Tag Archives: politics

Charles Key Speaking on Religious Liberty to CWFA in OKC Oct 20th

Charles Key will be speaking at the Concerned Women for America (CWFA) conference on October 20th at The Church on the Rock in OKC at 1:30 PM.

Church on the Rock
1780 W. Memorial Rd.
Oklahoma City, OK 73134

His topic is Religious Liberty, The Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

Other speakers will include Sally Kern, Scott Pruitt, and James Lankford.

If anyone tapes it and posts it on youtube, please provide the link in comments and that will share with all!  With Charles Key, our champion of the Constitution it is always good and timely and entertaining too.  Be there in person if you can~

Posted by Sandra Crosnoe for R3publicans

Some States Planning to Opt out of Medicaid Program and More — Summary Report from Kaiser Health News

Medicaid Expansion Draws Mixed Reaction From States

JUL 03, 2012

In the wake of the Supreme Court ruling making the law’s Medicaid expansion optional, some state officials say they will opt out because they cannot afford even 10 percent of the program’s costs. Others, though, are moving forward.

Kaiser Health News: States Balk At Expanding Medicaid
Hours after the Supreme Court upheld President Barack Obama’s health law on Thursday, but made its Medicaid expansion optional, senior White House officials were asked by a reporter how they would entice states to participate. They laughed. It seemed almost inconceivable to them that states would opt out (Galewitz, 7/2).

The Wall Street Journal: Some States Balk At Medicaid Expansion
Opposition to expanding Medicaid under the health-care overhaul is hardening in some Republican-led states, as Gov. Rick Scott of Florida said over the weekend that he will opt out. His decision puts the former hospital executive at odds with state hospitals. Another half dozen Republican-led states—Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Wisconsin—say they, too, may opt out of widening eligibility for the federal-state insurance program for the poor starting in 2014 (Radnofsky, Mathews and McWhirter, 7/2).

The New York Times: Republican Governor Of Florida Says State Won’t Expand Medicaid
In another sign of resistance to President Obama’s health care overhaul, Gov. Rick Scott of Florida, a Republican, said Monday that his state would not expand its Medicaid program (Pear, 7/2).

Market Watch: Orszag Says Health Law’s Medicaid Extras Will In Time Win State Support
Several governors of states, notably in Florida, have already come out and said they will take advantage of the Supreme Court’s health care decision not to offer additional Medicaid coverage. That’s important because the changes to Medicaid are supposed to account for roughly half of the 30 million people who are supposed to get health-care coverage. But Peter Orszag, vice chairman of global banking at Citigroup and President Obama’s former director of the Office of Management and Budget, said Monday that he expects states will eventually change their mind (Goldstein, 7/2).

Politico Pro: 4 Ways States Might React To Medicaid Ruling
The states’ responses won’t be clear for some time. But here are four scenarios to watch. 1) Red states opt out: The right to sit out the Medicaid expansion was one reason the 26 states went to court in the first place. … 2) Red states make noise, but then take the money: The White House is hoping that most, if not all, of the 26 states will see that big heap of federal Medicaid money on the table –– and take it. … 3) States will try to negotiate their terms for the expansion — particularly by trying to have more control over the program. …4) Red states put some in Medicaid, punt the rest to exchanges (Kenen and Feder, 7/3).

Politico Pro: States Choosing Not To Opt Out Of Expansion
The Supreme Court ruling put a spotlight on red states resisting Medicaid expansion, but some states are quietly moving ahead with plans to cover a lot more of their low-income population. Washington state Medicaid Director Doug Porter has been asked many times since Thursday if his state was rethinking the expansion (Smith, 7/3).

The Hill: Fifteen Governors Reject Or Leaning Against Expanded Medicaid Program
At least 15 governors have indicated they will not participate in the expansion of Medicaid under the healthcare law, striking a blow to President Obama’s promise of broader insurance coverage. Before Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling, states had the option of either increasing their Medicaid rolls or being penalized by the federal government. The high court struck down that offer as unconstitutional. Governors still have a financial incentive to participate in the expansion of coverage for low-income people, since the government will foot most of the bill through 2016 (Viebeck, 7/3)?

Des Moines Register: Branstad Is Firm On Opposing Idea To Grow Medicaid
Gov. Terry Branstad reaffirmed his resistance to expanding Medicaid on Monday, a stance that could reject $800 million annually in federal money to cover 150,000 poor Iowans without health insurance. The Republican governor has long raised doubts about President Barack Obama’s plan to expand Medicaid, which now generally doesn’t cover poor adults who lack minor children or serious disabilities (Leys and Clayworth, 7/2).

NewsHour: In Wake Of Health Reform Decision Medicaid Expansion In The Crosshairs
Under the law, Washington would pick up 100 percent of the cost of bringing about 17 million Americans into the Medicaid program. By 2020, that would drop to 90 percent, with the states picking up 10 percent indefinitely. Some states see that as a good deal, and for good reason, said Genevieve Kenney, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute. … But since the law was signed in 2010, state and local governments across the country have been going broke under the weight of the sour economy and dwindling tax revenues. … Even at 10 cents on the dollar, some of those states are saying they simply can’t afford a Medicaid expansion (Bowser, 7/2).

