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Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Fwd: MyHeritage.org: Zero - Obamacare's links to conservative ideas



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April 20, 2010 | By Amanda J. Reinecker

Zero - Obamacare's links to conservative ideas

President Obama recently told Matt Lauer, anchor of NBC's "Today" show, that his highly partisan health care law borrows ideas directly from The Heritage Foundation's health care reform playbook. This is utterly false.

As Heritage health policy analyst Bob Moffitt explains:

The Obama health-care law "builds" on the Heritage health reform model only in the sense that, say, a double-quarter-pounder with cheese "builds" on the idea of a garden salad. Both have lettuce and tomato and may be called food, but the similarities end there.  

This explicit misrepresentation of our research is part of an aggressive PR endeavor to paint Obamacare as a product of compromise and not the extremely partisan takeover of the health care system that it is. In fact, after their meticulous dissections of the bill, Heritage analysts found no redeeming attributes in Obamacare and have openly called for its repeal.

Repealing Obamacare, explains Heritage Vice President Mike Franc, will require support from both sides of the political aisle. Not surprisingly, that support is growing as Americans learn more about their new health care law.  

Companies are realizing the astronomical coverage costs they face; employers are facing severe cutbacks and overseas relocations as a result of the new tax and regulatory burdens; thousands of uninsured Americans are learning they'll remain so for another four years; and millions of Medicare Advantage recipients will suffer coverage reductions and even termination of their plans.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. "More negative news is on the way," writes Franc. But disapproval of the bill is not enough. The road to repeal requires channeling America's dissatisfaction with Obamacare into enthusiasm for a market-oriented approach to health-care reform, which would be far less costly and would give Americans far greater freedom.

» Read Heritage's commonsense, principled solutions on health care

As Franc points out, "history demonstrates that those who tout commonsense solutions to difficult problems gain credibility and trust when they persevere." And that's why Heritage isn't giving up our fight to replace Obamacare with a system that puts patients first, not government bureaucrats and special interests.

Tax Day Money Bomb a huge success!

Thanks to an outpouring of support from our members and supporters, The Heritage Foundation's Tax Day Money Bomb last Thursday was a great success.

All told, the Tax Day Money Bomb drew an astonishing $339,000—funds that will be dedicated right away to fighting for the principles of free enterprise, limited government, individual freedom, traditional American values, and a strong national defense.

The overwhelming support for the Tax Day Money Bomb made a statement about just how outraged conservatives are with big-government spending and high taxes. Conservatives have made their voices heard--and we aren't about to turn down the volume!

The response to the money bomb shows the continued strength of the conservative movement and the faith our members have in The Heritage Foundation to lead the charge against unlimited federal spending.

With the success of the Tax Day Money Bomb, we are able to continue this fight with renewed vigor. Not only do we have the resources to put our conservative ideas to work, but we know that we have the support of conservatives like you from around the country.

Thank you for standing at our side.

Leftist news network stirring trouble 

"The surest way to incite violence is to suppress legitimate dissent," writes Heritage national security expert James Carafano. Unfortunately, the leftists pundits at MSNBC are trying to do just that by using "the anniversary of the Oklahoma City Bombing to declare open season on almost anyone right of center," including peaceful tea party protesters.

Some Oklahoma City lawmakers recently proposed creating a state defense force, and MSNBC's liberal pundits are calling this an invitation to civil war. But the formation of such a force, Carafano explains, is "completely legal and appropriate under both the federal and state constitutions."

Not only is MSNBC's criticism of conservative activists unbalanced and misguided, it is hypocritical.  As Carafano points out:

Think back to its coverage of Code Pink and the antiwar protests of the Bush administration. None of its commentators fretted over whether the protesters would lead to a resurgence of left-wing violence such as that practiced by the Weather Underground, the Blank Panthers, or the Symbionese Liberation Army. That would have been totally inappropriate — but no more so than what it's eagerly doing now with conservative protesters.

If MSNBC is worried about internal unrest, then it should examine its own practices, which amount to little more than fear-mongering and political posturing. And that won't make us any safer.

> Other Heritage work of note

  • In the wake of Moscow's tragic subway bombings in March, American security officials moved quickly to secure America's buses and trains. But was this reaction warranted, or a clumsy political move?

    The extremists who terrorized Moscow are not the same groups posing imminent threat to the U.S., argues The Heritage Foundation's James Carafano. "American intelligence needs to prioritize and focus on our most dangerous enemies -- and they ain't in Chechnya." Instead of focusing on illusory threats, we must be realistic about the enemies we actually face.
  • The White House announced recently that it is shifting its attention from health care to job creation. Ironically, it is the recently-passed health care bill that will continue to cause job loss. But that isn't the only threat to job creation. For example, Washington lawmakers want to impose new taxes on energy.

    Heritage president Ed Feulner offers another solution. "Instead of another 'stimulus,' lawmakers should begin by reducing the corporate tax rate." Doing this, while maintaining the capital gains tax at 15 percent, "could create an average of at least 2 million jobs a year over the next decade."
  • On the heels of the unpopular health care overhaul, liberals in Congress are now pushing for legislation that would set up a permanent fund to bail out large investment houses. Predictably couched in "pro-taxpayer" language, the legislation is anything but. There are several major problems with this bill, says Heritage's Brian Darling. "If creditors know they aren't likely take a loss, and risk has been eliminated from an investment, it's taxpayers who are assuming all the risk."

> In other news

  • Arizona Republican Senators John McCain and John Kyl have proposed sending an additional 3,000 U.S. National Guard troops to monitor Arizona's increasingly dangerous border with Mexico. The two also requested an additional 700 miles in fencing. Arizona state lawmakers, meanwhile, passed a bill calling for officials "to determine if people are in the United States illegally," Reuters reports. Critics of the new policy argue it opens the door to racial profiling.
  • America's rising public debt continues to endanger the global financial system. The government nevertheless continues to spend taxpayer dollars at an unsustainable pace.
  • According to a report by the Department of Defense, Iran may be capable of striking the U.S. with an intercontinental ballistic missile by 2015. Reports like this one underscore the growing need to a robust missile defense.
  • "President Barack Obama issued a memo on Thursday that would require hospitals accepting Medicare or Medicaid funds to allow visitation rights to gay and lesbian partners," Reuters reports. By treating all relationships as equal, this federal intrusion strikes another blow against traditional family structures.

Amanda Reinecker is a writer for MyHeritage.org—a website for members and supporters of The Heritage Foundation. Nathaniel Ward, the Editor of MyHeritage.org, and Eva Brates, a Heritage Foundation intern, contributed to this report.


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