Wendell Potter is a former vice-president of Cigna. One day he had an attack of conscience and chose to expose the insurance industry’s practices.
—Update:
I had to share this too. It came, from all places, from a commenter on Sarah Palin’s facebook page.
The New Face of Conservatism in America
These were seen at a recent “Tea Party”. The stated goal from the 9/12 website (Glenn Beck’s little project):
Reconcile that with the reality of hate and intolerance:
Comparing Obama to Hitler. Seriously? Hitler? Please, oh please somebody try to justify that one to me. I’m just itching to have a go at somebody with that low of an IQ.
Comparing Obama to Hitler, Stalin, Lenin, and Castro. Ignorance knows no bounds.
I’m pretty sure threatening the President’s life is a felony. Slogans like this are supposed to unite the country?
Heil White Supremacist Moron!
This one doesn’t deserve a comment. The bearer is a waste of oxygen.
If Fred Phelps showed up to the funeral of one of her loved ones, Maybe she would have an idea how distasteful that sign is. Then again, probably not.
These people make me sick. The only thing missing here are white hoods and a burning cross.
Glenn Beck, go fuck yourself. Would you please find another country in which to peddle your hate, lies, and fear-mongering? We’re all stocked up here.
These people’s hate speech is, unfortunately, protected by the Constitution, the same document they seem to believe Obama is subverting. It protects the morons too. Where were they when Bush started chopping out the parts of the Constitution he didn’t like? Did they march then? They have no clue that if things had continued the way they had under Bush for a few more years, they likely would no longer even have THAT right. One has to wonder if they’ve even read it.
This is the face of modern “conservatives” in America. If you’re a conservative, take a long look. If you feel disgusted, congratulations, you’re still human. Please rethink your convictions and stop listening to idiots.
If you don’t feel disgusted by this, get help. And please never vote again.
The Religious Right
I’m a bit confused by something, and I would appreciate it if somebody could help me out here. First, a caveat. I’m not a Christian, but having once been in a Christianity-based cult, I know a little bit about the Christian bible.
I would like to know how the Religious Right reconcile their views on Health Care Reform and Social programs with the following passage, taken verbatim and completely in context, from the Christian bible.
Matthew 25:31-46 (New International Version)
The Sheep and the Goats
31″When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his throne in heavenly glory. 32All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. 33He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.
34″Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’37″Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’
40″The King will reply, ‘I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.’
41″Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. 42For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, 43I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not look after me.’
44″They also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you?’
45″He will reply, ‘I tell you the truth, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’
46″Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.”
The cult didn’t pay much attention to Matthew 25, but I did. I would like to know how the Jesus depicted here and in many other parts of the bible reconciles with the “Why should I give up what I have for somebody else?” views we’ve been hearing?
Then, a final footnote. The Health Care bill is carefully crafted to not take away from you what you may already have, but only to offer a choice to those that currently have none. In other words, the poor. How does somebody oppose this and call themselves a “Christian”? Is fighting science and oppressing homosexuals somehow more important than this? That’s not what I read in my bible*.
Discuss.
* Common catch phrase from the cult
The "Case" Against Socialized Medicine
My blog has gone quite political over the past year, and the reason for this is that I’ve gone quite political over the last year. The is the inevitable end result of roughly the last decade, starting with my exit from the cult. After leaving, I found it harder to just simply accept what I’m told. It becomes exceptionally hard to remain a conservative with this viewpoint. Most people fall into one of three categories:
- I don’t want to hear about it. By far most people fall into this category, and for most of my life I did as well. What little readership I had before has most likely left for these reasons. I’m pretty sure I have, not counting myself or the Chinese porn sites who spam my comments, two readers now. That’s okay with me. If one person finds me through Google and questions long held heretofore unquestioned beliefs as a result, I’ve made the world a better place. In other words, I’m not going to shut the fuck up.
- My beliefs are right and yours are wrong and I don’t really want to hear what you have to say and I’ll shout until you give up. It’s difficult to not fall into this category myself, but mostly because when I get into arguments like this, I’ve actually spent a little time looking into facts myself rather than just regurgitating Rush Limbaugh. Even that’s not fair, Rush proves he’s “right” by belittling his opponents. The logic fallacy in that should be clear even to those who have never studied logic.
- I’d like to hear what you have to say and judge it’s merit for myself. This is by far the smallest of the three categories, and, ironically, the group I’m talking to now.
In the interest of trying to remain a member of group #3, I followed a link from an obviously conservative acquaintance on Facebook recently. I’d like to offer a rebuttal to this article, and as a result will probably end up quoting the entire thing. The link is here: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1229567/posts. It’s very entertaining, and is posted by, apparently a political science major. I’ve never studied political science, but, well… here we go.
