Posts Tagged ‘Rick’

The Cowboy Social Darwinism of Rick Perry

Thursday, September 8th, 2011
 
 “Perrycare” vs. “RomneyCare” 

Rick Perry promises  to bring his “Personal Responsibility ” health reform to the rest of the country. He also vows to dismantle President Obama’s health care reform.

One of his main tactics is to fiercely attack Mitt Romney for putting through a 2006 health care reform in Massachusetts, which was a model for Obama’s new reforms. Even Romney, in the sights of the Tea Party, has been forced to backtrack on the success of his reforms.

But if Romney had guts and conviction, and the Republican Party wasn’t so crazy, he should be proud of the success of his 2006 health reform in Massachusetts.

Tens of thousands of babies, children, women and men die needlessly every year in Texas because of the lousy health care system promoted by Perry’s eleven-year reign as governor.

Is this Rick Perry’s better idea?

The facts are very clear: Texas ranks 50th, LAST, in terms of residents covered by health insurance. 25% of Texans have no insurance. Massachusetts ranks number 1 and the comparable number is 5%.

What does this disparity in insurance coverage mean?

Plenty. For every 1000 live births, one and a half more babies die needlessly — 6.3 deaths in Texas compared to 4.8 in Massachusetts, according to America’s Health Ranking, a non partisan group dedicated to finding policies to improve state health services. See How Massachusetts and Texas rank among the states in healthcare.

2011-09-07-Romneychart.JPG

It means that Texas has 44 more cardiovascular deaths per 100,000 population, 237.8 vs 281.4

It means that almost twice as many Texas workers are killed because of occupational fatalities than in Massachusetts — 5.6 vs 3.0 per 100,000 in population.

In Texas, deaths from infectious disease are more than 50% higher than in Massachusetts — 20.4 per 100,000 vs 13.6 in Massachusetts.

By almost every measure you look at, life is vastly more unhealthy in Texas than in Massachusetts.

In Texas, more people are obese, there are more smokers, fewer high school graduates, more violent crime, 40% more children in poverty, the air is more polluted, half as many primary care doctors per capita, more mental health absences, more premature deaths and more pregnant teenage girls. Massachusetts ranks 1st of all states in the lowest percentage of teenage pregnancy, and Texas ranks 50.

Governor Rick Perry has no real health care plan. His free market ideology keeps the poor from seeing doctors and going to hospitals. Naturally they die faster and younger. It’s a kind of cowboy social Darwinism that lets the poor and helpless die so that someday, generations from now, they will breed a healthier genetic stock.

But Texas’s hold down the costs — no matter how many thousands of preventable deaths it leads to — is working, sort of. The state spends per person in public health funding annually while Massachusetts spends 5. If Rick Perry had his druthers, he would bring the whole country down to the “let’m die in the streets, but we will hold down costs.”

It’s no surprise that after five years, most people in Massachusetts like their health care system just fine. (Even if they did elect Scott Brown in 2008, who ran on an anti health care platform). A recent poll by the Boston Globe and Harvard School of Public Health finds that 63% of Bay State residents support the health care law and only 21% oppose it.

But make no mistake about it. All the plans are screwed up.

Neither Romneycare, nor Perrycare, nor even Obamacare is going to solve the healthcare mess in this country. All three are a hodgepodge of deeply flawed, special interest dominated, magical thinking, and not likely to tackle the real problem. Escalating free market costs are going to destroy any kind of reforms currently proposed, if we don’t stop squandering the funds we do spend on health care.

Although Americans, and especially politicians, don’t like to admit that we can learn anything from other countries around the world, it’s an undisputed fact that most developed nations in the world have secure, excellent health care at a cost of about half as much as we pay in this country. A statistic that the US media mostly ignores.

The US ranks 40th in health care around the world. as measured by the 16 bottom line public health statistics, according to consistent year after year statistics from the World Health Organization. Life expectancy is longer in more than 20 other countries. A WHO study released just last week had the US ranked 41 in terms of newborn death rates, behind South Korea, Cuba, Poland, Andorra and Israel. See my previous blogs “Cuba has better Health Care Than the US” and “Poor Little Greece Has Better Health Care Than The US”

The reason most other countries achieved these astonishing results — at half of what we spend — is that their single payer systems — think Medicare — allows for tremendous cost cutting measures that have not been possible with our free market system. This is why Canada’s health care costs about 9 percent of its Gross Domestic Product. Whereas, in the US, the cost is almost twice as much, an embarrassing 17 percent of GDP.

