a good idea. lol

  25. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    ra1029 - Saddleback, the evangelical/AIDS thing.

  26. mj Says:

    Oh, I completely agree with Dean, but in this primary, we don’t want to piss off Iowa. ;)

  27. united 12 Says:

    mjs, yeah i know that, but i’m elderly…

    funny thing, i was responding to h w c at the time i made a comment about iowa, explain that if you can?

  28. gladiatorstail Says:

    this is interesting:

    wapo is trying HARD to beat Obama down on this pac story. weather they will get anywhere is anybody’s guess.

    Obama Campaign Worker Discussed PAC Donations

    By John Solomon
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Friday, November 30, 2007; Page A08

    Democratic Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential campaign helped recommend several of the donations his political action committee made in recent months to politicians in key primary states as the campaign was working to secure endorsements, campaign officials said yesterday.

    The acknowledgment alters the campaign’s original account of how donations were directed and raised questions among some legal experts about whether the presidential committee was using Obama’s leadership PAC to benefit his campaign. The Obama campaign said it is confident it complied with the law.

    Obama’s Hopefund Inc. distributed more than $180,000 in donations to political groups and candidates in the early presidential voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina and more than $150,000 to federal candidates in other states with primary dates through mid-February. The donations accounted for nearly three-quarters of the money the PAC has given out since this summer.

    An Obama campaign spokesman last week said that “there is no connection” between the PAC donations and the presidential campaign.

    But Bob Bauer, the private counsel for both Obama’s campaign and Hopefund, said yesterday that campaign workers were involved over the summer in identifying and recommending possible recipients when Hopefund was deciding how to spend its remaining money. In particular, Bauer said, senior campaign strategist Steve Hildebrand was consulted “multiple times” on potential donations.

    Hildebrand was a paid consultant at Hopefund last year and is now a deputy campaign manager.

    “He was being paid in part to help us identify targets of opportunity, and to the extent there was any one person who had an overview of what we were trying to accomplish, it was Steve Hildebrand,” Bauer said. Asked if other campaign officials also made recommendations, Bauer added, “I have no doubt.”
    ad_icon

    Bauer stressed that Hopefund also solicited input from others, including the fundraising committees for Democratic House and Senate candidates. The PAC also processed requests directly from local candidates. In the end, Bauer said, his law firm made the final decisions and dispatched the donations.

    Obama stopped raising money for Hopefund when he announced his presidential bid in January, but he has stood out from some of his rivals by continuing to make donations from Hopefund as the primaries approach. Most other presidential candidates shuttered their PACs.

    Bauer said he is confident that the PAC and the campaign complied with rules the Federal Election Commission enacted in December 2003 governing how leadership PACs can operate when their candidate is running for office. “There’s not even a remote question about whether this is legal,” he said.

    Campaign law experts, however, said they were less certain. They noted that the 2003 rules state that any leadership PAC expenditure coordinated with the politician’s campaign should be treated as “in-kind contributions” subject to a limit of $5,000. The rules define a coordinated expense as any made in “cooperation or concert with or at the request or suggestion” of a campaign.

    “I think this is something the commission should look at. If the money was, in fact, used to help the campaign, was requested by the campaign and coordinated with the campaign, then it could be considered an in-kind contribution,” Lawrence Noble, the FEC’s retired chief counsel, said.

    Former FEC chairman Scott E. Thomas, a Democrat who served on the commission when the 2003 rule was approved, said the FEC at the time was focused more on how to keep PACs from subsidizing presidential campaigns by picking up the costs of polling, salary and other goods and services.

    “He is clearly pushing the envelope, no doubt,” Thomas said. “I would clearly recommend the commission take another look at this to see if there is some reasonable line that can be drawn so presidential campaigns aren’t directing donations from the PAC a few months before the primaries.”

    While PAC donations went to politicians who endorsed Obama’s presidential bid, campaign spokesman Bill Burton said, “Hopefund did not make contributions to obtain presidential endorsements and the campaign never expected or instructed staff to recommend a contribution because it would win an endorsement.”

  29. mj Says:

    Any news on Hill’s visit to saddleback?

  30. kostner Says:

    Hello everybody,

    My latest report from chatting with an Iowa… This time I caught a politically active person. He’s in Ames and will definitely caucus. I had a lengthy conversation with him. BTW, Ames is a college town, his precinct had 19 delegates in 2004, it went to Kerry/Edwards/Dean by 7/6/6. So it’s definitely a Dean stronghold and supposedly an Obama stronghold as well.

    He told me it’s still very fluid at the moment, as politically active as he is, he’s still undecided. He would probably go with Biden right now, second choice might be Edwards. Last time, he went for ‘uncommitted’ first, then went with Edwards in the end. He respected Hillary, does not seem to be impressed with Obama at all, but I didn’t push him further on why he wouldn’t go with Hillary.

