December 19, 2006

Gov. Bredesen's Muslim Christmas

picSo the Democrat governor of Tennessee decided to put a portrait of a Muslim girl on his Christmas card. It's his card, right? It's not like I'm going to get one, right?

The problem is that this card is a political statement. After all, in the end everything is political. Heck, my Christmas card in 2002 had a real pretty red, white and blue Christmas tree ball on the front and was imprinted with, "May God Watch Over or Troops in Action and Our Commander in Chief".

As I said, everything is political —doubly so when it comes from a politician (I'm just not as subtle as the governor).

So what's Bredesen trying to say? Love your enemy? Muslims deserve Christmas too? Peace, at any cost?

Bredesen tries to explain with this on the back of the card:

While it may seem odd to put a portrait of a young Muslim woman on a Christmas card, this Season reminds us that He loves His children most of all.

Really governor? There aren't children here that you could have put on your card, as in someone from Tennessee? Perhaps a chronically ill indigent that you kicked off the rolls of TennCare. Or an illegal alien that you wish to have identification so they can continue living here. Or one of the corrupt THP officers that you protect. The possibilities are endless.

Make of it what you will, pandering or political correctness or political blundering. Democrats will forgive and Republicans will cry foul, as is the way of the world.

Of course, it could be what AC at Volunteer Voters says it is, a form of rich white liberal disease called competitive altruism:

What I mean by that is that these men tend to bend over backwards, not to embrace and and celebrate the traditions in which they were raised and through which they have thrived, but they instead, in attempt to show how open-minded and benevolent they are, "reach out" and prop up other culture and faiths.

It is not even to curry the favor or the political power of the minority or foreign culture they embrace. It is essentially a status game they engage in with other elite whites.

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April 26, 2006

Funding TennCare Lite

Gov. Phil Bredesen wants to use $100 million from the TennCare account to fund the first three years of his CoverTN program. This will only be enough if Tennessee Justice Center litigation is kept in check and enrollment doesn't explode.

Of course, Democrats have contingency plans: State Finance Commissioner Dave Goetz said the state could:

  1. Raise the cigarette tax (which as everyone knows is a tax on the poor — how compassionate!)
  2. Adjust budget priorities (has Democrats ever shut down one social program to fund another? I don't think so.)
  3. Shut down the CoverTN program (a little like putting the genie back in the bottle, isn't it? Even if Bredesen retires and can take the political failure, Democrats won't stand for getting a black eye over this one.)
Jim Bryson (R), state Senator and likely gubernatorial candidate this fall, is a vocal critic:
"The reality is that this is the administration's plan, and they ought to have a way to fund the plan," said Bryson, R-Franklin. "And they don't, other than enacting a tax."

"I generally don't like increasing any taxes," he said.

Other lawmakers wondered whether the plan would better be tweaked to include more coverage for catastrophic events, and whether the working poor would be willing to pay even a $50 monthly premium.

Exactly. But what do the Dems think?
Because the Cover Tennessee plan would be run by the state, it would be guaranteed to avoid the cost overruns experienced by TennCare, Goetz said.
Did you catch that? Here it is again:
Because the Cover Tennessee plan would be run by the state, it would be guaranteed to avoid the cost overruns...
The single most disingenuous statement ever uttered by a politician. But wait, there's more!

The Tennessee Health Care Campaign organized a press conference in which desperately ill citizens who had been thrown off of the TennCare rolls described their plight, just a few of the 67,000 citizens with pre-existing conditions that are no longer covered because of Bredesen's actions, and who will not be covered under Bredesen's new plan. The administration's response?

"We don't believe they gave a full accounting of their situation," said Goetz.

Goetz said he couldn't elaborate on which aspects are allegedly incomplete without obtaining a signed release from the former TennCare enrollees.

Typical smear tactic. Trust the politicians, it's the sick people that are lying!

Of course, Bredesen's plan will cover 10,000 "high risk" individuals, all of 1 in 7. I wonder who decides which will be among the privileged few?

More at The Bryson for Governor Blog.

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April 25, 2006

Cover Tennessee — With What?

As TennCare was bankrupting the state, Dem. Gov. Bredesen cut the rolls and now more than a half million Tennesseans are without any health insurance. To fix it, he has proposed a program called Cover Tennessee. It consists of three major initiatives:
  1. CoverTN: A "partnership between the state and small businesses to help working Tennesseans buy affordable health insurance", according to the (Democrat) party line. The state, employer and individual all kick in about $50 a month each to pay for the plan. If the employer doesn't want to play, the individual can cover it with another $50.

