Posted on 04/12/2011 3:00:12 AM PDT by Sub-Driver
Chris Matthews: Paul Ryan's Medicare Plan Will 'Kill Half the People Who Watch My Show' By Noel Sheppard Created 04/11/2011 - 8:35pm
By Noel Sheppard | April 11, 2011 | 20:35
MSNBC's Chris Matthews on Monday spent much of show scaring viewers about Congressman Paul Ryan's (R-Wisc.) recently released budget proposal.
So apoplectic was the "Hardball" host that he told liberal guests Howard Fineman and Richard Wolffe that Ryan's Medicare reform pland "is going to kill half the people who watch this show" (video follows with transcript and commentary):
HOWARD FINEMAN, MSNBC POLITICAL ANALYST: The good thing for the president is the Paul Ryan Medicare plan, because it makes people angry. And, first of all, it scares seniors.
CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Yes. Well, it should.
FINEMAN: Yes, and it should. But, at the same time, it exempts 55 and over, so its going to really annoy younger people who are going to at some point get -- supposed to get the Medicare benefits -- 40 to 55...
If it exempts people 55 and over, why should it scare seniors? Exempts means they're not impacted by this whatsoever. Why should anybody be scared by something that doesn't impact them?
People are encouraged to remember this as Matthews either doesn't understand it, or is an extremely dishonest person:
MATTHEWS: Howard, you know -- youre close to me in age. Let me just point this out.
FINEMAN: Yes. Right.
MATTHEWS: Most people who follow the news and watch the newspapers every day and watch television shows like this on FOX or this network, MSNBC, or anywhere, on CNN, they -- those most attuned to this debate over the budget are either retired or close to it.
FINEMAN: Yes.
MATTHEWS: They are very sensitive to the fact that they have planned in their retirement that their medical costs will be covered by their Medicare plan. They dont have to save $20 million so they can pay for their medical expenses when they get older, right, which are going to get more costly as they get older.
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: The federal government promised that back in the 60s, that they would take care of people who have worked their whole life for their medical costs.Now the Republicans are saying, no, no, were not going to do that anymore.
FINEMAN: I totally agree. My only point was, in addition to scaring everybody for those very valid reasons...
For the record, Matthews turned 65 last December. This means he is already eligible for Medicare and would not be impacted by Ryan's plan. I couldn't find Fineman's birthday, but as he graduated high school in 1966, he's probably 62 or 63 making him also exempt from Ryan's plan.
As such, there's absolutely no reason for them to be scared that their Medicare benefits are at all at risk by what the Wisconsin Congressman has proposed, and no one 55 or over should be either.
Yet, in the ensuing minutes, Matthews and his guests were actually going to wonder why seniors don't understand this:
MATTHEWS: Right.
FINEMAN: ... its not going to win points among younger people below 55 either.
MATTHEWS: Why not?
FINEMAN: Because theyre going to turn it into the plan where you only get a certain amount of money.
MATTHEWS: Yes.
FINEMAN: In other words, all the changes are going to be for those younger people. So theyre the ones who ultimately will get screwed.
MATTHEWS: Yes. Heres your Borders book $10 gift certificate thats going to pay for your million dollar health care costs. Its a joke.
(CROSSTALK)
RICHARD WOLFFE, MSNBC POLITICAL ANALYST: Right. But heres the perverse thing. For a start, the age exemption didnt work for Bush when it came to Social Security.
MATTHEWS: It went nowhere.
WOLFFE: So they know thats political...
MATTHEWS: Why? Because people dont hear this?
FINEMAN: They dont hear it. They dont hear it.
WOLFFE: They dont hear it.
Indeed. They don't hear it, because people like this misrepresent it. If Matthews, Fineman, and Wolffe all made it clear that Ryan's bill doesn't impact anyone 55 and older, retirees and soon-to-be retirees wouldn't be afraid of it.
Instead, Matthews ignorantly or dishonestly claimed: "The federal government promised that back in the 60s, that they would take care of people who have worked their whole life for their medical costs. Now the Republicans are saying, no, no, were not going to do that anymore."
And Fineman responded, "I totally agree. My only point was, in addition to scaring everybody for those very valid reasons, its not going to win points among younger people below 55 either."
