September 29, 2009

Yes, change has come.

We have been changed into creepy automatons.



All hail, education.

98 comments:

miller said...

Nothing to see here. Move along.

All hail dear leader, President Bambi.

Dante said...

Bunch of little fatties.

Mary Martha said...

But people who choose to educate their children outside of the public school system are derided as religious nuts.

Anonymous said...

"Hope - uniting blacks and whites."

Ironically, it was the public schools that taught my daughter that there even was such a thing as an African American.

Up until then, she just referred to our friends as "you know....Paul.....with the black hair."

The ridiculousness came to full fruition when we lived in Paris, and my son referred to someone as an African American.

I assured him that they weren’t African American, they were French.

File this under "creating the very mindset that you're trying to eradicate."

reader_iam said...

I like the way the kid on the front right (in the side-striped shirt) looks early on to whacking at his lips, as if to make that "whappa whappa whappa" sound. Oh, I don't know how to write it (I never was good at generating onomatopoeia, beyond the cliched basics), but you know what sound I mean, don't you?

MadisonMan said...

How horrible to think those children are being made to think they themselves can make America better.

wv: I am not making this up: cultsh

DADvocate said...

Maybe this is why Obama wants to lengthen the school year, to sing his praises even more. The better to indoctrinate you with, my dear!

Robert Cook said...

While I too find the teaching of schoolchildren to sing paeans to Obama to be unnerving, it is no less so whomever the sitting President may be. Given all the foofarah about this matter, Jon Stewart last night aired a clip of Louisiana schoolchildren singing praises to Bush for his help after Hurrican Katrina. (!?)

As for the tag at the end lamenting the apparent ubiquity of "liberalism," would that it were so.

Actually, I don't think most Americans are political at all, as far as having a consciously defined political worldview; most folks just want to go about their lives. But, recent polls show that, when asked their attitudes about various public policy issues, absent any references to terms such as "conservative" or "liberal," Americans tend toward policy preferences that partisans would describe as "liberal."

All their idiotic noise and fury to the contrary, the right wingers, Tea Party attendees, and Fox News afficianados hold a distinct minority view among the American public at large.

reader_iam said...

Amusingly enough, the reason I have time to comment this morning is that all I'm doing is preparing for a meeting with our supervising teacher (one of the avenues for legally homeschooling in Iowa is to have one, with whom one meets or talks with via phone).

I'll have to share this post with him.

Darcy said...

Same here, Quayle. My son has learned so many wonderful things from public school, really. Not.

Wish I could have a do-over.

MadisonMan said...

I'll guess 4th graders with this one.

Hard to tell where they are, though, or the season.

bagoh20 said...

The numerous videos on Youtube comparing these videos with Hitler youth sing alongs is really creepy.

The Nazi ones are nearly identical in message. Usually, very uplifting, and seemingly the harmless extolling of unity, love, change, hope, etc.

It's the attention to a single person that I don't like. Men are far to corruptible to be the objects of worship for children. What if Obama becomes a huge failure or worse, like a Nixon figure. These kids will be stuck with these videos of them singing to him forever.

Our kids deserve more respect. Admiring historical figures after the tally is in is fine, but Obama is far from proved. JFK has been canonized beyond all concern with fact, even after death. I liked him, but what did he do? This new stuff is definitely a bridge too far.

JAL said...

I am stunned.

Giving away my location with more than a gardening zone, let me just say I know this school.

I can predict there will be a kerfuffle (thank you James Taranto)in Buncombe County, NC.

reader_iam said...

MadisonMan, did you listen to the way the video "began"** and the words early on it? It sounds as if you're responding primarily to those nearing the end (I can be 100% wrong, of course).

**I'd prefer it if there were a longer version of this video, because it's fair to wonder about the larger context. And to, as always, want to know why the decision was made to start at a particular place, as opposed to a bit earlier. Etc.

JAL said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Ann Althouse said...

Actually, they are teaching a color-blindness theory of race, so this one should offend lefties.

JAL said...

You know, is it weren'to so tied to Obama's electioneering mantra, one might think "So what."

BUT I can never remember singing songs about how *I* could make America better.

The message is there over and over and over -- we were never good enough for people like the Obamas, the Ayers (right- looking at you too, Bernardine), the Wrights, the Pfleglers, the ACORN dudes, Alinsksy and all his acolytes ....

Weird. Really, really weird.

