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Tuesday, November 12, 2024

"America's Enemies Are On Notice" - Bronze Star Recipient, Fox News Host Pete Hegseth For SecDef

 President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday nominated veteran, author, and Fox News host Pete Hegseth as the Secretary of Defense for his second administration.

Hegseth, who has spent the past eight years as a host on Fox News' "FOX & Friends Weekend," has been a major advocate for veterans and the military.

"I am honored to announce that I have nominated Pete Hegseth to serve in my Cabinet as The Secretary of Defense," President-Elect Trump wrote in a statement on X. (emphasis ours)

"Pete has spent his entire life as a Warrior for the Troops, and for the Country.

Pete is tough, smart and a true believer in America First. With Pete at the helm, America’s enemies are on notice - Our Military will be Great Again, and America will Never Back Down.

Pete is a graduate of Princeton University, and has a Graduate Degree from Harvard University.

He is an Army Combat Veteran who did tours in Guantanamo Bay, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

For his actions on the battlefield, he was decorated with two Bronze Stars, as well as a Combat Infantryman’s Badge.

Pete has been a host at FOX News for eight years, where he used that platform to fight for our Military and Veterans."

Trump also commented in his statement on Hegseth's best-selling book, which advocated for veterans:

Pete’s recent book, “The War on Warriors,” spent nine weeks on the New York Times best-sellers list, including two weeks at NUMBER ONE.

The book reveals the leftwing betrayal of our Warriors, and how we must return our Military to meritocracy, lethality, accountability, and excellence.

Pete has also led two Veterans Advocacy organizations, leading the fight for our Warriors, and our great Veterans.

Nobody fights harder for the Troops, and Pete will be a courageous and patriotic champion of our "Peace through Strength” policy."

The Hill reports that Fox News confirmed Hegseth’s deal with the network ended on Tuesday and he will not host its popular morning program “Fox and Friends Weekend,” a program he had presided over since 2017.

“Pete Hegseth has been an exceptional host on FOX & Friends and FOX Nation and a best-selling author for FOX News Books for nearly a decade,” a spokesperson for the cable channel said.

“His insights and analysis especially about the military resonated deeply with our viewers and made the program the major success that it is today. We are extremely proud of his work at FOX News and wish him the best of luck in Washington.”

Trump’s pick of Hegseth was somewhat unexpected, as his name had not been circulated among those likely to be considered for the job, but his resumé speaks for itself.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/americas-enemies-are-notice-trump-taps-bronze-star-recipient-fox-news-host-pete-hegseth

"Warrior For Truth & Honesty" - Trump Names John Ratcliffe As CIA Director

 President-elect Donald Trump has announced he has selected John Ratcliffe as director of the CIA.

“John Ratcliffe has always been a warrior for Truth and Honesty with the American Public,” Trump wrote in a message sent on the evening of Nov. 12, the latest in a flurry of Tuesday evening appointments.

“I look forward to John being the first person ever to serve in both of our Nation’s highest Intelligence positions.

He will be a fearless fighter for the Constitutional Rights of all Americans, while ensuring the Highest Levels of National Security, and PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH."

Ratcliffe, an attorney, served as director of national intelligence during the first Trump term.

As Nathan Worcester reports, via The Epoch Times, Ratcliffe was previously a Republican congressman from Texas and an anti-terrorism and national security chief for Eastern Texas.

Originally from Illinois, Ratcliffe earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Notre Dame before obtaining a law degree from Southern Methodist University.

He was later U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Texas and, from 2004 until 2012, mayor of Heath, Texas, a community in metro Dallas-Fort Worth.

While in Congress, he was a member of the House Intelligence Committee and the House Judiciary Committee.

During Trump’s first term, Ratcliffe made a name for himself as a staunch Trump loyalist.

Trump dropped an early attempt to elevate Ratcliffe to the director of national intelligence position in 2019.

But the following year, he renewed the effort, nominating him in May against the backdrop of the COVID-19 response.


Stop Diverting Taxpayer Dollars Away from Patient Care

 MarketWatch recently reported that Trump’s victory in the 2024 presidential election contributed to a decline in many publicly traded healthcare stocks. Might U.S. patients have a reason to smile?

It depends.

The price of any stock, whether pork bellies or healthcare, is driven by expected future earnings. The more profit a company is projected to earn, the more people will pay for the stock, expecting higher returns.

Presumably, the executives at “Big Pharma,” viz., Eli Lilly and Pfizer, and major insurers like Healthcare Corporation of America (HCA) and Tenet believe that a Trump presidency along with Republican control of the Senate and possibly the House, will hurt profit margins.  

