Posted on 01/25/2006 6:08:36 AM PST by Gopher Broke
Hey Hitlery, you stupid B*tch, how about getting your pal Teddy the Swimmer to give back the 22 BILLION - That's right, I said BILLION, wasted on the THE BIG (leaky) DIG in Boston! What a scam!
Look into a mirror and point when you say that, Senator. There is your problem.
Teddy = The big dig pig
Special interest? Your hubby traded blowjobs for interviews at Revlon and the United Nations.
Appears the American people aren't buying her load of BS.....
http://exposingtheleft.blogspot.com/2006/01/51-say-no-to-prez-hill.html
How sweet..
And how about giving back the unused $2 billion in federal 911 funds now proposed for a Manhattan-to-Kennedy rail link???
http://www.qgazette.com/news/2005/1123/Front_page/
Well, it all started with this severe itching in the rectal area...
Try reading her email while imagining Hillary's flat, nasal, droning voice actually saying the words - your head will explode before the third sentence.
I join you in prayer for our country.
Oh man, thanks for an early laugh. That really tickled me. You need to submit that to her, with some elaboration.
So quit beatin' up the insurance companies, Clinton.
"Republicans are nothing if not consistent in putting their special-interest friends first. "
You are voting against a highly qualified judge nominated for the USSC, why? Because you put your special-interest friends first. Talk about pot calling the kettle black.
She's so full of bovine excrement:
WASHINGTON - Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday she and a House Democrat plan to introduce a bill to counter what she called a secret, "corrupt" Republican move to transfer Medicare funds to insurance companies.
The New York Democrat and Rep. John Dingell of Michigan denounced a reported attempt by House and Senate Republicans to save the insurance industry more than $22 billion over 10 years.
Clinton called the deal "an example of the culture of corruption in passing legislation in the dead of night."
The deal, Clinton and Dingell said, was reached in a closed-door House-Senate conference on a budget bill last month. A Senate bill would have lowered reimbursements, which are really overpayments by Medicare private health maintenance organizations, by $26 billion.
The overpayments result from HMOs billing Medicare the highest possible price allowed for a medical service, a process known as upcoding.
Clinton explained that HMOs have been allowed to bill Medicare for treating kidney failure, for example, when a patient actually has less expensive diabetes.
Clinton and Dingell said that in the conference, which excluded the Democrats, Republican conferees yielded to pressure from the insurance industry. The Congressional Budget Office said the conference reduced projected payouts by only $4 billion.
"This Republican effort to protect a ($22 billion) windfall for insurance companies came as Republicans in Congress drastically cut Medicaid benefits and took away medically necessary care for children and seniors to offset their budget," Clinton said in a conference call with Dingell.
"I just came back from a trip to pharmacies in Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse," Clinton said, "and I can tell you that this money ought to go to reimburse pharmacies and reimburse the states" for problems in dealing with the new Medicare prescription program.
The conference bill will come up for final passage in the House next Wednesday. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, who took part in the closed-door conference, said he also opposed "giveaways" to the insurance industry, but he called the budget office's estimates "ridiculous."
http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20060125/1058567.asp
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