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Six Smart Progressive Complaints About House Health Bill
The Affordable Health Care for America Act was approved by the U.S. House Saturday night with overwhelming support from progressive Democrats who serve in the chamber and from a president who was nominated and elected with the enthusiastic support of progressive voters.
But that does not mean that informed and engaged progressives are entirely enthusiastic about the measure.
In fact, some are openly and explicitly opposed to it -- among them former Congressional Progressive Caucus chair Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and CPC member Eric Massa, D-New York, both of whom broke with the majority of their fellow Democrats to vote "no" when the House approved the measure by a narrow 220-215 vote Saturday.
How can this be?
Isn't this a fight between Democrats and Republicans? Between reforming liberals and tea-party conservatives?
How can there possibly be any subtlety or nuance to this debate?
Well, of course, the debate over this 1,900-page behemoth of a bill is more complicated than the easy spin of political insiders -- and media cheering sections -- would have Americans believe.
Key interest groups, such as the National Organization for Women, and key congressmen who have been long-term supporters of reform, such as single-payer backers Massa and Kucinich, argue that the bill is not the cure for what ails the U.S. health care system.
Indeed, they suggest, the bill as it is currently constructed could make a bad situation worse.
Many sincere progressives in the House, and outside of it, chose to back the bill as the best that could be gotten. Others supported it on the theory that flaws could be fixed in the Senate and in the reconciliation of the House and Senate bills.
But those repairs will only be made if activists are conscious of what ails this bill.
For that reason, even supporters of the House legislation would be wise to consider the criticisms of it by groups that advocate for the rights of women, patient advocates, unions and some of the most progressive members of the House.
Here are six smart progressive complaints about the House bill:
1. FROM CONGRESSMAN ERIC MASSA: "This Bill Will Enshrine in Law the Monopolistic Powers of the Private Health Insurance Industry"
At the highest level, this bill will enshrine in law the monopolistic powers of the private health insurance industry, period. There's really no other way to look at it. I believe the private health insurance industry is part of the problem.This bill also, I believe, fails to address the fundamental question before the American people, and that is how do we control the costs of health care. It does not address interstate portability, as Medicare does. It does not address real medical malpractice insurance reform. It does not address the incredible waste and fraud that are currently in the system.
2. FROM THE CALIFORNIA NURSES ASSOCIATION: This Bill Fails to Control Costs
While the current bills will provide limited assistance for some, the inconvenient truth is they fall far short in effective controls on skyrocketing insurance, pharmaceutical and hospital costs, do little to stop insurance companies from denying needed medical care recommended by doctors, and provide little relief for Americans with employer-sponsored insurance worried about health security for themselves and their families.
3. FROM THE NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN: "This Bill Obliterates Women's Fundamental Right to Choose"
The House of Representatives has dealt the worst blow to women's fundamental right to self-determination in order to buy a few votes for reform of the profit-driven health insurance industry. We must protect the rights we fought for in Roe v. Wade. We cannot and will not support a health care bill that strips millions of women of their existing access to abortion.Birth control and abortion are integral aspects of women's health care needs. Health care reform should not be a vehicle to obliterate a woman's fundamental right to choose.
The Stupak Amendment (to the House bill, which was approved and attached on Saturday) goes far beyond the abusive Hyde Amendment, which has denied federal funding of abortion since 1976. The Stupak Amendment, if incorporated into the final version of health insurance reform legislation, will:
• Prevent women receiving tax subsidies from using their own money to purchase private insurance that covers abortion;
- Prevent women participating in the public health insurance exchange, administered by private insurance companies, from using 100 percent of their own money to purchase private insurance that covers abortion;
• Prevent low-income women from accessing abortion entirely, in many cases.
NOW calls on the Senate to pass a health care bill that respects women's constitutionally protected right to abortion and calls on President Obama to refuse to sign any health care bill that restricts women's access to affordable, quality reproductive health care.
4. FROM PLANNED PARENTHOOD'S CECILE RICHARDS: This Bill Embraces Religious-Right Extremes
It is extremely unfortunate that the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and anti-choice opponents were able to hijack the health care reform bill in their dedicated attempt to ban all legal abortion In the United States.Most telling is the fact that the vast majority of members of the House who supported the Stupak/Pitts amendment in today's vote do not support HR 3962, revealing their true motive, which is to kill the health care reform bill.
These single-issue advocates simply used health care reform to advance their extreme, ideological agenda at the expense of tens of millions of women.
