EDITED AND HOSTED BY THE GREANVILLE POST
Who are these people? Plainly and succinctly, AARP / United Healthcare are two symbiotic players that stand out in a field of parasites feeding voraciously on the sick body of US healthcare. Unfortunately, as many of us know, they are far from alone. The roster of villains includes other sordid but influential actors, to wit: the entire corporate-bribed political class, from presidents to congress critters and state assemblies, whose astonishing, (apparently) mind-numbing corruption would itself be a reason for social protest in any half-awake nation. To this, add the legions of media whores trumpeting the establishment's narrative. The are the key enablers of systemic criminality in every conceivable dimension, and for whom, from the billionaire owners to top personnel, a new Nuremberg tribunal should reserve some of its leading defendant seats. Throw in next the for-profit medical and hospital establishment, whose complicit passivity if not active collaboration in the face of the predatory Big Pharma and private insurance industry regime have allowed these entities to destroy the lives and economic solvency of untold millions of Americans, while complicating their lives enormously with labyrinthine legislation designed to be inaccessible to most normal Americans. And this is what exceptionalist propaganda still calls (proudly!) "the American Way of Life".
Yes, there are many villains that help explain the US healthcare scandal, the fact the richest and supposedly most powerful country on earth, the one that goes about giving lessons to other nations about democracy and good governance, does not offer its own citizens decent medical coverage. What is the cause of this? As is usually the case with complex social issues, the origin of this catastrophe has many tributaries. Foreign and native observers of American culture have long noted the preternatural naivety, anti-intellectual tendencies and hyper-individualistic preferences found among many Americans, a combination constantly fortified by the constant administration of exceptionalist/capitalist and chauvinist myths and, at least since the end of WW2, a professional effort to make the US a dumbed down nation immune to the idea of socialism in any form. This is the social, political and historical context in which vermin like AARP has enriched itself by pretending to be a friend of "senior Americans", and never lifted a finger to organize its bloated 100-million plus constituency into a mighty force to fight for universal healthcare.
Medicare is inadequate by design
A personal peeve
AARP, as Russell Mokhiber indicates below, has made a lot of its money through its close partnership with United Healthcare, one of America's largest private medical insurance companies, a veritable racquet in which no one is really your friend. The latter sells a product the industry politely calls "supplementary plans". AARP does the selling by essentially peddling fear: the fear of finding yourself unable to pay one of those extortionate bills the medical establishment and Big Pharma have become famous for. But the supplements exist because Medicare was written into law with this gaping hole in it: it does not cover all your expenses. Yea, that's where that dreaded 80% cap comes in, which no one can explain and which would make many foreigners still living in less savage capitalist nations, smirk with a sense of partial superiority. And what of those damn arbitrarily "restricted" days of enrollment, in itself a blatant absurdity which prompts a good question: why would anyone throw hurdles in the way the citizens access health services, vital services, mind you, and an inherent right of any human being? Who wrote this law? Why doesn't the US public ever question such insulting imbecilities, while demanding forthright correction? Only in America, folks. And that's far from the only annoying gremlin built into this legislation. It also has a number of limitations and qualifications. Yes, as noted above, the Medicare law, as befits a capitalist tract, was betrayed at birth. It's clear the lawmakers wanted to make sure the baby was born with crippling defects. That's why, besides that cretinous 80% cap, they also limited the protections of the bill only to Americans 65 or older, an obvious outrage to any political conscious population. The same cynical approach was used decades later, when the Democrats —with great fanfare—enacted a warmed-over Republican concoction as the desperately needed cure to a system in urgent need not of more patches and bandaids, which is what it got with the much ballyhooed Obamacare, but a complete and radical overhaul, from top to bottom. —PG
Top Ten Enemies of Single Payer
By Russell Mokhiber of Single Payer Action—
Crosspost with Common Dreams, first published on Thursday, April 16, 2009
Most people, when they arrive in Washington, D.C., see it for what it is – a cesspool of corruption.
Two reasonable reactions to the cesspool.
One, run away screaming in fear.
Two, stay and fight back and bring to justice those who have corrupted our democracy.
Unfortunately, many choose a third way – stay and be transformed.