    I asked him whether Obama was quite strong in his area, and he couldn’t answer since things are still fluid on the ground. He told me it appeared Edwards and Clinton had the strongest ground game at least in his precinct for the time being…

    I told him if Obama was only able to match Howard Dean’s showing or slightly better than Howard Dean in his precinct, he probably can’t win IA caucus. He agrees. His feeling is that Edwards would probably win if caucus were held tomorrow. But again, quite fluid…

    I will try to follow up with him in a few days to detect whether there’s any momentum of any candidate…

  31. filbertsf Says:

    Secret wrote:
    “Obama is becoming cockier by the day. I cannot wait until the day he falls. I have no mercy left. Not anymore and not for him.”

    Secret, spend some time on mydd and you’ll end up being more disgusted by Obama’s supporters. The one thing I actually look forward to is when I never have to see another pathetic diary/post from an Edwards or Obama supporter. I can almost bet that these “Democrats” will join the legion of Wingnuts to bash a Hillary presidency.

    I don’t even see them as fellow Democrats. The crap that they post is similiar to the sentiments that can be found on Free Republic.

    One of the reasons I still visit mydd is to counter the rabid stupidity of Obama/Edwards supporters. Like rats, they’ve infested that poor place.

  32. celiff Says:

    Oh I have a great pick-me-up story for anyone feeling sad about Iowa. I was in the IC office tonight, and the breck girl was about 1 block away holding an event in the Hotel Vetro, when in came a woman from the Edwards event. She said it was over. She then requested a Hillary yardsign, a Hillary bumpersticker, and a supporter card. It was hilarious. That was the highlight of my night.

  33. gladiatorstail Says:

    Kostner,

    Your conversation is in sync with many other ground reporters. but the point is “who are these people Obama seems to be gaining support with”?

    if it comes to groundwork, I am sure veterans like Vilsack can handle it for Hillary. her campaign is known for best get out to vote campaign till date. I see her using same strategy she used in NY. limiting her agenda to one or two states towards the end of the primary campaign and flooding them completely. her ground game is only to intensify more. I hear that Obama is going to flood Iowa with Chicago during final week of campaign. but then again, it all depends on how good his get out and vote strategy is.

  34. kostner Says:

    gladiatorstail,

    I don’t believe organization is all… That guy keeps on remind of the importance of second choice, which is pretty scary in a race in which three candidates are basically tied…

  35. kostner Says:

    celiff,

    great story, so that woman came back from an Edwards event and picked up a Hillary sign. LOL.

  36. celiff Says:

    Yup. She was apparently not pleased by the event.

  37. kostner Says:

    do you know if Ames is supposed to be Obama’s stronghold?

  38. kostner Says:

    btw, did that lady attend Clinton’s event before?

  39. MJS Says:

    DId you guys message or contact any gay bars/clubs or agricultural areas in Iowa or New Hampshire yet?

    Great to hear about that Celiff! lol I really want to volunteer for Hillary. Do you know if there is a Support Hillary Center here around the Chicago area?

  40. MJS Says:

    I would assume most college-towns and more “youhful” areas are probably part of Obama’s aimed demographic. He most believes he has places like Ames right in the bag.

  41. kostner Says:

    MJS,

    I will keep in touch with that guy. We have a rough yardstick here. In 2004, Dean only scored 17% state wide, but he was on par with Kerry & Edwards in his precinct. If Obama is only slightly better than Dean there, I doubt he can win Iowa.

  42. CJ Says:

    ..celiff…he probably said hillary so many times there getting frustrated at these 2 bimbo’s,enough is enough of there baby boys whinning,good for that lady you should have sign her up for here..lol…them people in iowa are funny counting you out celiff,i think they want to be on a winners side..so maybe thats why some of them are always chaging back and forth.i do believe hillary is winning there i think the polls in iowa could be paid by msm,i woulnd’t put anything passed them,of doing that,and they keep at that so they can have a race. i think she
    has 31% and bo.27% ed.22% they are making millions of bucks in iowa.bill was there today,i just dont think its fair for the other states at all.we all should be apart in the process 1st.i hope it changes next time around in 2012

  43. sm Says:

    Brilliant dissection by Paul Krugman in the New York Times of the glaring deficiencies in Obama’s health care plan and his mudslinging.

    By PAUL KRUGMAN
    Published: November 30, 2007

    From the beginning, advocates of universal health care were troubled by the incompleteness of Barack Obama’s plan, which unlike those of his Democratic rivals wouldn’t cover everyone. But they were willing to cut Mr. Obama slack on the issue, assuming that in the end he would do the right thing.

    Now, however, Mr. Obama is claiming that his plan’s weakness is actually a strength. What’s more, he’s doing the same thing in the health care debate he did when claiming that Social Security faces a “crisis” — attacking his rivals by echoing right-wing talking points.

