Monday, September 14, 2009

Greenwald vs Duncehat: No Contest

In his post today, Glenn Greenwald takes apart the latest New York Time column by Ross Dunce.. er Douthat. Greenwald points out that Douthat is just another example of the right wing tacticians, using subtle, and in some cases not so subtle race and culture issues to divide the "have-nots" against each other, rather than against those with wealth and power, who conspire to keep that power away from the masses.

Can't add much more to what Glenn wrote, along with his quotes from Matt Taibbi's piece, the column sums up quite well the sorry state of affairs we find ourselves in today.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Insurance Companies Counting On Windfall

Surprise, surprise.
Over at Daily Kos, Jed Lewison points out an AP article showing that insurance companies are salivating in anticipation of health reform with no public option.

Health care reform without a public option "would be fantastic" for insurers, said Robert Laszewski, president of Health Policy and Strategy Associates, a Virginia-based health care consulting firm.

"They're going to get millions of new customers and more than a trillion in new premiums over a 10-year period," said Laszewski, a former industry executive. "There's a reason they aren't running any negative ads."


So investors are going all in on Wall Street, sending stock prices up for the major health insurance companies. We all know what is good for insurance companies, is good for us, ... right?

Even after the President's speech, and polls continuing to show support for a public option, Democrats like Baucus and Conrad continue to be in bed with health insurers, and big pharmaceutical companies.

These plans as now constructed may be even worse than doing nothing. I only see two ways to make a successful plan. One, obviously is having the public option. The other would involve serious regulation governing what the health care industry can charge. That does not seem likely to happen, especially when one considers that our legislature in recent years has allowed credit card companies to offer worse credit terms than Tony Soprano.

I continue to be pessimistic, that anything will happen that can impact the health care system in a positive way for consumers. Of course, even if I am pleasantly surprised, the odds of reform being in place soon enough are very long indeed.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

The Audacity Of A Dope

Rude, and still lying.

Still lying after being proved wrong, and trying to raise money.

Today's Republican Party in a nutshell (pun intended.)


Sunday, September 6, 2009

God Bless The USA

Makes you proud to be an American. UGH!. Tip of the hat to Americablog

"A Change Is Gonna Come", Or is It?

An insightful diary posted on Firedoglake caught my attention early this morning. After a night’s sleep and the “pleasure” of watching more backtracking from the administration on the Sunday morning talk circuit, I feel even more strongly that this post by Marta Evry crystallizes the major issues of concern to many Democrats.
For five months, I gave up my "day job" as a film editor on theatrical films and network dramas to work on the campaign. Now, about that job. Essentially, it can be boiled down to this: I manipulate sound, images and language to create the desired emotional response in a viewer. Give me a couple of close ups of people's faces, a wide shot, an explosion and the right piece of music and I can make you angry, sad, or laugh - depending on how I manipulate those elements.

My point is this: Republicans understand - have always understood - this very, very well. They'll take a set of facts and figures, find the emotional truth inside all that information they want to push and go for it.

Presto-chango, end of life counseling becomes "death panels," reducing fraud and inefficiencies in Medicare become "pulling the plug on grandma."

One of the great joys for me in working on the Obama campaign was being involved with people who understood this concept very, very well. Although I had no part in the messaging of the campaign myself, I watched with great appreciation how the campaign tapped into the emotions of its volunteers. They took a demoralized activist base beaten down by 8 years of quasi-fascist rule and lifted us up with three simple words and one simple concept - "Respect, empower, and include" and "CHANGE."
Respect, empower, include, and change. Those four words aptly describe the theme that candidate Obama embraced. He would be a President that would respect opposing views, empower the citizenry, include those who have been left out, and most importantly change the culture of entrenched corporate power which dominates both parties in Washington. After seven and one half months, however, it appears that the candidate Obama who vowed to fight hard against the powerful corporate lobbies, did not move to Washington.