    Bredesen claims that CoverTN will not require high deductibles on the front end, only modest co-pays - about $25 for a doctor's visit and $10 for a generic prescription. Workers will be able to transport their coverage between jobs. "Initially, the focus will be on workers earning $24,000 a year or less and small businesses such as restaurants, retail shops and landscaping firms. It could be expanded to allow broader participation."

  2. CoverKids: The state pays for health insurance for uninsured children in homes with incomes up to $50,000 a year for a family of four. Families with higher incomes will be allowed to buy into the plan.
  3. AccessTN: Provides health insurance to adults who can afford health insurance, but can't get it because of pre-existing medical conditions. This will be limited to a pool of 10,000 people and the state will cover the costs.
The Executive Director of the Tennessee Health Care Campaign is borderline-outraged, publishing a disparaging point-by-point analysis of the CoverTN proposal, beginning with:
The governor's health care reform is going through its full election cycle. Before his election, he promised to reform TennCare. After his election, he successfully cut off the sickest and most expensive people and is now proposing to replace those people with younger and healthier people. This is the dream of any insurance company: Cover young, healthy adults and children and let older and sicker adults fend for themselves. It is also the dream of any politician: Expand coverage during an election year.
GOP lawmakers, too, are somewhat skeptical because the program does not address the shortcomings of the current TennCare program.

TennCare costs billions to provide health care to over a million Tennesseans, mainly because since its inception the Nashville-based advocate group Tennessee Justice Center has filed lawsuit after lawsuit challenging every aspect of the program, expanding it to the point where bureaucracy wasted millions of dollars and fraud robbed millions of dollars from the working class. GOP lawmakers want to make certain this won't happen again:

"We have to be able to be sure we can manage this program in a fiscally responsible way," Mumpower, R-Bristol, said of Cover Tennessee. "If we pass this program, I want to be sure it is lawsuit-proof, where the Tennessee Justice Center can't run the program the way it did with TennCare. I want to make sure we don't overcommit ourselves financially and it be a runaway spender like the TennCare program has. ... I don't want to be looking back in 10 years and have helped create another TennCare."
GOP Rep. Davis has similar concerns:
"I don't think the people of Tennessee are striving for universal health care. ... There are some governors across the nation who think that needs to take place," said Davis, who is a candidate for the 1st Congressional District seat being vacated by incumbent William L. "Bill" Jenkins. "If you look back 12 years ago when another president (Bill Clinton) and another first lady (Hillary Clinton) tried to push universal health care, there was a hue and cry that we didn't want that."

Mumpower added: "TennCare was a prime example that universal health care doesn't work. ... When you start to give away everything for free, people will take advantage of as much as they can get whether they need it or not."

Both Mumpower and Davis offered solutions of their own, a more pro-business approach:
... Davis said small businesses should be allowed to participate in large insurance pools, while Mumpower suggested small businesses should be given tax incentives to offer their employees health insurance.
But in a stunning admission of pre-failure, Bredesen has already suggested that the program may be more expensive than initial projections indicate; perhaps so expensive that he would have to call the General Assembly into special session in order to pay for it:
A plan to provide health care for the working poor, children and people who cannot get insurance elsewhere, unveiled Monday by Gov. Phil Bredesen, could become more expansive - and expensive - if more people than expected want to join the plan, the governor told The Tennessean yesterday.

Bredesen indicated he would be hesitant to turn people away from the program, called Cover Tennessee, which is expected to insure 185,000 Tennesseans over the next three years at a cost of $190 million.

But if there is a flood of uninsured people wanting to sign up, Bredesen said he might call the General Assembly back into session to provide funding beyond what he has earmarked.

And that's the problem. Bredesen says that he wants to start slow, but if people want in the program it won't be long before the Tennessee Justice Center is in court forcing the state to expand the program, and then it's a hop, skip and a jump to another bloated TennCare.

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October 27, 2003

Phil Bredesen responds to 2nd Amendment issue

Excerpt from letter received from TN Governor Phil Bredesen:
As a lifelong outdoorsman, I am a strong proponent of the Second Amendment.

As Governor, I will focus on maintaining current gun control laws rather than enacting new ones. I believe that existing laws, if properly enforced, are sufficient in keeping guns out of the hands of criminals without illegally infringing on the rights of law-abiding sportsmen.

Again, thank you for sharing your opinion. Rest assured, I am deeply committed to preserving the right of Tennesseans to own and use guns. It is an important component of both our heritage as Tennesseans and our freedom as Americans.

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