About Me

Name: Gabrielle Cusumano
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Archives

Update: House Bill – 3.8% Medicare tax on investment income (interest, dividends, cap gains, annuities, rents)

House Bill – 3.8% Medicare tax on investment income (interest, dividends, cap gains, annuities, rents; 222 House Democrats climb aboard the Pelosi-Obama Crazy Train – vote Yes on Slaughter Rule… http://moderateinthemiddle.wordpress.com/2010/03/18/update-3-8-medicare-tax-on-investment-income-interest-dividends-cap-gains-annuities-rents-222-house-democrats-climb-aboard-the-pelosi-obama-crazy-train-vote-yes-on-slaughter-rule-new-union-payo/

From Moderate In The Middle at:

Update: Tom Coburn promises exposure and a fight for any House Dem who sells their vote on Obamacare. No NASA chief job for you!!

Update: The Taxes have increased as predicted- TaxProf h/t Instapundit:

the House Health Care bill unveiled today includes a 3.8% Medicare tax on investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains, annuities, rents) earned by those with incomes in excess of $200,000 (single) and $250,000 (joint).

Update: The Corner has a list of the key votes to call!!!! Call baby call like the wind!!

“Yes” on Obamacare Last Time but Might Want to Switch:

Gabrielle Giffords, (D., Ariz.)—202-225-2542

Ann Kirkpatrick, (D., Ariz.)—202-225-2315

Harry Mitchell, (D., Ariz.)—202-225-2190

Vic Snyder, (D., Ariz.) (S)—202-225-2506

Marion Berry, (D., Ark.) (S)—202-225-4076

John Salazar, (D., Colo.) (S)—202-225-4761

Melissa Bean, (D., Ill.) —202-225-3711

Bill Foster, (D., Ill.) —202-225-2976

Joe Donnelly, (D., Ind.) (S) —202-225-3915

Brad Ellsworth, (D., Ind.) (S) —202-225-4636

Baron Hill, (D., Ind.) (S) —202-225-5315

Bart Stupak, (D., Mich.) (S) —202-225-4735

Michael Arcuri, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-3665

Tim Bishop, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-3826

Bob Etheridge, (D., N.C.) (S) —202-225-4531

Earl Pomeroy, (D., N.D.) (S) —202-225-2611

Steve Driehaus, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-2216

Zach Space, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-6265

Charlie Wilson, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-5705

Chris Carney, (D., Pa.) (S) —202-225-3731

Kathleen Dahlkemper, (D., Pa.) (S) —202-225-5406

John Spratt, (D., S.C.) (S) —202-225-5501

Ciro Rodriguez, (D., Texas) (S) —202-225-4511

Solomon Ortiz, (D., Texas) (S) —202-225-7742

Tom Perriello, (D., Va.) (S) —202-225-4711

Alan Mollohan, (D., W.Va.) (S) —202-225-4172

Nick Rahall, (D., W.Va.) (S) —202-225-3452

_______________________________________________

“No” on Obamacare Last Time but Might Need Encouragement:

Mike Ross, (D., Ark.) (S) —202-225-3772

Betsy Markey, (D., Colo.) —202-225-4676

Allen Boyd, (D., Fla.) —202-225-5235

Suzanne Kosmas, (D., Fla.) —202-225-2706

John Barrow, (D., Ga.) (S) —202-225-2823

John Adler, (D., N.J.) —202-225-4765

Michael McMahon, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-3371

Scott Murphy, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-5614

Larry Kissell, (D., N.C.) —202-225-3715

John Boccieri, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-3876

John Tanner, (D., Tenn.) (S) —202-225-4714

Glenn Nye, (D., Va.) —202-225-4215

Brian Baird, (D., Wash.) —202-225-3536

Update: MichelleMalkin has the RollCall of the vote on the Slaughter Rule. 222 Democrats in the House climbed aboard Pelosi and Obama’s Crazy Train.I am very proud to report my Critter broke against the flow of dead fish as Sarah would say and voted No. Big Booyah to Harry Mitchell AZ 05!!! The rest of the Crew will be on the Highway to Hell with their constituents come Easter Recess..good luck with that!

(interest, dividends, cap gains, annuities, rents; 222 House Democrats climb aboard the Pelosi-Obama Crazy Train – vote Yes on Slaughter Rule…

Update: Tom Coburn promises exposure and a fight for any House Dem who sells their vote on Obamacare. No NASA chief job for you!!

Update: The Taxes have increased as predicted- TaxProf h/t Instapundit:

the House Health Care bill unveiled today includes a 3.8% Medicare tax on investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains, annuities, rents) earned by those with incomes in excess of $200,000 (single) and $250,000 (joint).

Update: The Corner has a list of the key votes to call!!!! Call baby call like the wind!!

“Yes” on Obamacare Last Time but Might Want to Switch:

Gabrielle Giffords, (D., Ariz.)—202-225-2542

Ann Kirkpatrick, (D., Ariz.)—202-225-2315

Harry Mitchell, (D., Ariz.)—202-225-2190

Vic Snyder, (D., Ariz.) (S)—202-225-2506

Marion Berry, (D., Ark.) (S)—202-225-4076

John Salazar, (D., Colo.) (S)—202-225-4761

Melissa Bean, (D., Ill.) —202-225-3711

Bill Foster, (D., Ill.) —202-225-2976

Joe Donnelly, (D., Ind.) (S) —202-225-3915

Brad Ellsworth, (D., Ind.) (S) —202-225-4636

Baron Hill, (D., Ind.) (S) —202-225-5315

Bart Stupak, (D., Mich.) (S) —202-225-4735

Michael Arcuri, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-3665

Tim Bishop, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-3826

Bob Etheridge, (D., N.C.) (S) —202-225-4531

Earl Pomeroy, (D., N.D.) (S) —202-225-2611

Steve Driehaus, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-2216

Zach Space, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-6265

Charlie Wilson, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-5705

Chris Carney, (D., Pa.) (S) —202-225-3731

Kathleen Dahlkemper, (D., Pa.) (S) —202-225-5406

John Spratt, (D., S.C.) (S) —202-225-5501

Ciro Rodriguez, (D., Texas) (S) —202-225-4511

Solomon Ortiz, (D., Texas) (S) —202-225-7742

Tom Perriello, (D., Va.) (S) —202-225-4711

Alan Mollohan, (D., W.Va.) (S) —202-225-4172

Nick Rahall, (D., W.Va.) (S) —202-225-3452

_______________________________________________

“No” on Obamacare Last Time but Might Need Encouragement:

Mike Ross, (D., Ark.) (S) —202-225-3772

Betsy Markey, (D., Colo.) —202-225-4676

Allen Boyd, (D., Fla.) —202-225-5235

Suzanne Kosmas, (D., Fla.) —202-225-2706

John Barrow, (D., Ga.) (S) —202-225-2823

John Adler, (D., N.J.) —202-225-4765

Michael McMahon, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-3371

Scott Murphy, (D., N.Y.) —202-225-5614

Larry Kissell, (D., N.C.) —202-225-3715

John Boccieri, (D., Ohio) (S) —202-225-3876

John Tanner, (D., Tenn.) (S) —202-225-4714

Glenn Nye, (D., Va.) —202-225-4215

Brian Baird, (D., Wash.) —202-225-3536

Update: MichelleMalkin has the RollCall of the vote on the Slaughter Rule. 222 Democrats in the House climbed aboard Pelosi and Obama’s Crazy Train.I am very proud to report my Critter broke against the flow of dead fish as Sarah would say and voted No. Big Booyah to Harry Mitchell AZ 05!!! The rest of the Crew will be on the Highway to Hell with their constituents come Easter Recess..good luck with that!

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Fess Parker (AKA Davey Crockett, Daniel Boone) Interviews From 2000

(Videos) Actor Fess Parker discusses his role as "Davy Crockett". This is part of a multi-tape interview. Visit channel playlists emmytvlegends.org for ...
AlsoFess Parker and Buddy Ebsen Special and Soupy Sales and Fess Parker Together Videos Below
 
Fess Parker - Archive Interview Part 1 of 728:37
33,638 views
 
 
 
 
Fess Parker - Archive Interview Part 7 of 713:08
2,324 views
 
Fess Parker & Buddy Ebsen Reminisce About Disney's 4:36
This was taken from a 1978 NBC Special saluting the 25th Anniversary of The Wonderful World of Disney/Color Television Show
  
 
Daniel Boone0:47
697,744 views
 
 
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates - Movie Trailer 2:21
DAVY CROCKETT AND THE RIVER PIRATES Directed by Norman Foster A Walt Disney Production (1956) Movietrailer Davy Crockett and his sidekick Georgie ...
 
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

“If you don’t tie our hands, we will keep stealing.” Tom Perriello (D-VA)

 Dem Congressman Tom Perriello admits: “If you don’t tie our hands, we will keep stealing.” See video on the site. This amazing comment came from the lips of Tom Perriello (D-VA). Yes, you read that correctly that is indeed a Democrat who admitted this! See video on the site.

Democrat Congressman Tom Perriello Admits Congressional Stealing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0GmQwXMfW4
Democrat Congressman Tom Perriello Admits Congressional Stealing 1:05
The Jefferson Area Tea Party met with Democrat Congressman Tom Perriello (Virginia CD-05) on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 in Washington, DC The topic ...
 
9 hours ago 
 
TheSchillingShow

This amazing comment came from Tom Perriello (D-VA). Yes, you read that correctly that is indeed a Democrat who admitted this!   Even Democrat politicians stumble on obvious truths every once in a while!

Democrat Congressman Tom Perriello Admits Congressional Stealing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0GmQwXMfW4

The Jefferson Area Tea Party met with Democrat Congressman Tom Perriello (Virginia CD-05) on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 in Washington, D.C. The topic was Health Care reform and Tom’s position on the pending bill.

In this video, Congressman Perriello admits that Congress will “steal” unless you “tie our hands.”

Video footage courtesy of Audrey Welborn: www.welbornfreedomwatch.com

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Rep. Parker Griffith, M.D. (R-Ala.) set to lead efforts to force an up-or-down vote on a resolution requiring an up-or-down vote on the Senate health care bill.

"Republicans cannot force a vote on the actual resolution but they can force a vote on having a vote.  Given the toxic political climate on Capitol Hill right now -- and people nationwide paying more attention than ever to parliamentary process through the internet, cable news and talk radio -- the vote on whether or not to vote on the resolution could have political consequences for Democrats."
Republicans Will Force Vote on Slaughter Rule  By Connie Hair
 
Rep. Parker Griffith, M.D. (R-Ala.) switched parties recently to escape the far-left policies of the House Democratic leadership. The newly-minted Republican is set to lead efforts to force an up-or-down vote on a resolution requiring an up-or-down vote on the Senate health care bill. This is hand-to-hand fisticuffs, parliamentary-style, as minority Republicans battle the 76-seat Democrat majority on procedure while Democrats battle the American people on substance. If passed by the House, the resolution would prohibit Speaker Pelosi from implementing the “Slaughter Solution” scheme by which House Democrats seek to “deem” the Senate health care bill as passed without an... http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=36065
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

The 15 Republican Senators voted against DeMint’s measure to ban earmarks in the Senate.

