Minggu, 16 Agustus 2009

Video: The Focus In Afghanistan

Video: The Focus In Afghanistan
Iraq Co-Study Chairman Lee Hamilton and Former Senator Chuck Hagel spoke with CBS Early Show anchor Harry Smith about where U.S. focus should be in Afghanistan.
Obama's 'civil' town halls: No Austin, TX

by Mark Silva

Today, it's the Grand Canyon.

Tomorrow, it's the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Obama in Grand Junction two.jpg

But last night, for a traveling President Barack Obama, it was another "town hall'' on health care. In Grand Junction, Colo., with the second of the president's western meetings with the public tucked into a weekend of family sightseeing at the great national parks, Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon. The president plans to address the veterans at their convention in Phoenix on Monday before returning to Washington to confront another hot week in the great health-care reform debate of 2009.

But after a week of town halls staged in New Hampshire, Montana and Colorado, with the president suggesting that health-care reform is "80 percent'' thereit's the remaining 20 percent of the debate that poses the biggest hurdlethe White House figures that it has accomplished at least one thing out on the hustings:

"I think we've proved we can have a civil town hall meeting,'' Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, said aboard Air Force One last night en route to Phoenix after the president's town hall in Colorado.

"'d point out that Grand Junction is a place where we got about 35 percent of the vote out of 100, so it's not exactly Austin, Texas,'' Gibbs joked. "So I think it proves that people want to have a genuine discussion about the issues. I know the president was happy with both events (in Colorado and Montana) and felt like it gave him an opportunity to talk about what's at stake.

The president also got personal last night, as he has before, invoking the story of his own grandmother's recent death in the context of the swirling questions about end-of-life care in the health-care initiatives moving through the House and under debate in a Senate committeethe government, he says, is not going after "grandma.''

"There has been a tremendous amount of misinformation,'' Gibbs said. "I'm sure some of it is logically explained. I think some of it is, as I've said many times before, perpetuated on purpose despite the fact that people know the truth by people who ought to be smarter than that.

"I think the president invoked the image because, as he said in the answer, it's ludicrous to think somebody who had struggled with losing a grandparent, one that meant so much to his development and upbringing, only a day before -- only hours before he's elected president -- the notion that he would then go around proposing something as has been discussed by people who know better is crazy,'' he said. "So I think it gave him another opportunity to discuss it.''

And, in a season of congressional town hall meetings that have gotten out of order in some venues, this is hardly the end of the president's own attempt at "civil'' town halls to promote the initiatives that he will ask the House and Senate to approve when they return in September.

"I think he'll spend a decent amount of time on the road, yes,'' said Gibbs, en route to the Grand Canyon


Sabtu, 15 Agustus 2009

Obama: Be not afraid of health reform

Obama Health Care Fight Mirrors Campaign
President Revisits Campaign Playbook Tactics in Effort to Beat Back Criticism
Clem's Chronicles: Special Interests/Michael Vick/
Enjoy your weekend folks. Here's what's happening tonight: TOWN HALL FRIDAY-President Obama took to the road again today, venturing west to the town of Belgrade, Montana to hear residents’ thoughts and to help explain why his Administration feels that health...
Obama: Be not afraid of health reform

by Andrew Zajac

Don't let the venom and bad manners in some of the town hall meetings on health care distract you from the real issues involving the availability and affordability of medical insurance, President Obama told listeners this morning in his weekly radio address.

Obama downplayed the ferocity of confrontations between citizens and lawmakers at a number of gatherings held to assess the national mood for an overhaul of the health care delivery system, saying that beyond "the chatter and noise out there" a serious discussion is taking place.

As he has for several weeks now, Obama sought to keep the pressure on insurance companies, whose practices, he asserted, put health coverage out of reach of too many Americans.

Read on about the debate below the fold, see the full texts below, see the president's address above and Sen. Orrin Hatch's response here:


"I know there's plenty of real concern and skepticism out there", Obama said. But "while there may be disagreements on how to go about it, there is widespread agreement on the urgent need to reform a broken system and finally hold insurance companies accountable."

Obama said reform opponents predictably are using fear tactics to sow doubt about his proposed changes, as they have with previous reform efforts. "Every time we come close to passing health insurance reform, the special interests with a stake in the status quo use their influence and political allies to scare and mislead the American people," Obama said.