A new Columbia University study just out today in the journal Health Affairs found that American doctors are paid higher fees than their counterparts in Canada, France, Germany and the United Kingdom. In the US orthopedic surgeons are paid an average of 2,450 while in Britain the comperable figure is 4,138.

If we would ever get our drug prices under control — try negotiating with the drug companies like the Veterans hospitals do, and impose efficient control,, over hospital and doctor costs — we could we would save about .3 trillion each year, and the annual deficit would soon disappear.

What the Republicans will eventually come to realize (as conservatives around the world already know) is that the free market system does not work with healthcare. Just as the free market system would not work providing police forces, fire fighters or public schools. If everyone had to hire their own private policeman, it would be tremendously more expensive and would not protect everyone. There would be chaos — inefficient and not cost effective. This is what the rest of the developed world knows and Americans have yet to learn.

2011-09-07-romneytable.JPGThe above table was compiled from data from:

2011-09-07-AmericashealthRankings.JPG

The Democratic Daily

Children Speak Rick Perry Quotes

Monday, October 19th, 2009


A Texas Filmmakers for Bill White web video featuring children repeating Rick Perry’s quotes about part-time lifestyle, living in a mansion, the HPV vaccine controversy, and the Trans-Texas Corridor.

When asked for a response to this video by the Houston Chronicle Perry campaign spokesman Mark Miner said, “It’s nice that Bill White put his policy advisers in a video.”

In reply to Miner’s comment White spokeswoman Katy Bacon said, “Of course Texas children are on Bill’s mind when he’s thinking about policy for our state’s future. It’s Texas kids whose future Rick Perry is mortgaging with his fiscal mismanagement and the billion budget hole. Unfortunately, the only thing Rick Perry and his handlers are looking out for are their political friends and special interest lobbyists. That’s why we need a new governor.”

Sources of the quotes used in the video:

  1. “Texas is still competing and winning because of hardworking visionaries and committed economic development organizations who are willing to think bigger and work harder than anyone else.” (Source: Rick Perry speech, May 26, 2010).
  2. “I absolutely understand they want to get back to their homes. I’d like to get back to the mansion.” (Source: San Antonio Express-News, ” Biggest obstacle to Galveston recovery is water” 9/19/08).
  3. “It has been a tragedy of unspeakable consequences that, for decades, activist courts denied many Texas parents their right to be involved in one of the most important decision their young daughter could ever make…” (Source: Rick Perry press release, 6/5/05).
  4. ““The simple truth is: When it comes to roads, we need more of them….And good roads mean a better quality of life for our citizens.” (Source: Austin American-Statesman, “Perry: Legislature ‘abdicated responsibility’ on transportation,” 4/22/08).

Democratic Blog of Collin County – News

Rick Perry’s Cover-Up and Corruption

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

From the BOR:

Additional Sources

Democratic Blog of Collin County – News

Black Rep. Jennifer Carroll – Rick Scott’s Choice for FL Lt Governor

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

 

BLACK REPUBLICAN JENNIFER CARROLL – RICK SCOTT’S CHOICE FOR FLORIDA’S LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR

By Frances Rice 

The NBRA congratulates Florida State Representative Jennifer Carroll who was selected by Rick Scott, the Republican nominee for Florida’s governor, to be his running mate.  A 20-year U. S. Navy veteran and small business woman with over seven years of experience in the Florida legislature, Rep. Carroll is a superb choice to be Florida’s first black Republican lieutenant governor.  She is the Florida House Representative for District 13, which is in Jacksonville, and is the first black Republican woman to be part of a statewide ticket in Florida.

Rep. Carroll has realized the American Dream.  As a young girl, she legally immigrated to America from Trinidad, West Indies and served her country in the United States Navy, starting as an enlisted member and retiring as a Lieutenant Commander.  She obtained a higher education and subsequently started a small business.  She was first elected to the Florida House of Representatives in 2003 and was subsequently re-elected in 2004, 2006, and 2008.  She was appointed Deputy Majority Leader by Speaker Johnnie Byrd for the period 2003 to 2004 and served as the Majority Whip from 2004 to 2006.