Insurance profits

Rates for insurance premiums – insurers’ income – are driven by government regulations given the dominant role that government bureaucrats have in the negotiated premiums. Insurers’ income is thus largely determined by the number of people who purchase their policies. Insurers’ expenses are driven by federal “allowable” reimbursement schedules and actuarially predictable medical needs.

To generate profits, insurance carriers use the “3D” strategy: delay, defer, and deny payment to providers through multiple review procedures, and claiming a necessary treatment is experimental. This strategy is highly effective as health insurance has been one of the most profitable industries. By creating profit using the 3D strategy, insurers reduce patients’ access to medical care measured by lengthening wait times for care.

The drop in stock prices seems to signal a belief that health insurance profits will decline with Republican control of executive and legislative branches of government. If profits rise by reducing care, might the converse happen? Could shrinkage of insurance profits direct more money to care providers and thereby increase access?  If so, Americans would have cause to smile.

Pharmaceutical profit

Prior to COVID-19, pharmaceutical profits were influenced greatly by government actions but also by market forces. As more consumers decided to buy their products, “Big Pharma” made money. That changed with COVID-19. They received substantial funds from Congress through the negotiations by the Trump administration and Congress to help speed up the vaccine process. The amounts paid to these companies increased after the vaccine was ready and Trump urged everyone to get one. But when pharmaceutical manufacturers convinced the Biden administration to mandate injection of all Americans with their experimental genetic treatment falsely called a vaccine, they became rent-seekers. Instead of their products being subjected to market forces, the government paid them a guaranteed fixed price for hundreds of millions of doses.

Billions of dollars in healthcare spending were diverted from paying care providers to Pfizer, Eli Lilly, et al for a medically adverse and ineffective medication all Americans were ordered to take. More “healthcare” spent on corporate profits and thus less money available for patient care. With COVID-19 rent-seeking over and pharmaceutical stock prices down, might more money be diverted back to actual patient care?

A second, non-monetary adverse effect of the Big Pharma diversionary scheme was their loss in credibility. As a result of their data distortion and fabrication, censorship, and injecting the public with harmful substances, Americans began to distrust all vaccines, driving down the acceptance rate for all vaccines, not merely the mRNA COVID-19 jab.

Bureaucratic “profit”

While healthcare companies divert billions from patient care to private profits, government bureaucracy diverts trillions!

Last year, federal spending on the healthcare system in America was $4.8 trillion[VG1] . Thirty-one percent to more than 50 percent of this went to pay for BARRCOME: bureaucracy, administration, rules, regulations, compliance, oversight, mandates, and enforcement. Thus, Washington diverted $1.5 tr to $2.4 tr from paying for Americans’ medical care to paying...itself.

When unsuccessful candidate V.P. Harris recently promised to provide “free” home health services to Medicare benefits, to pay for it they cut payments to physicians by 2.9 percent. More benefits on paper and more money to insurance companies – less real care provided.

Seesaw effect

When healthcare dollars go to corporate profits, provide no-charge government insurance (Medicaid), or pay for BARRCOME, fewer dollars are available to pay for patient care. This “seesaw effect” – nonclinical healthcare spending up, access to medical care down – has been well demonstrated in Medicaid. It is equally true for Medicare. President Obama’s signature healthcare legislation, the falsely labeled Affordable Care Act (ACA), took at least $716 billion out of the Medicare Trust Fund intended to pay for seniors’ hospital care and used those funds to pay for ACA infrastructure.  

Conclusion

Hopefully, President-elect Trump, possibly aided by Elon Musk and others, can reduce the financial diversion and inefficient spending of healthcare dollars that go to corporate profits and ever-expanding bureaucracy. If they can initiate a patient-driven, market-based approach to health care, potentially trillions of scarce taxpayer dollars can either be spent on patient care, reversing the seesaw effect, or they can be returned to American pockets, where they originated so they can afford to pay directly for timely, quality care. 

Deane Waldman, M.D., MBA is Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics, Pathology, and Decision Science; former Director of Center for Healthcare Policy at Texas Public Policy Foundation; former Director of New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange; and author of 12 books, including multi-award winning, Curing the Cancer in U.S. HealthcareStatesCare and Market-Based Medicine.  Follow him on X.com at @DrDeaneW or contact him via www.deanewaldman.com.

