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Rational distrust vs. irrational fear

Well, it seems the public option is suffering the same fate as an uninsured American with a major disease.  It is dying. Let's review.

Most civilized countries have universal health care. Countries with universal health care generally pay less money and get better care than Americans do. Health care could be available to all Americans if, instead of paying health insurance premiums, employers and employees paid about the same amount of money in the form of a health care tax. In a world where facts matter, there is little debate that government-run health care has produced fine health care systems in modern, developed countries.

But universal health care was never an option in the current debate over health care reform. That's because it can be called socialized medicine. That would be the same thing as socialism itself, and would make us just like the Nazis, who were also socialists. So, Americans want nothing to do with public health care, even though 59% of our health care system is already publicly financed and Medicare is one of our most successful and popular social programs. Nonetheless, if the government were to entirely administer health care, it would only be a matter of time before it would kill Baby Trig.

Instead, a watered-down "public option" to our current health insurance system was proposed. It is optional health insurance administered by the government. It would bypass expensive bonuses to health insurance executives and bypass profit to health insurance company shareholders.  Unfortunately, the public option was also politically unviable, because it too is the same as socialism and Nazism and also because Joe Lieberman represents a state filled with health insurance executives.

Here's a sad story.  My sister was recently diagnosed with breast cancer. She had a lumpectomy and is now in the middle of her chemo treatment. She is doing pretty well. It seems like every time I call her, she is about to go out to a party. I accuse her and my brother-in-law of faking the whole thing for attention. Ha ha. My brother-in-law says they are not above that, ha ha, but he'd be happy to share his doctor bills with me to prove it. Ha ha. I say, as lighthearted as I can, too bad we don't have universal health care, so you wouldn't have all those bills. Ha ha. He says, yeah, it's too bad we don't have universal health care, because then no one would get treatment. Ha ha.

It is very depressing that my sister has cancer and is now saddled with large medical bills.  But it is only slightly less depressing that she and her husband have been convinced by hucksters that universal healthcare equals the death of anyone who is sick. I'm grateful my sister has a job with healthcare benefits and is getting appropriate treatment. I'm sad that fear of government is denying that to Americans who are not as fortunate.

I understand distrust of government. I really do.  Government does things like start dumb wars in Iraq.  Government killed hundreds of thousands of people during Communist purges.  Government sometimes allows lazy bureaucrats to ignore your well-being.

But I also don't trust capitalism to automatically provide for the common good. The purpose of a company is to make a profit, after all. In countries with weak governments and strong capitalism, the only choices most people have are to work for long hours in substandard working conditions for a pittance.  In our country, if it is unprofitable to insure people who are likely to get sick, capitalism's answer is to not insure those people and let them die. Companies choose profit over the public good because that is what they are designed to do.

It should be evident at this point that capitalism without government becomes economic slavery and government without a free market (of ideas and goods) becomes tyranny.  The problem isn't the existence of one or the other, but that either will encroach on our freedom if it is allowed to become too powerful. We need both to balance each other out, because too much power in one place is inevitably corrupting.

So who is more powerful in America in the 21st century?  An unwieldy but democratically elected government or multi-national corporations in search of the next quarter's profits? One way to answer this is to ask who is controlling whom. Government can tax corporations and put people in jail who don't follow laws. On the other hand, corporations can buy members of congress in order to enact favorable laws and gut enforcement of the laws that do exist. In the end, unjust laws can be changed with enough effort. But corporations are under no obligation to enact just labor practices or economic conditions unless government forces them to.

It is true that many liberals distrust capitalism. But it is not true that liberals naturally trust government. Liberals just recognize government as the only thing powerful enough to curb the excesses of capitalism. I suppose the important thing is to be able to differentiate between rational distrust and irrational fear, whether we are talking about government or capitalism.

So, back to health care.  The line between rational distrust and irrational fear in the health care debate was crossed some time ago. That line is now a hazy mirage that we thirst for as we wander around in the desert of irrational fear. We are at the point where an optional insurance program is equated with a government takeover of medical care, all because it would be administered by government personnel.

If the situation were reversed, it would look like this:  Suppose Medicare exists for everyone and there is no private insurance.  Some people decide they would be better served by a for-profit, private insurance option. So they try to pass a law allowing for the existence of private insurance. Angry people show up at town hall meetings because they are convinced that private insurance will kill Baby Trig. A proposed law establishing the legality of private insurance is filibustered and dies, because people don't want others to have that option.

But, of course, that's crazy. Who would be so irrational as to block other people's freedom to get the kind of medical insurance they want?

