Allan Sloan of Fortune has no problem with the ?public option? portion of the health-care reform proposals circulating through D.C. (He should, of course, as demonstrated by posts here, here, and here.)
But Sloan raises a different objection to the only concrete plan on the table:
My problem is that any piece of legislation that runs more than 1,000 pages — the House version weighs in at 1,017 — is certain to contain enough ambiguities, contradictions, and just plain mistakes to ensure years of lucrative employment for countless lawyers and lobbyists and experts who will pick away at it.