close
lunaticprophet

Last seen: 5 hours ago

lunaticprophet is a guy from Chicago, Illinois, USA

"A popular Government without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy, or perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance: And a people who mean to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives." -- James Madison, 4th President of the United States [1822]

  • Free Visual English Dictionary and Thesaurus | Discover...

    Rated Oct 06 1 review glaucoma, grammar, dictionary, reference, thesaurus snappywords.com

    Snappy Words

    From the page: "What is Snappy Words visual English dictionary?

    It's an online interactive English dictionary and thesaurus that helps you find meaning of words and draw connections of other associated words. Without looking up each associated word, Snappy Words helps you clearly see the meaning of each word by simply placing the mouse cursor over the appropriate words."
  • Twitter is dead&( - Internet )

    Rated Sep 27 2 reviews internet, spam, morons, twitter idg.no

    Twitter is dead
    ... SPAM will kill it before it grows ... much more!
  • Protect Insurance Companies PSA from FOD Team, Will...

    Rated Sep 25 37 reviews politics, satire, video, healthcare, congress funnyordie.com

    Protect Insurance Companies PSA

    Something... ANYTHING... must be done to spare these poor, downtrodden, multi-billion dollar insurance corporations!!

    Just imagine people all over American not having to worry healthcare costs!?!? NOT having to file personal bankruptcy because they broke a leg and didn't have the money or insurance to cover the $60,000 hospital bill!!?!

    Imagine NOT having to lose their home because their spouse has been fighting cancer for 5 years and their insurance policy has a 'limit' on how much money can be spent to save the parent of 3 children, ages 4-9.
  • Dailymotion - Billie Holiday - une vidéo Musique

    Rated Sep 01 1 review jazz, music, video, billie holiday, lester young dailymotion.com

    Billie Holiday - "Fine and Mellow"
    w/ Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Gerry Mulligan, Ben Webster
  • THE DOZENS: TWELVE ESSENTIAL ELLA FITZGERALD...

    Rated Aug 29 1 review jazz, music, ella fitzgerald jazz.com

    THE DOZENS: TWELVE ESSENTIAL ELLA FITZGERALD PERFORMANCES by Stuart Nicholson

    From the page: "Ella Fitzgerald lived to sing. Nothing in her life meant as much to her. Yet she never had a music lesson in her life and never bothered to warm up before a show. Arguably the most famous jazz musician of all time, her drawing power was phenomenal. During her lifetime, whatever the prevailing musical fashion, the mere mention of her name was enough to sell out any major concert hall in the world."

  • Firedoglake & Presidents Baucus and Grassley Allow Obama...

    Rated Jul 23 1 review politics, healthcare, republicans, obama firedoglake.com

    Presidents Baucus and Grassley Allow Obama to Speak
    From the page: "Monday, Co-President Chuck Grassley told Andrea Mitchell that his discussions on health care with Co-President Baucus was the only game in town. Nothing accomplished by the Senate HELP Committee matters. And as for the House bill, everything they proposed is "off the table." Chuck and Co-Prez Max have that phrase down.

    I've been watching the news stories all day, and I've yet to find a single statement by any Democratic leader to challenge Grassley's view. Oh, Speaker Pelosi insists they're still on track, and Harry Reid says we're still following some schedule. But it is startling that neither Reid nor Durbin, Pelosi or Hoyer, seems offended by President Grassley's arrogant assertion that he and Co-President Baucus will unilaterally define health care reform, so only their views matter.

    I would have thought that the role of the Senate Finance Committee was to figure out how to finance necessary health care reforms in a responsible fashion. It wasn't their job to make the major "policy" calls about what reform entails. That's the job of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committtee, and the respective House Committees, and they've already defined what they want and are in basic agreement.

    No, Finance's job was to look at the range of financing options -- some from Tax A, some from Tax B, a bit from Tax C, plus Savings X, Savings Y, etc. -- and then choose. Put together a package that's fair and that does the job. But apparently, the entire Congressional leadership is waiting for President Baucus and President Grassley to tell them what the substance of reform will be.

    So, what have the two Co-Presidents produced so far? Zero. Nada. Zilch. Unless you count delay.

    Despite their dismal failures and delays that are putting reform in serious risk, the Demoratic leader is allowing these arrogant Co-Presidents, all by themselves, to decide whether we can have reform at all, whether reform will create meaningful competition for insurance companies or not, whether individuals or employers will have to do anything, whether reforms will be done nationally or be handed to such 3rd world states as Louisiana, Arkansas and Alaska, and whether there will or will not be a institution with authority to examine, recommend and enforce ways to "bend the curve" of exploding health care costs.

