Single Payer Health Care?
After watching two of the three senate committee hearings that dealt with heath care, I was reminded of a saying I once heard but for the life of me I can’t remember where I heard it: There is nothing more reliable than a man whose loyalty can be bought for hard cash. That pretty much sums up what passes for democracy in the United States at this time. I often tell my students, half in jest (although the humor often escapes them) that if democracy worked for the benefit of the people it would be illegal.
Some background is in order in case you missed the hearings.
President Obama and the Democratic congressional leaders have promised that they are going to fix our broken health care system. Finally. After all, it has only been sixty years since President Truman tried to initiate a system that would cover every person in the country rather than leave 45 million people without health care and another 50 million underinsured. 23,000 people die every year in the United States because they do not have health insurance. Millions of people have said, “enough is enough. We must have a system that covers everyone.”
Health care is the talk of Washington and the airwaves. Obama and the insurance companies announced at the White House that the benevolent health care industry has agreed to cut health care costs by 1.5 percent over the next decade, saving $2 trillion. Mind you they also exacted a price: government will keep its hands off health care’s billions and billions of profits.
On capital hill the congress is holding hearings to devise ways to expand the broken system we have now: higher premiums; higher co-pays; higher deductibles while 14,000 workers loose their health care every day in this depression. Congress invited representatives of the health care industry, insurance companies, big pharma, and just about anyone who would reap profits from maintaining the current system to speak. They talked, and talked, and talked.
But some alternatives were not being talked about at all except by demonstrators whom the capital police hauled away and arrested. Their crime? To demand that representatives who favor a publicly financed, single-payer health care system be allowed at the table. Those filthy pinko, commie, fags.
Why is single payer not at the table? Members of the House and Senate are being loyal. The loyalty of members of the House and Senate have been bought for hard cash. The health care industry, which spent more than $500 million dollars in the last year on lobbying and campaign contributions, has great faith in the reliability of the members whom they have bought. Max Baucus, the chair of the Senate committee, received more money from the health care industry than any other member of congress. Every other member of the committee also received money from the industry.
“In 2003,” Bill Moyers reported last week, “a young Illinois state senator named Barack Obama told a local AFL-CIO meeting, ‘I am a proponent of a single-payer universal health care program.’ There was only one thing standing in the way, Obama said six years ago: ‘all of you know we might not get there immediately because first we have to take back the White House, we have to take back the Senate and we have to take back the House’”
Democrats now have the White House and the Senate and the House. What the hell happened to single-payer universal health care?
Change we can believe in I guess.
Labels: President Obama, Senator Bacus, Single Payer Health Care

Single Payer Health Care Now
18,000 people die every year in the United States because they are refused treatment in a hospital. Why? They have no health care insurance. 47 million Americans do not have health insurance - - 6 million more than when the Supreme Court chose George Bush as their president. Millions more are about to loose their insurance as they loose their jobs. With real unemployment now hovering around 17 percent, millions more people are without insurance. Millions of us just one illness away from poverty and destitution while the health-insurance company owners are awash in profit, pounds of flesh ripped from the bodies of “unhealthy mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters and, most of all, children”. Our current health care system, ranked 39th in the world, is, as Nick Metel wrote last month, “an old, failed relic, broken beyond repair.”
There are alternatives, alternatives that don’t rely on a profit motive. Single payer is such a system. Single payer as in Medicare available to all seniors in the U.S. “The government, which is the ‘single payer’ covers all citizens and pays the bills when they visit private (or public) doctors, hospitals and other facilities for medical care, wrote Mike Dennison in the Billings Gazette. “All would have basic coverage, regardless of whether they have a job, or where they work. Nobody gets billed for basic care. Nobody goes broke because of medical bills.
Who supports single payer? According to the latest polls, 68 percent of the American people do. 51 percent of American physicians do. The nursing unions do. American business leaders do.
Who opposes single payer? It seems the only hold-outs for the current system are President Obama, big pharma, the health insurance companies, including AARP and their congressional lackeys who claim single payer is off the table. Funny how small their tables are when it comes time to enacting policies that benefit the majority of people in the country.
The time has come to scrap the for profit health care system. Representative John Conyers of Michigan and 93 co-sponsors have introduced HR676 that would establish national health insurance and a single payer system. 500 labor unions have endorsed the bill. Led in part by the California Nurses Association, the national coalition supporting single payer has 85,000 institutional members.
The time has come “for our leaders to ensure that no citizen is ever again added to the lost of those who have died due to a lack of health coverage, a list that adds 18,000 names each year according to the Institute of Medicine.” 18,000? That’s five 9/11s. But congress and Obama are not going to do it unless we apply political pressure. Call or write members of congress and the president and demand that they institute real change we can believe in.
Labels: big pharma, Single Payer Health Care, U. S. health care