In the Republican address, Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch said there's much to fear because Democrats are rushing reform efforts and are trying to fix health care through heedless spending.

"More spending, more taxes, more government is not the answer," said Hatch, complaining that Democrats are proposing fixing a $2.5 billion health care system by shoveling another trillion dollars at it.

Hatch offered a novel twist on the oft-cited statistic that 46 million Americansroughly 15 percent of the country -- are uninsured. That means that 85 percent of Americans do have insurance and are satisfied with it, Hatch said, urging caution lest reform be bungled.

Here are the texts of the president's speech and Hatch's speech:

The president's weekly address:

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

This week, I've been traveling across our country to discuss health insurance reform and to hear directly from folks like youyour questions, your concerns, and your stories.

Now, I know there's been a lot of attention paid to some of the town hall meetings that are going on around the country, especially those where tempers have flared. You know how TV loves a ruckus.

But what you haven't seenbecause it's not as excitingare the many constructive meetings going on all over the country where Americans are airing their hopes and concerns about this very important issue.

I've been holding some of my own, and the stories I've heard have really underscored why I believe so strongly that health insurance reform is a challenge we can't ignore.

They're stories like Lori Hitchcock's, who I met in New Hampshire this week. Lori's got a pre-existing condition, so no insurance company will cover her. She's self-employed, and in this economy, she can't find a job that offers health care, so she's been uninsured for two years.

Or they're stories like Katie Gibson's, who I met in Montana. When Katie tried to change insurance companies, she was sure to list her pre-existing conditions on the application and even called her new company to confirm she'd be covered. Two months later, she was droppedafter she'd already gone off her other insurance.

These are the stories that aren't being toldstories of a health care system that works better for the insurance industry than it does for the American people. And that's why we're going to pass health insurance reform that finally holds the insurance companies accountable.

But now's the hard part. Because the history is clearevery time we come close to passing health insurance reform, the special interests with a stake in the status quo use their influence and political allies to scare and mislead the American people.

As an example, let's look at one of the scarier-sounding and more ridiculous rumors out therethat so-called "death panels" would decide whether senior citizens get to live or die. That rumor began with the distortion of one idea in a Congressional bill that would allow Medicare to cover voluntary visits with your doctor to discuss your end-of-life careif and only if you decide to have those visits. It had nothing to do with putting government in control of your decisions; in fact, it would give you all the information you needif you want itto put you in control of your decisions. When a conservative Republican Senator who has long-fought for even more far-reaching proposals found out how folks were twisting the idea, he called their misrepresentation, and I quote, "nuts."

So when folks with a stake in the status quo keep inventing these boogeymen in an effort to scare people, it's disappointing, but it's not surprising. We've seen it before. When President Roosevelt was working to create Social Security, opponents warned it would open the door to "federal snooping" and force Americans to wear dog tags. When President Kennedy and President Johnson were working to create Medicare, opponents warned of "socialized medicine." Sound familiar? Not only were those fears never realized, but more importantly, those programs have saved the lives of tens of millions of seniors, the disabled, and the disadvantaged.

Those who would stand in the way of reform will say almost anything to scare you about the cost of action. But they won't say much about the cost of inaction. If you're worried about rationed care, higher costs, denied coverage, or bureaucrats getting between you and your doctor, then you should know that's what's happening right now. In the past three years, over 12 million Americans were discriminated against by insurance companies due to a preexisting condition, or saw their coverage denied or dropped just when they got sick and needed it most. Americans whose jobs and health care are secure today just don't know if they'll be next to join the 14,000 who lose their health insurance every single day. And if we don't act, average family premiums will keep rising to more than $22,000 within a decade.

On the other hand, here's what reform will mean for you.

First, no matter what you've heard, if you like your doctor or health care plan, you can keep it. If you don't have insurance, you'll finally be able to afford insurance. And everyone will have the security and stability that's missing today.

Insurance companies will be prohibited from denying you coverage because of your medical history, dropping your coverage if you get sick, or watering down your coverage when it countsbecause there's no point in having health insurance if it's not there when you need it.

