Unbelievable Incompetence Led to No-Bid Contract for Healthcare.gov

Photo Credit: American Thinker It appears that management of the rollout of healthcare.gov was delegated to the Keystone Kops, the famous symbols of comic incompetence created by Mack Sennett. A level of ineptitude that surely must be termed negligence has led to at least one no-bid contract as CMS leadership discovered at the last minute that they had forgotten one crucial piece of the project. Sharon Begley of Reuters reports:

Caught flat-footed by the challenges of building the financial-management and accounting parts of the U.S. government’s new online marketplace for health insurance, officials rushed to hire a familiar contractor without seeking competing bids, according to government procurement documents reviewed by Reuters.

The documents dated in August – less than two months before the opening of online marketplaces established by President Barack Obama’s landmark healthcare law – showed the agency in charge had only “recently learned” that building the financial management functions was “beyond (its) currently available resources.”

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) documents shed more light on the problems facing the agency as it worked on the marketplaces established by the law commonly called Obamacare and on its revelation this week that at least 30 percent of the marketplace is still being built.

Those problems and others have been revealed by congressional oversight investigators who released emails and outside reports that paint an administration scrambling to meet the technological challenges of the marketplace – and usually failing to do so.

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Why Women Still Need Husbands

Photo Credit: AP/THE TAMPA BAY TIMES, EVE EDELHEITOver the past several decades, America has witnessed a profound change in the way women view men and marriage. It began with the baby boomer adage “never depend on a man.”

This message resulted in a generation of women who turned their attention away from the home and onto the workforce. They did what their mothers told them to do: they became financially independent so they’d never have to rely on a husband.

In time, “never depend on a man” turned into the full-blown belief that men are superfluous. In 2010 Jennifer Aniston claimed women needn’t “fiddle with a man” to have a child.

This may strike you as an isolated case of stupidity, but Aniston’s willingness to put it out there speaks volumes about modern cultural attitudes. No actress would have said such a thing in the 70s, 80s, or even early 90s.

Fortunately, most women come to the realization that they do, in fact, need a man—at least if they want a family.

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Who Killed the Kennedys? Ronald Reagan’s Answer

This year marks not only the 50th anniversary of the shooting of John F. Kennedy but also the 45th anniversary of the shooting of Robert F. Kennedy, which occurred in June 1968. Was there a common source motivating the assassins of both Kennedys—that is, Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan Sirhan?…

On June 5, 1968, Reagan was full of nothing but sympathy for RFK. He appeared on the popular television show of Joey Bishop, one of the extended members of Frank Sinatra’s Rat Pack. Bishop and Reagan were old Hollywood friends, and Bishop extended the governor a platform to address the shooting. A transcript of Reagan’s appearance on that show was grabbed by his young chief of staff, Bill Clark, who died just a few months ago. Clark shoved it in a box that ended up in the tack barn at his ranch in central California. It lay there until I, as Clark’s biographer, dug it out three decades later.

That rare surviving transcript reveals a Reagan who spoke movingly about RFK and the entire Kennedy family. Condemning the “savage act,” Reagan pleaded: “I am sure that all of us are praying not only for him but for his family and for those others who were so senselessly struck down also in the fusillade of bullets….I believe we should go on praying, to the best of our ability.”

But particularly interesting was how Reagan unflinchingly pointed a finger of blame in the direction of Moscow. Reagan noted that Kennedy’s killer, Sirhan Sirhan, a Palestinian Arab and also a communist, had shot Kennedy because of his support of Israel during the Six Day War that had occurred exactly one year earlier. On that, we now know beyond dispute what Reagan knew then: That war had been shamelessly provoked by the Kremlin. RFK supported Israel in that war. Sirhan Sirhan never forgave him for that. He killed him for that…Moscow had precipitated the Six Day War in June 1967, which, in turn, had prompted RFK’s assassin in June 1968.