So, that's where we are. Irrational fear killed the public option. Well, actually, money and power killed the public option, but they did it via fear and indoctrination.  There's too much money to be made in the current healthcare system, and too much power at stake should one party succeed in creating a health care system that works well for everyone.

And in the end, this is the problem with government today. It's not that government is too powerful. It is that government is too weak to accomplish the common good when the common good is at odd with moneyed interests.

 


15 comments

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Sean

#1

Best piece of read on this issue in a long time.

Tony Pomonis avatar featured_post

Tony Pomonis

#2

“Countries with universal health care pay less money and get better care than Americans do.”
—-A lie.  Which is to say, we bribe my grandmother’s nurses and doctors in Greece so that they change her linens and offer her corrective treatments.  Many countries offer a better, cheaper, and completely universal healthcare system…but all of them!  Such a claim.
“Health care could be available to all Americans if, instead of paying health insurance premiums, employers and employees paid about the same amount of money in the form of a health care tax.”
—-Your stance here is predicated on a populace that is completely employed?  No, that can’t be.  The working populace will pay for all?
“Liberals just recognize government as the only thing powerful enough to curb the excesses of capitalism.”
—-Really?  I never saw this on my membership card back in 2000.
“There’s too much money to be made in the current healthcare system, and too much power at stake should one party succeed in creating a health care system that works well for everyone.”
As a conservative (or classic liberal) I’m all for the public option.  The corporatization of health care dooms us all.  Private healthcare companies could use the competition to stay on the straight and narrow.  And as a society I believe we owe a debt to those (including the very young, very old, and special needs individuals) who are unemployable.  But your technique…it reminds me of your loyal opposition’s.   A lot of finger pointing, dishonest claims, and lazy conclusions.  I’m sorry.

Ryan Neaveill avatar

Ryan Neaveill

#3

Brilliant as always, Mr. Schreiber!

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Porkey

#4

When will you people get yer ideological heads out of yer ideological asses? The gov. is a bunch of criminals on both sides. The insurance companies wrote the damn legislation. They would love for it to pass. Its a revolving corporate government door in washington. This article is pointless and yer ideals/understanding is slowly fading. This country is gonna crash and burn, or be stolen like Argentenia or currently iceland, or be saved by grassroots. Remember when obama hijacked the “grassroots” movement. Hilarious. Read article sanywhere thats not mainstream or striclty right/left. They all say the same thing. They’re a bunch of criminals going for broke. Just read last months Harpers. There’s an expose on how the big insurance co.‘s wrote the legislation. There’s an article on how we’re protecting the afghan/pakistan border patrol who produce/export 90% of the worlds heroin - cause they’re leaders dad was killed by the taliban and he’s all about ruthes blood vengence - we arm ‘em. There’s an article on EPA corruption and the PCB’s in the hudson spewed by GE for over half a century and produced by Monsanto - forbes co. of the year. Wake up and read some real shit. Learn how the goddamn world works. I wanna read something intelligent locally and not in the comments sections.

Rob McColley avatar featured_post

Rob McColley

#5

Q: Who would be so irrational as to block other people’s freedom to get the kind of medical insurance they want?
A: Canada
 
But we don’t have to emulate anybody’s crazy system. The public option is a terrible idea, because it creates ONLY a bureaucrazy ... I mean bureaucracy.
 
The US should hire doctors and nurses, build clinics if necessary—or just occupy the myriad empty storefronts around the country—and get into the business providing universal preventative care to any citizen who walks in, and up to 2 children of that citizen. Those who want more kids can pay private unsurance ... I mean insurance.
 
And those who want better medical care than government can provide are free to go out and buy it—just so long as the US government never restricts the free exercise of paid medicine.

Rob McColley avatar featured_post

Rob McColley

#6

Oh, and because I am not kindhearted like Dan, Ryan and even that evil Tony Pomonis; I feel obliged to add my misanthropic hope that those two women in the picture both get cancer, and are then dropped by their unsurance compains.
 
... I mean insurance companies.
 
That’ll oughta learn ‘em.

Rob McColley avatar featured_post

Rob McColley

#7

Actually I suppose the problem in Canada is Canadian citizens expecting to be reimbursed for paid care received from private providers.
 
It’s the opposite end of the crazy spectrum, but just as crazy.

