AFM wrote:
Great! Give him a chance to prove it. Make a judgment on the final legislation, and not the 5 or so in-flight plans in committee. If the final plan doesn't meet the criteria he laid out in the speech, I will call him a liar, too. Doing it before then makes no sense to me. YMMV.
Why? The issue right now is whether he was a liar when Joe Wilson called him one. Whether he's a liar about something else down the road is another issue. It certainly makes perfect sense to me to address this now; this sort of political doublespeak that glosses over the details to the average person is a major problem.
Quote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Why would it be a different procedure?
I don't believe that repealing or amending EMTALA or MMA can be done in new legislation. I think, procedurally, it has to be done differently in Congress. Again, I could be wrong.
I don't think this is the case, but even if it is, there should be accompanying legislation to close these loopholes. Failing to do so is, as I pointed out, an end run.
Diamondeye wrote:
I wasn't really talking about you specifically, DE, nor anyone else on the board, and it shouldn't be taken personally. I was commenting that if the public had as much concern about denying healthcare to illegals back in 1986 when the EMTALA was passed, perhaps it wouldn't be an issue today. Same with the Medicare Modernization act in 2003. It was more of a swipe at the current political climate, where the media seems to be at the helm instead of the people.
I don't disagree on the media being at the helm, but in 1986 illegal immigraton wasn't at the forefront of politics as it is today, or so I recollect. I wasn't taking it personally either. I was pointing out that 1986 was 23 years ago and 23 years is a lot of time for opinions to change. 2003 is much more recent, but even then, just because this was passed 6 years ago doesn't mean we shouldn't remedy a problem now.