But Reagan wasn’t finished positioning blame where it deserved to be placed. Eight days later, on July 13, 1968, Reagan delivered a forgotten speech in Indianapolis. Both the Indianapolis News and Indianapolis Star reported on Reagan’s remarks, but the only full transcript I’ve seen was likewise located in Bill Clark’s private papers. In that speech, Reagan leveled this charge at international communism, with an earlier Kennedy assassination in mind: “Five years ago, a president was murdered by one who renounced his American citizenship to embrace the godless philosophy of communism, and it was communist violence he brought to our land. The shattering sound of his shots were still ringing in our ears when a policy decision was made to play down his communist attachment lest we provoke the Soviet Union.”…

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NYC Writer: ObamaCare Forced My Mom Into Medicaid

Photo Credit: Wall Street Journal My mother is not one to seek attention by complaining, so her recent woeful Facebook post caught my eye: “The poor get poorer.” It diverged from the more customary stream of inspirational quotes, recipes and snapshots from her tiny cottage in Pierce County, Wash.

The post continued: “I just received a notice: ‘In order to comply with the new healthcare law, your current health plan will be discontinued on December 31, 2013.’ Currently my premium is $276 and it is a stretch for me to cover. The new plan . . . are you ready . . . projected new rate $415.20. Now I can’t afford health insurance.”

The unaffordable ObamaCare-compliant plan that her insurer offered in a Sept. 26 letter is not what makes my mother’s story noteworthy. Countless individually insured Americans have received such letters; many are seeing more radical increases in premiums and deductibles.

But most of these people are still being offered the chance to choose what health-care insurance they will receive, or to opt out before they are automatically enrolled in a state program. Not so my mother, Charlene Hopkins, as I soon discovered when I called after seeing her Facebook post.

Since she couldn’t afford the new plan offered by her insurer, she told me she was eager to explore her new choices under the Affordable Care Act. Washington Healthplanfinder is one of the better health-exchange sites, and she was actually able to log on. She entered her personal and financial data. With efficiency uncommon to the ObamaCare process, the site quickly presented her with a health-care option.

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Candidate Divulges ‘Secret’ for Avoiding D.C. Corruption

Photo Credit: WND As a member of the elite Presidential Protective Division of the Secret Service, Dan Bongino says he found President Obama surrounded by “acolytes” who rarely gave the nation’s chief executive an accurate picture of himself or the problems he faced.

That “bubble,” he said, helps breed corruption, and now that he’s running as a Republican for a seat in Congress, he’s determined not to fall under the spell that seems to afflict nearly everyone who enters the Beltway, to one degree or another.

But there’s a major problem, he believes, that is rooted in human nature. No one on Earth, he contends, is immune to corruption.

“The first step to corruption is assuming you’re incorruptible,” Bongino told WND in an interview.

Bongino, whose new book “Life Inside the Bubble” was released this week, said his view of human nature is rooted in his Christian faith and informed by seeing the inside of a system he says is “more corrupt that the American people can even imagine.”

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Did the Shutdown Even Matter?

Photo Credit: Alex Wong/Getty When budget negotiations began last month, Democrats felt confident that public opinion surrounding the government shutdown would force Republicans to the table, eager to prove their party could compromise.

But today, there’s little sense of urgency on a budget deal. With less than four weeks to go before the conference committee’s deadline, the public focus has shifted to the troubled rollout of the Affordable Care Act and pressure on Republicans has subsided.

“The shutdown is history. We are moving forward to try to get the next thing done,” William Allison, a spokesman for House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, said last week.

Asked whether Ryan and others feel pressure to get something done because of the shutdown, Allison was blunt: “Nah,” he said.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., a member of the conference committee, said the idea that Republicans may be feeling more at ease about the budget deadline now that concerns about the Affordable Care Act have taken center stage lined up with how many Democrats read the situation.

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Educator, Heal Thyself

Photo Credit: Hash MilhanM.I.T. Economics Professor and Obamacare “architect” Jonathan Gruber offers American education a pathway to fairness.

In a recent interview with NBC News reporter Chuck Todd, Gruber said this about America’s healthcare system:

“We currently have a highly discriminatory system where if you’re sick, if you’ve been sick or [if] you’re going to get sick, you cannot get health insurance. The only way to end that discriminatory system is to bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price. That means that the genetic winners, the lottery winners who’ve been paying an artificially low price because of this discrimination now will have to pay more in return.”