But it makes sense if you are a statist and the state is the where everything's at.

Opting out.

reader_iam said...

All their idiotic noise and fury to the contrary, the right wingers, Tea Party attendees, and Fox News afficianados hold *a* distinct minority view among the American public at large.

Which view, Robert? On what topic? Could you specify, please?

Chip Ahoy said...

I think the kids are more impervious than we might think by looking at these things. In fact, they're very likely to rebel. The whole time they're singing they're thinking, "what a bunch of crap I'm made to do."

I did not understand the pledge of allegiance. At first I simply couldn't understand how a nation under God could be be invisible when it was plainly in view. But once that was cleared up I wondered why I was taking an oath to a flag.

I liked flags as much as any boy, flapping around, waving back and forth, almost as good as a kite, probably would make a good parachute, jump off a swing holding the corners, pull the ropes, fly it around, but swearing an allegiance to it? Seemed odd. I didn't get it. It's a piece of fabric! Ferchristsake. Then I thought, "Why are they making me do this?" Then, "I rather don't care for being indoctrinated like this." Then, "I'm certain I don't like this." Then, "I wonder what would happen to me if I refused." Then, "Oh just, blahblahblah de blahblahblah de blabidy blabidy blah blah."

I still kind of don't get it.

victoria said...

Please, this is a mountain out of a mole hill. Don't we have more important things to worry about? This controversy is crap.
My child was educated entirely in private schools, catholic, and she was NEVER known as a religious nut. Ridiculous.

victoria said...

BTW, i think they should take "under God" out of the pledge of allegiance.

reader_iam said...

blahblahblah de blahblahblah de blabidy blabidy blah blah



Hey! Now THAT'S what I ought to have written to try to express what it looked a bit as if that boy in the side-striped shirt was doing early on.

Chip Ahoy: As always, brilliant.

(Maybe, Chip, you could do one of your animation thingies to that boy to make more clear what I was trying to say.)

Beth said...

I'm most offended by the waste of time. If they're going to gather kids up into formations that look like a choir, they ought to be teaching kids some great choral music.

My friend went to a parent-teacher conference recently because her 6-year-old is apparently getting distracted mid-morning. This is after 1 and 1/2 hours of math, and into the next hour and a half of reading. And because No Child Must Be Left Behind, there's no recess. None. For first-graders. But there must be something wrong with a little boy getting restless.

Math, reading, history - all good. So are singing, art and recess. We've really lost our way in education.

reader_iam said...

Beth: My son attended a school in which boys of that age were expected, while walking on line to other classrooms, refrain from flapping their arms, even if they'd been sitting for great lengths of time.

WTF?

Greybeard said...

Chip-
Have you served in the military?

Shanna said...

Math, reading, history - all good. So are singing, art and recess. We've really lost our way in education.

Agree! Recess, especially, for very young children. How else are they to learn social skills?

CarmelaMotto said...

JAL I went to school in Buncombe County in the 1980s and went to North Buncombe HS. It was a much different place before all the Yankees came down (note, my family were Yankees when we arrived).

Quayle - I agree. I brought home a friend for dinner in college. Later that evening, my parents mentioned they were proud of me because I never mentioned my friend was black and they thought they must have done something right. Truthfully, it never occurred to me and I never rec'd "diversity training," pointing out my differences with my friends.

JAL said...

Somewhere over on the youtube link there is a comment that this was PTA /PTO [PTO being an alternative to PTA] meeeting. Do not know the date.

That being said I would make a pretty good wager that those words did not get approved by the parents in that school distict.

There is a point at which not talking about race is because of racism. There is a point at which bringing it up race at every opportunity is racism.

Hoosier Daddy said...

And because No Child Must Be Left Behind, there's no recess. None. For first-graders.

The horror.

My daughter has gone to public school from day and one and had recess. She also doesn't spend an hour and a half a day in math or reading either and she's in advanced math and reading now in 7th grade.

Sounds to me like your friend's gradeschool needs some reorganization perhaps?

Hoosier Daddy said...

Agree! Recess, especially, for very young children. How else are they to learn social skills?

There ain't no recess in life Shanna. Better the waifs get the wake up call now cause it don't get any easier.

Now if you'll excuse me I need to get my daughter back to tilling the backyard and fetching water.

JAL said...

Victoria Please, this is a mountain out of a mole hill. Don't we have more important things to worry about?