Instead of seeing a cesspool, they begin seeing a hot tub.
The result – profits and wealth for the corporate elite – death, disease and destruction for the American people.
Nowhere does this corrupt, calculating transformation do more damage than in the area of health care.
Outside the beltway cesspool/hot tub, the majority of doctors, nurses, small businesses, health economists, and the majority of the American people – according to recent polls – want a Canadian-style, single payer, everybody in, nobody out, free choice of doctor and hospital, national health insurance system.
Inside the beltway cesspool/hot tub, the corrupt elite will have none of it.
They won’t even put single payer on the table for discussion.
Why not?
Because it will bring a harsh justice – the death penalty – to their buddies in the multi-billion dollar private health insurance industry.
The will of the American people is being held up by a handful of organizations and individuals who profit off the suffering of the masses.
And the will of the American people will not be done until this criminal elite is confronted and defeated.
(Remember, virtually the entire industrialized world – save for us, the U.S. – makes it a crime to allow for-profit health insurance corporations to make money selling basic health insurance.)
Before we confront and defeat the inside the beltway cesspool/hot tub crowd, we must first know who they are.
To wit, we present the Top Ten Enemies of Single Payer (listed here in alphabetical order):
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). AARP, one of DC’s most powerful lobbying groups, has worked inside the beltway for years to defeat single payer. Why? AARP makes about a quarter of its money selling insurance through its affiliate, United Healthcare Group, the nation’s largest for-profit insurance company. AARP must defeat single payer – which if enacted, would wipe out that revenue stream.
America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP). The private health insurance industry. Public enemy number one. The health insurance corporations must die so that the American people can live. Of course, facing the death penalty, AHIP is the most aggressive opponent to single payer. No compromise with AHIP.
American Medical Association. With a shrinking base of doctors (only 25 percent of doctors nationwide belong) – the AMA is the most conservative of the doctors’ organizations. I just returned from a health care policy forum at the Center for American Progress. As usual, not one of the panelists mentioned single payer. Only during the question period did a self-identified patient/citizen ask the single payer question. And a pit bull-like Nancy Nielsen, president of the AMA, ripped into the questioner. “Sounds more like a statement than a question,” Nielsen said. “And clearly you have a point of view about that. And I don’t happen to share that point of view.” Clearly she doesn’t. But just as clearly, the majority of doctors, probably even a majority of doctors who belong to the AMA, support single payer. Nielsen is in denial and must be defeated.
Barack Obama. He was for it when he was a state Senator in Illinois. Now, ensconced in the corporate prison that is the White House, he says single payer is off the table. To get off the list, Obama needs to put single payer back on the table.
Business Roundtable. Dr. David Himmelstein, co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP), was at a health care forum a couple of years ago sponsored by the Business Roundtable. And the moderator asked the audience – made up primarily of representatives of big business – to indicate their preference of health care reforms. And the majority came out in favor of single payer. Why then is the Business Roundtable opposed? Himmelstein put it this way: “In private, they support single payer, but they’re also thinking – if you can take away someone else’s business – the insurance companies’ business – you can take away mine. Also, if workers go on strike, I want them to lose their health insurance. And it’s also a cultural thing – we don’t do that kind of thing in this country.”
Families USA. A major inside the beltway liberal foundation and long-time foe of single payer. It’s chief executive, Ron Pollack, was once an advocate for single payer. But no more. In November 1991, Pollack was at a Washington hotel debating Yale University professor Ted Marmor in front of then Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton. Marmor was making the argument for single payer. Pollack against. A November 1994 article in the Washington Monthly, co-authored by Marmor, reported the result this way: “After the two advocates finished, Clinton looked thoughtful, pointed to Marmor and said, ‘Ted, you win the argument.’ But gesturing to Pollack, Marmor recalls, the governor quickly added, ‘But we’re going to do what he says.’ Even considering the Canadian system, everyone in the room agreed, would prompt GOP cries of ‘socialized medicine’ – cries that the press would faithfully report.”
