Imagine telling a Democrat in the days after the 2004 election that the 2006 election would end Republican control of Congress, the 2008 election would return a Democrat to the White House, and by the 2010 election, Democrats would have passed a bill extending health-care coverage to 94 percent of Americans, securing trillions of dollars in subsidies for low-income Americans (the bill's $900 billion cost is calculated over 10 years, but the subsidies continue indefinitely into the future), and imposing a raft of new regulations on private insurers. It is, without doubt or competition, the single largest social policy advance since the Great Society.
::The right to be heard does not equal the right to be taken seriously::
::A noble spirit embiggens even the smallest man::
12.20.2009
The bigger picture
No, it's not what we wanted. Yes, there is still work to do - a public option can be added to HCR later via reconciliation. But read Ezra, he's right. We need to look at this in a macro sense.
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