You mean like POTUS flying to Copenhagen to make sure the IOC knows how improtant it is that Chicago gets the Olympics? And take Michelle out to dinner.

Unknown said...

Chip Ahoy said...

I think the kids are more impervious than we might think by looking at these things. In fact, they're very likely to rebel.

Hope you're right, Chip. Unfortunately, this is how they have made good little fanatics all over the world for quite some time.

Shanna said...

Now if you'll excuse me I need to get my daughter back to tilling the backyard and fetching water.

Heh. I think kids need time to play, if not other reason than that they have boatloads of energy that needs to be expended. Honestly, they would probably be better off tilling and fetching water for an hour or two a day, then being forced to sit still for 8 hours straight.

MadisonMan said...

reader, I did listen to the whole thing, but confess to looking at first at the kids, and seeing the distracting general squirminess, and not really listening. Was it a lot of hopey/changey nonsense? After some time the kids settled down and I then started listening to the words.

I watched it once. Please don't suggest I listen again.

I will say this: This is far far far better than Wackadoo Zoo. (shudder)

Scott M said...

@Robert Cook

All their idiotic noise and fury to the contrary, the right wingers, Tea Party attendees, and Fox News afficianados hold *a* distinct minority view among the American public at large.

Which view, Robert? On what topic? Could you specify, please?

Seconded.

Robert, please don't make sweeping statements like that without backing them up with, at the very least, sources. If what you claim is true (which I'll not cede), then why did the Clinton administration run left, but govern center-right?

Why did even the most avidly liberal prof I had in poli sci lament the fact that the country is center-right? The guy had KMARX on his license-plate for crying out loud, but still lamented the fact that the prols were all center-right.

MadisonMan said...

Re: Recess.

In Madison, kids still get recess through middle school, but it's after lunch, so lunch is a hurried affair, and woe to the kid who gets hot lunch and has to wait in line. I think that's why my son brownbags it. He can wolf down his two PB&Js and then get outside.

Scott M said...

OH, and for the record...to the point of the thread in the first place...

Any publicly-funded institution that makes young kids sing praises to individual government officials should make one's skin crawl. This should be true regardless of ideology or party.

Remember those kids saying prayers toward that cardboard cutout of Bush? Just as scary.

We're supposed to be a nation of people who's loyalties lie with institutions and ideals, not individuals. Loyalty to individuals first is a sure-fire step toward totalitarianism. Again...machs nicht on the party the adored belongs to.

Chip Ahoy said...

Greybeard, no I have never served in the military, but I grew up in a military family and half my formative years were spent on Air Force bases. I went to twelve schools before graduating from high school and we did that pledge in all of them. Although thankfully we were never compelled to sing songs to presidents, I am used to seeing framed photographs of presidents displayed prominently in government buildings, as a way of propounding "this is our current leader."

