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Rep. Ryan's Free-Market 'Death Panels'
The consequences of three decades of anti-government Reaganism and free-market extremism are now coming clearly into view, a cruel and brutish America split sharply between a few lucky haves and many desperate have-nots.
As Rep. Paul Ryan proudly declared in unveiling the Republican budget plan for fiscal 2012, “This is not a budget; this is a cause.”
It is the “cause” advanced in the modern era by President Ronald Reagan and economist Milton Friedman. It calls for further slashing the tax rate for the richest Americans by another ten percentage points, from 35 percent to 25 percent, while enacting a wide range of domestic spending cuts, including phasing out the Medicare health program for the elderly as it has existed since the 1960s.
Under Ryan’s plan, senior citizens in the future would have to select a private health insurance policy with the government paying “premium support” worth about $8,000 to the company, thus shifting a heavier, even crushing, financial burden onto the elderly.
And, since Ryan’s plan also would repeal President Barack Obama’s health reform, which prohibits insurance companies from excluding coverage of “preexisting conditions,” senior citizens suffering from chronic illnesses might find themselves unable to get coverage of those ailments and likely consigned to a premature death.
As medical writer Sheila Guilloton noted about Ryan’s plan, “What is not clear or even addressed is the problem of putting eligibility to purchase health insurance back in the hands of the health insurance industry.”
Even today, people just shy of Medicare’s 65-year-old threshold find themselves either shunned by insurance companies or paying exorbitant amounts. Yet Ryan envisions thrusting Americans over 65 into that same predicament, only worse because they are more likely to have health problems and are less likely to be under a company plan.
“For older people the prospect of getting and paying for private health insurance is daunting,” Guilloton wrote “For instance, in Connecticut a PPO with a $5,000 deductible would cost a 60-64 year old and spouse between $1,400 and $1,900 a month. And that cost presumes that they either are part of a company group plan or have no pre-existing conditions.
“The plan to return control of access to health insurance companies without addressing the issue of eligibility and cost control is simply to return to the very pattern of abuse in place before the attempt at health care reform.”
The elimination of Obama’s health-care reform also would remove requirements that insurance companies devote a high percentage of their premiums to medical services rather than diverting the money to higher executive salaries and greater profits.
In other words, Ryan’s plan would fatten the insurance industry's bottom line by squeezing the elderly on health care. In effect, the plan would create a free-market “death panel” by forcing many senior citizens to skip necessary care.
Ryan also would “save” large sums by turning the Medicaid program for the poor into a state block grant system, which would leave states little choice but to also turn their backs on many sick and disabled.
No Balanced Budget
Yet, even as Ryan touts his goal of cutting government spending by more than $6.2 trillion over the next decade, compared to Obama’s budget, Ryan’s plan would still not result in a balanced federal budget for nearly three decades, let alone pay off the accumulated national debt.
That’s because Ryan would accompany his steep spending cuts with lower tax rates for the wealthiest Americans. And those lower tax rates – based on an ideological devotion to Reagan’s “trickle-down economics” and Friedman’s “free-market” extremism – have been a principal cause of the debt problem.
Remember just a decade ago, after President Bill Clinton and the congressional Democrats raised the tax rates modestly, the U.S. government was running a surplus and was on a path to eliminate the entire federal debt.
Then, President George W. Bush and congressional Republicans began enacting tax cuts again.
Those tax cuts – combined with Bush’s two wars and the financial crisis caused, in large part, by inadequate federal regulation of Wall Street – flooded the U.S. government ledgers with trillions of dollars in red ink.
So, the logical remedy would seem to be to combine some reasonable spending cuts with a surtax on millionaires and billionaires. There also could be huge savings if the United States shifted to a “Medicare-for-all” health system that eliminated the expensive private insurance middlemen.
But that would go against Reagan/Friedman dogma about giving virtually all power to corporations and trusting in the “magic of the market.” Therefore, Ryan’s “solution” is to savage domestic government spending, weaken government regulatory powers and pass more tax cuts for the wealthy.
Since he unveiled his budget plan this week, Ryan has been widely hailed by the mainstream U.S. news media as a “courageous” visionary, a thoughtful guy who is brave enough to make the tough choices.
In watching the correspondents on CNN and CNBC – not to mention Fox – it’s almost as if the revenue side of the budget crisis is non-existent. “Political courage” only comes from destroying the remnants of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, if not Theodore Roosevelt’s progressive era.
Why not repeal the entire 20th Century and take the nation back to an era of two Americas, a few living in the lap of luxury and most living hand-to-mouth?
