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Sunday, April 4, 2010

Obama 17 Minute Filibuster of Audience Tax Question with 2500 Word Answer

President Obama addressed the employees of a Charlotte, North Carolina battery manufacturer...still talking about health care. An employee named 'Doris' stood and asked him a question which gave him the perfect out. He talked for the next 17 minutes in a 2500 word response and never did answer her question. The man filibustered his own audience. As he droned on, some people in the back of the room left. Convenient for him. How many questions did he duck in those 17 minutes? See if you can find an answer to Doris' straight-forward question. [Note that our uninsured is up from his 30 million claim to 50 million].

[Is it a] 'wise decision to add more taxes to us with the health care....""We are over-taxed as it is," Doris said bluntly.
Obama started out feisty. "Well, let's talk about that, because this is an area where there's been just a whole lot of misinformation, and I'm going to have to work hard over the next several months to clean up a lot of the misapprehensions that people have," the president said.
He then spent the next 17 minutes and 12 seconds lulling the crowd into a daze. His discursive answer - more than 2,500 words long -- wandered from topic to topic, including commentary on the deficit, pay-as-you-go rules passed by Congress, Congressional Budget Office reports on Medicare waste, COBRA coverage, the Recovery Act and Federal Medical Assistance Percentages (he referred to this last item by its inside-the-Beltway name, "F-Map"). He talked about the notion of eliminating foreign aid (not worth it, he said). He invoked Warren Buffett, earmarks and the payroll tax that funds Medicare (referring to it, in fluent Washington lingo, as "FICA").

Always fond of lists, Obama ticked off his approach to health care -- twice. "Number one is that we are the only -- we have been, up until last week, the only advanced country that allows 50 million of its citizens to not have any health insurance," he said.
A few minutes later he got to the next point, which seemed awfully similar to the first. "Number two, you don't know who might end up being in that situation," he said, then carried on explaining further still.
"Point number three is that the way insurance companies have been operating, even if you've got health insurance you don't always know what you got, because what has been increasingly the practice is that if you're not lucky enough to work for a big company that is a big pool, that essentially is almost a self-insurer, then what's happening is, is you're going out on the marketplace, you may be buying insurance, you think you're covered, but then when you get sick they decide to drop the insurance right when you need it," Obama continued, winding on with the answer.
Halfway through, an audience member on the riser yawned.
But Obama wasn't finished. He had a "final point," before starting again with another list -- of three points. Read it all at The Washington Post.

©2007-2012copyrightMaggie M. Thornton