“Thus in the end the health care drama played out almost entirely within the Democratic Party. It was a multistage process.

Stage one involved the election campaign of a magnetic, personable intellectual named Barack Obama who corralled millions of voters into his camp by promising health care reform with a public option that would reduce costs without being an open giveaway to the drug and insurance industries.

Stage two: after getting elected, Obama invited said industries to the White House early on in the process and cut a private deal to reverse virtually all of his campaign promises in exchange for their support of the bill.

Stage three then involved pretending the deal hadn’t been made (the White House to this day denies that the PhRMA deal that Tauzin admitted to took place) and insisting instead that the bill Obama supported was not an industry giveaway but simply good policy - and to prove it, they moved to stage four, which was repeatedly citing the research of an MIT economist who received nearly a million dollars from the federal government. 

Stage five involved bullying their own ranks to lay off conservative Democrats and get in line behind a public relations campaign against a totally idiotic and irrelevant Republican-led protest movement.

Stages six through eight were blaming the Senate for taking all the good stuff out of the bill, buying off the remaining recalcitrant members for $100 million a piece, and then sauntering off into the sunset atop a multitrillion-dollar corporate welfare program that might further wreck an already wrecked system for a generation, but will keep Rahm Emanuel rolling in campaign contributions for, well, the next two electoral cycles.

And then of course there was stage nine - losing Ted Kennedy’s seat and having to use the reconciliation process after all, but not taking advantage of that process to improve the bill in any significant way.”

—Matt Taibbi, Griftopia

“Thus in the end the health care drama played out almost entirely within the Democratic Party. It was a multistage process.

Stage one involved the election campaign of a magnetic, personable intellectual named Barack Obama who corralled millions of voters into his camp by promising health care reform with a public option that would reduce costs without being an open giveaway to the drug and insurance industries.

Stage two: after getting elected, Obama invited said industries to the White House early on in the process and cut a private deal to reverse virtually all of his campaign promises in exchange for their support of the bill.

Stage three then involved pretending the deal hadn’t been made (the White House to this day denies that the PhRMA deal that Tauzin admitted to took place) and insisting instead that the bill Obama supported was not an industry giveaway but simply good policy - and to prove it, they moved to stage four, which was repeatedly citing the research of an MIT economist who received nearly a million dollars from the federal government. 

Stage five involved bullying their own ranks to lay off conservative Democrats and get in line behind a public relations campaign against a totally idiotic and irrelevant Republican-led protest movement.

Stages six through eight were blaming the Senate for taking all the good stuff out of the bill, buying off the remaining recalcitrant members for $100 million a piece, and then sauntering off into the sunset atop a multitrillion-dollar corporate welfare program that might further wreck an already wrecked system for a generation, but will keep Rahm Emanuel rolling in campaign contributions for, well, the next two electoral cycles.

And then of course there was stage nine - losing Ted Kennedy’s seat and having to use the reconciliation process after all, but not taking advantage of that process to improve the bill in any significant way.”

—Matt Taibbi, Griftopia

Posted 1 year ago Notes

Notes:

About:

|ikˈspre sh ən|
noun

1 the process of making known one's thoughts or feelings : his views found expression in his moral sermons | she accepted his expressions of sympathy.
• the conveying of opinions publicly without interference by the government : the right to freedom of expression.
• the look on someone's face that conveys a particular emotion : a sad expression.
• the ability to put an emotion into words : envious beyond expression.
• a word or phrase, esp. an idiomatic one, used to convey an idea : nowhere is the expression “garbage in, garbage out” any truer.
• the style or phrasing of written or spoken words : subtlety of expression.
• the conveying of feeling in the face or voice, in a work of art, or in the performance of a piece of music : eyes empty of expression | their instruments have a rich variety of expression.
• Mathematics a collection of symbols that jointly express a quantity : the expression for the circumference of a circle is 2πr.
• Genetics the appearance in a phenotype of a characteristic or effect attributed to a particular gene.
• (also gene expression) Genetics the process by which possession of a gene leads to the appearance in the phenotype of the corresponding character.

Following: