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Obama’s Healthcare Reform is Bush’s War in Iraq

I have to give a friend of mine (Sam Greene) credit for this idea, but Obama’s rhetoric on health care is sounding more and more like Bush’s on the War in Iraq.   This isn’t meant to be a partisan attack, just what seems to me to be a growing and glaring set of analogies between the two situations.    Interested to hear how much I get slammed for the comparison.  

Here are a few examples:

  1. Bush had an opening created by 9/11 that he used to push through an important item on his political agenda – overthrowing Saddam.  Obama has an opening created by the financial crisis to push through an important item on his agenda – healthcare. 
  2. Bush blamed the previous administration for failing to stop the terrorists who started the war on terror that he claimed necessitated an attack on Iraq.   Obama blames the previous administration for creating the financial crisis and huge deficits that he claims necessitate health insurance reform.
  3. Bush built the case for war in Iraq on what was found to be a false premise:  WMDs.  Obama is building his case on what increasingly looks to be a false premise:  that it will not increase the deficit (rejected by the CBO). 
  4. Bush’s approach to Iraq was highly partisan and ideological (though it had bi-partisan support in the beginning).  Obama’s approach to health insurance reform is similarly partisan and ideological (though it likely won’t have bipartisan support). 

Whether or not the War in Iraq goes down in history as a success, it ruined Bush’s presidency.   The question is whether the same will be true of Obama’s health care reform effort.

Quick Poll: Who was irresponsible?

President Obama’s opening statement for the budget he released yesterday declared:  “We arrived at this point as a result of an era of profound irresponsibility that engulfed both private and public institutions from some of our largest companies’ executive suites to the seats of power in Washington.”  

What do you think?  Please answer the following five questions.  Results are available in real-time.  Thanks. 

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Was throwing down the bill really necessary?

If you want to persuade, you need to be credible. 

Watching John Boehner throw down the stimulus bill in front of what was undoubtedly a mostly empty House of Representatives makes me wonder what was the point?   What was the strategy? 

If he was trying to get on TV he succeeded.  So I guess he has that going for him.  

 

If he was trying to rally the people who already agreed with him to agree with him more, he probably succeeded as well.  

But if he was trying to convince even one person who is on the fence, did it work? 

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Words That Worked in 2008 (and Some That Didn’t): A Report Card

Originally published on Huffington Post 1/5/09

It’s easy to bemoan the state of the English language today. But the fact is, words still matter. Arguably, more than ever. It’s hard to think of a year filled with so many iconic words as 2008. The following is a list of words used to great — or not so great — effect this past year. Language by its very nature is always evolving, and 2008 imbued these words with different meanings than they had in 2007. Those who saw those new meanings emerged ahead. The following is our admittedly subjective ranking of the top ten words of 2008 and how well people used them.

#1 Change: 
There are few arenas in which as many words fly as in a U.S. presidential election. And this year, “change” was by far the big winner. It was the perfect word for unsettled times. A word that previously suggested uncertainty today conveys a move toward stability. By September, both candidates tried to use it to their advantage. But as in any debate, victory almost always goes to the person first able to define the terms. And the Obama campaign’s incredibly disciplined use of this one word inspired millions of new voters to head to the polls — and carried him to the presidency of the United States. Final assessment: right word, right time. Grade: A

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Eliot’s Choice

Originally posted on Huffington Post, 3/11/08

We do not yet know how the Spitzer story will end. But we do know already that this is not just another politician caught in a sex scandal.

Governor Spitzer came to office with a promise to hold Albany, Wall Street and New Yorkers in general to a higher standard. In an age of mistrust of institutions, Eliot was to be a role model. He promised to bring honor back to government and to hold politicians and corporate executives accountable for their actions. Even cynical New Yorkers wanted to believe, electing him with more than 70% of the vote in 2006.

We can’t fault Eliot for being human. And what he does with his $4,000 can be his own business.

We can, however, ask him to make a choice. He can hold himself to the standards he has set for others and resign. Or he can lower those standards in a way that will leave him in office and further erode the trust the public has in our government.

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Hello world!

A start.