Most media talking heads appear to be either devotees of free-market economist Milton Friedman or careerists who know that no one ever lost a promotion by promoting the anti-government doctrine of Ronald Reagan. (Reagan, of course, got his big start in politics in the 1960s by decrying Medicare as socialist oppression.)
The Cost of Reaganism
The American people are now paying the price for the lack of nearly any critical coverage of the Reagan presidency, as was apparent last February in the hagiography broadcast and written about the 40th president around the centennial of his birth.
The syrupy handling of Reagan and his legacy has had a powerful impact on the judgment of the American people. According to a recent Gallup poll, Americans rated Reagan the greatest president ever, five percentage points ahead of Abraham Lincoln, who came in second.
When the Reagan mythology is combined with the powerful influence of the right-wing media, it shouldn’t be a great surprise that many average Americans don’t blame Reagan and his anti-government policies for why their incomes have stagnated or sunk over the past three decades.
Instead, many Americans, especially white men, have been encouraged to blame “guv-mint” and its supposed favoritism toward minorities and the poor. So, some don “revolutionary war” costumes and join Tea Party groups, which are often quietly funded by politically savvy billionaires.
Unlike the duped average guys, the billionaires – the likes of the oil magnate Koch brothers and media mogul Rupert Murdoch – are keenly attuned to their class interests. They know the only serious check on their extraordinary powers would be a democratized and energized federal government.
So, they invest in the faux populism of the Tea Party and Fox News to rile up the white guys with anti-government rage.
Meanwhile, on the opposite side, American progressives have tended to be ineffective in presenting a consistent or coherent message to the people.
Though many progressives recognize the practical value of reforms like Medicare in making the lives of average Americans longer and more fulfilling, some on the Left preach an unrealistic perfectionism that finds little value in imperfect reforms. They almost invite the worst social pain as the only route to some “revolution.”
The combination of these factors – a well-organized Right against a largely disorganized Left – has brought a bleak future into sharp focus.
It can be seen through the lens of Paul Ryan’s budgetary "cause." It would leave sick elderly to die and the nation’s domestic infrastructure to decay, while insurance companies would reap more profits and the super rich would be taxed even less.
It’s an outcome that would have put a crooked smile on the lips of Ronald Reagan and Milton Friedman.
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40 Comments so far
Show All"If we can not help the many who are poor, then we can not protect the few who are rich"---John F. Kennedy
Yea our "enlightened" ruling class of years past has now been replaced by a bunch of knuckle draggers that are so shortsighted and recklessly greedy that they can no longer act in the longterm best interests of themselves and the offspring of their wretched loins.
Why aren't US college students out protesting Ryan's bill en masse since they have the most to lose.
Few US college grads are landing real jobs these days because millions of us boomers aged 55-64 are delaying retirement solely to hang on to our employer sponsored medical insurance.
If Medicare turns into glorified Obamacare as Ryan hopes it will, many boomers will never retire and the already high unemplyment rate for young Americans will increase further.
AARP saw this coming a couple of years ago when they had an article in their monthly rag about an old biddy who was still punching a timeclock at age 100.
Congress is going to investigate AARP.
They don't have to, bogi666. Republican hack Bill Novelli took over AARP years ago and eviscerated an organization that used to have politicians shaking in their boots. Now they just peddle insurance and stay out of Congress' business, for the most part.
Revised:
"If we can not help the many who are poor, then we can help the few who are rich"
"Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for the Man."
Paul Ryan
Ryan's plan, written by the insurance companies, is to create corruption because privatization eliminates transparency.The way Medicare and Medicaid are structured the politicians and insurers are left out of the corruption which occurs at the doctors billing for fraudulent charges, therefore eliminating the politicians and insurers from the graft and corruption benefits.
the democrats must understand that they cannot be a "hybrid" party
they cannot be part milton friedman and part john maynard keynes
keynes proved scientifically that the only way to have a functioning capitalistic system (and in fact a functioning democracy by caveat) is to have a proper distribution of wealth
NOT AN EVEN distribution of wealth but a proper one, where everyone can share in the societies wealth.
this is true identity of the democrats, and the must cling to if and fight of the pseudo economics of friedman
The Democrats motus operendi is Keynes rhetoric and Friedman action.
Until Americans stop supporting Democrats they will continue this strategy.
Parry sez: "Since he unveiled his budget plan this week, Ryan has been widely hailed by the mainstream U.S. news media as a 'courageous' visionary, a thoughtful guy who is brave enough to make the tough choices."
***
Wow, did I ever have this guy pegged wrong.
