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11月24日

Inconvenient Fraud

I suppose you all are up-to-date on junk science. The main question is..will algore give back his Nobel?

 

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdelingpole/100017393/climategate-the-final-nail-in-the-coffin-of-anthropogenic-global-warming/

>>>If you own any shares in alternative energy companies I should start dumping them NOW. The conspiracy behind the Anthropogenic Global Warming myth (aka AGW; aka ManBearPig) has been suddenly, brutally and quite deliciously exposed after a hacker broke into the computers at the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (aka Hadley CRU) and released 61 megabites of confidential files onto the internet. (Hat tip:Watts Up With That)

When you read some of those files – including 1079 emails and 72 documents – you realize just why the boffins at Hadley CRU might have preferred to keep them confidential. As Andrew Bolt puts it, this scandal could well be “the greatest in modern science”. These alleged emails – supposedly exchanged by some of the most prominent scientists pushing AGW theory – suggest:

Conspiracy, collusion in exaggerating warming data, possibly illegal destruction of embarrassing information, organized resistance to disclosure, manipulation of data, private admissions of flaws in their public claims and much more.<<<


11月22日

Follow the Money

The REAL problem in health care is hospital costs. The simplest of all abdominal operations which 60 years ago cost a few hundred dollars now will cost $23,849 from the hospital alone. The radiologist, surgeon, surgical assistant, and anesthetist are extra.  God forbid you have a complication. This is from the same hospital that charges you $107.00 to test a urine sample.
 
I see nothing in current debates to address this unbelievable inflation. Where does all the money actually go?
 
11月18日

The World as a School

OK. I THINK I GET IT 
Let me see if I understand all this.... 
 
IF YOU CROSS THE NORTH KOREAN BORDER ILLEGALLY YOU GET 12 YEARS HARD LABOR.. 
 
IF YOU CROSS THE IRANIAN BORDER ILLEGALLY YOU ARE DETAINED INDEFINITELY. 
IF YOU CROSS THE AFGHAN BORDER, YOU GET SHOT. 
IF YOU CROSS THE TURKEY BORDER ILLEGALLY, YOU SPEND THE REST OF YOUR LIFE IN PRISON! 
BUT, IF YOU CROSS THE U.S. BORDER ILLEGALLY YOU GET: 
    A DRIVERS LICENSE 
    A SOCIAL SECURITY CARD   
    WELFARE 
    FOOD STAMPS 
    AND, FREE HEALTH CARE? 
 
Oh well sure.  That makes perfect sense. 

11月13日

Diversity as a bad word

Remember I suggested the unintended consequences of the word diversity? Little did I know how quickly the meaning  of the word would change to "politically correct homicidal Islamist terrorist  Muslim military psychiatrist Dr. Hasan" now spit out once a minute on TV and radio.  Sorry about that-----
11月9日

Private Enterprise Cures for Health Care #4

Bartering: Have you ever considered bartering with your doctor or dentist?  When I was a country doctor, I traded services with my carpenter who had a slew of kids and a vegetable garden. Years ago, my lawyer and I did things for each other and never kept track of anything we did.  I have an unemployed patient now who just repaired my fence for me.  One of my daughters, whose husband runs a food market, trades with her dentist.  If you have something really expensive turn up, I’ll wager you have a nice boat you don’t need anymore.

Private Enterprise Cure For Health Care Crisis #3

Mr. McCain backs legislation sponsored by Arizona Rep. John Shadegg. Known as the Health Care Choice Act, it would allow individuals living in one state to purchase health insurance being sold to people living in other states. The policy would still have to meet the regulations of the state in which it is being sold, and would be subject to additional federal oversight.

Private Enterprise Solution To Health Care Crisis #2

The McCarran-Ferguson Act, which gives states the authority to regulate the “business of insurance,” also exempts the business of insurance from the federal antitrust laws.  There is no justification to exempt the insurance industry from the antitrust laws and federal government oversight. 

The Health Industry Antitrust Enforcement Act of 2009 will repeal the exemption for health insurance and medical malpractice insurance companies.  In the midst of the healthcare debate, where so many proposals contemplate how to bring added competition to the health insurance market, this legislation ensures that health insurers and medical malpractice insurers will at least be subject to normal laws of competition.

The Act only repeals the exemption for the most egregious forms of antitrust violations - price fixing, bid rigging, and market allocations.  For those antitrust concerns that would otherwise fall under a litigation-intensive rule of reason analysis, the McCarran-Ferguson antitrust exemption still applies. 

The Act will subject health insurers and medical malpractice insurers to the same good-competition laws that apply to virtually every other company doing business in the United States.  The nation’s competition laws are powerful tools to ensure that consumer welfare is the benchmark for fair and accountable industry practices.  Consumers benefit through lower prices, more choices, and better services.

The Act will not affect the ability of each state to regulate the business of insurance.  The Act ensures that price fixing, bid rigging and market allocation are removed from the federal antitrust exemption.  

Daily Private Enterprise Solution to the Health Care Crisis #1

The doctor who orders a test  never sees the bill and never knows what the hospital charges. 
The reason a $4.43 test costs $107 is that no one has power to challenge it. This is outrageous.

Our President has demanded greater transparency in medicine, and there is a way to make that happen.

Enact a law requiring ALL fees by hospitals and other health-care providers to be published and available to
the public online.  

I estimate it will take a one-page bill and one day in Congress to do it.
11月2日

Term limits; throw the rascals out.

Of the 15 states with legislative term limits, California is one with a 6-year limit.  I guess it hasn't helped California yet. The President has a two term limit. Representative democracy  has several other problems. One is corporatism, another is the revolving door to the military. industrial, and health complexes. Another is multiple failures by the US Congress to abide by the US Constitution. How about the 10th amendment? Signing statements? Mandating insurance? Un-elected Czars?  And who said we have a free market? Try buying health insurance out of state.  Vote for Liberty; vote for the US Constitution.