Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Will Obamacare Cover Illegals?
Via Memeorandum, in an interview with Katie Couric yesterday, Obama had this in response to her question about Obamacare for illegals:
"First of all, I'd like to create a situation where we're dealing with illegal immigration, so that we don't have illegal immigrants," he said. "And we've got legal residents or citizens who are eligible for the plan. And I want a comprehensive immigration plan that creates a pathway to achieve that."
"The one exception that I think has to be discussed is how are we treating children," he continued. "Partly because if you've got children who may be here illegally but are still in playgrounds or at schools, and potentially are passing on illnesses and communicable diseases, that aren't getting vaccinated, that I think is a situation where you may have to make an exception."
This is a perfect example of why everyone needs to slow down and actually read the bill. Obama does not know what's in the bills currently under consideration. It's his job to know. Steney Hoyer was on Fox this morning saying "There's no rush! We've been talking about health care reform for decades!" But if nobody is clear on what is in the bill or what it all means, it's a rush. Slow down.
Obama told Couric that illegals shouldn't have Obamacare but maybe their children should. He needs to read Michelle Malkin's new column which explains exactly how illegals will be covered:
Nevada GOP Rep. Dean Heller’s measure would have enforced income, eligibility, and immigration verification screening on all Obamacare patients. Unlike most everything else stuffed into the House Democrats’ plan, the citizenship vetting process would not have required building a new bureaucracy. Rep. Heller proposed using existing state and federal databases created years ago to root out entitlement fraud.
The House bill may "explicity exclude" illegals, but there's not one thing in there to prevent their access to coverage or to even verify who is legal and who isn't. That's usually referred to as a loophole.
What comes after that would then be the "sudden realization" that we're covering all these illegals, about to end up like California on a national scale, and then you have to either re-do what you've already passed, write new laws, or just make the illegals legal.
Or is that part of the plan?
When Obama tells Couric, "I'd like to create a situation where we're dealing with illegal immigration, so that we don't have illegal immigrants..." it isn't hard to read between the lines.
Related posts:
"This Isn't About Me!"
Lack of Empathy?
Obama Now Worried About Saddling Our Children With Debt?
Obamacare Team Visits Reserve, LA.
"You WILL Lose Your Current Insurance"
Obamacare for Illegals
No More Private Insurance with Obamacare
A Picture is Worth $245 Billion
Starting to Look at the Obamacare Bill
John Boehner Says the Republicans Have a Better Plan
"Say Hello to My Little Friend!"
Take a Look at Obamacare
Going Galt Over Obamacare
Congressman Fleming: What's Good for the Goose.
"This Isn't About Me!"
Here is Obama making remarks about his health care reform in which he explains "This isn't about me. This isn't about politics."
Well of course it's all about him. Jammie Wearing Fool reports this conversation quoted by Grassley:
Grassley said he spoke with a Democratic House member last week who shared Obama's bleak reaction during a private meeting to reports that some factions of House Democrats were lining up to stall or even take down the overhaul unless leaders made major changes.
"Let's just lay everything on the table," Grassley said. "A Democrat congressman last week told me after a conversation with the president that the president had trouble in the House of Representatives, and it wasn't going to pass if there weren't some changes made ... and the president says, 'You're going to destroy my presidency.' "
Obama isn't worried about what kind of health care you end up with. That's why he doesn't know what's in the bills. He's worried about creating his legacy. He's not concerned about you.
As Charles Krauthammer explained yesterday, this boondoggle plan is not going to help you get better health care:
It is about Obama. This is [the] signature achievement he has promised. If he doesn't have it, if he doesn't have a bill, any bill, at the end of the year, his presidency is going to be seriously damaged, and all the mystique will disappear. Which is why...I'm absolutely sure that at the end of the year, he will have a bill. It will have the words "health-care reform" on it. It will be extremely watered down: All of the ballast that the Blue Dogs were protesting against, including, I'm sure, the public plan, is going to be thrown overboard.
And it will be a very weak version of what we have now, probably even harmless—which will be a great American achievement. But he's going to have something. He won't have it in August, but he will have to have it at the end of the year.
Obamacare will grow government, ration health care and will move us backwards rather than forwards with regard to taking care of Americans.
Of course it's all about Obama. It's certainly not about getting better health care for you.
More at Memeorandum.
Lack of Empathy?
Obama Now Worried About Saddling Our Children With Debt?
Obamacare Team Visits Reserve, LA.
