The Health Care Hindenburg Has Landed
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_health_care_hindenburg_has_landed_20100322/
Posted on Mar 22, 2010

By Chris Hedges

Rep. Dennis Kucinich’s decision to vote “yes” in Sunday’s House 
action on the health care bill, although he had sworn to oppose 
the legislation unless there was a public option, is a perfect 
example of why I would never be a politician. I respect Kucinich. 
As politicians go, he is about as good as they get, but he is 
still a politician. He has to run for office. He has to raise 
money. He has to placate the Democratic machine or risk 
retaliation and defeat. And so he signed on to a bill that will do 
nothing to ameliorate the suffering of many Americans, will force 
tens of millions of people to fork over a lot of money for a 
defective product and, in the end, will add to the ranks of our 
uninsured.

The claims made by the proponents of the bill are the usual 
deceptive corporate advertising. The bill will not expand coverage 
to 30 million uninsured, especially since government subsidies 
will not take effect until 2014. Families who cannot pay the high 
premiums, deductibles and co-payments, estimated to be between 15 
and 18 percent of most family incomes, will have to default, 
increasing the number of uninsured. Insurance companies can 
unilaterally raise prices without ceilings or caps and monopolize 
local markets to shut out competitors. The $1.055 trillion spent 
over the next decade will add new layers of bureaucratic red tape 
to what is an unmanageable and ultimately unsustainable system.

The mendacity of the Democratic leadership in the face of this 
reality is staggering. Howard Dean, who is a doctor, said 
recently: “This is a vote about one thing: Are you for the 
insurance companies or are you for the American people?” Here is a 
man who once championed the public option and now has sold his 
soul. What is the point in supporting him or any of the other 
Democrats? How much more craven can they get?

Take a look at the health care debacle in Massachusetts, a model 
for what we will get nationwide. One in six people there who have 
the mandated insurance say they cannot afford care, and tens of 
thousands of people have been evicted from the state program 
because of budget cuts. The 45,000 Americans who die each year 
because they cannot afford coverage will not be saved under the 
federal legislation. Half of all personal bankruptcies will still 
be caused by an inability to pay astronomical medical bills. The 
only good news is that health care stocks and bonuses for the 
heads of these corporations are shooting upward. Chalk this up as 
yet another victory for our feudal overlords and a defeat for the 
serfs.

The U.S. spends twice as much as other industrialized nations on 
health care—$7,129 per capita—although 45.7 million Americans 
remain without health coverage and millions more are inadequately 
covered, meaning that if they get seriously ill they are not 
covered. Fourteen thousand Americans a day are now losing their 
health coverage. A report in the journal Health Affairs estimates 
that, if the system is left unchanged, one of every five dollars 
spent by Americans in 2017 will go to health coverage. Private 
insurance bureaucracy and paperwork consume 31 cents of every 
health care dollar. Streamlining payment through a single 
nonprofit payer would save more than $400 billion per year, 
enough, Physicians for a National Health Plan points out, to 
provide comprehensive, high-quality coverage for all Americans. 
Check out www.healthcare-now.org. It has some of the best analysis.

This bill is not about fiscal responsibility or the common good. 
The bill is about increasing corporate profit at taxpayer expense. 
It is the health care industry’s version of the Wall Street 
bailout. It lavishes hundreds of billions in government subsidies 
on insurance and drug companies. The some 3,000 health care 
lobbyists in Washington, whose dirty little hands are all over the 
bill, have once more betrayed the American people for money. The 
bill is another example of why change will never come from within 
the Democratic Party. The party is owned and managed by 
corporations. The five largest private health insurers and their 
trade group, America’s Health Insurance Plans, spent more than $6 
million on lobbying in the first quarter of 2009. Pfizer, the 
world’s biggest drug maker, spent more than $9 million during the 
last quarter of 2008 and the first three months of 2009. The 
Washington Post reported that up to 30 members of Congress from 
both parties who hold key committee memberships have major 
investments in health care companies totaling between $11 million 
and $27 million. President Barack Obama’s director of health care 
policy, who will not discuss single payer as an option, has served 
on the boards of several health care corporations. And as salaries 
for most Americans have stagnated or declined during the past 
decade, health insurance profits have risen by 480 percent.

Obama and the congressional leadership have consciously shut out 
advocates of single payer from the debate. The press, including 
papers such as The New York Times, treats single payer as a fringe 
movement. The television networks rarely mention it. And yet 
between 45 and 60 percent of doctors favor single payer. Between 
40 and 62 percent of the American people, including 80 percent of 
registered Democrats, want universal, single-payer not-for-profit 
health care for all Americans. The ability of the corporations to 
discredit and silence voices that represent at least half of the 
population is another sad testament to the power of our corporate 
state to frame all discussions.

Change will come only by building movements that stand in fierce 
and uncompromising opposition to the Democrats and the 
Republicans. If they can herd Kucinich and John Conyers, the 
sponsors of House Resolution 676, a bill that would create a 
publicly funded National Health Program by eliminating private 
health insurers, onto the House floor to vote for this corporate 
theft, what is the point in pretending there is any room left for 
us in the party? And why should we waste our time with gutless 
liberal groups such as Moveon.org, which felt the need to collect 
more than $1 million to pressure House Democrats who had voted 
“no” on the original bill to recant? What was this purportedly 
anti-war group doing anyway serving as an obsequious recruiting 
arm of the Obama election campaign? The longer we tie ourselves to 
the Democrats and these bankrupt liberal organizations the more 
ridiculous and impotent we appear.

“I’m ready to listen to the White House, if the White House is 
ready to listen to the concerns about putting a public option in 
this bill,” the old Kucinich said on the “Democracy Now!” radio 
and television program before he flipped. “I mean, they can do 
that. You know, they’re still cutting last-minute deals. Put the 
public option back in. Make it a robust public option. Give the 
people a chance to really negotiate rates with the insurance 
companies … from the standpoint of having a public option. But 
don’t just tell the people that you’re going to call this health 
care reform, when you’re giving insurance companies an even more 
powerful monopoly status in our economy.”
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