I see only a desiccated turd in a suit; an organ-grinder's monkey hawking snake venom on behalf of the handlers at the other end of his chain.
My mistake, apparently.
Goebbels--
I think your appraisal of Ryan is the correct one.
"I see only a desiccated turd in a suit; an organ-grinder's monkey hawking snake venom on behalf of the handlers at the other end of his chain."
I have read that sentence of your's better than ten times now, and I really have to hand it to you, so much truth, and such fine mental imagery all rolled up in so few words.
I would gladly give up Dick Cheney's cold dead mechanical heart to hear Paul Krugman utter your finely crafted words on the Sunday morning M$M bobble head talk shows.
As long as the American sheeple continue to vote for the one-party Duopoly - in either its blue or red flavor - every 4 years, this will be the end-result. Increased austerity, increased corporate power, increased tax breaks and subsidies for the uber-rich and the corporate masters that run the Oligarchy that is the United States of America, and an increased acceleration into third-world status and poverty for the country and the majority of its sheep, er, citizens.
It really IS that simple. Breaking the stranglehold of the Corporatist Oligarchs on our government and returning it to an actual democracy that furthers the interests of the PEOPLE. And that will never be accomplished by voting for the Duopoly.
The sooner the American sheeple figure this out, the better. I won't, however, hold my breath.
I think many of us are at wits end. We did not choose Hillary Clinton as the Democratic nominee because we kept associating her with her husband's policies. And now we get to witness Obama upholding those same policies. I abandoned the 2 major parties 32 years ago, but our rank and file don't seem to understand they are two sides of the same coin. To what should we turn?
I recently registered with the Green Party. It's time to make that party viable! Spread the word! www.gp.org
As faint a hope as it may be, I will always vote 3rd party and my principals. If the majority of Americans would vote for their interests, instead of "who has at least a chance of winning, even if it stinks" - the retarded lesser-evilism mentality - 3rd party politicians would be in the WH and filling both houses of Congress.
I know 3rd party candidates can't win - yet - but I will vote for them nonetheless. At least when one of the 2 Evil Parties wins an election, I will know I didn't sell out my principals to get him/her there.
This is a plan? More of what got the USA into the mess it is in?
Reagan had the same time and the debt went UP. This same plan of downsizing Government and Social programs while cutting taxes has been ongoing for some 30 years and the debt keeps climbing and they think it VISIONARY to try the same thing again?
Do people really think that were that wealthiest one percent to see their taxes cut again wherein they now had 5 billion a year incomes rather then only 4 billion a year they would then decide they now have enough to invest in America?
What is IN That water?
Supposedly,
the government is "of the people, by the people, for the people" (This is what the sadistic corporate predators want us to believe during each election cycle).
So,
when anyone talks about shrinking the government,
they are, in fact, talking about shrinking the number of people, the number of benefits, and the number of those who benefit.
This article tries to have us believe the republicans are the only ones doing harm.
Rubbish.
I respect Robert Parry and believe him responsible for a lot of great and valuable work over the years, but his blind spot is his faith in the two-party system. The GOP's program is so insane that an effective principled assault on its basic consequences could result in landslide victories across the country - but the Dems are one-half of the good cop/bad cop paradigm in American politics, and they share basic agreement with the GOP premise, only they'll be less fanatic in carrying it out.
In 2004, the Dems spent more time and attention on blocking third-party candidacies than they did in criticizing Bush. It is now extremely difficult to run anywhere in the US if not aligned with the two parties.
Excellent observation. Whenever Republicans use the words, me, us, they are code words for their WEALTHY PREDATORY CAPITALIST WELFARE KING buddies that fund them with bribery to transfer the forced contributions, withholding taxes, on labor to the WELFARE KINGS. Most Americans have been instilled with mindlessness and assume by using the words they are included as the me, we.
Of course, Obama could have pre-empted any future attempt by the Right to hijack healthcare by supporting a single payer plan. Instead, by giving away the farm to insurance companies, Obama merely encouraged them to push further--after all, if they could get that much out of a Democrat, imagine what they could get out of Republicans. So we can all thank that miserable SOB president for screwing us and our children well into the future. The other side of this is: there will always be idiot have-nots who will vote for the very people trying to rob them blind. America=a really bad experiment.
Let's face it...We must balance the Federal Budget. My idea is to balance it on the backs of the Department of Death and the throat-slitters at the CIA.