First it is impossible to respect an opponent who is not rational. The Republican Party in Washington, as it exists today is made up almost exclusively of people who hate government. They have no desire to improve government; they only come to destroy it. So rather than offering any plan of their own, they simply shoot down the President’s as being too extreme. Of course, when the President acquiesces and makes a plan that is already too moderate, even more so, Republicans still scream Socialism.

In order to empower you must include. Again that was something that candidate Obama seemed to understand, but President Obama has yet to grasp. Instead of utilizing the millions of e-mail addresses that the campaign gathered to mobilize and involve citizens in the fight for health care reform. E-mails taking a strong message to the public, motivating active support, encouraging letters and phone calls to congress have been lacking. When interest groups like Moveon.org, who were instrumental in the election launch an ad campaign against recalcitrant Democrats, President Obama tells them to back off. Instead of reinforcing the difficulty of the battle ahead against the moneyed insurance and pharmaceutical lobby, there are reports of back door deals with pharmaceutical companies.

That does not sound like "Change we can believe in". It sounds more like same old politics. All of this gets back to the point Ms. Every made in her closing argument:

That is what the fight over the public option is all about - it is not about policy. It's a proxy for the implied contract we entered into when we helped get Obama elected. We expected Change, we expected to be respected, empowered and included, we expected him to fight, and we expected to join him in that fight.




Yes, this is about health care reform, but really it is about the whole promise of “change” which was the Obama campaign. We thought we were ordering change when we cast that vote for candidate Obama. We were promised a change from the politics of the past. If President Obama cannot start to deliver on that promise, there will be a large number of demoralized and disgusted voters who will be very difficult for President Obama to ever reach again.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

September is National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month!



As the parent of a pediatric cancer survivor, I know this story only too well. The frail children with no hair, who still manage to occasionally flash a smile that will light up a room. Thankfully there are some happy endings amidst the sadness. Please follow the links and help if you can.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Maybe I Should Move to Canada?

As an American, watching the above video is both frustrating and infuriating. In light of what increasingly appears to be another botched attempt at providing a national health care program I find myself increasingly envious of our Canadian friends.

Listening to the comments of these Canadian citizens, what I am most struck by is the calm when they talk about there health care. There is no nervousness about losing a job, no trepidation that they may fall into bankruptcy because of a medical condition. Most of all there is calmness, because they do not even have to give their healthcare a second thought. Health care for these Canadians is something they do not even think about, because it is always there.

Thinking about this further, I realize that one of the bigger flaws in our system is that I should not have to think about shopping for healthcare. Some things should just not be an open market product.

Buying health care is not like shopping for a new refrigerator. I can’t simply plug a model number into Google, and instantly compare prices. If I find a price I like, I can provide my credit card, and just like that my new product is on the way to my door. Even if I could find a health insurance price quote, there would be an asterisk or two. If I indicated that yes I wanted to buy that policy, those asterisks would make the offer null and void as soon as family medical history is provided.

Recently I started shopping my home and auto insurance policy. Looking to save money wherever I can these days, I thought I would give the old open market competition a try. Realizing, that like most people I have stayed with the same insurance company for years simply because it is too much hassle to change. So what did the open market provide? Essentially the same price I had been paying. Sure I found a company that was a few dollars less annually, but nowhere near enough savings to bother switching. If there is such little real competition in this segment of the insurance industry, which is made up of individual consumers only, how can there be competition in health insurance that is driven by group coverage?


So when Republicans talk about open market and competition being best for health care, it is only best for the health care providers. Thanks in larger part to Republican de-regulation fervor there is no real competition for health care dollars in the US.

In many U.S. states, recent consolidation in the Health Insurance industry has left consumers with fewer choices. In all but 3 states, the top 2 health plans have over 50% market share.

For those of us not fortunate enough to be in a quality group health plan through an employer, the market will continue to be a stress filled nightmare. Next time I am in downtown Detroit, I may look longingly across the river at my friends in Windsor, and envy their equanimity about health care, even as my hair goes grayer by the day.