"Friends, we can change the Republican Caucus in the United States Senate. But we have to unite behind the real small government conservatives out there. We must get on the same page to improve our own." Erick Erickson

Replacing The Old Guard  Posted by Erick Erickson at: http://www.redstate.com/

Those fifteen were:

  1. Alexander (R-TN)
  2. Bond (R-MO)
  3. Bunning (R-KY)
  4. Cochran (R-MS)
  5. Collins (R-ME)
  6. Gregg (R-NH)
  7. Hutchison (R-TX)
  8. Inhofe (R-OK)
  9. Lugar (R-IN)
  10. Murkowski (R-AK)
  11. Roberts (R-KS)
  12. Shelby (R-AL)
  13. Snowe (R-ME)
  14. Voinovich (R-OH)
  15. Wicker (R-MS)

Senator Bob Bennett, who denounced the measure to a RedState contributor, did not vote at all.

Friends, we can change the Republican Caucus in the United States Senate. But we have to unite behind the real small government conservatives out there. We must get on the same page to improve our own.

Here is the list. We need these guys:

Ken Buck in Colorado
Chuck DeVore in California
Michael Williams in Texas
Marco Rubio in Florida
Rand Paul in Kentucky
Pat Toomey in Pennsylvania
Danny Tarkanian in Nevada
Marlin Stutzman in Indiana
Mike Lee in Utah

And if we can, I say we go with Ovide LaMontagne in New Hampshire and Christine O’Donnell in Delaware. Let’s go all and all in for small government conservatives. This year is our last best chance in a long time to get a slate of solid conservatives.   From http://www.redstate.com/
 

Meanwhile regarding the election this November 2010. On list of 15 Repubs voting against Jim DeMints proposal to ban earmarks:

Alexander (R-TN) 2014
Bond (R-MO) retiring 2010 (Roy Blunt)
Bunning (R-KY) retiring 2010 (Rand Paul)
Cochran (R-MS) 2014
Collins (R-ME) 2014
Gregg (R-NH) retiring 2010 (Ovide LaMontage?)
Hutchison (R-TX) 2012, retire now she’s not in Governors race? Doubt it.
Inhofe (R-OK) 2014
Lugar (R-IN) 2012
Murkowski (R-AK) 2010 NO PRIMARY! May 18th 2010
Roberts (R-KS) 2014
Shelby (R-AL) 2010 NO PRIMARY June 1st 2010
Snowe (R-ME) 2012
Voinovich (R-OH) 2010 (Rob Portman)
Wicker (R-MS) 2012
Comment by audax
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Idiot-in-Chief: ObamaCare Will Reduce Premiums by 3000 Percent

In his Health Care Reform address in Strongsville, Ohio, President Obama claimed that ObamaCare will reduce health insurance premiums by as much as “3,000 percent.”
 

Idiot-in-Chief: ObamaCare Will Reduce Premiums by 3000 Percent
Idiot-in-Chief Obama spreading outrageous lies about ObamaCare to promote a communist agenda

Idiot-in-Chief Obama spreading outrageous lies about ObamaCare to promote a communist agenda

by B. Chrysostom | 3/17/2010

On Monday, March 15, in his Health Care Reform address in Strongsville, Ohio, President Obama claimed that ObamaCare will reduce health insurance premiums by as much as “3,000 percent.” The words lie and impossible are insufficient to describe the outright idiocy and ridiculousness of such a preposterous assertion.   More at: http://conservativedatingsite.com/blog/2010/03/idiot-in-chief-obamacare-will-reduce-premiums-by-3000-percent/
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

AP "FACT CHECK: Premiums would rise under Obama plan."

"O’Donnell said ObamaCare raises taxes by almost $500 billion. Obama’s historic tax increase nearly doubles the previous record-setting tax that O’Donnell helped craft as Democratic Chief of Staff to the Senate Finance Committee during the Clinton administration."Read more: http://newsbusters.org/#ixzz0iT95cQ6a

Shocking AP Fact Check: Premiums Will Rise Under ObamaCare

 

It's no shock to rational, thinking people that healthcare legislation currently before Congress will do nothing to halt rising insurance premiums, but that the folks at the Associated Press would come to such a conclusion AND write about it is quite surprising.

There it was in a piece published Wednesday called, "FACT CHECK: Premiums would rise under Obama plan."

Readers are strongly encouraged to fasten seatbelts tightly, for they're about to enter what has to be an alternate universe (h/t Ed Morrissey):  Read more: http://newsbusters.org/#ixzz0iT7mG4rY
 

Idiot-in-Chief: ObamaCare Will Reduce Premiums by 3000 Percent

Idiot-in-Chief Obama spreading outrageous lies about ObamaCare to promote a communist agenda

Idiot-in-Chief Obama spreading outrageous lies about ObamaCare to promote a communist agenda

by B. Chrysostom | 3/17/2010

On Monday, March 15, in his Health Care Reform address in Strongsville, Ohio, President Obama claimed that ObamaCare will reduce health insurance premiums by as much as “3,000 percent.” The words lie and impossible are insufficient to describe the outright idiocy and ridiculousness of such a preposterous assertion.  http://conservativedatingsite.com/blog/2010/03/idiot-in-chief-obamacare-will-reduce-premiums-by-3000-percent/
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Bachmann Rips Media for Not Covering Deem and Pass

"Where is the mainstream media in all of this not telling this story? This is a compelling story - that the Speaker of the House would even consider having us pass a bill that no one votes on?"  Bachmann said.
 
According to Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., they have. She had some harsh words for the fourth estate on conservative talker Sean Hannity's March 16 radio show. (h/t Kevin Eder)

According to Bachmann, this is such an egregious maneuver by Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, to force through health care reform using the Slaughter Rule, as known as deem and pass, that it warrants her impeachment from the post.

"That should laugh her out of the House and there should be people that are calling for impeachment off of something like this," Bachmann continued. "That's how bad this is. I mean, trust me - Dennis Hastert could have never gotten away with this. President Bush never could have gotten away with it."
Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/jeff-poor/2010/03/17/bachmann-rips-media-not-covering-deem-and-pass-suggests-pelosi-impeachmen#ixzz0iT32mV0B

Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/jeff-poor/2010/03/17/bachmann-rips-media-not-covering-deem-and-pass-suggests-pelosi-impeachmen#ixzz0iT2QtDxN

Bachman on Red Eye last night! http://video.foxnews.com/?playlist_id=86926#/v/4111641/rep-michele-bachmann-on-red-eye/?playlist_id=86926

 
 
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________-
 
Washington Post has had several articles on Pelosi's attempt to destroy democracy. One of them garnered more than 5000 comments.

There's a lot more interest in this "process" than the Democrats imagined. One analyst who did a running analysis said 90% of the comments were anti-deem and pass, and those consisted of folks who had a wide variety of political understandings.


 


Defeat Obamacare call list: List now contains the new MAYBES

 
THEY ARE ANSWERING THEIR LOCAL NUMBERS RUSH SAYS THE LINES ARE MELTED DOWN. USE THEIR LOCAL NUMBERS!

Here is one of the ones Rush gave out on the radio that I’m calling. So far it’s been busy but I’m going to burn it up till I get to tell my congress critter to vote NO!
Join me?..... 1-877-762-8762

KEEP THE CALLS UP! DC OFFICE LOCAL OFFICE

Code Red” - House Target List on Health Care

The National Republican Congressional Committee has published a target list on health care. In addition to continuing to contact the five Tennessee Democrat Congressmen, you can go http://www.votervoice.net/link/clickthrough/ext/94697.aspx to contact some of these targets. Much of the talk following Obama’s announcement has focused on how to defeat this second bill through reconciliation, but that is misleading because the first step to defeating Obamacare is not by concentrating on defeating the “fixer” bill but by defeating the Senate bill in the House when it goes to the floor for an up-or-down vote on Thursday, March 18th.

Rep. Lincoln Davis 202-225-6831 Columbia office: 931-490-8699
Rep. Jim Cooper 202-225-4311 Nashville office: 615-736-5295
Rep. Bart Gordon 202-225-4231 Murfreesboro office: 615-896-1986
John Tanner (202) 225-4714, Union City, (731) 885-7070, Jackson Phone: (731) 423-4848, Millington (901) 873-5690 TN (MAYBE)
Rep. Steve Cohen 202-225-3265 Memphis office: 901-544-4131
Harry Mitchell (202) 225-2190 (480) 946-2411 AZ 5th District
Gabrielle Giffords (202) 225-2542 (520) 881-3588 AZ 8th District
Ann Kirkpatrick (202) 225-2315 (928) 226-6914 AZ 1st District
Jerry McNerney (202) 225-1947 925-833-0643 CA 11th District
John Salazar 202-225-4761 970-245-7107 CO 3rd District
Jim Himes (202) 225-5541 (866) 453-0028 CT 4th District
Alan Grayson (202) 225-2176 (407) 841-1757 FL 8th District
Bill Foster (202) 225-2976 630-406-1114 IL 14th District
Baron Hill 202 225 5315 812 288 3999 IN 9th District
Mark Schauer (202) 225-6276 (517) 780-9075 MI 7th District
Gary Peters (202) 225-5802 (248) 273-4227 MI 9th District
Dina Titus (202) 225-3252 702-256-DINA (3462) NV 3rd District
Carol Shea-Porter (202) 225-5456 (603) 743-4813 NH 1st District
Tim Bishop (202) 225-3826 (631) 696-6500 NY 1st District
John Hall (202) 225-5441 (845) 225-3641 x49371 NY 19th District
Bill Owens (202) 225-4611 (315) 782-3150 NY 23rd District
James Matheson Toll-Free Number 1 (877) 677-9743 (202) 225-3011Mike Arcuri (202)225-3665 (315)793-8146 NY 24th District
Dan Maffei (202) 225-3701 (315) 423-5657 NY 25th District
Earl Pomeroy (202) 225-2611 (701) 224-0355 ND At-Large District
Steven Driehaus (202) 225-2216 (513) 684-2723 OH 1st District
Mary Jo Kilroy (202) 225-2015 (614) 294-2196 OH 15th District
Zach Space (202) 225-6265 (330) 364-4300 OH 18th District
Kathy Dahlkemper (202) 225-5406 (814) 456-2038 PA 3rd District
Patrick Murphy (202) 225-4276 (215) 826-1963 PA 8th District
Christopher Carney (202) 225-3731 (570) 585-9988 PA 10th District
Paul Kanjorski (202) 225-6511 (570) 825-2200 PA 11th District
John Spratt (202) 225-5501 (803)327-1114 SC 5th District
Tom Perriello (202) 225-4711 (276) 656-2291 VA 5th District
Alan Mollohan (202) 225-4172 (304) 623-4422 WVA 1st District
Nick Rahall (202) 225-3452 (304) 252-5000 WVA 3rd District
Steve Kagen (202) 225-5665 (920) 437-1954 WI 8th District
Bart Stupak (202) 225 4735 MI (MAYBE)
Brian Baird (202) 225-3536, Vancouver, (360) 695-6292. Olympia, (360) 352-9768, (MAYBE)
senator mark begich (202) 224-3004 toll free. (877) 501 - 6275 just became a MAYBE
Jason Altmire 202-225-2565, Aliquippa, 724-378-0928,
Natrona Heights, 724-226-1304 (MAYBE)

On the Bubble (Major developments from the “yes” and “no” columns in the House)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2467046/posts

Congressional Dems on Twitter
http://www.arrghpaine.com/congressional-dems-on-twitter

And here are toll-free numbers we can use to call any Senators or Reps.
At the first number below you must wait through a tape recording urging you to tell your Rep or Senator to vote “yes” for the health care bill. Just hang on and when the recording is over, you will get the Capitol operator. Just ask for your Rep or Senator’s office. Then you will either talk to an aid or have the chance to leave a message for him/her to vote NO on the health care bill.