One of the greatest dreams of American liberals is a nationalized health care system similar to the one in Canada. They argue in favor of such a system because they believe health care is a basic “right,” and because they believe the current system is flawed beyond repair. As with most problems, they advocate government solutions, not private enterprise solutions. Unfortunately, the government has an abysmal record of correcting problems, and American health care would be no exception.
Most of this article provides no backing for any of it’s claims (so neither will I), so I think we can take the statement that the government has an abysmal record with a shaker of salt. Private enterprise had their shot at this problem, and I think it’s pretty clear they blew the pooch on this one. Advocating private enterprise solutions to this problem would be similar to trying to cure a headache by pounding yourself over the head with a mallet. The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. That was Einstein, if I’m not mistaken.
First, let’s examine the “right to health care” claim. Obviously, there is no right to health care established in the U.S. Constitution. However, we do have a moral right to health care, some will argue. Unfortunately, those who make this argument do not understand what a “right” is.
Of course there’s no right to health care in the U.S. constitution. It would have read something like “The people shall have the right to government sponsored bloodletting and leeches as needed” at the time. The Constitution was designed to be flexible, and meet the needs of the people as they changed. Over 200 years later, they’ve changed a little. In a government for the people, of the people and by the people, a “right” is what the people determine it to be. We call this “Elections”. Medicare, Social Security, Unemployment , Fire and Police service are also not covered by the Constitution. By this argument, we should disband all of them.
A “right” is the ability and autonomy to perform a sovereign action. In a free society founded on the ideal of liberty, an individual has an absolute ability to perform such an action – so long as it does not infringe upon the rights of another individual. Health care is not speech: In order for you to exercise a theoretical “right” to health care, you must infringe on someone else’s rights. If you have a “right” to health care, then it means you must also have the right to coerce doctors into treating you, to coerce drug companies into producing medicine and to coerce other citizens into footing your medical bill. This is Orwellian. “Freedom” for you cannot result in slavery for others. Thus the concept of a “right” to health care is an oxymoron: It involves taking away the rights of other individuals.
Here we start to sound a bit like Glen Beck, full of conspiracies. We’ll ignore the obviously emotionally laden choice terms like “slavery”. We seem to have re-defined what the term “slave” means. We’re also ignoring the fact that true slavery existed in this country under the Constitution until the mid-1800s, when it was amended (under rather considerable protest) to redefine what “rights” are to include people who aren’t white. This is a great example of how our Constitution adapts to changing times. If anything about his statement were true, then police and firemen could effectively be considered slaves by the same argument. This is a completely illogical leap, and I just can’t buy it.
Surely, though, we can agree that doctors, the pharmaceutical industry and insurance companies earn excessive profits, you say. Well, that depends on what your definition of “excessive” is. Doctors literally hold the lives of their patients in their hands.
So do police officers, but the chief of police doesn’t make 9 digits a year.
How much is someone who saves lives everyday worth?
How much is a human life worth? Are the 250 million Americans who have health coverage somehow more valuable than the 50 million who don’t? Oh, and Police save lives every day too.
The same is true of pharmaceutical companies. While it has become fashionable to condemn their profits, the fact is that these profits fund medical research, which leads to more medicines being produced, and, consequently, more lives saved. Insurance companies spread the cost of health care among many people who might not otherwise be able to afford it, and thus make health care readily available for many.
Pharmaceutical companies do make excessive profits, and the new medicines being produced seem to consist largely of Viagra and similar products. That’s because that’s where consumer demand is. The cost will be spread among many in a government plan as well, making health care readily available for all. I would hate to be the guy who has to choose who isn’t included in the “many” group.
While on the topic of profits, we should examine them. The word “profit” is considered to be a dirty word by many on the political left, but why? What makes a profit bad? Nothing.
Normally I would disagree that liberals consider profit a dirty word, and I would agree that there is nothing wrong with making profit, but when denying care to citizens with or without coverage increases profits, then they are profiting off of death and disease. That would make profit bad.
On the contrary, profits are very positive. When you come to class in the morning, there is a good chance you either drive a car or ride a bus. Do you think the bus driver and the workers who built your car or the bus did so that you could get to school on time? Of course not, they did because they wanted to make money. Yet their pursuit of a profit benefited them as well as you.
Comparing bus drivers to insurance company executives is just a little skewed. I don’t the the guy who built my car got paid 100 million in compensation last year (maybe the guy who owns the company did though). The rhetoric usually throws the word “socialist” around, playing off the fact that most Americans don’t know the difference between the words “socialist” and “communist”. They hear “socialist” and all they see the hammer and sickle. The truth is that socialism is not the inverse of democracy, it’s the inverse of capitalism (and even that’s not entirely accurate). And neither pure capitalism nor pure socialism is a good thing, that’s one of the things America tends to do well, maintaining a balance between capitalism and socialism. However we’ve made socialism a bad word through years of indoctrination and association with communism (e.g. Cold War, Red Scare, etc etc). Evil is in the eye of the beholder, and most of the rest of the world views the U.S.A. in the same light we used to view the U.S.S.R. Some popular socialist programs we already have that you might not realize are socialist are Medicare and Social Security. Similar arguments were made against these programs before they passed “Socialism, BAD BAD BAD!” Most politicians these days are smart enough to know that proposing the abolition of these programs would be political suicide.