Ah, yes. The Secret Government (the CIA and all the rest of those alphabet agencies*) -- which Bill Moyers outed in a book in 1987 -- they do a lot of special ops type clandestine shenanigans with varying degrees of success, but they're evidently lousy at what spies are supposed to be doing: gathering intelligence. They seem to be constantly being caught by surprise by developments in places other than here that, if they were any good, they should have seen coming.
They were caught totally off guard when the Iranians tossed the Shah out in 1979, were shocked when the Afghanistan people stopped fighting the Russians back when they were Soviets and went from "allies" to "enemies," and by most of what has happened on the planet before and since.
Like most of the apparatchiks of the establishment, they're dumb at heart but think they're smart.
*Does anybody even in the Oval Office know how many there are and what they're all doing? I just learned of one that I hadn't heard of before, the Defense Department's JSOC, the Joint Special Operation Committee -- be "special" as pass that Joint covertly over here.
The CIA failed to report or even predict the collapse of the USSR in 1989. I was in the USSR in 1984 and it took me 1 week and cost $350, all inclusive out of London, to realize that the USG was being fed with fraudulent information by the spy agencies, but most likely were deliberately perpetrating fraud on the American taxpayers to force contributions, withholding taxes,for the Pentagon protection racket scheme of fund US, the Pentagon for protection or else, by taxing the productive sector of the economy, labor, and transferring it to the unproductive WEALTHY PREDATORY CAPITALIST WELFARE KINGS, PAPER shufflers to create fraudulent products around the world.
The CIA failed to report or even predict the collapse of the USSR in 1989. I was in the USSR in 1984 and it took me 1 week and cost $350, all inclusive out of London, to realize that the USG was being fed with fraudulent information by the spy agencies, but most likely were deliberately perpetrating fraud on the American taxpayers to force contributions, withholding taxes,for the Pentagon protection racket scheme of fund US, the Pentagon for protection or else, by taxing the productive sector of the economy, labor, and transferring it to the unproductive WEALTHY PREDATORY CAPITALIST WELFARE KINGS, PAPER shufflers to create fraudulent products around the world.
If Ryan is really honest about wanting to cut government spending then a good place to start is by slashing the military budget and cutting off the funds for the unnecessary occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq. But that seems quite doubtful because, as Randolph Bourne observed about a hundred years ago:
War is the health of the State
---and death squads from untaxed covens topped with whitewashed roods---
"The syrupy handling of Reagan and his legacy has had a powerful impact on the judgment of the American people."
__________________
"I think Ronald Reagan changed the trajectory of America in a way that Richard Nixon did not and in a way that Bill Clinton did not. He put us on a fundamentally different path because the country was ready for it. I think they felt like with all the excesses of the 1960s and 1970s and government had grown and grown but there wasn't much sense of accountability in terms of how it was operating. I think people, he just tapped into what people were already feeling, which was we want clarity we want optimism, we want a return to that sense of dynamism and entrepreneurship that had been missing."
-- Barack Obama, 2008
It would seem as if Obama has succeeded in facilitating a return of all the "clarity, dynamism and entrepreneurship" he could ask for, at least among the jackals and hyenas in Congress!
Of course, the present "clarity" is limited to "clarity of PURPOSE", i.e. our Elected Misrepresentatives' ultimately bipartisan resolve to earn their keep by vivisecting and stripping the dying carcass of the Compassionate State in order to fatten the capitalist overclass.
With luck, Obama will have his whole second term to catch up on the straggling "optimism".
Are you in(sane)?
Well said.
Yeah, Reagan, with his big, vacant 20 Mule Team Borax, 150-watt GE grin and jokes salvaged from old Warner Bros. scripts, exuded optimism and made post-Nam America feel good about itself while his corporatist underlings began dismantling the underpinnings of the middle-class and undermining any chance of prosperity for the poor. Then they convinced the kids growing up under St. Ronnie of Eureka that the government of We the People was actually their enemy -- in other words, they were their own worst enemy -- rather than the Grand Old Pilferers party. Well, it didn't come cheap; more than a billion dollars has been spent marketing this corrosion of reality throughout the American zeitgeist, plainly ludicrous notions that the Europeans laughed off after WWII. (Of course, the rewards for the Corporatists were enormous, much more than whatever it cost to suborn politicians to strangle populist democracy in this country for the past 30 years.) We've now reached the point where the fate of our democracy rests with a judgeship and recall votes in Wisconsin and teachers, cops and firefighters throughout the Midwest.
The only thing that will awaken America to its true enemies and to fight against Ryan's unholy 'cause' will be another economic collapse (in progress) and the reinvigoration of pissed-off blue-collar unionists, taking to the streets to demand their rights and forcing the weak-kneed Democrats to either live up to their purported populist principles or risk defeat by a third party.
