Matt Latimer was deputy directing of speechwriting for President George W. Bush and chief speechwriter for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. He was also communications director for Senator Jon Kyl. His new book, SPEECH*LESS; Tales of a White House Survivor, is a New York Times bestseller.

Matt Latimer
What MSM Won’t Tell You: Doctors Are Challenging Government Health Care-and the AMA
by Matt LatimerAttempting to enact his big-government health care scheme, President Obama and his supporters frequently claimed that a “majority” of doctors supported his health-care plans. When the American Medical Association – which had opposed HillaryCare – signed onto Obama’s plan last year, the organization seemed to make the President’s case. Most people assumed that the AMA represented most of the doctors in the country. But in fact, the AMA represents less than 20 percent of all physicians in the United States. And yet as the organization’s leadership moved more to the left, it held a near monopoly on media attention on issues pertaining to public health. No longer.

As the AMA has become increasingly politicized in recent years – issuing a statement in support of climate change, for example, in 2008 – a new group of doctors has risen to challenge them. Like other anti-statist groups that have risen in opposition to the Obama-Reid-Pelosi agenda, Docs4PatientCare are challenging the AMA’s stranglehold on health care matters, just as other groups once challenged the right of the left-leaning American Bar Association to determine what judges are and are not qualified for the United States Supreme Court. How Docs4PatientCare managed to barge its way into the closed-door meetings of Washington offers a lesson to other groups seeking to have a voice in their federal government.
Founded by Dr. Hal Scherz, a prominent Atlanta physician, the group of doctors expressed concern that like so many other professional groups, the AMA’s leadership have been thoroughly “Washingtonized” – caring more about the pleadings of other lobbyists on K Street, White House invitations and Capitol Hill committee appearances than the professions they are supposed to represent. As doctors have taken a battering over several decades from insurance companies, HMOS, and government agencies, Scherz says the AMA was a bystander.
“As the insurance companies become more and more impossible and government intrusion keeps growing, we’ve seen our delivery of care to our patients compromised and our incomes decrease,” he said.
But it was the AMA’s support for ObamaCare that really troubled Scherz and others in his field.
Exclusive Book Excerpt: “Speech-Less: Tales of a White House Survivor”
by Matt LatimerTHE STORY ANN COULTER SAID SHOULD BE REQUIRED READING FOR EVERY BUREAUCRAT IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
Many of the people mentioned still work at the Department of Defense. They are civil service employees who are almost impossible to fire, demote, or shift to other jobs. In my book, SPEECH-LESS: Tales of a White House Survivor, I show how nameless big government bureaucracies can treat America’s heroes.
The Pentagon’s press operation was run by a very large staff of civil servants and military personnel. Maybe twenty or thirty public affairs specialists sat among a maze of carrels while the director of the room sat in a glass cage and watched over them. It was reminiscent of a secretarial pool from the 1950s or ‘60s, without the Smith-Corona typewriters. I sometimes expected to see Lucille Ball walk in with a steno pad looking for Mr. Mooney.
Most of the press officers were probably Democrats, but the problem was not that they were partisans. The problem was that those who wanted to help were given no direction and the rest were mostly inert. Many would come in around 8:30 or 9 and breeze out by 4:59 pm. Nothing would prevent their on-time departure – not some major crisis abroad, not even a war. At night, that giant room was so deserted that tumbleweeds blew by desks. A sizable number of them lacked any sense of urgency or interest in what the administration was doing. One Pentagon reporter compared prying information from them to going on an Easter egg hunt.. Sometimes you’d want to put a mirror under their noses to see if they were breathing.
Forget about their being proactive. They rarely, if ever, came up with an interesting new story to pitch to a reporter. Their job was to wait for the phone to ring and hold morale-building events. There was almost always a party going on with cakes and cookies and people telling jokes and giving each other awards. There was an annual chili cook-off. If ever you needed a sugar fix, you could find something almost any day in the press room….






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