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Posts Tagged ‘Huffington Post’

How much slower is acceptable?

January 26th, 2010 Aaron No comments

When the Democrats started the health care reform process a year ago, they held the White House, The House of Representatives by a 78 vote majority, and the Senate by a 58-41 majority.

After the loss in the special election last week in Massachusetts, they hold the White House, the House of Representatives by a 78 vote majority, and the Senate by a 59-41 majority.

So obviously, it’s time to give up.

There’s Senator Snowe, the only Republican seemingly willing to negotiate at all, saying that, “said she tried to warn Democrats, including Mr. Obama, that they were pushing too hard too fast.”

Yeah… too fast. That’s the problem with health care reform. We’ve been moving too fast.

Way back in 1912, almost a century ago, Teddy Roosevelt ran for president on the Progressive Party ticket, pledging national health insurance for Americans. He lost to Woodrow Wilson, and so did the country’s chance for robust health care reform. I guess he moved too fast.

In 1932, the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care, headed by Secretary of the Interior Wilbur, recommended:

Socialization of medical care for the people of the United States, based on a system of group practice and group payment, with community medical centres to provide complete medical service, both preventive and therapeutic, in return for weekly or monthly fees, in the form of insurance, taxation, or both

This was, or course, called socialism. The opposition, of course, said the issue was one “between incitement to revolution and a desire for gradual evolution based upon analysis and study.” That’s high-faulting talk for “they’re moving too fast.”

In 1945, after becoming President, Harry Truman called for the creation of National Health Insurance. However, before he could get anything enacted, the Republicans won control of Congress in 1946, and his hopes for reform became unobtainable. In 1948, however, President Truman won re-election with a mandate for health care reform. The Democrats even retook control of Congress. But conservative Democrats wound up blocking his efforts.

Sound familiar?

President Kennedy tried again in the early 1960s, but was also blocked by conservative Southern Democrats. President Johnson failed similarly in his first term. After a landslide victory in 1964, though, with a 150+ vote majority in the House and a 26 vote majority in the Senate, they passed Medicare; even then they couldn’t get health care reform for everyone, just the elderly.

Or course, those opposed to reform claimed the process was socialism and the end of freedom. None of that turned out to be true, of course. You’d think that no one had heard those arguments before. Maybe, since things were moving so fast no one had paid close attention.

In the 1970’s Senator Ted Kennedy tried again for National Health Insurance. President Nixon, in an effort to cut him off, proposed his own brand of more conservative reform. Ironically, his proposal is arguably more liberal than the “socialism” working its way through Congress now. But, because there were too many different ideas (and some losses and gains in Congress), reform stalled.

Sound familiar?

I wont even go into President Clinton’s efforts. But let’s remember they occurred in the early 1990’s. That was a pretty long time ago.

How slow do we need to move? When will America be ready for health care reform?

Throughout much of the Democratic primary, Senators Clinton and Obama debated health care reform. That started in 2006. Throughout the entire general election in 2008, Senators Obama and McCain debated health care reform. About one year ago, President Obama asked Congress to work on health care reform.

Was no one paying attention? How long is it supposed to take?

Back to Senator Snowe. There she was days ago telling us we need to slow down. I’d give her more credit, but she’s said that before. In December:

“The more they try to, sort of, drive this process in an unrealistic timeframe, the more reluctant I become about whether or not this can be doable in this timeframe that we’re talking about,” Snowe told reporters today.

Throughout the health care debate, Snowe has often pushed the principals to slow things down. So what might make her less reluctant?

“There’s always January,” Snowe said. “Frankly, I understand the value of deadlines, but this is getting, I think, unrealistic in terms of where we stand today.”

Huh. That sounded familiar. Maybe because she’d said the same thing in October:

“Well, Christmas might be too soon,” Snowe told Bloomberg’s Al Hunt in an interview that will air throughout the weekend. “Well, you know, there’s always that possibility. I know that’s not what the president prefers.”

Snowe refused to say that such a delay was likely, but added that “nothing would surprise me because of the complexity [of the issue].” She said that a vote would likely not come much before Christmas should it be held before recess.

She stressed the need to give the bill “the time it deserves,” something she has routinely said during negotiations.

“[The American people] don’t want it put on a fast track. They want us to give it the thought it needs and requires, and that’s why I’ve tried to slow the process down,” she said.

