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Showing posts with label RyanCare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RyanCare. Show all posts

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Flashmob of Paul Ryan on Facebook was AWESOME!


Paul Ryan walked in a parade for some reason today and there was a large contingency of people in Kenosha at the parade protesting his violent budget plan. There was a Facebook flashmob planned by the Facebook page The Hippies Were Right https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Hippies-were-Right/131351033605798 to have people speak their mind to Ryan's Facebook page while the live protest was going on. During the two from 1pm-3pm over 700 comments were left by who knows how many people(less than 700 as lots of people posted several times). I had to act quickly to put this together because from the time that I started many posts had already been deleted from the page.

https://www.facebook.com/Shitscottwalker

Category:


Friday, June 3, 2011

Paul Ryan Is a Liar: Under His Plan, Millions of Seniors Will Be Affected, Almost Immediately

Republicans are convinced that burnishing the public’s view of their unpopular proposal to overhaul Medicare depends on assuring today’s seniors that they won’t be affected.
 “The retirees are going to be taken care of; there’s no ifs, ands, or buts about it,” House Speaker John Boehner vowed in an interview with CBS last month. The plan’s architect, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, has said time and again that the changes wouldn’t affect anybody getting close to retirement. “We propose to not change the benefits for people above the age of 55,” Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee, insisted last week.

There’s only one problem with the strategy: It’s not true.

The policies in the House GOP budget, if enacted, would begin affecting millions of seniors almost immediately by increasing their costs for prescription drugs and probably long-term care. Further, Medicare costs could rise over time if healthier seniors choose to abandon the traditional benefit program.
I don't know if Ryan sketched out his "plan" on the back of an envelope during a plane flight from DC or if he's just a liar. But either way, it doesn't appear to be either "serious" or honest.

This is why seniors are mistrustful of people "reforming" their program. They paid into it their whole working lives, they desperately need it or they'll die, and they know that they can't trust politicians not to lie to them. You'd be skeptical too.

It's not that they trust Democrats more than Republicans, but in this case they probably do. The GOP's repeated assaults on the program over the years doesn't lend their claims of trying to "save" it much credibility. When they propose to fundamentally change the program these seniors know exactly what that means.
By digby | Sourced from Hullabaloo

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Monday Reportback from ADAPT in Washington, DC

Washington, DC

  • May 7th, 2011 7:57 pm ET
By Martina Robinson
Disability Examiner

On Monday, members of the nonviolent direct action group ADAPT which has launched a campaign called "Defending Our Freedom" took their message of no block grants in Medicaid to the Halls of Congress.  The group is in direct opposition to Senator Paul Ryan's plan to block grant Medicaid.  The Ryan proposal, activists feel, would reduce available services and force more people into institutions.

Activists were unusually quiet marching to the  Hill.  Not one chant was heard as marchers lined the hallways.  Even as activists moved into the Rotunda there was not a sound, accept for subdued chatter and whirring of wheelchair motors.  Then the energy of almost 300 activists was unleashed as rounds and rounds of "Free our brothers,  free our sisters, free our people now!" suddenly exploded through the Capitol.  The rotunda acoustics are amazing!  The Capitol police were stunned and moved in to arrest, but changed their minds when activists quieted down and ADAPT's leadership team went into negotiate.

Several members of Congress came to visit the activists while they were in the Rotunda and by 6:25 pm the negotiations had failed and police were moving in with the intent to arrest this time.  The last person to speak to activists was Representative John Lewis.  Representative Lewis was himself arrested with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. during the civil rights movement of the 1960's.

He told activists that there was no shame in going to jail to fight an injustice.  He said this just as activists, many of whom used wheelchairs, were being led away by police.  Some ADAPT members speculated that there would not have been so many arrest had Representative Lewis not spoken.  All and all, 91 members were arrested Monday.

The early arrestees could still make out the chants of "I'd rather go to jail then die in a nursing home!" through the ceiling of the hallway they were led down which was one floor below the Rotunda, from those still waiting to be arrested who were above them.