I was reminded of this at my father's service at Ft. Logan. I had forgotten they did that. At the Visitors Center, right there behind the counter centered high on the broad soffit, a LARGE photograph of G. Bush 43. I thought, "If my friends saw this, they'd shit themselves."

~~~~~

In the opening frame of the video (haven't bothered to watch) the boy in front with the stripe shirt looks like he's wearing a paper hat folded into a boat from a newspaper. Ha ha ha. I used to love those paper boats.

Michael Haz said...

Kids being kids, there are probably some on the playground during recess singing

Mmm Mmm Mmm
Braack Hussien Obama
He wants to kill grandmama
Mmm Mmm .

WV: fachrou. Japanese epithet

I'm Full of Soup said...

This stuff will cost the Dems votes. It's overkill and moderate Americans recognize it at a glance.

It's like the Dems appointing 3-4 dimwitted bootlickers to vacant U.S. Senate seats....Burris in IL, Kaufman in DE, Teddy's replacement in MA. What good soldier will take Robert Byrd's seat when he croaks for good?

Arrogant complacency like this will cost the Dems votes too because we are not a monarchy.

Robert Cook said...

"...why did the Clinton administration run left, but govern center-right?"

When running, most politicians play to the people they hope will vote for them: the public. When governing, they play to the people who actually own the country: the big corporations and wealthy individuals whose money the pols depend on to run for office. Obviously, after 12 years of Reagan/Bush, which saw the economy in terrible shape (as it was also left after 8 years of Bush Jr.), Clinton knew the public wanted to hear vigorous promises to undo the corruption and other practices that had hurt the common people in the oountry, i.e., they wanted to hear so-called "liberal" rhetoric.

That said, I don't think Clinton was ever anything more than a centrist anyway, just as Obama isn't.

As for specific issues, here's one: the right wingers, Tea Partiers, et al., pontificate furiously against any sort of government provided health care or public option, but a majority of Americans favor a public option, and many would like to see single payer health care.

Mark said...

What disturbs me is how many teachers nationwide seem to be spontaneously driven to inculcate what I believe to be unhealthy hero worship on someone.

And then I remember how many "progressives" were sure that conservatives were fomenting a Cult of Bush.

Again, the rule is, anything the Progressives accuse conservatives of doing is something they plan to do as soon as they get the chance.

Which makes me damned nervous about the next Administration change.

Hoosier Daddy said...

As for specific issues, here's one: the right wingers, Tea Partiers, et al., pontificate furiously against any sort of government provided health care or public option, but a majority of Americans favor a public option, and many would like to see single payer health care.

While in the reality based community, polls show that 85% of folks are happy with their current coverage.

And Osama bin Laden is still dead.

Joan said...

And because No Child Must Be Left Behind, there's no recess. None. For first-graders. But there must be something wrong with a little boy getting restless.

I wouldn't put my children into such a school, but don't blame NCLB for this lunacy. NCLB is a federal policy but the vast majority of elementary schools still have multiple - appropriate - recesses for very young students.

Re the content of the video, my response to the chanting of "Can we make America better? Yes, we can!" was to wonder whether these kids are learning anything at all about how wonderful America really is. We are still the best country on earth, and they should know that.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Any publicly-funded institution that makes young kids sing praises to individual government officials should make one's skin crawl. This should be true regardless of ideology or party

Bolding this because it is the most important point....and because I think it irritates someone here...Bissage? :-)

Seriously. WTF. Taking time out of the children's limited learning time and attention span to have them spew praises of a transitory (we hope to God) partisan political figure?

This is indoctrination, plain and simple.

I'm also appalled that those who object to children singing Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer find no issue whatsoever with this completely inappropriate and ILLEGAL use of school time and tax payer dollars. Of course...I forgot. They worship at the altar of Obama and the new world order so that makes it just fine.

JAL said...

"Keep your eyes open" ??

But the line most likely to be be voted #1:

"Being both [black and white] Obama can not take sides."

"SIDES"

Unbelievable. And these people teach our kids.

Penny said...

The country is still center right, but looking down the road a few decades, it's very hard to imagine that this will be the case.

I agree with Beth that we have lost our way with education, and I agree with JAL's point that sometimes it is racism to NOT talk about race. Education is one of those times when it is unhealthy not to discuss how our current system is missing the mark for too minorities when they will become the majority in this country soon enough.

It bodes poorly for our nation's future.

Sofa King said...

I wouldn't put my children into such a school, but don't blame NCLB for this lunacy. NCLB is a federal policy but the vast majority of elementary schools still have multiple - appropriate - recesses for very young students.

One problem with that: if it's not because of NCLB, then how do you blame Bush? For any problem, you must start with the conclusion that Bush is to blame, then you can work out the connection.