Medpage Today: After Court Decision, All Eyes On States
While the court found the Medicaid expansion is constitutional, it ruled that the provision in the law that gives the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) the authority to financially penalize states that don’t comply with the expansion — by withholding federal Medicaid matching funds — is not constitutional. … For some states with very limited Medicaid programs, the 133% expansion could still come with significant costs, [one analyst] said. Not to mention that there is no guarantee that future congresses will continue to support the federal government footing most of the bill, he said (Walker, 7/2).

Meanwhile, it’s not just the Medicaid expansion that state officials are thinking about — exchanges are also getting consideration -

Kaiser Health News: States Already Taking Radically Different Approaches To Court Ruling
Three states – Mississippi, California and Texas — illustrate the range of approaches emerging in the wake of the court’s ruling. Here are the dispatches from NPR member station reporters (7/2).

Modern Healthcare: GOP Tells Governors Not To Set Up Exchanges
GOP lawmakers in both chambers started their July 4 recess by asking the nation’s governors not to implement the state health insurance exchanges required under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Reps. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) and Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) along with Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) have sent a letter to all 50 governors that urged the state leaders to oppose creating state exchanges that the federal lawmakers say impose a financial threat to strained state economies (Zigmond, 7/2).

Minnesota Public Radio: Bachmann And Conservatives Ask Governors To Reject Exchanges
With the Supreme Court’s ruling last week to uphold the Affordable Care Act, conservative opponents of the law lost their main line of argument that the ACA was an unconstitutional expansion of government power. Now, with the help of Republican U.S. Michele Bachmann, they’re urging governors to slow the implementation of the law by refusing to create the online health insurance markets known as exchanges that are one of the ACA’s key policies. In a letter sent to all 50 governors, Bachmann and other tea party-linked members of Congress argue that “implementation of this law is not inevitable” (Neely, 7/2).

This is part of Kaiser Health News’ Daily Report – a summary of health policy coverage from more than 300 news organizations. ….. Visit their home page.  Original post here >>>

Posted by Sandra Crosnoe for R3publicans (graphic added) Please note that this is a summary report with multiple sources — visit links to see entire articles.  Special thanks to Kaiser Health News for the summary report!

Oklahoma Primary Vote Reminder TODAY June 26th and PS just say NO to debt!

Say No to any more debt (or bonded indebtedness).  Your property taxes are going up now because of earlier debt you agreed to.  We as a community need to learn to live within our means.  We need to be a community that can thrive in difficult times as other cities fail under the weight of crushing debt.  Please do not enslave your children to pay for things you cannot afford with current revenue streams in your household or your church or your community.

Remember to vote today and please say NO to any more debt!

Posted by Sandra Crosnoe for R3publicans

Daughters of Liberty Talk about Liberty Then and Now

“Give me liberty or give me death!” Thomas Paine

anonymous contributor reposted with permission via

We have all heard the quote that titles this piece.  Some of us may have spoken it and in some sense, we meant it.  But what exactly does it mean and what made it a symbol of our country’s history?  In today’s world this is a group of words that form a sentence. Most of us acknowledge that it has some importance in our history, but not many of us really relate to it being a declaration from a large majority of The New World, from the 1700′s into the 1800′s. It is what has allowed us to have what we think we have today.

Today, I am focusing on how these liberties we all think we have are an illusion. What we have today is very similar to what our ancestors had in the mid 1700′s. I feel that we are actually worse off than they were, but I will get to that shortly. What we think we have are rights we ought to have. But what began as sneaking infringements in here and there has rapidly increased to an almost weekly event. Rights you think you still possess have been taken. Unless you are following the congress and senate session you have no idea, until after the votes are cast. Even after the votes most people have no idea that a new law has passed. The government doesn’t announce these loud and proud and they most certainly do not campaign on them. The mainstream media very rarely reports them, and even when they do, it is never really a major news story. It’s kind of like the brief mention of your local church’s potluck dinner, no real story is told.  I am going to tell that story and I encourage you to take time to research yourself. Until we all start being informed and caring about what is being voted on, and why they are voting on it to begin with,  we can do nothing effective to change it. I know that reading bills can be boring and mundane, but maybe that is their point. Make it so boring and long that “We the People” will not care to pay attention. That allows them to basically do what they want. If we were paying attention there is absolutely no way we would be where we are today!

In the early to mid  1700′s, America was still very much under the reign of the British Crown.  As the King and his Parliament bombarded America with laws and taxes and oppressive control, the people began to question the validity of a government with unlimited power.  The King said they were committing high treason. So are the people who gave us this nation guilty of treason in your eyes?  I want to lay out the laws that led to the turmoil. I will also lay out the way things changed and what they became. Then I will lay out what happened since those great documents that made us the United States of America were written. Then we can decide if liberty, as defined and as paid for with the blood of our founders, is still alive today.

Posted by Sandra Crosnoe for R3publicans

OKGrassroots

Ron Paul the Gold Standard of Presidential Politics at Reagan Dinner in Iowa on Nov 4th

Rand Paul introduces his father from long distance for this important dinner in Iowa. Ron Paul’s remarks include a few personal experiences with Ronald Reagan and a little insight into the gold standard, economic policy, foreign policy, and a strong national defense. He has recommended $1 Trillion in the first year of his presidency and eliminate 5 departments including the department of education. Enjoy his refreshing comments amidst a very friendly crowd at the Reagan dinner in Iowa.

Des Moines, Iowa

Hy-Vee Hall

November 4, 2011

Posted by Sandra Crosnoe for Finding Gems & Sharing Them

Cross-posted with  R3publicans