Rep. Carroll was the recipient of the NBRA’s Pioneer Award in 2007.  She was also a keynote speaker at NBRA’s first annual Black Republican Forum and was featured in the 2007 edition of the NBRA magazine, The Black Republican

She is the former Executive Director of the Florida Department of Veterans’ Affairs.  While serving with that agency, she was responsible for the claims and benefits of over 1.8 million veterans.  Under her leadership, more than million in retroactive compensation was awarded in 2001 to Florida Veterans.  She was responsible for the agency’s million budget, legislation, three state nursing homes and one domiciliary home.

Rep. Carroll is the former Chairperson of the Florida’s Council on Homelessness, and the Honorary Chair of the Florida Assembly of Black Republicans.  Currently, she is the Chairperson of the Republican Party of Florida African American Leadership Council. 

Among her honors, Rep. Carroll received the First Coast African American Women Award in 1998; the Clay County Chamber of Commerce Military Person of the Year Award in 1996; the YMCA Black Achievers Award in 1996; and the Clay County Young Republican Club "One of Clay’s Most Influential People" Award. 

As a small business owner, she knows what is required to create jobs.  Rep. Carroll is a perfect match for Rick Scott since she shares his conservative values of smaller government, lower taxes, reducing regulation, individual freedom and personal responsibility.  She also opposes the out-of-control spending of stimulus money that creates massive deficits, grows the government and kills private-sector jobs.  She has vowed to fight to end government control of healthcare through ObamaCare and increased regulations, such as cap and trade.

“I want to thank Rick Scott for the opportunity to join him in this race as his pick for Lieutenant Governor,” Rep. Carroll said during an interview. “Floridians are ready to elect a conservative outsider with private sector experience and a plan to create 700,000 jobs. Rick and I share core conservative principles like lower taxes, less regulation, and smaller government. I look forward to campaigning with Rick against Alex Sink, Rod Smith and their liberal agenda.”

Scott’s choice of Rep. Carroll, a smart and capable black woman, to be his running mate demonstrates his continued commitment to equality of opportunity, a founding principle of the Republican Party that was started in 1854 as the anti-slavery party and championed civil rights for blacks from the 1860′s through the 1960′s until today.

To learn more about the historic Scott-Carroll gubernatorial campaign, visit their website

Frances Rice is a retired Army Lieutenant Colonel, a lawyer and chairman of the National Black Republican Association


Related links:

Scott Carroll press release 

Florida Times-Union – Rick Scott: Jennifer Carroll will help me get state moving again   

 

© National Black Republican Association, 2010. All Rights Reserved.

 

BLACK REPUBLICAN: National Black Republican Association E-News

Back To Basics Ad: “Rick Perry Thinks You’re a Sucker”

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Houston Chronicle: The Back to Basics political committee is hitting Gov. Rick Perry again in a new television commercial. Spokesman Cliff Walker would not say where the ad is running, but said it is a “six-figure” television buy.

Perry spokesman Mark Miner responds: With his failing campaign quickly running out of money, liberal trial lawyer Bill White has pulled his advertising from 22 television stations in seven different Texas markets: Abilene, Amarillo, Beaumont, Harlingen, Midland-Odessa, Shreveport, and Waco.

Bill White spokeswoman Katy Bacon said Perry’s campaign is wrong about the television buys. Bacon said White is on the air in all the markets mentioned in Miner’s release. “They’re making things up again,” Bacon said.

Titled “Rick Perry Thinks You’re a Sucker,” the ad juxtaposes Perry encouraging viewers to send a letter to Washington saying what they think about “all this stimulus, all this runaway spending” with a letter Perry sent President Barack Obama in February 2009 saying Texas would welcome Federal stimulus funds. Perry’s Feb. 18, 2009 letter, posted on the governor’s state website, certified that Texas would accept federal funds.

The Houston Chronicle Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News has previously published news articles stating Perry accepted more than billion in stimulus money to balance the state budget.

Perry has not welcomed all federal funds. Last year, Perry opposed about 0 million to fund the state’s unemployment trust benefits. The governor said businesses would have had to pay higher unemployment taxes after the federal dollars ran out. An effort by some legislators to overrule Perry died in the state House. And this year, Perry did not to apply for federal education funding in the competitive federal grant program known as Race to the Top.