    How did it come to pass that the country has left 1/6 of the US economy in the hands of these two people? When did we elect them as Co-Presidents?

    I suppose a co-presidency with no other meaningful legislative branch is one way to organize a government. But I just wish they'd told us how this works in grade school. Those of us in the rest of the country could have avoided the trouble of voting. And those 530 or so other chumps in Congress would have known not to waste their time or ours.

    -------

    Update: Tonight, the man whom the nation's crazies -- that's most of the Republican Party these days and much of the media -- think is not President held a press conference. At least the press addressed him as "Mr. President" and didn't call him names like half the clowns on cable news do.

    The President addressed -- no, surrounded, analyzed, explored, turned in-side-out, every question. He defended health reform as necessary and correctly tied it to bringing down budget deficits and avoiding bankruptcies. He talked about how much progress has been made, and the broad scope of agreements.

    But he also seemed to focus a couple of times on making the insurance companies the villains -- near the end he spoke of their record profits at a time of rising premiums and used that to defend the need for the public plan, to keep them honest.
    And he repeated some of the stories he hears -- "my health coverage is great," he said, but a lot of people are having problems. That was a good response. "
  • Daily Kos: Cheers and Jeers: Thursday

    Rated Jul 23 1 review politics, bush, big pharma, healthcare, republicans dailykos.com

    When the GOP does it, it's awesome!

    From the page: John Cole wields a sharp stick:

      I think it is worth discussing, as we watch Congress try to cobble together some sort of health care bill that will cover tens of millions of additional people while still remaining "deficit neutral," that the Bush administration Prescription Drug Entitlement, passed by the "fiscally conservative" Senate and the "fiscally conservative" house (loaded with members of the 1994 Republican Revolution who were now reneging on their term limit pledges) and signed by the "fiscally conservative" Bush administration, didn't have one single penny set aside to pay for the promises.

      And I don't remember hearing howls of outrage from the Blue Dogs.


    Ah, yes. The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act. The signature "health care reform" bill of the Bush administration. Remember that? Good times. In fact, as I'm writing this, Rudy Giuliani is telling Chris Matthews on Hardball that "Republicans did the best reform ever for seniors in terms of bringing down the cost of drugs. ... It's working out really well." Really??? It's surprising to hear him say that, considering that Republicans think government is evil and can't do anything well. Me confused!

    Just a couple words about that Medicare bill: it prohibits the government from using its bargaining power to negotiate for lower drug prices; the administration lied to Congress about the true cost and threatened to fire the actuary if he opened his yap about it; and the House held the vote open way longer than they should have so that arms could be twisted and at least one GOP congressman could be bribed so they could ram it through by the slimmest of margins. What fun.

    And then there's this from Paul Krugman, who wrote in 2005:

      If all this sounds like a story of a corrupt deal created by a corrupt system, it is. And it was a very expensive deal indeed. According to the Medicare trustees, the fiscal gap over the next 75 years created by the 2003 law---not the financing gap for Medicare as a whole, just the additional gap created by legislation passed 18 months ago---will be $8.7 trillion.

      That's about three times the amount President Bush proposes to save by cutting middle-class Social Security benefits.


    Elections have consequences. Bush and his congress did health care reform their way. Now it's our turn. And the reason Republicans are terrified and want to turn this into "Obama's Waterloo" isn't because they're afraid it will fall short of expectations, but rather because it will exceed them and send McConnell, Boehner & Co. even further into the wilderness.

    Meanwhile the Blue Dogs should take a look at their party ID cards to remind themselves whose side they're on.
  • Republicans Will Be Toast in 2010 If the Dems Pass Health...

    Rated Jul 23 2 reviews insurance, politics, lobbyists, healthcare, congress alternet.org

    Republicans Will Be Toast in 2010 If the Dems Pass Health Reform, and They Know It
    If Obama and the Democrats get health care reform done, the Republican Party is finished in the next election. So it's pulling out the stops.


    From the page: "If President Barack Obama succeeds in signing a major health care reform bill into law -- one that provides a public plan for people currently priced out of the system -- he will achieve what at least three presidents before him had hoped for, and failed to do. And he will likely deprive the Republican minority in Congress from anything approaching a comeback in the 2010 midterm elections.

    However, if health care reform does not pass early in Obama's term, the Democrats will likely face midterm elections amid rising unemployment figures with a record of having passed legislation characterized as "bailouts" for megabanks and large corporations -- bills whose benefits to the economy have little impact on the person who has already lost a job. So GOP leaders are focused like a laser beam on stopping health-care reform in its tracks.

