Sorting Fact From Fiction on Health Care

In recent town-hall meetings, President Barack Obama has called for a national debate on health-care reform based on facts. It is fact that more than 40 million Americans lack coverage and spiraling costs are a burden on individuals, families and our economy. There is broad consensus that these problems must be addressed. But the public is skeptical that their current clinical care is substandard and that no government bureaucrat will come between them and ... Full Story »

Posted by Michael Bugeja - via Opinion Source, Wall Street Journal (Opinion), AllTop, Wall Street Journal (Most Emailed)

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Review

Deborah Plummer
2.6
by Deborah Plummer - Aug. 31, 2009

I found the writing confusing along with what the article was trying to "say," besides pointing out various "hot" spots on the health insurance bills, like "best evidence," "best practice," and HR 3200, which was to allow states to have individual universal health insurance as a causeway to saving HR 676. I thought the writing was confusing and the issues were clouded intentionally. it's various points about the potential health insurance bill.

I admit to a prejudice with WSJ and my radar comes out whenever I read their articles .... since it's a Fox-derivative, I look for lies and innuedoes.

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Deborah's Rating

Overall
2.6

Average
from 12 answers
Quality
2.9
Facts
3.0
Fairness
3.0
Sourcing
2.0
Style
2.0
Context
3.0
Depth
3.0
Enterprise
3.0
Relevance
4.0
Popularity
1.5
Recommendation
1.0
Credibility
2.0
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