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John

#8

Interesting article, though it’s really hard to fully address this topic into such a small space.. I think the main argument boils down to capitalism works well for some things and poorly for others. And it does not work well when it comes to health care because we (at least I) don’t consider people’s lives a commodity. 
But I specifically want to respond to some of the comments. I would suggest Mr. McColley do a little more research into the Canadian health care system before making his claims. It does little good to demonize Canada when arguing for some kind of public options. And there is a big difference between who pays for care and who delivers care, something that he seems to confuse. Almost all providers in Canada are private in some way and no one needs to be reimbursed because there is never an upfront charge for medically-necessary services. The government pays the providers, not the individual. Other services (such as dental and pharmaceuticals) are paid by the individual, usually through insurance programs through work, much like in the U.S.
Canadian health care is not the opposite of the US’s system and, while there needs to be improvement up there in a lot of areas, it is not just as crazy as the U.S. system. The number one reason - Canada decided a long time ago to provide basic health care for all of it’s citizens, while the U.S. decided that everyone is on their own (Medicaid is such a joke that I’m not counting it). 
And without getting too long-winded here, how ludicrous is it to punish 3rd and 4th children by not granting them care because their parents had them? 

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porkey

#9

Listen. Check the huffington post today. One of HUNDREDS of articles linking Monsanto corn to organ failure or sterilization. Why because 80% of our corn is GMO. Europe bands it. Japan bans it. Australia bans it. Most the rest of the non-third world restrict it and the third world is forced to eat it. Ever hear of the “Green revolution.” Ridiculous.
The US biggest biotechnology industry group, the Biotechnology Industry Organization, named Tom Vilsack, Obamas Agriculture advisor, Governor of the Year when he was gov. in IA. He was also the founder and former chair of the Governor’s Biotechnology Partnership. He has long been an advocate of genetically modified foods.
Now THAT’s a fucking business plan. That’s the fucking health care industry. And that’s how our country is run.
 

Dan Schreiber avatar featured_post

Dan Schreiber

#10

Tony’s not evil. He just disagrees.
 
Actually, I didn’t mean to imply that every universal health care system is better than ours, so I added a “generally” to that line.  My main point there is that universal health care systems generally work better than ours, and yet there is a swath of our population that believes implementing it would somehow lead to us rounding up Jews in railcars.
 
And Tony, I’m not sure how you got to everyone needs to be employed to get health care. Most universal health care is paid via an employment tax, and yet it eliminates enough waste and greed that everyone gets healthcare.  The chart here is pretty powerful: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_system#Cross-country_comparisons
 
 

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Samuel

#11

Hey Dan, here’s an even better chart from national geographic:
http://blogs.ngm.com/blog_central/2009/12/the-cost-of-care.html
This is striking graphicly-basically, we pay two times as much for health care as anyone else, and get results that are below average when compared to countries with universal care. 
Also, Canadians like their health care system (86% at last check http://www.healthzone.ca/health/article/679824). That’s more popular than anything in the United States. I’d say its a pretty good system.
This is a really easy issue. All the evidence suggests we can save money and lives by changing our system.  Even the bill currently before congress will do both according to neutral observers, and as noted its a bit of a mess.
Take care.

Tony Pomonis avatar featured_post

Tony Pomonis

#12

Actually, evil or not, I agree with Dan.
I especially like his wiki’d chart.         
However, I disapprove of his methods.  Performing ventriloquism and speaking for an entire segment of the US population is, ultimately, self-defeating.  It reminds me of Glenn Beck. 
And so is his choice to use hyperbole for an argument.
As I sit down from work this afternoon I can’t help but note another example: that a “swath of our population” equates universal healthcare with loading Jews into railcars. 
It is this language, this very methodology which cripples meaningful discursive practice in America.  And by extension, progress.  
 

Dan Schreiber avatar featured_post

Dan Schreiber

#13

Come on, Tony, that line about equating healthcare with loading jews into boxcars is pretty funny. 
 
Mostly, I guess I just don’t think there is progress to be made with people who compare government health care to Nazism.
 
I don’t want to be defensive about my style. I know I tend to overgeneralize. But Glenn Beck?  I think that comparison is a bit of hyperbole itself.

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Samuel

#14

The issue of ventriliquism for a wide swath of people is a challenging one, because obviously each person is different, has unique perspectives and opinions, and rarely are interested in being cramed in an ideological box by their political opponents. On the other hand, there is something very useful in being able to speak in the aggregate about our national discussion, there are some obvious political divides in our country, and the public face of the opposition to health care often has equated Obama’s health care plan with the Nazi party. Only the most radical really believed the death panel nonsense, but the criticism of excessive government power as being parallel to the rise of the Nazi party is a fairly common critique. I think if handled with care, its probably on balance worth the efficiency of being able to talk about what’s going on in the country, but I’m willing to be convinced otherwise.

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FingTree

#15

I have known Dan since childhood. The comparison to Glenn Beck has drawn many parallel’s for me. Dan can cry for a camera fictitiously at the drop of a Liberal leaning hat.
Very nice article my friend, good enough to create a little banter
 

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