    As Congress cleared two major hurdles last week toward agreement on the provisions in such a bill, the Republican pique approached a new level of shrillness.

    Just as two committees in the House of Representatives passed a jointly crafted bill for a future floor vote, and an important Senate committee passed a version that is reconcilable with the House bill, Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., showed the GOP hand. On a conference call with a group of right-wing operatives, according to Politco's Ben Smith, DeMint said, "If we're able to stop Obama on this, it will be his Waterloo. It will break him." (He was talking to members of Conservatives for Patients' Rights, some of the people sponsoring those right-wing tea-bag protests.)

    Appearing on Meet the Press on Sunday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., backpedaled a bit when confronted with DeMint's comments. "Look, my goal is not to stop the president," McConnell told host David Gregory. "My goal is to get the right kind of health care for America. And the direction in which the president and the majority in the House and Senate want to take this is the wrong direction. What we hope to do is to have enough time here for people to truly understand what's going on."

    By "enough time," what McConnell really meant, say many observers, was "enough time" to kill the bill.
    Any legislation as complicated as health care reform relies on the buy-in of many congressional committees and competing interests.

    Democrats still have a ways to go in getting a final bill ready for passage in both the House and Senate. But last week's committee votes, combined with the seal of approval for the House bill from the powerful American Medical Association (which long opposed any sort of public option), as well as the progressive coalition known as Health Care for America Now, apparently put the fear of God into Republicans who, for the first time, saw a possibility that Obama could win this major prize.
  • Disease Profiters Fear Public Option Will Kill Their...

    Rated Jul 23 1 review insurance, politics, healthcare, republicans alternet.org

    Disease Profiters Fear Public Option Will Kill Their Ponzi Scheme
    The estimated 119 million Americans wanting to join the public option has made the debate over it into a death match for the insurance industry

    From the page: "To understand the financial stakes involved in the battle over U.S. health-care reform, it's useful to keep two numbers in mind: 50 million and 119 million.

    The first number is the approximate total of Americans without health insurance, a new market that the private health insurance industry is salivating to get its hands on. The industry's hope is that the government will mandate that those Americans sign up for private insurance and offer subsidies for those who can't afford to pay the premiums.

    Fifty million new customers and government largesse to help pay the bills would be a huge windfall for the insurance industry, which otherwise faces a decline in its market because Baby Boomers are reaching the age to qualify for Medicare and because rising unemployment is draining the pool of Americans who have insurance through their employers.

    So, as Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. noted, the 50 million potential customers explain why the insurance companies have been so eager to sit down at the reform table.

    "Their public-spiritedness reflects enlightened self-interest," Dionne wrote. "Health-care reform could bail out these interests by adding the currently uninsured -- fast approaching 50 million people -- to their customer base and by preventing more individuals and employers from dropping insurance altogether."

    But Dionne and other mainstream analysts miss the significance of the other number -- 119 million -- and why it is even a more powerful incentive for private insurers to have the ear of key members of Congress and White House insiders. It is the figure that the industry and its backers cite as the potential exodus of disaffected customers to a public health insurance option.


    The industry's curious argument is that so many Americans would bolt to a government-run program that the option simply can't be allowed.

    "As many as 119 million Americans would shift from private coverage to the government plan," one of the industry's chief protectors, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote in a column for Politico.com.

    Though some analysts question the 119 million estimate, it has transformed the debate over health-care reform into something of a death match for the private insurance industry, especially because it's a good bet that many of the 50 million uninsured also would opt for a public plan, since they've been heartlessly left out in the cold by the private industry.

    Obama's Stance

    President Barack Obama says he strongly supports inclusion of a public option in any reform legislation as necessary to keep the private industry "honest." His reference to the public option during a speech on Thursday in Green Bay, Wisconsin, was greeted with some of the strongest applause as was his reference to prohibiting insurers from denying someone coverage because of a "preexisting condition."

    One of the most offensive features of private health insurance plans has been the denial of benefits if industry investigators determine that a serious illness might have predated the start of a person's policy. Some policies for individuals and small businesses even require the signing of privacy waivers so the insurance company can examine a doctor's confidential files looking for evidence of a precondition."
  • FRONTLINE: sick around america | PBS

    Rated Jul 21 4 reviews insurance, pbs, politics, healthcare, frontline pbs.org

    Sick Around America



    As reviewer bs1999bs states:
      "We have all the money in the World for war, bank bailouts, etc and even blatant waste - yet we are unable to provide basic health care to many. Not only have we screwed up comprehensively, we reward the villains with grand bonuses for having taken us there. That's adding insult to injury - big time!


    ...that sums it up nicely