Eric Hanneken's Library tagged → View Popular
Obama shadow boxes with 'enemies' of health plan
-
Who were these "well-financed forces" and profiting "opponents of ... reform"?
-
The Pharmaceutical Researchers and Manufacturers of America, the largest industry lobbying group in the country, is shelling out $12 million for pro-"reform" ads this summer and fall. Obama has bragged that "even the pharmaceutical industry" is on board.
- 2 more annotations...
White House wants suit against Yoo dismissed
Barack Obama sides with John Yoo and George W. Bush.
-
The Obama administration has asked an appeals court to dismiss a lawsuit accusing former Bush administration attorney John Yoo of authorizing the torture of a terrorism suspect, saying federal law does not allow damage claims against lawyers who advise the president on national security issues.
PROMISES, PROMISES: A closed meeting on openness
-
It's hardly the image of transparency the Obama administration wants to project: A workshop on government openness is closed to the public.
The event Monday for federal employees is a fitting symbol of President Barack Obama's uneven record so far on the Freedom of Information Act, a big part of keeping his campaign promise to make his administration the most transparent ever.
-
Add Sticky NoteObama scored points on his pledge by requiring the release of detailed information about $787 billion in economic stimulus spending. It's now available on a Web site, http://www.recovery.gov.
- Privately run sites have more useful information than recovery.gov. Try recovery.org. - on 2009-12-07
- 2 more annotations...
What does Obama's Afghan timeline mean? Depends who's asking
-
The Obama administration is giving different explanations of its July 2011 deadline for the start of an Afghanistan troop withdrawal, assuring foreign officials that it applies only to the 30,000 to 35,000 additional U.S. troops that President Barack Obama is sending next year, but suggesting to Congress that it covers all U.S. forces.
Obama's phony federalism
-
Not yet a year into his administration, Obama's record on 10th Amendment issues is already clear: He'll let the states have their way when their policies please blue team sensibilities and he'll call in the feds when they don't. Thus, he'll grant California a waiver to allow it to raise auto emissions standards, but he'll bring the hammer down when the state tries to cut payments to unionized health care workers.
Obama Administration Invokes State Secrets Privilege…Again
Yet again, Barack Obama = George W. Bush.
-
The Obama administration invoked the controversial "state secrets" privilege again on Friday, arguing that if U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker were to permit a legal case against the government to proceed, he would be putting national security at risk.
-
The case is a class action suit brought by four Brooklynites alleging that the Bush administration engaged in wholesale dragnet surveillance of ordinary Americans in which they were unjustly caught because they regularly made phone calls and sent emails to individuals outside the U.S., specifically in the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Egypt, the Netherlands, and Norway.
- 1 more annotations...
The Peace Prize Body Count
This count doesn't include those killed by the U.S. government's other programs, such as the so-called "War on Drugs."
The Right to a Guilty Verdict: Obama's empty promise of due process for terrorism suspects
-
In July the Defense Department's top lawyer declared that the
president has the authority to detain people accused of belonging
to or assisting terrorist groups even after they're acquitted.
The only point of prosecuting them, it seems, is to create an
impression of due process while continuing Bush detention
policies that Obama has repeatedly condemned. -
In a
May speech the president said these prisoners "cannot be
prosecuted" because there is not enough admissible evidence
against them but cannot be released because they "pose a clear
danger to the American people."
Obama Is No Radical--But maybe we'd be better off if he were.
-
Radicals make sudden turns. Obama sometimes slams
his foot on the accelerator-just look at
projected spending for the next few years-but he hardly ever
tries to change direction. Radicals tear down centers of power.
When Obama is faced with a crumbling institution, his first
instinct is to prop it up. -
And no, I'm not using "radical" as a euphemism for "free-market
libertarian." A radical Obama still might have extended assistance
to the people displaced by the corporate failures, perhaps even
setting up a generous guaranteed income scheme. He might have
broken up the big banks. He might have done all sorts of things,
some wiser than others. But he would not have strengthened the
corporate-state partnerships bequeathed to him by Bush. - 3 more annotations...
