Wednesday, April 22, 2015

More On Florida's Obamacare Debacle

As I mentioned here last week, Florida Governor Rick Scott has decided to sue the Federal Government instead of fulfilling his campaign promise to expand Medicare under Obamacare, and he's taking as lot of heat -- from Democrats, Republicans, and the Press -- for this wrong-headed decision.

Jonathan Cohn at HuffPo posted a great piece yesterday on this ongoing fight in Florida, and I found the following section of his article particularly interesting:
Over 10 years, the researchers found, making Medicaid available to all low-income people [in Florida] would cost about $71 billion above and beyond what the state's Medicaid program would otherwise cost. That's a lot of money, for sure. But roughly $66 billion of the total, the researchers found, would come from the federal government. That would leave Florida taxpayers on the hook for the remaining $5 billion, with at least some of that money coming back to them in the form of reduced spending on other programs.

To put it another way, expanding Medicaid in Florida would likely require a net investment by state taxpayers that, over the course of a decade, would work out to less than a half-billion dollars a year. That's without accounting for any additional growth and tax revenues that the huge infusion of federal dollars might provide. That's also without accounting for the more than $1 billion a year in that, without expanding Medicaid, Florida would probably have to scrounge up in order to help hospitals defray the cost of charity care.
In other words, Rick Scott and Republicans in the Florida House hate Obama so much that they are willing to turn down $66 billion in Federal money over ten years, money that would provide health care coverage to 800,000 Floridians.  Now that's a lot of hate.

If that doesn't make any sense to you, well then you are not alone. The Tampa Bay Times called Scott's position "indefensible," stating that "[h]ospitals cannot eat $1 billion in charity care, and Florida cannot turn down billions in federal Medicaid dollars because House Republicans don't like the Democratic president." Cohn agrees:
[C]onservative fervor to block or repeal the Affordable Care Act has always seemed a bit disconnected from reality, given that the law consists almost entirely of pieces that existed, without such fuss, long before Obamacare came along. The lone exception is the "individual mandate," the requirement that people carry insurance or pay a fee. And that's an idea that plenty of conservatives tolerated -- and some even supported -- less than a decade ago. In fact, it was a conservative expert at the Heritage Foundation who many historians credit with the idea.

No, the level of hostility to Obamacare makes very little sense -- unless it's about something beyond the policy particulars. It could be the fact that Democrats finally accomplished something big, for the first time in several decades, thereby expanding the welfare state at a time when conservatives thought they were on their way to shrinking it. Or it could be the idea that, on net, the Affordable Care Act transfers resources away from richer, whiter people to poorer, darker people. Or it could be the fact that "Obamacare" contains the word "Obama," whose legitimacy as president at least some conservatives just can't accept.
I, of course, think this is all about Obama and the fear some right wingers have that history will view his presidency as not only legitimate, but as a legitimately successful one.  Indeed, I can't think of anything that would infuriate a racist Republican more.

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Quote of the Week

“Watching these channels all day is incredibly depressing. . . . I live in a constant state of depression. I think of us as turd miners. I put on my helmet, I go and mine turds, hopefully I don’t get turd lung disease.”
- Jon Stewart, on what it’s like to watch a fuck-ton of Fox News as part of his Daily Show hosting duties.

Friday, April 17, 2015

GOP Hatred For America's First Black President: Why It Is A Bad Thing Politically

It's a bad thing politically because it makes Republican politicians do stupid shit, like Florida Governor Rick Scott announcing yesterday that he is going to sue the Federal Government to force it to give Florida funds from a program that will soon be non-existent.

Why would he do such a dumb thing you ask?  Well, because of Obamacare of course:
The suit, which has yet to be filed, is only the latest round in an ongoing feud between Scott and CMS in connection with LIP.  The program is scheduled to expire in June under an agreement between Florida and the federal government. Federal health officials have said they are open to negotiating a successor program, but no deal has been reached.

