Posted on 07/21/2009 11:34:19 AM PDT by Petro
Abraham Lincoln once said this of "trust":
"If you once forfeit the confidence of your fellow citizens, you can never regain their respect and esteem.
(Click on link to original article to see Politico Video)
(Excerpt) Read more at cuttingthroughthefog.blogspot.com ...
That did it forever, as far as a I am concerned. NO GOOD MAN would EVER do this to his nation. He was saying, in essense, "I am BETTER than you. My family is more IMPORTANT than the rest of American families."
Same with the congress.
Look at those dolts up there one the hill...........DO ANY OF THEM LOOK OR SOUND LIKE SOMEONE THAT YOU WOULD WANT DETERMINING THE COURSE OF HEALTH CARE FOR ONE OF YOUR FAMILY MEMBERS or YOURSELF? Hardly.
-------John Adams
Imagine that, I wonder why.
can’t lose what you never had.
We can’t let up now. We have to keep the pressure on. Expose this fraud every chance you have. Do NOT back down. There is no temporary breather. This is war. We must fight 24/7 for our country, our liberties, and our Constitutional rights.
“The problem ain’t so much that you lied to me, the problem is that I can’t ever trust you again.”
I keep wondering if, when the sheeple figure out these bastards are lying bastards, they will finally begin to wonder what else they have been lying about.
Bump!
(How can you lose what you never had?)
Let it Be so
Can you give a link or source for this? I had not heard this particular anecdote.
if his only response is to throw self-pitying tirades on television, he is already toast
Assuming you mean the Lincoln quote, here’s one link.
http://thinkexist.com/quotation/if_you_once_forfeit_the_confidence_of_your_fellow/145498.html
Sorry, I wasn’t clear. No, I was interested in the Obama quote—when and where did he answer a the question about whether he and his family would be under the same healthcare program and said, “No, I want the best care for my family.”
Did he mean “No, I don’t want my family under the nationalized system proposed in Congress” or was he saying that he wanted the best care for them and (since he has to say this) since the new program is the best, “no, I don’t want them excluded from it, I want the best”
I find it very hard to believe that he would come out and say that he wanted his family outside the system Congress is proposing because he wanted the best for his family and therefore the program he’s betting his whole political future on is not the best care possible?? If he did say this, it’s wildly counterintuitive, so I’d like to know when and where he said it.
It’s not that I don’t doubt that he thinks this way—that he wouldn’t want his children under the nationalized health care system any more than Congress is going to be under it. I don’t doubt for a moment that he thinks this. But I find it hard to believe he said it.
So if you can give a link or other source, it’d be a huge propaganda plus for our side.
He never says anything substantive unless it’s mixed in with a sea of unrelated BS.
“And youre absolutely right that, if its my family member, its my wife, if its my children, if its my grandmother, I always want them to get the very best care. But heres the problem that we have in our current health care system, is that there is a whole bunch of care thats being provided that every study, every bit of evidence that we have indicates may not be making us healthier.”
So, he basically says that he won’t be participating because he wants the very best care, but actually is somewhere in between that and not answering the question at all.
It’s much more damning later on when he tells the woman that her mother won’t get a pacemaker and that we can’t be deciding these things by someone’s ‘spirit’. Maybe instead of a pacemaker, she should take a painkiller. (He actually says this)
Here’s that portion:
JANE STURM: Caregiver for 105-year-old mother: Yes.
SAWYER: Hazel Homer (ph), 100 years old and she wanted
STURM: Shes 105 now. Over 105. But at 100 the doctor had said to her, I cant do anything more unless you have a pacemaker. I said, go for it. She said, go for it. But the arrhythmia specialist said, no, its too old. Her doctor said, Im going to make an appointment, because a picture is worth a thousand words. And when the other arrhythmia specialist saw her, saw her joy of life and so on, he said, Im going for it. So that was over five years ago. My question to you is, outside the medical criteria for prolonging life for somebody elderly, is there any consideration that can be given for a certain spirit, a certain joy of living, quality of life? Or is it just a medical cutoff at a certain age?
