Tuesday, September 22, 2009



The year is 1907, one hundred and 2 years ago.



Theodore Roosevelt's ideas on Immigrants and being an AMERICAN in 1907.

'In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person's becoming in every facet an American, and nothing but an American...There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language.. And we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.'

Theodore Roosevelt 1907



Every American citizen needs to read this!

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Senior Care To Suffer Under Gov't Plan,Two-Thirds Of Practicing Physicians Say

By DAVID HOGBERG
News Analysis by IBD | Posted Friday, September 18, 2009

Will the quality of care for seniors improve under health care reform currently being considered by Congress?

A recent IBD/TIPP Poll shows that a majority of physicians think the answer is no.

Of the 1,376 physicians who answered our survey, 65% said that government reform would lead to lower-quality care for seniors.



Just 28% said it would lead to better care for seniors, while 7% declined to answer.

"I'm not surprised by the results," said Dr. Alieta Eck, an internist in Zarephath, N.J. "It's not possible to cut $500 billion from Medicare and provide better-quality care for seniors."

While Dr. Gary Kaplan isn't surprised by the results either, he disagrees with them.

"Change is hard and there is a lot about health care reform that is uncertain," said the internist and chairman and CEO of Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle. "But I don't think (worse care for seniors) will happen. I'm quite optimistic about reform as a way to improve care."

The plan currently in the House would reduce Medicare spending by $500 billion over 10 years, while the plan recently released by Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., would reduce it by $400 billion.

A lot would depend on how reform achieves those reductions.

"Medicare was set up for acute care and hospital care, not to treat those with chronic conditions," said Dr. Laurel Coleman, a geriatrician in Manchester, Maine. "If policymakers would do changes in Medicare to improve chronic care management, it would directly help a disease like Alzheimer's that over 5 million Americans have, most of whom are on Medicare."

While generally supportive of reform, Coleman said she'd have to see specifics before deciding if a policy would improve senior care.

The Baucus plan instructs the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services to set up an "Innovation Center" that will, in part, be charged with establishing "community-based health teams to support small-practice medical homes by assisting the principal primary care practitioner in chronic care management activities."

Dr. Jane Orient is not convinced this will improve senior care.

"What does it mean to coordinate somebody's care?" asked the internist and executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons.

"Am I going to review care plans for patients I've never set eyes on? Am I supposed to see these patients to earn money for coordinating care? It's not clear what that means."

One concern that many physicians voiced in the IBD/TIPP survey was rationing of medical care.

"Increased government interference cannot make a huge endeavor function better," wrote one respondent. "There will be mandated protocols, long waits, rationing of care, (and) infringement upon a doctor's right of conscience."

"One of the challenges going forward with Medicare is that it is becoming harder and harder to access primary care physicians," said Coleman. "A lot of it has to do with the costs for primary care physicians and the Medicare reimbursement. Changing the Medicare reimbursement, especially for serving complex patients, would help."

The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission says it found that the number of elderly Medicare recipients who had trouble finding a primary care physician rose from 11% to 17% from 2004 to 2007.

Under the Baucus plan, physicians who practice family medicine, internal medicine, geriatric medicine or pediatric medicine, and who perform about 60% of their services for primary care, will receive a 10% bonus on those services.

But others think the reduction in Medicare spending will inevitably mean reductions in physician payments.

"As Medicare constantly lowers reimbursement, it will be harder for new physicians to take part," said Eck. "People are telling me that it is already happening in gynecology. Medicare patients can often no longer find a gynecologist for routine care, or they have to wait six months."

Others see another side to rationing. "Insurance companies already ration care and limit access," wrote another IBD/TIPP survey respondent.

Added Kaplan, "I think today that health care is rationed. It's plentiful for some and unavailable for 47 million Americans. . . . If we improve access and payment for value and eliminate waste, as we are here at Virginia Mason, there will be more resources available to the American public."

Physicians even disagree over the effect of "end of life" counseling, which some critics have derided as "death panels."

