MildlyAmusingRant's Blog

2010/04/08

get ready to be microchipped, Americans!

Filed under: Rant — mildlyamusingrants @ 21:18
Tags: , , , , , , ,

http://goldfuture.wordpress.com/2010/03/19/both-house-and-senate-health-bills-require-the-micro-chipping-of-americans-31810/

Let’s all bend over, and take it like a hamster !

BOTH HOUSE AND SENATE HEALTH BILLS REQUIRE THE MICRO CHIPPING OF AMERICANS – 3/18/10

Required RFID implanted chip

Sec. 2521, Pg. 1000 – The government will establish a National Medical Device Registry. What does a National Medical Device Registry mean?

National Medical Device Registry from H.R. 3200 [Healthcare Bill], pages 1001-1008:

(g)(1) The Secretary shall establish a national medical device registry (in this subsection referred to as the ‘registry’) to facilitate analysis of postmarket safety and outcomes data on each device that— ‘‘(A) is or has been used in or on a patient; ‘‘(B)and is— ‘‘(i) a class III device; or ‘‘(ii) a class II device that is implantable, life-supporting, or life-sustaining.”

Then on page 1004 it describes what the term “data” means in paragraph 1,

section B:
‘‘(B) In this paragraph, the term ‘data’ refers to information respecting a device described in paragraph (1), including claims data, patient survey data, standardized analytic files that allow for the pooling and analysis of data from disparate data environments, electronic health records, and any other data deemed appropriate by the Secretary”

What exactly is a class II device that is implantable? Approved by the FDA, a class II implantable device is an “implantable radio frequency transponder system for patient identification and health information.” The purpose of a class II device is to collect data in medical patients such as “claims data, patient survey data, standardized analytic files that allow for the pooling and analysis of data from disparate data environments, electronic health records, and any other data deemed appropriate by the Secretary.”

See it for yourself: http://www.fda.gov/downloads/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/GuidanceDocuments/ucm072191.pdf

This new law – when fully implemented – provides the framework for making the United States the first nation in the world to require each and every one of its citizens to have implanted in them a radio-frequency identification (RFID) microchip for the purpose of controlling who is, or isn’t, allowed medical care in their country.

Don’t believe it? Look it up yourself. Healthcare Bill H.R. 3200: http://waysandmeans.house.gov/media/pdf/111/AAHCA09001xml.pdf

Pages 1001-1008 “National Medical Device Registry” section.
Page 1006 “to be enacted within 36 months upon passage”
Page 503 “… medical device surveillance”

Why would the government use the word “surveillance” when referring to citizens? The definition of “surveillance” is the monitoring of the behavior, activities, or other changing information, usually of people and often in a secret manner. The root of the word [French] means to “watch over.”

In theory, the intent to streamline healthcare and to eliminate fraud via “health chips” seems right. But, to have the world’s lone superpower (America, for now) mandate (page 1006) a device to be IMPLANTED is scary!

Microchiping included in Healthcare Bill? http://www.dailypaul.com/node/105079

Coverage under Obamacare will require an implantable microchip?
http://current.com/items/90842279_coverage-under-obamacare-will-require-an-implantable-microchip.htm

(via http://goldfuture.wordpress.com/2010/03/19/both-house-and-senate-health-bills-require-the-micro-chipping-of-americans-31810/ )

2009/09/08

Help Stop Socialized Healthcare And $1.5 Trillion In New Taxes

Filed under: Rant — mildlyamusingrants @ 22:34
Tags: , ,

Please look at it; if you agree, please sign, and pass the word on

http://www.grassfire.org/122/petition.asp

Help Stop Socialized Healthcare And $1.5 Trillion In New Taxes!
Petition Opposing Government-Run, Socialized Health Care

Total signers: 455,524

Petition Sponsor:  Grassfire.org

President Obama and his liberal cohorts are rushing a massive socialized healthcare plan through Congress — with a final vote expected in September!