When you use the second number and the Capitol operator comes on, just ask for your Rep or Senator’s office. Every time I use this number I get the Rep or Senator’s answer machine, so it may be set up that way all the time...to go to their answer machine. Either way you can leave a message to vote NO on the health care bill!

We need to use these toll free numbers that have been set up for the health care/ BO supporters and illegals to use! After all they are FREE!

1-800-828-0498 , 1-866-220-0044, 1-866-338-1015, 877-851-6437, 877-210-5351


Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

NAZI gas chamber, built to reduce costs of taking care of chronically ill.

"This gas chamber was built to reduce the costs of taking care of the chronically ill. In modern terms, we might say that it was built to "bend the cost curve." Ill persons were led into the gas chamber and told that it was for "inhalation therapy." Apparently, the patients resisted, so shower heads were added to the walls, and later patients were told that the gas chamber was a shower.  As we know, that showerhead subterfuge caught on. "
 

Why No Discussion Of Government Run Health Care As A Gateway To The Holocaust
 
By Jubal Harshaw

 at:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2473190/posts
With all the discussion about the risks of allowing socialized healthcare, I am surprised at the lack of attention to this point: socialized healthcare was the direct antecedent to the mass killings of the holocaust.

The first Nazi gas chamber was activated in 1939, in the Brandenburg State Hospital and Nursing Home. The Nazis apparently "only" killed ~10,000 people there (at least 9,772 people, but apparently some records may have been lost) because the stench from the associated crematoria was too much for a facility near the middle of town.

This gas chamber had nothing to do with killing Jews; of the ~ 10,000 people killed there, only about 400 were Jews. Those Jews, it seems, were simply mixed in with the non-Jewish Germans who were the majority of the victims. The gas chamber went into operation in 1939, while the "final solution" (the attempt by the Nazis to wipe out the Jews) wouldn't begin until 1942.

This gas chamber had little or nothing to do with killing criminals. I have found some references which claim that some of the victims had been judged, by the Nazi state, to be criminals. I have found other references which do not mention any killing of criminals in this gas chamber. In any case, it is relevant that approximately 2,500 of the victims were children; hard to believe that they were all criminals deserving of the death penalty.

This gas chamber was built to reduce the costs of taking care of the chronically ill. In modern terms, we might say that it was built to "bend the cost curve." Ill persons were led into the gas chamber and told that it was for "inhalation therapy." Apparently, the patients resisted, so shower heads were added to the walls, and later patients were told that the gas chamber was a shower.  As we know, that showerhead subterfuge caught on.

Think that a state-run healthcare system is currently immune to allowing mass death in order to "bend the cost curve?" How about the 2006 revelations that the University of California was running a sham liver transplant program at the Irvine campus, with collaboration from the San Diego campus? That sham liver transplant program apparently received federal funding, and recruited patients with liver disease to come and join the waiting list. The University of California did not, however, recruit a full-time transplant surgeon, nor transplant-qualified anesthesiologists. In fact, when one of the Irvine anesthesiologists, Dr. Glenn Prevost, got half his department to sign a petition requesting transplant training in order to properly perform transplants, Dr. Prevost was fired and allegedly blackballed. Hundreds of patients waited in vain for transplants that were never going to be performed; approximately 108 died while waiting.

Still think that government healthcare agencies won't do whatever it takes to "bend the cost curve?"

There are multiple examples of government taking extreme measures to reduce its own costs, regardless of the effect on the lives of the people. The Holocaust is but one; other examples include the Holodomor (cheapest way for the state to take over the land in the Ukraine? Starve all the Ukranians off), the Cultural Revolution (One small example from the cultural revolution: pots, pans, doorknobs, tools, household goods were the cheapest source of metal for the government, and were melted down in government projects. No matter that millions then lost the ability to easily prepare food, work with tools, etc).

I'm as concerned as the next guy about the risk that government run healthcare will be a financial boondoggle, that there will be mismanagement, that there might be a lot of forms to fill out, and all the rest of it. Still, all our discussions about the financial costs of government healthcare miss the point, in my opinion. The worst problem is not that healthcare might become too expensive.

The worst problem is that government healthcare sets up the same incentives that motivated the Nazi doctors who ran the Brandenburg gas chamber. The Nazi doctor's incentives were to cut costs, and not to worry about trying to attract new patients, since revenues were provided by the state anyway. Government run healthcare here will generate the same incentives. If that happens ... we will be lucky if we get results only as bad as the holocaust, and not much, much worse.   http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2473190/posts

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Obama refuses to campaign for Dems voting NO on healthcare...

Please! You Deomcrats in Congress, Jump Ship Now!  Save America and yourselves from a terrible fate. Your leader Obama doesn't care a whit about you.


Obama refuses to campaign for Dems voting NO on healthcare...

Midnight, Sunday, Democrats released a 2,309 page health care bill that will start the process of reconciliation —
  it’s not the actual reconciliation bill with all the changes you’ve been reading about. Instead, as Rep. Paul Ryan, the ranking Republican member on the Budget Committee, explained to me last week, this is just the “shell” bill — the vehicle that Democrats need to get moving on health care. Once the bill gets approved (likely Monday), Democrats will send this phantom bill over to the Rules Committee, where it will be stripped, and then they’ll insert in all of the actual changes that they’ve negotiated.

2309 pages. Download PDF here.

http://budget.house.gov/doc-library/FY2010/03.15.2010_reconciliation2010.PDF

Page 7
TITLE IV—AMENDMENTS TO INTERNAL REVENUE CODE OF 1986

Subtitle A—Shared Responsibility
PART 1—INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY
Sec. 401. Tax on individuals without acceptable health care coverage.
PART 2—EMPLOYER RESPONSIBILITY
Sec. 411. Election to satisfy health coverage participation requirements.
Sec. 412. Responsibilities of nonelecting employers.  (much more under picture)


MICHIGAN

Rep. Bart Stupak, Michigan 1st

http://www.house.gov/stupak/

DC Office Number: (202) 225-4735, DC Fax Number: (202) 225-4744
Local Office Number: (906) 786-4504, Local Fax Number: (906) 786-4534
Voted Yes on Stupak, Voted Yes on Health Care, Currently Undecided on Next Health Care Takeover Vote

Rep. Mark Schauer Michigan 7th

http://schauer.house.gov

DC Office Number: (202) 225-6276, DC Fax Number: (202) 225-6281
Local Office Number: (517) 780-9075, Local Fax Number: (517) 780-9081
Voted Yes on Health Care
Currently Undecided

Rep. Gary Peters, Michigan, 9th

http://peters.house.gov/index.html

DC Office Number: (202) 225-5802, DC Fax Number: (202) 226-2356
Local Office Number: (248) 273-4227, Local Fax Number: (248) 273-4704
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
(The Bill continued)
Subtitle B—Credit for Small Business Employee Health Coverage Expenses
Sec. 421. Credit for small business employee health coverage expenses.
Subtitle C—Disclosures to Carry Out Health Insurance
Exchange Subsidies
Sec. 431. Disclosures to carry out health insurance exchange subsidies.
Subtitle D—Other Revenue Provisions
PART 1—GENERAL PROVISIONS
Sec. 441. Surcharge on high income individuals.
Sec. 442. Distributions for medicine qualified only if for prescribed drug or insulin.
Sec. 443. Delay in application of worldwide allocation of interest.
PART 2—PREVENTION OF TAX AVOIDANCE
Sec. 451. Limitation on treaty benefits for certain deductible payments.
Sec. 452. Codification of economic substance doctrine.
Sec. 453. Penalties for underpayments.

Page 8
PART 3—PARITY IN HEALTH BENEFITS
Sec. 461. Certain health related benefits applicable to spouses and dependents extended to eligible beneficiaries.

1054
19 SEC. 114. NONDISCRIMINATION IN BENEFITS; PARITY IN
20 MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE
21 DISORDER BENEFITS.

22 (a) NONDISCRIMINATION IN BENEFITS.—A qualified
23 health benefits plan shall comply with standards estab
24 lished by the Commissioner to prohibit discrimination in
25 health benefits or benefit structures for qualified health

1055
1 benefits plans, building from sections 702 of Employee
2 Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 2702 of the
3 Public Health Service Act, and section 9802 of the Inter
4 nal Revenue Code of 1986.

5 (b) PARITY IN MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE
6 ABUSE DISORDER BENEFITS.—To the extent such provi
7 sions are not superceded by or inconsistent with subtitle
8 C, the provisions of section 2705 (other than subsections
9 (a)(1), (a)(2), and (c)) of section 2705 of the Public
10 Health Service Act shall apply to a qualified health bene
11 fits plan, regardless of whether it is offered in the indi
12 vidual or group market, in the same manner as such provi
13 sions apply to health insurance coverage offered in the
14 large group market.

1223
11 TITLE IV—AMENDMENTS TO IN
12 TERNAL REVENUE CODE OF
13 1986
14 Subtitle A—Shared Responsibility
15 PART 1—INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY
16 SEC. 401. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE
17 HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.
18 (a) IN GENERAL.—Subchapter A of chapter 1 of the
19 Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding at
20 the end the following new part:
21 ‘‘PART VIII—HEALTH CARE RELATED TAXES
‘‘SUBPART A. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.
22 ‘‘Subpart A—Tax on Individuals Without Acceptable
23 Health Care Coverage
‘‘Sec. 59B. Tax on individuals without acceptable health care coverage.