5. FROM CONGRESSMAN DENNIS KUCINICH,: This Bill Worries About the Health of Wall Street, Not America
We have been led to believe that we must make our health care choices only within the current structure of a predatory, for-profit insurance system which makes money not providing health care. We cannot fault the insurance companies for being what they are. But we can fault legislation in which the government incentivizes the perpetuation, indeed the strengthening, of the for-profit health insurance industry, the very source of the problem. When health insurance companies deny care or raise premiums, co-pays and deductibles they are simply trying to make a profit. That is our system.Clearly, the insurance companies are the problem, not the solution. They are driving up the cost of health care. Because their massive bureaucracy avoids paying bills so effectively, they force hospitals and doctors to hire their own bureaucracy to fight the insurance companies to avoid getting stuck with an unfair share of the bills. The result is that since 1970, the number of physicians has increased by less than 200% while the number of administrators has increased by 3000 percent. It is no wonder that 31 cents of every health care dollar goes to administrative costs, not toward providing care. Even those with insurance are at risk. The single biggest cause of bankruptcies in the U.S. is health insurance policies that do not cover you when you get sick.
But instead of working toward the elimination of for-profit insurance, H.R. 3962 would put the government in the role of accelerating the privatization of health care. In H.R. 3962, the government is requiring at least 21 million Americans to buy private health insurance from the very industry that causes costs to be so high, which will result in at least $70 billion in new annual revenue, much of which is coming from taxpayers. This inevitably will lead to even more costs, more subsidies, and higher profits for insurance companies - a bailout under a blue cross.
By incurring only a new requirement to cover pre-existing conditions, a weakened public option, and a few other important but limited concessions, the health insurance companies are getting quite a deal. The Center for American Progress' blog, Think Progress, states, 'since the President signaled that he is backing away from the public option, health insurance stocks have been on the rise.' Similarly, healthcare stocks rallied when Senator Max Baucus introduced a bill without a public option. Bloomberg reports that Curtis Lane, a prominent health industry investor, predicted a few weeks ago that 'money will start flowing in again' to health insurance stocks after passage of the legislation. Investors.com last month reported that pharmacy benefit managers share prices are hitting all-time highs, with the only industry worry that the Administration would reverse its decision not to negotiate Medicare Part D drug prices, leaving in place a Bush Administration policy.
During the debate, when the interests of insurance companies would have been effectively challenged, that challenge was turned back. The 'robust public option' which would have offered a modicum of competition to a monopolistic industry was whittled down from an initial potential enrollment of 129 million Americans to 6 million. An amendment which would have protected the rights of states to pursue single-payer health care was stripped from the bill at the request of the Administration. Looking ahead, we cringe at the prospect of even greater favors for insurance companies.
Recent rises in unemployment indicate a widening separation between the finance economy and the real economy. The finance economy considers the health of Wall Street, rising corporate profits, and banks' hoarding of cash, much of it from taxpayers, as sign of an economic recovery. However in the real economy - in which most Americans live - the recession is not over. Rising unemployment, business failures, bankruptcies and foreclosures are still hammering Main Street.
This health care bill continues the redistribution of wealth to Wall Street at the expense of America's manufacturing and service economies which suffer from costs other countries do not have to bear, especially the cost of health care. America continues to stand out among all industrialized nations for its privatized health care system. As a result, we are less competitive in steel, automotive, aerospace and shipping while other countries subsidize their exports in these areas through socializing the cost of health care.
Notwithstanding the fate of H.R. 3962, America will someday come to recognize the broad social and economic benefits of a not-for-profit, single-payer health care system, which is good for the American people and good for America's businesses, with of course the notable exceptions being insurance and pharmaceuticals.
6. FROM "SICKO'S" DONNA SMITH: The Bill Does Not Cure What Ails Us
Passing a healthcare reform bill that does not provide me with better access to care or protection from bankruptcy and financial ruin is not what I asked you all to do. Stripping away all reference to a progressively financed, single standard of high quality healthcare for all - also known as single-payer -- is done only to more deeply ensconce the deep pocketed interests in healthcare: the private, for-profit insurance giants, the big pharmaceuticals, the medical equipment companies, the hospital corporations and all the other making huge profits as thousands die needless deaths.Healthcare is a basic human right. Granting that right is not something to be calculated differently in swing Congressional districts, off-year election strategy or second-Presidential term planning. It is your (members of Congress') duty to me, to my fellow citizens and to your nation.
