Sep
25
2009

When protesters marched on washington a few weeks ago, one of the most common rallying cries was that congress was disconnected from the opinions of the American people. They argued that Americans were outraged that congress was (among other things) shoving a healthcare bill down American’s throats that they don’t want. I found this to be a curious charge, considering the bipartisan calls for healthcare reform that have grown louder over the last few decades. But maybe the protesters had something there. Perhaps it’s true that congress has become disconnected from what mainstream Americans want out of all this healthcare reform talk. Fortunately, a few polls have been released recently which give us some insight into how the public feels about the public option , perhaps the most famous, most misunderstood, and most contentious element of the healthcare plans proposed thus far.
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1 comment | tags: Baucus, Healthcare Reform, Obama, Partisanship, Polls, Public Option | posted in Health, Politics
Sep
14
2009
As the battle for healthcare reform rages on, many of the myths that I once expected to quietly die have instead become stronger and more entrenched. In particular, the degree of misunderstanding surrounding the “public plan” portion of healthcare reform proposals continues to astound me, both on the Right and the Left. I addressed some of those concerns in a post last week entitled “All About the Public Plan” and I think some of the misconceptions I discussed in that article have pertinence to the discussion of alternate reform mechanisms as well. Especially in regards to Co-ops, I think misunderstandings on the part of the Left have hobbled any chance at real discussion of this viable public plan alternative. So hopefully this will help clear some things up:
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2 comments | tags: co-ops, healthcare, healthcare co-ops, Healthcare Reform, Obama, Public Plan, Republicans, socialized medicine | posted in Current Events, Health, Politics
Sep
10
2009
For those who didn’t get to see it last night, I give you Obama’s healthcare speech, in both video form and text form (after the jump). Frankly, it was better than I expected. He effectively summarized the rational for many of the most controversial reform elements, and added in enough personal stories and emotional appeals to keep it from becoming too dense with policy details. I also thought he did a fair job of criticizing some of the tactics that have been used by his opponents, while promoting cooperation. I sincerely hope that the olive branch of tort reform Obama extended last night was in good faith, and that the republicans will actually become more cooperative as a result. It would be nice if it felt like congress was actually trying to do what they thought was best for the country and not what they thought was best for their party or their political future. Hit the read link to see the full text.
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3 comments | tags: healthcare, Healthcare Reform, joint sessions of congress, Obama, Public Plan, Speech, transcript | posted in Health, Politics
Jul
23
2009

Well needless to say there’s a lot going on in the healthcare arena lately. In case you missed it, the House of Representatives released their healthcare bill last week. I’m planning on writing up my analysis of it but unfortunately I’ve got midterms early next week so you’ll all have to wait a week or so for that. But in the meantime I thought I’d provide some basic information about what the bill contains since I’ve had several people recently express frustration to me that they don’t know where to get an objective description of the contents of the bill. So I’ve provided some helpful links after the jump. Continue reading
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8 comments | tags: Analysis, Bill, CBO, healthcare, Healthcare Reform, House, Obama, Public Plan, reform, Representatives | posted in Current Events, Health, Politics
Jul
8
2009

While politicians hammer out the details of healthcare reform legislation and debate some of the more “controversial issues” (which I put in quotes because they shouldn’t be as controversial as they are) surrounding healthcare reform, the administration is busy doing things that everyone should be able to happy about. Of course good news doesn’t draw as many readers as doom and gloom so its easy to miss some of these developments if you’re just clicking through a news website or taking in a bit of CNN, so I’ve highlighted a couple of the recent positive developments after the jump. Continue reading
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1 comment | tags: Congress, Deficit, healthcare, hospitals, Obama, pharmaceutical industry, reform | posted in Politics
Jun
27
2009

Well its been a while hasn’t it? Sorry about that. I’ll be posting with more regularity in the future. As many of you know I recently got back from an AMA conference in Chicago and it was a surprisingly eye-opening experience in a lot of different ways. There’s no way I can cover it all in one post so I’m just going to talk about one of the issues that was discussed at this meeting. There is a now-famous article that was recently published in the New Yorker entitled “The Cost Conundrum” which analyzes some of the drivers of high healthcare costs.
Everybody was talking about this article. The President of the AMA called the article a “watershed moment” for healthcare reform. Supposedly President Obama had everyone on his healthcare team read the article. So if you have even a passing interest in healthcare policy and reform, you should probably read it too. So for your enjoyment I’ve posted a link to it after the jump.
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3 comments | tags: capitation, costs, healthcare, kaiser, new yorker, Obama, reform, savings, Waste | posted in Current Events, Health, Politics
May
16
2009

