Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Opinion

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Reader Comment of the Day

“If I have to choose between having a bureaucrat and a health insurance agent decide on weather or not I get health care, I will gladly take the bureaucrat. If the bureaucrat doesn't have my best interest in mind... then off he goes next election.”

—Jay of N.Y. in response to Linda Killian:

Letters and Comments

Opinion Letters

Opinion Letters

Expanding Help for Home Buyers

We have seen a boost in first time home buyers because of this incentive ["Expanded First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit Becomes Law," usnews.com].

Palin Cartoon Gallery

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Healthcare Cartoon Gallery

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Datebook

A look back at the week in history.

Washington Whispers

Washington Whispers

Gibbs Slaps Coverage of Afghan Troop Surge

Turns out President Obama isn't ready to OK 40,000 new troops to Afghanistan as press has reported.

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Op-Eds

The Coming Fight Over Education Reform

By Andrew J. Rotherham

There's broad consensus on education reform, but there are deep fault lines underneath.

The languishing reauthorization of the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 is turning lawmakers into educational Michael Corleones, pulling them back into a business many fervently wish was over. Although the landmark education law is overdue for its scheduled five-year overhaul, contentiousness left the last Congress unable to even get a bill out of committee.

Harold Evans

Harold Evans

The Double Standards Facing Israel

What would Israel's critics have the country do?

Washington Book Club

Foreign Policy by Contractor

Allison Stanger discusses One Nation Under Contract.

What the 2009 Elections Tell Us About 2010

By Tom Davis

Seven lessons the parties need to learn from Tuesday's races.

The 2009 off-year elections in Virginia, New Jersey, and New York's 23d Congressional District offer a small snapshot of the current views and motivations of the American electorate. While there may be a desire to extrapolate the events of Nov. 3, 2009 into a prediction of what will happen on Nov. 2, 2010, that is impossible.

Brian Kelly

Brian Kelly, Editor U.S. News & World Report

Editor's Note: Why Leadership Really Matters

Turbulent times demand strong guidance and fortitude.

Mary Kate Cary

Mary Kate Cary

How Republicans Can Keep Winning

Finding the right issues to appeal to an increasingly conservative country.

Help the Troops, Save the Planet

By Michael Signer

Doe-eyed do-gooders aren't the face of environmentalism, the U.S. military is.

To some critics, the cause of alternative and sustainable energy will always be associated with the image of dewy-eyed do-gooders earnestly plying a hopeless cause. This caricature has helped opponents today, such as the conservative columnist George Will; by mocking activists as naive idealists, they make the cause they represent seem naive and hopeless as well.

Mort Zuckerman

Mort Zuckerman

Inflation or Deflation: That Is the Question

The next big economic worry could be the opposite of the expected.

Two Takes On...

Major Christian Jenni (L) of Ocean City, New Jersey with the 405th Civil Affairs of the U.S. Army listens to a local man as he airs a grievance during a weekly meeting called a Shura to discuss issues of local governance October 13, 2009 in Orgune, Afghanistan.

Is Counterinsurgency the Right Path in Afghanistan?

With full support, victory is possible James Danly says. A cookie cutter approach won't work, argues Gian Gentile.

Robert Schlesinger

Robert Schlesinger

GOP Can't Be Perfect in N.Y.

Republicans lean a little heavier in upstate New York.

The National Deficit—of Leadership

By David Gergen

President Obama fired the imagination of the country during his campaign, but the glow has faded

It is fashionable these days to decry the quality of American leaders, and why not? Not long ago, we celebrated our CEOs as the new masters of the universe; some paid themselves as if they thought so, too, and their faces graced the covers of magazines everywhere. But last year, that universe imploded, and taxpayers were forced to come to the rescue.

Bernadine Healy, M.D.

Dr. Bernadine Healy

Why Health Reform Will Be a Danger to Passive Patients

Even if Congress soon ends health insurance worries, your job as an informed patient will be key.

Peter Roff 04:45 PM ET

Time for Term Limits in Congress?

By Peter Roff, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

In the early '90s the Republican march to majority included the idea that it was time to impose term limits on members of the U.S. House and Senate. A part of the Contract with America, term limits died thanks in part to a disagreement among its supporters over just what those terms should be.

It also didn't help the cause that those who followed Newt Gingrich and Dick Armey as leaders of the House GOP determined that voluntarily ceding power to other people might not be the most prudent of ideas, especially after the party had spent 40 years in the political wilderness.

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Bonnie Erbe 04:22 PM ET

Google's Free Airport Wi-Fi: Techno-Heroin?

By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

I'm conflicted about Google's announcement today that it will subsidize free wireless network access in 47 airports from now until January 15—and indefinitely in the airports of Burbank, Calif., and Seattle.

The promotion, in cooperation with Boingo Wireless, Advanced Wireless Group, and Airport Marketing Income, is the latest effort to use free Wi-Fi to boost a brand. Among others: Yahoo is sponsoring Wi-Fi in Times Square in New York, and Google is sponsoring Internet access on Virgin America flights during the holidays.

It's a great holiday gift, don't get me wrong. I'm one of those frequent travelers who hates long layovers with my laptop. I'm stuck killing time between flights only to encounter the deal-breaker of a $5.00 or $10.00 charge when I try to logon at an airport.

