Feb 222010
 

AboutMost of you probably know that our government pays more per beneficiary to private insurance companies to provide Medicare Advantage plans than it spends per person on original Medicare.

Medicare In October 2009, here’s how Sen. Jay Rockefeller described the Medicare Advantage plans:
“It’s a wasteful, inefficient program and always has been,” Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) said at a recent hearing. At its core, Rockefeller added, Medicare Advantage is “stuffing money into the pockets of private insurers, and it doesn’t provide any better benefits to anybody.”
Yes, the for-profit add-on plans the Republicans pushed through under Bush heavily subsidize services. (So much for “pay as you go,” huh?)
A study released yesterday by a major consulting firm found that premiums for Medicare Advantage plans offering medical and prescription-drug coverage jumped 14.2 percent on average in 2010, after an increase of 5.2 percent the previous year. Some 8.5 million elderly and disabled Americans are in the plans, which provide more comprehensive coverage than traditional Medicare, often at lower cost.
Lee Durrwachter, a retired chemical engineer from Grand Marais, Mich., said his premiums more than doubled this year – even though he switched plans to try to save money. “It doesn’t bode well,” he said. “It’s unaffordable.”
The Medicare findings are bad news for President Obama and his health-care overhaul that is bogged down in Congress. That is because the higher Medicare Advantage premiums for 2010 followed a cut in government payments to the private plans last year. And the Democratic bills pending in Congress call for even more cuts, which are expected to force many seniors to drop out of what has been a rapidly growing alternative to traditional Medicare.
Republicans have seized on the Medicare Advantage cuts in their campaign to derail the health-care bills, and seniors are listening. Polls show seniors are more skeptical of the legislation than the public as a whole, even though Democrats would also reinforce original Medicare by improving preventive benefits and narrowing the prescription-coverage gap.

… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Crooks and Liars>
In the interest of full disclosure, let men begin by saying that I subscribe to a Medicare Advantage plan.
Rockefeller’s statement is incorrect.  My plan offers many preventive services that traditional Medicare does not cover,  I can’t speak for other plans, but the increase in premium for my plan was 5.4%.  Of course, I do not (and would not use) one of the giant killer companies like Cigna or Wellpoint.  I use Providence, a local Oregon company.  Other than guilt over the destruction of half a rainforest to make the endless stream of paperwork I receive from them, I’m thoroughly satisfied with their service.
While I agree that government ought not to give Medicare Advantage plans an unfair advantage, I justify my own participation, because I was denied health care for years while the Social Security Administration unjustly denied my disability claim.  I need the additional services just to make my health care current after years of enforced neglect, so I figure I have it coming.  I do support cutting payments to private insurers’ Medicare Advantage plans to the same level that government spends on Medicare.  While that may be against my own self-interest, I am not so hypocritical as to support policies for my personal benefit over the good of the nation as a whole.  However, including more preventive services in traditional Medicare and closing the prescription coverage gap are necessary reforms.

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Feb 222010
 

Believe it or not I actually caught up on replying to comments and returning visits yesterday.  It took most of the day.  Today, I should stay caught up.  I have a few errands to run, and I have to arrange for a new web host provider for the nonprofit I help run.  If you’re considering Liberty Names of America (aka LNOA) as a host provider, don’t.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

My time was 3:20.  I have an unfair advantage on this one.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Short Takes:

A senior administration official told CNN that Obama will propose legislation that would empower him to block excessive rate hikes by insurance companies.

World War III ended with the score USA 5, Canada 3.  Here’s video of all the goals.

Cartoon:

OGIM!!

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Obama Appeals for HCR Unity

 Posted by at 2:33 am  Politics
Feb 212010
 

Obama has once again called for bipartisanship in the Thursday’s HCR conference.

 

I expect one of three things to happen.

Door Number 1:

Obama could cave in to GOP demands.  While this would cause consternation on the GOP, because they would have to immediately about face and pretend that they now and have always opposed whatever those demands are.  Such a move would doom Obama’s presidency by alienating the mainstream, let alone his base.

Door Number 2:

Obama will present what is essentially BARF (Baucus Against a Real Fix).  The GOP would oppose it, as do the majority of Americans.  It would probably fail to pass and doom Obama’s presidency for the same reasons.

Door Number 3:

The last and best possibility is that Obama will introduce a compromise between the House and Senate bills.  Of course the GOP would refuse to compromise, and Obama can then claim justification to proceed with reconciliation.  Hopefully, the public option will be put back in during that process.  This alone can save Obama’s presidency.

