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Sunday, March 17, 2024
How to Change Your Psychology
Schadenfreude: Biden is flying into rages now against his staff
Joe Biden is not happy about his polling numbers.
According to NBC News, citing 20 anonymous staffers and allies:
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden was seething.
In a private meeting at the White House in January, allies of the president had just told him that his poll numbers in Michigan and Georgia had dropped over his handling of the war between Israel and Hamas.
Both are battleground states he narrowly won four years ago, and he can’t afford any backsliding if he is to once again defeat Donald Trump. He began to shout and swear, a lawmaker familiar with the meeting said.He believed he had been doing what was right, despite the political fallout, he told the group, according to the lawmaker.
...
For months, Democrats have watched the 2024 campaign unfold with rising alarm as the sitting president struggles to gain ground against his defeated predecessor. Frustrations rippling through the party have reached the top, with Biden at times second-guessing travel decisions and communications strategies that have left much of the electorate clueless about his record, interviews with nearly 20 lawmakers, present and past administration officials and Biden allies show.
That's got to be miserable stuff for staffers on the receiving end, particularly since, as NBC reports, they're taking the brunt of his out-of-control anger.
He's blaming his staff for many things, not just his bad poll numbers, which hover around 38% public approval at last reading, according to the NBC report, a number so low no president running for re-election in modern times has overcome them. Past presidents, such as Jimmy Carter and George Bush, Sr. were defeated on higher public approval ratings than Joe has. Nobody's as low as Joe.
Biden claims that his staff is "cocooning" him away from the public as if his many gaffes and physical stumbles weren't reason enough to do so.
Here's an icky quote from a staffer, which has public relations written all over it.
“The president and his advisers have all been eager for him to be out there more and planned for that to take place at the start of the election year, as has been the norm for past incumbents seeking re-election,” the second person familiar with the matter said.
Some of staff have complained that Biden is playing defense, trying to shore up his base, not trying to persuade new voters, which sounds about par, particularly since recent reports say he's hemorrhaging working class black and Latino voters who are moving to President Trump.
Others say he should be let out more often and walk faster, even though others still say he's falling flat on his face when he does.
Still others say he needs an army of surrogates to carry his message since he can't do it alone.
You can tell from the report that the staff don't know what to do, but there Biden is, raging at them for his miserable polling numbers.
NBC unquestioningly insists that Biden has a good economy to brag about and voters just don't get it.
That's where the real problem is. No, the economy is not good, and voters know it. Grocery and gas and heating prices are sharply higher while salaries are lower and housing is out of the question for many.
Illegals have taken many of the "jobs created" and if not illegals, legal immigrants, which sounds like replacement theory.
It's wretched stuff based on the world's most wretched presidential record. It frankly stinks.
But that's not where Biden is. He's bellowing at staff about why voters don't love him.
They will never be able to tell him the truth and he won't look for it. But look forward to staff resigning as he rages at them -- and lots of tell-all books.
Media whips out fake 'narrative' on Trump 'bloodbath'
They're at it again.
President Trump uses one figure of speech they don't like in a speech to supporters in the swing state of Ohio and all of a sudden we're supposed to head for the hills in mortal terror.
Here's how bad it's gotten, as The Guardian put it:
Trump’s Ohio address, ostensibly in support of Bernie Moreno, his preferred candidate in the state’s Republican Senate primary Tuesday, also saw the former president returning to darker, more apocalyptic themes.
The US, Trump insisted during comments about the auto workers and the car industry, was headed for “a bloodbath” if he was rejected again at the polls in favor of Biden.
“Now, if I don’t get elected, it’s gonna be a bloodbath. That’s going to be the least of it. It’s going to be a bloodbath for the country,” he said, without clarifying what he meant.
Later, he added: “I don’t think you’re going to have another election in this country, if we don’t win this election… certainly not an election that’s meaningful.”
His comments prompted a statement from Biden’s re-election campaign that said “this is who Donald Trump is”.
A Biden campaign spokesperson James Singer said: “He wants another January 6, but the American people are going to give him another electoral defeat this November because they continue to reject his extremism, his affection for violence, and his thirst for revenge.”
Dark, apocalyptic? Like this image of Joe Biden?

Speaking of apocalyptic.
Bloodbath, ooh, scary.
Here are the media clapping seals repeating their talking points:
Only the Daily Beast wrote an accurate headline, the rest were having too much fun with the word 'bloodbath' and sought to suggest voters there would be blood in the streets, Trump supposedly threatening violence (again).
Here's what the leftists who latched onto the word really had in mind with their latching onto that one word, this one let the cat out of the bag:
They want to extend their January 6 stunts into the present day, creating one, two, many Jack Smiths with which to topple Trump on the fake January 6 rap.
All it shows is that they know they can't beat Trump by elections, so now they're looking for that one magic disqualifying word and trying to run with the word 'bloodbath.'
