Penna Dexter hosts this week’s Weekend Edition show and she is joined by Dr. Merrill Matthews and First Liberty’s Hiram Sasser. Together they will look at the top stories in the news this week and give you their point of view.
Joining the show for a segment is artist Marnie Freeman who will discuss her painting “March of the Deplorables.”
Dr. Matthews is a past president of the Health Economics Roundtable for the National Association for Business Economics, the largest trade association of business economists. Dr. Matthews also served for 10 years as the medical ethicist for the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center’s Institutional Review Board for Human Experimentation, and has contributed chapters to several books, including Physician Assisted Suicide: Expanding the Debate and The 21st Century Health Care Leader and, in 2009, Stop Paying the Crooks (on Medicare fraud).
He has been published in numerous journals and newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal, Investor’s Business Daily, Barron’s, USA Today, Forbes magazine and the Washington Times. He was an award-winning political analyst for the USA Radio Network.
Dr. Matthews received his Ph.D. in Humanities from the University of Texas.
Sasser successfully argued before federal and state appellate courts, federal and state district courts, and the Texas Supreme Court. His past and present clients include The American Legion, VFW, Association of Christian Schools International, Fraternal Order of Eagles, the Falun Gong, a Native American sweat lodge, Jewish Educational Center, Southern Baptist Convention, National Association of Evangelicals, synagogues, and various state and local government entities and officials.
In addition to his legal duties, he develops, coordinates, and implements successful media strategies on behalf of his clients. This includes numerous appearances on ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox News, CNN, and the BBC as well as being heard on various radio stations throughout the United States, Asia, Africa, and Europe.
Prior to joining Liberty, Sasser graduated summa cum laude from Oklahoma City University School of Law, where he received recognition as the “Outstanding Graduate.” He earned his bachelor’s degree from Oklahoma State University. His military service includes serving as Headquarters Commander, a Company Executive Officer, and Training Officer in the United States Army Reserve.
Last month, the Freedom from Religion Foundation (FFRF), a Wisconsin-based group, sent a letter to the leadership of the N.H. Air National Guard after “a concerned guardsman” contacted the organization to tell them that ceremonies at Pease International Tradeport led by a chaplain regularly include prayer.
However, the First Liberty Institute, a religious liberties legal group in Texas, is pushing back against the effort to end those activities, sending their own letter to the base on Tuesday.
Her prayer is that her art will share Biblical truths and a Judeo-Christian heritage, inspiring leadership, and demonstrating God's beauty, love, faithfulness and forgiveness. She had not picked up a paintbrush for over eight years prior to the Lord's 2005 calling!
"It's premature, but the initial indications appear to be a mixed bag," Ceci Connolly president and chief executive officer of the Alliance of Community Health Plans said.
"The situation is moving in the right direction for 2018-19," Connolly said, "but we would need to see legislation enacted that keeps the subsidies and a little more clarity on reinsurance and risk adjustment."
Observers agreed it was difficult to predict the overarching impact of the reforms. The short-term prognosis was upbeat, but the legislation includes elements that could pose substantial hurdles for long-term market stabilization.
Two U.S. House committees last week passed legislation to repeal the ACA and replace it with a Republican version that would keep some of the most popular elements (Best's News Service, March 9, 2017).
The bills would extend the consumer subsidy programs, the advance tax credits and the cost-sharing reductions, until the end of 2019. That helps to stabilize the market in the near-term, Connolly, told Best's News Service. However, the bills are silent on how to pay for those provisions.
"They deserve credit for hearing our message around stabilizing the market and not creating chaos for millions of Americans that are getting coverage and care," Connolly said.