Insurance companies will no longer be able to place some arbitrary cap on the amount of coverage you can receive in a given year or lifetime, and we will place a limit on how much you can be charged for out-of-pocket expensesbecause no one in America should go broke just because they get sick.

Finally, we'll require insurance companies to cover routine checkups and preventive care, like mammograms and colonoscopiesbecause there's no reason we shouldn't be saving lives and dollars by catching diseases like breast cancer and prostate cancer on the front end.

That's what reform means. For all the chatter and the noise out there, what every American needs to know is this: If you don't have health insurance, you will finally have quality, affordable options once we pass reform. If you do have health insurance, we will make sure that no insurance company or government bureaucrat gets between you and the care that you need. And we will deliver this in a fiscally responsible way.

I know there's plenty of real concern and skepticism out there. I know that in a time of economic upheaval, the idea of change can be unsettling, and I know that there are folks who believe that government should have no role at all in solving our problems. These are legitimate differences worthy of the real discussion that America deservesone where we lower our voices, listen to one another, and talk about differences that really exist. Because while there may be disagreements over how to go about it, there is widespread agreement on the urgent need to reform a broken system and finally hold insurance companies accountable.

Nearly fifty years ago, in the midst of the noisy early battles to create what would become Medicare, President Kennedy said, "I refuse to see us live on the accomplishments of another generation. I refuse to see this country, and all of us, shrink from these struggles which are our responsibility in our time." Now it falls to us to meet the challenges of our time. And if we can come together, and listen to one another; I believe, as I always have, that we will rise to this moment, we will build something better for our children, and we will secure America's future in this new century.


Sen. Hatch's remarks:

"Hello. I am Orrin Hatch, from the great state of Utah. Thank you for the opportunity to speak with all of you today to talk about the very important challenge of health care reform.


"Ensuring access to affordable and quality health care for every American is not a Republican or Democrat issueit is an American issue. Our nation expects us to solve this challenge in an open, honest and responsible manner. More spending, more taxes and more government is not the answer.

"After the rushed stimulus bill, Americans are rightly concerned about what is being pushed through the Democratic Congress. The rush to pass something that will affect every American life and one-sixth of our economy has raised concerns all around our nation.

"So, why are Americans so skeptical of and concerned with the approach of the Obama administration and Democrats in Congress? A big reason for this concern is that nearly 85 percent of Americans have coverage and they are really worried about what reform means for them. Especially our seniors. And these concerns are moving from kitchen table conversations to town hall discussions.

"I am disappointed about the attempts to characterize the behavior of Americans expressing their concerns as 'un-American'.' Although I strongly encourage the use of respectful debate in these town halls, we should not be stifling these discussions. There is nothing 'un-American' about disagreements. In fact, our great nation was founded on speaking our minds.

"Families are voicing their concerns because they feel like they are not being heard in Washington and I am here to tell you that your voices are coming through and it is essential for all of you to be involved in this issue.

"Republicans in Congress agree with the majority of Americans who believe that just throwing more taxpayer dollars at a problem will not deliver meaningful reform. Telling the American public that the solution for solving a $2.5 trillion health care system is to simply spend another trillion dollars in our current economy, just does not make sense. Especially at a time when spending and debt are multiplying with such alarming speed, like an almost $2 trillion national deficit this year alone, $200 billion in state deficits, a Medicare program on the edge of bankruptcy and a national debt that will triple within the next decade.

"There are several areas of consensus that can form the basis for a sustainable, fiscally responsible and bipartisan reform. These include:

1. Reforming the health insurance market for every American by making sure that no American is denied coverage simply based on a pre-existing condition

2. Protecting the coverage for almost 85 percent of Americans who already have coveragecoverage they likeby making it more affordable. This means reducing costs by rewarding quality and coordinated care, giving families more information on the cost and choices of their coverage and treatment options, discouraging junk lawsuits against doctors and hospitals and promoting prevention and wellness measures like quitting smoking and living a healthier lifestyle.

