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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper examines how different nations see the U.S. health care dilemma. Different newspapers are the focus of this investigation. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RG13_SA109med.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
matter. This is such a large topic that there is worldwide coverage. Different newspapers each seem to have a particular slant and much depends upon their country of origin. For
example, the press in the United Kingdom seems to report the issue by focusing on major players, or individuals, and how they fare. The UK also focuses on the issue
of health care and what it means to the American people. On the other hand, the French press reports the issue more as a partisan problem and focuses solely on
Democrats and Republicans and all things political. In a Times of London article entitled "Obamas Health; The mathematics and politics of health care reform have just become monumentally more
difficult for the presidency," the issue of health care is presented to the British audience. The author explains that President Obama won the election by putting Kennedys coalition back
together, but in January, Democrats were defeated ("Obamas Health; The mathematics and politics of health care reform have just become monumentally more difficult for the presidency," 2010). The author sees
this as a divided democratic party and also criticizes Martha Coakley as being inept ("Obamas Health; The mathematics and politics of health care reform have just become monumentally more difficult
for the presidency," 2010). The author goes on and claims that same things happened with Bill Clinton as he was punished during the midterm elections ("Obamas Health; The mathematics
and politics of health care reform have just become monumentally more difficult for the presidency," 2010). The article concludes as follows: "Mr. Clinton recovered after 1994, when all seemed bleak
for him. He did so because he took the verdict of the voters seriously. He made clear that he was returning to the centrism that had brought him his original
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