1224
1 ‘‘SEC. 59B. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE
2 HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.
3 ‘‘(a) TAX IMPOSED.—In the case of any individual
4 who does not meet the requirements of subsection (d) at
5 any time during the taxable year, there is hereby imposed
6 a tax equal to 2.5 percent of the excess of—
7 ‘‘(1) the taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross in
8 come for the taxable year, over
9 ‘‘(2) the amount of gross income specified in
10 section 6012(a)(1) with respect to the taxpayer.
11 ‘‘(b) LIMITATIONS.—
12 ‘‘(1) TAX LIMITED TO AVERAGE PREMIUM.—
13 ‘‘(A) IN GENERAL.—The tax imposed
14 under subsection (a) with respect to any tax
15 payer for any taxable year shall not exceed the
16 applicable national average premium for such
17 taxable year.
18 ‘‘(B) APPLICABLE NATIONAL AVERAGE
19 PREMIUM.—
20 ‘‘(i) IN GENERAL.—For purposes of
21 subparagraph (A), the ‘applicable national
22 average premium’ means, with respect to
23 any taxable year, the average premium (as
24 determined by the Secretary, in coordina
25 tion with the Health Choices Commis
26 sioner) for self-only coverage under a basic

1225
1 plan which is offered in a Health Insur
2 ance Exchange for the calendar year in
3 which such taxable year begins.
4 ‘‘(ii) FAILURE TO PROVIDE COVERAGE
5 FOR MORE THAN ONE INDIVIDUAL.—In the
6 case of any taxpayer who fails to meet the
7 requirements of subsection (e) with respect
8 to more than one individual during the tax
9 able year, clause (i) shall be applied by
10 substituting ‘family coverage’ for ‘self-only
11 coverage’.
12 ‘‘(2) PRORATION FOR PART YEAR FAILURES.—
13 The tax imposed under subsection (a) with respect
14 to any taxpayer for any taxable year shall not exceed
15 the amount which bears the same ratio to the
16 amount of tax so imposed (determined without re
17 gard to this paragraph and after application of para
18 graph (1)) as—
19 ‘‘(A) the aggregate periods during such
20 taxable year for which such individual failed to
21 meet the requirements of subsection (d), bears
22 to
23 ‘‘(B) the entire taxable year.
24 ‘‘(c) EXCEPTIONS.—

1226
1 ‘‘(1) DEPENDENTS.—Subsection (a) shall not
2 apply to any individual for any taxable year if a de
3 duction is allowable under section 151 with respect
4 to such individual to another taxpayer for any tax
5 able year beginning in the same calendar year as
6 such taxable year.
7 ‘‘(2) NONRESIDENT ALIENS.—Subsection (a)
8 shall not apply to any individual who is a non
9 resident alien.
10 ‘‘(3) INDIVIDUALS RESIDING OUTSIDE UNITED
11 STATES.—Any qualified individual (as defined in
12 section 911(d)) (and any qualifying child residing
13 with such individual) shall be treated for purposes of
14 this section as covered by acceptable coverage during
15 the period described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of
16 section 911(d)(1), whichever is applicable.
17 ‘‘(4) INDIVIDUALS RESIDING IN POSSESSIONS
18 OF THE UNITED STATES.—Any individual who is a
19 bona fide resident of any possession of the United
20 States (as determined under section 937(a)) for any
21 taxable year (and any qualifying child residing with
22 such individual) shall be treated for purposes of this
23 section as covered by acceptable coverage during
24 such taxable year.
25 ‘‘(5) RELIGIOUS CONSCIENCE EXEMPTION.—

1227
1 ‘‘(A) IN GENERAL.—Subsection (a) shall
2 not apply to any individual (and any qualifying
3 child residing with such individual) for any pe
4 riod if such individual has in effect an exemp
5 tion which certifies that such individual is a
6 member of a recognized religious sect or divi
7 sion thereof described in section 1402(g)(1) and
8 an adherent of established tenets or teachings
9 of such sect or division as described in such sec
10 tion.
11 ‘‘(B) EXEMPTION.—An application for the
12 exemption described in subparagraph (A) shall
13 be filed with the Secretary at such time and in
14 such form and manner as the Secretary may
15 prescribe. Any such exemption granted by the
16 Secretary shall be effective for such period as
17 the Secretary determines appropriate.
18 ‘‘(d) ACCEPTABLE COVERAGE REQUIREMENT.—
19 ‘‘(1) IN GENERAL.—The requirements of this
20 subsection are met with respect to any individual for
21 any period if such individual (and each qualifying
22 child of such individual) is covered by acceptable
23 coverage at all times during such period.

1228
1 ‘‘(2) ACCEPTABLE COVERAGE.—For purposes
2 of this section, the term ‘acceptable coverage’ means
3 any of the following:
4 ‘‘(A) QUALIFIED HEALTH BENEFITS PLAN
5 COVERAGE.—Coverage under a qualified health
6 benefits plan (as defined in section 100(c) of
7 the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of
8 2009).
9 ‘‘(B) GRANDFATHERED HEALTH INSUR
10 ANCE COVERAGE; COVERAGE UNDER GRAND
11 FATHERED EMPLOYMENT-BASED HEALTH
12 PLAN.—Coverage under a grandfathered health
13 insurance coverage (as defined in subsection (a)
14 of section 102 of the America’s Affordable
15 Health Choices Act of 2009) or under a current
16 employment-based health plan (within the
17 meaning of subsection (b) of such section).
18 ‘‘(C) MEDICARE.—Coverage under part A
19 of title XVIII of the Social Security Act.
20 ‘‘(D) MEDICAID.—Coverage for medical as
21 sistance under title XIX of the Social Security
22 Act.
23 ‘‘(E) MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES
24 AND DEPENDENTS (INCLUDING TRICARE).—
25 Coverage under chapter 55 of title 10, United

1229
1 States Code, including similar coverage fur
2 nished under section 1781 of title 38 of such
3 Code.
4 ‘‘(F) VA.—Coverage under the veteran’s
5 health care program under chapter 17 of title
6 38, United States Code, but only if the cov
7 erage for the individual involved is determined
8 by the Secretary in coordination with the
9 Health Choices Commissioner to be not less
10 than the level specified by the Secretary of the
11 Treasury, in coordination with the Secretary of
12 Veteran’s Affairs and the Health Choices Com
13 missioner, based on the individual’s priority for
14 services as provided under section 1705(a) of
15 such title.
16 ‘‘(G) OTHER COVERAGE.—Such other
17 health benefits coverage as the Secretary, in co
18 ordination with the Health Choices Commis
19 sioner, recognizes for purposes of this sub
20 section.
21 ‘‘(e) OTHER DEFINITIONS AND SPECIAL RULES.—
22 ‘‘(1) QUALIFYING CHILD.—For purposes of this
23 section, the term ‘qualifying child’ has the meaning
24 given such term by section 152(c).

1230
1 ‘‘(2) BASIC PLAN.—For purposes of this sec
2 tion, the term ‘basic plan’ has the meaning given
3 such term under section 100(c) of the America’s Af
4 fordable Health Choices Act of 2009.
5 ‘‘(3) HEALTH INSURANCE EXCHANGE.—For
6 purposes of this section, the term ‘Health Insurance
7 Exchange’ has the meaning given such term under
8 section 100(c) of the America’s Affordable Health
9 Choices Act of 2009, including any State-based
10 health insurance exchange approved for operation
11 under section 208 of such Act.
12 ‘‘(4) FAMILY COVERAGE.—For purposes of this
13 section, the term ‘family coverage’ means any cov
14 erage other than self-only coverage.
15 ‘‘(5) MODIFIED ADJUSTED GROSS INCOME.—
16 For purposes of this section, the term ‘modified ad
17 justed gross income’ means adjusted gross income—
18 ‘‘(A) determined without regard to section
19 911, and
20 ‘‘(B) increased by the amount of interest
21 received or accrued by the taxpayer during the
22 taxable year which is exempt from tax.
23 ‘‘(6) NOT TREATED AS TAX IMPOSED BY THIS
24 CHAPTER FOR CERTAIN PURPOSES.—The tax im
25 posed under this section shall not be treated as tax

1231
1 imposed by this chapter for purposes of determining
2 the amount of any credit under this chapter or for
3 purposes of section 55.
4 ‘‘(f) REGULATIONS.—The Secretary shall prescribe
5 such regulations or other guidance as may be necessary
6 or appropriate to carry out the purposes of this section,
7 including regulations or other guidance (developed in co8
ordination with the Health Choices Commissioner) which
9 provide—
10 ‘‘(1) exemption from the tax imposed under
11 subsection (a) in cases of de minimis lapses of ac12
ceptable coverage, and
13 ‘‘(2) a process for applying for a waiver of the
14 application of subsection (a) in cases of hardship.’’.
15 (b) INFORMATION REPORTING.—
16 (1) IN GENERAL.—Subpart B of part III of
17 subchapter A of chapter 61 of such Code is amended
18 by inserting after section 6050W the following new
19 section:
20 ‘‘SEC. 6050X. RETURNS RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE
21 COVERAGE.
22 ‘‘(a) REQUIREMENT OF REPORTING.—Every person
23 who provides acceptable coverage (as defined in section
24 59B(d)) to any individual during any calendar year shall,
25 at such time as the Secretary may prescribe, make the

1232
1 return described in subsection (b) with respect to such in
2 dividual.
3 ‘‘(b) FORM AND MANNER OF RETURNS.—A return
4 is described in this subsection if such return—
5 ‘‘(1) is in such form as the Secretary may pre
6 scribe, and
7 ‘‘(2) contains—
8 ‘‘(A) the name, address, and TIN of the
9 primary insured and the name of each other in
10 dividual obtaining coverage under the policy,
11 ‘‘(B) the period for which each such indi
12 vidual was provided with the coverage referred
13 to in subsection (a), and
14 ‘‘(C) such other information as the Sec
15 retary may require.
16 ‘‘(c) STATEMENTS TO BE FURNISHED TO INDIVID
17 UALS WITH RESPECT TO WHOM INFORMATION IS RE
18 QUIRED.—Every person required to make a return under
19 subsection (a) shall furnish to each primary insured whose
20 name is required to be set forth in such return a written
21 statement showing—
22 ‘‘(1) the name and address of the person re
23 quired to make such return and the phone number
24 of the information contact for such person, and

1233
1 ‘‘(2) the information required to be shown on
2 the return with respect to such individual.
3 The written statement required under the preceding sen
4 tence shall be furnished on or before January 31 of the
5 year following the calendar year for which the return
6 under subsection (a) is required to be made.
7 ‘‘(d) COVERAGE PROVIDED BY GOVERNMENTAL
8 UNITS.—In the case of coverage provided by any govern
9 mental unit or any agency or instrumentality thereof, the
10 officer or employee who enters into the agreement to pro
11 vide such coverage (or the person appropriately designated
12 for purposes of this section) shall make the returns and
13 statements required by this section.’’.
14 (2) PENALTY FOR FAILURE TO FILE.—
15 (A) RETURN.—Subparagraph (B) of sec
16 tion 6724(d)(1) of such Code is amended by
17 striking ‘‘or’’ at the end of clause (xxii), by
18 striking ‘‘and’’ at the end of clause (xxiii) and
19 inserting ‘‘or’’, and by adding at the end the
20 following new clause:
21 ‘‘(xxiv) section 6050X (relating to re
22 turns relating to health insurance cov
23 erage), and’’.
24 (B) STATEMENT.—Paragraph (2) of sec
25 tion 6724(d) of such Code is amended by strik

1234
1 ing ‘‘or’’ at the end of subparagraph (EE), by
2 striking the period at the end of subparagraph
3 (FF) and inserting ‘‘, or’’, and by inserting
4 after subparagraph (FF) the following new sub
5 paragraph:
6 ‘‘(GG) section 6050X (relating to returns
7 relating to health insurance coverage).’’.
8 (c) RETURN REQUIREMENT.—Subsection (a) of sec
9 tion 6012 of such Code is amended by inserting after
10 paragraph (9) the following new paragraph:
11 ‘‘(10) Every individual to whom section 59B(a)
12 applies and who fails to meet the requirements of
13 section 59B(d) with respect to such individual or
14 any qualifying child (as defined in section 152(c)) of
15 such individual.’’.
16 (d) CLERICAL AMENDMENTS.—
17 (1) The table of parts for subchapter A of chap
18 ter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is
19 amended by adding at the end the following new
20 item:
‘‘PART VIII. HEALTH CARE RELATED TAXES.’’.
21 (2) The table of sections for subpart B of part
22 III of subchapter A of chapter 61 is amended by
23 adding at the end the following new item:
‘‘Sec. 6050X.Returns relating to health insurance coverage.’’.