    The central question is whether there should be a health insurance “mandate” — a requirement that everyone sign up for health insurance, even if they don’t think they need it. The Edwards and Clinton plans have mandates; the Obama plan has one for children, but not for adults.

    Why have a mandate? The whole point of a universal health insurance system is that everyone pays in, even if they’re currently healthy, and in return everyone has insurance coverage if and when they need it.

    And it’s not just a matter of principle. As a practical matter, letting people opt out if they don’t feel like buying insurance would make insurance substantially more expensive for everyone else.

    Here’s why: under the Obama plan, as it now stands, healthy people could choose not to buy insurance — then sign up for it if they developed health problems later. Insurance companies couldn’t turn them away, because Mr. Obama’s plan, like those of his rivals, requires that insurers offer the same policy to everyone.

    As a result, people who did the right thing and bought insurance when they were healthy would end up subsidizing those who didn’t sign up for insurance until or unless they needed medical care.

    In other words, when Mr. Obama declares that “the reason people don’t have health insurance isn’t because they don’t want it, it’s because they can’t afford it,” he’s saying something that is mostly true now — but wouldn’t be true under his plan.

    The fundamental weakness of the Obama plan was apparent from the beginning. Still, as I said, advocates of health care reform were willing to cut Mr. Obama some slack.

    But now Mr. Obama, who just two weeks ago was telling audiences that his plan was essentially identical to the Edwards and Clinton plans, is attacking his rivals and claiming that his plan is superior. It isn’t — and his attacks amount to cheap shots.

    First, Mr. Obama claims that his plan does much more to control costs than his rivals’ plans. In fact, all three plans include impressive cost control measures.

    Second, Mr. Obama claims that mandates won’t work, pointing out that many people don’t have car insurance despite state requirements that all drivers be insured. Um, is he saying that states shouldn’t require that drivers have insurance? If not, what’s his point?

    Look, law enforcement is sometimes imperfect. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t have laws.

    Third, and most troubling, Mr. Obama accuses his rivals of not explaining how they would enforce mandates, and suggests that the mandate would require some kind of nasty, punitive enforcement: “Their essential argument,” he says, “is the only way to get everybody covered is if the government forces you to buy health insurance. If you don’t buy it, then you’ll be penalized in some way.”

    Well, John Edwards has just called Mr. Obama’s bluff, by proposing that individuals be required to show proof of insurance when filing income taxes or receiving health care. If they don’t have insurance, they won’t be penalized — they’ll be automatically enrolled in an insurance plan.

    That’s actually a terrific idea — not only would it prevent people from gaming the system, it would have the side benefit of enrolling people who qualify for S-chip and other government programs, but don’t know it.

    Mr. Obama, then, is wrong on policy. Worse yet, the words he uses to defend his position make him sound like Rudy Giuliani inveighing against “socialized medicine”: he doesn’t want the government to “force” people to have insurance, to “penalize” people who don’t participate.

    I recently castigated Mr. Obama for adopting right-wing talking points about a Social Security “crisis.” Now he’s echoing right-wing talking points on health care.

    What seems to have happened is that Mr. Obama’s caution, his reluctance to stake out a clearly partisan position, led him to propose a relatively weak, incomplete health care plan. Although he declared, in his speech announcing the plan, that “my plan begins by covering every American,” it didn’t — and he shied away from doing what was necessary to make his claim true.

    Now, in the effort to defend his plan’s weakness, he’s attacking his Democratic opponents from the right — and in so doing giving aid and comfort to the enemies of reform.

  44. celiff Says:

    Yeah, Ames is pretty conservative, but I am sure obama is doing well on campus there. The gaybars are a tough cookie. I called Studio, and the main manager was off. I am going there tomorrow night. And the lady that saw the light tonight, she did not say if she has seen HRC speak anywhere. I hope she gets to see her.

  45. celiff Says:

    Yup. He constantly talks about Hillary. He had an event here 2 weeks ago on Foreign policy, and he attacked her then, and tonight’s event was billed as a foreign policy speech again, so I am sure he did the same. People on the phones keep saying that either he is to inexperienced and/or that he should be home taking care of Elizabeth, that is just what older Iowans think. He needs to take care of her.

  46. kostner Says:

    celiff,

    what county is ames in? the guy told me he’s close to University of Iowa(correct me if i’m wrong?)

  47. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    kostner: guy keeps on remind of the importance of second choice

    yes, but something nobody talks about (good) is the amount of horsetrading that’ll be taking place. Remember, the caucus system is something like a neighborhood meeting. If you’ve ever attended any meetings at local civic orgs, you know about the big battles that can take place.

    Most people attending caucuses are not like blog people, ready to go to the mat over trivial differences between candidates. This is where savvy precinct captains come into play, particularly if they rep local establishment.