And (members of Congress) are marching away from reality when you think all the hard-working people who counted on you to make this a better healthcare system will not notice when you deliver insurance purchase mandates and a corporate bail-out that will dwarf the Wall Street trillions you've already justified.
Watch Smith's video: "American Sickos: Will the Current Bills Help? No"
Follow Smith's organizing for real reform at the website of Progressive Democrats of America. She is the national co-chair of PDA's Healthcare NOT Warfare campaign.
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26 Comments so far
Show AllWho pays the Big Insurance Companies when we are unemployed?
This bill does nothing to provide health care for the American people.
Ok Mr Nichols what can we do now? Is the Senate our only chance in blocking a bad bill from passing? Should we ask Senator Sanders - the one good Senator in the Senate - to fillibuster? Do you have any other Senators in mind?
Will our Reps in Congress get a (mulligan) or chance to vote again on the final bill merged with the Senate Bill and vote against it? Also, did Kucinich and Weiner and the progressive dems blow it by not persuing the Weiner ammendment vote for single payer?
Heck, if the Stupak bill or amendment for no money for abortions passed on short notice, why not the effort for a vote on Single Payer? Looks like the prog dems are pretenders and are also on the take from the DLC and
insurance and drug lobby
Sanders has said he'll stand against. I've emailed him congrats and support, and emailed my 2 bums to stand down.
The comment made by earthian to yesterday's Nihcols's screed is being repeated in full below because it applies bigtime and explains why only two progressive congresscritters are noted above:
Earthian November 8th, 2009 2:08 pm
On July 30th of this year, 57 members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus said this about health care reform:
"Any bill that does not provide, at a minimum, for a public option with reimbursement rates based on Medicare rates -not negotiated rates -is unacceptable. It would ensure higher costs for the public plan, and would do nothing to achieve the goal of 'keeping insurance companies honest,' and their rates down."
Incredibly, in a stunning display of mass cowardice before corporate power, only two of the 57 kept their commitment, Dennis Kucinich and Eric Massa. My praise goes to them, their courage, and their commitment to their word. Bravo!
The other 55, the cowardly, lying 55, broke their word to the American progressive citizenry.
My only hope for them is when the final bill comes back from conference committee, surely in even less-progressive condition, that they will re-examine their consciences and vote no. But based on this betrayal of their written commitment of July 30, I have no hope that they will. They have no spines. No courage. No commitment to anything they say. They caved. They are worse than the conservatives who at least have the courage of their corporate convictions.
Here are the cowardly, lying, spineless 55:
Lynn Woolsey
Raul Grijalva
Carolyn Kilpatrick
Jerry Nadler
Phil Hare
Lucille Roybal-Allard
Keith Ellison
Earl Blumenauer
Mel Watts
Donna Edwards
John Olver
Laura Richardson
Maxine Waters
John Conyers
Judy Chu
Maurice Hinchey
Hank Johnson
Diane Watson
Jackie Speier
Bill Pascrell
Lloyd Doggett
Marcy Kaptur
Mazie Hirono
Bob Filner
Linda Sanchez
Marcia Fudge
Barbara Lee
Andre Carson
Sheila Jackson Lee
Michael Honda
Jim McDermott
William Lacy Clay
Jim McGovern
Yvette Clarke
Chellie Pingree
Jesse Jackson, Jr.
Elijah Cummings
Bennie Thompson
Gwen Moore
Donald Payne
Fortney "Pete" Stark
Ed Towns
Corrine Brown
Alcee Hastings
Nydia Valezquez
Luis Gutierrez
Grace Napolitano
Albio Sires
John Tierney
Mike Capuano
Chaka Fattah
Jose Serrano
Sam Farr
Bill Delahunt
Eddie Bernice Johnson
I personally will never again trust what these individuals say, only what they do. They have violated the trust of progressives with their cowardly caving to corporate power. They are liars all.
Here is the e-mail address of the Congressional Progressive Caucus for sending a message urging them to grow spines for the final vote:
progressive@mail.house.gov
This is just another huge transfer of tax dollars to Wall st. The cynical way the Dems. have used poor people and people literally dying without any care is sickening. This bill sucks it will only make things worse. What is wrong with the DEms. when are they going to grow a pair? Maybe it's time for Progressives to bolt this stupid fruitless coalition? We have it in our power to destroy the Dems. and maybe that's what it will take to wake them up. They're NOT listening to their own base so why should we support them? What is in it for any of us anymore? We keep electing people who are not at all interesting in doing anything of any real value for us. This is just throwing good $$ and effort down a rat hole. I'm done with these people they're worse frauds then the GOPERS. The GOPERS are nutz but they don't make any bones about not caring. I hate being endlessly lied to and used by these asshole.