ricpic said...

This is un-American. Not in the sense that it is worship of Obama. Worship of Reagan - it may be that that occurred in certain classrooms - would be just as bad. It is a drill that inculcates subjecthood not citizenship. I'm not all that thrilled with the Pledge of Allegiance but at least it is a pledge to liberty and justice for all: principles. Not persons.

John Stodder said...

My take on this is: How sad.

It's abundantly clear now to his supporters as well as his foes that Obama the man is just another mediocre politician who overpromises and underperforms. If I was a die-hard leftist, like perhaps this teacher is, by now I'd be thinking "how could I have been so fooled?" Not by his rhetoric, but by his pretensions of being a "transformational leader." The overwhelming sense I get from watching Obama love himself to death on TV these days is this guy represents anything but "change" and as a leader he is increasingly "hope"-less. He is numbingly average. His indecisiveness on Iran, his continued vagueness on the actual tough questions the health care reform bill poses, his complete indolence when it comes to the issue of transparency (Why isn't he leading the charge to demand the senate's bill be put online for 72 hours before the committee vote. The campaign version of Obama would have insisted on it), all of it taken together screams "I'm an average politician, utterly controlled by the special interests that got me here. As far as presidents go, I'm below average because I have no idea how to use the powers of my office."

How do you reconcile the deeds of a boring hack with the devotion and high ideals of this video? I mean, it's bad enough for those of us who think this stuff is creepy. But what about those who think it's inspiring? The reality of Obama must be the biggest buzzkill ever!

John Stodder said...

For any problem, you must start with the conclusion that Bush is to blame, then you can work out the connection.

Sounds like a fun parlor game. The political equivalent of "Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon." Connect any bad thing that happens anywhere in the world to the Bush Administration in six or fewer steps.

ElaineCoxArt said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Robert Cook said...

"While in the reality based community, polls show that 85% of folks are happy with their current coverage."

I'm happy with my current coverage, too, because I'm lucky enough to be employed and to have an employer who provides me access to a good plan. (I've had treatment for health issues the cost of which would have bankrupted me if not for this plan.) However, I definitely want single payer, "universal" health care, and I want the complete elimination of insurance companies from our health care delivery system. The one position does not necessarily preclude the other. I don't want to have to depend on being lucky enough to have a particular employer in order to know I can get health care as necessary.

Here are a few results I found by googling:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hlTYMW3D6YD6
cehWzTUWCJtIFe6g

http://blogs.abcnews.com/theworldnewser/2009/09/majority-of-americans-support-a-public-option-in-health-reform.html

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/06/19/opinion/polls/main5098517.shtml

http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2009/06/public-support-for-public-option.html

kristinintexas said...

Robert Cook said...

Actually, I don't think most Americans are political at all, as far as having a consciously defined political worldview; most folks just want to go about their lives.

Agreed. And this desire to just want to go about life, to be free to care for one's family and pursue one's goals - happiness, even - without interference, is what motivates those who push for smaller government. Thank God we live in a country where people can afford not to care about politics. I just wish more people realized that wanting to be left alone is a political worldview.

Robert Cook said...

"Robert Cook, any link to see that Louisiana clip with the schoolkids/George Bush praise? can't seem to locate it. thanks."

It was on last night's DAILY SHOW, so I'd check Comedy Central's website. If I can find a direct link I'll post it here.

Robert Cook said...

Okay, if you go to the DAILY SHOW site you can click to watch last night's complete episode. The segment relating to this topic, and that ends with the clip of "Katrina Kids" singing, starts at about 11:50 in.

Hoosier Daddy said...

However, I definitely want single payer, "universal" health care, and I want the complete elimination of insurance companies from our health care delivery system

Well shit. I want a government funded mortgage payment too. How about a government funded car so I can get to work? You know, a government funded clothing allowance would be swell too. Cause you know those three things, food, shelter and clothing are the cornerstone for basic survival.

But you know Cookie, Medicare is bankrupt so don't you think the government should work on getting that fixed first? Maybe demonstrate that they can handle the 42 million Medicare folks before we add in the 300 million Americans and 10-15 million illegals?

Just a thought.

Robert Cook said...

To the degree Medicare needs additional funding, they can simply reallocate funds and cut other areas of the budget. I recommend taking a big red pencil to large chunks of our military budget.

That would be novel: taking money away from killing and torturing people and apply it toward providing health care for people.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Hoosier, please get with the program.

The correct term is not govt-funded. You are hereby reminded and instructed to refer to it as "affordable health care" whatever the fuck that means.

