Cornell Insider

a blog by the writers of the Cornell Review

Posts Tagged ‘Health Care Reform’

Please Hold For the President

Posted by Oliver Renick on September 27, 2010

President Obama got on the phone this afternoon with several college students in a publicly-broadcast conference call, where he fielded questions from student journalists.  His objective was relatively simple – garner support for health care initiatives that allow students to remain on their parents’ plan until they are 26, and encourage young people to take part in the upcoming midterm elections.

“I want to remind young people they have to get reengaged in this process and vote in these midterm elections,” he told one caller.  It sounds as if Mr. Obama, who received widespread youth support in 2008, may be realizing the fickle tendencies of the youth.

Obama credited health care costs for the hardships of graduating college students, saying “if I keep increasing pell grants and college funding but health care keeps going up and inflation of tuition prices rises, we’re right back to where we started.”

The president also recounted the good ol’ days of his college years.  “When i was going to college food at the cafeteria was notoriously bad – we didn’t have a lot of options, we used to joke about what was for lunch that day.  There was a lot of nondescript stuff that wasnt edible.  We need to ask, what can we do to make universities more cost effective?  There should be pie charts at every university that show you where every dollar your spending is going.”  Bold words for a Harvard man.

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Monday Reading Madness #41

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on March 22, 2010

From cornellbigred.com

- Health Care for all! Recap here and a brief analysis by Nile Gardiner.

- Nothing new here, but The Guardian and BBC have also written about the recent string of Cornell suicides.

- FoxNews and USA Today stories as well.

- Cornell laughs its way to the Sweet 16!!

- Meanwhile, hockey also goes to the NCAA Tournament.

- It can be easy to forget we’re fighting a war: excellent images from FP in Afghanistan.

- George Will takes on the subject of education and children again.

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Monday Reading Madness #28

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on December 7, 2009

As we begin study week, here’s an extra long MRM to assist with your procrastination.

- MetaEzra seems to be optimistic about the idea of a “College of Public Policy.”

Cornell International Affairs Review

- This has to be a joke to make the cash strapped administration feel good, right?

- Let us hope this product does not hit college campuses any time soon. (Via Paul Ibrahim)

- A great feature on the Cornell International Affairs Review.

- “Is Any Rand Bad for Libertarianism?”

- John Fund believes that Democrats are appeasing their liberal base on the issue of health care reform.

- The Economist breaks down the upcoming Copenhagen Summit. Will Climategate affect the outcome?

- Americans care as much as Russians about global warming.

- Obama’s job approval rating holds steady at around 52%.

- For those outside the world of Cornell hockey, the Big Red managed to tie the defending national champion BU at MSG last Saturday (they’re not that great this year, so we really should have won). Here’s Bilmes’ pre-game post and the recap.

- Also in hockey news, there is a new initiative to encourage American hockey prospects to go NCAA over Canadian juniors.

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Monday Reading Madness #27

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on November 30, 2009

- A Cornell professor examines how race, income, and gender shape religion’s effect on American voters.

- Every college seems to be banking on “upping enrollment.”

- Charles Krauthammer on why the health care bill “should be immolated, its ashes scattered over the Senate swimming pool.”

- During the annual turkey pardon, Obama “saved or created 4 turkeys.”

- Research finds that early undergraduate specialization can be beneficial, but students who pick their majors early are also more likely to change majors before graduating.

- An interesting story on a GW freshman who entered college after spending ten years in prison.

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MRM #23

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on November 1, 2009

- The 1990 page House health care bill is out.BOOK

- Bloggers say the economy will still be the main issue for the 2010 midterms.

- Obama may be taking his time in deciding what to do in Afghanistan, but the American people aren’t sure about the country’s purpose in Central Asia either.

- Publishers Weekly has a list of the top 10 books of 2009.

- From The Austrian Economists, here’s a video of the “Economists” category being played on Jeopardy. Cornell econ majors: I certainly hope you’re able to answer all of these.

- Not exactly a quick reading link, but if you’ve got time, check out President Skorton’s State of the University Address.

- Like Chief Energy Economist for Deutsche Bank, Adam Sieminski ’71, I also subscribe to The Economist for the covers.

- Just for fun: could Cornellians use personal assistants?

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Politics of Spite?

Posted by Lucia Rafanelli on October 13, 2009

About a week ago, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman authored an article entitled “The Politics of Spite,” attacking the Republican party for being emotionally immature and for valuing party politics over the well being of the country. In his extremely mature article, in which he compares the Republicans to a “bratty 13-year-old”, Krugman accuses Republicans of acting based on “spite pure and simple” and alleges that they oppose everything good for President Obama, regardless of whether it’s “good for America”.

Krugman first attempts to illustrate these points by pointing out that some conservatives were joyous at the news of Chicago’s loss of the 2016 Olympic bid. This loss, however, is so trivial that it could hardly be considered detrimental to America. Further, it is certainly not valid to extrapolate from the reactions of a few conservatives to this one issue- minuscule compared to the real problems our country faces today- the worldview and motivations of an entire political party on all issues.

Krugman attempts to give his argument weight by asserting that the Republicans’ opposition to healthcare is based largely on such purely partisan concerns. He argues that “the main G.O.P. line of attack is the claim — based mainly on lies about death panels and so on — that reform will undermine Medicare” and that this is hypocritical because it contradicts Republicans’ traditional opposition to unlimited welfare spending.

Apparently, it never occurred to Krugman that such criticisms of liberal healthcare reform were meant to showcase its hypocritical nature, to demonstrate that the Democrats’ healthcare plans may actually hurt the very people they attempt to aid-the disadvantaged who need help to afford insurance. Whether or not this is true is a question to be answered another time, but, nonetheless, the Republicans’ criticisms of healthcare reform’s potential effects on Medicare spending deserve to be treated as serious arguments that deal with an important nuance of a complex issue; they should not to be immediately disregarded as childish and irrelevant trivialities.

Krugman also failed to notice that such criticisms are hardly the crux of the Republican opposition to liberal healthcare reform. The Medicare issue has been sidelined by concerns regarding the impact of proposed reforms on insurance premiums, whether government money would be used to insure illegal aliens, whether a so-called “public option” would destroy the quality of healthcare in the US, and whether government involvement in the privately run health sector is philosophically legitimate. Any analysis of the “main GOP line of attack” regarding healthcare that does not include these issues is severely lacking and incredibly inaccurate.

Moreover, I take issue- and I think we should all take issue- with Krugman’s malicious characterization of the Republican party. This is not because I don’t think people should openly disagree with each other about political issues. It is not because I do not value meaningful political debate. In fact, it is just the opposite. It is because I value this type of discourse- which provides for the development a healthy and thriving democracy- that I oppose such generalizations and broad mischaracterizations as those found in Krugman’s article. These elements actually discourage meaningful debate by encouraging more ad-hominem-style exchanges concerned more with comparing one’s political opponents to spoiled teenagers than attempting to intellectually refute their arguments.

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