Uh-oh, don't look now but the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett, says it's time to scrap ObamaCare and start over. “Attack the costs first and then worry about expanding coverage,” he told Money Morning. Bottom line: If President Obama has lost the usually ardent support of Mr. Buffett, ObamaCare is a lost cause. [Bolding in original]Uh-oh, don't look now but the crack research team at the Trib has done it again - or rather failed to do it. Adequate research, that is.
Take a look at this from the Scaife supported Newsbusters:
When Warren Buffett proposed higher taxes on millionaires in 2011, the media gushed and fawned giving him and his views airtime as if Elvis Presley returned from the dead.Before moving on, let's all note the use of the phrase "Oracle of Obama." Good clue that this was the braintrust's source for their Thursday Wrap blurb. Anyway, Newsbusters then quotes the Monday Morning piece:
Will they be as fascinating by the Oracle of Omaha stating that ObamaCare should be scrapped? [Emphasis added.]
"Attack the costs first, and then worry about expanding coverage," he said.And so on.
So what's the problem?
This is the problem for the Trib. It's what's posted above the story at Newsbusters:
Executive editor's note: Due to an error made by a secondary source, the piece below incorrectly claimed that Warren Buffett had called for the repeal of Obamacare in 2013. The interview which was cited actually took place in 2010. We regret the error.[Emphasis added.]In fact, the Money Morning piece that Scaife's own Newsbusters page links to no longer contains that "Attack the costs..." quotation.
So let's sum up. The Scaife's braintrust at the Trib uses a quote to assert that Warren Buffet thinks that "Obamacare should be scrapped" while another Scaife supported "news" source corrects itself and says that it's piece (one that used the same quotation) was incorrect in saying exactly the same thing.
Oh, and that "Attack the costs..." line was actually from 2010.
If you can't even get this stuff right, then what good are you at all?
Then there's this:
The New York Post reports that under ObamaCare, doctors will be required to ask you “Are you sexually active?” and “If so, with one partner, multiple partners or same-sex partners?” To which any true-blue American should respond, “Tell the president it's none of his (expletive deleted) business.”What they didn't tell you is that it wasn't a report from the Post, it was a column by Betsy McCaughey.
And as Wonkette points out:
If there’s anyone we can trust for her expertise on health care policy, it’s Betsy McCaughey, the genius who decided that if Medicare pays for seniors to meet with a doctor to discuss living wills, that’s a DEATH PANEL.And then Mediamatters elaborates:
As Wonkette pointed out, McCaughey offered no evidence for her claims that the ACA changes existing practices. In fact, despite her fearmongering, sexual history questions are routine medical practice. The Centers For Disease Control calls such questions "an important part of a regular medical exam or physical history" and recommends that "[a] sexual history needs to be taken during a patient's initial visit, during routine preventive exams, and when you see signs of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)." In fact, the very questions that McCaughey claims doctors will now be pressured to ask are the exact questions the CDC recommends doctors ask their patients.It's always amazing to me how Scaife's braintrust can get so much absolutely wrong in such a tiny space. But once you fully grasp the depth and breadth of their various mendacities, how can you trust anything they have to say?
In a post on The Incidental Economist, Aaron Carroll, a professor of pediatrics and director of the Center for Health Policy and Professionalism Research, accused McCaughey of inventing inaccurate "reasons to dislike Obamacare," pointing out that doctors ask about sexual history "because having multiple sexual partners greatly increases your risk of sexually transmitted infections. They're looking out for my health, and want to advise me best on how to manage it."
http://www.urban.org/publications/412894.html
ReplyDeleteHere's a perspective on a few of your recent posts. The study is an interesting read.