For the moment, let’s put aside a discussion of the Professor’s possible implied reference to eugenics (“[if] you’re going to get sick”). Rush Limbaugh, in his November 15 nationwide radio broadcast, suggested that Gruber interjected eugenics into the healthcare debate by saying there’s a “lucky gene pool.”

One can clearly infer, though, from the Professor’s comments that the lucky gene pool is, for those who swim in it, a prevenient cause of discriminatory healthcare practices that benefits the lucky gene-holders.

Healthcare is a huge system that affects almost all Americans, but it’s not the only one. So instead of swimming in Professor Gruber’s healthcare gene pool, let’s focus on “discriminatory” practices where it also matters to a vast number of people. Education.

The only way, the Professor says, to end the discriminatory practices of the healthcare system in America is to “bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price.” If that’s good for healthcare, why not apply it to education?

America’s educational institutions constitute a huge system made up of private and public schools (pre-K to 12), community/junior colleges, state universities, private colleges and universities, and service academies. Taken together, they represent a potpourri of learning environments, nearly all of which receive some level of city, county, state and/or federal government funding assistance.

According to Professor Gruber’s definition of discrimination, America’s educational system is patently unfair and discriminatory, systemically favoring the “genetic lottery winners.”

How so? you ask. Well, consider this:

The average salary of professors teaching at the top five Massachusetts colleges is $200,000. We’ll put aside how Gruber supplemented his M.I.T. salary in 2009 with a $297,000 contract with the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS). That was probably a part-time consultative gig associated with his Obamacare architectural design services.

Meanwhile, in 2012, the average salary of a tenured, full-time professor teaching at a two-year community college was $51,000. What makes that fair?

In a candid moment, Dr. Gruber might argue that he’s teaching at the prestigious M.I.T., and not at Grayson Junior College, because he’s better educated than the average Junior College Economics Professor. He earned the right to teach at M.I.T. and to enjoy his enhanced salary, he might claim, by earning a Ph.D. in Economics at Harvard.

But, unfortunately, that wouldn’t neatly align with his sociological credo. Jonathan Gruber is the son of the New York University Stern Finance Professor (Emeritus) Martin J. Gruber, who received his Ph.D. from Columbia, and was once Director of the National Bureau of Economic Research. That’s equivalent to a winning genetic lottery ticket, isn’t it?

According to Professor Gruber, the only way to end discriminatory practice in healthcare is “to bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price.” Let’s be fair and apply that to universities.

Dr. Gruber received an undergraduate degree in economics at M.I.T. where, in 2013, annual student tuition, room and board, plus books and personal expenses total about $57,000 — more than the average salary of a community college professor, who obviously could not afford to enroll a child at M.I.T. based on his/her income.

According to Professor Gruber’s sociological definition of fairness, the wide disparity in matriculation costs at America’s universities represents financial discrimination. Students who swim in the lucky gene pool are much more likely to attend M.I.T. than students who work part time at a fast-food restaurant to pay their tuition at Grayson County Junior College.

As Professor Gruber said, “The only way to end that discriminatory system is to bring everyone into the system and pay one fair price.” Okay then, why not one salary for all college professors — one standard tuition for all college students. That’s the Gruber Paradigm of Fairness applied to American education, is it not?

Perhaps the Professor would retort that private schools, like M.I.T., should not be required to adhere to a ubiquitous standard of fairness, since they’re not publically supported. But that dog won’t hunt. M.I.T. received $475,000,000 in federal grants in 2012. That qualifies as big-time public support.

But some will still excuse private universities from the need to be fair. In that case, let’s visit our local Independent School District — particularly in the large urban areas. Looking there we see arts and magnet schools, college prep courses for the more zealous students and a variety of accelerated learning opportunities for the select few taught by the best teachers. Why are these not discriminatory educational practices according to the Gruber definition of fair?

At a relatively early age, public school students are pegged as advanced learners — while teachers balk at being judged on their pedagogical skills — and promoted into a more intense educational environment, while other students languish on the public school bus of mediocrity.

The only way to make public school fair is “to end that discriminatory system [and] bring everyone into the system.” No separate and unequal parts — that’s discriminatory, al la Gruber.

Unless, of course, you’re one of Dr. Gruber’s genetic winners and can pay for a concierge education. In that case, never mind.

