THE NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS


Threats to freedom of speech, writing and action, though often trivial in isolation, are cumulative in their effect and, unless checked, lead to a general disrespect for the rights of the citizen. -George Orwell

Friday, November 14, 2014

THREE MARTINI LUNCH: NOVEMBER 14, 2014

National Review's Andrew Johnson joins host Greg Corombos to discuss current events. Today's topic: Bill Cassidy crushes Mary Landrieu in the first run-off poll as her Keystone pipeline ploy backfires, al-Qaeda and ISIS team up, and Dems try to distance themselves from Jonathan Gruber.



Gruber Embraced Misleading the Public About ObamaCare Even While It Was Still Being Debated
This is the person whom the White House relied on to help craft the bill; he was paid handsomely to model its effects (a fact he did not disclose, even when asked), and he was in the room when important decisions were made about how it would work. He claims to have helped write specific portions of the law himself. Gruber was not the sole architect of the law, but he was one of its biggest single influences on both its design and on how the media, which quoted him repeatedly, reported and understood the law.
The White House and its allies are desperately trying to distance themselves from Gruber right now by downplaying his role in the law's creation. But the record of his involvement is clear enough: At The Washington Post, Ezra Klein has variously described Gruber as "one of the key architects behind the structure of the Affordable Care Act" and "the most aggressive academic economist supporting the reform effort." The New York Times in 2012 described his role as helping to design the overall structure as well as being "dispatched" by the White House to Congress to write the legislative text. Gruber's work was cited repeatedly by the White House, Democratic leadership, and the media.
So when he describes the thinking about how the law was crafted and sold to the public, it's worth taking note. This is the posture of one of the law's authors and chief backers. It's part of the spirit in which the law was created and passed. Gruber's ideas were embedded in the law's structure and language, and so was his attitude.
Also read:

Gruber video #5: Mocking critics as "adolescent children"

The hits keep coming: Gruber celebrates 'mislabeling' ObamaCare in video #6

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