Take your pick.

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Beyond the OPR Report

 Posted by at 2:33 am  Politics
Feb 212010
 

I did not cover the horrid OPR report, absolving GOP war criminals Yoo and Bybee, because I had already covered its contents when it was leaked last month.

Daphne Eviatar has prepared an excellent article on why the OCR report should not be the end of this matter.

Yoo The New York Times this morning writes that the Justice Department’s ethics report on the work of the lawyers who approved Bush administration’s torture of detainees "brings to a close a pivotal chapter in the debate over the legal limits of the Bush administration’s fight against terrorism and whether its treatment of Qaeda prisoners amounted to torture."

The Washington Post says the report represents "the end of a 5-year internal battle" at the Justice Department.

In fact, the Office of Professional Responsibility report is just the beginning of a bigger and more important battle. Legal ethics investigators concluded that former Office of Legal Counsel lawyers John Yoo and Jay Bybee committed "professional misconduct" in advising the Bush administration that it was not against the law to torture, humiliate and abuse detainees despite longstanding domestic and international prohibitions against doing so. The battle now will be over whether the U.S. government will meet its obligations to thoroughly investigate what happened and hold the perpetrators accountable.

The final OPR report chastises the two OLC lawyers for reaching bizarre legal conclusions that were wholly unsupported by the law. For example, one of their memos claimed that torture was legal so long as an interrogator’s goal was to obtain information rather than to inflict severe pain or suffering – even if he knew he would inflict severe pain or suffering in the process. As one OLC lawyer commented on the memo at the time: "The way it reads now makes you wonder whether this is just an anti-sadism statute."

Meanwhile, the memo’s now-infamous definition of "severe pain" as necessarily "equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death" not only relied on an irrelevant medical benefits statute for its definition, which the OPR report calls "illogical," but actually misquoted the language of that statute so as "to add further support to their ‘aggressive’ interpretation of the torture statute," the OPR report concludes. Ultimately, the definition could lead an interrogator to believe, the OPR found, "that pain could be inflicted as long as no injury resulted." It’s the "leave no marks" theory of torture.

The list of twisted and inexplicable legal conclusions is long and impressive. In another instance, the lawyers relied on extremely narrow interpretations of the international Convention Against Torture proposed by the Reagan administration that the U.S. had never adopted. And they completely ignored far more relevant sources of law on torture, such as federal court cases interpreting the Torture Victims Protection Act, which found torture had occurred in situations far less severe than the brutal interrogation techniques being contemplated in these memos. In one case, for example, a federal court held that imprisonment for five days under bad conditions while being threatened with bodily harm, interrogated and held at gunpoint amounted to torture.

Bybee David Margolis, the Deputy Associate Attorney General ultimately overrode the recommendations of the ethics office to refer the lawyers to state bar associations for disciplinary proceedings, because he decided that the OLC’s standards for referral were unclear. But the report of the investigators who actually read and analyzed the memos that authorized such brutal conduct as "waterboarding" (controlled drowning), slamming prisoners’ heads repeatedly against a wall ("walling"), weeks of sleep deprivation, stress positions, and confinement in a cramped box with insects provides an astonishing look at how the lawyers tasked with providing objective legal advice to the White House on its most sensitive policies completely contorted ordinary logic and legal reasoning to reach the conclusions desired.

Justice Department lawyer Patrick Philbin at one point asked John Yoo why he included a wholly unsubstantiated section in one of the memos that concluded that the president of the United States, as commander in chief, can completely ignore any law he wanted – such as the prohibition against torture. Yoo said it was in the memo because "they want it in there" — "they" presumably being whoever had requested the opinion. The memo never explained how the prohibition against torture could be construed in any reasonable way so as to conflict with the president’s authority as commander in chief.

Whether John Yoo and Jay Bybee face professional sanctions (that’s now up to their respective state bars) is far less important than whether we get to the bottom of what really happened at the Bush White House: who ordered these lawyers to come up with legal reasoning to justify torture? The OPR report suggests that David Addington, Chief of Staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, played a significant role. Who was he getting his orders from?

The OPR report is just another piece of the slowly-emerging puzzle of how the country plunged into what Dick Cheney has aptly called "the Dark Side," abandoning its most basic belief in human dignity and the rule of law to zealously combat terrorism in a way that’s ultimately backfired; we’re now less safe, and mired in a vicious and protracted war.

