Who We Are


We are not the stereotype of the typical Republican. We drink. We smoke. We cuss. We like The Simpsons and Family Guy, but we love South Park. We are Goldwater Girls Gone Wild and cynical punk rockers and drunk frat boys and bong-toting Burkeans and chain smoking blue collars and right-wing ravers and conservative clubbers and postmodern iconoclasts and Wall Streeters partying like it's 1982. We are metalheads and deadheads and parrotheads. Our heroes include Johnny Ramone, Jonah Goldberg, Greg Gutfeld, Hank Jr., P.J. O'Rourke, Alice Cooper, Gene Simmons, Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry, Ted Nugent, Neal Peart of Rush, Kid Rock, Andy Levy, Andrew Breitbart and Frank Kelly Rich. We love Ronald Reagan and PBR with straight shots, and Margaret Thatcher and fine cigars with Scotch. We often lean more libertarian than traditional conservative on certain issues, and would love to kick the ass of anyone wearing a Che t-shirt. We care a helluva lot more about a candidate's tax policy than past drug use. We are well informed on pop culture, the latest music, and Milton Friedman. We read National Review, Ayn Rand, and The Onion. Our religious beliefs range from devout to atheist, but we are more likely to be nursing a hangover on Sunday morning than in a church pew. And we are getting damn tired of people exclaiming, "YOU'RE a Republican?!?!"

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

The $700 B Question

Something is rotten in DC, but who is going to pass a bill to clean up that mess? That is the $700B question.
I think we know by now, after having a week of erratic Wall Street performance, compounded by today’s activity of the Markets in the EU, Asia and US, that the bailout bill did not save Main Street and stabilize markets. The Bailout Bill, from page A13 of the NYT today, looks like it was primarily abused by our elected officials and gave them a last-minute opportunity to include earmarks. President Bush should have thrown some Texas BBQ sauce on and it and thrown it over a pit to roast.
Our overly-stressed, financially-strapped, medical community now has an added obligation to treat the mentally ill with equal care as the physically ill. Depression, Anxiety, Eating Disorder? Go to the emergency room. Go to your physician. Don’t worry, insurance will cover it and physicians and health care providers do not have a choice. I guess physicians aren’t overly burdened with their current, mandated, patient load already…so why not throw in some more people that are, well, depressed! Now, I am uncertain as to the qualification of depression, but in the era of Prozac, the overly prescribed and diagnosed diagnosis of depression is not, necessarily, scientific or exact.
This Mental Parity Bill also requires a no limit stay in hospitals. So, a person that is depressed can stay in the hospital for an equal amount of time as say, a person with cancer, or a woman that has just had a c-section. Businesses that are larger than 50 employees will have to overhaul their insurance policies and are at risk of employees taking advantage of this bill-- which would reduce productivity and profits for these small companies and add extra costs to their bottom line. The amount of paperwork, increased premium expense, crowding at our emergency rooms, impact on availability of hospital staff and supplies is for certain—but by how much?
That is the question that needs to be asked. That is the question that needs to be answered by the Senators that pushed this piece of pork into the Economic Bailout bill. Jim Ramstad (R) and Patrick J. Kennedy (D) led the fight. In 1981, Jim woke up in a jail cell after an alcoholic black out and in 2006, Patrick drank too much and crashed his car on Capitol Hill. Now see, if Joe Public drank too much and crashed his car, well, he wouldn’t be working in Congress anymore to sign a bill into law that gives him an excuse for his abuse. No, Joe Public would be attending AA classes or sitting in a jail cell or working overtime to pay off his DUI lawyer.
This bill’s passing was declared as a result of “12 years of passionate advocacy of the relatives and friends of people with mental illness and addiction disorders.” 12 years? Our elected representatives could not wait for a month, 6 months, or even12 months, to allow chaos to subside within our economy and reason to return to OUR government?
This bill is also described as “ a milestone in the quest for civil rights, an effort to end insurance discrimination and to reduce the stigma of mental illness.” I am sorry, but I thought that this Bailout bill was to stabilize our markets in order to avoid a recession. I did not realize that our economy would be more stable if we included and introduced “bandages” for civil rights and discrimination.
This Mental Parity bill is a perfect example of government forcing policy onto small businesses, professionals, and the public without any regard to the additional financial burden placed on these individuals and businesses. What happens when costs of doing business increase? Prices increase. Premiums increase. Businesses go out of business. This Mental Parity bill is another example of larger government and government mandates on the private sector. We, excuse me, Congress, has enacted legislation that is costly to the Healthcare system and the taxpayers at a time when us taxpayers just swallowed a $700B pill.
It is with absolute incredulity that our Senators could, at a time of financial crisis, use this vulnerable and fearful time, for their own self -interests. It is with absolute incredulity that policy, a BILLION more dollars of “policy” not related to this bailout, was included. What an absolutely blatant abuse of power. What an absolute abuse of our political system. What an absolute abuse of Joe Public. Maybe I will check in to my local hospital. I feel abused and I am depressed.
“Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely”
I am Miss Tory, and I approve of this message.

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The Edwards Report, the right wing Onion rip-off.