    Let’s say I were a precinct captain for candidate A and want to peel off support for candidate B. I’d show up at the caucus ready to deal on local stuff like “ok, stand with us and I’ll stand with you on funding for your community pool,” etc.

  48. MJS Says:

    That’s good to hear, from both of you! (Kostner and Celiff)
    It looks like you guys are at least slightly able to convince others to support Hillary somehow. My school and basically my community here is heavily Republican-leaning. Our congressional house respresentative frikkin voted WITH Bush’s policies 79% of the time. :(

    but of the democrats and admitted independents here, they seem to want Illinois’ favorite corrupt lieing son to win, so we’ll see.

  49. MJS Says:

    HLR, do you think Hillary knows about this? If she knew, she could find strong and strong-willed volunteers to serve as precinct captains for each major area! And she should!

  50. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    MJS — I’m sure Hillary and her IA associates are way ahead on this :-)

    celiff — are the campaign offices throwing New Year’s Eve parties? I will be in IA right after Christmas helping out and am trying to figure out what to do NYE, as I don’t know anyone in IA.

  51. gladiatorstail Says:

    charlie rose is` ripping edwards!

  52. MJS Says:

    HLR, I really hope they understand and fully comprehend EVERYTHING! :)

    and ugh, I just watched the Republican youtube debate….
    I would probably much rather 4 more years of George Bush than ANY of these “candidates” and/or bible-thumping, ignorant, narcistic, egotistical, prejudiced buffoons.

  53. MJS Says:

    details, Glad!

  54. kostner Says:

    HillaryLandRocks,

    actually that’s exactly what that guy told me. The horsetrading… He told me he’s ‘uncommitted’ for the first round last time, but joined Edwards group in the second round. I asked him if he’s ‘uncommitted’, why even bothered to show up in the first place. He told me bargaining, negotiation, trying to put stuff into local agenda blah, blah, blah.

    It’s completely undemocratic, and disgusting, I certainly hope Clinton campaign’s precinct captains are well seasoned to cajole those minor candidates’ supporters into her tent in the end.

  55. gladiatorstail Says:

    he is debunking his constant lobbyist rhetoric.. its on pbs right now!

  56. mj Says:

    A Purpose Driven Candidate
    by Aaron Bruns
    Hillary Clinton laid out her plan to end global poverty and fight disease in Africa during a visit to the Global Summit on AIDS at Saddleback Church in California — the home parish of pastor Rick Warren, author of “The Purpose Driven Life.”

    Amid numerous Biblical references, Sen Clinton proposed $50 billion over five years for providing universal access to treatment, prevention, and care for global HIV/AIDS, and vowed to stamp out malaria deaths in Africa by the end of her second term.

    Of course, she has to win one term first, and visiting the largest megachurch in California won’t hurt that cause. Warren is something of controversial figure in evangelical circles; some more conservative critics say hosting Barack Obama at this forum last year, as well as Warren’ signature on a Global Warming Pact and what they say is his tendency to play fast and loose with some Biblical tenets in favor of a more broad message of love, have shown his true liberal colors.

    But there’s no question as to Warren’s influence in the Christian community. More than 400,000 ministers and priests have been trained in his methods at seminars, and nearly 200,000 subscribe to the weekly newsletter.

    A visit to his church allows her a safe forum to talk about and display her faith, as well as reach out to that vast network of Christians.

    Watch her entrance, and her explanation about why she showed up.

    If you got to camerondotblogsdotfoxnewsdotcom you can watch the video

  57. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    kostner — exactly. Last summer, I saw a whole street go from a “hostile” attitude to a newcomer in a state race to enthusiastic supporters … why? Candidate got their street sign fixed.

  58. celiff Says:

    Our office is going to have fun that night. That is my birthday (Jan 1), and we will have fun the night before. Where will you be in Iowa. BTW y’all, Ames is in Story County north of Des Moines and is the home of Iowa State University, my rivals. I live in eastern, liberal Iowa in Iowa City, home to the University of Iowa Hawkeyes. HLR, if you are in Davenport or Iowa City, let me know and we can meet up, and you can help in our office.

  59. mj Says:

    Clinton Urges Sweeping Action on AIDS Published 11/29/2007 - 11:21 p.m. EST

    (AP) By MICHAEL R. BLOOD
    Associated Press Writer

    Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton used an appearance at one of the nation’s largest evangelical churches Thursday to sketch a broad agenda to take on disease around the globe, calling it “the right thing to do.”

    The centerpiece of a speech laced with Biblical references and reflections on her own faith was a call to spend billions of dollars to combat HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases at home and abroad. She said she would try to stamp out malaria deaths in Africa within eight years.

    Money and government alone cannot solve the problems, she said. AIDS “is a problem of our common humanity, and we are called to respond with love, with mercy and with urgency,” she said.