1235
1 (e) SECTION 15 NOT TO APPLY.—The amendment
2 made by subsection (a) shall not be treated as a change
3 in a rate of tax for purposes of section 15 of the Internal
4 Revenue Code of 1986.
5 (f) EFFECTIVE DATE.—
6 (1) IN GENERAL.—The amendments made by
7 this section shall apply to taxable years beginning
8 after December 31, 2012.
9 (2) RETURNS.—The amendments made by sub
10 section (b) shall apply to calendar years beginning
11 after December 31, 2012.

1253

13 Subtitle D—Other Revenue
14 Provisions

15 PART 1—GENERAL PROVISIONS

16 SEC. 441. SURCHARGE ON HIGH INCOME INDIVIDUALS.

17 (a) IN GENERAL.—Part VIII of subchapter A of
18 chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as added
19 by this title, is amended by adding at the end the following
20 new subpart:

21 ‘‘Subpart B—Surcharge on High Income Individuals
‘‘Sec. 59C.Surcharge on high income individuals.

22 ‘‘SEC. 59C. SURCHARGE ON HIGH INCOME INDIVIDUALS.

23 ‘‘(a) GENERAL RULE.—In the case of a taxpayer
24 other than a corporation, there is hereby imposed (in addi

1254

1 tion to any other tax imposed by this subtitle) a tax equal
2 to—

3 ‘‘(1) 1 percent of so much of the modified ad
4 justed gross income of the taxpayer as exceeds
5 $350,000 but does not exceed $500,000,

6 ‘‘(2) 1.5 percent of so much of the modified ad
7 justed gross income of the taxpayer as exceeds
8 $500,000 but does not exceed $1,000,000, and

9 ‘‘(3) 5.4 percent of so much of the modified ad
10 justed gross income of the taxpayer as exceeds
11 $1,000,000.

12 ‘‘(b) TAXPAYERS NOT MAKING A JOINT RETURN.—
13 In the case of any taxpayer other than a taxpayer making
14 a joint return under section 6013 or a surviving spouse
15 (as defined in section 2(a)), subsection (a) shall be applied
16 by substituting for each of the dollar amounts therein
17 (after any increase determined under subsection (e)) a dol
18 lar amount equal to—

19 ‘‘(1) 50 percent of the dollar amount so in ef
20 fect in the case of a married individual filing a sepa
21 rate return, and

22 ‘‘(2) 80 percent of the dollar amount so in ef
23 fect in any other case.

24 ‘‘(c) ADJUSTMENTS


Page 1223

11 TITLE IV—AMENDMENTS TO IN
12 TERNAL REVENUE CODE OF
13 1986

14 Subtitle A—Shared Responsibility
15 PART 1—INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY

16 SEC. 401. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE
17 HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.

18 (a) IN GENERAL.—Subchapter A of chapter 1 of the
19 Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding at
20 the end the following new part:

21 ‘‘PART VIII—HEALTH CARE RELATED TAXES

‘‘SUBPART A. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.

22 ‘‘Subpart A—Tax on Individuals Without Acceptable
23 Health Care Coverage

‘‘Sec. 59B. Tax on individuals without acceptable health care coverage.

1224

1 ‘‘SEC. 59B. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE
2 HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.

3 ‘‘(a) TAX IMPOSED.—In the case of any individual
4 who does not meet the requirements of subsection (d) at
5 any time during the taxable year, there is hereby imposed
6 a tax equal to 2.5 percent of the excess of—

7 ‘‘(1) the taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross in
8 come for the taxable year, over

9 ‘‘(2) the amount of gross income specified in
10 section 6012(a)(1) with respect to the taxpayer.

11 ‘‘(b) LIMITATIONS.—
12 ‘‘(1) TAX LIMITED TO AVERAGE PREMIUM.—

13 ‘‘(A) IN GENERAL.—The tax imposed
14 under subsection (a) with respect to any tax
15 payer for any taxable year shall not exceed the
16 applicable national average premium for such
17 taxable year.

18 ‘‘(B) APPLICABLE NATIONAL AVERAGE
19 PREMIUM.—

20 ‘‘(i) IN GENERAL.—For purposes of
21 subparagraph (A), the ‘applicable national
22 average premium’ means, with respect to
23 any taxable year, the average premium (as
24 determined by the Secretary, in coordina
25 tion with the Health Choices Commis
26 sioner) for self-only coverage under a basic

1225

1 plan which is offered in a Health Insur
2 ance Exchange for the calendar year in
3 which such taxable year begins.

4 ‘‘(ii) FAILURE TO PROVIDE COVERAGE
5 FOR MORE THAN ONE INDIVIDUAL.—In the
6 case of any taxpayer who fails to meet the
7 requirements of subsection (e) with respect
8 to more than one individual during the tax
9 able year, clause (i) shall be applied by
10 substituting ‘family coverage’ for ‘self-only
11 coverage’.

12 ‘‘(2) PRORATION FOR PART YEAR FAILURES.—
13 The tax imposed under subsection (a) with respect
14 to any taxpayer for any taxable year shall not exceed
15 the amount which bears the same ratio to the
16 amount of tax so imposed (determined without re
17 gard to this paragraph and after application of para
18 graph (1)) as—

19 ‘‘(A) the aggregate periods during such
20 taxable year for which such individual failed to
21 meet the requirements of subsection (d), bears
22 to

23 ‘‘(B) the entire taxable year.

24 ‘‘(c) EXCEPTIONS.—

1226

1 ‘‘(1) DEPENDENTS.—Subsection (a) shall not
2 apply to any individual for any taxable year if a de
3 duction is allowable under section 151 with respect
4 to such individual to another taxpayer for any tax
5 able year beginning in the same calendar year as
6 such taxable year.

7 ‘‘(2) NONRESIDENT ALIENS.—Subsection (a)
8 shall not apply to any individual who is a non
9 resident alien.

10 ‘‘(3) INDIVIDUALS RESIDING OUTSIDE UNITED
11 STATES.—Any qualified individual (as defined in
12 section 911(d)) (and any qualifying child residing
13 with such individual) shall be treated for purposes of
14 this section as covered by acceptable coverage during
15 the period described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of
16 section 911(d)(1), whichever is applicable.

17 ‘‘(4) INDIVIDUALS RESIDING IN POSSESSIONS
18 OF THE UNITED STATES.—Any individual who is a
19 bona fide resident of any possession of the United
20 States (as determined under section 937(a)) for any
21 taxable year (and any qualifying child residing with
22 such individual) shall be treated for purposes of this
23 section as covered by acceptable coverage during
24 such taxable year.

25 ‘‘(5) RELIGIOUS CONSCIENCE EXEMPTION.—

1227

1 ‘‘(A) IN GENERAL.—Subsection (a) shall
2 not apply to any individual (and any qualifying
3 child residing with such individual) for any pe
4 riod if such individual has in effect an exemp
5 tion which certifies that such individual is a
6 member of a recognized religious sect or divi
7 sion thereof described in section 1402(g)(1) and
8 an adherent of established tenets or teachings
9 of such sect or division as described in such sec
10 tion.

11 ‘‘(B) EXEMPTION.—An application for the
12 exemption described in subparagraph (A) shall
13 be filed with the Secretary at such time and in
14 such form and manner as the Secretary may
15 prescribe. Any such exemption granted by the
16 Secretary shall be effective for such period as
17 the Secretary determines appropriate.

18 ‘‘(d) ACCEPTABLE COVERAGE REQUIREMENT.—

19 ‘‘(1) IN GENERAL.—The requirements of this
20 subsection are met with respect to any individual for
21 any period if such individual (and each qualifying
22 child of such individual) is covered by acceptable
23 coverage at all times during such period.

1228

1 ‘‘(2) ACCEPTABLE COVERAGE.—For purposes
2 of this section, the term ‘acceptable coverage’ means
3 any of the following:

4 ‘‘(A) QUALIFIED HEALTH BENEFITS PLAN
5 COVERAGE.—Coverage under a qualified health
6 benefits plan (as defined in section 100(c) of
7 the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of
8 2009).

9 ‘‘(B) GRANDFATHERED HEALTH INSUR
10 ANCE COVERAGE; COVERAGE UNDER GRAND
11 FATHERED EMPLOYMENT-BASED HEALTH
12 PLAN.—Coverage under a grandfathered health
13 insurance coverage (as defined in subsection (a)
14 of section 102 of the America’s Affordable
15 Health Choices Act of 2009) or under a current
16 employment-based health plan (within the
17 meaning of subsection (b) of such section).

18 ‘‘(C) MEDICARE.—Coverage under part A
19 of title XVIII of the Social Security Act.

20 ‘‘(D) MEDICAID.—Coverage for medical as
21 sistance under title XIX of the Social Security
22 Act.

23 ‘‘(E) MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES
24 AND DEPENDENTS (INCLUDING TRICARE).—
25 Coverage under chapter 55 of title 10, United

1229

1 States Code, including similar coverage fur
2 nished under section 1781 of title 38 of such
3 Code.

4 ‘‘(F) VA.—Coverage under the veteran’s
5 health care program under chapter 17 of title
6 38, United States Code, but only if the cov
7 erage for the individual involved is determined
8 by the Secretary in coordination with the
9 Health Choices Commissioner to be not less
10 than the level specified by the Secretary of the
11 Treasury, in coordination with the Secretary of
12 Veteran’s Affairs and the Health Choices Com
13 missioner, based on the individual’s priority for
14 services as provided under section 1705(a) of
15 such title.

16 ‘‘(G) OTHER COVERAGE.—Such other
17 health benefits coverage as the Secretary, in co
18 ordination with the Health Choices Commis
19 sioner, recognizes for purposes of this sub
20 section.

21 ‘‘(e) OTHER DEFINITIONS AND SPECIAL RULES.—

22 ‘‘(1) QUALIFYING CHILD.—For purposes of this
23 section, the term ‘qualifying child’ has the meaning
24 given such term by section 152(c).

