Fudging the Facts on Health Care and Deficits
Data sets and out-year projections may make everybody's eyes glaze over, but without accurate information, the end result of legislation is disaster. Today, there is no way to avoid fiscal ruin and social erosion unless we can determine whether health care reform will tame or swell deficits.
Yet the Republican leaders in Congress are now insisting on their own "facts" concerning health care and deficits, which directly contradict the careful studies of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). They have gone so far as to denigrate CBO, among the most respected agencies in Washington since its founding in 1974, by accusing its analysts of using "rigged" assumptions to reach its conclusions.
Why? The agency's conclusions are irritating to the Republicans, especially Speaker John Boehner and Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, because the CBO found that health care reform will reduce the federal deficit by more than $230 billion during the first decade after it goes into effect—and then by trillions of dollars in the decades that follow.
Boehner and Ryan Know Better But Won’t
Admit It
For Americans worried about the growing deficit,
that particular aspect of health care reform was no doubt obscured by all the
faked uproar over "death panels."
Now, however, with the question of deficit reduction
hanging over the new Congress, the Republicans feel obliged to address the
fiscal impact of their drive to repeal, defund and destroy health care reform.
They've chosen to do so by issuing their own 19-page rebuttal of the CBO analysis,
filled with accusations about budgetary "gimmicks,"
"double-counting" of revenue and omission of major costs—and the use
of "biased" assumptions imposed on the agency's analysts by the
Democrats who were in control when the bill passed.
But the truth is that Boehner has been around long
enough to understand that the CBO's methods are strictly neutral and indeed
bipartisan. As Paul N. Van de Water of the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities noted, in a detailed rebuttal of the attack on CBO, the agency's
reality-based analytical procedures were developed during the past three
decades by House and Senate Budget Committee members and staff, as well as
administration officials of both parties.
For the current crop of politicians to disparage
them is an insult to those honest efforts and an assault on the foundations of
government.
If all that seems too dry, too wonkish, too earnest,
then consider this: The present speaker and his cronies know that their
partisan attack on the CBO is patently hypocritical. Unless afflicted with
selective memory loss, they can surely remember that two years ago, the
Republicans and other opponents of reform were crowing loudly because the CBO
had found that the Senate Finance Committee's health care bill would increase
the deficit. Although Democrats grumbled, they accepted the CBO findings and
rewrote the bill extensively to ensure that it reduced the deficit, as
promised.
Consistency and integrity are important, not only as
basic values but also because without them we have no hope of achieving any
public objective. Politicians who knowingly seek to promote fraudulent numbers
and budgetary smoke cannot be trusted with our medicine or our money.
2011
Creators.com



Maybe we should just print off cash and give every American a million dollars. We could pay off our debts and start over. WHERE'S MY OBAMA CHECK?!!!!