No one is certain of what’s in the bill, but Senator Jim DeMint spotted one shocking revelation regarding the section in the bill describing the Independent Medicare Advisory Board (now called the Independent Payment Advisory Board), which is a panel of bureaucrats charged with cutting health care costs on the backs of patients – also known as rationing. Apparently Reid and friends have changed the rules of the Senate so that the section of the bill dealing with this board can’t be repealed or amended without a 2/3 supermajority vote. Senator DeMint said:She's been one step ahead of them the whole way. And it clearly drives the left nuts.
“This is a rule change. It’s a pretty big deal. We will be passing a new law and at the same time creating a senate rule that makes it out of order to amend or even repeal the law. I’m not even sure that it’s constitutional, but if it is, it most certainly is a senate rule. I don’t see why the majority party wouldn’t put this in every bill. If you like your law, you most certainly would want it to have force for future senates. I mean, we want to bind future congresses. This goes to the fundamental purpose of senate rules: to prevent a tyrannical majority from trampling the rights of the minority or of future congresses.”
In other words, Democrats are protecting this rationing “death panel” from future change with a procedural hurdle. You have to ask why they’re so concerned about protecting this particular provision. Could it be because bureaucratic rationing is one important way Democrats want to “bend the cost curve” and keep health care spending down?
The Congressional Budget Office seems to think that such rationing has something to do with cost. In a letter to Harry Reid last week, CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf noted (with a number of caveats) that the bill’s calculations call for a reduction in Medicare’s spending rate by about 2 percent in the next two decades, but then he writes the kicker:
“It is unclear whether such a reduction in the growth rate could be achieved, and if so, whether it would be accomplished through greater efficiencies in the delivery of health care or would reduce access to care or diminish the quality of care.”
Though Nancy Pelosi and friends have tried to call “death panels” the “lie of the year,” this type of rationing – what the CBO calls “reduc[ed] access to care” and “diminish[ed] quality of care” – is precisely what I meant when I used that metaphor.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Sarah Palin: I Told You There Were Death Panels
And I think she was right, despite the efforts of the left to proclaim "death panels" the lie of the year. From Palin's Facebook site:
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3 comments:
To quote the high schoolers from thje DailyShow's attack on Christmas segment:
"Woman, take your meds."
Sarah drives the lefties crazy because she tells the truth.
Tells the truth?
Like Obama pals around with terrorists, but she could only name one.
Her claim last summer about "death panels".
Her inability to name a newspaper that she reads.
Being for or against federal earmarks and the Bridge to Nowhere.
Seeing Russia from Alaska.
Then there is her quitter tendencies.
She quit being governor.
She just quit her vacation.
She embodies Oscar Wilde quote:
The only thing worse than being talked about, is not being talked about.
For all those who love her. she no different than any other politician.
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