It's pathetic.
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/03/media_whips_out_fake_narrative_on_trump_bloodbath.html
Post-acute healthcare provider PACS Group files for an estimated $500 million IPO
PACS Group, a post-acute care provider with more than 200 nursing facilities across the US, filed on Wednesday with the SEC to raise up to $100 million in an initial public offering. However, this is likely a placeholder for a deal we estimate could raise up to $500 million.
PACS Group is a post-acute healthcare company primarily focused on delivering skilled nursing care through a portfolio of independently operated facilities. The company states that it is one of the largest skilled nursing providers in the US by number of facilities, with 208 post-acute care facilities across nine states serving over 20,000 patients daily. PACS also provides senior care, assisted living, and independent living options in some of its communities.
The Farmington, UT-based company was founded in 2013 and booked $3.1 billion in revenue for the 12 months ended December 31, 2023. It plans to list on the NYSE under the symbol PACS. PACS Group filed confidentially on December 8, 2023. Citi, J.P. Morgan, Truist Securities, and RBC Capital Markets are the joint bookrunners on the deal. No pricing terms were disclosed.
Neuroscience and inflammation biotech Contineum Therapeutics files for a $150 million IPO
Contineum Therapeutics, a Phase 1 biotech developing small molecule therapies for NI&I indications, filed on Friday with the SEC to raise up to $150 million in an initial public offering.
Contineum Therapeutics is focused on discovering and developing novel, oral small molecule therapies for the treatment of neuroscience, inflammation, and immunology (NI&I) indications with high unmet need. Its wholly-owned lead asset, PIPE-791, is a novel, brain penetrant, small molecule inhibitor in development for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and progressive multiple sclerosis (Progressive MS). The company has completed a Phase 1 trial of PIPE-791 in healthy volunteers in both indications, and it plans to submit a Clinical Trial Authorization to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency to commence a Phase 1b open-label trial in 2024. Contineum is collaborating with Johnson & Johnson on its second candidate, PIPE-307, which has entered a Phase 2 trial in relapse remitting MS.
The San Diego, CA-based company was founded in 2009 and booked $50 million in license revenue for the 12 months ended December 31, 2023. It plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol CTNM. Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Stifel, and RBC Capital Markets are the joint bookrunners on the deal. No pricing terms were disclosed.
Israel considers use of private security contractors to protect Gaza aid ships: report
Israel is weighing the use of international private security contractors to help protect the humanitarian aid shipments arriving in Gaza, according to a report
Israeli officials have brought up the idea to the Biden administration. US officials are wary of having armed American troops or American security forces on the ground in the Palestinian enclave, officials familiar with the conversations told NBC News.
The Jewish State has allegedly already reached out to several security firms and brought up the idea of having other nations split the bill for the pricey contract work, the officials said.
The Israeli government declined to comment on the report.
The White House and State Department did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.
The discussions come after the US green-lit a plan to use more than 1,000 US troops and civilian personnel to construct a floating dock and pier system that would allow more aid to be delivered easily Gaza beaches.
It took about three days for the first shipment of nearly 200 tons of food to be towed to Gaza after leaving Cyprus last week, delivering much needed humanitarian aid to the nearly 2 million Palestinian refugees.
The World Central Kitchen charity built a temporary jetty to allow the flat-bottomed barge to approach Gaza to compensate for the current lack of a port, the Times of Israel reported.
Such aid would be delivered much faster with the US floating pier system, which would ferry food and aid to the shore and deliver as much as 2 million meals a day to the refugees, according to the Pentagon.
Biden, who announced the plan during his State of the Union address, has said Israel would need to provide security for the project, but defense officials told NBC that the specifics are still in the works.
Both Biden and the Pentagon have insisted that “no US boots will be on the ground.”
The shipments are aimed at curbing the rise of starvation spreading among Gazans, with the embattled UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees finding that one in three children under two years old in the Gaza Strip are acutely malnourished.
Medicaid program targets dead peoples’ homes to recoup health care costs
As Salvatore LoGrande fought cancer and all the pain that came with it, his daughters promised to keep him in the white, pitched roof house he worked so hard to buy all those decades ago.
So, Sandy LoGrande thought it was a mistake when, a year after her father’s death, Massachusetts billed her $177,000 for her father’s Medicaid expenses and threatened to sue for his home if she didn’t pay up quickly.
“The home was everything,” to her father said LoGrande, 57.
But the bill and accompanying threat weren’t a mistake.
Rather, it was part of a routine process the federal government requires of every state: to recover money from the assets of dead people who, in their final years, relied on Medicaid, the taxpayer-funded health insurance for the poorest Americans.
A person’s home is typically exempt from qualifying for Medicaid. But it is subject to the estate recovery process for those who were over 55 and used Medicaid to pay for long-term care such as nursing home stays or in-home health care.