Breaking News! Tomorrow morning Pres. Obama is expected to announce that he has chosen John Huntsman Jr., governor of Utah and moderate republican as the new ambassador to China. And sources say Governor Huntsman has accepted the ambassador position. He learned Chinese while serving a mission for the church in Taiwan and he has an adopted daughter from China. He also served as Ambassador to Singapore under President George H.W. Bush and worked in the Reagan Whitehouse. I’ve always liked Gov. Huntsman and he seems to be extremely qualified for this position. And I’m pleased to see Pres. Obama reaching across party lines to appoint more Republicans to important positions. The full article follows:
SALT LAKE CITY — President Barack Obama intends to name Utah’s Republican Gov. Jon Huntsman, seen by many as a potential GOP presidential contender, to be ambassador to China, a source close to the governor said Friday night.
The popular moderate governor has accepted the appointment, said the source, who would speak only on condition of anonymity ahead of a White House announcement expected Saturday. Repeated messages to Huntsman’s spokeswoman and other staffers went unreturned Friday. The White House would not confirm the nomination.
Huntsman, a two-term governor, is fluent in Mandarin Chinese from his days as a Mormon missionary in Taiwan. One of his seven children, Gracie Mei, was adopted from China in 1999 after she was abandoned in a vegetable market. He made headlines recently for encouraging the Republican Party to swing in a more moderate direction if it wanted to bounce back from the 2008 elections, angering some conservatives. Continue reading
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5 comments | tags: Ambassador China, Bipartisan, Bipartisanship, Governor Huntsman, John Huntsman, Mormon, Obama, Republican | posted in Current Events, Politics, Religion
Apr
27
2009

One of my absolute favorite political sites on the internet, Politifact.com, recently won a pulitzer prize! They were apparently the first exclusively online news organization to do so. And they really, really deserve it. They do top-notch fact-checking of most of the controversial statements being thrown around by public officials. They’re also running an “Obameter” where they keep track of over 500 of Obama’s campaign promises and record which ones are kept and which are broken, with comprehensive explanations for each.
Every time I start to get depressed about the sorry state of investigative journalism, the decline of objective reporting and rise of partisan pontificating, or the way our news media has devolved into a megaphone for the most apocalyptic, opinionated, and insane of our politicians and pundits, I surf on over to politifact.com and bask in their worship of sweet, sweet facts, and it gives me hope. Seriously, if you have even a passing interest in politics, you should probably bookmark politifact and check it a couple times a week. They only update every once in a while. If they expanded into a full news agency I’d probably make them my number one source of political information. Another fantastic, and equally objective, site is Factcheck.Org. I know I’ve promoted them both before but seriously, check them out:
www.PolitiFact.com
www.FactCheck.org
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no comments | tags: FactCheck.org, Journalism, Obama, Objective, Politicians, Politifact, Politifact.com, Pulitzer, Pundits | posted in Current Events, Politics
Apr
11
2009

Thanks to Joel for this tip. It turns out my old stake president from my Glenwood days, Larry Echohawk, just got asked to head up the bureau of indian affairs! Here’s a portion of the Salt Lake Tribune article about it:
President Barack Obama on Friday picked Brigham Young University law professor Larry EchoHawk to lead the Bureau of Indian Affairs, making him the first high-profile Mormon and first Utahn to join the administration’s senior ranks.
EchoHawk, a member of the Pawnee Nation of Oklahoma, has lived and worked throughout the West. He made history in 1990 as the first American Indian elected to statewide office when he won Idaho’s attorney general race. After a failed bid for Gem State governor, EchoHawk, a Democrat, relocated to Utah, where he started teaching courses on criminal law and federal Indian law at BYU.
“Larry EchoHawk has the right leadership abilities, legislative experience and legal expertise,” Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said, “to bring about the transformative improvements we all seek for Indian country.”
The rest of the article can be found after the jump. Continue reading
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2 comments | tags: Administration, Indian, Larry Echohawk, Obama, Stake President | posted in Current Events, Politics, Religion
Apr
1
2009

I’m finally catching up on articles I’ve been meaning to write for a long time and this one comes from a New York Times Op-Ed piece which was written last June but which I discovered more recently. It can be found here. It describes a phenomenon known as “source amnesia”, which serves as yet another example of how none of us are nearly as smart, objective, or discerning as we think we are.
Most basically, source amnesia is just the idea that its much easier to remember a particular nugget of information, than it is to remember the context or source of that information, especially if its information we use, think about, or hear often. For example Continue reading
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4 comments | tags: Brain-washing, Lies, Muslim, Obama, Pundits, Rumors, Source Amnesia | posted in Philosophy, Politics