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First published at American Thinker.

Since 2007, Lee Cary has written hundreds of articles and blogs for several conservative websites, including the American Thinker and Breitbart’s Big Journalism & Big Government (as Archy Cary), been quoted on national television (Sean Hannity) and on nationally syndicated radio (Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin). His articles are cited in Jerome Corsi’s The Obama Nation and in Levin’s Liberty and Tyranny. Cary now writes for the Texas-based site teaparty911.com.

If You Like Your Insurance, You Can Rent It… Maybe

Photo Credit: Reuters/Jonathan BachmanThe main reason I left the insurance industry years ago was the fatigue of marketing a product that is misunderstood by the vast majority of its customer base, not to mention the majority of functionaries inside the industry. I was a lousy agent frankly, but for some reason, the concepts were very intuitive to me. I was the high scorer in of all of those licensing and continuing-ed type classes, but those don’t pay the bills, so for reasons of money and sanity, I left.

Alas, this escape was only temporary, as we all now live in a country where the industry is being seized by a president who remains totally oblivious to its realities. Yet he insists on occupying the position as grand poobah CEO of all of it, and ruling by edict. And his epic “fix” can be translated this way:

If you like your coverage, you can rent it. Maybe.

There are so many problems with what he said, it’s hard to know where to start — so let’s start with the absurdity of a one-year fix. That’s no fix. Even terminal cancer caregivers score being “fixed” in terms of a five-year survival. Besides, Obama’s 29 public pronouncements that you can “keep your insurance” were never mitigated with a “sell by” date. He hasn’t fixed Obamacare, and in fact, he hasn’t even fixed his “incorrect promise” by this. That promise depends, I guess, on what the meaning of “period” is.

And let’s consider this startling confession from the smartest man, the man with the sharpest pant crease — the most brilliant man to ever sit in the Oval Office — or for that matter, trod the soil of this humble planet: “What we’re also discovering is that insurance is complicated to buy.”

Shazam! Who knew?

Read more from this story HERE.

A Constitutional Strategy to Stop NSA Spying

Photo Credit: APThe National Security Agency looks at literally millions of phone records. It captures millions of e-mails. It sifts through millions of megabytes of private data.

And it does this all without following the requirements of the Fourth Amendment.

It can be stopped. How that can be done in a moment — but first, a closer look at current strategies and roadblocks.

Defending Itself

In a recent press release, one spokesperson went so far as to call criticism of the NSA a “disservice to the nation.”

NSA conducts all of its activities in accordance with applicable laws, regulations, and policies – and assertions to the contrary do a grave disservice to the nation, its allies and partners, and the men and women who make up the National Security Agency.

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8 Reasons The Republican Party Has A Bright Future

Photo Credit: Townhall Losing to Barack Obama in 2012 shook the confidence of many Republicans and it’s easy to understand why. After all, if you lose to the worst President in history, what does that say about you? Combine that with the frustrations so many conservatives have with the GOP and it’s easy to write off the Republican Party. However, it’s often darkest before the dawn and many people are missing the fact that the GOP is well positioned to thrive over the next couple of decades.

1) We have the most potent grassroots movement in politics: The GOP has the Tea Party Movement, while the Democrats HAD the Occupy Movement. The Tea Party Movement is about small government, cutting spending, and sticking to the Constitution. The Occupy Movement was about demanding free stuff and avoiding taking baths for weeks at a time. The greatest moment for the Tea Party was the GOP’s incredible success in the 2010 elections. The greatest moment for the Occupy Movement was when the occupiers were protesting Wall Street and a bunch of traders dumped hundreds of McDonald’s job applications on them out of a window. The Tea Party Movement is still alive and kicking. The Occupy crowd eventually gave it up when the rich liberals stopped sending the protesters free food and they ran out of open space to poop in the city parks.

2) 2010 was the GOP’s best year since 1948: It’s funny to hear, “The Republican Party can’t win anymore,” when the GOP had its best year since 1948 less than three years ago. In the 2010 election, the GOP added 6 Senate seats, 63 House seats, and 680 seats in state legislatures around the country. Does that sound like a party that can’t win any more? Does that sound like a party that’s dying?

Read more from this story HERE.