Sandy wrote:So, do you think that the propaganda that is put forth, about our high standards of medical care, and how terrible socialized medicine is in 'Canada and England is bought and paid for by profiteers in the insurance business?
Not really. The insurance business is happy with ObamaCare - ~30,000 more mandated buyers. Pharmaceutics are thrilled by the agreement that bulk purchases of drugs from Canada or wherever has been negotiated away for their support of ObamaCare. Now neither is too unhappy with the status quo either. They just do not want single payer system - understandable in that the health insurance business would be out of business and drug costs down by more than 50%. But industries have to re-invent themselves periodically with changing times.
Sandy wrote:George W. Bush sold this country out to the highest bidder. The end result is a one percent class of corporate wealthy that control the rest of the country. Unless something is done, they will have complete control of everything, and the government will be unable (or unwilling) to protect its citizens from what already amounts to an immoral level of legalized robbery. If Romney gets in there, the process will be accelerated.
Agreed most whole-heartily!
Sandy wrote: It's becoming clear that the enemies of Obamacare are being bankrolled by the health insurance industry. They are paying a fortune for the publicity, the rumor mills, and all the crap that is disseminated by Limbaugh, Hannity and Beck, and all these other idiots like Drudge.
Truth is the health care and pharmaceuticals and hospital conglomerates industries has contributed very heavily Obama and to the Democrat Max Bacchus (who led the Health Care Act Reform).
Congress and the Obama administration worked out an unconscionable compromise health care bill that
perpetuates the perverse stranglehold for-profit insurance companies have on our system;
maintains the United States’s status as having the most expensive, inefficient health care system in the world; and
will still leave 23 million people without any basic health care coverage.
How did that happen? Basically, through bribery and the worst of Washington, D.C. politics-as-usual.
During three months – April, May, and June, 2009 – the lobby blitz by insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies makes it clear how the U.S. public was shafted – and the insurance and pharmaceutical companies, once again, made a killing. During those three months, the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association spent $2.8 million on lobbyists; GlaxoSmithKline, $2.3 million; Novartis, $1.8 million; Metlife Group, $1.7 million; Allstate, $1.5 million; Johnson & Johnson, $1.6 million; America’s Health Insurance Plans, $2 million; and Bayer Corp., $2 million. The American Medical Association spent $8.2 million on lobbying from January through June.
The second quarter of 2009 was expected to set a record, exceeding the first quarter, when health-care firms and their lobbyists spent at the rate of $1.4 million per day to prevent the health care system desired by a majority of Americans.[12]
That’s just for lobbying. The most blatant bribery comes in the form of campaign contributions. Senator Max Baucus, a Democrat from Montana, played a powerful role in the health care “reform” negotiations and was Chair of the Senate Finance Committee. He was one of the insurance industry’s hired guns, working against the public’s desire for a competing public insurance option. Here’s how the situation was described by The Guardian:
A primary target of criticism is Senator Max Baucus, the single largest recipient of health industry political donations and chairman of the finance committee that drafted the legislation criticised by [Dr. Steffie] Woolhander professor of medicine at Harvard University and co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program].
The committee twice voted against including public insurance in the legislation, with Baucus opposing it both times.
Baucus took $1.5m from the health sector for his political fund in the past year. Other members of the committee have received hundreds of thousands of dollars. . . .
Baucus holds dinners for health industry executives at which they pay thousdands of dollars each to be at the table, and an annual fly-fishing and golfing weekend in his home state of Montana that lobbyists pay handsomely to attend.[13]
One lobbyist was candid about how members of Congress are bought off:
“It would be very naïve to say they’re not influenced [by campaign contributions]. The contributors certainly hope they’re influencing and the recipients probably ultimately are influenced,” he [John Jonas, of lobbying firm Patton Boggs] said. “I think it’s a morally suspect practice, and then you have to look at its application to see if it’s morally bankrupt. . . .I think what’s bad about the system is it’s got more and more lax over time.
“When I started in this practice you did not talk issues at a fundraiser. It was impolite. And then with this need for money, the system has got coarser over time so that they go around the room asking what issues you’re interested in, much more of a linkage of dollars to a discussion of the issues now.”[14]
Then there’s the revolving door, from industry, to Congress, and back to make the big bucks in industry:
At Baucus’s side, drafting much of the wording of the reform, was Liz Fowler, a senate committee counsel whose last position was vice-president of the country’s largest health insurer, Wellpoint, which stands to be a principal beneficiary of the new law.
But the health care industry is also buying off Republicans because they really fear a single payer system (understandably for its survival). But survival of an industry cannot trump the needs of the people.
The ideological idiots you point out are attempting to do ObamaCare in with cries of "loss of freedom to choose doctors, “death panels”, “rationing of care” and the so-called gigantic deficit it would cause. Most of that noise from the RW pundits is utter lies and comes from the Republican propaganda machine which already has control over FoxNews and Clear Channel radio sans any extra money. Do not believe them, and I know you don’t Sandy, at least. CBO is now estimating a
$150B drop in deficit over 10 years with ObamaCare compared to current practices. But that can hardly be very precise until the states start rolling out their programs in 2014 as planned under ObamaCare - could be more, could be less. Now the RW most often just reports on total costs of ObamaCare (
$1.76T/year) and does not compared that to the current practice that is already more than $2T/year and growing at 6.7% a year - what a deceptive lie!
From Wiki:
In 2007, the U.S. spent $2.26 trillion on health care, or $7,439 per person, up from $2.1 trillion, or $7,026 per capita, the previous year.[32] Spending in 2006 represented 16% of GDP, an increase of 6.7% over 2004 spending. Growth in spending is projected to average 6.7% annually over the period 2007 through 2017.
But I’m not here to support ObamaCare. Under Rocky’s plan and other OEDC health care systems (e.g. Taiwan, France, Norway, Canada), you are "free to choose" doctors and hospitals (although I understand UK is not that way). There will be a goal of "right-sizing” health care but that is different than “rationing” - much needed to control our fee-for-services system which is motivated to treat more to get more and CYA from suits. Tort reform and control of overtreatment by a single payer best practices protocols will bring down costs and therefore insurance costs faster than anything - a lot more than ObamaCare under the best of likely states programs. I have no estimates but see that we can cut costs by at least 40% (Norway’s level) and that in all likelihood exceeds ObamaCare estimate savings. That is itself gives more “freedom” to people and universally available coverage gives “freedom" to move jobs and retire as well. So if you value “freedom”, as good Baptists do, you will want Rocky’s health care plan.
And note no matter what the SCOTUS says about the constitutionality of mandated coverage, coverage can be made
universally available to all but not mandatory. So if you hear the SCOTUS has shot down single-payer systems, that would also be utter lies from the RW press.
An excellent source of information is at
Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP). Here’s just one key point from PNHP:
The U.S. spends twice as much as other industrialized nations on health care, $8,160 per capita. Yet our system performs poorly in comparison and still leaves 50 million without health coverage and millions more inadequately covered.
This is because private insurance bureaucracy and paperwork consume one-third (31 percent) of every health care dollar. Streamlining payment through a single nonprofit payer would save more than $400 billion per year, enough to provide comprehensive, high-quality coverage for all Americans.
Other places I’ve seen that administrative costs as being 17% instead of 31%. But with advertising and exorbitant CEO pay, it could easily be that high.
Informed by Data.
Driven by the SPIRIT and JESUS’s Example.
Promoting the Kingdom of GOD on Earth.