In concluding that Yoo and Bybee exercised "poor judgment" rather than "professional misconduct", Margolis emphasizes that "his decision should not be viewed as an endorsement of the legal work that underlies these memoranda," which he notes were "seriously flawed" and represent "an unfortunate chapter in the history of the Office of Legal Counsel." In Yoo’s case, his conclusions represented a "loyalty to his own ideology and convictions" which "clouded his view of his obligations to his client" and led him to author opinions reflecting "extreme" views of executive power.

Yoo was among the very small group of lawyers entrusted to write these opinions for the White House because he was already known to hold these extreme opinions. That he ignored or contorted opposing views should not have come as a surprise to his employers; that’s what he’d been doing all along as an academic.

It’s clear from the report, too, that that’s what Yoo was expected to do. As John Bellinger, the Bush administration’s legal advisor to the State Department told OPR: "Yoo was ‘under pretty significant pressure to come up with an answer that would justify [the program]’ and that, over time, there was significant pressure on the Department to conclude that the program was legal and could be continued, even after changes in the law in 2005 and 2006."

Some of those memos were also being demanded under very tight time frames to justify particular interrogations.

So who asked Yoo and Bybee to write these memos, and what exactly were the instructions given? Were they pressured to reach a particular conclusion and provide a "golden shield" for illegal conduct that the White House had already chosen to undertake? The report points out that the OPR investigators were not able to access most of John Yoo’s e-mail messages from the time period: "most of Yoo’s e-mail records had been deleted and were not recoverable." Why did Yoo delete those messages, and what did they say?… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Huffington Post>

I have little to add.  This must not end here.

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CPAC Straw Poll

 Posted by at 2:32 am  Politics
Feb 212010
 

Yesterday the denizens of CPUKE demonstrated their idiocy in fine form.   Here are the results of their straw poll.

GOP-hat …Results from the full field, and a link to the complete poll after the jump.

Haley Barbour: 1%

Mitch Daniels: 2%

Newt Gingrich: 4%

Mike Huckabee: 4%

Sarah Palin: 7%

Ron Paul: 31%

Tim Pawlenty: 6%

Mike Pence: 5%

Mitt Romney: 22%

Rick Santorum: 2%

John Thune: 2%

Read the full poll here. [PDF]

Inserted from <TPM>

This demonstrates that the GOP still has a complete leadership vacuum.  The winner’s chances of winning the presidency are sub-zero.  And despite all his campaigning, effort an expense, she second place winner could not even defeat the winner.

I have committed the unforgiveable sin and mentioned the unmentionable name.  If they crawl out of the woodwork, please do not feed the trolls.

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Feb 212010
 

Yesterday I caught up replying to comments before leaving for my Board Meeting, where I was nominated to serve as the Treasurer for another year.  Today I hope to catch up on visits, but at 4 I will divert my attention to the one US war that I support: the battle against the evil Canadian hockey team. 😉

Jig Zone Puzzle:

My time was 4:03.  Click here to do it.  How did you do?

Short Takes:

Yesterday, the Dutch government fell do to controversy over participation in the Afghanistan war.

The teabaggers have a new game to play.  In the game users must obtain a can of gasoline, burn a house, then pilot a single-engine airplane into an IRS building. Upon successful completion, the game declares: "Justice is Served!" Along the way, if players manage to hit a malfunctioning Toyota Prius, they are rewarded with the "Auto Recall" medal.  How do you spell S-I-C-K?

Cartoon:

Are mou mourning for the Ellipsoid Orb?

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 Comments Off on Open Thread – 2/21/2010
Feb 202010
 

Yesterday I told you about a Facebook group honoring Joseph Stack, the nut case who crashed his plane into an Austin office building.  AmericaBlog captured images the teabaggers’ attempt to restart it, before Facebook took it down:

facebook1

facebook2

facebook3

Is this foul or what?  How anyone could honor this mad man boggles my mind.  But this had risen all the way to the GOP mainstream.

Rachel Maddow and Chris Hayes discuss the GOP love affair with violence.

 

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Please take a few minutes to read today’s other articles. I wish I could put all of them on top, today.

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Feb 202010
 

I wrote a college term paper for freshman level Economics, in which I suggested that the only way to fight pollution was to stop allowing polluters to externalize the costs of that pollution.  My economics professor agreed and told me it was years ahead of it’s time.  I sent a copy to whoever my Congressman was at the time and never received a reply.  Too bad.  Had they paid attention then, we would not now be facing this.