Mug shots were taken. Property was bagged.  If arrestees needed medicine, they had to ask an officer to retrieve it.  Battery chargers for wheelchairs were kept with individuals, however, and the police were prompt in bringing medicines when asked for.  Going to the bathroom was an issue.  Police are not trained in the provision of personal care assistance (PCA) services and at first were not even aware of where the wheelchair accessible bathroom was!  Fortunately, a few PCA's got arrested and the officers seemed to be a quick study.  Activists received water, half a sandwich, and in one case ice for a swollen ankle.

Among the arrested where Bobbi Wallach, who has been previously arrested for civil disobedience over the institutionalization issue. Ms. Wallach moved into her own apartment last month after 4 and a half years in a nursing home.  She says the home didn’t want to let her go because they claimed she required two people to lift her.  However, she credits the Center for Disability Rights located in Rochester for finding the loophole that allowed her to be evaluated by an independent service.  As a result, she was able to prove that she only needed one PCA at a time and move out.  Ms. Wallach says, “I’m in my own home and loving it.  I make my own decisions.  I have all my choices and all my rights back now.”

Another arrestee was Heiwa Salovitz who recently moved from Connecticut to Texas where he volunteers with ADAPT of Texas.  He hopes to get a job soon “helping real people gain their freedom.”

 The first release happened at 3:11AM Tuesday morning.  The last group was released at 6:30.  ADAPT members, arrested or not, are supposed to be lined up by 10AM Tuesday.  Those arrested are due in court on May 26th in Washington, DC.

Disabled Wis. protesters arrested outside Paul Ryan's DC office


Washington - A group of Wisconsinites with disabilities vowed Wednesday to keep protesting the Ryan budget after many of them were arrested this week demonstrating in congressional office buildings.

"Representative Ryan is going to be seeing us again sooner or later. . . . We aren't going away," said Jerome Holzbauer, a retired Milwaukee schoolteacher who has cerebral palsy.
Holzbauer was arrested Monday with 90 others from Wisconsin and other states while protesting Ryan's proposal to convert the Medicaid entitlement into block grants to the states. The group had occupied the rotunda of the Cannon House Office Building.
Another story:
UPDATE: At about 6:30 p.m. EST, Capitol police began arresting ADAPT members who refused to leave the rotunda. The organization released a brief statement as the arrests began:

Tonight, Capitol Police have begun arresting ADAPT members from all over the country, who have remained in the Cannon House Office Building since midday. The ADAPTers want Representatives Paul Ryan, John Boehner and Michelle Bachmann to publicly withdraw their support for Medicaid budget cuts and Medicaid state block grants. Without this commitment, ADAPT has decided to make a point that we are willing to do whatever it takes to defend the right of people with disabilities and seniors to live in our homes, not nursing homes and institutions. It is unacceptable for our own government to treat the 60 million Americans who rely on Medicaid like garbage.

[A]about 100 people have been arrested so far, many of them chanting “I’d rather be in jail than in a nursing home!” He said Ryan sent his chief of staff to speak with the protesters but that Speaker of the House John Boehner refused to speak to the organization. Representatives who talked to the group and listened to their demands included: John Lewis (D-Ga.), Danny Davis (D-Ill.), Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), and Barney Frank (D-Mass.)

