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The can't-do spirit.


After their roaring two-house victory, the Democrats are squeaking about micro-policies. There will be no impeachment impeachment, formal accusation issued by a legislature against a public official charged with crime or other serious misconduct. In a looser sense the term is sometimes applied also to the trial by the legislature that may follow. , we're told, though maybe a bit more oversight of Halliburton-style war profiteering This article or section has multiple issues:
* It may contain original research or unverifiable claims.
* It does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by citing reliable sources.
. No withdrawal from Iraq, only a "phased redeployment re·de·ploy  
tr.v. re·de·ployed, re·de·ploy·ing, re·de·ploys
1. To move (military forces) from one combat zone to another.

2.
." And The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times assures us that the Dems "have largely dropped ... talk of a Canadian-style national health insurance." Instead, they might try to reverse the Medicare drug plan's ban on bargaining for drug price discounts.

They've caught the can't-do spirit that hovers over that former malarial swamp, Washington, D.C. Well, maybe they caught it long ago, when the Republican Congressional sweep of '94 sent Bill Clinton into long policy ruminations on school uniforms and midnight basketball Midnight basketball was a 1990s initiative to curb inner-city crime in the United States by keeping urban youth off the streets and engaging them with alternatives to drugs and crime. . Since then, it's been almost nonstop can't-do: can't-do universal health insurance, can't-do hurricanes.

Then it turned out that we couldn't do war either, at least if that meant whipping the Taliban or finding an honorable way out of Iraq.

Here's a "phased redeployment" plan: Phase one, bus the troops to the nearest functioning airport in Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia (sä`dē ərā`bēə, sou`–, sô–), officially Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, kingdom (2005 est. pop. . Phase two, put them on regular commercial flights to the United States.

According to Travelocity, the airfare part would cost about $1,500 a person (coach class), or $225 million for 150,000 troops. If the government won't come up with the ticket price, I'm sure thousands of ordinary citizens would happily dig into their own pockets. Hell, I'd spring for first class.

When it comes to health care, the more cautious Dems trace their can't-do spirit to the great Hillary health reform debacle of 1993. We tried, they say, and it didn't work. But what did they try? The Hill health plan would have created a vast new level of bureaucracy to contract for insurance from the big companies, thus tightening their evil grip over American health care.

Look, millions of voters didn't swing toward the Democrats because they wanted a $15 discount on their statins Statins
A class of drugs commonly used to lower LDL cholesterol levels.

Mentioned in: C-Reactive Protein
 and beta-blockers. They voted out the can't-do Republicans in part because health costs are an immediate threat to ordinary Americans' livelihoods and lives. They want a solution, and they want it now.

How could we do that? The cautious way would be to expand Medicare to cover everyone. No new program would have to be devised, and the fight over whether Medicare would lead to socialism was resolved more than forty years ago. Just extend it to everyone of any age.

The only problem with that is that Medicare is as full of holes as the Bush rationale for the Iraq War

Main article: Iraq War
See also: , , , , and


The rationale for the Iraq War (i.e.
. It's not enough to have Medicare Parts A and B; you need supplementary health insurance to cover the co-payments. As for Part D, a.k.a., "Part Doughnut Hole," no one has as yet been able to comprehend it, though it seems to work fine for people who are willing to substitute shark cartilage shark cartilage,
n cartilage obtained from the hammerhead and dogfish sharks, used as an anticancer, antiinflammatory, and antiangiogenic treatment. Precautions for those with liver disease.
 and lemon grass lem·on·grass also lemon grass  
n.
A tropical grass (Cymbopogon citratus) native to southern India and Sri Lanka, yielding an aromatic oil used as flavoring and in perfumery and medicine.

Noun 1.
 tea for prescription drugs.

So the most sensible plan is the one put forward by Anna Burger, head of labor's Change to Win coalition. She proposes extending the health insurance plan that currently covers members of Congress to everyone. "If it's good enough for them," she asks, "Why isn't it good enough for every American?"

Hey, we can do it, or at least something very similar. Recall that as of the first week of November, raising the minimum wage was another "can't-do" issue: Can't do it because it might lead to inflation or unemployment, might offend the Chamber of Commerce, or, God knows, cause acne. But six states just raised their minimum wages, and Nancy Pelosi promised to raise the federal minimum in her first 100 hours as Speaker of the House.

If the Dems can do that, they can do health care. Just renounce the can't-do spirit.

Barbara Ehrenreich is a columnist for The Progressive. Her latest book is "Bait and Switch A deceptive sales technique that involves advertising a low-priced item to attract customers to a store, then persuading them to buy more expensive goods by failing to have a sufficient supply of the advertised item on hand or by disparaging its quality. : The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream. "Her website is www. barbaraehrenreich.com.
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Title Annotation:Flip Side
Author:Ehrenreich, Barbara
Publication:The Progressive
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2007
Words:654
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