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Thursday, December 24, 2009

The Senate, on a 60-39 vote, passes the health reform bill. It now goes to a House-Senate conference committee to iron out differences between the House and Senate versions. That committee will make a report which will then be voted on by each body. Only if that report passes will it then go to the President to be signed into law.

If you like your health plan, you may not get to keep it after all.

David Broder, who favors universal coverage and wrote a book about the failed health reform efforts of 1993-94, says the way this bill was passed, and some of the things in it, stinks.

Michael Barone compares the passing of the health reform bill with the Kansas-Nebraska Act, a hugely unpopular bill passed by using every legislative trick in the book that ended up causing more problems than it solved.

Here is something you don't often see...an op-ed in The New York Times that advocates airstrikes to slow down the Iranian nuclear program.

Here is why electric cars, at least as they are currently designed and perform, will not become widely popular anytime soon.

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