Is Rachel Maddow planning on running against Scott Brown in her home state of Massachusetts?
The individual health insurance mandate was constitutional before, you know, it wasn’t.
Just where was Senator Mae Beavers in 1993?
Watch this if only to see Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, who conceived the idea of the individual health insurance mandate, tap dance for Andrea Mitchell (at 4:06).
And let us not forget that the health insurance reform is not universal health care nor does it include a public option, it is an expansion of the private health insurance system we have now. Combine this with the mandate thing and Republican opposition seems even more absurd.
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UPDATE: More video of the “breathtaking cynicism” coming from Republicans in Washington:
Sen. Hatch (R-UT) says he once supported an individual mandate without knowing he did — simply as a tactic to stop the Clinton plan.
This clip begins with Dr. Martin Luther King’s “Where Do we go From Here?” (“Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.”), winds its way through mush needed snark about the recent Newt Gingrich quote about passage of health care reform (“They will have destroyed their party much as Lyndon Johnson shattered the Democratic Party for 40 years”) (Newt’s clarification is a doozie too), and lands on the question that has starred in some of our country’s most historic (and violent) moments and is once again at the forefront of every public policy and political discussion: Do we want a government that does something, or don‘t we?
Rachel Maddow: “Actually, doing health reform is a demonstration that government is not just for show. Government is for fixing problems. We have a government, not just to give people shiny political celebrity high-profile jobs so they can win popularity contests against other people who want shiny political high-profile jobs. We have a government to work on problems that we have as a people, as a country, problems that aren‘t working themselves out intrapersonally or in the marketplace. Government is for something. We have one for a reason.”
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“Must See TV” is back on (MS)NBC with Rachel Maddow, who is doing amazing work. Her appearance on Meet the Press last Sunday was stunning when she held Rep. Aaron Schock (R-Ill.) accountable for “railing against a spending bill in public while touting its benefits in his home district:”
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And last night she continued shining her special brand of sunshine on the Republican legislators who simultaneously praise the good results of stimulus dollars with their hands out for more while tearing down the stimulus bill because…well, because of the good results and their willingness to destroy the country to take back even just a little bit of power:
Rachel Maddow exposes the corporate-funded Rick Berman-fueled astroturf underneath the ACORN demonization and how the media failed the American people again by forgetting about the fact-checking part of their job.
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Watch Rachel tie it all together and interview one of the authors of a study that shows, among other fun facts, that 80% of the news media failed to report “ACORN’S role in reporting irregularities.”
The Rachel Maddow Show investigates RecessRally.com and the people behind the people disrupting the town hall meetings. What Maddow and her staff find is that they’re professional, Republican-staffed organizations and companies who are doing the bidding of their corporate healthcare overlords and who are very adept at using the American people.
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“These guys are the pros. This is an industry. Americans are showing up at these events to shout down the discussion and chase their Congressman and they are enraged. And they’re enraged at least in part because they’re being riled up by over-the-top fabricated conspiracy theories about healthcare. And they’re being directed and orchestrated by corporate interests that do this for a living and do it very well.
Recessrally.com is not some organic outgrowth of American anger. This is how corporate America creates the illusion of a grassroots movement to support their own interests. This is what they do. They are professionals. This is an industry. To talk about these town hall events as some organic outpouring of average American folks who have concerns about healthcare is to be willfully blind to what is really going on which is, professional PR operatives generating exploitative manufactured strategically deployed outrage in order to line their own pockets.
These PR spinmeisters get paid a lot of money for doing it. The corporations they work for get to kill legislation that would hurt their profits. And the real people who they launch into these town hall settings after they’ve been told that healthcare reform is a secret Commie plot to kill old people and to mandate sex changes? Those real people get more and more and more and more angry and more and more and more alienated. And ultimately they get left like the rest of us with a healthcare system that is broken and doesn’t work in the interest of the American people and that does work in the interestes of the corporations who profit from the way the system is now.
This is professional, corporate-funded, Republican-staffed PR…and it should be reported as such.”
Would you like fries with that manipulation?
I just heard a story on NPR about a spontaneous protest twenty years ago by some older Americans trying to get their Congressman to listen to them. He wouldn’t give them any time so they waited outside his office and, trying to be heard, they yelled at him and followed him out to his car.
Now, Americans have an opportunity to be heard about about healthcare – you know, the real concerns most of us have about meaningful reform with a public option – and instead of allowing these concerns to be heard, they are being thwarted by other Americans who have been armed with lies and misinformation and who, because of their bad behavior, won’t allow a real healthcare discussion to take place.
What about the other Americans who are attending these town halls hoping to learn something or get a question answered? Is it a coincidence that along with their elected official, they aren’t being heard either? Uh, no. When recent polls show that over 70% of the American people want healthcare reform, not allowing them to be heard is part of the plan.


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