Adam Smith once said, “It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest.” As we have seen, profits and self-interest are not bad things.
Ditto, bad comparison.
Let’s pretend, for a moment, that the left gets its way, and the United States adopts a universal health care system. This profit motive will effectively be removed.
Ignoring the fact that Doctors in other industrialized nations with universal health care plans make rather good money, medicine just simply should not be about profit, it should be about saving lives, and this is where America differs from the rest of the industrialized world. I’m a little apprehensive of the doctor who became a doctor for the money, rather than for the desire to save human life.
Doctors will then be government employees, and, as such, have far less accountability,
I’m yet to see the government employee who has less accountability.
as well as lower pay. Could we still expect the best and brightest to strive to be doctors?
Yes, but the greedy will probably be forced into politics now.
Probably not. More than likely, they will pursue other careers where they can make more money.
It appears we’ve lumped the best and brightest in with the greedy, and I think that’s unfair. Many pursue careers in teaching and law enforcement despite the abysmal pay. A few of them still pursue these careers for the wrong reasons, but mostly they are people who are doing what they love. While I strongly feel that they deserve more pay, I think this fact, along with lack of recognition for societal contributions, filters out a lot of bad eggs. If somebody decides to not pursue a career in medicine because of the pay, it probably wasn’t where they belonged. They should try being CEO of Halliburton, or perhaps starting a war in Iraq. There’s a lot of money to be made there.
Some love to bemoan the fact that the United States is one of the few industrialized nations without a government health care system.
I looked this one up, and we have some company on this one. Mostly Africa and the Middle East. Interestingly enough, Iraq and Afghanistan have universal health care programs paid for by United States war funding!!!, but we don’t have one back home. And “love” seems a highly inappropriate and emotionally laden word to choose there.
Yet they rarely note that the United States produces disproportional amounts of the new, life-saving drugs, largely because of the profits drug companies make. Will we continue to produce these drugs if we abolish the profit motive? Not likely. Chances are, they will not be produced at all, and more people will needlessly suffer and die as a result.
The truth is a disproportional amount of the profits drug companies make go to their executives, not research. 50 million Americans do not have health insurance. That’s roughly one out of every six Americans who cannot afford to see a doctor, and this number has been steadily growing for decades. What good does it do us to produce the cure for cancer if nobody can afford it? And we’re making some big assumptions here that don’t seem to be grounded in fact again. There’s no indication that drug companies will stop producing drugs if we reform health care.
When we examine countries that have embraced socialized medicine, we find long waiting lists, expansive red tape and little concern for the individual. Do you really want to be told which doctor to go to? Do you want to wait years to have necessary medical procedures performed? If so, then socialized medicine is for you.
Conservatives love to throw this one around, but there’s no backing data for it. We’re told what doctors we can see now. We have necessary medical procedures denied now. We have long waiting lists now. I suppose if want that sort of thing, then privatized medicine is for you.
But if you believe in individual rights, competent healthcare and sound economic policies, we must get the government out of the doctor’s office.
The government isn’t in the doctor’s office. The author has completely failed to show what individual rights, competent healthcare, or sound economic policies have to do with “the government in the doctor’s office”. Most conservative arguments seem based on inducing fear of change. They fail to mention that you’ve already got someone intervening between you and your doctor, and they have a financial interest in finding some way (any way) to deny your claim. Denying a claim is the equivalent of denying health care, because very few Americans can afford the outrageous charges for even minor operations under the American system. A recent study showed that different insurance companies were denying between 20-40% of all claims they received (one[Cigna] was 20, another [UHC] was 40). Does it sound like this is just a problem for the uninsured? People who are paying their premiums (or being a “Grown Up”, as Lynn Jenkins of Kansas recently called a young waitress supporting a two year old) are still being denied care. People are DYING as a result, and we should, as Americans, each and every one of us, find that shocking and unacceptable.
We’re very fond of talking about how superior we are to the rest of the world (freedom fries, anyone?), and that’s very easy to believe as long as we don’t actually look at the rest of the world.
Op-Ed Columnist – Health Care Fit for Animals – NYTimes.com
Opponents suggest that a “government takeover” of health care will be a milestone on the road to “socialized medicine,” and when he hears those terms, Wendell Potter cringes. He’s embarrassed that opponents are using a playbook that he helped devise.