Hoosier Daddy said...

To the degree Medicare needs additional funding, they can simply reallocate funds and cut other areas of the budget. I recommend taking a big red pencil to large chunks of our military budget.

Of course you would. Nothing like sacrificing the national defense.

I recommend taxing those individuals who currently don't pay any taxes and have them start kicking into the system rather than taking out of it.

Novel concept.

Hoosier Daddy said...

Hey I have an even better idea. How about we cancel our membership in the UN along with the billions we pay into it, along with the additional billions we provide in aid to Africa, Asia and the other 'developing countries'

Now there's an idea, take care of our own before we take care of others.

This is fun.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Cookie said:

"That would be novel: taking money away from killing and torturing people and apply it toward providing health care for people."

Why don't we merge the two programs, Medicare with Torture/Killing? Then we could double your proposed savings.

Hoosier Daddy said...

Why don't we merge the two programs, Medicare with Torture/Killing? Then we could double your proposed savings.

See you have to forgive Cookie. The idea that this nation has a military and uses it for things like removing genocidal dictators or killing the Islamofascist headhackers who perpetrated 9/11 just gives him the vapors.

On the other hand if we simply converted to Islam and did the same stuff we could simply celebrate it as part of our rich cultural heritage.

Robert Cook said...

"Nothing like sacrificing the national defense."

I have no objections to actual defense of our country; however,no war we've engaged in since WWII has been defensive. Certainly, all our recent wars have been entirely offensive.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Cookie Cookie, lend me your comb!

[checking to see how old the commenters here are. I know Alhouse will remember this]

Robert Cook said...

And, this genocidal dictator about whom you've been manipulated to have the vapors was our buddy for a long time, and only became a (false) cause for alarm when he attacked another of our buddies in the region. We are in no way strangers to close cooperative bonds with brutal dictators around the globe, so any appeals to "vanquishing the bad guys" on our part are baloney, meant only to elicit unthinking approval for our wars of aggression abroad.

Robert Cook said...

Ed "Kookie" Byrnes from 77 Sunset Strip.

hombre said...

Please, this is a mountain out of a mole hill. Don't we have more important things to worry about?

More important that the quality of education in government schools? Maybe not.

My youngest went to a preschool for the gifted -- tested for admission -- where the kids took turns running a "store," using a cash register and making change.

At the end of his first term in a public kindergarten, his teacher, a lovely woman and the prior year's state "teacher of the year," allowed as how he "probably knew his numbers from one to ten."

That was his last day in an American government school.

BTW, wasn't "No Child Left Behind" sponsored by Ted Kennedy and accompanied by the largest increase in educational spending in history? Just askin'.

MadisonMan said...

wasn't "No Child Left Behind" sponsored by Ted Kennedy

If you ignore the part GWBush played in it, you could say it was all Kennedy's fault.

Can I tell you how the children in this video reacted? Most of them didn't really like it -- sure, they went along with it, grumblingly, and about half learned all the words. Of those half, several actually understood what they were saying. Maybe one or two took away knowledge of how to memorize something. Whether or not they believed what they were saying, well that would depend on their parents' points of view at his age. Maybe a kid or two realized they really liked being on a stage in front of people. Some of them liked doing something different during the day, maybe because they weren't understanding what was going on in class. Some of them didn't like the disruption in the classroom routine.

wv: motions, as in going through the..

bagoh20 said...

"I have no objections to actual defense of our country; however,no war we've engaged in since WWII has been defensive. Certainly, all our recent wars have been entirely offensive."

Robert,

I think you have the logic or at least the justification backward:
If we were proactive in Europe around 1940, we could have prevented the single worst event in the history of the world. In other words if we acted the way we have since WWII we could have avoided it. We will never know what we have avoided by our smaller "aggressive" wars. The idea that we can shrink our military, close the drapes and call 911 is a dangerous dream. Certainly not worth risking just to get single payer.

While insurance companies are less than perfect in health care, I don't see where you get the idea that single payer would be better. If as you describe, you needed serious treatment, then you should understand that under single payer you might not have gotten it, even if you could afford to pay for it. That is my history: I would be dead now if we had single payer of the Canada or UK variety.

hombre said...

R Cook wrote: To the degree Medicare needs additional funding, they can simply ... cut other areas of the budget. I recommend taking a big red pencil to large chunks of our military budget.

What a surprisingly unique position for a leftie to take. LOL

Of course the real puzzler is: If it is true, as Cook says, that the majority of Americans have a liberal point of view, why didn't Obama simply announce during the campaign that he would be pursuing a liberal agenda?