Democratic Blog of Collin County – News

Why Texas Polls Showing Rick Perry Leads Bill White Might Be Wrong

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Earlier this week a Belo poll suggested Republican Gov. Rick Perry leads Democratic challenger Bill White by a 50 percent to 36 percent margin. John Reynolds reports in a Quorum Report article (subscribers only) that Lone Star Project’s Matt Angle believes a Belo poll screening question disproportionately disqualified likely Bill White voters and thus discredits the survey. Specifically, Angle said that the survey screened respondents by asking if they voted in most or all school, local and primary elections. Angle said that is a very different screening question from the more common “Are you likely to vote in the next General Election?”

Angle said the Belo screening question eliminated voters who might not vote in every election, but would come out for a higher profile gubernatorial election. In addition, he said the screen question concentrates Republican respondents who tend to be the higher income homeowners who regularly turn out for local school elections. He said that the poll fell outside the range seen in other polls because it is unintentionally skewed to favor Perry.

Angle is correct in his assessment that Belo’s screening question heavily skews the poll’s coverage to favor Perry, but that is not the whole story. A second factor further skews toward the Republican side of the question in this and most other national and Texas polls.

Most pollsters, from national pollster Rasmussen to small Texas pollsters, call only people with published number landline telephones. Political polls that do not include respondents who subscribe exclusively to wireless cell phone service produce results that skew six or more points toward the conservative or Republican side of the question. The adoption of wireless-only phone service by major segments of the U.S. population has occurred so rapidly that political experts and pollsters are scrambling to adjust to the ramifications of this telecommunications earthquake.

Over the last 10 years pollsters have increasing relied on statistical weighting of landline telephone samples to correct for the omission of wireless-only households that new research reveals have a decidedly progressive tilt. According to Nate Silver of the FiveThirtyEight blog statistical weighting no longer sufficiently compensates for the omission of the 30% of U.S. households that have dropped traditional landline telephone service. (It is estimated that 30% of all U.S. households have become wireless-only during the last half of 2010.)

The rapid increase of wireless-only Americans now has a quantifiable impact on political polling results. Specifically, excluding wireless-only adults from political surveys has a statistically significant, negative impact on Democratic performance in political polling. This was confirmed in a recent study by Pew, which compared the national generic ballot preference of a landline-only sample of 4,683 registered voters with a combined landline and cell-phone sample of 7,055 registered voters:

In the landline sample, Republican candidates have a 47%-to-41% margin over Democratic candidates on the 2010 generic horse race, but in the combined sample voters are evenly divided in their candidate preferences for this November (44% for each party). A majority of cell-only voters (52%) say they will support the Democratic candidate in their district.

There is still a margin of error in a poll with such a large sample size, but it is just barely over plus or minus 1%. As such, with an overall six-point gap, the survey shows a statistically significant difference between polls that include cell-phone only adults and polls that do not.

Telephone surveys since the 1960′s, when they first grew to prominence, have traditionally relied on samples from published landline telephone numbers. The explosion of unpublished number wireless-only phone service over the last 10 years, and more recently Internet-based VOIP phone service, places a rapidly growing number of “unpublished phone number” Americans out of reach of those surveys. Nationally, more than one-in-four U.S. households now have no “published number” landline telephone, considerably more than in the early 1960s when telephone surveys were considered unreliable because so many households were unreachable by telephone.

While some pollsters are starting to include wireless-only respondents in their surveys most do not because of the higher cost to reach those wireless respondents. Many pollsters, particularly smaller local pollsters don’t include wireless-only respondents because the cost of calling wireless numbers is more than double the cost of calling published number landline phone respondents.

It is difficult and more expensive for pollsters to interview wireless-only Americans because of the provision in the 1995 Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act (TCPA) that places restrictions on unsolicited calls to mobile phones. The TCPA forbids calling a cell phone using any automated telephone dialing system (autodialer) without prior express consent. This rule applies to all uses of autodialers and predictive dialers, including for survey and opinion research. So, when live-interviewer pollsters want to interview respondents on their cell phone, they must first surmount the problem of compiling a list of unpublished cell phone numbers. Then the live-interviewers must place the calls by manually dialing each number.

The most recent survey from the CDC covering the period of July-December 2009 shows that 24.5% of US households, and 22.9% of US adults, were wireless-only by the second half of 2009. This is a sharp increase over the past two years.

Adults living in U.S. households with wireless-only phone service.
Source CDC/NCHA, National Health Interview Survey.