Friday, May 6, 2011

The Real Impact Of Cutting Medicaid -- Just When We Need It Most

Harold Pollack
(This first appeared at Kaiser Health News)
An excellent Chicago Tribune story by Rex Huppke details the impact of cuts to home and community-based services in Illinois. Huppke recounts the story of 81-year-old Lorraine Phifer, who cares for her son William, who has cerebral palsy. Phifer has a wheelchair van, but she can't maneuver him into it by herself anymore. He has also required help with a wheelchair lift to get into and out of bed. Staff from the University of Illinois at Chicago Assistive Technology Unit have come out to the Phifer home and provided valuable help. That unit now faces a 70 percent budget cut.
UIC's intellectual disabilities family clinics, which offer a range of services that are hard to access elsewhere, also face deep cuts. My intellectually disabled brother-in-law occasionally uses these facilities, too. I'm not a disinterested observer.
Few of my fellow policy wonks have occasion to write these last words. Most policy debate occurs at great personal distance from the world of safety-net care. To be sure, every policy debate has its quantitative dimension. Congressional Budget Office projections and actuarial reports matter, because there are real human consequences when the numbers don't add up. When the numbers are all we talk about, though, policy debate bears discomfiting similarity to arguments among armchair warriors maneuvering toy soldiers on a plexiglass board.
Debates about health care for seniors generally acknowledge these elemental realities. Nearly everyone involved has a parent or other relative who receives Medicare. And most expect to rely on Medicare, too, when they grow old. Seniors are a powerful constituency. If they find a proposed policy too unsettling, it probably won't happen.
The tone and the politics change when things turn to Medicaid and related safety-net services. Dozens of states are making painful cuts right now. The disadvantaged people most directly affected are playing conspicuously small parts in the accompanying political process. In Washington and in state capitals, too, few influential stakeholders have any strong personal stake in such matters. Few have sat on either side of the counter in some welfare office, county hospital or public health clinic.
Thus, the New York Times Lizette Alvarez reports that Florida's Republican-dominated legislature is set to scrap traditional Medicaid services and shift Medicaid recipients into state-authorized for-profit HMOs or provider sponsored networks. Florida also seeks permission to deny recipients some benefits now being offered. These changes could occur as quickly as next year. For those immediately affected, this program represents a more radical experiment than any provisions of last year's health reform. Florida legislators are quite explicit that their purpose is to save money: "The Medicaid system is irretrievably broken," State Sen. Joe Negron (R) says.
Florida indeed faces growing Medicaid burdens. These arise because of surging enrollment in a state hammered by recession and the foreclosure crisis, and which has one of the nation's highest rates of uninsurance. Concerns that the state's predicament is driven by lavish benefits and inefficiencies can be put to rest. Florida ranks 43rd in per-recipient Medicaid costs.
Florida's proposed Medicaid changes are based on a dubious pilot project that has disrupted life for thousands of Medicaid recipients. Part of the problem was that for-profit HMOs proved unable or unwilling to serve many disabled or medically complicated recipients. WellCare, one of the largest participating HMOs, exemplified these problems. WellCare encountered legal difficulties over alleged Medicaid fraud and charges of "cherry-picking" the healthiest recipients, as the Miami Herald reported.
Ultimately, low Medicaid reimbursements led WellCare and other HMOs to precipitously exit much of the market, forcing tens of thousands of families to change health plans. A Georgetown research team released a very critical analysis of these operational problems, concluding:
The five-year pilot program has yielded little in the way of concrete evidence of either efficiencies or cost reductions. In fact, the pilot has raised significant questions about the ability of its managed care model to effectively meet the needs of beneficiaries….
Despite this track record, Florida lawmakers seek to expand this program statewide. Whether Medicaid recipients would actual benefit seems beside the point.
Politicians in Washington are following a similarly unpromising path. The CBO estimates that Republicans' proposed plan to block-grant Medicaid would reduce federal program expenditures by 35 percent by 2022 and by 49 percent in 2030 relative to current law. In return, states would have greater flexibility to restructure Medicaid benefits.
How governors would actually use this flexibility is another matter. Medicaid is flexible right now. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reports that about 60 percent of state Medicaid spending consists of expenditures to cover people or to reimburse services that are not required under federal law. Given Medicaid's low per-person cost and its relatively restrained projected cost growth, there's little room to comfortably cut. Safety-net services are already shoestring operations. Under-funded and stressed, they have many shortcomings. There is no way to meet the above spending reduction targets without shifting costs and risks onto the states, covering markedly fewer people and services, or further underpaying Medicaid providers.
No one can firmly say how states would respond to the reduced federal support. I fear that's precisely the point. Block grants provide both states and the federal government with useful political cover to cut important benefits. If a particular state eliminates Medicaid home care services or by dropping the working poor from coverage, Congressional Republicans can say: "Don't blame us. That's what this state chose to do." Meanwhile governors can say, with equal justification: "Don't blame us. We're doing the best we can, given limited federal resources."
I wish that Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., architect of the House Republican budget plan, could accompany my wife and her brother to waste hours sitting in a gritty welfare office. I wish he had the responsibility of helping an intellectually disabled person with a nasty toothache, when the state Medicaid program no longer covers dental care.
Ryan's proposals won't become law anytime soon. Still, they exemplify this political moment's misguided mood and priorities. During the worst recession in decades, we are cutting needed services precisely when the need for them has grown.
Despite heated rhetoric about federal debt, this proposed budget does surprisingly little to reduce the deficit. Even if this plan did more, Americans would be wise to reject it. Our policy debate seems predicated on the philosophy that we must sharply shrink government despite the accompanying human costs. That vision is mighty appealing, especially to those who feel comfortable and safe without public help.
President Barack Obama helpfully identified what Republicans left out: our collective obligation to protect one another against misfortunes that could crush any one of us left to face them alone. When I consider the 81-year-old women gutting it out to care for her disabled son, or the aged and disabled people in South Carolina losing their adult day care, hospice or meals on wheels services due to current Medicaid cuts, I can only tell Rep. Ryan: "There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy."

