
It appears they got the Shiite blown out of them.......
What's good for the goose......and all that other stuff.
True enough. Still, that some "librul lamestream media" correspondent would broach the subject, 40+ years after Nixon appeared on Laugh-In and California governor Ronnie Rayguns appeared on Sonny & Cher . . . it seems a bit idiotic; the sort of denialist hypocrisy you'd normally see on FUX. Either way, I just copied Wonkette's headline.Vrede wrote:Weird Wonkette headline. Whatever one thinks of Jim Avila's perspective, neither your link nor the linked TPM article quotes him as saying anything about the Constitution.
neoplacebo wrote:Wingnuts invoking Reagan while openly advocating for a new Cold War, or even a hot one.
Don't fear it, those are things he should be remembered for.rstrong wrote:I fear that Obama will be remembered in much the same way, regarding drone strikes, the NSA, whistleblowers, non-prosecution of Wall Street fraud and torturers etc.neoplacebo wrote:Wingnuts invoking Reagan while openly advocating for a new Cold War, or even a hot one.
I'm not that he had any choice on the public option. He campaigned on it in 2008, and tried to pass it in 2009.Vrede wrote:Along with ignoring single-payer, caving in on the public option,
Marketwatch.com: Aetna's money well spentIt's fairly well known that Aetna Insurance of Hartford has sent Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman into the fray to flex his considerable muscle as the 60th vote needed by the Democrats. For that, the company has paid him a little over $100,000 this year.
In return, Lieberman nearly single-handedly killed the effort to expand Medicare to include Americans as young as 55. And this followed on the heels of his prior success in helping to scuttle the public option.
As a result, the health-insurance industry is popping corks all over town and the stock prices are soaring. Aetna's stock has increased 16.5% this month, through Tuesday's closing. That means the value of the company, as measured by its market price, has increased by over $2 billion in December alone.
Lieberman, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, and fellow Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd, a retiring Democrat, got the most Aetna funds. But Aetna also went far and wide when it came to finding key players in the health-care debate, giving heavily to Montana's Max Baucus and Nebraska's Ben Nelson -- both Democrats -- as well as two moderate Republicans from Maine, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins