The
U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision that the president’s
health care law is constitutional caused a flurry
of celebration on the part of proponents of reform
and a vow on the part of Republicans and other on
the right to deep six the plan, along with the president.
Proponents
of reform see the decision as a step in the right
direction and those who oppose taking control of U.S.
health care out of the hands of the insurance companies
and the pharmaceutical companies have vowed to work
tirelessly to defeat the idea of universal health
care.
They went to the bargaining
table with the Republicans giving them their last
best offer as an opener
Then,
there is the other viewpoint, not necessarily in the
middle, but a more objective view of the state of
America’s
health and the “system” that is, indeed, controlled
by nameless, faceless bureaucrats out of Corporate
America. Top Republicans in Congress, like Sen. Mitch
McConnell and House Speaker John Boehner, are doing
their best to see that corporate bureaucrats will
continue to stand between patients and their doctors
(or other health care practitioners). They have a
lot of help.
That
other viewpoint is from Physicians for a National
Health Program (PNHP), a group formed 25 years ago
for a single purpose, to help develop and pass a single-payer
universal health plan for America.
When
the Supreme Court released its decision, PNHP stated
that so-called Obamacare “is not a remedy to our health care crisis.”
In
short, the reasons: “(1)
it will not achieve universal coverage, as it leaves
at least 26 million uninsured, (2) it will not make
health care affordable to Americans with insurance,
because of high co-pays and gaps in coverage that
leave patients vulnerable to financial ruin in the
event of serious illness, and (3) it will not control
costs.”
They want nothing to interfere
with the massive transfer of wealth to the corporations
that are in control of the current health care non-system
The
legislation, which President Obama spent the first
half of his first term attempting to get passed with
bi-partisan support, the Affordable Care Act (ACA),
is full of shortcomings that will become obvious immediately
and some that will take some time to recognize. But
the main problem with the ACA, according to PNHP and
many others, is that the
act “perpetuates a dominant role for the private insurance
industry. Each year, that industry siphons off hundreds
of billions of health care dollars for overhead, profit
and the paperwork it demands from doctors and hospitals;
it denies care in order to increase insurers’ bottom
line; and it obstructs any serious effort to control
costs.”
PNHP
and its 18,000 members across the country have a remedy
that is clear and simple. They have been advocating
a piece of legislation that was introduced in the
House of Representatives by Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich.,
years ago, HR 676. It also is called “Expanded and Improved
Medicare for All.”
HR
676 would, literally, take the current Medicare program
that provides health care for those who are 65 or
older (with some exceptions like prescription drugs
and dental, unless you have supplemental coverage)
and provide that same care for all. That was not what
was envisioned by Obama and the Democratic leadership
at the beginning of the fight over a new health care
law. When Nancy Pelosi took the speaker’s gavel in
the House of Representatives, one of the first things
she pronounced was, “Single payer health care is off
the table.” Things went downhill from there.
HR 676 would provide the
current Medicare program for all
On
the stump in the early days of the Obama Administration,
Democratic legislators held what were called town
hall meetings with constituents. Nearly every meeting
was disrupted by self-described Tea Party members,
who plunged the meetings into chaos. Little was learned
about the reform proposal. Possibly, not much more
is known today, but one thing is certain. Those same
Tea Party members, or people with the same inclinations,
remain unalterably opposed to universal health care
of any kind.
Right-wingers
seem to believe that Mitt Romney, who is awaiting
coronation as the 2012 Republican presidential candidate,
is just as opposed as they are to the Supreme Court-blessed
(by a 5-4 decision) ACA. Few of them seem to know
that Romney’s legacy, as governor to the people of
Massachusetts,
is virtually the same health care program that Obama
signed and the court has upheld.
This
puts Romney foursquare at war with himself, but that’s
not an unusual position for him to be in. He now has
to say that he is opposed to the federal health care
reform law, thus denouncing his own legacy in the
Bay State. And, he doesn’t seem to be getting
any better at keeping his foot out of his mouth.
