U.S senate and Congress passed the reconciliation health care bill. President Obama delivered a passionate speech in Iowa. Tea baggers and their Klan members threatened the congressmen who voted for the Health care bill and broke their office windows. Few republican congressmen, Sara Palin, Michelle Bachman, Glen beck and Rush Limbaugh urged and supported these tea bagger’s act of terrorism. This is what you independents waited for all these time and now you have it and you all can actually see their terrorist uncivilized behavior and who they are.
This will be written down in the history books and read by the future generation. It’s good that no republican voted for this bill because when something good happens to this country you always want to disassociate your self from the devil and exclude the cooperation of the devil , which will bring bright future, more goodness and good fortune to this country.
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President Obama hit the road Thursday to sell the merits of the newly enacted health care law, telling an enthusiastic Iowa crowd that the measure will lead to greater economic security for most Americans.
"This is your victory," Obama said at the University of Iowa. Health care reform "was about the future of our country. And today ... that future looks stronger and more hopeful and brighter than it has in some time."
The crowd, in turn, repeatedly chanted Obama's campaign theme: "Yes, we can."
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A fax bearing the image of a noose. Profane voice mails. Bricks thrown, a gas line cut. White powder sent to an office.
Democrats and a few Republicans revealed mounting numbers and unsettling details of threats against them Thursday in the emotional aftermath of the passage of the health care overhaul.
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Congressional Democrats sent the final piece of landmark health care legislation to President Barack Obama before heading home to face a skeptical — and sometimes even threatening — electorate.
The last legislative chapter in the wrenching national debate over Obama's health overhaul plan came Thursday night in the House, as Democrats approved — for the second time — a package of fixes to the sweeping health bill Obama signed two days earlier. The measure includes better benefits for seniors and low-income and middle-class families.
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Health reform triggers hate Tom Perriello