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Onus Is Now on Congress
After Court’s Embryonic Stem Cell Ruling

For those suffering from diabetes, spinal cord injuries, Parkinson’s disease and other afflictions that resist traditional therapies, Monday’s legal decision barring federal funding for embryonic stem cell research is deeply disappointing.
Disappointing, but likely legally correct. [Read full story] 

We Must Not Regress
Beck Rally Won’t Block Path to Unity

WASHINGTON--Almost 50 years ago on Saturday, Martin Luther King Jr. transformed the steps of the Lincoln Memorial into a modern-day pulpit with his message of faith and hope.
He stood before the world and shared his vision for a different, better America, and he inspired all of us to reach for our higher selves and lay down the burden of racial discrimination and hate. [Read full story]

The Lunatic’s Manual
World-Class Ineptitude in Iraq and Afghanistan Wars

 [Read full story]

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Prater Consistently on Right Track
Prosecutor Merits Community’s Strong Support

Oklahoma County District David Prater, having won election by a large margin about four years ago, has consistently been on the right track as he has gone about doing his job, all the while stalwartly pursuing justice without bias or favor, as would some modern-day Eliot Ness. [Read full story]

The Wrong Kind of Enthusiasm
Democrats Need to Counter With Show of Commitment

Republican insurgents from the far right did well in Tuesday’s primaries.
What their campaigns lack in logic, compassion and sensible policy seems to be counterbalanced by a fiercely committed voter base that is nowhere to be seen on the Democratic side.
In Alaska, Joe Miller, a little-known lawyer from Fairbanks, had a lead for the GOP Senate nomination over Lisa Murkowski, the incumbent. [Read full story]

Editorials

 

GUEST EDITORIAL
USA Today

Just ‘Cause You Say It, Don’t Make It So!
Big Lie:  Calling Health-Care Reform Law a ‘Job Killer’

In 2009, the Democrats who controlled Washington could see that voters’ top priority was job, jobs, jobs.  So they focused on….health care reform.
In 2010, the Republicans took America’s pulse and concluded that voters still want jobs, jobs, jobs.  So, the new GOP majority in the House has also made health care--namely repealing the law enacted last year--its first priority.
Go figure.
Each party has dealt with this disconnect in its own way.  The Democrats reasoned that the economy was recovering and that the public would come to embrace their health care measure as an important addition to financial security.  They’re still waiting.
Republicans have opted for hollow rhetoric.  They simply insert the words “job killing” before any mention of the health care law.  It’s in the title of the repeal bill that was voted on Wednesday.  And House Speaker John Boehner (Rep., Ohio) used the term seven times in a 14-minute news conference on the first day of the new Congress.
Simplistic labels, such as the effort to rebrand the estate tax as the “death tax,” can be smart politics if they subtly alter people’s perceptions.  But a heavy-handed approach like this, which tells people what to think without any explanation for why, is unlikely to be effective.  Not only that, it flies in the face of reality.
The evidence that the medical care reform law will be a job-killer is slim to none.  While there is no shortage of rosy or pessimistic assessments produced by groups on either side of this debate, the few independent studies of law’s impact on jobs have offered up resounding shrugs.  In 2009, researchers at the RAND Corp. and the Lewin Group said its overall job impact would be minimal.
The reason for this sis simple.  Whatever positive or negative can be said about the health care reform measure--and we believe that the pros outweigh the cons--the sad truth is it does little to alter the velocity of medical spending, which at the current rate of increase would push family insurance premiums to $25,000 a year within a decade.
Market forces, normally good for holding down spending, are virtually non-existent in health care because patients and providers are mostly spending other people’s money--an employers through work or the government’s through Medicare, veterans’ benefits or various other programs.  In fact, government already pays for about half of all health care while providing hefty tax breaks for the half it doesn’t pay for, and every time government tries to be frugal, it’s accused of rationing and price fixing, not least by interests that benefit from the spending.
So, costs rise everywhere.  To the extent that the health law affects employment, it just continues the shift of jobs into medical areas at the expense of jobs in other sectors as the Baby boom generation ages.  Among the 20 professions projected to grow the fastest by the federal Department of Labor, 10 are in health care; several others, in areas such as biochemistry and physical therapy, are related.
These trends should prompt lawmakers to focus on what they can do to improve the health care law and rein in surging costs.  Slapping the “job killing” label on the repeal bill is an effort to avoid making tough decisions and coming up with better ideas. 

 

 

 


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