This “ObamaCare” healthcare plan imposes at least $1.5 trillion in new taxes and forces Americans to “hand over” their health care decisions to politicians and bureaucrats. This nationalization of our health care system will cripple businesses and cause a massive increase in government control over our lives. For more on how the so-called “Public Option” is really a “Government Co-option” of healthcare, go here.

Grassfire is delivering petitions opposing the government takeover of our healthcare system on Friday, September 12. Help us reach 500,000 petitions by this important day by signing our petition and rallying your friends to follow your lead.

The Petition States:

To: President Barack Obama, Members of Congress

As a concerned citizen, I oppose any and all efforts to further expand government control over the U.S. healthcare and insurance system. Specifically, I oppose the so-called “Public Option” proposals — the “Affordable Health Choices Act” and other similar bills — which amount to government-run, socialized health care that will impose massive taxes on the American people.

Like most Americans, I prefer getting my health coverage through private insurance rather than the federal government. That’s because government healthcare always results in higher costs and rationing. I do not want politicians and bureaucrats dictating the health care and insurance decisions of myself and my employer. Especially in these difficult economic times, I flatly reject any new government healthcare plan that imposes new taxes or burdens on individuals or businesses.

2009/08/20

government health care – care is an oxymoron here

Filed under: Rant — mildlyamusingrants @ 07:54
Tags: ,

Socialized health care is working great in Canada.  American nationalist sentiment aside, Canada like Japan is a vibrant first world country that is quite comparable to the U.S. in sophistication.

Our northern neighbours haven’t made socialized medicine work any better than G.B. has, or anywhere else it’s ever been implemented.  Most Canadian doctors stop receiving government pay by August, and many of those work the rest of the year in … the United States.  Hm.

As an Canadian acquaintance recently related, she was at least reasonably glad on the timing of her dad’s heart attack; he was visiting friends in the U.S.  While I’m not likely to support the Republicrats anytime soon, nor the Demicans, just thought I’d pass this along.  Certainly no one that I work with is polarized on this issue <riiight>

While health care needs some reform, adding government to anything is not the answer.  See yesterdays post, quoting Ronnie.

———- Forwarded message ———-
Date: Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 2:16 AM
Subject: Run Health Care like the Post Office?


Dear M,Barack Obama recently said, “I think private insurers should be able to compete…I mean. If you think about it, UPS and FedEx are doing just fine. It’s the Post Office that’s always having problems.”

The President is acknowledging what Republicans have been saying all along: That the private sector does a better job offering choices and delivering services to customers in a competitive and cost effective manner than a government-run monopoly.

But Obama and liberal Democrats in Congress are pushing for a government-run health care scheme that is inefficient, limits choices and hemorrhages taxpayer money like the Post Office.

Two weeks ago, the Post Office was called a “high risk” federal agency by the Government Accountability Office. The Post Office will have a $7 billion operatingloss this year. So what makes the President, Nancy Pelosi and their left-wing allies think that government bureaucracy can run health care better than the private sector?

M, it’s clear Americans simply aren’t buying into the Democrats’ government-run health care experiment. They are waking up to the fact that the Democrats are trying to strip us of more of our freedoms all in the name of their “government knows best” philosophy.

Your generous support of the RNC is critical to laying the foundation Republicans need to defeat the Democrats and stop their leftward push to control every facet and detail of our lives.

Please help the RNC recruit and train the next generation of conservative Republican candidates who are committed to our core values of limited government, fiscal discipline and personal responsibility by making a secure online contribution of $1,000, $500, $100, $50, or $25 today.

No matter how the President and his liberal allies try to spin it, they cannot escape the fact that his government-run health care plan would increase costs, increase taxes, increase the deficit and reduce health care choice and quality.

M, we can win this fight and stop the Democrats from another government takeover. Please give as generously as you can to help defeat Barack Obama’s risky health care scheme.Sincerely,

Michael Steele
Chairman, Republican National Committee

P.S. M, the President paints a perfect picture of what government-run health care would look like when talking about the costly inefficiencies of the Post Office. Please visit http://BarackObamaExperiment.com to learn more facts about the President’s government-run health care experiment and share it with your family and friends. And please make a secure online contribution of $1,000, $500, $100, $50, or $25 today to help the RNC recruit and elect Republicans committed to our conservative principles. Thank you.