Yeah. That might have carried more weight if she hadn’t also said it back in July:

The letter, obtained by the Huffington Post, was drafted by Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) and is also signed by Democratic Sens. Mary Landrieu (La.) and Ron Wyden (Ore.). Independent Joe Lieberman (Conn.), who caucuses with Democrats, signed on, as did Maine Republican Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins — moderates heavily courted by President Obama. The organized effort to slow down the process is a blow to the reform effort. Obama has pushed hard for a final vote before the August recess, arguing that delaying until September could slow momentum and risk missing a historic opportunity.

How slow is slow enough? The facts of the matter are that reform can’t realistically take more than two years, when the entire House is re-elected. The Congress who writes the law has to pass it. That’s pretty much the way it always works. You can’t ask Congresspeople to vote on legislation they didn’t debate or write.

Will no one ask the question? How much slower would be acceptable?

It’s not as if any of the arguments against health care reform are new. Socialism? Government takeover of health care? We’ve been there before.

Last July, I was sitting across from Stephen Colbert who said that health care was never going to work because they were giving the Republicans a timetable for withdrawal by demanding it be passed by August. “This was never going to be easy, ” I replied. “The longer they wait, the more it’s likely this could be unpopular.” That wasn’t any great insight. I just knew we’ve been here before. Over and over again.

If you believe the Republicans, or anyone else, has a valid and new argument against reform, then so be it. If you believe that watching more “debate” on C-Span will produce a better bill, then more power to you. But if you buy into the rhetoric that we’re moving too fast, you just haven’t been paying attention.

*This was also posted at HuffPo

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Huffington Post

January 14th, 2010 Aaron No comments

My latest is up.  HCR is really not much fun for anyone anymore, is it?

Debate the Solution, But Don’t Deny the Problem

Enjoy!

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Do you want to be right, or do you want to be healthy?

January 5th, 2010 Aaron No comments

I always get a thrill when HuffPo features one of my posts.

Please go read it, share the link, and comment!

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The miracle of modern technology

December 22nd, 2009 Aaron No comments

I am currently on an airplane, monitoring the Internet on my computer while I listen to Pete Dominick on Sirius/XM.  I’m also chatting with him on AIM.  Technology is amazing.

I’m especially excited because it’s allowed me to answer a lot of comments over at the Huffington Post.  Join the discussion.

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Vacation!

December 22nd, 2009 Aaron No comments

I’m heading out of town, and may have limited Internet access.  Expect blogging to be light for the rest of the week.  Of course, if it turns out I do have access, that might change.

Enjoy my latest at the Huffington Post.  Please do comment.

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Huffington Post – A Public Option Tree in the Health Care Reform Forest

December 15th, 2009 Aaron No comments

By now you should all know my feelings on the public option.  If you don’t (and even if you do), go read my piece at the Huffington Post.

I really appreciate comments!

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Huffington Post – The Problem Isn’t the Recommendation, It’s How We React to It.

December 1st, 2009 Aaron No comments

Although most of the world seems to have moved on from the screaming about mammograms last week, I can’t let it go.  I really do think that the rhetoric bodes poorly for future attempts to get a handle on cost control.

Read more.

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Meet the New Health Care Reform, Same as the Old Health Care Reform

November 3rd, 2009 Aaron No comments

This was originally up at the Huffington Post, but I want to repost it here.  I apologize for those of you forced to read it twice.

We’re so close to health care reform!  Even Paul Krugman is starting to talk about what comes next.  Me?  I’ve been thinking about what comes next for a long time.  I think this bill will pass.  We will get the incremental reforms we were promised.  Things will likely get better in the short term.  Then, since we didn’t contain costs, we’ll need to enact real reform.  Or, things will go right back to the status quo.

How do I know that?  We’ve been here before.

President Obama said, in his address to Congress, that he was determined to be the last president to deal with health care reform.  That’s not going to happen.  He should have read his history.  At least, he should have read the New York Times.

Governor Romney thought the same thing in Massachusetts in 2006.  I saw it – right there in the New York Times:

The bill does what health experts say no other state has been able to do: provide a mechanism for all of its citizens to obtain health insurance.

“This is really a landmark for our state because this proves at this stage that we can get health insurance for all our citizens without raising taxes and without a government takeover. The old single-payer canard is gone.”

But wait.  I’d heard that before.  In the New York Times.  In 1988:

Massachusetts last week ventured where no state had gone before: It guaranteed health insurance for every resident.

The plan requires that by 1992 every employer of six or more pay $1,680 per worker per year for insurance. The employer may buy the insurance directly for his workers and their dependents, thereby earning a tax credit…The Massachusetts plan recognizes the value of an employer-based approach, which it would expand by forcing more businesses either to insure or pay.