Vance Ginn, Ph.D., is president of Ginn Economic Consulting, host of the Let People Prosper Show, and previously chief economist of the Trump White House's Office of Management and Budget. Follow him on X.com at@VanceGinn.

https://www.realclearhealth.com/articles/2024/11/12/stop_diverting_taxpayer_dollars_away_from_patient_care_1071662.html

Liberal Elite At UN Climate Conference Calls For Meat Tax

 The UN Climate Change Conference, known this year as COP29, kicked off on Monday and will last through the 22nd of this month. Many of the usual climate grifters have skipped the event as de-growth 'green' policies in the US are being prepared to be rolled back to some degree under a Trump presidency. Even Swedish far-left activist Greta Thunberg skipped the event (pre-occupied with pro-Palestine protests?). 

On Tuesday, UN Secretary-General António Guterres told the world leaders who attended the event that last year's meeting was a "master class in climate destruction," adding, "The sound you hear is the ticking clock."

Guterres also said the transition to clean energy "won't be stopped by no group, no business, and no government." He was likely referring to Trump's plan to roll back certain climate policies that are strangling the economy and simultaneously boosting inflation, making US companies unable to compete in international markets. At the same time, China operates free of these de-growth policies. 

One particular speech by Willem Branten, the public affairs officer of True Animal Protein Price (TAPP) Coalition, a non-profit foundation focused on taxing real meat out of existence to reset the global food supply chain into a planet-based future, caught the internet's attention given radical far left and their billionaire funders have been pushing fake meat and insects as a way to solve the so-called 'climate crisis.' 

LoL.

WEF propaganda non-sense. 

TAPP's Branten said the quiet part out loud: using policy warfare, such as the "greenhouse gas emission price mechanism" - or a meat tax - to fund their climate crisis agenda and eventually end the overconsumption of animal protein.

Calling for a meat tax while US retail ground beef prices are soaring shows just how out-of-touch liberals are with concerns of the working class. That's why they lost the election in the US. 

In other words, the themes of de-growth and de-population promoted by the UN are being pushed by radical leftists who want to control every facet of life—what you eat, drive, and how you live. Trump's victory last week was a vote by the American people that rejects radical climate grifters and their Marxist friends that have sparked the worst inflation storm in a generation. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/liberal-elite-un-climate-conference-calls-meat-tax

Senate Majority Leader Candidates Agree To Trump's Demand For Recess Appointments

 by Jackson Richman via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Candidates for Senate majority leader have said they will honor President-elect Donald Trump’s request to make appointments when the Senate is in recess.

(Left) Sens. Rick Scott (R-Fla.); (Center) John Thune (R-S.D.); (Right) John Cornyn (R-Texas). Andrew Harnik; Samuel Corum; Joshua Roberts/Getty Images

Ahead of the Senate leadership election on Nov. 13, Sens. John Thune (R-S.D.), John Cornyn (R-Texas), and Rick Scott (R-Fla.) have said they would support recess appointments.

Any Republican Senator seeking the coveted LEADERSHIP position in the United States Senate must agree to Recess Appointments (in the Senate!), without which we will not be able to get people confirmed in a timely manner,” Trump said in a post on X. “Sometimes the votes can take two years, or more. This is what they did four years ago, and we cannot let it happen again. We need positions filled IMMEDIATELY!”

100% agree,” Scott wrote on X, sharing Trump’s post. “I will do whatever it takes to get your nominations through as quickly as possible.”

Thune said in an X post: “We must act quickly and decisively to get the president’s nominees in place as soon as possible, & all options are on the table to make that happen, including recess appointments. We cannot let Schumer and Senate Dems block the will of the American people.”

It is unacceptable for Senate Ds to blockade President @realDonaldTrump’s cabinet appointments,” Cornyn wrote on X. “If they do, we will stay in session, including weekends, until they relent. Additionally, the Constitution expressly confers the power on the President to make recess appointments.”

Recess appointments would allow the president to nominate executive and judicial personnel who would likely not receive Senate confirmation. Recess appointments have not happened in years due to the Senate meeting in pro forma sessions, meaning that although the Senate is meeting, it is only for a few minutes and therefore no legislative business is conducted.

The recess appointments clause of the U.S. Constitution states that “the President shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.”

In 2012, President Barack Obama made recess appointments, including appointing Richard Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

“The convening of periodic pro forma sessions in which no business is to be conducted does not have the legal effect of interrupting an intrasession recess otherwise long enough to qualify as a ‘Recess of the Senate’ under the Recess Appointments Clause,” the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel wrote at the time. “In this context, the President therefore has discretion to conclude that the Senate is unavailable to perform its advise-and-consent function and to exercise his power to make recess appointments.”

However, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in 2014 that recess appointments cannot be made when the Senate is in a pro forma session.