"You WILL Lose Your Current Insurance"
Obamacare for Illegals
No More Private Insurance with Obamacare
A Picture is Worth $245 Billion
Starting to Look at the Obamacare Bill
John Boehner Says the Republicans Have a Better Plan
"Say Hello to My Little Friend!"
Take a Look at Obamacare
Going Galt Over Obamacare
Congressman Fleming: What's Good for the Goose.
Lack of Empathy?
I want to address first the fact that people don't have access to doctors. For the most part, everyone has access to medical services. In case of an emergency, no hospital will refuse to see you. For routine matters, lower income children have access to SCHIP; there is also Medicaid. For seniors, Medicare. I'm not saying all these are perfect plans and no one, not even Republicans on The Hill, are suggesting that some health care reform doesn't need to be achieved. But there is access.
The whole rush to reform health care "right now!" is partly based on the fallacy that 46 million people can't afford health insurance. This is not true. Some of those people choose to be uninsured; some are young and invincible and choose to spend the money on other things. Others are eligible for Medicaid and have never enrolled. Some of those 46 million are illegals. When you filter out those people, you get down to about 8 million who cannot afford health insurance.
This is the only place that liberal "lack of empathy" argument might hold water - I'm not sure we need to sacrifice the coverage the rest of the nation has for those 8 million. What about empathy for the rest of the nation? Talk about empathy, have empathy for the guy with the broken arm who has to wait 12 hours (if he's lucky) to have it set, or empathize with the child who needs an MRI but has to wait six months to get it. That's what health care is like in countries who have plans such as the one Obamacare will lead us to.
As far as mandatory counseling for the elderly - I stand by what I said yesterday. That's way too much government involvement in one's personal medical decisions. The family and the patient and patient's doctor should make those decisions. Period.
I have an 84 year old mother who I can guarantee you would NOT be enthusiastic about talking about her personal medical decisions to some Obamacare "representative".
Even if that mandatory counseling comes down to being administered by your own personal physician, it's still government interference. If a patient feels the need for those services, make them available, but not mandatory.
Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has a piece in today's Wall Street Journal on how to make this health care reform bi-partisan which is the only way it will succeed. In it he refers to health care as a "basic human need" which is the correct terminology. Health care is not a "right" and not something that must be funded and provided by the government. Obamacare would fare better if it would drop the public option and concentrate on the actual reform measures.
Jindal also points out that Obama would fare better if he would speak honestly to the American people about the measures in the bill rather than with falsehoods, such as "you will be able to keep your coverage." That's a lie, as I wrote yesterday.
It's not accurate to accuse those who stand up against Obamacare as lacking empathy; there are plenty of other reasons to stand up against it. Obama said yesterday that those who were blocking his plans were only trying to score political points, or playing the politics of the moment. Those claims and the lack of empathy claims ring of desperation to me. The plan as it is written is going down in flames and those who want health care reform would do well to slow down and regroup.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Obamacare to Dictate End of Life Counseling?
The House version of the Health Care Bill is going to require (p 425-430) mandatory counseling for all seniors at a minimum of every five years, more often if the senior is sick or in a nursing home.
Think they're over-reacting? See for yourself: Here is the section dealing with end of life counseling for seniors.
This section talks about possible life sustaining treatment. These orders, of course, will be "standardized and uniquely identifiable throughout the State." This life sustaining treatment will be "guided by a coalition of stakeholders includes representatives from emergency medical services, emergency department physicians or nurses, state long-term care association, state medical association, state surveyors, agency responsible for senior services, state department of health, state hospital association, home health association, state bar association, and state hospice association."
Really? All those people are going to be involved in my health care decisions?
These counseling sessions may be more frequent than every five years: "An advance care planning consultation with respect to an individual may be conducted more frequently than provided under paragraph (1) if there is a significant change in the health condition of the individual, including diagnosis of a chronic, progressive, life-limiting disease, a life-threatening or terminal diagnosis or life-threatening injury, or upon admission to a skilled nursing facility, a long-term care facility (as defined by the Secretary), or a hospice program."
This section discusses level of treatment - whether or not life-saving measures will be attempted or if you will receive antibiotics:
The level of treatment indicated under subparagraph (A)(ii) may range from an indication for full treatment to an indication to limit some or all or specified interventions. Such indicated levels of treatment may include indications respecting, among other items--CommentsClose CommentsPermalink
‘(i) the intensity of medical intervention if the patient is pulse less, apneic, or has serious cardiac or pulmonary problems;CommentsClose CommentsPermalink
‘(ii) the individual’s desire regarding transfer to a hospital or remaining at the current care setting;CommentsClose CommentsPermalink
‘(iii) the use of antibiotics; andCommentsClose CommentsPermalink
‘(iv) the use of artificially administered nutrition and hydration.’.One more time, let me say, this is simply too much government interference in personal, private issues of one's life. My health care is not my government's business.
