Compromises always taste bad

By | December 8, 2009, 10:40am PST

Summary: 2010 will be a year for the business of government. HealthIT regulations will be in place, and money will start being spent. Regulations will be written and enforced on whatever passes the Congress.

It’s a law of politics that a result that is a compromise will really please no one.

So it has always been with health reform. As the bill moves closer to final passage it becomes less popular.

The compromise now gaining traction is to replace the public option with an expansion of Medicare. Liberals are wary, and the 10 Senators tasked with finding common ground may still fail.

Another idea making the rounds is that the House will vote through whatever the Senate passes, eliminating the need for a conference and giving the President a new law under his Christmas tree.

Liberals don’t like this either, but the fact is there aren’t 60 liberals in the Senate, nor will there be any time soon.

Ideas may look like pretty pigs going into the abattoir, but they all come out as sausage. (This is true for conservative ideas as well.)

While the rhetoric is growing increasingly ugly, big businesses are quietly weighing in for an aye. As the bill looks more and more like what Massachusetts passed, its Republican sponsor finds himself defending the idea, adding a patina of bipartisanship to the effort.

What this means for 2010 is it will be a year for the business of government. HealthIT regulations will be in place, and money will start being spent. Regulations will be written and enforced on whatever passes the Congress.

And the rest of us will go back to covering business.

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Disclosure

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a journalist, writer and part-time futurist for over 30 years. At the present moment I run only a personal blog in addition to my ZDNet open source blog. DanaBlankenhorn.Com has the subtitle The War Against Oil. In the past I have used it to write about political history, e-commerce, personal matters, some ideas related to open source, and The World of Always On, which is the idea of using sensors, motes and RFID to turn WiFi links into platforms for applications which live in the air. My IRA account at Schwab holds a few tech shares, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials, but there are no open source companies in it. I don’t even own any CBS stock.

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist since 1978, and has covered technology since 1982. He launched the Interactive Age Daily, the first daily coverage of the Internet to launch with a magazine, in September 1994.

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Calling the President "Banana Obama" is racist
PeopleFirst 9th Dec 2009
Why are people so racist that they cannot refrain from calling names?
0 Votes
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Keep smiling, Harry
itpro_z 8th Dec 2009
Come next November you will be retired.
0 Votes
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What has this to do with Tech?
No_Ax_to_Grind 8th Dec 2009
As if we don't get enough of politics on other sites...
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What it has to do with tech...
wizard57m@... 8th Dec 2009
Basically, almost all the proposed reforms entail some sort of "technical" facet. From increasing the use of "digital information" to where/how/who stores the vast amounts of currently disparaging data on hand, and somehow making that data usable on a variety of platforms.
To say health care financing reform has nothing to do with technology is a bit narrow of a definition for technology.
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It's a system
DanaBlankenhorn 8th Dec 2009
Health care is a system, and technology is integral to the system. The size of the market determines the environment for technology that treats people. And integral to saving money is IT technology.

But I hear the criticisms. I hope I can accommodate them soon.
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Yes...
Darth Malus 8th Dec 2009
You're right Dana, it is just that and all. Liked the article.
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Tunnel Vision?
Darth Malus 8th Dec 2009
You cannot be that narrow minded, right?
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RE: Compromises always taste bad
wizard57m@... 8th Dec 2009
Compromise shouldn't always taste bad, if open discussions and exchange of ideas occur without the seemingly over-abundant view of "it has to be all this way, or I won't pitch in" that both sides are guilty of.
We compromise on things all the time in our everyday life...from grocery shopping, to Christmas gifts, to purchasing a new television.
Sure, the compromises might not be attractive to the various "lobbyists", but let's see what the "general population" has to say before we pronounce the milk "sour"!
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A political rule...
DanaBlankenhorn 8th Dec 2009
As a debate goes on public opinion is pulled toward the edges by advocates for each side. For that reason any compromise is seen as unreasonable once it's arrived at, because everyone was told by people they trusted to demand and expect a pony.
Wrong! The rest of us will be too busy trying to stretch the ends to make them meet, while the "politicians" will be busy trying to cover their donkeys.

No more "Earmarks" (I promise)
No more "Lobbying" (I promise)
"Transparancy" (I promise)
(Obama)
0 Votes
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Can you say Socialist class.....
Independent_Voter 8th Dec 2009
Enjoy your 'hope' because your change in
your pocket will go to the Gob'ment...
0 Votes
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Banana Obama
Darth Malus 8th Dec 2009
Yeah, so why are you so upset with the obvious? The new boss is same as the old boss. Nothing much has changed, you didn't really buy into the Obama lie(s) did you?

You should have saw this coming, I mean you and I have been born since Wilson sold America out, right?

Nothing at all has changed then. Names, faces, sure, same old thing and business as usual or is it that you drank into the Obama Kool-Aid???

I am just asking, that is all...
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Why are people so racist that they cannot refrain from calling names?

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