In the second half of 2009 nearly half of adults aged 25–29 years (48.6%) lived in households with only wireless telephones. More than one-third of adults aged 18–24 or 30–34 (37.8% and 37.2%, respectively) lived in households with only wireless telephones. As age increased from 35 years, the percentage of adults living in households with only wireless telephones decreased: 23.9% for adults aged 35–44; 14.9% for adults aged 45–64; and 5.2% for adults aged 65 and over. Adults of all ages living in or near the poverty level, Hispanic adults and non-Hispanic black adults are also more likely to live in households with wireless-only phone service. The most progressive segments of the population are rapidly going wireless only.

When the CDC releases its second half of 2010 wireless-only report it is expected that more than 30% of all U.S. households will have unpublished number wireless-only phone service. Last May Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight, wrote an interesting piece examining the effect wireless-only households now have on political polls. Silver predicts that if the current adoption trends hold, the percentage of wireless-only households could be in the mid to high 30s by election day November 2012. Furthermore, the CDC wireless-only figure does not fully reflect so-called “cellphone-mostly” households. Cellphone-mostly households are households that do have a landline, but that line is used for FAX or home security systems and it rarely or never used to receive incoming calls; another 15% of the population falls into this category.

The recent explosion of unpublished number Internet-base VOIP landline service subscriptions further increases the percentage of unpublished phone number households in certain metropolitan areas with high broadband Internet coverage. Collin Co. has very high residential broadband Internet coverage.

Previous research has shown that Rasmussen’s use of a likely voter screen is not the reason why their polls now differ strongly from the trendline of all other polls. Since Rasmussen excludes wireless-only adults from their surveys (possibly due to restrictions on automated phone calls to cell phones), it is likely that the wireless-only effect is one of the main reasons that Rasmussen’s likely voter polls are about six points more favorable to Republicans than other likely voter polls. Also, Rasmussen polls of all adults are six points more favorable to Republicans than other polls of all adults. This six-point pro-Republican tilt in national polling results is exactly the gap found by Pew in their landline-only sample.

State-level estimates for 2007 show that wireless-only adults are particularly prevalent in Arkansas, Kentucky and Texas. While 13.6% of the nation as a whole was wireless-only in 2007, Arkansas was already 21.2% wireless, Kentucky was 21.6% wireless and Texas was 20.9% wireless (PDF, page 5). Wireless-only households in these states likely continue above the national trend line, which means the percentage of wireless-only households in these states may already be in the low to mid 30′s. The lack of wireless-only adult survey coverage by Rasmussen may explain why Rasmussen polls in Kentucky and Arkansas have skewed toward the most conservative candidates in primary and and general election surveys.

While Texas is one of the states leading in wireless-only adoption the metro areas surrounding Dallas and Austin lead most other Texas counties in unpublished number wireless-only phone coverage. Given the trends nationwide, it is likely that roughly one in three of all adults in Arkansas, Kentucky and Texas are now wireless-only. This would make for an even more pronounced localized landline only coverage effect gap than the national discrepancy found in Pew’s 2010 study.

So, Belo’s poll showing Republican Gov. Rick Perry leading Democratic challenger Bill White by a 50% to 36% margin is very likely skewed more that six points toward the Republican side of the question by the landline only coverage effect found in Pew’s study, in addition to the right skewing nature of the Belo’s “likely voter” screening question.

A just released Texas Lyceum Poll shows Perry leading White 48 percent to 43 percent, a margin of only five points. Adjusting the Texas Lyceum poll results for Pew’s six point landline only coverage effect puts White dead even with Perry. If the landline only coverage effect is indeed greater than six points in Texas because Texas residents have a significantly higher wireless-only adoption rate, then White could even lead Perry in a dual-frame survey including both landline and wireless-only respondents. (also see Texas Lyceum Summary of Trial Ballots)

The rapid rise in wireless-only adults, along with the confirmation that those adults have a decidedly progressive tilt, helps explain some, and possibly all, of the recent right skewing of polls from Rasmussen and other polling firms. Americans are dumping landlines at a rapid rate, and those Americans do skew heavily toward progressive political viewpoints. Pew’s “landline only poll coverage effect” finding puts a lie to the national media’s mime that the nation’s political mood has shifted so far right that the Tea Party movement now represents mainstream America. The truth is that Tea Party supporters still rely on old “copper wire” landline phones and they are the people being polled while everyone else who has gone totally wireless are not being polled.

Democratic Blog of Collin County – News