Related posts:
Obama Now Worried About Saddling Our Children With Debt?
Obamacare Team Visits Reserve, LA.
"You WILL Lose Your Current Insurance"
Obamacare for Illegals
No More Private Insurance with Obamacare
A Picture is Worth $245 Billion
Starting to Look at the Obamacare Bill
John Boehner Says the Republicans Have a Better Plan
"Say Hello to My Little Friend!"
Take a Look at Obamacare
Going Galt Over Obamacare
Congressman Fleming: What's Good for the Goose.
Obama Now Worried About Saddling Our Children With Debt?
The substance of the remarks were more of the same and filled with the same spin and the same cliches. There were also some outright lies in them. And plenty of gall.
He said time and time again that those that oppose health care reform are only trying "to score political points." I don't believe this is wholly true. Some, possibly. Others are standing up to his proposals because they believe it to be socialistic in nature as well as too expensive. Some are standing up against Obamacare because they believe that Americans will be forced into public option plans. It's not all about scoring political points, Mr. Obama.
He went on to "lay out" what he called "the substantial common ground in the current bills." He says that "You won't lose your health care if you change jobs or if you lose your job or if you start a business." This is spin. Enrollments in private plans will be closed once Obamacare becomes law. So, while technically he is correct when he says you won't lose your coverage, your coverage will come from a public plan rather than a private plan, should you change jobs.
He says that you will be able to "compare the price and quality of different plans and pick the plan" you want. But they will all be public plans. That is not "choice," Mr. Obama. That is socialism.
He then says, "If you like your current plan, you will be able to keep it." This is an outright lie. You might be able to keep it if your provider continues to offer it. But should they decide it's too expensive to do so when the government is offering cheaper plans which make them no longer competitive, you won't be able to keep it. Spin.
As Betsy McCaughey explained, if you currently get your coverage through your employer, your employer has five years to switch you into a "qualified plan" but none of the bills currently define what that is.
This part was especially rich; when Obama said that the American people don't care about politics so much, or who is up or down in Washington, but they do care about "whether their children are going to be saddled with debt."
Now that's gall. Incredible gall.
He said that with a straight face; after having passed Porkulus, Omnibus, blown the deficit out of the water for generations to come, to say that with a straight face is pure gall.
The truth is, Obama doesn't even know what is in any of the bills; he said so. When confronted with the information that new policies would not be written, Obama said, “You know, I have to say that I am not familiar with the provision you are talking about.”
Yet he wants us to "trust" him.
Sorry, Mr. Obama. I. don't. trust. you.
Related posts:
Obamacare Team Visits Reserve, LA.
"You WILL Lose Your Current Insurance"
Obamacare for Illegals
Melt the Phones!
No More Private Insurance with Obamacare
A Picture is Worth $245 Billion
Starting to Look at the Obamacare Bill
John Boehner Says the Republicans Have a Better Plan
"Say Hello to My Little Friend!"
Take a Look at Obamacare
Going Galt Over Obamacare
Congressman Fleming: What's Good for the Goose.
Obamacare Team Visits Reserve, Louisiana
"It will be a cold day in hell before he socializes my country," so said one spectator in Reserve, Louisiana yesterday.
NOLA.com has a report this morning on the Obamacare meeting in Reserve. It was a standing room only crowd inside with about 400 people; there were also anti-government-funded-abortion protesters outside.
I found this quote rather ominous - maybe it's just my paranoia [emphasis mine]:
"Sebelius said the House health care reform bill and the Senate Health Committee bills don't define the benefit packages that would be available under a revamped health delivery system. A team of health care providers will recommend what would be covered, she said. 'I think it would be wise to let science guide what the best health care package is,' she said."
Have you heard about Obama's science czar? The one who believes in population control and compulsory abortions? The one who wrote this: "It has been concluded that compulsory population-control laws, even including laws requiring compulsory abortion, could be sustained under the existing Constitution if the population crisis became sufficiently severe to endanger the society." That's not who I want to decide "what the best health care package is."
The Advocate quotes Sebelius in response to a question about whether or not members of Congress would have to sign up for Obamacare: "Sebelius said the proposals do not dismantle coverage plans, which would include the congressional plan, but give a choice to people who are under-insured or uninsured." She probably needs to go back and read the current version of the bill. This has been proven to be misinformation - see here and here.