OBAMA: Well, first of all, I want to meet your mom.
(LAUGHTER)
OBAMA: And I want to find out whats shes eating.
(LAUGHTER)
OBAMA: But, look, the first thing for all of us to understand is that we actually have some some choices to make about how we want to deal with our own end-of-life care. And thats one of the things I think that we can all promote, and this is not a big government program. This is something that each of us individually can do, is to draft and sign a living will so that were very clear with our doctors about how we want to approach the end of life. I dont think that we can make judgments based on peoples spirit. That would be a pretty subjective decision to be making. I think we have to have rules that say that we are going to provide good, quality care for all people.
GIBSON: But the money may not have been there for her pacemaker or for your grandmothers hip replacement.
OBAMA: Well, and and thats absolutely true. And end-of-life care is one of the most difficult sets of decisions that were going to have to make. I dont want bureaucracies making those decisions, but understand that those decisions are already being made in one way or another. If theyre not being made under Medicare and Medicaid, theyre being made by private insurers. We dont always make those decisions explicitly. We often make those decisions by just letting people run out of money or making the deductibles so high or the out-of-pocket expenses so onerous that they just cant afford the care. And all were suggesting and were not going to solve every difficult problem in terms of end-of-life care. A lot of that is going to have to be, we as a culture and as a society starting to make better decisions within our own families and for ourselves. But what we can do is make sure that at least some of the waste that exists in the system thats not making anybodys mom better, that is loading up on additional tests or additional drugs that the evidence shows is not necessarily going to improve care, that at least we can let doctors know and your mom know that, you know what? Maybe this isnt going to help. Maybe youre better off not having the surgery, but taking the painkiller. And those kinds of decisions between doctors and patients, and making sure that our incentives are not preventing those good decision, and that that doctors and hospitals all are aligned for patient care, thats something we can achieve. Were not going to solve every single one of these very difficult decisions at end of life, and ultimately thats going to be between physicians and patients. But we can make real progress on this front if we work a little bit harder.
SAWYER: Is that a conversation you could have had with your mom?
STURM: What I wanted to say was, that the arrhythmia specialist who put the pacemaker in said that it cost Medicare $30,000 at the time. She had been in the hospital two or three times a month before that, so lets say 20, 30 times being in the hospital, maybe going to rehab, the cost was so much more. And thats what would have happened had she not had the pacemaker.
OBAMA: Well, and thats a good example of where if weve got experts who are looking at this, and they are advising doctors across the board that the pacemaker may ultimately save money, then we potentially could have done that faster. I mean, this can cut both ways. The point is, we want to use science, we want doctors and and medical experts to be making decisions that all too often right now are driven by skewed policies, by out-dated means of reimbursement, or by insurance companies. And everybodys families, I think, have had to experience this in one way or another. Thats thats the reason we need reform right now.
The whole transcript is here if you want to dig through it:
http://criticalpolitics.wordpress.com/
I will certainly try to find it..hope it was in the title of a thread here on FR.
Thanks. Verrrrrrrrry interesting.
“And youre absolutely right that, if its my family member, its my wife, if its my children, if its my grandmother, I always want them to get the very best care. But heres the problem that we have in our current health care system, is that there is a whole bunch of care thats being provided that every study, every bit of evidence that we have indicates may not be making us healthier.”
In this part he’s speaking in hypotheticals—”my family member” means “this is what anyone would want if it was that person’s family needing health care.” This doesn’t seem to be what Petro was referring to. Perhaps it’s elsewhere in the transcript.
But you are right about rambling B.S.
Sorry, my initial question was directed to Republic who said Obama lost credibility for him/her when Obama said “No, I want the best health care for my family” or something like that. Petro responded, so I responded to Petro rather than Republic. And perfect rovian then offered the long transcript which is interesting but may or may not offer a smoking gun.
My question remains—did Obama ever explicitly say that his family won’t be covered under the health care plan he’s staking his whole political future on?
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