For
example, during the GOP presidential primaries, he
responded to a member of the audience with this gem:
“Corporations are people, too, my friend.” Although
he seemed completely unaware of the lives of working
men and women, he should have known that millions
of Americans know that corporations are not people,
that they have powerful control over their daily lives,
and that the U.S. Supreme Court gave Corporate America
the right of free speech that was intended to protect
citizens, not corporations, in its Citizens United
decision. That decision has loosed the power of
unlimited money into the political system, polluting
it beyond all reason. Romney does not know this.
The
trouble with both his Massachusetts universal health care law and the
one just upheld by the court is that both leave the
power and the profit in the hands of Corporate America,
more particularly, its constituent corporations of
the insurance, pharmaceutical, and related “industries.”
Their power is not curbed in very many ways under
either law, one of the problems being that there is
no control over premiums, which translate into obscene
profits, obscene CEO salaries and benefits, and similar
treatment for all of top management in a host of corporations
connected to the medical care industry (for many,
even the use of the term is distasteful).
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Contrary
to what politicians and their benefactors in Corporate
America say about a single-payer system of health
care, PNHP noted recently: “Research shows the savings
in administrative costs alone under a single-payer
plan would amount to $400 billion annually, enough
to provide quality coverage to everyone with no overall
increase in U.S. health spending. The major provisions
of the ACA do not go into effect until 2014. Although
we will be counseled to “wait and see” how this reform
plays out, we’ve seen how comparable plans have worked
in Massachusetts and other states. Those “reforms”
have invariably failed our patients, foundering on
the shoals of skyrocketing costs, even as the private
insurers have continued to amass vast fortunes.”
Considering
the savings, what does it mean that Mitt Romney, Republicans
in general, and the right-wingers of every stripe
are frothing at the mouth in their attempt to be the
most rabidly against the so-called reform? It means
that there is a simple choice in the minds of the
GOP and all of those in full support of the status
quo. They want nothing to interfere with the massive
transfer of wealth to the corporations that are in
control of the current health care non-system. If
that means leaving tens of millions out of the system,
with no access to health care, so be it. After all,
these are the politicians’ benefactors, those who
pay their bills.
Top Republicans are doing
their best to see that corporate bureaucrats will
continue to stand between patients and their doctors
“The
American people desperately need a universal health
system that delivers comprehensive, equitable, compassionate
and high-quality care, with free choice of provider
and no financial barriers to access,” PNHP stated
after the court’s decision was announced. “Polls have
repeatedly shown an improved Medicare for all, which
meets these criteria, is the remedy preferred by two-thirds
of the population. A solid majority of the medical
profession now favors such an approach, as well.”
What
brought the country to accepting this pathetic “reform?”
For starters, Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and other
Democratic leaders and operatives took off the table
the only proposal (HR 676) that made sense, if there
truly were to be reform. They went to the bargaining
table with the Republicans, so to speak, giving them
their last best offer as an opener. If the president
had been a union bargainer and had made such a proposal
at the opening session of contract talks, he would
have been yanked from the bargaining committee as
if by shepherd’s crook.
To
those who say that we must move toward universal health
care in America incrementally, it must be pointed out
that that’s what Harry Truman must have thought, back
in the late 1940s, when he mulled national health
care. It was only 60 years ago, and we’re still debating
whether we should provide health care for all.
If
we leave it to Mitt Romney to provide universal health
care in America, it may be another 60 years before it
happens and, if we approach “reform” the way President
Obama and the Democrats have done, it’ll give Romney’s
timetable a big boost.
(For
a PNHP fact sheet on HR 676, visit www.pnhp.org.)
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
John
Funiciello, is a
labor organizer and former union organizer. His union
work started when he became a local president of The
Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s. He was a reporter
for 14 years for newspapers in
New York
State. In
addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous
pressure from factory food producers and land developers.
Click here
to contact
Mr. Funiciello. |