Yeah, the people are taking the "law" into their hands as related by this recap, http://www.alternet.org/world/143813/as_foreclosure_nightmares_increase%2C_will_more_homeowners_pay_off_their_bankers_in_violence One wonders how many other incidents have occured that the author omitted from his essay.
I agree with the author that a volcano is about to erupt, especially with all those taxpayer dollars fueling the billions in bankster bonuses and the further extortion of billions hidden in both so-called healthcare reform bills. How soon will "gated communities" be assaulted with firebombs? I also await the kidnapping of a CEO with the ransom note directed to his corporation, not his family. More people will go "postal;" you can bet on it.
Personally, I would declare war on Goldman Sachs and escalate to include all of Wall Street.
"Isn't this a fight between Democrats and Republicans? Between reforming liberals and tea-party conservatives?"
No! This is a fight between the citizens of this country and the greedy/gluttenous elite, plain and simple. Guess who is winning big time?
1990 pages will be more than enough to keep people from reading it much less work to defeat it and give us 30 simple pages of HR676. I found my head begging for a jar of Tylenol back when I had to read it and it was only 1,000 pages ! I'll bet that every special interest group that opposed single payer will be having pure fun with this bill when they misuse it to tell their customers stuff like "Oh, butt under section blah-blah-blah, you're not covered or only covered for yada-yada ..."
Jennifer:
Great post! If the issue wasn't so serious, I'd laugh at your last sentence because it's totally on target.
The frigging country is on life support, and these pusillanimous clowns just pulled the plug on it.
Great point Lingum but one thing about those perceived cowards. I seriously doubt that these clowns are cowards but are instead "bold" in the wrong direction. RichM generally gives the details on "boldness in the wrong direction". Either way, no doubt the damage is done. Maybe pulling this country out of "life support" will awaken it but I won't be holding my breath expecting society to wake up even then. As it is, I don't take health care for granted and I expect to become a bigger skeptic of this system should this scam pass.
"This Bill Will Enshrine in Law the Monopolistic Powers of the Private Health Insurance Industry"
Actually, its Oligarchic Power...as there is more than one entity holding that power...maybe five smart progressives and another guy?
If this bill had a genuine, affordable, strong public option in it, they know nearly everyone would migrate to it. This bill essentially kills that idea and preserves the monopolistic power of the insurance industry.
They're afraid that we would move closer to something like single-payer.
I bet insurance will become more expensive for the average person if this bill passes - like the sham that COBRA is.
Think about this next time you're looking for a new job: Better get something with health benefits guaranteed or else you're s@!t out of luck! And then they can still take that away!
What a country this is. We're all slaves to the insurance industry. Can't move to a different job or a different state without getting screwed. Can't get sick... or risk bankruptcy or skyhigh premiums.
And things will not get any better.
Dear Congressional idiots,
Do you know what the hell Universal Health Care is? It is not frickin' car insurance, which you are forced to buy! (Let's not go there.) It means that it is funded by working people and the companies they work for. When I look at my paycheck right now, I pay for Medicare and I pay for some insurance company to make profits off my good health (called Reserve by Blue Cross). I should be paying one frickin' fee, probably one half of what I'm paying now. (An immediate increase to my disposable income.) An equal amount would be paid by my employer. Pick your doctor. No pre-existing conditions. If I become unemployed, it becomes free. If I retire, it becomes free. Also, the funds get put into an organization that the Federal Government cannot steal from to pay for killing people of the brownish persuasion. But why am I wasting these words? The criminals will take their money from the insurance companies and continue screwing the American people. And why not, they've been doing it for years! Perhaps we start ignoring these morons and start working more locally, at the state level. Or, in the great tradition of American government, every citizen of the U.S. donates $1 and we divide the $300+ million across all of the Congress critters. Now, you're talking their language. You'd have Universal Health Care passed in about five minutes.
Gee, I guess there is still momey in the US treasury to be stolen by the health and pharma corporations!!!
But I could be wrong !