    With the presidential campaign intensifying in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, Clinton was alone among leading candidates to fly to coastal California to appear at Saddleback Church in Orange County, where pastor and best-selling author Rick Warren convenes a conference each year to highlight the global threat posed by HIV/AIDS.

    Earlier this week Clinton released her proposal to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS, which focuses in part on fighting the spread of the illness in minority communities. As president, she would double the HIV/AIDS research budget at the National Institutes of Health _ to $5.2 billion annually _ and spend at least $50 billion within five years around the globe.

    On Thursday, speaking to about 1,700 conference attendees, she said as president she would also call for spending $1 billion a year to address malaria infection in Africa. She set a goal of eradicating malaria deaths in Africa by the end of her second term.

    Many Christian conservatives dread the possibility of another Clinton White House, a point of agreement in a year when prominent leaders in the movement have divided their loyalties among GOP contenders.

    There was a sprinkle of criticism from conservatives in response to Clinton’s appearance at the church, but it was muted compared to last year when more than a dozen conservative leaders signed a letter urging Warren to rescind an invitation to Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., who supports abortion rights. The church defended his appearance.

    Warren is theologically and socially conservative, but he is known for avoiding the scrum of partisan politics. The author of “The Purpose-Driven Life” has devoted much of his time in recent years mobilizing evangelicals to fight AIDS in Africa.

    The speech gave Clinton a chance to appear on stage with the popular pastor _ who greeted her with a hug _ as well as talk at length about her own faith.

    “I’ve been raised to understand the power and purpose of prayer,” she said at one point.

    Warren thanked her for attending. “We invited all of them to come, but she was the one who showed up,” he said

  60. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    celiff — I’ll know as soon as I get my “Iowa HillStars” assignment packet. It should be here soon (if not already, haven’t checked today’s mail yet). No matter what, I’ll call your office to wish you happy birthday.

  61. celiff Says:

    Thanks (: Yeah, hopefully you get eastern Iowa, about which I am somewhat of an expert. But western Iowa is pretty conservative. There are really dedicated supporters in western Iowa though. Ah, you are a Hillstar! Awesome. We have a Hillstar working in our office from Manhattan.

  62. MJS Says:

    I think the only way I can go to Iowa would be to hop on the Obama-express lol
    but you

  63. gladiatorstail Says:

    ok, and the final nail on coffin comes from krugman himself.

    Mandates and Mudslinging

    Article Tools Sponsored By
    By PAUL KRUGMAN
    Published: November 30, 2007

    From the beginning, advocates of universal health care were troubled by the incompleteness of Barack Obama’s plan, which unlike those of his Democratic rivals wouldn’t cover everyone. But they were willing to cut Mr. Obama slack on the issue, assuming that in the end he would do the right thing.

    Now, however, Mr. Obama is claiming that his plan’s weakness is actually a strength. What’s more, he’s doing the same thing in the health care debate he did when claiming that Social Security faces a “crisis” — attacking his rivals by echoing right-wing talking points.

    The central question is whether there should be a health insurance “mandate” — a requirement that everyone sign up for health insurance, even if they don’t think they need it. The Edwards and Clinton plans have mandates; the Obama plan has one for children, but not for adults.

    Why have a mandate? The whole point of a universal health insurance system is that everyone pays in, even if they’re currently healthy, and in return everyone has insurance coverage if and when they need it.

    And it’s not just a matter of principle. As a practical matter, letting people opt out if they don’t feel like buying insurance would make insurance substantially more expensive for everyone else.

    Here’s why: under the Obama plan, as it now stands, healthy people could choose not to buy insurance — then sign up for it if they developed health problems later. Insurance companies couldn’t turn them away, because Mr. Obama’s plan, like those of his rivals, requires that insurers offer the same policy to everyone.

    As a result, people who did the right thing and bought insurance when they were healthy would end up subsidizing those who didn’t sign up for insurance until or unless they needed medical care.

    In other words, when Mr. Obama declares that “the reason people don’t have health insurance isn’t because they don’t want it, it’s because they can’t afford it,” he’s saying something that is mostly true now — but wouldn’t be true under his plan.

    The fundamental weakness of the Obama plan was apparent from the beginning. Still, as I said, advocates of health care reform were willing to cut Mr. Obama some slack.

    But now Mr. Obama, who just two weeks ago was telling audiences that his plan was essentially identical to the Edwards and Clinton plans, is attacking his rivals and claiming that his plan is superior. It isn’t — and his attacks amount to cheap shots.

    First, Mr. Obama claims that his plan does much more to control costs than his rivals’ plans. In fact, all three plans include impressive cost control measures.

    Second, Mr. Obama claims that mandates won’t work, pointing out that many people don’t have car insurance despite state requirements that all drivers be insured. Um, is he saying that states shouldn’t require that drivers have insurance? If not, what’s his point?

    Look, law enforcement is sometimes imperfect. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t have laws.

