JohnG@lt wrote:
Are you going to call Scott Rasmussen a liar too?
Sort of...
"However, the Center for Public Integrity listed his firm as having been paid $95,500 by the Republican National Committee and $45,500 by the George W. Bush presidential campaign in 2003-4. He has had at least one article published by the Democratic Leadership Council, a group of centrist Democrats whose goal is to make the "Democratic party more moderate, rather than more liberal.
Republicans often use his polling to make their arguments. “Republicans right now are citing our polls more than Democrats because it’s in their interest to do so,” Scott Rasmussen said. “I would not consider myself a political conservative — that implies an alignment with Washington politics that I don’t think I have.”
But in the early days of his polling firm, when it was named Rasmussen Research, Rasmussen advocated for conservative views. For a short time around the 2000 elections Scott Rasmussen wrote a column for WorldNetDaily, which describes itself as an "Independent conservative news website with an emphasis on aggressive investigative reporting".http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_RasmussenHere is an archive to sift through written by Rasmussen for WND.
http://www.wnd.com/news/archives.asp?AUTHOR_ID=14But hey... I'll play this poll game. Let's look at a recent Rasmussen poll about Massachusetts healthcare.
"Twenty percent (20%) now say that the state’s reform effort has made health care more affordable while 31% say just the opposite. Thirty-nine percent (39%) believe it’s had no impact on prices and 11% are not sure.
Sixteen percent (16%) say the Massachusetts reform has improved the quality of care in the state while 24% believe the quality of health care in the state has gotten worse. Most, 51%, say there has been no impact on the quality of care."http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_ … _a_successSo, a lot of people apparently aren't sure what to think of the Mass. plan.
Let's take a look at some Gallup polls.
"In all three countries, there is great variation of opinion within the population on both the quality of medical care and the availability of affordable healthcare. It is a testament to national health systems that people in Canada and Great Britain are significantly more satisfied with availability of affordable healthcare than their American counterparts are.
In Great Britain, satisfaction with access to affordable healthcare (43%) is consistent with satisfaction with quality (42%). In Canada, satisfaction with access to affordable healthcare (57%) is slightly higher than satisfaction with quality (52%). But the most dramatic variation in satisfaction with these two facets of the healthcare system occurs in the United States, where only 25% are satisfied with the availability of affordable healthcare, but 48% are satisfied with quality. Once again, this dichotomy seems to support the hypothesis that private healthcare encourages high-quality standards, but may be a barrier to access and affordability.
On a less relative basis, the fact that 72% of Americans say they are dissatisfied with the availability of affordable healthcare, and 50% are dissatisfied with the quality of medical care are cause for concern. Regardless of how these numbers measure up to those in Canada and Great Britain, they indicate that the U.S. healthcare system has considerable room for improvement."http://www.gallup.com/poll/8056/healthc … anada.aspxSo, apparently, Americans don't like the current system, and other polls say that Americans don't want socialized care. Could it just be that Americans will bitch no matter what the system is? Canada and the U.K. seem a lot more pleased with their systems. They seem to have some bitchers too, but they make up less of the populations there, it would appear.
JohnG@lt wrote:
It WAS a referendum on health care because the national health care bill currently sitting in the House is almost a carbon copy of the system that is established in Massachusetts, right down to the fines for non-compliance. It's called RomneyCare up there...
See, I don't think that's really what's going on. I think it was a referendum on the fickleness of public opinion in America. One minute they praise Obama, the next they hate him. Right now, they'll praise Brown, but give him more power and a little time, and they'll be bitching about him too.
In short, maybe Phil Gramm was right after all... Maybe we really are a nation of whiners.
Last edited by Turquoise (2010-01-22 18:41:10)