Health Care for America Now. The largest coalition of liberal groups promoting a choice between a public plan and private insurance companies. “They are saying – we can’t do single payer because Americans don’t want it,” said Kip Sullivan of the Minnesota chapter of PNHP. “That’s based on junk research conducted by Celinda Lake for the Herndon Alliance. It is bad enough to say we can’t do single payer because the insurance industry is too powerful to beat. But it is just plain insidious to say we can’t do single payer because the American people don’t want it. In fact, polling data indicates that two-thirds of Americans support a single payer system. And that level of support exists despite the fact that there is little public discussion about it.”
Kaiser Family Foundation. One of the most prestigious liberal inside the beltway think tanks on health reform policy. Saul Friedman is a reporter for Newsday. In February, Friedman wrote an article for Newsday arguing that single payer is suffering from a conspiracy of silence. And he says Kaiser is the most culpable of the co-conpsirators. Kaiser, funded initially by insurance industry money, regularly keeps single payer off the table, Friedman says. When single payer advocates released a study in January asserting that Congressman John Conyers’ single payer bill (HR 676) could create 2.6 million new jobs and would cost far less than the private insurance currently paid for by individuals and employers, “the Kaiser Family Foundation’s daily online report on health care developments at kff.org didn’t mention it,” Friedman reported. “Nor has Kaiser, the most comprehensive online source of health care information, made any mention of single-payer or the Conyers bill since it was introduced in 2003, despite widespread support for such a plan according to Kaiser’s own polls.” After a number of insistent inquiries, Kaiser told Friedman that they would publish charts in March comparing the Stark and Conyers bills. They never did.
The Lewin Group. The go-to consulting firm for health reform studies. The most recent study, released last week and widely quoted in the press, of the public plan option, showed that the insurance industry would lose 32 million policy holders if a public plan is enacted. Lewin’s health reform policy guru, John Sheils, told the Associated Press: “The private insurance industry might just fizzle out altogether.” What the mainstream press didn’t report was that The Lewin Group is a wholly owned subsidiary of Ingenix, which is in turn owned by UnitedHealth Group, the nation’s largest health insurance corporation. Lewin Group has conducted studies on single payer at the state level – and their studies consistently show that single payer is the most efficient cost saving system. But Lewin Group has never done a study on HR 676 – which would create a single payer for the entire country and drive The Lewin Group’s parent – UnitedHealth Group- out of business. When asked why Lewin Group never has done a study on HR 676, Sheils said – “the President didn’t propose single payer, did he?” No, he didn’t. That’s why he too is on this list. (Sheils says The Lewin Group has studied national single payer. He points to a recent comparison of the different health reform proposals floating on Capitol Hill – including one by Congressman Pete Stark (D-California). Stark’s bill would give every American the option of opting into Medicare. But that’s not single payer, because it keeps the private insurance industry in the game. Sheils counters that he modeled the Stark bill as single-payer. “The employer coverage option under the Stark bill is made so unfavorable that no employer would do it. We have everyone in Medicare, with the resulting savings.” Sheils says that of all the plans studied, the Stark bill saves the most money.)
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers Association of America (PHRMA). PHRMA chief executive Billy Tauzin says that under single payer, the government would become a “price fixer.” By which he means, the government, as a single payer, will have the power to negotiate drug prices downward, thus costing the drug corporations millions in excess profits. In recent years, PHRMA has infiltrated liberal sounding groups like America’s Agenda – Health Care for All. PHRMA’s Vice President for Government Affairs and Law, Jan Faiks, now sits on the board of America’s Agenda and PHRMA contributes money to the group – which has worked in recent years to undermine single payer at the state level. (America’s Agenda Mark Blum won’t say how much money PHRMA gives to his group.)
We have met the enemy.
And they ain’t us.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Appendix
Who needs enemies when we have fake friends like the AARP?
Saccharine, cutesy and really insulting ads.
These are the Iagos of contemporary American life
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
This clip is from 2007, from Moore's justly celebrated SiCKO documentary, when Moore was still a valuable member of the left, focusing his attention on important topics, such as health, and class struggle, instead of becoming what he eventually became, a frequent apologist for the identity-politics obsessed neoliberal Democratic Party and its multitude of corporate criminals. Note this clip leaves the viewer with the impression Hillary Clinton was sincere in her desire to enact "socialized medicine"