3. Giving states flexibility to design their own unique approaches to reduce uninsured

4. Empowering small businesses and self-employed entrepreneursthe job-creating engines and lifeblood of our economyto buy affordable coverage for their employees

"Unfortunately, the path we are taking in Washington right now is to simply spend another trillion dollars of taxpayer money to further expand the role of the federal government. The reform proposals being pushed by the Democrats include massive expansions of the Medicaid program and the creation of a new Washington-run plan that will drive millions of Americans from private coverage of their choice into government-run plans. As the federal government's control of our health care system continues to increase, private coverage will continue to decrease, till we are left with a Washington-run and dictated health care system.

"Medicare offers an important lesson. With $38 trillion in future costs, it is facing bankruptcy within the next decade, threatening access to care for millions of Americans. So what is the Democratic approach to fix Medicare for our seniors? Hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts which will be used to expand a financially-strapped Medicaid program and create another government-run plan.

"To enact true health care reform, we should work together to write a responsible, bipartisan bill for the American families who are faced with rising unemployment and out of control health care costs.

"We have a real need for reform and an opportunity on behalf of the American people to get it done. If we are responsible in our policy approaches and strive for true bipartisanship, we can achieve meaningful reform."


Jumat, 14 Agustus 2009

Must-See TV: The 11-Year-Old’s Interview With President Obama

Sharpton, Gingrich Push School Reforms
The Unlikely Pair Will Travel with Education Secretary Arne Duncan to Promote Education Reform
Must-See TV: The 11-Year-Old’s Interview With President Obama
Damon Weaver is gunning for our jobs. Take a look…
Obama 'bullied a lot?'no slam dunks

by Mark Silva

Damon Weaver, an 11-year-old sixth grader from rural Pahokee, Fla., worked for some time at getting his "dream" interview with President Barack Obama.

"As president, you get bullied a lot,'' Weaver told Obama. "How do you handle it?''

"When you're president, you're responsible for a lot of things, and a lot of people are having a tough time and they're hurting out there,'' Obama said. "The main thing I just try to do is stay focused on trying to do a good job... And try to be understanding that sometimes people are going to be mad about things.''

Was he ever bullied in school?

"I wasn't bullied too much in school,'' Obama said. "I was pretty big for my age.''

"Can you dunk?'' Weaver asked the first basketball player.

"Not anymore,'' Obama said. "I'm almost 50 now... Your legs are the first thing to go.''

Being president?

"It's very exciting. There's a lot of work,'' Obama said. "There are times when you get a little worn down. But every day, you have the possibility of helping other people.''

Weaver wanted to know what can be done for schools in places like his home town, which is closer to hardscrabble Lake Okeechobee than the Gold Coast of Palm Beach County -- "kind of a poor town.''

"Unfortunately, a lot of times, if you've got a community that is lower-income, they don't have as much money in their schools,'' Obama said. "A lot of that is state funding. I want to see states be more fair in terms of how they give money to schools.''

Weaver, who said he had gotten a similar pledge from Vice President Joe Biden, asked the president this: "Would you like to become my homeboy?''

"Absolutely,'' Obama said.

"Thanks for making my dream come true,'' the sixth-grader said.

CBS News' Early Show asked the young journalist about his get.

"President Obama was nice. He gave good details,'' the young interviewer said, noting: "And he's a very tall person.''


Kamis, 13 Agustus 2009

Cheney 'Spills the Beans' About Bush Administration

Dozens Line Up to Remember Shriver at Wake
Mourners Outside Mass. Church Include Special Olympians Holding Yellow Flowers
Cheney 'Spills the Beans' About Bush Administration
ABC's Stu Schutzman reports from New York: Dick Cheney appears to be at it again. In the run-up to his new book, author Cheney purportedly “spill’s the beans” about the inside stories surrounding the controversies which swirled around the Bush...
Health-care: Polling, push-back, problems

by Mark Silva

In Washington, "push-back" is something one does in order to combat "misconceptions,'' particularly when one thinks he might have a "problem,'' which "polling'' sometimes "suggests.''

In the case of health-care reform, the White House was asked today "if the president is pushing for something that the American people, when you poll independently, supportwhy are they not with the president?''

Robert Gibbs Aug 13.jpg

"Part of it is some of these misconceptions,'' White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs replied. "I don't doubt that... I do think people have questions... I mean, the president isn't out doing town hall meetings just for his health... He understands the need to address concerns or misconceptions out there.''