This month, a Democratic lawmaker proposed scuttling the “cruel” program altogether. Critics argue the program collects too little — roughly 1% — of the more than $150 billion Medicaid spends yearly on long-term care. They also say many states fail to warn people who sign up for Medicaid that big bills and claims to their property might await their families once they die.
LoGrande says that’s how she ended up in a two-year legal battle with Massachusetts after her father died. Several years before he died in 2016, she had turned to a local nonprofit for advice on caring for her elderly father. The group suggested she sign him up for Medicaid. She even remembers asking about the house, but was assured the state would only seek the house if it sent her father to a nursing home.
“He never would have signed on with anything that would put his home in jeopardy,” she said.
For years, her father got an annual renewal notice from the state’s Medicaid office. She says it wasn’t until after his death, when the state’s demand for $177,000 arrived, that she saw the first bill for his care, which included a brief stint in the hospital for pain from cancer, medications and hospice.
“That’s what ripped my guts out,” LoGrande said. “It was dishonest.”
The state settled with the LoGrandes in 2019 and released its claim on the house.
State policies around this recovery process vary widely, according to a 2021 report from the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, which makes policy recommendations to Congress.
Some states will put a lien — a legal right — on a home while others don’t. Meanwhile, some Medicaid offices try to recoup all medical costs from patients, like doctor visits or prescriptions, while others just pursue the costs for long-term care. Alaska and Arizona pursued just dozens of properties in recent years while other states go after thousands of homes, totaling hundreds of millions of dollars.
New York and Ohio topped the country for such collections, recovering more than $100 million combined in a single year, a Dayton Daily News investigation found.
An investigation into the Kansas program, released Tuesday by the Health and Human Services inspector general, found that program was cost effective — yielding $37 million while only spending $5 million to recover the money, But the state didn’t always collect the money from estates that were eligible.
Last month, a foundation for one of the industry’s biggest health insurance giants called on Massachusetts to overhaul its process, which includes collecting reimbursement for most Medicaid costs, beyond the federal government’s minimum requirement to recover long-term care expenses. The Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of Massachusetts recommended the state Legislature pass a law that would prohibit those additional collections.
Estate recovery “has the potential to perpetuate wealth disparities and intergenerational poverty,” said Katherine Howitt, a Medicaid policy director with the foundation.
In Tennessee, which recovered more than $38.2 million from more than 8,100 estates last year, Imani Mfalme found herself in a similar predicament after her mother’s death in 2021.
As her mother’s early-onset Alzheimer’s worsened, Mfalme continued to care for her. But in 2015, when Mfalme was diagnosed with breast cancer and needed a double mastectomy, she started looking at other options. She hosted a meeting in her mother’s home with the local Medicaid office. The representative told her to drain her mother’s bank accounts – money Mfalme poured into assisted living facility payments for her mom – so her mother would qualify for the program.
She recalls being somewhat offended during the meeting after the representative asked her three times: “This is your mother’s home?” The representative, Mfalme said, made no mention that she could be forced to sell the house to settle her mother’s bill with Medicaid once she died.
Now, Tennessee’s Medicaid office says she owes $225,000 and the state is seeking a court order that would require Mfalme to sell the house to pay up.
Mfalme, now 42, said she wants to pay what she can, but the house is a particular pain point. Her mother, a Black woman, purchased her dream home in Knoxville after she won a landmark discrimination lawsuit against her former employer, Boeing, for paying her less than her male coworkers.
“She fought hard for equal pay and equal rights. Just to see that ripped away just because she was sick and I was sick, it’s just absolutely devastating,” Mfalme said of her mother.
TennCare, Tennessee’s Medicaid office, said in an email to The Associated Press that it would not comment on specific cases.
The Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission’s report recommended that Congress reverse the 1993 law that required states to recover money from estates, instead making it optional.
Earlier this month, Democratic Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Illinois reintroduced legislation that would end the federal government’s mandate. Schakowsky believes the rule is a losing proposition for families, who give up their homes, and taxpayers, who don’t see big returns from the recovery efforts.
“It is one of the most cruel, ineffective programs that we see,” Schakowsky told the AP. “This is a program that doesn’t work for anybody.”
In a gridlocked Congress, where some Republicans are clamoring to trim Medicaid entitlements, the bill is unlikely to garner the bipartisan support needed to become law.
There’s at least one person who acknowledges the rule isn’t working: the man who engineered it.
Many people don’t know about the decades-old mandate, which was intended to encourage people to save for long-term care — or risk losing the equity from their home, explained Stephen Moses, who now works for the conservative Paragon Health Institute.
“The plan here was to ensure that people who need long-term care can get it but that you plan ahead to be able to pay privately so you don’t end up on the public health care program,” Moses said.




