More proof that this vote didn't mean anything, at least to liberal.  Juan
Williams said only old, white people voted for it.

Way to go Juan.  Another liberal injecting race into an issue.




LIZ CHENEY: You've also got Robert Gibbs this week when asked about what
does it mean that 71 percent of the people in Missouri said they don't want
any mandate for health insurance, he said, quote, "It means nothing." Now
when you've got a White House that is that unwilling to listen to what the
people out there are saying, I think that you know, it causes some real
concern about whether or not they are actually going to be responsive to the
voters. But, I think, frankly it gives the voters much bigger impetus come
November to elect some folks who will listen to him.

CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Juan?

JUAN WILLIAMS: I like George W. Bush, but the decider? I think, he's the one
that coined that phrase. He said he was the decider when he was president,
so I guess President Obama can be the decider now that he is president.
Isn't that the deal?

CHENEY: I don't think Bush ever said he got to decide who had the keys to
the scar.

WILLIAMS: Look, I think this is, and as far as the Missouri vote, you get 70
percent inside an echo chamber of older white people, no not in St. Louis
not in Kansas City, saying, "Oh yeah, we don't like a requirement that
everybody has to have healthcare even though the hospitals in Missouri say
it's gonna drive up our costs, everyone is just going to run to the
emergency rooms when they have their accidents."

WALLACE: What happened to respect for democracy?

WILLIAMS: I have tremendous respect for democracy, but as Ted Olson...

WALLACE: The proposition was on the ballot...

WILLIAMS: Yes.

WALLACE: ...and 71 percent voted in favor of it.

WILLIAMS: That's who's energized. The unions didn't participate and they
didn't get out there...

WALLACE: Well, that's their problem, isn't it?

WILLIAMS: Right, so because everybody knows, as Ted Olson told you in an
earlier segment on the gay rights issue, the courts, the courts have said
that federal law trumps state law in this area, or they will decide if it's
to be the case.

WALLACE: That has to do with immigration, we are talking about healthcare.

WILLIAMS: That is exactly right, Chris, on the issue, does, can a state say
that we will not require our citizens to buy health insurance? That issue is
right now being taken up by several attorney generals around the country in
seperate states, and, they will eventually end up in the courts. I hate to
inform you of this, you should know this as our anchor.

(Laughter)

CHENEY: It is a real constitutional issue whether or not the federal
government has the right to force people to buy insurance, and I think it is
stunning you and the White House are unwilling to heed the votes of the
people in Missouri.


J



-

Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms those entrusted with
power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny -
Thomas Jefferson on government


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