1230

1 ‘‘(2) BASIC PLAN.—For purposes of this sec
2 tion, the term ‘basic plan’ has the meaning given
3 such term under section 100(c) of the America’s Af
4 fordable Health Choices Act of 2009.

5 ‘‘(3) HEALTH INSURANCE EXCHANGE.—For
6 purposes of this section, the term ‘Health Insurance
7 Exchange’ has the meaning given such term under
8 section 100(c) of the America’s Affordable Health
9 Choices Act of 2009, including any State-based
10 health insurance exchange approved for operation
11 under section 208 of such Act.

12 ‘‘(4) FAMILY COVERAGE.—For purposes of this
13 section, the term ‘family coverage’ means any cov
14 erage other than self-only coverage.

15 ‘‘(5) MODIFIED ADJUSTED GROSS INCOME.—
16 For purposes of this section, the term ‘modified ad
17 justed gross income’ means adjusted gross income—

18 ‘‘(A) determined without regard to section
19 911, and

20 ‘‘(B) increased by the amount of interest
21 received or accrued by the taxpayer during the
22 taxable year which is exempt from tax.

23 ‘‘(6) NOT TREATED AS TAX IMPOSED BY THIS
24 CHAPTER FOR CERTAIN PURPOSES.—The tax im
25 posed under this section shall not be treated as tax

1231

1 imposed by this chapter for purposes of determining
2 the amount of any credit under this chapter or for
3 purposes of section 55.

4 ‘‘(f) REGULATIONS.—The Secretary shall prescribe
5 such regulations or other guidance as may be necessary
6 or appropriate to carry out the purposes of this section,
7 including regulations or other guidance (developed in co8
ordination with the Health Choices Commissioner) which
9 provide—

10 ‘‘(1) exemption from the tax imposed under
11 subsection (a) in cases of de minimis lapses of ac12
ceptable coverage, and

13 ‘‘(2) a process for applying for a waiver of the
14 application of subsection (a) in cases of hardship.’’.

15 (b) INFORMATION REPORTING.—

16 (1) IN GENERAL.—Subpart B of part III of
17 subchapter A of chapter 61 of such Code is amended
18 by inserting after section 6050W the following new
19 section:

20 ‘‘SEC. 6050X. RETURNS RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE
21 COVERAGE.

22 ‘‘(a) REQUIREMENT OF REPORTING.—Every person
23 who provides acceptable coverage (as defined in section
24 59B(d)) to any individual during any calendar year shall,
25 at such time as the Secretary may prescribe, make the

1232

1 return described in subsection (b) with respect to such in
2 dividual.

3 ‘‘(b) FORM AND MANNER OF RETURNS.—A return
4 is described in this subsection if such return—
5 ‘‘(1) is in such form as the Secretary may pre
6 scribe, and

7 ‘‘(2) contains—

8 ‘‘(A) the name, address, and TIN of the
9 primary insured and the name of each other in
10 dividual obtaining coverage under the policy,

11 ‘‘(B) the period for which each such indi
12 vidual was provided with the coverage referred
13 to in subsection (a), and

14 ‘‘(C) such other information as the Sec
15 retary may require.

16 ‘‘(c) STATEMENTS TO BE FURNISHED TO INDIVID
17 UALS WITH RESPECT TO WHOM INFORMATION IS RE
18 QUIRED.—Every person required to make a return under
19 subsection (a) shall furnish to each primary insured whose
20 name is required to be set forth in such return a written
21 statement showing—

22 ‘‘(1) the name and address of the person re
23 quired to make such return and the phone number
24 of the information contact for such person, and

1233

1 ‘‘(2) the information required to be shown on
2 the return with respect to such individual.
3 The written statement required under the preceding sen
4 tence shall be furnished on or before January 31 of the
5 year following the calendar year for which the return
6 under subsection (a) is required to be made.

7 ‘‘(d) COVERAGE PROVIDED BY GOVERNMENTAL
8 UNITS.—In the case of coverage provided by any govern
9 mental unit or any agency or instrumentality thereof, the
10 officer or employee who enters into the agreement to pro
11 vide such coverage (or the person appropriately designated
12 for purposes of this section) shall make the returns and
13 statements required by this section.’’.

14 (2) PENALTY FOR FAILURE TO FILE.—

15 (A) RETURN.—Subparagraph (B) of sec
16 tion 6724(d)(1) of such Code is amended by
17 striking ‘‘or’’ at the end of clause (xxii), by
18 striking ‘‘and’’ at the end of clause (xxiii) and
19 inserting ‘‘or’’, and by adding at the end the
20 following new clause:

21 ‘‘(xxiv) section 6050X (relating to re
22 turns relating to health insurance cov
23 erage), and’’.

24 (B) STATEMENT.—Paragraph (2) of sec
25 tion 6724(d) of such Code is amended by strik

1234

1 ing ‘‘or’’ at the end of subparagraph (EE), by
2 striking the period at the end of subparagraph
3 (FF) and inserting ‘‘, or’’, and by inserting
4 after subparagraph (FF) the following new sub
5 paragraph:

6 ‘‘(GG) section 6050X (relating to returns
7 relating to health insurance coverage).’’.

8 (c) RETURN REQUIREMENT.—Subsection (a) of sec
9 tion 6012 of such Code is amended by inserting after
10 paragraph (9) the following new paragraph:

11 ‘‘(10) Every individual to whom section 59B(a)
12 applies and who fails to meet the requirements of
13 section 59B(d) with respect to such individual or
14 any qualifying child (as defined in section 152(c)) of
15 such individual.’’.

16 (d) CLERICAL AMENDMENTS.—

17 (1) The table of parts for subchapter A of chap
18 ter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is
19 amended by adding at the end the following new
20 item:

‘‘PART VIII. HEALTH CARE RELATED TAXES.’’.

21 (2) The table of sections for subpart B of part
22 III of subchapter A of chapter 61 is amended by
23 adding at the end the following new item:

‘‘Sec. 6050X.Returns relating to health insurance coverage.’’.

1235

1 (e) SECTION 15 NOT TO APPLY.—The amendment
2 made by subsection (a) shall not be treated as a change
3 in a rate of tax for purposes of section 15 of the Internal
4 Revenue Code of 1986.

5 (f) EFFECTIVE DATE.—

6 (1) IN GENERAL.—The amendments made by
7 this section shall apply to taxable years beginning
8 after December 31, 2012.

9 (2) RETURNS.—The amendments made by sub
10 section (b) shall apply to calendar years beginning
11 after December 31, 2012.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

YouTube Paul Ryan speaks out against "The Washington Way"

Reconciliation Markup Opening Statement Ranking Member Paul Ryan, House Budget Committee March 15, 2010 http://www.house.gov/budget... Transcript: http://www.house.gov/budget...   

Paul Ryan speaks out against "The Washington Way"

 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Breaking! “Democrats release 2300-page reconciliation bill *Updated*”

2300+ pages and includes student loans. Good reading... http://budget.house.gov/doc-library/FY2010/03.15.2010_reconciliation2010.PDF
 

Page 2084:

(3) BEHAVIORAL CHANGE COMPONENT.—
A behavioral change component which provides for alter
 ing employee lifestyles to encourage healthy living
through counseling, seminars, on-line programs, or
self-help materials which provide technical assistance
2084
•J. 55–345
1 and problem solving skills. such component may in
clude programs relating to—
3 (A) tobacco use;
4 (B) obesity;
5 (C) stress management;
6 (D) physical fitness;
7 (E) nutrition;
8 (F) substance abuse;
9 (G) depression; and
10 (H) mental health promotion (including
11 anxiety).
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

"End of Life" language Healthcare Reconciliation Bill Posted Today

Some ‘end of life’ language” in the  Healthcare Reform reconciliation bill is posted! 2300+ pages and includes student loan     (see language below exploding nuje!)

   http://budget.house.gov/doc-library/FY2010/03.15.2010_reconciliation2010.PDF

 
Some ‘end of life’ language”
(B) An advance care planning consultation with re18
spect to an individual may be conducted more frequently
19 than provided under paragraph (1) if there is a significant
20 change in the health condition of the individual, including
21 diagnosis of a chronic, progressive, life-limiting disease, a
22 life-threatening or terminal diagnosis or life-threatening
23 injury, or upon admission to a skilled nursing facility, a
24 long-term care facility (as defined by the Secretary), or
25 a hospice program.
1485
•J. 55–345
1 ‘‘(4) A consultation under this subsection may in2
clude the formulation of an order regarding life sustaining
3 treatment or a similar order.
4 ‘‘(5)(A) For purposes of this section, the term ‘order
5 regarding life sustaining treatment’ means, with respect
6 to an individual, an actionable medical order relating to
7 the treatment of that individual that—
8 ‘‘(i) is signed and dated by a physician (as de9
fined in subsection (r)(1)) or another health care
10 professional (as specified by the Secretary and who
11 is acting within the scope of the professional’s au12
thority under State law in signing such an order, in13
cluding a nurse practitioner or physician assistant)
14 and is in a form that permits it to stay with the in15
dividual and be followed by health care professionals
16 and providers across the continuum of care;
17 ‘‘(ii) effectively communicates the individual’s
18 preferences regarding life sustaining treatment, in19
cluding an indication of the treatment and care de20
sired by the individual;
21 ‘‘(iii) is uniquely identifiable and standardized
22 within a given locality, region, or State (as identified
23 by the Secretary); and
1486
•J. 55–345
1 ‘‘(iv) may incorporate any advance directive (as
2 defined in section 1866(f)(3)) if executed by the in3
dividual.
4 ‘‘(B) The level of treatment indicated under subpara5
graph (A)(ii) may range from an indication for full treat6
ment to an indication to limit some or all or specified
7 interventions. Such indicated levels of treatment may in8
clude indications respecting, among other items—
9 ‘‘(i) the intensity of medical intervention if the
10 patient is pulse less, apneic, or has serious cardiac
11 or pulmonary problems;
12 ‘‘(ii) the individual’s desire regarding transfer
13 to a hospital or remaining at the current care set14
ting;
15 ‘‘(iii) the use of antibiotics; and
16 ‘‘(iv) the use of artificially administered nutri17
tion and hydration.’’.
18 (2) PAYMENT.—Section 1848(j)(3) of such Act
19 (42 U.S.C. 1395w–4(j)(3)) is amended by inserting
20 ‘‘(2)(FF),’’ after ‘‘(2)(EE),’’.
21 (3) FREQUENCY LIMITATION.—Section 1862(a)
22 of such Act (42 U.S.C. 1395y(a)) is amended—
23 (A) in paragraph (1)—
24 (i) in subparagraph (N), by striking
25 ‘‘and’’ at the end;
1487
•J. 55–345
1 (ii) in subparagraph (O) by striking
2 the semicolon at the end and inserting ‘‘,
3 and’’; and
4 (iii) by adding at the end the fol5
lowing new subparagraph:
6 ‘‘(P) in the case of advance care planning
7 consultations (as defined in section
8 1861(hhh)(1)), which are performed more fre9
quently than is covered under such section;’’;
10 and
11 (B) in paragraph (7), by striking ‘‘or (K)’’
12 and inserting ‘‘(K), or (P)’’.
13 (4) EFFECTIVE DATE.—The amendments made
14 by this subsection shall apply to consultations fur15
nished on or after January 1, 2011.
16 (b) EXPANSION OF PHYSICIAN QUALITY REPORTING
17 INITIATIVE FOR END OF LIFE CARE.—