Making Bush Look Like a Piker
-
For each of Obama’s years in office, the deficit is projected to be larger than any year during Bush’s terms.
For each of Obama’s years in office, the deficit is projected to be larger than any year during Bush’s terms.
Second, Obama is right to note that he inherited a large deficit in fiscal 2009. But as we can see here, he is responsible for growing the deficit beyond expectations in fiscal 2009 and thereafter.
-
Third, Obama’s deficits are frightening but they promise to get worse. Each month that goes by the president adds spending to the deficit. The August 2009 projections for instance, do not include any of the president’s healthcare reform spending and they assume that the “temporary” stimulus spending will not be prolonged past fiscal 2011. Finally, they also assume that the economy will recover soon and that it will grow enough to generate increasing tax revenue, in spite of the president’s plan to impose new taxes and regulations on the private sector.
Taking Over Everything
-
This president and his Ivy League advisers believe that they know how an economy should develop better than hundreds of millions of market participants spending their own money every day. That is what F. A. Hayek called the “fatal conceit,” the idea that smart people can design a real economy on the basis of their abstract ideas.
Obama to Use Current Law to Support Detentions
-
The Obama administration has decided not to seek new legislation from Congress authorizing the indefinite detention of about 50 terrorism suspects being held without charges at at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, officials said Wednesday.
- 2 more annotations...
Faith-Based Double Standards
-
Now that Mr. Bush is gone, however, no one seems particularly worried about the entanglement of the federal government with religious organizations.
-
Mr. Obama has left "the entire architecture of the Bush Faith-Based Initiative intact—every rule, every regulation, every executive order." More controversially, the office has become a major hub of political outreach. In frequent conference calls, the administration informs faith-based leaders of its policy initiatives, as when it recently asked rabbis around the country to give sermons on health-care reform during the coming high holiday season.
- 1 more annotations...
Obama supports extending Patriot Act provisions
-
The Obama administration supports extending three key provisions of the Patriot Act that are due to expire at the end of the year, the Justice Department told Congress in a letter made public Tuesday.
-
The provision on business records was long criticized by rights groups as giving the government access to citizens' library records, and a coalition of liberal and conservative groups complained that the Patriot Act gives the government too much authority to snoop into Americans' private lives.
U.S. Says Rendition to Continue, but With More Oversight
-
The Obama administration will continue the Bush administration’s practice of sending terrorism suspects to third countries for detention and interrogation, but pledges to closely monitor their treatment to ensure that they are not tortured, administration officials said Monday.
-
Ms. Singh cited the case of Maher Arar, a Syrian-born Canadian sent in 2002 by the United States to Syria, where he was beaten with electrical cable despite assurances against torture.
- 1 more annotations...
Debating the President’s Portsmouth pitch
Keith Hennessey fisks the president's pitch for more government involvement in health insurance.
-
These bills would give government officials, or people chosen by the government, authority to determine benefit packages, copayments and deductibles, relative premiums, as well as health plan expenses and profits. They would, in effect, turn health insurance into a utility, run by private companies, but with policies and rates set by the government.
-
Resources are constrained, and so someone has to make the cost-benefit decision, either by creating a rule or making decisions on a case-by-case basis. Many of those decisions are now made by insurers and employers. The House and Senate bills would move some of those decisions into the government. Changing the locus of the decision does not relax the resource constraint. It just changes who has power and control.
- 11 more annotations...
Championing the Status Quo
-
Ever since Congress created Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, health politics has followed a simple logic: Expand benefits and talk about controlling costs. That's the status quo, and Obama faithfully adheres to it. While denouncing skyrocketing health spending, he would increase it by extending government health insurance to millions more Americans.
-
No president has spoken more forcefully about the need to control costs. Failure, he's argued, would expand federal budget deficits, raise out-of-pocket health costs and squeeze take-home pay (more compensation would go to insurance). All true. But Obama's program would do little to reduce costs and would increase spending by expanding subsidized insurance.
- 3 more annotations...
Selected Tags
Related Tags
Sponsored Links
Top Contributors
Highlighter, Sticky notes, Tagging, Groups and Network: integrated suite dramatically boosting research productivity. Learn more »
Join Diigo