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http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-health-coop20-2009aug20,0,4258832.story

By James Oliphant

August 20, 2009

Reporting from Washington – With prospects fading that the Senate will include a government-run insurance option in healthcare reform legislation, congressional Democrats and Republicans are already sparring over an alternative — a series of private regional cooperatives that advocates say could achieve the goals of a public plan without the potential for government interference.

The key negotiators in the Senate — the so-called Gang of Six of three Republicans and three Democrats from the Senate Finance Committee — are scheduled to meet today by teleconference to discuss prospects for keeping a bipartisan health plan alive, which could hinge on the acceptability of co-ops to both sides.

One of the six — Democrat Kent Conrad of North Dakota — is the leading Senate proponent of co-ops. He and others point to cooperatives in Seattle and Minnesota that employ doctors and own their own healthcare facilities, giving them more control over costs and the quality of care. Conrad says that under his plan, the federal government would play no role in managing the co-ops, but would only provide seed money to help them get started.

Sen. Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, a Republican member of the negotiating team, says he supports a co-op provision in the bill as long as it is not “hijacked” to get a “government-run program in place.”

The White House has been adamant that healthcare reform legislation needs to create more competition in the health insurance marketplace, expand insurance to millions who do not have it, and drive down costs.

President Obama’s favored mechanism is a federal insurance plan — the so-called public option — which could give consumers an alternative to private insurers and put pressure on the industry to reduce costs. Bills passed by committees in the House of Representatives contain that option.

But conservative opposition, based on arguments that a federal plan would have unfair advantages and ultimately drive private insurers out of business, has risen sharply. The chances of a public option emerging from the Senate Finance Committee are now considered almost zero.

Senators seeking a compromise hope that the White House, its liberal allies and Republicans might find common ground in co-ops. Supporters say co-ops offer improved service and are cheaper because they don’t have to turn a profit. They would return revenue to their members in the form of lower premiums and be self-governed by elected boards. And the co-ops might help the White House achieve its goal of providing competition to private insurance companies.

Although Obama prefers a public option, “if there are others that have ideas about how we can institute choice and competition, he’s happy to look at those,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Wednesday.

But the Senate negotiators are already encountering opposition to co-ops. Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl, part of the Republican leadership in Congress, launched a new attack this week, saying co-ops would be no different than a government plan. He contends that the federal government would probably provide funding and tax advantages to the co-ops — which would put private insurers at a disadvantage — and would also exert so much regulatory authority that the co-ops would operate as virtual federal entities.

Liberals who favor a federal insurance option say the co-ops are prone to insolvency and probably can’t be structured to be large enough to secure favorable rates from doctors, hospitals and drug companies. The smaller co-ops would be entering a crowded field dominated by larger insurers with greater capital and market leverage.

It could take three to four years for a co-op to be federally chartered and established, said Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund, which advocates for high-quality healthcare. “But the real issue is, how long does it take before they have sufficient enrollment to really get good prices from hospitals and doctors,” Davis said. “That’s at the heart of this. Would they be able to get discounts that lower premiums?”

The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that 10 million to 12 million Americans — about 4% of the population — could take advantage of co-ops.

But co-ops are “unlicensed, unregulated,” Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) said in a recent interview. “Nobody has ever done any study . . . of how they would affect health insurance in a bill the magnitude of the size we’re doing.”

Unless the Senate Finance Committee negotiators arrive at a compromise on co-ops, the partisan fight over them could be just as fierce as the current debate about a federal insurance plan.

Republicans are in danger “of appearing to reject any solution to healthcare as opposed to what they say are bad solutions,” said Julian Zelizer, a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. “Just as Democrats have a history of fighting among themselves, Republicans have a tradition of going too far.”

Republican pollster Bill McInturff, who has been surveying the public on healthcare, disagreed. “Given the perception of President Obama’s strength of leadership and the huge Democratic majorities, there has been little evidence Republicans are ‘paying a price’ for being obstructionist,” McInturff said.

joliphant@latimes.com

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