Then-Justice Stephen Breyer wrote that “the Recess Appointments Clause is not designed to overcome serious institutional friction. It simply provides a subsidiary method for appointing officials when the Senate is away during a recess.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/senate-majority-leader-candidates-agree-trumps-demand-recess-appointments

'Gender-Affirming Care Isn't Just for Adults, Say AMA Delegates'

 Gender-affirming healthcare shouldn't be limited to adults, members of the American Medical Association (AMA) House of Delegates said Monday at the delegates' interim meeting in Orlando, Florida.

"As a pediatric endocrinologist myself, I've seen how appropriate, guideline-based [gender-affirming] care for my patients can be lifesaving," said Brittany Bruggeman, MD, of Gainesville, Florida, an alternate delegate for the American Academy of Pediatrics who spoke for the delegation. "I have really seen the tremendous effects that when this care is done right by physicians and is based on guidelines -- which is what this report calls for -- it can dramatically improve the health of my patients. For this reason, the AMA should support doctors who are providing this care in a guideline-based way."

The delegates were discussing a resolution offered by the Virginia delegation related to a report from the AMA Board of Trustees on "Advocating for the Informed Consent for Access to Transgender Healthcareopens in a new tab or window." The report, which an AMA reference committee had recommended that the delegates vote to adopt, stated that the association supports the provision of medically necessary gender-affirming care (GAC) but does not take a position on whether determination of medical necessity needs to include a gender dysphoria diagnosis.

The report further noted that the AMA "does not wish to ... endorse one particular model of care over another. Rather, the AMA vigorously advocates for equitable payment policies while relying on the evidence-based professional guidelines and recommendations set by professional medical associations, as well as individual physician clinical judgment, on questions of appropriate clinical criteria." The authors added that "GAC may be provided during or before adolescence; however, recognizing that providing GAC for children is fundamentally different than for adults due to differences in biology, psychology, and autonomy, the scope of this report is limited to gender-affirming medical interventions provided to adults."

Tom Eppes, MD, of Forest, Virginia, speaking for the Virginia delegation, at first tried to get the report referred to the Board of Trustees for further study, with a report due back at the delegates' 2025 annual meeting in June. He noted that "This report was released Saturday morning ... less than 2 hours before the reference committee began. And unless you're a speed reader, you didn't have any chance to get through it. There was no chance to read it, no chance to discuss with delegations [or] comment online ... We feel that this report needs to be reviewed in our House of Delegates in the same order that all other resolutions and reports have, and [the trustees should] report back next June for a vote."

When that effort was voted down by delegates, Eppes, this time speaking for himself, then proposed that the new policy proposed in the board report -- which said that the AMA "unambiguously supports access to and insurance coverage of medically necessary GAC" -- include the words "for adults [over age 18]" at the end of that phrase. He added that the amendment "is to clearly delineate that this is about adults, not children. In the body of the report, it states there is a difference in children and adults, but later conflates adolescents as [sic] adults. I believe this addition makes clear that the intent of this report is for adults only."

That proposal received a lot of pushback. "I don't think that this amendment is necessary," said Sophia Spadafore, MD, of New York City, a resident and fellow sectional delegate for the American College of Emergency Physicians, who was speaking for herself. "The words 'medically necessary' already appear in this report. This House of Delegates should defer to physicians who do this care ... We have many adolescent physicians in this house -- pediatricians who know what is medically necessary. I think that is fully covered. We don't need this amendment."

Catherine Gutfreund, MD, a family physician in Santa Rosa, California and alternate delegate from California who spoke for herself in opposition to the proposal, said she was the mother of a trans child "who was suicidal until she was able to get the treatment ... And I can tell you with the biggest heart that now that she's getting gender-affirming care, she's doing fabulous." Joanna Bisgrove, MD, of Evanston, Illinois, an alternate delegate for the American Academy of Family Physicians and the mother of a non-binary child who spoke for herself, said her family "changed states for a number of reasons, but the primary one was that my now-17-year-old could not get the care that they need, and we now have an ability for insurance to cover them."

Frank Dowling, MD, of Islandia, New York, who spoke for the New York State delegation, said that "We have policy in New York that says that we will support physicians and other professionals who are providing gender-affirming care ... I ask that we finally stop persecuting my children and their friends, myself, and others who identify as gender minority people, and just give us what everyone else has."

No one besides Eppes spoke in favor of the amendment. In the end, the House of Delegates voted 127-486 against adding the phrase and then voted in favor of accepting the report as is.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage/ama/112873

'AMA Delegates Support ACA Subsidies for Undocumented Immigrants'

 The American Medical Association (AMA) House of Delegates endorsed subsidizing healthcare for undocumented immigrants on the Affordable Care Act (ACA) exchanges during their interim meeting in Orlando, Florida, on Monday.