And these so-called journalists why the exemption age of 55 didn't work for Bush when he tried to reform Social Security in 2005, and why it's going to be problematic for Ryan's Medicare reform plan. It's because shills like these are intentionally trying to scare and confuse the public.
But the best was still to come:
WOLFFE: But thats a political opportunity that, perversely, this White House is not going to leap on right now. There may be lots of people in the Senate on the Democrats side who say, lets use it as a political football, but this president...
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: Well, theyre saving it for November.
WOLFFE: This president -- no, no. The president is going to say, if theres a deal out there, lets do it, but the deal has to be reasonable; the deal has to include taxes. Whats unreasonable...
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: This is smart. In other words, dont...
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: Dont let it be dead on arrival.
WOLFFE: No.
MATTHEWS: Let the Republican sit out there, sit out there, as the basis for a compromise.
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: Theyre that smart? Theyre that smart?
(CROSSTALK)
WOLFFE: Yes.
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: Theyre that smart?
(CROSSTALK)
WOLFFE: They are smart enough to play that game, but theyre going to say, if you are serious about deficits, you cannot leave taxes off the table.
MATTHEWS: OK.
FINEMAN: Yes. He...
MATTHEWS: Will -- will that ever sell with the country? Will the Congress ever adopt a combination of some modification or cost-cutting, which we know has to come into place, somehow squeeze the costs of Medicare -- medical costs, and a tax increase for people who can afford it, as a -- as a more democratic, a more fair way to deal with this problem? Will they get that through and signed by the president, or is that just a posture?
HOWARD FINEMAN, MSNBC POLITICAL ANALYST: Well, I think its a possibility but theyll be glad to talk about it for the next few months. The one thing the president doesnt want to do is talk about tax increases in isolation.
MATTHEWS: Fair enough. Im with you.
FINEMAN: As Richard was saying, youve got -- you cant -- that wont work for Democrats, even if youre just going to tax rich people. You have to put it in the context of a plan.
MATTHEWS: OK. So, guys are so smart. Im with the smart people here.
FINEMAN: Right.
MATTHEWS: So, the plan is the president says, look, let them offer a big slash in Medicare, which is going to kill half the people who watch this show.
So the reform package for Medicare in Ryan's budget will kill half of the people who watch "Hardball."
And this is sadly what passes for journalism at MSNBC.
Gee, how did people live to a ripe old age before Medicare?
Matthews is engaged in completely fact free speculation. Does he have any evidence whatsoever to support the assertion that Medicare actually increases longevity? I am not an euthanasia advocate, at all, but I recall that the nuns taught us that while suicide was a mortal sin, we were not required to take extraordinary measures to prolong life.
If I could spend my life savings to prolong my life for a year or pass the money on to my children, I might prefer to pass in on to my children. In the event I have no choice. The government already takes my money to prolong someone else’s life.
The decision about how much terminal care is enough and how much of other people’s money should be spent to prolong the life of another are not easy questions, they are absolutely intractable moral dilemmas. I little faith that any bureaucracy can deal with them, but I am absolutely certain that the incumbent president is intellectually and morally the most poorly equipped to address them in the history of the republic.
Somebody should tell the twerp that everybody on Medicaid is going to die. I think that makes it 100%.
So it’d be an act of mercy?
Ergo, it would kill exactly one person.
Q.E.D.
So it’ll kill about a dozen people tops?
Yes, but which one?
So,...4 people dead? Let’s go with it. I mean say 4 million people watched his show,...their ALL leftists! 2 million leftists dead??? Now that’s the kind of deal Trump would go for!
That would be like, what, three people?
Paul Ryan’s Medicare Plan Will ‘Kill Half the People Who Watch My Show’
All the more reason NOT to watch your show.
Nonviewers will do just fine.
My poor ignorant pro union BIL is another.
No one will successfully reform entitlements. They’ll have to collapse first. No one wants to be the one without a chair when the music stops.
Thats about 10 people, Chris
I wonder if Rachel Maddow watch’s his show?
“Chris Matthews: Paul Ryan’s Medicare Plan Will ‘Kill Half the People Who Watch My Show’
...And we lived happily everafter.
LOL! Excuses, excuses...hey chrissie? How’s Katie these days/
LLS
Then there is a 50-50 chance of death.
Then there is a 50-50 chance of death.
Chris will be down to one viewer!
Good thing there aren’t many of them.
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