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Bush Signs $400 Billion Prescription Drug Program Into Law: Bush Is A BIG GOVERNMENT Republican
December.8,2003

Posted on 12/08/2003 8:47:55 AM PST by Reagan Man

President Bush has made it official. By signing into law the new Medicare Prescription Drug Program, the President has given his approval to the largest increase in spending by the federal government since Medicare itself was created and signed into law by the liberal Democrat, President Johnson in 1965. The President has given his okay to raise government expenditures by $400 billion over the next ten years. We all know spending on this Medicare PDP, will not stop at $400 billion. As with all government entitlement programs, the costs to run this new addition to the federal bureaucracy will double or triple over the next ten years.

Bush does win on the politics, but its not a political victory for conservatives or for the GOP in the long term. Medicare is not on the road to privatization.

Throwing money at problems is the way liberal Democrats solved things throughout the 1960`s and 1970`s. That's how the governments entitlement programs grew to over 60% of the current budgetary expenditures. Most traditional conservatives don't oppose assisting the elderly poor, the seriously handicapped or America's military veterans. However, this addition to Medicare, is a boondoggle for government, the drug companies and financially secure seniors.

In the 2000 election campaign, candidate Bush ran on reforming Medicare. His plan called for $158 billion program that assisted the elderly poor, while injecting a much needed modernization phase into the system. What the President signed into law today, was not what he ran on in 2000. President Bush has proven, he is a BIG GOVERNMENT Republican.

The Hertitage Foundation did a solid analysis on the new Mediacre-PDP. You can find it here, Why Medicare Expansion Threatens the Bush Tax Cuts and Undermines Fundamental Tax Reform . Robert Samualson wrote a good piece on the subject. Medicare as Pork Barrel. Here's another good article, Analysts: Medicare Drug Costs Will Rise.

A snippet from the Heritage Foundation analysis.

The Medicare prescription drug proposal is bad health policy, exacerbating the flaws in a system that has almost no market-based incentives to improve service and control costs. But the House and Senate bills also will undermine sound tax and economic policy in several ways. Specifically:

The size of government will expand

A new entitlement will take America even faster down the road that has caused so much economic damage in Europe's welfare states. Indeed, the unfunded Medicare expansion is essentially a huge future tax increase since the population of Medicare recipients will nearly double once the baby-boom generation retires. Ironically, just when some European countries are waking up to the problem and restraining unfunded entitlements, America will be creating an enormous new entitlement.

President Bush's recently enacted tax cut and tax reform package will likely be the first casualty

Because of arcane budget rules, the bulk of the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts expire at the end of 2008 and the end of 2010. Extending these tax cuts or making them permanent will be enormously difficult in an environment of skyrocketing spending for government-provided health care. Indeed, the creation of a prescription drug entitlement may be akin to repealing the Bush tax cuts.

By adding to the deficit, the huge new unfunded liability will likely be the death knell of further tax relief and fundamental tax reform

A prescription drug benefit means bigger deficits--a problem that will intensify as the baby boomers start to retire in the next decade. Once these demographic and fiscal variables become part of the budget forecast, lawmakers seeking to cut taxes and create a simple and fair tax code, such as the flat tax, in all probability will face insurmountable political obstacles.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: healthcare; medicare; prescriptionswindle
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To: Valentine_W
I have no idea



LOL.......... Understandable.

101 posted on 12/08/2003 12:34:31 PM PST by deport
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To: Valentine_W
Don't be fooled. Any Republican/conservative would have a similar if not more fitting policy on the war on terrorism. From a more conservative administration, we will see our borders being protected, Saudi Arabia exposed for the fruad they are, and curtailing immigration from Islamic countries. The goal is how do we get a more conservative person in the White House.
102 posted on 12/08/2003 12:36:29 PM PST by FirstPrinciple
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To: Joe_October
The Greatest Looting Generation simply refuses to ask their children to cover the difference and prefer to steal from the young using the government as an agent of theft.

This bill is nothing compared to the $200 billion debt financed adventure in Iraq to build a welfare state, but it an enemy of civil society.

103 posted on 12/08/2003 12:36:36 PM PST by JohnGalt ("Nothing happened on 9/11 to make the federal government more competent.")
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To: Valentine_W
Well, I wont. Not again. Fool me once...
104 posted on 12/08/2003 12:37:54 PM PST by FirstPrinciple
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To: FirstPrinciple
This is a compromise between means-tested and universal.

1. It is voluntary.
2. Seniors who opt for this program and who have income above a certain level will pay higher premiums.
3. You can have either Medi-gap insurance or the Medicare insurance, not both. Many people, like my mother, will remain with their private coverage.