As of June, six states and the District of Columbia provide fully state-funded coverage to some income-eligible adultsopens in a new tab or window regardless of immigration status, and as of Nov. 1, some Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipientsopens in a new tab or window may be eligible for coverage on the ACA exchanges.

On a related question of whether to support extending the enhanced ACA subsidies overall, the House also voiced its support, with some changes.

However, not all delegates were on board. Jordan Warchol, MD, MPH, a delegate from Nebraska, said she worried that passing such a resolution right now wasn't prudent.

Given the current political climate and that President-elect Trump only recently named a "border czar,"opens in a new tab or window Warchol, who spoke on her own behalf, suggested that the House wait a few months.

"Passing this policy today ... may unnecessarily put a target on the back of this organization at a time that we really do not want that," she said, arguing that if the media got wind of the resolution's passage, it might negatively impact the association's priorities for the next 4 years.

The resolution was not "bad policy," she stressed, calling it a "reasonable" statement for the AMA to make, but for the optics and the timing.

A committee focused on medical service and practice advocacy appeared to draw a similar conclusion, suggesting that the policy statement be referred for study.

However, on Monday afternoon, the House overruled the committee's recommendation, and in a vote of 362-259, adopted the resolution.

Luis Seija, MD, a delegate for the Minority Affairs Section, the primary sponsor of the policy statement, argued that no further investigation was necessary, as the resolution included nearly 20 different references to studies backing the concept.

"The evidence shows that uninsured individuals, particularly those in undocumented communities, experience higher rates of preventable illness or chronic disease and worse overall health outcomes," Seija said. "Subsidizing health insurance would allow undocumented immigrants to access care when they need it, not just in emergencies, leading to healthier communities overall, as well as a more inclusive, equitable, and efficient healthcare system."

Frank Zhou, a medical student speaking on behalf of the PacWest Conference, also argued against referring the statement for further study.

"This policy is simply good for everyone and all stakeholders involved," Zhou said, noting that it's good for patients, because they get better healthcare, and good for the healthcare system, because it keeps immigrant patients from relying on emergency departments, which not only lowers costs, but reduces boarding.

It's also good for physicians, he added. "When undocumented folks come and seek care and actually have insurance, then we get compensated ... And I think we like getting paid for the work that we do."

Zhou also pointed out that undocumented immigrants pay more than $90 billion in taxes every year. "They deserve to be able to buy insurance on the ACA marketplace ... like everyone else with these subsidies," he said.

Other delegates disagreed.

Deepak Kumar, MD, a delegate from Ohio speaking on his own behalf, said as a legal immigrant he opposed the resolution. When his wife was immigrating to the U.S., he had to show proof of insurance without any support, and demonstrate that his wife would not "be on the dole," he said. More recently, his daughter married a Canadian, who also had to prove "evidence of insurance with no subsidies."

"So, if you want to provide for undocumented individuals ... some sort of subsidies, that needs to be provided to legal immigrants as well," he said.

James Milam, MD, a delegate from Illinois who also spoke for himself, shared Kumar's concerns, pointing to his conflict of interest: "My wife is on the exchange."

He argued that any coverage gaps experienced by American citizens should be addressed before the nation extends those subsidies to undocumented people.

"Please understand, people, I am not unsympathetic to undocumented folks getting care, but I have to take care of my own family first," Milam said.

As for the concerns about optics, Katrina Saba, MD, a pediatrician and California delegate speaking on her own behalf, urged the committee not to wait to adopt the resolution. "If there is a target on the AMA's back, I think we should wear that target proudly," she said.

Carl G. Streed Jr., MD, MPH, a delegate for the LGBTQ+ Section, agreed. "We have sufficient evidence to show this is a critically important issue, and I'm not willing to shirk just because of a headline that may or may not happen," he said.

A separate resolution on whether to support the extension of the enhanced ACA subsidies, which expire at the end of 2025, was also approved.

However, an amendment to that policy statement eliminated a provision calling for the AMA to "immediately initiate or substantially invest in a focused grassroots campaign" around such an extension.

Sherif Z. Zaafran, MD, a delegate for the Texas Medical Association, who introduced the amendment, argued that while his delegation supports extending the tax credits, it did not want any other effort to distract from what it views as AMA's primary priority: Medicare payment reform.

"We need to be focusing on the one item that is absolutely essential for all of us, which is having a Medicare economic inflationary index applied to our Medicare payments so that we're not getting cut on an annual basis," Zaafran said. "If we dilute that effort by having multiple other asks, then we lose that effort."

While delegates from the Medical Student Section, the Resident and Fellow Section, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Massachusetts delegation opposed the amendment, their concerns were overruled, and the final amended resolution was adopted in a vote of 507-51.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage/ama/112875