And why are he and most Democrats still lying about their commitment to single payer health care?

bagoh20 said...

Single Payer had a meeting with the death panel today and it didn't go well.

ElaineCoxArt said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
hombre said...

If you ignore the part GWBush played in it, you could say it was all Kennedy's fault.

Since I am no longer a Democrat, who say it was all Bush's fault, I can choose not to be so disingenuous.

Robert Cook said...

bahoh20 said:
"That is my history: I would be dead now if we had single payer of the Canada or UK variety."

How do you know? There are not huge numbers of Brits or Canadians dying because they have government provided health care. Even granting for discussion that would have been the case for you, the canadian model and the UK model are not identical to one another, and there would be no reason an American model would be or should be identical to either of them; we would be free to craft an American single payer plan to our own needs.

My own history is that I would be dead or bankrupt if not for my having had health insurance through my employer; there are many Americans, both employed and unemployed, who do not have insurance, and many who have insurance find their coverage inadequate to their needs when the medical crisis arrives in their lives.
It is my own personal history that convinces me we need universal health care in this country.

el hombre said:
"And why are he and most Democrats still lying about their commitment to single payer health care?"

Please elaborate: what do you mean? Aside from a couple of mavericks, none of the Dems or Obama have expressed any slightest inclination to allow single payer to be given any consideration at all, much less do they have any "commitment" to trying to bring it about. From the start, Obama has been trying to foist a crippled "reform" plan on us, one that would continue to benefit the rapacious insurance and pharmaceutical industries.

hombre said...

The enlightening moment of the day is expressed in the wishful thinking of KristeninTexas:

I just wish more people realized that wanting to be left alone is a political worldview. [Emphasis added.]

Exactly, Kristin! Thank you. However, if people of the left, like Cook, acknowledge that, they can no longer offer up the delusion that "most people" share their "liberal" worldview.

Robert Cook said...

Elaine Cox: you're welcome.

Nice art, too.

hombre said...

R. Cook wrote: Aside from a couple of mavericks, none of the Dems or Obama have expressed any slightest inclination to allow single payer to be given any consideration at all....

Well, Cook,I guess that depends on whether I choose to believe you or my own "lyin'eyes."

It is artful of you to characterize Barney Frank as a "maverick," but he is not. Your use of "consideration" implies that it is the verbiage rather than the probable results of the proposal that we should consider.

Sorry. You can't sell that here.

WV "lizerns" = Young people, usually students, apprenticing to the Democrat leadership in Congress.

Deb said...

Hmmm. Video has been removed.


wv: Ouden. One of the lesser known Norwegian gods.

John Richardson said...

I have a friend who used to be the head of the PTA at Sand Hill-Venable. She would be aghast to know that it was becoming an indoctrination camp for Obama.

Frankly, I blame it all on the Vanderbilts and their descendants. If they hadn't started building an overpriced frou-frou neighborhood in Enka - now Biltmore Lake - to attract yuppie riff-raff, you wouldn't have seen a video like this made at Sand Hill-Venable.

Heh.

John Richardson said...

Here is a link to the video from the Asheville Citizen-Times. It is still up there.

http://www.citizen-times.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090929/NEWS/90929052

jr565 said...

We don't need no education (mmm mmmm mm)
We don't need no thought control (mmm mmm mmm)
No dark sarcasm in the classroom (mmm mmm mmm)
Hey Teachers! Leave them kids alone (mmm mmmm mmm)

Robert Cook said...

El Hombre:

Shock! Obama said six years ago that he was in favor of single payer! Scandal!

No shock, no scandal...we all know that's what he said then...which is why his absolute refusal to invite proponents of single payer to participate in any of the discussions he held a few months back with representatives of the various points of view on the subject of health care reform was such a betrayal...as were his backroom deals with the pharmaceutical companies where he promised not to negotiate for lower drug prices.

Any talk of "this will lead to single payer...sometime in the future" is merely pandering, a means of seducing proponents of single payer into supporting whatever botched deal is actually put together.

If Obama really had a commitment to single payer, he would have come in with that as his starting point, and compromised down from there.

You can choose to believe Obama is really just using the public option as a stealth move to bring in single payer, but I don't.

hombre said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
hombre said...

Well, if I was an Obot, I too would claim to believe what he says today instead of what he said yesterday.

Fortunately, I'm not burdened by idolatry or dogmatic ideology.

Robert Cook said...

What is an "Obot?" If you percieve that I am a supporter of Obama, you're laughably mistaken. I didn't vote for that equivocating mediocrity as it was plain to see even a year ago he was just another compromised motherfucker. (I didn't vote for McCain either, but I did vote...and I stood in line for an hour to do so.)

Obama is smoother and smarter than George Bush, and probably not as crooked, but he's a puppet of the corporations just the same, and a member of the same war criminals club as well. (His mendacious rhetoric this week about "Iran is breaking the rules" is the same war-mongering horseshit the Republicans puked up for 8 years.)

