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Monday, November 10, 2008
Steve Chapman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Change We Can Remember
by Steve Chapman
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Barack Obama's campaign mantras were "change we need" and "change we can believe in." His victory, and the enthusiasm of his more ardent supporters, may suggest that Americans dream of doing what Thomas Paine proposed we do in 1776: "begin the world over again." In fact, underlying the vote is yearning to return to how things were before: before the Iraq war, before torture, before the housing bust, before the recession.

Also before George W. Bush, who has a way of reminding people why Bill Clinton, for all his wretched foibles, left office with a 65 percent approval rating. As Hillary Clinton was fond of saying of her husband's critics during this campaign: "What part of the 1990s didn't they like -- the peace or the prosperity?"

Ronald Reagan came into office in 1980 assuming he had an electoral mandate to diminish the size of government. Once there, he found that Americans are a conservative people -- in the sense of wanting to conserve what they have, especially any benefits they get from Washington. Result: The welfare state survived with little change. Obama may likewise discover that the appetite for new policies is smaller than it appears.

In his speeches, the candidate spent more time extolling the need for change than specifying exactly what form it should take. His calculated imprecision allowed voters to assume that the change he was offering was pretty much the same as the change they wanted.

As in 1980, Americans are enduring economic pain that makes them amenable to notions they might once have rejected. It's safe to assume that, like then, Americans are ready to experiment with moving in the direction the new president favors -- in this case, toward a more activist government. But it's also safe to assume that 1) they are in no mood for drastic steps that require sacrifice on their part and 2) they will support new initiatives only if they, you know, work.

Obama, as it happens, won by offering voters the same thing Reagan promised: tax cuts. Most of those who supported him did so on the assumption that they would not fall in the class of people who will have to cough up more to the IRS.

Not only that, but many voted against McCain partly because Obama successfully branded his health-care program as a tax increase. Americans are willing to embrace a bigger and more expensive federal government on one condition: that it doesn't cost them anything. Continued...

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About The Author
Steve Chapman is a columnist and editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune.
 
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Fooled you too, eh Steve?
He promised to fix whatever you don't like and someone else will pay for it. That's "change". "Health care" was the main thing he actually promised, but what everyone heard was "free health care". Of course, we already have that in this country and I have the unpaid charges for my son, who is a junkie living on the streets, for various hospital stays totalling about 80 thousand dollars and not all at Parkland -- the "free" hospital in Dallas. One 25,000 dollar stay was at Baylor which is the destination of choice for many people who travel 100's of miles to dallas to PAY for their care. Of course, almost NONE of the people who heard "free health care" are going to qualify for it or get it. What they will get is drastically inferior health care and THAT's a promise.

THE GREAT WHITE NATION OF OBAMA
LOOK AT HIS ECONOMIC TEAM, HIS TRANSITION TEAM LOOK LIGHT IN THE REPRESENTATION OF MINORITIES COMPARED TO THE BUSH TEAM. THE MEDIA WILL NOT WRITE ABOUT THIS OCCURANCE. CLINTON HAD MINORITIES ON HIS TEAMS AS DID BUSH 41, REAGAN AND CARTER. SO MAYBE WHEN OBAMA TALK ABOUT MAKING AMERICA GREAT AS IT WAS LONG AGO HE WILL BRING BACK THE ERA OF REPRESENTING ALL THE BLACK RACE, HIMSELF.
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