Showing posts with label hope and change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hope and change. Show all posts

Saturday, September 25, 2010

I'm buying a FORD



Someone on the radio said these Chrysler workers were also driving Fords, but I can't tell from the vid; I'm not an autophile. However I wouldn't blame them. I'm certainly not going to be driving a car made by these clowns. H/T The Blaze.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Breitbart Owns Astroturf Obamabot Protesters

You have to watch this. There is so much here. Obama's Organizing for America gins up a rent-a-mob. Breitbart starts engaging him and they call him gay.


Then someone orders the rent-a-mob to back off, probably because they saw the Fox cameras, etc. Breitbart receives an apology from a handler named Eugene H. Winkler, who googles out to be a Chicago preacher and social activist associated with the group Protestants for the common good.

Then I realized that this Eugene Winkler was the angry guy who earlier slipped and said "We're not paying anybody!" Then it's like (oops) "Nobody's getting paid!" They know when the jig is up.

Breitbart is going to take down the left with cheap camcorders.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Obamacare Rationing Begins

Brian Darling from RedState details the beginning of rationing based on the brave new world of Obamacare. Excerpt:

This past August, an advisory panel for the Food and Drug Administration recommended that the late stage cancer drug Avastin be “de-labeled” because of cost considerations. It is critical to note, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) did not propose denying cancer victims the right to the drug because of the safety of the drug, but because of a formula containing cost as factor.

Senator David Vitter (R-LA) has taken a leadership position on the issue and has written letters to the FDA and expressing concern about “cost rationing.” Senator Vitter is worried that the Avastin case will be the beginning of ObamaCare rationing for drugs that may extend life. Rationing for seriously ill patients based on cost.

Should the FDA agree with the advisory panel’s recommendation, private insurers and Medicare will drop coverage for the drug for breast cancer patients, despite the fact that the drug extends life for an average of six months. This is a classic example of why many conservatives are concerned about government run health care.

Well, there's always bribery. Of course that's only for the well-to-do. So where does that leave us?