The negotiations took a turn Tuesday, when CMS told Florida's Agency for Health Care Administration that any decision regarding LIP would be tied to whether the state accepts federal Medicaid expansion money — a politically charged policy option that Scott once supported, but now opposes.  Scott blasted CMS on Thursday, saying that linking the two issues violated a U.S. Supreme Court ruling "that the president cannot force Medicaid expansion on states."

"Not only does President Obama's end to LIP funding in Florida violate the law by crossing the line into a coercion tactic for Obamacare, it also threatens poor families' access to the safety net health care services they need," Scott said.
I've got a great idea, Governor: Instead of wasting your state's resources on a bullshit lawsuit based on a crisis that you manufactured, why not expand Medicaid under Obamacare, something you already promised to do? Then 800,000 Floridians -- including the poor families you claim to care so much about -- can get access to health coverage. I promise it won't be that hard. Just pretend that a black man didn't sign the Affordable Care Act into law and it'll all be good.

Needless to say, Gov. Scott is taking quite a bit of heat on this from all sides. In fact, Florida's Republican Senate President Andy Gardiner criticized the Governor over this, stating that the federal government "has no obligation to provide LIP funding," and that "it is difficult to understand how suing CMS on day 45 of a 60-day session regarding an issue the state has been aware of for the last 12 months will yield a timely resolution to the critical health care challenges facing our state."

Monday, April 13, 2015

The Traitor McCain Sides With Supreme Leader of Iran (Updated)

I was somewhat stunned that Obama did not rip into the GOP after 47 treasonous Republican Senators signed that bullshit letter to Iran last month.  But, as usual, he kept his cool.

Those days might be over:
President Barack Obama said Saturday that partisan wrangling over the emerging nuclear agreement with Iran and on other foreign policy matters has gone beyond the pale, singling out two senior Republican senators for particularly harsh criticism. "It needs to stop," he declared.

Obama complained that Sen. John McCain of Arizona had suggested that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's explanations of the framework agreement with Iran were "somehow less trustworthy" than those of Iran's supreme leader.

"That's an indication of the degree to which partisanship has crossed all boundaries," an exercised Obama said in a news conference at the end of the two-day Summit of the Americas. "And we're seeing this again and again." ***

Obama, speaking at a news conference in Panama City, said it was understandable that people would be suspicious of Iran, even that they would oppose the nuclear deal.

"But when you start getting to the point where you are actively communicating that the United States government and our secretary of state is somehow spinning presentations in a negotiation with a foreign power, particularly one you say is your enemy, that's a problem," he said.
Of course, this isn't anywhere near far enough -- Obama should be constantly questioning the patriotism of these treasonous bastards. But it's a good start.

And by the way, if McCain and the GOP love the Supreme Leader of Iran so much, then they should invite him to speak to a Joint Session of Congress.

UPDATE:  Here is a great New York Times Editorial on the GOP's efforts to de-legitimize America's first Black president. [h/t JB].  The editorial correctly points out that all the new GOP fuckery (e.g., the treason letter to Iran, all the secessionist horseshit, the Asshole McConnell's anti-American position with regard to foreign governments and climate change) is really just the same old crap we've seen before:
It is a peculiar, but unmistakable, phenomenon: As Barack Obama’s presidency heads into its twilight, the rage of the Republican establishment toward him is growing louder, angrier and more destructive.

Republican lawmakers in Washington and around the country have been focused on blocking Mr. Obama’s agenda and denigrating him personally since the day he took office in 2009. But even against that backdrop, and even by the dismal standards of political discourse today, the tone of the current attacks is disturbing. So is their evident intent — to undermine not just Mr. Obama’s policies, but his very legitimacy as president.

