Re: [CTRL] FWD: MRC's Bozell on Patients Bill of Rights

1999-07-23 Thread Bill

 -Caveat Lector-

Yes and it is filth and it is disgusting.  It is
Psychological Warfare pure and simple.  Look at it, know it
for that, and its very easy to see.  Concerted Efforts at
Mind Control.

"A.C. Szul Jr." wrote:

  -Caveat Lector-

 FYI, interesting observations by Media Research Center's Chair, Brent
 Bozell, on TV/media coverage of PBR. No wonder there are folks out there
 complaining about HMOs, especially after they're fed such filth by the
 major news networks. [Isn't it something like 70% of folks who get their

 news from the evening news broadcasts?]
 MRC [http://www.mediaresearch.org/] is a media watchdog group.
 -A

   *Touting A "Patients' Bill Of Rights"
 
   By L. Brent Bozell III
   July 22, 1999
 
   The first fight in any political debate is over semantics. Who
 could be against the "Clean
   Air Act"? Who could oppose controlling "assault weapons"? The
 "right to choose"? The
   800-pound gorilla in the semantics debate is, of course, the
 "objective" press. The
   media have the power to make or break the slogans partisans use.
 
   It is common practice for the liberal press to attach the word
 "so-called" to GOP
   initiatives. When the Contract with America became the "so-called
 Contract with
   America" in news reports, its proponents were placed squarely on
 the defensive. So
   prevalent is the "so-called" curse that the media now attach it
 to organizations
   themselves, thus bringing doubt to bear not on the issues, but on
 the participants. When
   Dan Rather files a story about the "so-called Christian
 Coalition," it's a clear message to
   the viewer not to believe the group, period.
 
   The Democrats, on the other hand, have no such problem. Whatever
 they say, and
   however they put it, is accepted immediately. The latest semantic
 manipulation in the
   Democrats' favor is the "patients' bill of rights." The vast
 majority of press reports from
   the Senate debate on regulating health maintenance organizations
 refer without quotes to
   a "bill of rights," which offers "protections" for patients and
 doctors against mean,
   cost-cutting HMO bureaucrats. The Democrats are the champions of
 this
   wonderful-sounding idea and the Republicans who oppose it, are
 well, monsters. So the
   Republicans have (again) knuckled under with a watered-down
 version, since who
   would want to be against "rights" or "protections"? In USA Today,
 reporter William
   Welch began: "Senate Republicans, ending a week of bitter
 partisan debate late
   Thursday, approved a limited set of federal rights for patients
 in managed care health
   plans."
 
   Reporters ought to be dropping "so-called" into sentences like
 this. First, what are
   patients' rights? To hear the typical Democrat talk, a patient
 has the right to walk into a
   hospital and order whatever procedure he wants, and cost is no
 object.
 
   The "patients' bill of rights" is a completely perverse abuse of
 terminology, a direct
   opposite to our classic understanding of individual rights,
 specifically the right to
   property. What the Democrats are supporting here is their classic
 understanding of an
   "entitlement," something that everybody should have no matter how
 much everybody
   "else" pays. If Republicans weren't duck-and-cover types, they'd
 call this the "patients'
   bill of entitlements." And if the media weren't so blinded by
 their support of the
   Democrats, it might occur to them, too.
 
   The media also tell us that this "bill of rights" is being
 advocated by "consumer groups,"
   while those who oppose it are simply bought and paid for by the
 insurance industry.
   Now consider these "consumer groups." Many of these groups, like
 Families USA, are
   strident left-wing advocacy groups who would love to see
 Canadian-style single-payer
   health care installed in the United States. Do they favor
 "consumers" or some hidden
   agenda?
 
   Question: If insurance groups are protecting their profits and
 "buying" politicians, then
   who's "buying" the Democrats? You'll never see the press
 investigate that one.
   Reporters are not explaining how the Democrats' push for a right
 to sue HMOs is a
   favor to one of their biggest donor groups, the trial lawyers.
 Somehow, the trial lawyers'
   push for expensive litigation puts them among the "consumer
 groups," too.
 
   By contrast, note how quickly CBS reporter Bob Schieffer puts the
 Republicans in
   someone's pocket: "Pushed by the big insurance companies, the
 Republican majority
   stuck together as expected and killed the Democrats' HMO reform
 plan, plank by
   plank. On near party line votes, Republicans killed the
 Democratic proposal to give
   doctors, not insurance companies, the final say on treatment."
 