As for the polls, however, not all lead to the conclusion that the people are "not with the president,'' Gibbs suggests. Gallup has found more people voicing disapproval for the president's handling of healthcare than those voicing approval. But others have shown that most people want reform.

Yet now the White House is engaged in an email campaign to rally support, "town halls" featuring the president this week in New Hampshire, Montana and Colorado, and more events coming next week. "Does that indicate that this push-back... is late?'' Gibbs was asked today.

No, he said.

"Polling is a snapshot in time,'' Gibbs said. "The debate continues, and we'll see whether numbers move or change as a result of the continuing debate.'' (The snap shots have held some storm warnings since June.)

"But doesn't the fact that you've started pushing back
indicate that you realize that the initiative is in trouble?'' another reporter asked the White House spokesman today.

"One of the reasons we've pushed back is because of those misconceptions,'' said Gibbs, who managed to mouth the phrase, "death panels,'' which Republican Sarah Palin accuses Obama of promoting in the healthcare reform legislation.

"Have some of those misconceptions contributed to the poll numbers?'' Gibbs asked. "I don't doubt that. But at the same time... there's a little cause and effect here. But we're not going to stop pushing back on the misconceptions, whether or not the polling shows one thing or another. The president, again, strongly believes that -- and has for years -- that it's better to address what people's concerns are, and take them on head-on.''

(Photo of Robert Gibbs today by Alex Brandon / )


Rabu, 12 Agustus 2009

Kennedy to Miss Medal of Freedom Ceremony

Kennedy to Miss Medal of Freedom Ceremony
Senator's Daughter Will Accept Presidential Honor, Awarded to 16 People This Afternoon
The Fed Speaks: Good News, Bad News
Just in -- from the ABC Business Unit: The Fed confirmed what the GDP and jobs data have been showing -- that “economic activity is leveling out.” It took note of continuing headwinds, including “ongoing job losses, sluggish income growth,...
Vladimir Putin's 'reset button' armed

by Mark Silva

It's probably a good thing that the Obama administration has pushed the "reset button'' in relations with Russia.

With Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's announcement today that Russia will spend as much as 16 billion rubles ($487 million) next year to develop a military base in the breakaway region of Abkhazia and fortify the border of the separatist Georgian territory, memories of Russia's five-day war with Georgia just a year ago may linger fresh on the minds of the world's diplomats.

Vladimir Putin on vacation.jpg

Russia recognized Abkhazia as a sovereign country after the war over another breakaway Georgian region, South Ossetia. Russia has deployed thousands of troops in the two regions.

"On a visit to the Abkhaz capital Sukhumi today, the first anniversary of a European Union-brokered cease-fire agreement that brought the fighting to an end, Putin renewed Russia's pledge to defend Abkhazia against attack and to help the region rebuild its economy,'' Bloomberg News notes.

"The Abkhaz people will succeed in reviving their economy as Russia continues to give systemic economic and political -- and, if needed, military -- support," Putin told reporters after talks with Abkhaz leader Sergei Bagapsh.

Putin recently returned from vacation outside the town of Kyzyl, in Southern Siberia, where he boned up on his horseback skills. The Russians are putting a lot of horsepower into Abkhazia.

President Barack Obama recently returned from Russia.

On his way there, he noted this of Putin: "I think he would admit that his formative years were shaped on the Cold War and that some of his continued grievances with respect to the West are still dated in some of the suspicions that came out of that period... I think he genuinely would like to see U.S.- Russians relations improve.''

(Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pictured on vacation outside the town of Kyzyl in Southern Siberia earlier this month in a photo by Alexsey Druzhnin /AFP / Getty Images)


Selasa, 11 Agustus 2009

Watch: Hostile Town Hall Audience Presses Sen. Arlen Specter

DOT Under Microscope for Stimulus Grants
Transportation Department IG's Report Shows $1.1B in Federal Money Paid for 50 Subpar Projects
Watch: Hostile Town Hall Audience Presses Sen. Arlen Specter
Republican turned Democratic Sen. Arlen Specter faced an angry crowd at a town hall meeting today in Lebanon, Pa. Frustrated voters challenged him again and again about health care reform -- Specter attempted to explain his position, and said he...
Obama daughters off-limits: White House

by Mark Silva and updated

The White House has made it clear that it did not approve of posters asking the question: "President Obama's daughters get healthy school lunches. Why don't I?"