reader_iam said...

A question truly stemming from mere curiosity (primarily due to interest in language, in this instance):

Robert Cook, is "single payer"the term you would have chosen, if you were at the table whenever that term was chosen? If yes, why? If not, what would be a better one in your view?

reader_iam said...

Perhaps the mere might mislead. What I meant was, I've been wondering about this for while. That is, I'm curious.

Robert Cook said...

"Single payer" is the term that exists to describe government-funded healthcare. I wouldn't necessarily have chosen the term, but it is the term. I'm not even sure of its derivation, but I'll speculate that it refers to the fact the government is the "single payer" for all healthcare services, (using funds drawn from tax revenues).

reader_iam said...

Robert Cook: I know all of that, plus some. What I asked you is what you'd have chosen, and if that, why; and if not, what instead?

(vw: inivent

OK, the vw's are getting ever ... something or other ... on Blogger. Heh.)

hombre said...

What is an "Obot?" If you percieve that I am a supporter of Obama, you're laughably mistaken.

I "perceive" you to be an ideologically driven leftist who will say anything and support anyone, including Obama, to further "the cause."

Otherwise, why assume he ought not to be accountable for what he said in 2003? Why dissemble about the stature and motives of the Democrats, including Barney Frank? Why pretend that the government option today won't likely lead to single payer tomorrow?

Beth said...

NCLB was W's proposal, and Kennedy took point on it in the Senate. Bipartisan clusterfuck.

It's been good for lots of friends of politicians, as well, including Randy Best, an old W crony, but also friend to many a Democrat as well, including my own state's Mary Landrieu.

JAL said...

jpr9945 -- howdy neighbor (past or present).

Doncha love the way they took over Enka Lake? Seen the I-26 exit at Long Shoals where it now looks like you're in downtown Asheville?

We moved out to the country before the golf course came knocking.

I do feel a little sorry for the author of the chant. She must be frazzled. An Obama supporter so in love with the new president that she had to share the joy of The Hope and Change.™ Someone needed to take her aside before tarted and give her a clue.

The local media is yakking about it all over the place. We are waiting to see which other presidents were honored and how.

master cylinder said...

same as it ever was

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2006/04/17/out-of-the-mouths-of-babes/

Robert Cook said...

"Otherwise, why assume he ought not to be accountable for what he said in 2003?"

Held accountable? Hell, he ought to be held accountable for betraying his statements from that time! If he came out today and asserted he wanted single payer, it would be something about him I could support.

"Why dissemble about the stature and motives of the Democrats, including Barney Frank? Why pretend that the government option today won't likely lead to single payer tomorrow?"

Because that's your misperception, not mine. I don't believe the Dems--a handful aside who openly support single payer--intend for the public option to be a gateway to single payer. I wish they did, I wish it were, but I don't. I think Obama and the Dems have, from the start, been poised for failure with their so-called "reform" of health care. They started in a compromised position, and from there one can only go down to defeat. They're sellouts to the heavy hitters in the medical and health care industry, the insurance companies and big pharma.

Robert Cook said...

"Robert Cook: I know all of that, plus some. What I asked you is what you'd have chosen, and if that, why; and if not, what instead?"

I don't know; is it important?

I wouldn't have chosen "single payer" because it's not clear what it means unless one has taken the time to learn. Alternative names? Government funded health care; taxpayer funded health care; Medicare for all. I don't think the name is really significant, as long as it's clear what it's referring to.

jr565 said...

Robert Cook wrote:
"His mendacious rhetoric this week about "Iran is breaking the rules" is the same war-mongering horseshit the Republicans puked up for 8 years"


Oh my god! THEY ARE BREAKING THE RULES! They just revealed a hidden enrichment facility. They haven't been cooperating with the UN at all.
And they were breaking the rules under Bush and even under Clinton. Therefore what you call "war mongering horseshit" I would call BASIC FACTS.


That doesn't mean that therefore you go to war with them (and Bush didn't go to war with them) but does it mean you have to literally lie about actual facts because you want to remain peaceful? So stating that Iran is breaking the rules, when they are breaking the rules is now warmongering and not merely stating common knowledge? So, to you, even if Iran does break the rules, we are not allowed to say so lest we be accused of warmongering?

Robert Cook said...

"Oh my god! THEY ARE BREAKING THE RULES! They just revealed a hidden enrichment facility. They haven't been cooperating with the UN at all.
And they were breaking the rules under Bush and even under Clinton. Therefore what you call "war mongering horseshit" I would call BASIC FACTS."


Nope.

This enrichment facility has been known about for some time, and the Iranians officially made its presence known within the time frame stipulated by their treaty obligations.

They're not breaking any rules they're bound by.

Obama and Hillary and the others in Washington expressing such faux surprise and "concern" are lying through their teeth.