She continunes to quote the 47 million are uninsured meme which is a misleading figure as Sally Pipes of the Pacific Research Institute has explained:
"Of the almost 46 million Americans counted as uninsured by the U.S. Census Bureau, 14 million of them are eligible for existing government programs but have not signed up. Another 17 million of them are earning over $50,000 a year but do not buy insurance because they feel it is too expensive. Two-thirds are young people between 18 and 31 who consider themselves “invincible.” They would buy insurance if it were cheaper and available to cover catastrophes, which is why one has insurance. Because 64 percent of Americans get their insurance through their employer and insurance is not portable, many of the uninsured are just between jobs and hence counted as uninsured, even if they are only uninsured for a short period of time. There are only about 8 million uninsured that need some assistance."Of course, 12 million illegals will be able to obtain coverage under Obamacare.
Senator Mary Landrieu was at the meeting and "told the crowd she understands the debate and strong feelings on both sides. She added, though, that as it stands now, the health care system in America is good for some, but not for everyone. 'All of us, all of us have an obligation in America to think about the kind of health care system that we want. Are we happy with the way the system is now? Some people think parts of it are good, but most people think that it could be changed to be better.'"
Senator David Vitter was also there and spoke to the media about the expense of the plan.
The Dead Pelican has this footage of the meeting which pretty much sums it all up:
Related posts:
"You WILL Lose Your Current Insurance"
Obamacare for Illegals
Melt the Phones!
No More Private Insurance with Obamacare
A Picture is Worth $245 Billion
Starting to Look at the Obamacare Bill
John Boehner Says the Republicans Have a Better Plan
"Say Hello to My Little Friend!"
Take a Look at Obamacare
Going Galt Over Obamacare
Congressman Fleming: What's Good for the Goose.
(Photo Credit: PATRICK DENNIS/THE ADVOCATE)
Monday, July 20, 2009
"You WILL Lose Your Current Insurance"
“If you like your health plan, you can keep it, the only thing that will change is that you’ll pay less.” Remember that? Well, according to the new Lewin study:
- Approximately 103 million people would be covered under the new public plan and as a consequence about 83.4 million people would lose their private insurance. This would represent a 48.4 percent reduction in the number of people with private coverage.
- About 88.1 million workers would see their current private, employer-sponsored health plan go away and would be shifted to the public plan.
- Yearly premiums for the typical American with private coverage could go up by as much as $460 per privately insured person, as a result of increased cost-shifting stemming from a public plan modeled on Medicare.
So, is there truth in the way the President and Congress are advertising their plans?
In his address President Obama asserted that, “If you like your current insurance, you keep that insurance. Period. End of Story.” But what the President forgot to tell you is that his assertion is only true if the story were fiction.
President Obama has stated that any plan he’d sign must include a health insurance exchange with a public “option”. So, if you like your current insurance you may, in fact, lose it. Period. End of story.
Read the whole thing.Obamacare for Illegals
The Heller amendment would have enabled providers to verify eligibility and citizenship. It was defeated 27 to 15 by the House Ways and Means Committee. You think we have illegal immigration problems now? Wait until they can get free health insurance.
From Newsmax:
Democrats had insisted throughout the health-care reform debate that illegals would be ineligible for the so-called public option plan that is to be subsidized by taxpayers.
"We're not going to cover undocumented aliens, undocumented workers," Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, told reporters in May. "That's too politically explosive."
Republicans, however, point out that the Democrats, by refusing to accept the Heller amendment, would deny health agencies from conducting simple database checks to verify citizenship. Many states give illegals driver licenses, which will be sufficient to get free health care under the plan.
Read the whole article. Then contact your Senators, your Representatives, your Governor, and anyone else you think will help stop this madness.Remembering Shifty Powers
Mary Katharine Ham blogging at The Weekly Standard has a story on Shifty Powers. The online community is remembering him today. Go read the neat stuff she's pulled together.
From The Navy Times:
Darrell “Shifty” Powers died June 17 without fanfare or much attention beyond the family and friends who gathered for his funeral.
Immortalized in the pages of Stephen Ambrose’s Band of Brothers and the subsequent mini-series, Powers jumped into Normandy with the 101st Airborne Division and fought through some of the grittiest battles of World War II. His nickname came from the basketball courts, his family says, not from running moonshine, as one of his battle buddies liked to joke.
He was buried quietly near his hometown in rural Virginia. He was 86 and had spent many of his last years visiting troops and faithfully attending reunions with his dwindling band of “Easy Company” brothers.