But the posters stay.

Has the White House Counsel's Office indeed asked a nonprofit organization to take down the posters, which appeared in the Union Station train depot in Washington last week in a bid to convince Congress to offer schoolchildren healthier lunches? (See the ad here: nutrition ad.pdf)

Malia and Sasha dolls small.jpg

"Without getting into the specifics, we've been very clear, I think, from even before the administration started, that their two girls would have a very private life, and we want to protect that private life and their privacy,'' White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said today. "And we hope that others will be respectful, as many in the media have been, about not using the girls as a publicity stunt.''

Soon after the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine placed its posters with the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, in a $20,000 campaign on nutrition policy, White House lawyers asked the group to pull the ads featuring 8-year-old Jasmine Messiah, a Florida resident who says her school offers no vegetarian or vegan lunches.

PCRM President Neal Barnard, a physician and nutrition researcher, received a phone call about the posters from the counsel's office. He made a call of his own, to a First Amendment lawyer, and has asked the White House to reconsider its objections.

"We're definitely keeping them up,'' Barnard told Tribune's Washington Bureau today. "First of all, the president and the first family have no objection to these ads, from what we have seen. I am quite sure that the president would say, 'That girl deserves a healthy meal, just like any other child in America.'

"The president is surrounded by people who are there to protect him.... And sometimes they are overzealous,'' Barnard said. "People are trying to exploit the first family, but our ad is perfectly appropriate. What it does is talks about an important issue.''

The White House counsel's office, when it called last week, ''said, 'Take take the ads down.' They effectively implied that we would be in for legal action if we did not,'' Barnard said. "I called one of the First Amendment attorneys here in Washington who said, "No. 1, they don't have a leg to stand on.... That would effectively constitute censorship.'''

Barnard called the White House back and said, the ads stay.

The group has placed 14 of the ads around Union Station, where congressional staffers coming to work will see them. The group is attempting to convince Congress to consider vegetarian options in the Child Nutrition Act under review this fall. The majority of schools in the National School Lunch Program do not offer vegetarian or vegan options, despite American Medical Association support for those options, according to Barnard.

The president's daughters attend a private school in Washington.

The posters don't mention the president's children by namenor do they portray their images, the way that the "Sweet Sasha" and "Marvelous Malia'' dolls made by Ty Inc. pictured above. The White House objected to them, and the toymaker stopped using the daughters' names. (Ty moved on to Bo, the Beanie Baby.)


Senin, 10 Agustus 2009

Hillary Clinton Meets With Former Person of the Week

In Mexico, Obama Predicts Health Care Win
President Talks Domestic, Foreign Issues at North America Leaders Summit
Hillary Clinton Meets With Former Person of the Week
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in Congo today, and a glance at her schedule sent us to the "World News" archives. Secretary Clinton visits with Congolese NBA star Dikembe Mutombo -- for the same reason we made Mutombo our...
Sarah Palin redux: 'Civil discourse'

by Mark Silva

After stirring a hornet's nest with a claim that President Barack Obama and fellow Democrats are planning government "death panels'' in a healthcare reform that promises to be "downright evil,' Alaska's Sarah Palin now says it's time for a "civil discourse.''

The former governor, at her Facebook page, notes today that "Alaskans will join Senators Murkowski and Begich in town hall meetings to discuss the current health care legislation.

"There are many disturbing details in the current bill that Washington is trying to rush through Congress, but we must stick to a discussion of the issues and not get sidetracked by tactics that can be accused of leading to intimidation or harassment,'' Palin writes in her Facebook Noes, the number of followers growing in the past few days.

"Such tactics diminish our nation's civil discourse which we need now more than ever because the fine print in this outrageous health care proposal must be understood clearly and not get lost in conscientious voters' passion to want to make elected officials hear what we are saying,'' she writes. "Let's not give the proponents of nationalized health care any reason to criticize us.''

It seems a little late for that, perhaps, considering Palin's rabble-rousing comments over the weekend and now with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Leader Steny Hoyer denouncing the people who have disrupted congressional town-hall meetings with loud protests as "simply unAmerica.''