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Doug Heye 03:35 PM ET

Pelosi’s Cynical Politics: Cutting the Voters Out of the Healthcare Debate

By Doug Heye, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Did you get the sense that the House Democratic Leadership was frantic, even desperate, to nail down the vote for the 1,990-page healthcare reform bill?

No, not the actual votes from members Democrats were worried might go south on them—though House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer had good reason to be concerned about that; 39 Democrats opposed their party's bill—but scheduling the actual vote itself. It had to be before the Veterans' Day recess.

What was the hurry? The vote was promised before Congress' August recess and didn't happen—what are a few more days to allow the legislation to be seen by the American public for 72 hours, as Pelosi promised?

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Jamie Stiehm Yesterday

The Army Deserves Better Than Afghanistan--and Fort Hood

By Jamie Stiehm, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Let's get real about the Army and Afghanistan. Now's not the season to study more war.

Let me count the ways, saving the Fort Hood tragedy for last.

Clearly, the Army has suffered enough in the Iraq War—so has the nation and the world since 2003. The president of peace, Barack Obama, has a historic opening to close out two conflicts started by the bellicose George W. Bush. The 43rd president's fingerprints are all over these scenes; let him own the failures in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Nor is this a matter of sending 35,000 or 40,000 troops to take care of the problems in Afghanistan. Guess what: All those troops mean another 10 years on the ground (at least). Those troops cost more money and resources than our distressed economy can afford right now. We have lost so many lives—more than 5,000—in these cruel winters of war.

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Mary Kate Cary Yesterday

Bill Clinton on the Berlin Wall and Why We Owe George H.W. Bush Thanks

By Mary Kate Cary, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Today is the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, and I thought you might enjoy President Bill Clinton's take on what happened on November 9, 1989. He and President George H.W. Bush were both honored a few weeks ago by The International Crisis Group at a dinner in New York City. Lauren Bush stood in for her grandfather, and here's what 42 had to say, both about 41 and 43:

Lauren, thank you for coming for your grandfather. I love him very much and we have had the time of our lives in our dotage doing the work we've done in the tsunami, for Katrina. I can't tell you how much I admire him. 

And I want to emphasize something that means a lot to me and that made my job as President much easier. When the Berlin Wall fell, it was the product of nearly a half century of bipartisan American determination to protect the freedom of Western Europe and to stand up for our values. You can argue that not every call we made was right, but in the end I think we were on the right side of history. But whenever some momentous event like that happens, the question is always "Then what?"

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Bonnie Erbe Yesterday

Women Don't Have More Family-Work Conflicts Than Men Do

By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Now here's a study the results of which make me jump up and yell, "huzzah!"

According to the Academy of Management:

Bosses mistakenly believe female workers have more family-work conflict than men do, and that misconception stymies women's careers.

Just last week, I was seething over a different study that seemed to show the opposite. The second study showed that women were increasing, not decreasing, their share of household chores and child care, and that kids are being raised believing Mom does (and therefore should do) more work around the house than Dad.

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Linda J. Killian Yesterday

Pelosi Jeopardized Vulnerable Democrats With Healthcare Vote

By Linda Killian, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

In all of the celebratory remarks by President Barack Obama and other Democrats about making history with this weekend's House vote in favor of healthcare reform nobody is really talking much about the fact that the Democrats did it by the skin of their teeth.

Thirty-nine Democrats voted against the measure which passed 220-215.

Shortly after the vote, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic leadership team gathered before reporters to take a victory lap. But House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer couldn't help but let reality intrude on the celebration. "Much work remains," he said soberly.

Truer words were never spoken.

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Peter Roff November 06, 2009

Voters Have Spoken: Stop Bailouts and Fix the Economy

By Peter Roff, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Tuesday's exit polls, while far from an exact science, showed that nearly 80 percent of those who turned out to vote in both Virginia and New Jersey cited the economy as a major concern. New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine's mishandling of his state's economy certainly played a significant role in his ouster while Republican Bob McDonnell's "jobs, jobs, jobs" campaign clearly resonated with voters in Virginia.

If there is a message for the national politicians buried somewhere in the elections returns it is that Washington's handling of the economy needs to change, and quickly.

By all accounts, however, the Obama administration continues tacking to port, and at full speed. Not only is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi trying to rush a healthcare bill through Congress, the administration—despite the new 10 percent unemployment numbers—continues to hint that another stimulus package is in the offing, the first one having proven to be so successful.

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Mary Kate Cary November 06, 2009

Wall Street's Swine Flu Vaccine Score Shows the Perils of Government Healthcare

By Mary Kate Cary, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

The blogosphere and the cable news channels are full of outrage at the fact that Wall Street firms such as Goldman Sachs, Citi, and J.P. Morgan have received thousands of doses of H1N1 vaccine, while shortages across New York City have prevented pregnant women and high-risk children from receiving shots first. Believe me, as a parent of a high-risk child who had a heck of a time getting her a shot last week—I think this is outrageous.

But in the midst of all the anger at the bailed-out bankers getting their shots, no one seems to be noticing that the New York City government health authorities are the ones who sent the vaccines to the banks in the first place, after receiving their share of the state's shipment from the publicly-run Centers for Disease Control. Clearly we have a scarce supply of vaccines, with great demand nationally, and that supply is being rationed by the government.

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