MKH also posted this video of Shifty from two years ago; Band of Brothers happened to be on the TV during the interview. Since it's Remember Shifty Day, I don't think MKH will mind if I steal and post it myself:Butter Michael Doesn't Make the Cut
Jesus Christ and his apostles made the cut. So did John Wayne, Elvis and Tiger. But Michael Jackson will not have his buttery likeness displayed at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines this summer, after support for a creamy statue of the King of Pop melted in an online vote.
Kent Lehs, a manager with the Midwest Dairy Association, which sponsors the display, said Friday it wasn't a question of Jackson's achievements that drew complaints.
"They were more pointed toward what they felt they understand Michael Jackson's reputation was and not as a singer and dancer, but more some of the things he was implicated on in his personal life," said Lehs.
...........................Fair spokeswoman Lori Chappell said more than 100,000 votes were cast and by a 65 percent to 35 percent margin, people rejected the Jackson sculpture. Voters were asked to include a ZIP code, and 97 percent of those submitted were from Iowa, she said.
But the butter cow will still be there!
Previously:
Buttery-Michael May Not Make it After All!
Michael Jackson in Butter?
America is a Center-Right Nation - Has Obama Forgotten That?
Fred Barnes points to the errors of the stimulus legislation as part of Obama's problems. It was passed too quickly. Nobody read it. It was crafted behind closed doors. Barnes calls it a "rookie mistake" for Obama to have let the congressional Democrats run that show.
And now the 2010 elections are beginning to loom.
Robert Stacy McCain has a piece at American Spectator on the progress of the Inspectors General Investigaton; he says:
"Timing is very important in politics, and both Republicans and Democrats are beginning to look ahead to the 2010 mid-term elections. Projections of double-digit unemployment and mushrooming deficits are already causing some Democratic jitters. The questions being asked about the IG investigations and Obama's promises of 'transparency' now dangle like a sword of Damocles above the heads of Democrats on the Hill."
Obama's rush to ram through as much of his liberal social agenda as fast as he can has always seemed suspect to me. Presidents usually take advantage of that "honeymoon" period to enact their policies, but Obama's policies have been such a radical departure from what we know to be American values, that people are beginning to get skittish.
Sure, he still has plenty of support and his numbers are not in the cellar. He's still relatively popular. But 22% of the moderate and conservative Democrats now see him as an old-fashioned "tax and spend Democrat," up from 4% in March, according to the Washington Post-ABC News poll.
John Meacham, writing for Newsweek in October 2008, said that America is still a center- right nation, a fact that Obama should not forget. It may have come to that. People may be beginning to get the jumps at the idea of socialized health care, bailouts, frigtening deficit projections, radical cap and trade legislation proposals, and the practice of transparency only when it suits the White House; why are we spending $18 million to revamp the Recovery.gov website?
Obama is pushing back on health care reform now by going on what Fox is calling a "blitz" to get health care reform passed before the August recess. What's the rush? Shouldn't something that important and something that affects so many Americans move more cautiously? Must we pass yet another critical piece of legislation in a rapid-fire way? Or is it that in Washington only the investigations move slowly while the legislation is quick?
The polls show that Americans are beginning to develop concerns about the Obama agenda. As more and more people lose jobs ("the stimulus has done its job!") and unemployment rises, as people continue to lose their homes, as the deficit grows and spending in Washington continues, people will notice and Obama's numbers will continue to fall. He'll retain some popularity of course, but the scope is changing. There is a shift underway.
As Obama heads off to Martha's Vineyard on vacation next month, he might revisit his agenda and consider those words of Meacham who said that "America a nation that is more instinctively conservative than it is liberal—a perennial reality that past Democratic presidents have ignored at their peril."
What Took You So Long, Bobby?!
From The Washington Post:
"Governor Jindal has seen enough," said Curt Anderson, a consultant for Jindal. "As a health-care policy expert, he strongly believes that the House Democrat[ic] plan would be a disaster for the long-term health of the American people, and the long-term health of the economy."
Bobby Jindal knows a thing or two about health care, and I'm thrilled that he's finally speaking out. After his poor (yes, it sucked) Republican response speech in February, I'm glad to see him re-emerge and redeem himself. I'd be surprised if he actually made a run in 2012, but you never know. A lot of things can change between now and then.
This is Jindal speaking in March on health care. Listen carefully:
Frank McCourt
If you have never read his books, go get them. They are wonderful and his death is a real loss.
You should read Angela's Ashes first; 'Tis picks up where it leaves off. Then Teacher Man, which helped me a lot when I taught a Creative Writing class! It's a must-read for teachers of any subject.