[CTRL] FWD: MRC's Bozell on Patients Bill of Rights

1999-07-22 Thread A.C. Szul Jr.

 -Caveat Lector-

FYI, interesting observations by Media Research Center's Chair, Brent
Bozell, on TV/media coverage of PBR. No wonder there are folks out there
complaining about HMOs, especially after they're fed such filth by the
major news networks. [Isn't it something like 70% of folks who get their

news from the evening news broadcasts?]
MRC [http://www.mediaresearch.org/] is a media watchdog group.
-A

  *Touting A "Patients' Bill Of Rights"

  By L. Brent Bozell III
  July 22, 1999

  The first fight in any political debate is over semantics. Who
could be against the "Clean
  Air Act"? Who could oppose controlling "assault weapons"? The
"right to choose"? The
  800-pound gorilla in the semantics debate is, of course, the
"objective" press. The
  media have the power to make or break the slogans partisans use.

  It is common practice for the liberal press to attach the word
"so-called" to GOP
  initiatives. When the Contract with America became the "so-called
Contract with
  America" in news reports, its proponents were placed squarely on
the defensive. So
  prevalent is the "so-called" curse that the media now attach it
to organizations
  themselves, thus bringing doubt to bear not on the issues, but on
the participants. When
  Dan Rather files a story about the "so-called Christian
Coalition," it's a clear message to
  the viewer not to believe the group, period.

  The Democrats, on the other hand, have no such problem. Whatever
they say, and
  however they put it, is accepted immediately. The latest semantic
manipulation in the
  Democrats' favor is the "patients' bill of rights." The vast
majority of press reports from
  the Senate debate on regulating health maintenance organizations
refer without quotes to
  a "bill of rights," which offers "protections" for patients and
doctors against mean,
  cost-cutting HMO bureaucrats. The Democrats are the champions of
this
  wonderful-sounding idea and the Republicans who oppose it, are
well, monsters. So the
  Republicans have (again) knuckled under with a watered-down
version, since who
  would want to be against "rights" or "protections"? In USA Today,
reporter William
  Welch began: "Senate Republicans, ending a week of bitter
partisan debate late
  Thursday, approved a limited set of federal rights for patients
in managed care health
  plans."

  Reporters ought to be dropping "so-called" into sentences like
this. First, what are
  patients' rights? To hear the typical Democrat talk, a patient
has the right to walk into a
  hospital and order whatever procedure he wants, and cost is no
object.

  The "patients' bill of rights" is a completely perverse abuse of
terminology, a direct
  opposite to our classic understanding of individual rights,
specifically the right to
  property. What the Democrats are supporting here is their classic
understanding of an
  "entitlement," something that everybody should have no matter how
much everybody
  "else" pays. If Republicans weren't duck-and-cover types, they'd
call this the "patients'
  bill of entitlements." And if the media weren't so blinded by
their support of the
  Democrats, it might occur to them, too.

  The media also tell us that this "bill of rights" is being
advocated by "consumer groups,"
  while those who oppose it are simply bought and paid for by the
insurance industry.
  Now consider these "consumer groups." Many of these groups, like
Families USA, are
  strident left-wing advocacy groups who would love to see
Canadian-style single-payer
  health care installed in the United States. Do they favor
"consumers" or some hidden
  agenda?

  Question: If insurance groups are protecting their profits and
"buying" politicians, then
  who's "buying" the Democrats? You'll never see the press
investigate that one.
  Reporters are not explaining how the Democrats' push for a right
to sue HMOs is a
  favor to one of their biggest donor groups, the trial lawyers.
Somehow, the trial lawyers'
  push for expensive litigation puts them among the "consumer
groups," too.

  By contrast, note how quickly CBS reporter Bob Schieffer puts the
Republicans in
  someone's pocket: "Pushed by the big insurance companies, the
Republican majority
  stuck together as expected and killed the Democrats' HMO reform
plan, plank by
  plank. On near party line votes, Republicans killed the
Democratic proposal to give
  doctors, not insurance companies, the final say on treatment."
Schieffer also brought on
  the new president of the American Medical Association to express
his outrage.