I just hope the blue-collar folks get there before the economic collapse.
RSJ: Astute characterization and I'd agree with your conclusion whole-heartedly were the U.S. (among other lands) not currently caught in a massive permutation which will make it impossible to go back to what once was, i.e. the previous "normal." Collapse is taking place in stages, with one evident example seen in the implosion of other nations' economies, added to a growing roster of expensive, massive climate-related changes. These, added to senseless wars, represent the beginning unwinding of the screws that held the former paradigm together.
Many lack the imagination to understand what this means... the mantra of growth is fast becoming an effete concept, and then there is the pending end of oil... there IS no going back to what once represented a prior security or secure society.
Things are speeding up. The answers will not be found in or through politics. The Shift that's begun is greater than that sector, and will require different adaptive strategies of small groups. This is the part in the "global movie" where the fiscal pyramid, amassing so much at its tip, literally starts to come asunder. The elites remind me of people trying to grab everything they can without realizing the weight of the bulk will freeze them in place, and that's not a very sound place to be.
Right now the wisest thing to do is to plan strategies of survival. It's THAT serious.
The people in Japan didn't have weeks or months to think over their plight, nor did those on the beach in Thailand with the tsunami hit. These events are escalating and will eventually lead to food shortages and lack of materials trucked into specific regions. In a sense, politics today is just an extension of media, it's the surface story and quite distracting...but it hardly has the power to alter the changes that have begun. And answers will not be found through it...
Game Change, folks...
I agree, Sioux Rose, we are imploding on several fronts and it seems as if some kind of Jungian 'collective unconsiousness' is sweeping through the world, and even the US. Some say it's just the Internet and mass communications -- that's part, but not all of it. This is like watching the Enlightenment emerge, albeit too slowly for my taste.
There will be a Game Change, but it won't come from the government. I think people are just sick of all the crap.
Reagan is the great communicator of the the sociopathic, psychopathic, psychobabble happy talk propaganda to instill mindlessness in American society. The "Manufacturing Consent", Noam Chomsky, has been in effect since the 1920's when it was 1st articulated by Walter Lippman, someone who Reagan grew up with. That''s 90 years of developing a society of mindlessness during a time when the explosion of manipulating the behavior of American Society is increasingly sophisticated while the society is being increasing dumbed down by business ads to be narcissistic, consumerist, gluttons of mindlessness. America is the only country is the history of the world that finds security in shopping without considering the consequences of using debt to find security.
Curious that Reagan articulated economic and social policies while he had Alzheimer's and is held in such high esteem. Kudos to G,H.W. Bush for passing the American with Disabilities Act which puts Reagan and his policies, formulated while having Alzheimer's, superior to policies proposed by others of sound mind. Why don't ObamberBush and the Democrats talk about these truths about Reagan rather than idolizing him.
"some on the left preach an unrealistic perfectionism that finds little value in imperfect reforms." Would it be too nit-picking to ask what that means?
Well, for one thing, it means he's euphemistically avoiding using the stock dismissive buzz-word "purist".
Lord_buckley --
I suspect that was a shot at progressives who have decried Obamacare as an immense cave-in to the insurance companies. (Which of course it is.)
Parry has done some excellent journalism over the years but he has two weak spots, in my opinion:
Anyone who questions the official 9/11 narrative (in even the most cautious fashion) is a nut.
The solution to our economic and political problems is the Democratic Party.
"The combination of these factors – a well-organized Right against a largely disorganized Left – has brought a bleak future into sharp focus."
Yes.
Although I usually steer clear of the show, I happened to catch part of MSNBC's "Morning Joe" the other day where four conservative white male millionaires, abetted by a limousine-liberal white female millionaire, were heaping praise on Paul Ryan for his 'courageous' stand by taking on those horrible 'entitlement' programs of Medicare and Medicaid. The odor of horse-pucky was nearly palpable as they studiously avoided mentioning tax increases for their class, the corporations like ExxonMobil and MSNBC-parent GE that pay no income tax on obscene profits, the billions poured into the gaping maw of the Pentagon war machine, or the billions in subsidies provided by the Great Unwashed to the global 'free-marketeers' who spend small fortunes evading the competition and risk of failure presented by a true free market.
It would have been courageous if Ryan had taken on any of the latter; as it was, Paulie was simply servicing his clients as any hooker does, meaning no disrespect to the women and men who practice sexual prostitution. They work hard for their money; Ryan doesn't.