McCourt grew up in extreme poverty but he tells the story with wisdom and humor. His life is a testament that you can do anything you set your mind to.
The Natchitoches Travelogue
Sometimes you get a restaurant review and sometimes a travelogue. It's not all politics here all the time! Today, you get a travelogue.
Steve and I have returned from Natchitoches. It was a fun 24 hours and really a lovely town. It's only about an hour from here and we like to get out of town every so often and go down there, or sometimes to Jefferson, Texas; both are quaint and historic little towns.
We stayed at The Church Street Inn Saturday night. It was originally a bank, built in 1961, and has been converted to a 20 room hotel. It's furnished with reproduction antiques and is right in the middle of the historic district, so we could just park our car and leave it for the weekend. Everything else we wanted to do was in walking distance.
We started off with lunch at Lasyone's - their famous Natchitoches meat pies. We can't go to Natchitoches without going to Lasyone's.
From there we went across the street to the Church of the Immaculate Conception, a beautiful Catholic church which was built from 1857-1892. There are two graves in the church; one is Bishop Augustus Aloysus Martin and the other is his first Vicar General. The church is beautiful and has been recently restored.
When we arrived there were a couple of people there putting flowers on the altar for Sunday's service and they told us that the church has recently been named a Minor Basilica by Pope Benedict XVI which gives the church a direct connection with Rome. A church can be named a Minor Basilica only when it has extra historical and spiritual significance. There are 56 minor basilicas in the U.S. and the only other one in Louisiana is St. Louis Cathedral in New Orleans.
We also visited the gift shop next door to the church and visited for a while with a friendly woman who worked there. She gave us a copy of the newspaper article about the church's new designation and I bought a refrigerator magnet.
Our next stop was the Kaffie-Frederick Hardware store. It's the oldest operating general store in Louisiana and has everything under the sun in there. Right inside the door was an old cooler filled with Cokes (the green bottles!) and an "honor system" money box. We bought two.
Local watercolorist Grady Harper was there with an exhibition; he was working on a new piece using coffee as his "paint." He does beautifully detailed watercolors of local historic sites. We talked to him for a while and ended up buying a print of Front Street.
We wandered around the store for a while; I bought an iron Fleur de Lis coat hook (to hang my dog's leash on) and had two keys made. We finished our cokes and moved on down to The Book Merchant.
The Book Merchant is probably my favorite store on Front Street. If I owned a book store, it would be just like this one. It's the anti-Barnes & Noble. It's owned and operated by J. Michael Kenny who must see thousands of people a year in that shop but always seems to remember us. He has two cats that live in the store, although Princess was in "time out" this time and we didn't get to see her. The store has a great collection of local interest books and one that caught my eye this time was of The American Cemetery which is quite old and historic. He also had a hard-to-find (and out of my price range) book of the Kisatchie Forest which I had used before on a research project and loved. The authors combed the area and interviewed the old families throughout the forest, recorded their histories and stories, filled it with maps and pictures, and I just love it. That's for another post, though. Before we left town, Steve surprised me by getting the book for me.
We spent the rest of the afternoon poking in shops, walking along the Cane River, we checked into the hotel at 3 and unloaded our purchases then set out again. We hit a few more shops and ended up ducking into The Pioneer Pub for a couple of cold beers and a quick rest. If you were following me on Twitter you would know by now that we really liked the pub. We'd never been in there before; it was always one of those places we thought we'd do sometime but never had.
We sat at the bar and had a couple of Dos Equis on draft. The bar itself had a sort of concrete top that made me wish for chalk! Great atmosphere in the place and the people were all very friendly. Harold, the owner, sat quietly at the end of the bar and his girlfriend was behind the bar mixing fresh mojitos with fresh mint. She gave us a sample and it was wonderful. I suspect the fresh flowers on every table was her touch - zinnias, black-eyed susans, daisys, etc. We met another interesting character in there, Father Mike, with whom we visited for a while. He and Steve have both done a lot of traveling so they talked about places I've never been. That's him, in the picture, talking to some fellows outside the pub.
We decided we'd have to come back for dinner because the menu looked too good to pass up.
From there we headed out to visit the American Cemetery. It's probably the oldest cemetery in the Louisiana Purchase. This is the cemetery where they filmed the funeral scene in Steel Magnolias. While there we found the grave of Dr. John Sibley, who as soon as I "twittered" this, I found out was the great, great, great grandfather of blogging buddy Jim at My Bossier. Small world! Dr. John Sibley was a Revolutionary War soldier and was appointed by President Thomas Jefferson as surgeon to the U.S. Army at Natchitoches. If you want to read that plaque you'll have to go to my Flickr photos and look at it there.