 

TRI-CARE

10 SEC. 1234. PART B SPECIAL ENROLLMENT PERIOD AND
11 WAIVER OF LIMITED ENROLLMENT PENALTY
12 FOR TRICARE BENEFICIARIES.
13 (a) PART B SPECIAL ENROLLMENT PERIOD.—
14 (1) IN GENERAL.—Section 1837 of the Social
15 Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395p) is amended by add16
ing at the end the following new subsection:
17 ‘‘(l)(1) In the case of any individual who is a covered
18 beneficiary (as defined in section 1072(5) of title 10,
19 United States Code) at the time the individual is entitled
20 to hospital insurance benefits under part A under section
21 226(b) or section 226A and who is eligible to enroll but
22 who has elected not to enroll (or to be deemed enrolled)
23 during the individual’s initial enrollment period, there
24 shall be a special enrollment period described in paragraph
25 (2).
1491
•J. 55–345
1 ‘‘(2) The special enrollment period described in this
2 paragraph, with respect to an individual, is the 12-month
3 period beginning on the day after the last day of the initial
4 enrollment period of the individual or, if later, the 12-
5 month period beginning with the month the individual is
6 notified of enrollment under this section.
7 ‘‘(3) In the case of an individual who enrolls during
8 the special enrollment period provided under paragraph
9 (1), the coverage period under this part shall begin on the
10 first day of the month in which the individual enrolls or,
11 at the option of the individual, on the first day of the sec12
ond month following the last month of the individual’s ini13
tial enrollment period.
14 ‘‘(4) The Secretary of Defense shall establish a meth15
od for identifying individuals described in paragraph (1)
16 and providing notice to them of their eligibility for enroll17
ment during the special enrollment period described in
18 paragraph (2).’’.
19 (2) EFFECTIVE DATE.—The amendment made
20 by paragraph (1) shall apply to elections made on or
21 after the date of the enactment of this Act.
22 (b) WAIVER OF INCREASE OF PREMIUM.—
23 (1) IN GENERAL.—Section 1839(b) of the So24
cial Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395r(b)) is amended
1492
•J. 55–345
1 by striking ‘‘section 1837(i)(4)’’ and inserting ‘‘sub2
section (i)(4) or (l) of section 1837’’.
3 (2) EFFECTIVE DATE.—
4 (A) IN GENERAL.—The amendment made
5 by paragraph (1) shall apply with respect to
6 elections made on or after the date of the en7
actment of this Act.
8 (B) REBATES FOR CERTAIN DISABLED
9 AND ESRD BENEFICIARIES.—
10 (i) IN GENERAL.—With respect to
11 premiums for months on or after January
12 2005 and before the month of the enact13
ment of this Act, no increase in the pre14
mium shall be effected for a month in the
15 case of any individual who is a covered
16 beneficiary (as defined in section 1072(5)
17 of title 10, United States Code) at the time
18 the individual is entitled to hospital insur19
ance benefits under part A of title XVIII
20 of the Social Security Act under section
21 226(b) or 226A of such Act, and who is el22
igible to enroll, but who has elected not to
23 enroll (or to be deemed enrolled), during
24 the individual’s initial enrollment period,
25 and who enrolls under this part within the
1493
•J. 55–345
1 12-month period that begins on the first
2 day of the month after the month of notifi3
cation of entitlement under this part.
4 (ii) CONSULTATION WITH DEPART5
MENT OF DEFENSE.—The Secretary of
6 Health and Human Services shall consult
7 with the Secretary of Defense in identi8
fying individuals described in this para9
graph.
10 (iii) REBATES.—The Secretary of
11 Health and Human Services shall establish
12 a method for providing rebates of premium
13 increases paid for months on or after Jan14
uary 1, 2005, and before the month of the
15 enactment of this Act for which a penalty
16 was applied and collected.
17 SEC. 1235. EXCEPTION FOR USE OF MORE RECENT TAX
18 YEAR IN CASE OF GAINS FROM SALE OF PRI19
MARY RESIDENCE IN COMPUTING PART B IN20
COME-RELATED PREMIUM.
21 (a) IN GENERAL.—Section 1839(i)(4)(C)(ii)(II) of
22 the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395r(i)(4)(C)(ii)(II))
23 is amended by inserting ‘‘sale of primary residence,’’ after
24 ‘‘divorce of such individual,’’.
1494
•J. 55–345
1 (b) EFFECTIVE DATE.—The amendment made by
2 subsection (a) shall apply to premiums and payments for
3 years beginning with 2011.
4 SEC. 1236. DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM ON USE OF PA5
TIENT DECISIONS AIDS.
6 (a) IN GENERAL.—The Secretary of Health and
7 Human Services shall establish a shared decision making
8 demonstration program (in this subsection referred to as
9 the ‘‘program’’) under the Medicare program using pa10
tient decision aids to meet the objective of improving the
11 understanding by Medicare beneficiaries of their medical
12 treatment options, as compared to comparable Medicare
13 beneficiaries who do not participate in a shared decision
14 making process using patient decision aids.

(pages up to 1494)

______________________________________________________________


SCHOOL BASED HEALTH CLINICS???? What the hell?

Text of what they will provide is posted in Reply #124

Mental health screeing, "age-appropriate" health information, access to the SBHC by community groups (we know who that is)...just what we could expect.

‘‘(c) HEALTH PROFESSIONS TRAINING FOR DIVER7
SITY.—For the purpose of carrying out sections 736, 737,
8 738, 739, and 739A, in addition to any other amounts
9 authorized to be appropriated for such purpose, there are
10 authorized to be appropriated, out of any monies in the
11 Public Health Investment Fund, the following:
12 ‘‘(1) $90,000,000 for fiscal year 2010.
13 ‘‘(2) $97,000,000 for fiscal year 2011.
14 ‘‘(3) $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2012.
15 ‘‘(4) $104,000,000 for fiscal year 2013.
16 ‘‘(5) $110,000,000 for fiscal year 2014.
17 ‘‘(6) $116,000,000 for fiscal year 2015.
18 ‘‘(7) $121,000,000 for fiscal year 2016.
19 ‘‘(8) $127,000,000 for fiscal year 2017.
20 ‘‘(9) $133,000,000 for fiscal year 2018.
21 ‘‘(10) $140,000,000 for fiscal year 2019.
22 ‘‘(d) INTERDISCIPLINARY TRAINING PROGRAMS, AD23
VISORY COMMITTEE ON HEALTH WORKFORCE EVALUA24
TION AND ASSESSMENT, AND HEALTH WORKFORCE AS25
SESSMENT.—For the purpose of carrying out sections
26 741, 759, 761, and 764, in addition to any other amounts
1985
•J. 55–345
1 authorized to be appropriated for such purpose, there are
2 authorized to be appropriated, out of any monies in the
3 Public Health Investment Fund, the following:
4 ‘‘(1) $91,000,000 for fiscal year 2010.
5 ‘‘(2) $97,000,000 for fiscal year 2011.
6 ‘‘(3) $101,000,000 for fiscal year 2012.
7 ‘‘(4) $105,000,000 for fiscal year 2013.
8 ‘‘(5) $111,000,000 for fiscal year 2014.
9 ‘‘(6) $117,000,000 for fiscal year 2015.
10 ‘‘(7) $122,000,000 for fiscal year 2016.
11 ‘‘(8) $129,000,000 for fiscal year 2017.
12 ‘‘(9) $135,000,000 for fiscal year 2018.
13 ‘‘(10) $141,000,000 for fiscal year 2019.’’.
14 (b) EXISTING AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIA15
TIONS.—
16 (1) SECTION 736.—Paragraph (1) of section
17 736(h) (42 U.S.C. 293(h)) is amended by striking
18 ‘‘2002’’ and inserting ‘‘2019’’.
19 (2) SECTIONS 737, 738, AND 739.—Subsections
20 (a), (b), and (c) of section 740 are amended by
21 striking ‘‘2002’’ each place it appears and inserting
22 ‘‘2019’’.
23 (3) SECTION 741.—Subsection (h), as so redes24
ignated, of section 741 is amended—
1986
•J. 55–345
1 (A) by striking ‘‘and’’ after ‘‘fiscal year
2 2003,’’; and
3 (B) by inserting ‘‘, and such sums as may
4 be necessary for subsequent fiscal years
5 through the end of fiscal year 2019’’ before the
6 period at the end.
7 (4) SECTION 761.—Subsection (e)(1), as so re8
designated, of section 761 is amended by striking
9 ‘‘2002’’ and inserting ‘‘2019’’.

There's a Health Service Trust mentioned pp 1986ff?


Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Budget Committee approved Health Care phantom/shell bill today. Sending to the Rules Committee.

This is actually the “shell” bill that Paul Ryan warned about:   (aka Reconciliation Bill)
http://spectator.org/blog/2010/03/11/ryan-dems-ramming-shell-hc-bil

In a phone interview with TAS Thursday afternoon, Ryan said that he expects Democrats to begin the complex process on Monday, under which they would have the Budget Committee approve a phantom bill by midnight, which they will then send over to the Rules Committee. At that point, the Rules Committee will strip out all of the language in the phantom bill, and insert the changes to the Senate bill that Democrats have negotiated.
....

He said he expected Democrats to dust off last year's health care bills from the Education and Labor and Ways and Means Committees, to use as the vehicle for reconciliation changes.

Link

the Dems would ram through the Budget Committee, who would send it to the Rules Committee. At that point, the Rules Committee will strip out all of the language in the phantom bill, and insert the changes to the Senate bill that Democrats have negotiated. to use as a vehicle to impose national health care.

This is the first step in the convoluted process the Dems are using to force through ObamaCare.
 
An idea at least of what might be going on     http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2010/3/14/846274/-Public-Option-in-the-reconciliation-bill-What
 
"INSURANCE REFORMS.—This subdivision— 15 (A) enacts strong insurance market re16 forms; 17 (B) creates a new Health Insurance Ex18 change, with a public health insurance option 19 alongside private plans" 
 
(SEE ABOVE) Obama pointed Kucinich toward single-payer language that Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) was able to get into the bill.!

