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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) got some moral support and a major boost for her campaign coffers when President Obama headlined two fundraisers in Los Angeles Monday night to support her reelection bid. She also used the occasion to make the case for sending her back to the Senate. "I'm in a very, very tough race. . . . These are very, very tough times," she said. "You understand that. Leaders are tested in tough times. And that is appropriate. At the end of the day people want someone who is in their corner." ...
There's an old story that occasionally makes the rounds in Washington. In the 1970s, a magazine (now long defunct) named New Times reported that Sen. William Scott, a Virginia Republican, had been ranked the "dumbest" senator in a survey conducted by a public interest group. Subsequently, Scott held a press conference to deny the charge -- thereby proving he was pretty darn dumb. After all, he only called more attention to the accusation. Sarah Palin has taken a Scott-like position. Earlier this month, PolitiFact.com, a project of the St. Petersburg Times, awarded Palin the not-so-coveted ...
I don't like to talk about dying any more than the next guy, but sometimes it only makes sense. One of those times is right now – if you haven't signed any advanced directives. Those are the forms that spell out what kind of care you want to receive when you're dying. The other time it pays, literally, to talk about death is when you're actually in the process. According to a report in the Archives of Internal Medicine, advanced cancer patients who had end-of-life conversations with doctors had 35 percent lower medical costs in their final week than other patients. Those with higher ...
A majority of Americans believe many of the claims about health care legislation are distortions or "scare tactics," according to a new Bloomberg poll. ...
Sarah Palin is at it again. She's insisting that the health care bill under construction in Congress will cause the creation of "death panels." She was invited to testify before the New York Senate's Aging Committee on health care reform and instead sent the committee a letter that she also posted on her Facebook page. In that letter, she says:A great deal of attention was given to my use of the phrase "death panel" in discussing such rationing. Despite repeated attempts by many in the media to dismiss this phrase as a "myth," its accuracy has been vindicated. But expert after expert has ...
In a letter to London's Daily Telegraph, a group of medical experts who care for the terminally ill in the U.K. say that scores of patients are being wrongly categorized as "close to death" and that their demise is being hastened under increasingly controversial care guidelines introduced in 2004. ...
President Obama accused some health reform critics of "bearing false witness" during a live conference call and webcast Wednesday with tens of thousands of clergy and people of faith. Using strong language, Obama told the religious leaders that some claims about health reform are "ludicrous." In particular, he said, "This notion that somehow we are setting up death panels" that would decide whether old people get to live or die is "an extraordinary lie." The death panel idea has been advanced by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and dismissed as fiction by, among others, fact-checkers and some ...
Who knew that Sarah Palin was such a uniter? How else can you explain how the right and left want to wrap their wings around her. Conservatives embrace her as a voice of the future, liberals hail her as a present-day object of ridicule. Enter the Center for American Progress, definitely in the latter group. In a piece on its "Think Progress" Web site, the group takes delight in pointing out that the very same Sarah Palin who has inspired so much hell-raising with her little Facebook "death panels" description, not too long ago proclaimed her belief in the kind of living will planning she now ...
Just as President Obama complains about the "misinformation" about health care proposals spewing from his opponents, one of his allies has caught him in some misinformation of his own.At his lovefest town-hall session in New Hampshire on Tuesday, the president denied charges he intends to cut Medicare benefits. "We are not," he said, "AARP would not be endorsing a bill if it was undermining Medicare. Okay?" ...
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