Thursday, September 10, 2009

Republicans Shout Lies and Heckle Obama During Healthcare Speech

From Huffington Post, with commentary, pictures and links added:

"Fresh from a month of acrimonious town halls, House Republicans arrived for President Obama's address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night with signs, props, and a lot of attitude.

But at least one congressman went way too far. Rep. Joe Wilson shouted "You lie!" after Obama denied that his health care proposal would cover illegal immigrants.

All eyes turned in the South Carolina Republican's direction -- including Obama's, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's and Vice President Joe Biden's.

Wilson, looking agitated, leaned forward and began tapping away at his BlackBerry, as if he were Googling up proof that the president had, in fact, lied.

"Shame on you!" shouted someone from the Democratic side. "Throw him out!" shouted someone else. First Lady Michelle Obama, seated behind and above Wilson, seemed to mouth a drawn-out "damn" at the scene unfolding before her.

Not long after the speech ended, Wilson issued an apology. "This evening I let my emotions get the best of me when listening to the President's remarks regarding the coverage of illegal immigrants in the health care bill," he said. "While I disagree with the President's statement, my comments were inappropriate and regrettable. I extend sincere apologies to the President for this lack of civility." Wilson also called the White House to apologize.

(FactCheck.org, an non-partisan group confirmed the Obama plan does not include coverage for illegal immigrants, despite lies by Wilson and other Republicans. From their website: "Not true. In fact, the House bill (the only bill to be formally introduced in its entirety) specifically says that no federal money would be spent on giving illegal immigrants health coverage - So not only would mandated coverage of illegals not be in the bill, not one penny can be spent on illegals, period.)

(It's amazing how everything the Republicans say is consistently the opposite of the truth. Where I come from that means you're either an idiot or a liar. Take your pick, neither is a complement.)

Wilson's wasn't the only disruption, though it was the most extreme. Throughout the speech, Republican members of Congress repeatedly held up stacks of papers that appeared to represent ideas they had for the bill.

Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) held signs that read "What Bill?" and "What Plan?"

When Obama told the chamber that the "death panel" lie was, in fact, a lie, a Republican member said loudly enough to be heard in the press gallery, "Read the bill" -- a common refrain at August's angry town hall meetings.

(This is despite FactCheck.org, the non-partisan group that sorts lies from facts on both sides, and who has read the bill, stating that the Death Panel's claimed by Republicans are not real. FactCheck.org: "The claim that the bill would "push suicide" is a falsehood.")

When Obama told the chamber that he had "no interest in putting insurance companies out of business," a Republican member responded with a loud, "Ha!"

"Nineteen years, never, never have I seen anything like this," said a furious Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) after the speech.

"I thought it was very inappropriate behavior, to hold up signs. None of us ever would have done that," said Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.). "I don't think in the Congress of the United States there ought to be catcalls, or people standing up and yelling comments or holding up signs."

Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), the longest serving member in House history, said he was not impressed by the GOP antics. "Well, you've got to understand: They're Republicans. They're just doing what comes natural," he told HuffPost.

Obama, in his speech, referenced Dingell's father for first introducing universal health care legislation in 1943. Dingell has introduced such a bill every year he's been in Congress and today's House bill bears his name.

"I am not the first President to take up this cause, but I am determined to be the last," Obama said of the long history of failed efforts. It struck a chord with Dingell. "The best speech I've ever heard on the floor of the House," he said."

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Americans Have Drastically Changed Their Spending Habits

Economists and rich people everywhere are on edge because the recession has prompted a change in spending habits by Americans.

"The Los Angeles Times and others are reporting that we collectively cut our debt by a record $21.6 billion in July—the biggest monthly drop since the government started keeping records in 1943."

How are companies and cutthroat lenders supposed to survive if we pay off our debt quickly instead of paying 21% interest on everything? Won't the country fail if we actually start keeping money in the bank and earning interest on it instead of blowing it every month on junk we don't need?

Hardly. The country will be fine. It will adapt. Consumerism has been out of control. We don't need a shiny new $40,000 car every three years, or the latest new phone every year. Life goes on, with our without our money. The rich will have to rough it short a few billion.

Bravo, America. That's one small step for sanity, and one giant leap for fiscal responsibility. Don't blow it.

Build an emergency fund, pay off your debt, and start saving. You can get higher interest rates from online banks, shop around for the best rates at places like Emmigrant Direct and ING, among others.