IT'S IN THE BILL ALREADY!  "(B) creates a new Health Insurance Ex18 change, with a public health insurance option 19 alongside private plans" 

BREAKING: Healthcare Reform reconciliation bill is posted! 2300+ pages and includes student loan
http://budget.house.gov/doc-library/FY2010/03.15.2010_reconciliation2010.PDF

‘‘(b) RESPONSIBILITIES.—The Assistant Secretary shall—
‘‘(1) ensure the collection, collation, reporting, and publishing of information (including full and complete statistics) on key health indicators regard-
•J. 55–345
2028 1 ing the Nation’s health and the performance of the
2 Nation’s health care; 3 ‘‘(2) facilitate and coordinate the collection, col- 4 lation, reporting, and publishing of information re- 5 garding the Nation’s health and the performance of 6 the Nation’s health care (other than information de- 7 scribed in paragraph (1)); 8 ‘‘(3)(A) develop standards for the collection of 9 data regarding the Nation’s health and the perform-
10 ance of the Nation’s health care; and
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
‘‘(B) in carrying out subparagraph (A)— ‘‘(i) ensure appropriate specificity and standardization for data collection at the na-
tional, regional, State, and local levels; ‘‘(ii) include standards, as appropriate, for the collection of accurate data on health and health care by race, ethnicity, primary lan- guage, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability, socioeconomic status, rural, urban, or other geographic setting, and any other popu- lation or subpopulation determined appropriate
by the Secretary; ‘‘(iii) ensure, with respect to data on race
and ethnicity, consistency with the 1997 Office of Management and Budget Standards for
•J. 55–345
2029 1 Maintaining, Collecting and Presenting Federal
2 Data on Race and Ethnicity (or any successor 3 standards); and 4 ‘‘(iv) in consultation with the Director of 5 the Office of Minority Health, and the Director 6 of the Office of Civil Rights, of the Department, 7 develop standards for the collection of data on 8 health and health care with respect to data on 9 primary language;
10 ‘‘(4) provide support to Federal departments 11 and agencies whose programs have a significant im- 12 pact upon health (as determined by the Secretary) 13 for the collection and collation of information de- 14 scribed in paragraphs (1) and (2);
15 ‘‘(5) ensure the sharing of information de- 16 scribed in paragraphs (1) and (2) among the agen- 17 cies of the Department; 18 ‘‘(6) facilitate the sharing of information de- 19 scribed in paragraphs (1) and (2) by Federal depart- 20 ments and agencies whose programs have a signifi- 21 cant impact upon health (as determined by the Sec- 22 retary);

BREAKING: Healthcare Reform reconciliation bill is posted! 2300+ pages and includes student loan
http://budget.house.gov         

student loan crap starts @ page 2098

Page 1971 ‘‘Placing health professionals in regions experiencing significant changes in the cultural and linguistic demographics of populations, including communities along the United States-Mexico border."
 
Oh, nice.. Page 2084:
(3) BEHAVIORAL CHANGE COMPONENT.—A behavioral change component which provides for alter ing employee lifestyles to encourage healthy living through counseling, seminars, on-line programs, or self-help materials which provide technical assistance
2084 •J. 55–345
1 and problem solving skills. such component may in clude programs relating to—
3 (A) tobacco use;
4 (B) obesity;
5 (C) stress management;
6 (D) physical fitness;
7 (E) nutrition;
8 (F) substance abuse;
9 (G) depression; and
10 (H) mental health promotion (including
11 anxiety).
 


 Comment # 86  by Diogenesis at: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2471082/posts
 
 
19) QHBP OFFERING ENTITY.—The terms
17 ‘‘QHBP offering entity’’ means, with respect to a
18 health benefits plan that is—
19 (A) a group health plan (as defined, sub20
ject to subsection (d), in section 733(a)(1) of
21 the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
22 of 1974), the plan sponsor in relation to such
23 group health plan, except that, in the case of a
24 plan maintained jointly by 1 or more employers
25 and 1 or more employee organizations and with
12
•J. 55–345
1 respect to which an employer is the primary
2 source of financing, such term means such em3
ployer;
4 (B) health insurance coverage, the health
5 insurance issuer offering the coverage;
6 (C) the public health insurance option, the
7 Secretary of Health and Human Services;
8 (D) a non-Federal governmental plan (as
9 defined in section 2791(d) of the Public Health
10 Service Act), the State or political subdivision
11 of a State (or agency or instrumentality of such
12 State or subdivision) which establishes or main13
tains such plan; or
14 (E) a Federal governmental plan (as de15
fined in section 2791(d) of the Public Health
16 Service Act), the appropriate Federal official.
17 (20) QUALIFIED HEALTH BENEFITS PLAN.—
18 The term ‘‘qualified health benefits plan’’ means a
19 health benefits plan that meets the requirements for
20 such a plan under title I and includes the public
21 health insurance option.
22 (21) PUBLIC HEALTH INSURANCE OPTION.—
23 The term ‘‘public health insurance option’’ means
24 the public health insurance option as provided under
25 subtitle B of title II.
 
 
From page 1011: (SBHC= School based health clinic)
COMPREHENSIVE PRIMARY HEALTH SERVICES.

The term ‘comprehensive primary health services’ means the core services offered by SBHCs, which shall include the following:

PHYSICAL.—Comprehensive health assessments, diagnosis, and treatment of minor, acute, and chronic medical conditions and referrals to, and follow-up for, specialty care.

MENTAL HEALTH.—Mental health assessments, crisis intervention, counseling, treatment, and referral to a continuum of services including emergency psychiatric care, community support programs, inpatient care, and outpatient programs.

OPTIONAL SERVICES.—Additional services, which may include oral health, social, and age-appropriate health education services, including nutritional counseling.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


 

Code Red” - House Target List on Health Care

The National Republican Congressional Committee has published a target list on health care. In addition to continuing to contact the five Tennessee Democrat Congressmen, you can go http://www.votervoice.net/link/clickthrough/ext/94697.aspx to contact some of these targets. Much of the talk following Obama’s announcement has focused on how to defeat this second bill through reconciliation, but that is misleading because the first step to defeating Obamacare is not by concentrating on defeating the “fixer” bill but by defeating the Senate bill in the House when it goes to the floor for an up-or-down vote on Thursday, March 18th.

Rep. Lincoln Davis 202-225-6831 Columbia office: 931-490-8699
Rep. Jim Cooper 202-225-4311 Nashville office: 615-736-5295
Rep. Bart Gordon 202-225-4231 Murfreesboro office: 615-896-1986
John Tanner (202) 225-4714, Union City, (731) 885-7070, Jackson Phone: (731) 423-4848, Millington (901) 873-5690 TN (MAYBE)
Rep. Steve Cohen 202-225-3265 Memphis office: 901-544-4131
Harry Mitchell (202) 225-2190 (480) 946-2411 AZ 5th District
Gabrielle Giffords (202) 225-2542 (520) 881-3588 AZ 8th District
Ann Kirkpatrick (202) 225-2315 (928) 226-6914 AZ 1st District
Jerry McNerney (202) 225-1947 925-833-0643 CA 11th District
John Salazar 202-225-4761 970-245-7107 CO 3rd District
Jim Himes (202) 225-5541 (866) 453-0028 CT 4th District
Alan Grayson (202) 225-2176 (407) 841-1757 FL 8th District
Bill Foster (202) 225-2976 630-406-1114 IL 14th District
Baron Hill 202 225 5315 812 288 3999 IN 9th District
Mark Schauer (202) 225-6276 (517) 780-9075 MI 7th District
Gary Peters (202) 225-5802 (248) 273-4227 MI 9th District
Dina Titus (202) 225-3252 702-256-DINA (3462) NV 3rd District
Carol Shea-Porter (202) 225-5456 (603) 743-4813 NH 1st District
Tim Bishop (202) 225-3826 (631) 696-6500 NY 1st District
John Hall (202) 225-5441 (845) 225-3641 x49371 NY 19th District
Bill Owens (202) 225-4611 (315) 782-3150 NY 23rd District
Mike Arcuri (202)225-3665 (315)793-8146 NY 24th District
Dan Maffei (202) 225-3701 (315) 423-5657 NY 25th District
Earl Pomeroy (202) 225-2611 (701) 224-0355 ND At-Large District
Steven Driehaus (202) 225-2216 (513) 684-2723 OH 1st District
Mary Jo Kilroy (202) 225-2015 (614) 294-2196 OH 15th District
Zach Space (202) 225-6265 (330) 364-4300 OH 18th District
Kathy Dahlkemper (202) 225-5406 (814) 456-2038 PA 3rd District
Patrick Murphy (202) 225-4276 (215) 826-1963 PA 8th District
Christopher Carney (202) 225-3731 (570) 585-9988 PA 10th District
Paul Kanjorski (202) 225-6511 (570) 825-2200 PA 11th District
John Spratt (202) 225-5501 (803)327-1114 SC 5th District
Tom Perriello (202) 225-4711 (276) 656-2291 VA 5th District
Alan Mollohan (202) 225-4172 (304) 623-4422 WVA 1st District
Nick Rahall (202) 225-3452 (304) 252-5000 WVA 3rd District
Steve Kagen (202) 225-5665 (920) 437-1954 WI 8th District

Bart Stupak (202) 225 4735 MI (MAYBE)
Brian Baird (202) 225-3536, Vancouver, (360) 695-6292. Olympia, (360) 352-9768, (MAYBE)
senator mark begich (202) 224-3004 toll free. (877) 501 - 6275 just became a MAYBE
Jason Altmire 202-225-2565, Aliquippa, 724-378-0928,
Natrona Heights, 724-226-1304 (MAYBE)
Compiled by Gail A
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Breaking! Reconciliation Bill has "public health insurance option"

Yes,  the "Public Option IS IN THE BILL!!!  INSURANCE REFORMS.—This subdivision— 15 (A) enacts strong insurance market re16 forms; 17 (B) creates a new Health Insurance Ex18 change, with a public health insurance option 19 alongside private plans;  http://budget.house.gov/doc-library/FY2010/03.15.2010_reconciliation2010.PDF
  
See more information about reconciliation bill and outrage at:  http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2471082/posts
 
Photobucket
To: rlbedfor; All

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 14, 2010

CONTACT: Levi Russell at (509) 979-6615 or Levi@FrontLineStrat.com

 

 **MEDIA ALERT**

 

What: CODE RED Health Care Rally to…Kill The Bill!

 

When: March 16, 2010 at 10:00 AM EST.

 

Where: Capitol Hill, Taft Park, Washington D.C.

 

The American Grassroots Coalition and The Tea Party Express welcome the American People to bring their LOUD VOICES, Thoughts and Letters to their elected Representatives.

 

www.americangrassrootscoalition.org           www.teapartyexpress.org

  

Speakers Include:


·        Congressman Mike Pence

·        Congresswoman Michele Bachmann

·        Congressman Tom Price

·        Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn

·        Congressman Joe Wilson

·        Congressman Phil Gingrey

·        Amy Kremer of Tea Party Express

·        Tim Phillips of American for Prosperity

·        Jim Martin of 60 Plus

·        Matt Patterson of the National Center for Public Policy Research

·        Max Pappas of  FreedomWorks

 

*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

Contact:

 

Please contact: Mary Christopher, Mary@americangrassrootscoalition.org, or Jennifer Hulsey, 770.546.0286, with questions and for press passes.

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive