Morgen Richmond and John Sexton

Morgen Richmond and John Sexton

Morgen Richmond is the co-founder of a successful high-tech consulting business based in California and a blogger at VerumSerum.com. He began working with Verum Serum during the run-up to the 2008 election and has been blogging regularly since April 2009. His focus is primarily on politics where he strives to uncover original, newsworthy content that can impact the national debate over key issues. His work on the Sotomayor nomination was featured in a cover story by Mark Bowden in the October 2009 issue of The Atlantic. His stories on healthcare reform have been covered in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and all throughout the conservative blogosphere and talk radio.

He is married with two young children and lives in Orange County, CA. He has a B.S. degree in Economics from the University of Redlands.

John Sexton co-founded the blog Verum Serum in 2005. Determined to be eclectic, he began writing about everything from cosmology to politics but has mostly narrowed it down to politics recently. Along with co-blogger Morgen Richmond he is to be featured in an upcoming documentary about the rise of new media and its effect on traditional journalism. He has a degree in Liberal Arts from Virginia Tech and is currently finishing a Masters in Science and Religion at Biola University.

John does freelance web design and photo restoration work from his home in Southern California. He is married and has three children.

The Public Option Deception

by Morgen Richmond and John Sexton

The public option has been a political football since early summer. The President has said more than once that he prefers it but will not demand it. This was considered capitulation by many on the left who see the public option as necessary for “real” reform. Meanwhile, belying the President’s public statements, there are reports that the President’s Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel has been quietly but firmly twisting arms in the back rooms to insure the public option is included in the final bill. Even now, pressure is mounting on Harry Reid to include the public option in the health reform bill he brings to the Senate floor.

Obama

In response to the tumult over what appears to be a small feature of the effort, more than one critic has wondered aloud why Democrats don’t just give up on the public option – which is opposed by every Republican – in order to reach a more bipartisan outcome. What exactly is so important about the public option anyway? And why do Democrats in particular seem so wedded to the idea?

There is a simple answer to these questions, but it’s an answer you’ve likely not heard from any institution in the mainstream media. The truth is that the public plan is a carefully devised scheme, a sneaky strategy, to deceive American voters. It’s a political marketing ploy designed to move the nation to a single-payer system – like the one in Canada – over the next decade. The public option is the Trojan horse. On the outside it’s all about “choice and competition”, but once it has been dragged within the walls of American medicine it’s true nature will become evident. By that time, it’ll be too late.

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