    Third, and most troubling, Mr. Obama accuses his rivals of not explaining how they would enforce mandates, and suggests that the mandate would require some kind of nasty, punitive enforcement: “Their essential argument,” he says, “is the only way to get everybody covered is if the government forces you to buy health insurance. If you don’t buy it, then you’ll be penalized in some way.”

    Well, John Edwards has just called Mr. Obama’s bluff, by proposing that individuals be required to show proof of insurance when filing income taxes or receiving health care. If they don’t have insurance, they won’t be penalized — they’ll be automatically enrolled in an insurance plan.

    That’s actually a terrific idea — not only would it prevent people from gaming the system, it would have the side benefit of enrolling people who qualify for S-chip and other government programs, but don’t know it.

    Mr. Obama, then, is wrong on policy. Worse yet, the words he uses to defend his position make him sound like Rudy Giuliani inveighing against “socialized medicine”: he doesn’t want the government to “force” people to have insurance, to “penalize” people who don’t participate.

    I recently castigated Mr. Obama for adopting right-wing talking points about a Social Security “crisis.” Now he’s echoing right-wing talking points on health care.

    What seems to have happened is that Mr. Obama’s caution, his reluctance to stake out a clearly partisan position, led him to propose a relatively weak, incomplete health care plan. Although he declared, in his speech announcing the plan, that “my plan begins by covering every American,” it didn’t — and he shied away from doing what was necessary to make his claim true.

    Now, in the effort to defend his plan’s weakness, he’s attacking his Democratic opponents from the right — and in so doing giving aid and comfort to the enemies of reform.

  64. celiff Says:

    There is a Hillary office in Chicago, I just don’t know where.

  65. MJS Says:

  66. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    MJS — Hey, I live in northeastern US. I was joking w/ a friend the other day that the cheapest way I can get to IA is to hop on one of those Obama buses.

  67. MJS Says:

    great article, glad! too bad MSM will be too busy salivating on whatever new ~*dirty*~ truths Obama will reveal tomorrow about Hillary.

  68. celiff Says:

    One of the people in our office is running for state senate and he is a huge Clinton supporter, and he is in college still. He isn’t much older than me. Another Clinton supporter in Des Moines.

    http://iowa.facebook.com/group.php?gid=17748455393&ref=nf

  69. celiff Says:

    Someone from the Obama side told me today that they will be bussing plenty of students back to Iowa to caucus.

  70. MJS Says:

    Wow! you are really very very dedicated HLR! More power to you! LOL @ the Obama bus comment, though its probably true. :D

    I hope Hillary doesn’t expend ALL her forces these coming weeks on Iowa. She must remember that we still have battles in New Hampshire in what is becoming an increasing tighter race!

  71. MJS Says:

    Celiff, I’m not sure where you heard that, but currently, the plan indeed is for any voluntary *cough* Illinoisers to cross the Iowa threshold.

    I’ve been mingling a lot more with the Obama-lites here and it seems to me most of them don’t even really care so much about Obama as they do about beating Hillary. It shocks me that high-school kids here are so anti-hillary. Must be the parents, I say. lol

    But either way, I’m pretty sure they’re in for sore disappointment.

  72. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    MJS — NH would have been more convenient, but I decided on IA after seeing the media nightmare post-Oct 30th debate “stumble”. All hands on deck!

  73. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    MJS — what do you mean by cross the IA threshold?

    BTW, I recently read an article that voting in NH is even more lax than IA. You don’t need residency.

  74. gladiatorstail Says:

    did I say, I saw Edwards endorsing Obama and rallying his supporters against Hillary in Charlie Rose’s interview?

  75. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    GT — Clarify. He couldn’t possibly have endorsed Obama. If so, why is he running?

  76. mj Says:

    Look at this POS:

    HALPERIN’S TAKE ON OBAMA AND BLOOMBERGNo matter why the meeting was set up or what ends up on the agenda, the richness of this union cannot be overstated. Bloomberg (the self-styled outsider, reformer, and agent of change), getting together with Obama (whose national success is based on the same type of image) is the kind of exciting surprise that will spin out a billion threads and turn Friday’s news cycle into a series of mini-cycles as the political world wakes up to the headline and starts to try to figure it all out.

    Among those who will be very interested in what the two potential presidents will discuss: Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer, Rudy Giuliani, and, perhaps most of all, Bloomberg’s chief political strategist Kevin Sheekey.

    Both Bloomberg and Obama understand the politics of symbolism, and both know that they are among the baker’s half dozen or so people with a chance to move into the Oval Office in January of 2009. Could they make a deal? Form an alliance — or a ticket?

    Most constitutional and election law experts believe that a party’s vice presidential nominee (like a presidential one) can spend unlimited personal funds on a general election campaign. So, just for fun, say Obama this week named Bloomberg as his prospective running mate if the Illinois Senator wins the Democratic Party’s nomination. How much would that sway the electorate?