The cost of pollution and other damage to the natural environment caused by the world’s biggest companies would wipe out more than one-third of their profits if they were held financially accountable, a major unpublished study for the United Nations has found.
The report comes amid growing concern that no one is made to pay for most of the use, loss and damage of the environment, which is reaching crisis proportions in the form of pollution and the rapid loss of freshwater, fisheries and fertile soils.
Later this year, another huge UN study – dubbed the “Stern for nature” after the influential report on the economics of climate change by Sir Nicholas Stern – will attempt to put a price on such global environmental damage, and suggest ways to prevent it. The report, led by economist Pavan Sukhdev, is likely to argue for abolition of billions of dollars of subsidies to harmful industries like agriculture, energy and transport, tougher regulations and more taxes on companies that cause the damage.
Ahead of changes which would have a profound effect – not just on companies’ profits but also their customers and pension funds and other investors – the UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment initiative and the United Nations Environment Programme jointly ordered a report into the activities of the 3,000 biggest public companies in the world, which includes household names from the UK’s FTSE 100 and other major stockmarkets.
The study, conducted by London-based consultancy Trucost and due to be published this summer, found the estimated combined damage was worth US$2.2 trillion (£1.4tn) in 2008 – a figure bigger than the national economies of all but seven countries in the world that year.
The figure equates to 6-7% of the companies’ combined turnover, or an average of one-third of their profits, though some businesses would be much harder hit than others.
“What we’re talking about is a completely new paradigm,” said Richard Mattison, Trucost’s chief operating officer and leader of the report team. “Externalities of this scale and nature pose a major risk to the global economy and markets are not fully aware of these risks, nor do they know how to deal with them.”
The biggest single impact on the $2.2tn estimate, accounting for more than half of the total, was emissions of greenhouse gases blamed for climate change. Other major “costs” were local air pollution such as particulates, and the damage caused by the over-use and pollution of freshwater.
The true figure is likely to be even higher because the $2.2tn does not include damage caused by household and government consumption of goods and services, such as energy used to power appliances or waste; the “social impacts” such as the migration of people driven out of affected areas, or the long-term effects of any damage other than that from climate change. The final report will also include a higher total estimate which includes those long-term effects of problems such as toxic waste.
Trucost did not want to comment before the final report on which sectors incurred the highest “costs” of environmental damage, but they are likely to include power companies and heavy energy users like aluminium producers because of the greenhouse gases that result from burning fossil fuels. Heavy water users like food, drink and clothing companies are also likely to feature high up on the list.
Sukhdev said the heads of the major companies at this year’s annual economic summit in Davos, Switzerland, were increasingly concerned about the impact on their business if they were stopped or forced to pay for the damage.
“It can make the difference between profit and loss,” Sukhdev told the annual Earthwatch Oxford lecture last week. “That sense of foreboding is there with many, many [chief executives], and that potential is a good thing because it leads to solutions.”
The aim of the study is to encourage and help investors lobby companies to reduce their environmental impact before concerned governments act to restrict them through taxes or regulations, said Mattison.
“It’s going to be a significant proportion of a lot of companies’ profit margins,” Mattison told the Guardian. “Whether they actually have to pay for these costs will be determined by the appetite for policy makers to enforce the ‘polluter pays’ principle. We should be seeking ways to fix the system, rather than waiting for the economy to adapt. Continued inefficient use of natural resources will cause significant impacts on [national economies] overall, and a massive problem for governments to fix.”…

Inserted from <The Guardian>
An externalized cost is the part of the true cost of producing a product or service that the producer is allowed to leave for someone else to pay.  Pollution is a prime example, because if taxpayers pay to clean up a toxic waste dump,  if others suffer ill health due to exposure to waste products, or if costal cities drown due to global climate change, those costs have or will have been passed on to someone else.
All costs must be included in the cost of all goods and services.
But, but, but… it might put some corporations out of business!
So be it.  If the true costs (with all environmental costs internal) of a product or service are so high that there is insufficient demand to support the producer, then that producer ought to fail.
But, but, but… It might cost corporations 1/3 of their profits!
So be it.  If internalizing all costs cuts their profits, their profits are too high.
I have no doubt that Republicans will unanimously oppose this idea.  How odd.  Because what I am arguing here is really nothing more that capitalism in a free market.

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