Nice article, here's some links to the PNHP's website that also believes this bill is worse than useful.
http://pnhp.org/blog/
http://pnhp.org/blog/2009/11/05/health-care-reform-2009-no-bill-is-better-than-a-bad-bill/
Best synopsis of the health care rip off parading as reform I've seen ... More business as usual in Congress ...
As the year of the Democrats marches on all we see is Bush's third term.
~ More War
~ More bankster bailouts
~ More domstic spying
~ More war crimes denial
Then there is this health care bill that is a direct send up of Bush's Medicare Part D ... another bill guaranteeing the monopoly and profit of Big Pharma and Health Care Rip Off Inc.
Let's see who is pro life. The "pro lifers" don't want their money to pay for [safe, legal] abortions.
Well, I'd love to say what I don't want to pay for. I don't want my tax dollars going to kill civilians. Go after the actual terrorists but why kill civilians? Isn't it obvious that just creates more terrorists?
I don't want children saddled with overlong tests, I want my money to go to pay more teachers.
Prohibition doesn't work, let's cut the DEA's work down dramatically: legalize and tax marijuana.
Deficit solved.
I sent this letter via Congress.org to the puppets in Washington, DC.
SICK MANDATE
I hereby declare my absolute refusal to pay any private “insurer” for my right to exist. For, that is what the insurance companies are trying take control of—our very lives!
In order to gain endless and obscene profit from the right to life of others, the insurance industry is telling us we must pay “protection” for our own bodies, regardless of our state of health; as if our bodies were commodities sold, rented, or loaned to us by these self-professed owners of all that exists! This is legalized blackmail. Through its conduit, the Federal Government, this corporate beast has decreed that we, the vast Citizenry, hand over our cash, every month, in amounts decided by them for as long as we shall live.
Consider this stunning scenario: A boy turns eighteen and immediately signs up and begins his life of servitude to the insurance companies. If he were to pay $100.00 a month and die at eighty, he would end up paying his “insurer” $74,400.00 over sixty-two years! And here’s the most chilling fact of all—if he never needs to file a claim during his life, or his claims are refused, the insurance company keeps ALL he paid over ALL those years! That’s the racket. Remember, your money is not held in trust; it and all interest it accrues go to the insurer in what amounts to a monumental “thank you very much for the right to exist” gift to that company. Also, keep in mind that as we, Americans, continue our fall into the abyss of ever poorer health, higher infant mortality, and shorter life expectancy, these companies will continue to increase premiums on everyone, including the few among us who try to be healthy in order to hedge losses on those who throw caution and better judgment to the wind. Therefore, in the end our boy dies a desiccated old man after having everything right down to his bodily fluids sucked dry by those corporate parasites!
We, in this tyranny-infected plutarchy that the stupid and thoughtless among us stubbornly continue to label a democracy, have had no say in this plan to force every American to buy private insurance or face the ravages of the penal system. H.R.3962 has never been put before the people themselves for a vote or a debate. We, in this “democracy” are being ordered to pay or else!
This is probably the most fiendish plot hatched in this country since slavery itself and it comes at the demand of what is probably the most monstrous of capitalist institutions—insurance companies!
Recently, President Barack Obamanation made the media rounds touting this obscene plan. While interviewing with George Stephanopoulos, he claimed that this mandate is not a tax. Yea, and I am not an earthling! This evasive tactic has become so damned tiresome; it is as though someone has just walked up, punched you in the face, and then immediately said “Un-unh! I didn’t do anything.” Madness! He also tried to draw parallels between this plan and auto insurance, claiming that nearly all of us have auto insurance. So what’s the problem? Well, the problem is this: as unfair as the private auto insurance monopoly is, one can avoid paying it simply by NOT DRIVING A MOTOR VEHICLE! While, in contrast, this so-called health care plot would entrap practically every American! There is a clear and profound difference to anyone with an ounce of sense.
A talking point that supporters of this fascist decree are echoing is the idea that this is all about pooling resources for the common good. Give me a break! This scheme has absolutely nothing to do with the common good; it has everything to do with the exclusive benefit of the few at the expense of the many.
Instead of just funding corporate bailouts and foreign wars of conquest, we should be getting the health coverage we need from the tax dollars we pay into the national coffers every April instead of from private insurance companies whose only interest is gaining as much profit as possible from our health needs. This is typical in an out-of-control “corporatocracy” such as this, and all supported by one who has completely reversed his position on healthcare since taking office. When will we finally learn that politicians, in their self-serving quest for power will always tell the people whatever the people want to hear to get what they want? It’s a tired cliché. We must stop being so damned gullible!