"I think reform is all about giving patients choices," said Kaplan. "Insuring that patients understand not only what's available in terms of their care, but that they have choices to make about aggressive or less aggressive treatment — I think reform will help that to happen."

Responds Orient, "If I'm going to spend an hour with a patient, why should I be paid to go through a list of what your end-of-life options are instead of getting your diabetes under control or helping your heart failure?"

The divergent opinion among physicians is, to some extent, reflected among seniors.

At a recent town hall meeting convened by Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., at the Greenspring retirement community in Springfield, Va., some seniors expressed concern over reform.

Katherine Featherstone worried about what reform would mean for people like her deceased husband, who suffered from Alzheimer's.

"I had the freedom to talk with his doctor and participate in his treatment. I would lose that freedom under this bill," she said.

But others were in favor of reform. "We have to reform health care, no doubt about it," said Mary Thomas. "It needs to be passed."

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Obama's First Six Months' Accomplishments

The following was received in an email.

Obama's First Six Months' Accomplishments

1. Offended the Queen of England.
2. Bowed to the King of Saudi Arabia.
3. Praised the Marxist Daniel Ortega.
4. Kissed Socialist Hugo Chavez on the cheek.
5. Endorsed the Socialist Evo Morales of Bolivia.
6. Sided with Hugo Chavez and Communist Fidel Castro against Honduras.
7. Announced we would meet with Iranians with no pre-conditions while they're building their nuclear weapons.
8. Gave away billions to AIG also without pre-conditions.
9. Expanded the bailouts.
10. Insulted everyone who has ever loved a Special Olympian.
11. Doubled our national debt.
12. Announced the termination of our new missile defense system the day after North Korea launched an ICBM.
13. Released information on U.S. intelligence gathering despite urgings of his own CIA director and the prior four CIA directors.
14. Accepted without comment that five of his cabinet members cheated on their taxes and two other nominees withdrew after they couldn't take the heat.
15. Appointed a Homeland Security Chief who identified military veterans and abortion opponents as "dangers to the nation."
16. Ordered that the word "terrorism" no longer be used and instead refers to such acts as "man made disasters."
17. Circled the globe to publicly apologize for America's world leadership.
18. Told the Mexican president that the violence in their country was because of us.
19. Politicized the census by moving it into the White House from the Department of Commerce. 20. Passed a huge energy tax in the House that will make American industry even less competitive while costing homeowners thousands per year.
21. Salutes as heroes three Navy SEALS who took down three terrorists who threatened one American life and the next day announces members of the Bush administration may stand trial for "torturing" three 9/11 terrorists by pouring water up their noses.
22. Low altitude photo shoot of Air Force One over New York City that frightened thousands of New Yorkers.
23. Sent his National Defense Advisor to Europe to assure them that the US will no longer treat Israel in a special manner and they might be on their own with the Muslims.
24. Praised Jimmy Carter's trip to Gaza where he sided with terrorist Hamas against Israel.
25. Nationalized General Motors and Chrysler while turning shareholder control over to the unions and freezing out retired investors who owned their bonds. Committed unlimited taxpayer billions in the process.
26. Announced nationalized health care "reform" that will strip seniors of their Medicare, cut pay of physicians, increase taxes yet another $1 trillion, and put everyone on rationed care with government bureaucrats deciding who gets care and who doesn't.

Bloomberg: Daschle says, "Health care reform will not be pain free. Seniors should be more accepting of the conditions that come with age instead of treating them," while former Colorado Governor Dick Lamm says seniors have "a duty to die."

If this does not sufficiently raise your ire, just remember that the President, Senators and Congressmen have their own special gold plated health care plan which is guaranteed the remainder of their lives and they are not subject to this new law if they pass it . Please use the power of the Internet to get this message out.

Talk it up at the grassroots level. We have an election coming up in one year and four months where we can reverse the dangerous direction of the Obama administration and its allies. In the interim, we can make their lives miserable. Lets do it!