    That is of course wild speculation — of just the kind that anyone reading these words is going to see a lot of in the next (rapid-fire) 98 news cycles.

    (And if you want to see something that rhymes with “muster-buck,” go watch the press stakeout of this one.)

  77. MJS Says:

    HLR, many will travel to Iowa in a bid to do whatever it takes to make sure Obama is the victor there. Some will do it irrationally and possibly get caught, but i suspect most will think carefully about it. from what I’m hearing, some of these parents are anti-hillary too!

    I wouldn’t be worried though. To be honest, Iowa is such a trivial state imo.

  78. MJS Says:

    ew.

    i just stumbled upon the nohillaryforpresident site and its really funny how all these uptight douches are freaking out about her major leads in polls and stuff. lol

  79. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    mj: say Obama this week named Bloomberg as his prospective running mate if the Illinois Senator wins the Democratic Party’s nomination. How much would that sway the electorate?

    They expect Democratic women to vote for a ticket w/ Bloomberg on it?

  80. gladiatorstail Says:

    HLR,

    Rose’s question was if Edwards is done in Iowa, and he loses in NH, where would his supporters go, and he was predicting that they should be going to Obama, and not Hillary. So much for democratic party. now it is 2 vs 1.

  81. gladiatorstail Says:

    here is interview if anyone is interested.

    http://www.charlierose.com/shows/2006/11/14/1/a-conversation-with-john-edwards

  82. mj Says:

    What a jerk. That he would even be discussing that speaks volumes. He’s really just running to screw Hillary Clinton. It’s down right bizarre.

  83. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    GT — thanks for the link, listening now.

  84. HillaryLandRocks Says:

    ok, the link is to an old interview. New one not available yet.

  85. admin Says:

    Comments tonight have been facinating. The New Years in Iowa comments sounds grand. The Iowa news items from Celiff and Kostner are encouraging and good to know HLR will soon be toasting Celiff’s birthday. The press clippings are great. We’ll soon check out the Charlie Rose interview to punish ourselves.

  86. hwc Says:

    That’s a link to an old Charlie Rose interview with Johnny Edwards. Tonight’s show is not posted yet.

    BTW, it looks like the big dog hisself, Bill Clinton, is on Charlie Rose tomorrow night. Worth settin’ the TIVO.

  87. gladiatorstail Says:

    yeah i saw that.. btw hwc u crack me up on mydd :)

  88. hwc Says:

    MyDD: I’ve had enough.

  89. freckles Says:

    I have a question. I looked it up a few weeks ago and can’t remember the answer — or even if I found an answer.

    I know that in the GE, a few states carve up the electoral votes — the rest it’s winner-take-all. (unless CA falls for that prop they’re trying to promote)

    But in the primary, is it all apportioned delegates or are some states winner-take-all?

  90. wbboei Says:

    During the last couple days, the Clinton campaign has raised two questions re. the candidate Obama:

    1. Did the Obama campaign direct Hopeland to make contributions to officials and entities in states holding nominating contests? Yes or no?

    2. With the critical foreign policy challenges America faces in the world today, does Obama who served in the Illinois State Senate just three years ago, and would have less experience than any President since World War II, have the strength and experience to be the next President?

    These are material questions. The first one goes to Senator Obama’s administrative ability and his integrity as well. The second goes to his qualifications to be President. As such, they deserve responsive answers.

    To date no such answers have been forthcoming from the Obama campaign, not even the usual evasions. That is according to the Chicago-Sun Times, Obama’s home town paper.
    http://www.suntimes.com/news/hunter/672543,CST-NWS-hunter29.article.

    Given this lack of responsiveness, voters can only assume the worst.

  91. Hillary Is 44 » Blog Archive » Fighting Barack Obama’s 15 Million Lies Says:

    […] Archives : Links : About : Webmaster : Confidential Tips : Friday, Nov 30th - 6:18 am « Barack Obama’s 15 Million Lies […]

  92. Hillary Is 44 » Blog Archive » O + O = 0 Says:

    […] And make no mistake, Obama abandons 15 million Americans to the land of the uninsured. For the arguments substantiating this claim read HERE, HERE, HERE, and HERE. […]

  93. Hillary Is 44 » Blog Archive » Vote Healthcare - Vote Hillary Clinton Says:

    […] written before about health care. Today, Paul Krugman once again takes on the failure and flim flam man who is Barack Obama. The […]

1 comment:

