Posted on 11/15/2014 5:50:15 AM PST by Kid Shelleen
--SNIP-- Gruber said during an event at Simmons College in February. Ted Kennedy had managed to figure out a way to rip off the federal Medicaid program to the tune of about $500 million a year through a series of strange manipulations.
Here was Mitt Romneys dirty little secret that we dont like to talk about in Massachusetts, which is the way we passed our law is the federal government paid for it.
George Bush said why am I sending this Democrat $500 million a year, Im taking it back, Gruber explained, adding Mitt Romney to his credit went to George Bush and said, look, can we keep the money if we use it for universal coverage. And Bush to his credit said yes.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
I would even offer to print my own money, thereby saving the government the trouble but somehow they have this idea that when I do the same thing the government does it is wrong when I do it. Maybe I just don’t understand the system, or maybe I do.
bump
No need for a rope factory, here in Carolina we have wild muscadine grape vines that are strong enough to hang horses. Just go out in the woods and cut a few.
Two percent is probably high. I suspect that no more than two percent of Americans would be in favor of returning to constitutional government if they understood exactly what that would mean. The vast majority of federal government activity is unconstitutional, it has been ruled to be constitutional by judges who ignore the actual meaning of the words and pretend to find some other meaning in them.
Some people will say that I exaggerate but anyone who thinks about it should realize that if all this stuff is within the meaning of the commerce clause and or general welfare clause as is so often claimed it means that our forefathers were a bunch of dummies who spent countless hours haggling, writing and rewriting a constitution and then threw in a couple of clauses which say that all the rest is meaningless and you can just do whatever suits you. I think they were a lot smarter than that and I think we have a bench full of judges who are crooked and shameless.
WALLACE: Governor, I want to pick up on this, because we got a lot of e-mail from conservatives this week who said that you are the wrong man to be making that point, and they pointed specifically to your role in passing health care reform in Massachusetts. In your book, you criticize actions by your successor, Governor Patrick, but then you write this, and let's put it up on the screen. "Even with these added costs and policy choices by the legislature and the new governor, the plan is working."
But let's look at the record. According to the Wall Street Journal, average Massachusetts health care premiums are now the highest in the nation. Per capita health spending is 27 percent higher than the national average. And fiscal 2010 costs are $47 million over budget. Is that your idea of, quote, "the plan is working?"
ROMNEY: Well, let's go back and look at the facts. First of all, Massachusetts had very high health care costs before our plan was put in place. And what our plan did was focus on getting everybody insured. And that it's done. Some 98 percent of Massachusetts individuals have insurance.
And since the plan has been put in place, premiums for those individuals have risen at 5 percent per year, pretty substantially below the kind of numbers you're seeing across the nation.
And I think you could also recognize that we have work to do, which is to bring down the cost of health care throughout the country. That's a big issue, something we tackled for the people who were uninsured in the past because we got premiums down for them. But getting premiums down for the entire population is now the next responsibility.
Let me tell you, there's a big difference between what we did and what President Obama is doing. What we did, I think, is the ultimate conservative plan. We said people have to take responsibility for getting insurance, if they can afford it, or paying their own way. No more free- riders. And we solved this at the state level not a federal plan, but a state plan.
This is a federalist nation. States should be able to solve their own problems. We didn't raise taxes. We did not at the same time cut Medicare and expect our seniors to have to pay for all this. We didn't do what President Obama's doing, which is putting controls on our system of premiums for private insurance companies.
And let me just tell you, I think our plan is working well. And perhaps the best thing I can say about it is that it is saving lives. It is the ultimate pro-life effort, if you will, because people who otherwise could have lost their lives are now able to get the kind of care that they deserve.
WALLACE: But, Governor, let's look at the plan that you signed into law in Massachusetts in 2006. You have an individual mandate. You have an employer mandate. You have subsidiaries for some of the uninsured. You set minimum insurance coverage standards.
Again, a lot of e-mails I got from conservatives say make this point. They say it sure sounds an awful lot like "Obama-care."
ROMNEY: A big difference a state plan versus a federal plan. No new taxes, unlike his plan. No cut in Medicare, unlike his plan. And no controls over insurance premiums, price controls, cost controls like his plan. So very, very different in that regard.
It's the difference between a racehorse and a donkey, if you will, so they both have four legs, but one works pretty well and the other's not working and would not work at all.
And a couple other things. The facts of those features are not exactly right. The plan this year, for instance, is $80 million below budget. It's coming in very much within the range that was forecast when the legislature and I put this together.
And there were some features that I didn't like that the legislature put in place, for instance the provision that said that insurance companies are told what kinds of coverages have to be included. That's something I vetoed. They overrode it. That's the nature of a of a bipartisan process.
And let me tell you one thing I'm also proud of. We were able to do in our state something which is not being done in Washington. And that is we worked on a bipartisan basis. Republicans and Democrats came together. And we worked out something which we thought was pretty good and, on my view, a step forward.
But you know, the states were designed to be the laboratories of democracy. This is an example where people can take a good look, see what they like, what they don't like.
But the idea of taking what we did and applying something entirely different to the entire nation is not the right approach. And I think that's why President Obama is seeing the kind of resistance that he's experiencing.
WALLACE: Yeah, but I want to pursue this, if I may, Governor. The libertarian, and certainly the somewhat conservative, Cato Institute says that your plan in Massachusetts is a mirror a mirror plan of "Obama- care." They say it's quite right you didn't raise taxes, but they say, in fact, you got millions of dollars from the federal government to finance your plan. [emphasis added]
ROMNEY: Well, what we have is a plan which is paid for half by the state and half by the federal government. The cost is about 1.5 percent of the state budget.
And the federal dollars we received were federal dollars that we were entitled to through a program called DISH, the disproportionate share program. Federal funds had been applied to Massachusetts, just like to other states, for the care of those that were uninsured.
We said, "Let's take that money that's been going to hospitals that are caring for the uninsured and instead help people buy their own private insurance." No government insurance. No government option, if you will.
[Source: Transcript: Mitt Romney on 'FNS'
FNS program broadcast on March 7, 2010]
Burn on big Teddy,burn on.Lard and alcohol,what a combo.
Gawd D.C. gets more like the Mafia every day.
Like Mexico.
This reminds me of the debate for light rail in Honolulu (I live half the year in Kailua). The argument a truly idiotic proponent was that the project will not cost the taxpayers a dime because the government will pay for it.
Worse
McClaughry, who wrote the comment in an op-ed weeks before the 2011 committee meeting, told Vermont Watchdog he did not know Gruber made the condescending insult. However, he was aware of other videos discovered this week in which Gruber boasted of writing deceptive policies to trick stupid American voters.
No one should trust this man. Based on the rest of the stuff thats come out on the videos, nobody can trust this guy. He has no use for transparency, he thinks people are stupid, and hell do anything to get this thing through and pocket his $400,000. Thats not in the interest of the people of Vermont, McClaughry said.
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2014/11/private_obamacare_investigator_says_more_bad_news_coming.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
Did your younger cousin open your eyes wide enough to see the truth or did it take a while?
About ten seconds for it to sink in! I must be getting old.
Not a simple Republican senator or Congressman voted in favor of that monstrosity called Obamacare. It must be make perfectly clear that democrat Phd com man Gruber, called stupid not all the American voters, but just the democrat voters that put the Liar in Chief in the White House, in spite of his Marxist anti-American back ground, and all the Democrats legislators co-conspirators with the president and the MSM in the greatest deception against the American people in the history of the United States.
Well stated, I cannot add even a letter to make it any better.
Like father like son. Both were crooks and charlatans. Both were gigolos!
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