Friday, July 17, 2009

Michael Moore Was Right: Card Check Was a Ruse

Mockumentarian and far-left spokesperson Michael Moore was right in saying several months ago that you could strip card check from the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) and still have businesses where you want them--on their knees and begging government to bail them out.

That's because the mandatory arbitration clause in EFCA lives on without card check, and it's those faceless bureaucrats running arbitration who are the unions' best friend. They'll be more than happy to split the difference between a 3,000-percent pay raise demand and a 3-percent pay raise offer--and come up with 30 percent or more.

That's why it's not surprising that the Democrats pushing EFCA are now more than willing to jettison card check and instead mandate elections within five or ten days of getting 30 percent of employees to sign up for a union. That's the current state of "compromise" in the Senate. Card check, it turns out, was just a Trojan Horse to get contracts dictated by bureaucrats to Mom-and-Pop businesses, to say nothing of the ultimate goal, the total take-down of Wal-Mart.

"First, Detroit, and now Benton, Arkansas" may as well be the union battle cry.

They won't stop until there is no private enterprise left--and government runs everything.

Oh, sad, sad day.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

AHRQ Proves that Cold Weather Cures...

...the health care system anyway.

In its just-released comparative study on health care quality in the 50 states, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) ranks most states as average, but those few that came in as strong seemed to be--from my unscientific review of the data--located in the northernmost midsection of our nation.

Specifically, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Iowa were deemed as having "strong" quality health care. Massachusetts slipped into the category too, which of course will have liberals shouting that "See, health care reform [socialization] works!" (Actually, Massachusetts has always had an advanced health care system even before Commonwealth Care, which may well end up destroying it.)

It also appeared almost axiomatic that the bigger the state, the worse the health care. Also, Sunbelt States didn't pan out too well either.

I'm doomed.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Pfizer Maintain: Who Says Free Enterprise Sucks?

Drug manufacturer Pfizer has launched a program called Maintain to provide free prescription drugs to laid-off Americans who lack insurance. Powerhouse drugs like Lipitor, Norvasc, Caduet and, yes, Viagra, are on the list, though you might be hard pressed to make a medical necessity case for the latter.

Cynics will counter that it's all "great PR," and I can see the New York Times invoking "the Obama Effect," as in "the Jesus Effect" in parting the waters, feeding multitudes with one fish--and now providing free prescriptions (soon health care as well).

As an enrollee you, of course, have to be able to prove your unemployment and meet other tests, but this sounds great to me (especially since I've used one or two of those drugs to treat my own conditions, and no, not Viagra--LOL).

Check out the program's Web page, or call (866) 706-2400.