The Real Health Care Debate
Posted on Apr 9, 2012
By Chris Hedges
The debate surrounding the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act illustrates the impoverishment of our political life. Here is a law that had its origin in the right-wing Heritage Foundation, was first put into practice in 2006 in Massachusetts by then-Gov. Mitt Romney and was solidified into federal law after corporate lobbyists wrote legislation with more than 2,000 pages. It is a law that forces American citizens to buy a deeply defective product from private insurance companies. It is a law that is the equivalent of the bank bailout billsome $447 billion in subsidies for insurance interests alonefor the pharmaceutical and insurance industries. It is a law that is unconstitutional. And it is a law by which President Barack Obama, and his corporate backers, extinguished the possibilities of both the public option and Medicare for all Americans. There is no substantial difference between Obamacare and Romneycare. There is no substantial difference between Obama and Romney. They are abject servants of the corporate state. And if you vote for one you vote for the other.
But you would never know this by listening to the Democratic Party and the advocacy groups that purport to support universal health care but seem more intent on re-electing Obama. It is the very sad legacy of the liberal class that it proves in election cycle after election cycle that it espouses moral and political positions it will not pay a price to defend. And since we have no fight in us, since we will not punish politicians like Obama who betray our core beliefs, the corporate juggernaut rolls forward with its inexorable pace to cement into place our global neofeudalism.
Protesting outside the Supreme Court recently as it heard arguments on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act were both conservatives from Americans for Prosperity who denounced the president as a socialist and demonstrators from Democratic front groups such as the SEIU and the Families USA health care consumer group who chanted Protect the law! Lost between these two factions were a few stalwarts who hold quite different views, including public health care advocates Dr. Margaret Flowers, Dr. Carol Paris and attorneys Oliver Hall, Kevin Zeese and Russell Mokhiber. They displayed a banner that read: Single Payer Now! Strike Down the Obama Mandate! They, at least, have not relinquished the demand for single payer health care for all Americans. And I throw my lot in with these renegades, dismissed, no doubt, as cranks or dreamers or impractical by those who flee into the embrace of empty political theater and junk politics. These single payer advocates, joined by 50 doctors, filed a brief to the court that challenges, in the name of universal health care, the individual mandate.
We have the solution, we have the resources and we have the money to provide lifelong, comprehensive, high-quality health care to every person, Dr. Flowers said when we spoke a few days ago in Washington, D.C. Many Americans have not accepted the single payer approach because people get confused by the politics, she said. People accept the Democratic argument that this [Obamacare] is all we can have or this is something we can build on.
MORE:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_real_health_care_debate_20120409/
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Chris with another hard hitting article.
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limpyhobbler
(8,244 posts)I hadn't heard that one before. Can't wait to use it in a conversation.
dbuscemi1949
(2 posts)Chris, you nailed it.
The insurance companies got a gift; and the citizens got the empty box.
The shame goes to the President, because he knew what he was doing.