  But do you remember five years ago, when the AMA and those people
complaining
  about choice for doctors were the cavemen who opposed the Clinton
health plan? If the
  Clintons had their way then, those same doctors 

[CTRL] Fw: [CTRL] FWD: MRC's Bozell on Patients Bill of Rights

1999-07-22 Thread Amelia Edgeman

 -Caveat Lector-

So, the press could have a liberal slant after all.  Hhuum. . .
Amelia
who has said so for years but is always surprised when folks do not see it.


- Original Message -
From: A.C. Szul Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 1999 11:52 PM
Subject: [CTRL] FWD: MRC's Bozell on "Patients Bill of Rights"


 -Caveat Lector-

 FYI, interesting observations by Media Research Center's Chair, Brent
 Bozell, on TV/media coverage of PBR. No wonder there are folks out there
 complaining about HMOs, especially after they're fed such filth by the
 major news networks. [Isn't it something like 70% of folks who get their

 news from the evening news broadcasts?]
 MRC [http://www.mediaresearch.org/] is a media watchdog group.
 -A

   *Touting A "Patients' Bill Of Rights"
 
   By L. Brent Bozell III
   July 22, 1999
 
   The first fight in any political debate is over semantics. Who
 could be against the "Clean
   Air Act"? Who could oppose controlling "assault weapons"? The
 "right to choose"? The
   800-pound gorilla in the semantics debate is, of course, the
 "objective" press. The
   media have the power to make or break the slogans partisans use.
 
   It is common practice for the liberal press to attach the word
 "so-called" to GOP
   initiatives. When the Contract with America became the "so-called
 Contract with
   America" in news reports, its proponents were placed squarely on
 the defensive. So
   prevalent is the "so-called" curse that the media now attach it
 to organizations
   themselves, thus bringing doubt to bear not on the issues, but on
 the participants. When
   Dan Rather files a story about the "so-called Christian
 Coalition," it's a clear message to
   the viewer not to believe the group, period.
 
   The Democrats, on the other hand, have no such problem. Whatever
 they say, and
   however they put it, is accepted immediately. The latest semantic
 manipulation in the
   Democrats' favor is the "patients' bill of rights." The vast
 majority of press reports from
   the Senate debate on regulating health maintenance organizations
 refer without quotes to
   a "bill of rights," which offers "protections" for patients and
 doctors against mean,
   cost-cutting HMO bureaucrats. The Democrats are the champions of
 this
   wonderful-sounding idea and the Republicans who oppose it, are
 well, monsters. So the
   Republicans have (again) knuckled under with a watered-down
 version, since who
   would want to be against "rights" or "protections"? In USA Today,
 reporter William
   Welch began: "Senate Republicans, ending a week of bitter
 partisan debate late
   Thursday, approved a limited set of federal rights for patients
 in managed care health
   plans."
 
   Reporters ought to be dropping "so-called" into sentences like
 this. First, what are
   patients' rights? To hear the typical Democrat talk, a patient
 has the right to walk into a
   hospital and order whatever procedure he wants, and cost is no
 object.
 
   The "patients' bill of rights" is a completely perverse abuse of
 terminology, a direct
   opposite to our classic understanding of individual rights,
 specifically the right to
   property. What the Democrats are supporting here is their classic
 understanding of an
   "entitlement," something that everybody should have no matter how
 much everybody
   "else" pays. If Republicans weren't duck-and-cover types, they'd
 call this the "patients'
   bill of entitlements." And if the media weren't so blinded by
 their support of the
   Democrats, it might occur to them, too.
 
   The media also tell us that this "bill of rights" is being
 advocated by "consumer groups,"
   while those who oppose it are simply bought and paid for by the
 insurance industry.
   Now consider these "consumer groups." Many of these groups, like
 Families USA, are
   strident left-wing advocacy groups who would love to see
 Canadian-style single-payer
   health care installed in the United States. Do they favor
 "consumers" or some hidden
   agenda?
 
   Question: If insurance groups are protecting their profits and
 "buying" politicians, then
   who's "buying" the Democrats? You'll never see the press
 investigate that one.
   Reporters are not explaining how the Democrats' push for a right
 to sue HMOs is a
   favor to one of their biggest donor groups, the trial lawyers.
 Somehow, the trial lawyers'
   push for expensive litigation puts them among the "consumer
 groups," too.
 
   By contrast