WaPo Avoids the “U” Word
A September 14th Washington Post article by N.C. Aizenman covering the oral arguments in the states suit against Obamacare, reports that “the public remains profoundly ambivalent about the president’s signature legislative achievement.” But is the American public really “ambivalent” about Obamacare? According to Merriam-Webster, ambivalence means holding “simultaneous and contradictory attitudes or feelings,” “continual fluctuation,” or “uncertainty as to which approach to follow.”
Now compare that definition with the Pollster.com aggregated data on Obamacare’s poll numbers. It reveals that a plurality or majority of the public has consistently opposed the law since before the angry town-hall meetings of … Continue Reading
Tags: health care, N.C. Aizenman, Obamacare, poll, polling, polls, public opinion, The Washington Post