A Socialist Attends a Town Hall Health Care Meeting
by Josh Hatala /  August 14th, 2009
 
In recent months the health care debate has reached a fevered pitch as all  
sides clamber to be heard. This debate has centered around two options: the 
plan  proposed by Obama which may, or may not, include a public option but 
maintains a  system of for-profit insurance, or the continuation of the 
status quo with,  perhaps, some “tort reform” and an unclear notion of 
developing greater  competition within the for-profit insurance sector to drive 
down 
prices. Minor  reforms or the unseen hand of the market? Myths that should 
have been shattered  by the recent economic crisis are alive and well in the 
debate about health care  reform.
 
Missing from this debate are the millions of us who support a single-payer  
system. The cost effective and truly humane plan proposed in House 
Resolution  676 for a National Health Insurance Program, now faces the 
possibility 
of being  reduced to a footnote in the history of the early twenty-first 
century  healthcare debate. So, what is to be done? My recent trip to a health 
care  themed “town hall” meeting attended by about 250 people in New York 
State’s 20th  district, represented by Scott Murphy (D), provide some answers 
to this  question.
 
Most of us have by now seen media coverage of these “town hall” meetings:  
Elected officials make a case for Obamacare, right-wing protestors carry 
signs  denouncing Obama as a socialist and make wild claims about the 
dictatorial hell  “government healthcare” will usher in. Those in support of 
the 
president’s as  yet unclear plan shout back and carry their own signs. Blows 
are occasionally  exchanged. Single-payer advocates are rarely heard from.
 
At the town hall meeting I attended, I was surprised to see that the  media’
s coverage of these events was fairly accurate. One protestor’s sign  
alluded to the 1973 movie Soylent Green by suggesting that a government run 
plan  
might create a dystopian nightmare where patients stand in front of “Obama’
s  death panel” (as former governor Sarah Palin recently described it) 
waiting to  be judged worthy of scarce, rationed health care. When the town 
hall 
was opened  to Q&A, right supporters offered an ample serving of this 
fear-mongering and  misinformation.
 
When I had my chance to speak, I thanked the members of the military,  
firefighters, and police officers who had spoken (pause, wild applause from the 
 
right) – for being living testaments to the success of public services and  
government-run institutions (laughter and applause from the left and 
confused  silence from the right). I then told my own story — of both of my 
parents  passing away in the past four years, of being told their insurance had 
run out  even after decades of working for the state, that they were denied 
needed care  because of an inability to pay, and that this amounted to 
rationing health care  — rationed based on those who can and cannot afford it. 
The 
feared nightmare, I  said, is already here.
 
I asked Congressman Murphy why, despite the support of tens of millions of  
Americans, a single-payer option was not being discussed as a real 
alternative  to the present system. Several members of the crowd applauded, 
expressing their  agreement, but most were silent. In Congressman Murphy’s 
reply, he 
claimed that  he had not heard much support from within his district for a 
single-payer system  and had a responsibility to reflect the wishes of his 
constituents.
 
The near silence from a crowd of approximately 250 people when I mentioned  
single-payer left me a bit confused. This crowd had been extremely vocal 
for  over an hour, interrupting Congressman Murphy and nearly every speaker to 
 interject their opinions either for or against the Obama plan. Why were 
there so  few cries in support of single-payer and, even more strangely, why 
was the  right-wing eerily silent when I suggested a plan that would bring us 
even closer  to real socialism? Second, I think Congressman Murphy might 
have been correct:  single-payer advocates have not been vocal enough in 
making their position  known. This is not helped by others on the left who have 
abandoned hope for  single-payer and instead support Obama’s plan because 
they see single-payer as  an impossibility in corporate dominated America. The “
lesser of two evils”  mentality has apparently migrated from the ballot box 
to the health care  debate.
 
After asking my questions, I moved around the crowd a bit, striking up  
conversations with the handful of single-payer advocates as well as Obamacare  
supporters. It turned out that few of the Obamacare advocates I spoke with 
had  even heard of HR 676, but were very interested to learn more. It became 
apparent  that the near silence I experienced after asking Congressman 
Murphy about  single-payer was attributable to the fact that few there had even 
heard of HR  676. Most, it seems, had no idea what I was talking about. 
Congressman Murphy’s  claim that few in his district had brought up 
single-payer 
started to become  more believable. So, where does that leave us?
 
Fueled by half-truths and outright lies thousands of right wing meet-up  
groups are springing up around the country, inspired by Glenn Beck and other 
so  called “patriot” pundits. These are the people at the town hall meetings 
 parroting the slogans of fear and divisiveness. Their strategy is working, 
their  numbers are growing, and partly because of their influence the 
debate over  healthcare is not moving beyond the two options mentioned at the 
beginning of  this article.
 
If we advocates of single-payer have any chance at winning real change, or  
at least having our voices heard in this debate, we need to act quickly, 
act  firmly, and act collectively to educate the public and make our voices 
heard.  Some basic ideas came to mind as a result of my trip to a town hall  
meeting.
 
We should not assume that most people understand what single-payer means,  
or know that it even exists as an option. Always be willing and able to 
explain  the benefits of HR 676, in comparison to the false options of the 
other 
 proposals. Flyers with basic information on single-payer can be placed at 
local  establishments such as coffee shops, bars or wherever people gather. 
We should  use the media exposure to our advantage.
 
Let’s start seriously putting the screws to elected representatives. We  
should contact them to present single-payer as a viable option. If they reject 
 this, we can escalate the pressure. Either way, the time to act is now!
 
Of course, we cannot go it alone in this struggle. Consider getting  
involved with organizations that advocate for single-payer, like the Socialist  
Party-USA or Healthcare-NOW. History shows that there is power in numbers.
 
We must always remain in motion. Get active and organize locally to  
protest, petition, and gain support.
 
Time is running out. We must act quickly and decisively if our voice is to  
be heard.
 
This article was originally published in the Socialist WebZine.
 
_http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/08/a-socialist-attends-a-town-hall-health-ca
re-meeting/_ 
(http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/08/a-socialist-attends-a-town-hall-health-care-meeting/)
 

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