We went back to the pub for dinner. And more beer. We both had cheeseburgers and fries and they were awesome. It's hard to get too excited about a cheeseburger but these were great. And the fries were "real." Like you'd make in your own kitchen. We went back the next day and had lunch before leaving town and had the brisket po-boy. Also incredible. We can't wait to go back and try the home made pizzas which looked incredible.
They had a rockabilly band come in about 9:30 and we stayed to check that out. They were really fun and we had a good time. They were called The Makeshifts. They played a lot of Johnny Cash and such. They were dressed the part with the suits, sideburns and hair styles.
We finally left the pub and walked back to the hotel along the river. The ducks had all come up onto the bank for the night and we watched them a bit and finally called it a night.
Before leaving town the next day we hit the Book Merchant again and a kitchen store. We went back to the pub for our brisket sandwiches and then headed out of town.
Our last stop was at Grand Ecore; we'd been there before but the view of Red River from there is incredible. The Visitor's Center is on a 480 foot bluff over the river; there is a long, wrap-around porch with rocking chairs where you can just sit, watch the river, and listen to the birds. It was a strategic site during the Civil War because of the unique views of the river from all directions. There is a walking trail as well where you can still see the remains of the trenches dug by the soldiers.
It was a busy 24 hours but we enjoyed it. As often as we go to Nachitoches, we decided this time that we wanted to do some things we'd never done before and I guess we did. The church and the cemetery were both new sites for us. We've still never done the plantation tour - there are several that are very close. We'll save that for next time.
Related Posts:
The Full Metal Jacket Reach Around: Natchitoches Edition
Catching Up
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Fun Facts on Obamacare
If you now get your plan through work, your employer has a five-year "grace period" to switch you into a qualified plan. If you buy your own insurance, you'll have less time.
And as soon as anything changes in your contract -- such as a change in copays or deductibles, which many insurers change every year -- you'll have to move into a qualified plan instead (House bill, p. 16-17).
When you file your taxes, if you can't prove to the IRS that you are in a qualified plan, you'll be fined thousands of dollars -- as much as the average cost of a health plan for your family size -- and then automatically enrolled in a randomly selected plan (House bill, p. 167-168).
It's one thing to require that people getting government assistance tolerate managed care, but the legislation limits you to a managed-care plan even if you and your employer are footing the bill (Senate bill, p. 57-58). The goal is to reduce everyone's consumption of health care and to ensure that people have the same health-care experience, regardless of ability to pay.
Nowhere does the legislation say how much health plans will cost, but a family of four is eligible for some government assistance until their household income reaches $88,000 (House bill, p. 137). If you earn more than that, you'll have to pay the cost no matter how high it goes.
There's more here.Senate Votes Not to Subject Themselves to Obamacare
"On Tuesday, the Senate health committee voted 12-11 in favor of a two-page amendment courtesy of Republican Tom Coburn that would require all Members and their staffs to enroll in any new government-run health plan. Yet all Democrats -- with the exceptions of acting chairman Chris Dodd, Barbara Mikulski and Ted Kennedy via proxy -- voted nay."
John Fleming, as you know, has a similar Resolution in the House. How do you think the liberal House will vote? Hmmmm?
Related posts:
Melt the Phones!
No More Private Insurance with Obamacare
A Picture is Worth $245 Billion
Starting to Look at the Obamacare Bill
John Boehner Says the Republicans Have a Better Plan
"Say Hello to My Little Friend!"
Take a Look at Obamacare
Going Galt Over Obamacare
Congressman Fleming: What's Good for the Goose...
Full Metal Jacket Reach Around: The Headed to Nachitoches Edition
Start off at Fishersville Mike with some super scary pictures - eek!
Troglopundit asks a VERY good question. The Daley Gator has an equally good question as does Grandpa John. And speaking of excellent questions, Bride of Rove has a doosy and I'd like someone to answer it.
Paleo Pat is paying tribute to Walker Cronkite as is The Anchoress.
Carol pays tribute Mr. Cronkite also and she also has a so-sad-it's-true story on Joe Biden.
Heh! Someone buy Little Miss Attila some Play-doh please! But no Plato.
Flopping Aces, (who never, EVER link me) has a really good essay on John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and where we are today. I enjoyed it because I'd just watched the HBO series for the second time and have read the huge McCullough book. It'll make you think.