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Poll: Taxing the Rich Favored over C utting Medicare

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0411/53455.html


President Obama and Paul Ryan are pictured. | AP Photos
President Obama's approach won out over Paul Ryan's in a new survey. | AP Photos Close
Most Americans oppose the big spending cuts that many in Washington see as necessary to bring down the budget deficit, a new poll suggests, but they do support one idea for deficit reduction that President Barack Obama has pushed for years — raising taxes on the rich.

Only small slivers of the group of Americans surveyed for a Washington Post/ABC News poll released Wednesday said they support cuts to Medicare and Medicaid — 21 percent and 30 percent, respectively — and cuts to defense spending get the support of 42 percent of those surveyed. Seventy-eight percent of Americans are opposed to Medicare cuts, while 69 percent are opposed to Medicaid cuts.

VIDEO: Obama's deficit plan

VIDEO: Ryan's spending proposal

The potential solution to the debt crisis that gets the strongest support is raising taxes on Americans who make $250,000 or more annually, an idea that Obama campaigned on in 2008, backed away from last year to make a legislative deal with Republicans but has returned to as he’s begun discussing his vision for long-term fiscal responsibility. Of those surveyed, 72 percent said they support tax increases on people with incomes of more than $250,000, including 54 percent who strongly support them. Twenty-seven percent are opposed, including 17 percent strongly. 

Another potential remedy to the debt crisis gets less support — 45 percent of those surveyed said they support raising taxes on all Americans by a small percentage while making small cuts to Medicare and Social Security. Fifty-three percent of Americans are opposed to such a plan, including 40 percent who say they are strongly opposed.
One more idea that doesn’t get much support is House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s proposal to transform Medicare into a modified voucher program, with 65 percent of those surveyed opposed and 34 percent supporting it.
Asked whom they trust more to handle the debt, 46 percent of those surveyed pointed to congressional Republicans, while 42 percent said they trusted Obama more on the issue. Nine percent say they trust neither. Both sides have suggested entitlement cuts of varying measures, but only Obama is pushing the notion of tax hikes.
At the same time, nearly half of all Americans — 48 percent — said they think Obama isn’t doing enough to try to compromise with congressional Republicans, while 12 percent say he is doing too much and 38 percent said he is doing about the right amount of compromising.
The poll was conducted April 14-17 and surveyed 1,001 adults. The error margin is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0411/53455.html#ixzz1KTpqSBkD.
See the videos ..