"For his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples."
That's what the man said.
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"For his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples."
''This partisan Finance Committee proposal will never see the Senate floor since the real bill will be written by Democrat leaders in a closed- to-the- public conference room somewhere in the Capitol,''
"Instead of having a debate in the House and the Senate and giving a bill to the president, you're going to get Harry Reid's bill, passed by the Senate, by the Democrats... immediately rubber-stamping it, no debate, no House-Senate conference, no Republican discussion, and it goes right to the president for his signature, and oh, by the way, no one knows what's in it. "
As for denial of care, Medicare, which we've described as the government's public option for senior citizens, has the highest denial rate in the country, according to the American Medical Association's 2008 National Health Insurer Report Card.
From March 1, 2007, to March 10 of last year, Medicare rejected 475,566 of 6.94 million claims for a rate of 6.85%.
Aetna was the only private insurer that had a similar number, denying 43,317 of 637,239 claims for a rate of 6.8%. But the average of seven carriers was 4.05% including Aetna. Dropping Aetna as an outlier takes the private sector insurance denial rate down to 3.08%.
[Snip]
The lesson here is that a government program, even one as beloved as Medicare, is only half as efficient, or half as caring, or half of both than private coverage.
Is it possible for a sitting president to ignore a war his own country is waging? According to the Boston Globe, it depends on who that president is... [snip]
During the Bush administration, journalists and liberal politicians were up in arms against a Defense Department policy that forbade the photographing of caskets coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan. Now that we have a Democrat as a commander in chief, however, the caskets are old news, and are getting little to no coverage."make it difficult, if not impossible, for any U.S. government in the future to hide the human cost of war from the American people."
"When you saw the beaming look on Che's face as the victims were tied to the stake and blasted apart by the firing squad, you saw there was something seriously, seriously wrong with Che Guevara."
Che's image is particularly ubiquitous on college campuses. But in the wrong places. He belongs in the marketing, PR and advertising departments. His lessons and history are fascinating and valuable, but only in light of P.T. Barnum.
George Norris, an orchid importer, spent two years in prison for paperwork errors in the course of operating his business of importing and distributing orchids. No illegal substances were involved, and so far as I can see there was no tax evasion going on. It was paperwork. Walsh draws the implications:As George Washington University law professor Stephen Saltzburg testified at the House hearing, cases like these "illustrate about as well as you can illustrate the overreach of federal criminal law."
The Cato Institute's Timothy Lynch, an expert on overcriminalization, called for "a clean line between lawful conduct and unlawful conduct."
A person should not be deemed a criminal unless that person "crossed over that line knowing what he or she was doing."
"Because of its repeated efforts to stimulate the economy through fiscal policy**, Japan now faces a serious debt problem (Japan's debt-to-GDP ratio has nearly doubled in the last decade, rising from 0.58 in 1991 to 1.1 in 2000)."
"The kids were not simply jealous of me, they were extremely hostile"
"I once was blind and now I see"