Doug Ross, who links me more than I deserve (and I LOVE him for it!) has an interesting piece on the "intersection of the insurance industry, Obamacare, and the Constitution.
Donald Douglas takes a look at Obama's NAACP speech. I'll offer you one quote, but you've got to go read it: " If a black person can't make it in America today, they aren't going make it. What barriers are keeping folks down? What impediments? It's not all those "indicators" touted by the President. The rate of imprisonment; the proportion of HIV/AIDS; the number of those uninsured ... You get the picture. The President's talking statistics, not causation."
Monique Stuart also has some thoughts about the speech.
Jimmie Bise has an excellent post on Obamacare here and here and that second one got linked all over the blogosphere.
And Yukio makes some excellent points on Obamacare. Again, I'll offer a quote, but you must go read it all: "So, while Obama urges us to sacrifice in the midst of empty and meaningless references to Normandy and the Founding Fathers-- all amid town hall/devotional cheers-- the machinations of the federal government offers us this heavy-handed, top-down travesty of a bill to sacrifice our elders upon."
Sister Toldjah looks that the CBO report on Obamacare and I believe she's dubious about Obama's promise not to hurt the little people.
Pundette points out that Obamacare will be rationing a lot more than health. Jordan is fed up with the prospects of Obamacare, also.
The Left Coast Rebel is proposing an intervention for Obama.
A couple of must-watch videos on socialized medicine at Snaggletoothie's place.
Free guns!
What's going on in Honduras? Fausta knows.
My Bossier is longing for the good old days, and who knows, those may be pictures of our future health care medications. Things go full-circle sometimes.
One of my favorite blogs EVER is Sippican Cottage, as regular readers know. He offers this post about Ten Things You Should Be Able to Do if You're a Handy Homeowner (But Still Can't).
I can only do three of them. I suck.
Sarah made me cry this week. But she does have a profile of Sue Myrick of North Carolina (that's not what made me cry.)
Have you looked at Charlie lately?
Professor Jacobson is saying yes to Sotomayor.
Robert Stacy McCain likes Michelle Malkin's new book! Wonder why....
Jules Crittenden is opening a new store.
Texas Rainmaker has a long, long list of Obama-gaffes.
And now I'm off. There is a meat-pie at Lasyone's waiting for me. I'll catch you cat daddys later.
Get outside today and enjoy your weekend.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Quote of the Day
John Roberts
Taxpayer's Union of Louisiana
Guys in Tuxedos and Bass Players With Moves
Catching Up...
The wind kicked up, the shopping carts in the parking lot rolled and crashed into parked cars, plastic bags ballooned up with the wind and skittered across the parking lot. I sent a text in to The Teenager to hurry up!
We got home just as the power blew out, around 8; it finally came back on around midnight which was actually sooner than I expected because of all the lightening.
At any rate, the rain was welcome, but I ended up sleeping much later than usual today. By the time I got up and checked the blogosphere, Robert Stacy McCain had already headed to DC to burn some more shoe leather on the IG story, Carol had put Hilzoy at Obsidian Wings in his place, Professor Jacobson had received an Instalanche, and I felt like the kid who missed the bus for school.
Then I watched the video Sarah sent me, cried for twenty minutes, and had to go redo my makeup.
And of course that put everything into perspective. The video. Not my makeup.
Steve and I are heading to Natchitoches this weekend to stay at the lovely Church Street Inn. We're going to stroll the historic district, wander into shops, eat some meat pies at Lasyone's, shop at The Book Merchant (my favorite place in the world), and maybe go to Oakland Plantation.
We're going to go to the Kaffie-Frederick Hardware Store which has everything under the sun from old-fashioned sleds (not much call for those in Louisiana), galvanized wash tubs, nails and sundry hardware items, washboards, wrought iron pieces, kitchen items, childrens toys (like jacks, tops, jump ropes). It has wooden floors and a wooden staircase to a second level where there's a bridal registry and, in season, a Christmas shop. Here's a "Where's Waldo" activity for you. Find the plastic owl in the picture of the hardware store.
We'll meander along the Cane River, look at the paddle boats and the houses across the river.
The Rocque House is one of my favorite buildings in Natchitoches and sits right on the River. I once bought an adorable stained glass gingerbread-man ornament there. You can't really see the house in this picture but it's behind those trees.
I don't know if I'll take my computer but if I see anything interesting I'll post it via my phone to the blog. And I'm sure I'll keep TwitPic busy.
Meanwhile, until then, there are dragons to slay in the news and so I better go get caught up. I'm behind everybody else today!