It is a line of attack that echoes Republicans’ earlier questioning of Mr. Obama’s American citizenship. Those attacks were blatantly racist in their message — reminding people that Mr. Obama was black, suggesting he was African, and planting the equally false idea that he was secretly Muslim. The current offensive is slightly more subtle, but it is impossible to dismiss the notion that race plays a role in it.
It is my sincere hope that Obama responds to all of this by personally attacking McCain, McConnell, Cotton, and the rest by calling them traitors, because that's what they are -- they are traitors who have aligned themselves with the hardliners in Iran. Time to put in a raise, Mr. President.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Exactly Right

Brian Beutler sums up my problem with an early Hillary coronation:
[A]ll candidates are fallible, and most of them are human, which means every campaign labors under the small risk of unexpected collapse. The one real advantage of a strong primary field is that it creates a hedge against just such a crisis. Right now either Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker or Jeb Bush is favored to win the Republican primary, but if both of them succumb to scandal or health scares, the GOP can shrug it off knowing that other seasoned Republicans have infrastructure in place, and are poised to swoop in if necessary.

If nobody serious challenges Hillary Clinton, nobody can be her understudy. In the near term that isn’t a problem, but if doubts about her inevitability develop late in the year or early next, the placid silence in the Democratic field will grow eerie. ***
If Hillary does end up getting the nomination, she'll almost certainly pick a Latino running mate, probably Julián Castro, former mayor of San Antonio and current HUD Secretary. Jeb Bush, the inevitable GOP nominee for 2016, will also pick a Latino running mate, and I'm pretty sure that person will be Marco Rubio.

Tuesday, April 07, 2015

The Obama Doctrine

“You take a country like Cuba. For us to test the possibility that engagement leads to a better outcome for the Cuban people, there aren’t that many risks for us. It’s a tiny little country. It’s not one that threatens our core security interests, and so [there’s no reason not] to test the proposition. And if it turns out that it doesn’t lead to better outcomes, we can adjust our policies. The same is true with respect to Iran, a larger country, a dangerous country, one that has engaged in activities that resulted in the death of U.S. citizens, but the truth of the matter is: Iran’s defense budget is $30 billion. Our defense budget is closer to $600 billion. Iran understands that they cannot fight us. ... You asked about an Obama doctrine. The doctrine is: We will engage, but we preserve all our capabilities.”
-- Barack Obama.

Saturday, April 04, 2015

Quote of the Week

"Can any of you identify a critic of the Iran deal who was right about the war in Iraq?"
- Steve Benen.

Friday, April 03, 2015

The GOP's "Blame Obama For Everything" Syndrome

I've noticed over the last few years that whenever anything negative happens, the GOP always blames Obama for it.  A recent example of this is Indiana Governor Mike Pence (R) blaming Obamacare for the massive cluster-fuck Pence created when he signed hate legislation into law last month.  Here are some other examples of this:


Most Republicans are furious that Obama has been elected (and then reelected) president. Forget the fact that Obama is the most conservative Democrat ever to ascend to the presidency -- the GOP apparently believes that a Black man has no place in the White House, even one whose politics is clearly right-of-center.

The one thing that terrifies these people the most is the idea that history may view the Obama Presidency as a successful one. The Birther Movement is a direct reaction to this. That fear also explains why the Republican Party's first impulse when something bad happens is to immediately blame Obama for it no matter how ridiculous it is to do so.  It's so bad in fact that some Republicans even blame the President for things that happened before he became president.

Wednesday, April 01, 2015

My Favorite Quote from The 2016 Presidential Campaign Trail (So Far)

“There’s nothing in my record that would suggest that I’m a moderate.”
-- Jeb Bush, last month in Iowa.

I love this quote because it perfectly captures the current state of the GOP and explains why this country is in a political mess right now.

I remember a time when being branded a liberal was a bad thing if you were a Republican but being a moderate was perfectly acceptable. In the current political climate, however, there is no such thing as liberal Republicans (they are now called "Democrats") and a moderate within the GOP ranks is viewed with contempt, especially during the presidential primary season.