A handy website that tells you which page you should be on if you're to read the whole bill before the committee vote on it.
It also has handy page and section references to important parts of the bill for those of us who do things like sleep, eat and work instead of reading 2000 page health care bills; things like Page 872--Section 1433 requires the director of food services at nursing facilities participating in Medicare and Medicaid to hold "military, academic, or other qualifications" as determined by federal bureaucrats.
Hurry up! Only 1 day, 13 hours and 17 minutes left!
Posted by MarkGriswold at November 05, 2009 07:51 AM | Email ThisYes, it'd be nice if bills were in plain English, I agree. That does happen on the Finance committee and the GOP still sought to delay things for weeks. The GOP tactic is to delay, delay, delay, and kill. There's nothing wrong with that, but please stop pretending like you actually need time to study the bill. You've already decided you're against it.
BTW, the site is basically bull. The bill was released last week. A small amendment was added recently that clears up some language and changes a funding source (since the Senate used that source in their unemployment legislation). To say there's only three days to catch up on the health care bill is a GOP distortion. Every time we amend the bill, do we need to delay the process by a week?
Posted by: John Jensen on November 5, 2009 09:44 AM...And that is a complete lie. Anything bigger than small employers aren't even allowed on the health care exchange where the public option lives.
Posted by: John Jensen on November 5, 2009 09:46 AMIf the Dems would quit changing the language and text of the bill more than they change their underwear there might actually have been time to read the fool thing. It is hard to hit a moving target, and the Dems seem to want everyone to be ignorant of the actual contents.
Posted by: FurryOldGuyJeans on November 5, 2009 09:51 AMSomeone explain to me how 2000+ pages of complex and arcane legal prose will reduce costs?
Wait, legislation CHANGES while it's been developed? It's almost like the real world is complex and the GOP is trying to greatly simplify things to make an irate base even more pissed off.
The same thing happens with all pieces of legislation. The only difference is that you're paying attention to this one, and the GOP is exploiting that to piss people off.
Jack, Someone explain to me how 2000+ pages of complex and arcane legal prose will reduce costs?
By enacting policies that will reduce costs. Every single bill ever signed has "complex and arcane legal prose." If that were the standard of how effective a law is, then we shouldn't have passed the PATRIOT Act or any other Bush legislative priority.
Posted by: John Jensen on November 5, 2009 10:05 AMThese 2000+ pages are being promoted as doing so.
I've skimmed over at least 75% of these pages. The devil in the details matter. There are many many many obscure, open to interpretation-type passages in this text.
Again, how will 2000 pages of new regulations, many of which are clearly ambiguous, not result in a significant administrative burden on government and the private sector?
I will acknowledge, it is indeed a jobs bill - for bureaucrats.
Posted by: Jack Turk on November 5, 2009 10:18 AMCome on Jack. It's long and in legalese specifically because it is... specific. It's just dense and hard to read for you and I.
Posted by: John Jensen on November 5, 2009 10:35 AMIf you're so confident that it's the right choice, then why are you guys afraid to require it be read and understood by those who vote on it?
Wouldn't the quality of the law be better that way? Or is it possible that if people who currently support it knew what was in it, they might not support it anymore?
Posted by: Andrew Brown on November 5, 2009 11:05 AM