I am not at all averse to the idea of paying my fair share in order to help maintain a healthy society of a truly civilized disposition. I want nothing more than to live in a just and fair country that treats all of its citizens, not just its wealthiest, with fairness and respect. However, the sad truth is that this society is unjust. Draconian policies such as this planned personal mandate attest to that fact. Since a society devoid of justice is uncivilized, we must first acknowledge this truth; one who chooses to stick his head in the sand still exposes his posterior to reality.
Once we admit this grave reality to ourselves, then we can begin to pursue truth and righteousness--those ever-elusive human ideals. Only then can we avoid the path that leads, as it has so often in history, from democracy, to minority control of all wealth at the expense of the majority, to chaos, to totalitarian control of chaos, and then, finally, to the death of that which the best among us of all time and times have hailed to the stars above—our collective SOUL.
For a risk to be insurable, it must no be too common. The premium for your house insurance is reasonable because the chances of it burning down are slight. Car insurance costs more, relatively, since there are many more vehicle accidents than house fires, but it is still not a bad bargain, all in all.
Health care is another matter, actuarily speaking, as almost all of us incur some amount of medical expense, i.e. the risk is much too high. So the premium has to be so large that the insurance principle becomes impractical, even if the companies were willing to settle for a reasonable rate of return, as they have clearly demonstrated they are not.
That is the basic, inescapable fact of the matter, which we refuse to face. There are two remaining alternatives, single payer and private prepaid plans like Kaiser Permanente, which is single payer on a smaller scale.
I'm rapidly coming to the view that we would be better off in the long run if this current effort were to fail altogether, which might turn attention to the available real alternatives that can work.
Thank you John for a summary of the top reasons this bill should be allowed to rot. And thanks again to Kucinich and Massa for their NO vote.
I have never read anything by by Dennis Kucinich on his arguments for single payer health care that is more cogent and eloquent than that in Nichols' piece. Says it all. Says it well. Interesting that Kucinich has often sacrificed his own strong views for the good of the party. Not this time.
Herman Schmidt
We may not be able to count on a conference committee making meaningful changes.
In the House, the Speaker appoints all members. I would hope Speaker Pelosi chooses progressive Dems. The Senate's rule, however, says only that "the Senate" chooses conference committee members.
A woman in either Harry Reid's office or the HELP committee office (don't remember which) believes that the "relevant committees" choose which members of those committees would serve, which means of course that Baucus would appoint himself and as many other Blue Dogs as possible and that Harkin would appoint the only Good Guys/Gals.
How on earth can anyone be surprised that the US Congress is completely incapable of passing a bill that would improve the lives of ordinary citizens? This Congress cannot even address global warming, which will affect everyone, including the members' own children. So how can anyone expect this dysfunctional system to successfully address a problem that only affects the little people and the little people's children? Not gonna happen.
So nice of Common Ground to post an article critical of Pelosi's bill AFTER the debate and vote are over. Even this article doesn't specify in simple language which provisions of the bill cause the problems, so people might oppose them. It only complains, after the fact, about the negative consequences.
During the entire lead-up to this disastrous piece of legislation, Common Ground was posting articles urging progressive readers to call their members of Congress in support b/c it had an undefined "public" option. People who were getting their info from other sources are not surprised by the outcome. Only by how the progressive media had deserted us when publishing good info could have made a difference. And they wonder why I haven't sent them money.
It's curious that many genuine **progressives** who enthusiastically support the bill claim that it solves many of the faults cited above. That it will contain costs, expand coverage, end bankruptcies, close the "donut hole," and end many insurance company abuses. The ones we are all familiar with such as dropping 'customers' (I almost said 'patients') when they need coverage, pre existing conditions, etc. As well as offer many more benefits.
But then there is the Stupak amendment, which he sold as "maintaining the status quo," not as expanding restrictions on a woman's right to choose. All done in the last moment when the survival of the bill was up for grabs.
Well, we'll see. I think it's a start, and, yes, the Republicans are right to be scared. The public option provisions, though starting out modestly, will probably eventually kill off the private insurers for they won't be able to compete. Those of us, such as myself, who see single payer (Medicare for all) as the best route hope, of course, this will happen sooner than later. Following the debate, so many complicated issues which have come up could easily have been avoided with Medicare for all.
We'll see.