105 posted on 12/08/2003 12:37:59 PM PST by Miss Marple
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To: Joe_October
The real facts are that people who get prescription medicine need less surgury and hospital care.

Can you show me the facts? I'm not at all convinced that the availability of drugs does anything more than defer surgery until a later time. Of course, I've seen it referenced as "fact" so often I'm sure there must be plenty of studies out there.

Of course, that's to say nothing of the fact that drugs are readily available to seniors should they need them under the current system. This new entitlement is filling a nonexistant gap.

106 posted on 12/08/2003 12:39:16 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: FirstPrinciple
I understand your concern for protecting our borders, at the same time, 99.9 % of those who cross the border are not a national security threat. At the same time, I do not believe it would hurt the Administration to step up on more border security.

As for Saudi Arabia, I would like to believe that they are still a solid ally. With the royal family being as large as it is, it seems that there are bound to be a couple duds in the bunch. At the same time, I wouldn't be surprised if the Royal Family is unofficially funneling money to terrorist organizations in their country in order to squelch dissent, or an all-out revolt within their kingdom.

107 posted on 12/08/2003 12:42:15 PM PST by Valentine_W
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Comment #108 Removed by Moderator

To: Miss Marple
"3. You can have either Medi-gap insurance or the Medicare insurance, not both. Many people, like my mother, will remain with their private coverage."

How many private companies do you think will just get rid of their prescription programs because the federal government already has one available?

109 posted on 12/08/2003 12:45:03 PM PST by Valentine_W
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To: Valentine_W
How many private companies do you think will just get rid of their prescription programs because the federal government already has one available?

Private companies with better benefits than those available through this new PDP. Which will start the refrain among those who lost better coverage for more comprehensive benefits under this system. And who will oppose them?

110 posted on 12/08/2003 12:46:41 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: Trust but Verify
I tend to agree. There are many loathsome parts to this bill, especially the money for illegals. But it is a start. If Bush and the Republicans presented anything more sweeping, it would have been kicked to the curb by Dems, period. I, too, believe this is just a 'foot-in-the-door' type of win. Round two will be a blast.

The same 'start small' approach happened with vouchers and the 'No Child Left Behind Act', if I'm not mistaken. I'd look for the same thing to happen with partial privatization of social security next.

111 posted on 12/08/2003 12:47:55 PM PST by rintense
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To: Valentine_W
There are incentives in the bill to keep private companies insuring their people.

My mother is a retired teacher. Her coverage is part of the contract negotiated by the State Teachers Association. It is better coverage than the Medicare coverage, and the current teachers will not give it up in negotiations. Many people are covered through unions, pension plans, etc. I doubt those people will be switching to the government program.

112 posted on 12/08/2003 12:48:46 PM PST by Miss Marple
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To: JohnGalt
The Greatest Looting Generation simply refuses to ask their children to cover the difference and prefer to steal from the young using the government as an agent of theft.

I'm thinking that since we can't beat the big government, we might as well join the big ripoff.

I once worked for a company that delivery medical equipment/services to Medicare patients. The company owner told me that suckling Medicare's udder is more profitable than drug-dealing.

Now that Medicare will join the prescription drug racket, my former boss will have to refine his previous statement. Providing Medicare's drugs will be as profitable as any other drug dealing scheme.

And it's legal. The gubment will publish a list of how much the drug companies will be able to overcharge seniors,("fair" market prices), and this entitlement will become huge.

113 posted on 12/08/2003 12:49:37 PM PST by george wythe
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To: Miss Marple
I wasn't referring to federal/state employees.
114 posted on 12/08/2003 12:52:28 PM PST by Valentine_W
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To: rintense
I do not think the No Child Left Behind Act has even passed through Congress yet.
115 posted on 12/08/2003 12:53:10 PM PST by Valentine_W
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To: Reagan Man
For a couple of billion, maybe less, NAH!, we could investigate the drug industry, and spend even more money to find why Canada gets a discount but not us... with the truth being, even Canada is getting ripped off...
116 posted on 12/08/2003 12:55:57 PM PST by hosepipe
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To: Valentine_W
It was signed into law January 8, 2002.
117 posted on 12/08/2003 12:56:29 PM PST by rintense
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To: rintense
Thanks for the clarification.
118 posted on 12/08/2003 12:58:33 PM PST by Valentine_W
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To: Valentine_W; rintense
Not to get off topic, but the No Child Left Behind Act has its own problems. I know some top-notch educators, and their opinion of the bill is that it's totally infeasible and little more than a political ploy.
119 posted on 12/08/2003 12:59:40 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: FirstPrinciple
On a separate subject, what do you think of Podesta's new think-tank?
120 posted on 12/08/2003 1:00:49 PM PST by Valentine_W
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