That time was under Governor Dukakis.  He was going to be the last one to deal with health care reform, too.  Just so you know, the rate of uninsurance in Massachusetts was 8.4% in 1988 around the time of the first “unique” reform and 5.5% in 2008, after two times they said they were going to achieve universal coverage.  I don’t think they understood the concept of “fixed”.

And that’s just Massachusetts.  Look at Tennessee.  They went all out with incremental reform in 1994.  There’s that New York Times again:

The Tennessee program, which went into effect last Jan. 1, covers 803,800 people who were formerly on Medicaid and 335,300 who had no health insurance. Gov. Ned McWherter, a Democrat, said that 94 percent of the state’s residents were now insured. He predicted, “Tennessee will cover at least 95 percent of its citizens with health insurance by the end of 1994, seven years faster than the most aggressive goal set for the nation under legislation being debated in Congress.”

Tennessee’s rate of uninsurance was 10.2% in 1994 and 15.1% in 2008.

Governor Dean, no stranger to the cause of health care reform, “fixed” the problem of health care reform way back in 1992.  Per the New York Times:

Gov. Howard Dean, the only Governor who is a doctor, signed a law here today that sets in motion a plan to give Vermont universal health care by 1995.

The Vermont law creates a state agency, the Health Care Authority, that will have the power to bargain for health insurance for the state’s residents, using what Governor Dean called “enormous leverage” to gain better coverage at lower rates.

Wow.  That sounds like… a public option!  Let’s go to the scoreboard: Vermont’s rate of uninsurance was 9.5% in 1992 and 9.3% in 2008.

Minnesota tried this, too, in 1992.  Of course, how would anyone know about that?  It was only in the New York Times:

Minnesota is enacting a program that will be the most sweeping effort yet to provide health insurance to people who lack it.

The legislation, called HealthRight, provides state-subsidized insurance coverage for people of modest income, a provision that is expected to cost Minnesota $250 million a year, along with steps to control the health-care industry’s steeply rising charges.

Subsidies to buy insurance.  That must have worked, right? Minnesota’s rate of uninsurance was 8.1% in 1992 and 8.7% in 2008.

Washington State?  1993.  New York Times:

Washington will have one of the most aggressive health-care experiments in the nation, a program that would extend medical benefits to all 5.1 million residents of the state and try to control costs through a cap on insurance premiums.

The plan would require all employers to pay at least half the cost of health insurance premiums for their employees… “We weren’t going to create some huge new government bureaucracy, so we took that away from the critics.”

God forbid!  A government system might actually… I don’t know…  do something.  Anyway, Washington’s rate of uninsurance was 12.6% in 1993 and 12.4% in 2008.

Since the administration has put Senator Snowe somewhat in charge of health care reform, you would think they would at least know about efforts in Maine.  Right?  To the New York Times, please!

The Maine Legislature today passed a comprehensive health insurance plan that will make low-cost coverage available to all state residents by 2009.

The legislation will create a semiprivate agency that provides private coverage to the state’s 180,000 uninsured residents, businesses and municipalities with fewer than 50 employees and the self-employed. Employers would pay up to 60 percent of an employee’s premium.

That looks like it could have come right out of HR 3200.  You’d never know it was from 2003.  How did that pledge to achieve universal coverage by 2009 go? Maine’s rate of uninsurance was 10.4% in 2003 and 10.4% in 2008.

We pretend these problems are new; we pretend that these solutions are new.  Subsidies have been done.  Community ratings are old news.  “Public plans” have been around for a while.  Mandates, both individual and employer, weren’t invented this year.

In 1988, before the first of these plans went into effect, 13.4% of Americans were uninsured.  In 2008, it was 15.4% of Americans.  They don’t work.  Not in the long run.

We need comprehensive reform.  This plan will pass; it won’t be enough.  President Obama will not be the last President to deal with this problem.

We keep doing the same thing and expecting a different outcome.  What does that signify?

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Huffington Post – A Little Perspective on the Cost of Health Care Reform

November 3rd, 2009 Aaron No comments

Look, I get that for political reasons, those that oppose reform are going to come up with any excuse they can to fight it.  I accept that.  But the media doesn’t have to swallow it; neither do you.

Please go read my whole piece at the Huffington Post.  I welcome comments there, and answer many of them.  Spread the word!

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Huffington Post – The public option is not where you draw the line

October 20th, 2009 Aaron No comments

Many are rallying around the public option like it’s a singular opportunity to save the world. It’s not; it’s not even close.

Go read the entire piece at The Huffington Post.

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