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Marc A. Murison
 
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Insurers deny care for colon cancer because of benign breast cysts

Four years ago, Deb Robben was denied health insurance by every single insurance parasite she approached. Why? Benign cysts in her breasts. Benign. Meaningless. Not a threat. Recently she developed colon cancer and has to foot the chemo and other bills herself. Or die. Repukelicans, of course, would prefer she die quickly. The cysts are still benign.

Posted in · morons and miscreants · | 2010 Feb 22 20:42 | (0) comments | permalink

Top tax rate: some perspective

Posted in · morons and miscreants · | 2010 Feb 08 00:13 | (0) comments | permalink

Poll of self-identified republicans in 2010

Yeah, they are crazy.

Posted in · morons and miscreants · | 2010 Feb 07 18:31 | (0) comments | permalink

Makeup of the national deficit over the next decade

Wow. Republicans have a lot to answer for. All of it, in fact:

Posted in · morons and miscreants · | 2010 Feb 07 17:47 | (0) comments | permalink

Congress is the problem

Lawrence Lessig make a good case: Like an alcoholic whose life is circling the drain, we must solve the underlying problem before any of the other huge issues can be tackled. For the alcoholic, it’s the addition to alcohol. For the United States, it’s the utterly corrupt Congress.

Building on the rhetoric at the core of his campaign, on January 20, 2009, Obama could have said:

America has spoken. It has demanded a fundamental change in how Washington works, and in the government America delivers. I commit to America to work with Congress to produce that change. But if we fail, if Congress blocks the change that America has demanded--or more precisely, if Congress allows the special interests that control it to block the change that America has demanded--then it will be time to remake Congress. Not by throwing out the Democrats, or by throwing out the Republicans. But by throwing out both, to the extent that both continue to want to work in the old way. If this Congress fails to deliver change, then we will change Congress.

Had he framed his administration in these terms, then when what has happened happened, Obama would be holding the means to bring about the obvious and critical transformation that our government requires: an end to the Fundraising Congress. The failure to deliver on the promises of the campaign would not be the failure of Obama to woo Republicans (the unwooable Victorians of our age). The failure would have been what America was already primed to believe: a failure of this corrupted institution to do its job. Once that failure was marked with a frame that Obama set, he would have been in the position to begin the extraordinarily difficult campaign to effect the real change that Congress needs.

I am not saying this would have been easy. It wouldn’t have. It would have been the most important constitutional struggle since the New Deal or the Civil War. It would have involved a fundamental remaking of the way Congress works. No one should minimize how hard that would have been. But if there was a president who could have done this, it was, in my view, Obama. No politician in almost a century has had the demonstrated capacity to inspire the imagination of a nation. He had us, all of us, and could have kept us had he kept the focus high.

Posted in · morons and miscreants · | 2010 Feb 06 21:06 | (0) comments | permalink

What the Repugs have wrought upon us

From Pelosi’s official page.  Reality sucks, eh?  Being complete morons, the fucking “Republicans” will never, ever, comprehend the concepts of reality, fairness, community, or what it means to be American.

Posted in · morons and miscreants · | 2009 Feb 10 11:37 | (0) comments | permalink
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