  1. > Bush's Third Term
    > July 2, 2008; Page A12
    >
    >
    > We're beginning to understand why Barack Obama keeps protesting so
    > vigorously against the prospect of "George Bush's third term." Maybe
    > he's worried that someone will notice that he's the candidate who's
    > running for it.
    >
    > Most Presidential candidates adapt their message after they win their
    > party nomination, but Mr. Obama isn't merely "running to the center."
    > He's fleeing from many of his primary positions so markedly and so
    > rapidly that he's embracing a sizable chunk of President Bush's
    > policy.Who would have thought that a Democrat would rehabilitate the
    > much-maligned Bush agenda?
    >
    >
    > Getty Images
    >
    > Take the surveillance of foreign terrorists. Last October, while
    > runningwith the Democratic pack, the Illinois Senator vowed to
    > "support a
    > filibuster of any bill that includes retroactive immunity for
    > telecommunications companies" that assisted in such
    > eavesdropping after
    > 9/11. As recently as February, still running as the liberal favorite
    > against Hillary Clinton, he was one of 29 Democrats who voted against
    > allowing a bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee reform of
    > surveillance rules even to come to the floor.
    >
    > Two weeks ago, however, the House passed a bill that is
    > essentially the
    > same as that Senate version, and Mr. Obama now says he supports it.
    > Apparently legal immunity for the telcos is vital for U.S. national
    > security, just as Mr. Bush has claimed. Apparently, too, the
    > legislationisn't an attempt by Dick Cheney to gut the
    > Constitution. Perhaps it is
    > dawning on Mr. Obama that, if he does become President, he'll be
    > responsible for preventing any new terrorist attack. So now he's happy
    > to throw the New York Times under the bus.
    >
    > Next up for Mr. Obama's political blessing will be Mr. Bush's Iraq
    > policy. Only weeks ago, the Democrat was calling for an
    > immediate and
    > rapid U.S. withdrawal. When General David Petraeus first
    > testified about
    > the surge in September 2007, Mr. Obama was dismissive and
    > skeptical. But
    > with the surge having worked wonders in Iraq, this week Mr.
    > Obama went
    > out of his way to defend General Petraeus against MoveOn.org's attacks
    > in 2007 that he was "General Betray Us." Perhaps he had a late
    > epiphany.
    > Look for Mr. Obama to use his forthcoming visit to Iraq as an
    > excuse to
    > drop those withdrawal plans faster than he can say Jeremiah
    > Wright "was
    > not the person that I met 20 years ago." The Senator will learn -
    > as
    > John McCain has been saying - that withdrawal would squander the gains
    > from the surge, set back Iraqi political progress, and weaken
    > America'sstrategic position against Iran. Our guess is that
    > he'll spin this
    > switcheroo as some kind of conditional commitment, saying he'll
    > stay in
    > Iraq as long as Iraqis are making progress on political
    > reconciliation,and so on. As things improve in Iraq, this would
    > be Mr. Bush's policy
    > too.
    >
    > Mr. Obama has also made ostentatious leaps toward Mr. Bush on domestic
    > issues. While he once bid for labor support by pledging a unilateral
    > rewrite of Nafta, the Democrat now says he favors free trade as
    > long as
    > it works for "everybody." His economic aide, Austan Goolsbee,
    > has been
    > liberated from the five-month purdah he endured for telling Canadians
    > that Mr. Obama's protectionism was merely campaign rhetoric. Now that
    > Mr. Obama is in a general election, he can't scare the business
    > community too much.
    >
    > Back in the day, the first-term Senator also voted against the Supreme
    > Court nominations of John Roberts and Samuel Alito. But last
    > week he
    > agreed with their majority opinion in the Heller gun rights
    > case, and
    > with their dissent against the liberal majority's ruling to ban the
    > death penalty for rape. Mr. Obama seems to appreciate that getting
    > pegged as a cultural lefty is deadly for national Democrats - at least
    > until November.
    >
    > This week the great Democratic hope even endorsed spending more
    > money on
    > faith-based charities. Apparently, this core plank of Mr. Bush's
    > "compassionate conservatism" is not the assault on church-state
    > separation that the ACLU and liberals have long claimed. And
    > yesterday,Mr. Obama's campaign unveiled an ad asserting his
    > support for welfare
    > reform that "slashed the rolls by 80 percent." Never mind that
    > Mr. Obama
    > has declared multiple times that he opposed the landmark 1996 welfare
    > reform.
    >
    >
    > * * *
    >
    >
    > All of which prompts a couple of thoughts. The first is that Mr. Obama
    > doesn't seem to think American political sentiment has moved as
    > far left
    > as most of the media claim. Another is that the next President,
    > whetherDemocrat or Republican, is going to embrace much of Mr.
    > Bush's foreign
    > and antiterror policy whether he admits it or not. Think Eisenhower
    > endorsing Truman's Cold War architecture.
    >
    > Most important is the matter of Mr. Obama's political character -
    > and
    > how honest he is being about what he truly believes. His voting record
    > in the Senate and in Illinois, as well as his primary positions, would
    > make him the most liberal Presidential candidate since George McGovern
    > in 1972. But he clearly doesn't want voters to believe that in
    > November.He's still the Obama Americans don't know.
    >

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