Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Newsweek

Our insurgent government's
"Mission Accomplished"

                                         The Obamacy
A year ago, this obvious fact would have been denied out-of-hand by the liberal leftists.  Now, less than a month into "Dear Leader's" regime, they are coming out from under their rocks and proudly confirming what many clear thinkers from both sides of the aisle have known for some time now.

Actually, they're a bit late by declaring their acknowledgment of this obvious fact.  With growing government ownership in Industry (Banks and the Auto companies), their pending involvement and oversight of personal medical information, the infrastructure "bailout (which is loaded with pork), their backing away from prosecuting America's sworn terrorist criminals, the hi-jacking of the Census (and the impact it will have in weighting the votes of both Houses), the building of bureaucracy upon bureaucracy,  ..... etc....etc....etc....   To hell with "Socialism"... we are already well on our way to full fledged Communism.

Those children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the apologists and deniers that don't see this, or are reluctant to admit it..will be the innocent victims of the fate that the future holds for them.... thanks to today's generation (the one that grew up in the Golden Age of the U.S.)

WASS

Cuzzin Ricky
IWKOAEFDIKIAHB

The End



Heard in the barber bhop -- "If I was on Tim McVeigh's jury today, he'd leave a free man."

Whoa!

Went Dream

Juicy Lucy sent me this
Man-oh-man, how I wanted to remix it. 
Got  grip on myself first though. 

Hoopettes

Lady Hoops


I watched Maryland's girl's basketball team play Boston College last night, and it may be the the best game I've seen this year.  I kept thinking during the game that the MD's women's team would prolly win 3 out of 10 against the men's team, maybe more.  They are amazing ball handlers, passers, and unconscious from three point range.  I don't think either team missed a free throw.  Boston College had a little red head shrimp, Mickel Picco, who was scoring falling down from mid court. .  The officiating is like the Big Ten's on steroids ... nothing's called.  You get clobbered inside.    All in all, I enjoy men's and women's hoops equally, and I wish there was more of it televised.  Wait. There's one difference.  I want to hug  Kristi Toliver to pieces. Never felt that way about Greivis Vasquez.

The Goebbels Conspiracy

David Westin, call your office
Media punks run amok


In 1998 ABC NEWS fired veteran reporter Bob Zelnick, ostensibly because he signed a contract with Regnery Books for an Al Gore biography, a conflict of interest for an ABC reporter, according to David Westin.   That was the show pony.  Zelnick was under fire from media liberals for a previous book, Backfire, that cataloged the unintended consequences of racial quotas.  And this ... take note of this.
Jane Mayer is a pro-Clinton hack who writes for The New Yorker and who protested Zelnick's reporting on a show featuring Gary Aldrich, the author of Regnery's Unlimited Access. ABC News President David Westin agreed, writing to Zelnick that his appearance "held up to ridicule that our reporting is influenced by views you/we have formed about the individual involved."
Westin later had no such compunction about hiring Clinton puppet, liberal Democrat and political hack George Stephanopoulos to replace David Brinkley as host of This Sunday.  It was during a This Sunday interview that Stephy corrected Barry Hussein Obama's potentially troublesome slip, "You're absolutely right that John McCain has not talked about my Muslim faith."  Remember? Fast forward to the Obama White House, and this from AOL News. 

Biased: George Stephanopoulos Gives Daily Advice to Rahm

It was recently revealed that ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent George Stephanopoulos takes part in daily "profane" phone conversations with Democratic strategists James Carville and Paul Begala.

... Oh yeah, and the daily calls also include Obama Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel.

As Politico reports:

Of course, David Westin will fire Stephanopoulos anon.

The Swimmer's Legacy

Do you love irony, like I love irony?
Ted Kennedy, Dick Head
Ted the "Swimmer" (1932-2009) is diagnosed with incurable brain cancer. His physician, as mandated by law, refers his case to the Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research . It's pretty much an open and shut case. At age 77, cost effective health care for the 77 year old Kennedy is limited to an overdose of morphine, so the emergency operation that will allow his Senate staff to work him like a puppet for another year is denied. But wait, that's not the ironic part. This is.

Because Kennedy has the cash, he's able to extend his worthless life using black market medical care. Ain't that a pussy? This sonuvabitch, almost entirely responsible for socialized medicine in this country, is forced underground to avoid the penalty his own plan would impose upon him. Catch 22 (million in the bank).

I give you the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology section of the Obamacy's "Stimulus Package," as recommended by the Three Dickheads. Limbaugh explains it ...
... But the stimulus bill, the job-creation bill (so improperly named) creates a "new bureaucracy, the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology... Now, this new bureaucracy will monitor newly digitized medical records. There are rules-for-health care coverage in this bill, and they will affect every individual in the United States. You can consult if you want to go try to find a PDF copy of the bill you can find the references are on page 445, 454, and 479."

Your medical treatments will be tracked electronically by a federal system. Now, there are arguments back and forth about whether or not this is a good thing. The opportunity for the loss of privacy is huge here by digitizing and making everybody's health care records computerized, especially having a major federal database where everybody's health records are. Some people say this is a good thing because it will assist in treatment, particularly in emergencies. When you go in for an emergency, if they can get your records... Let's say you're out of town. Say you're vacationing in Alaska hunting moose and an accident happens up there, but you live in New Jersey. Doctors in Alaska will be able to consult the federal database to find out what your allergies are, what your treatments have been, what mistakes not to make on you.

That's what they used to sell this. Anyway, this bill computerizes everybody's health records. Then after everybody's health records are computerized, this new bureaucracy is created, the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology.

And he'll have a whole bureaucracy at his disposal that "will monitor treatments to make sure your doctor is doing what the federal government deems appropriate and cost effective." You know, right now a lot of you get all upset at your insurance company because they say, "Well, certain things will be covered and others won't," and you want it to be left up to the doctor. Try the government being in charge of what the doctor can do, the kind of treatments that can be extended to you -- and I'll tell you who gets creamed in this, is the elderly. The elderly get really shafted in this, and I'll explain why here in just a minute. Now, "The goal [of the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology] is to reduce costs and 'guide' your doctor's decisions (442, 446). These provisions in the stimulus bill are virtually identical to what Daschle prescribed in his 2008 book, 'Critical: What We Can Do About the Health-Care Crisis.' According to Daschle, doctors have to give up autonomy and 'learn to operate less like solo practitioners.'"

Doctors have to join the federal community here in dolling out treatment so that it's fair and equitable. "Keeping doctors informed of the newest medical findings is important, but enforcing uniformity," Betsy McCaughey writes, "goes too far. Hospitals and doctors that are not 'meaningful users' of the new system will face penalties. 'Meaningful user' isn't defined in the bill. That will be left to the HHS secretary, who will be empowered to impose 'more stringent measures of meaningful use over time' (511, 518, 540-541). What penalties will deter your doctor from going beyond the electronically delivered protocols when your condition is atypical or you need an experimental treatment? The vagueness is intentional. In his book, Daschle proposed an appointed body with vast powers to make the 'tough' decisions elected politicians won't make. The stimulus bill does that, and calls it the Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research (190-192). The goal, Daschle's book explained, is to slow the development and use of new medications and technologies because they are driving up costs. Rush Limbaugh, unedited
All socialized medical plans will eventually be forced to thin the herd as money runs out. It's our turn in the box.