Death Panels are REAL!!!
The Health Care Debate
I tried to find the Republican sponsored commercial that depicts a Washington bureaucrat (who looks suspiciously like an IRS agent caricature) interposing himself between a patient and her doctor. What the ad doesn’t say is that we have that now. Replace “Washington Bureaucrat” with “Insurance Agent”. No difference.
What, you’ve never watched your doctors fighting with the insurance company to attempt to justify care? I have. I watched my Dad’s doctors more or less blackmail the insurance company to get them to approve an “experimental” procedure that has extended his life far beyond the year or so he had in 2001. He’s enjoying time with his grandchildren today. If that doctor had capitulated, my dad would have died when his oldest grandchild was a baby. This is the healthcare system Republicans want to protect. They have a financial interest in doing so, not a humanitarian one. Republicans warn that Obama wants to destroy our healthcare system. Damn straight! We want to destroy the broken system that only works for the insurance companies and replace it with something that works for everybody.
The problem here is that in a Democracy (which is what the United States claims to have, if you weren’t aware), the Government is supposed to be afraid of the people, not the people afraid of the Government. If the government were truly afraid of the people, Universal Healthcare would not be a debate at all. Ask yourself honestly, are you afraid of the Government, or is it afraid of you?
Insurance companies are spending millions of dollars with anti-reform commercials and buying Washington votes. Why? Do they have the best interests of the American People at heart, or are they interested in the billions to be made under the current system which routinely denies needed care to millions? They’re afraid, because they know that every other industrialized country in the world has universal healthcare and it works. They know that our system of paying huge insurance premiums is entirely concocted and unnecessary. They don’t want you to know that.
Did you catch that? The crutches that cost $15 in Canada were $45 in the U.S.? We must have some damn good crutches here in order to charge 3 times as much. Right?
I expect the first conservative to come across my post will respond with something like “If you think it’s so much better in Canada, why don’t you move there?” This probably seems like good logic to them. When you don’t really understand logic, it’s easy to miss a fallacy.
I believe in America and I believe we can fix this. I don’t want to move to Canada, I want the United States’ healthcare system to be the envy of the world, not the laughing stock it is today. You should too.
Wall-E
First, a recant.
I blasted Xbox support in a previous post. While their support still sucks, there was an answer, and the second reply actually got me close enough to find the answer for myself. I appreciate that the support personal are A) providing support for free (well, they get paid, Microsoft provides it) and B) probably constrained to certain responses due to efforts to actually improve support. I also understand that support is a difficult job. I’ve done it. It doesn’t change the fact that their support sucks dog crap, but whatever. It’s fixed now. I won’t sell the Xbox just yet, but I’m not ruling out a Playstation either. At any rate, if the same thing happens to you, the answer is “The License Consolidation Tool”. Despite the websites many assertions that it’s not necessary, it was necessary. Just because the job is difficult doesn’t excuse poor support.
That leads me to DRM and why it sucks and is completely pointless, but that’s another post for later.
Today I had two of my nieces over. I happened to have Wall-E recorded, and thought the kids might enjoy watching it. My wife
vetoed it because she heard from a friend that it was actually some Hollywood plot to bash fat people and accuse them of destroying the world.
So I watched it to see for myself what Hollywood’s latest evil plot was.
What I saw was a cute movie with a sub-plot containing a cartoonish over-exaggeration of the dangers of rampant consumerism.
So what’s the problem?
It occurs to me that this is exactly what the religious right are deathly afraid of, having a social consciousness and actually being forced to think for themselves. I think the social message “hidden” in the movie is dead on, and not really a bad thing to expose children to.
The Wal-Mart generation could learn something here.
It seems that the religious right are always looking for some plot “to destroy our way of life.” To them I say: “What Would Jesus Buy?”
First, let me be clear. I’ve abandoned Christianity for many reasons, not the least of which is I no longer believe the adult fairy tale of a “benevolent” “God” watching over all of us and allowing all of the bad things to happen because he works in “mysterious ways”. It’s a load of crap. It’s Santa for grown-ups. I think that there is some sort of higher consciousness, but it doesn’t look out for us on an individual level, it’s not a God, it isn’t accurately described by any religious text ever, and it’s completely explainable by science, even if it’s science we don’t understand yet. So all criticisms of Christians as to whether or not they have any idea of what their own religion dictates should be taken with a grain pound of salt.
That being said, if Jesus were alive today, he’d puke at the sight of the people who call themselves his followers. Yes, I’m talking to YOU Ray Comfort and Pat Robertson! I don’t know a
single “Christian” alive today that lives the life prescribed by the Christian Bible. For all their faults, the only group I know that actually came even somewhat close was the cult.
I believe that Jesus would say “Stop the wars in the Middle East”. Christians say “Fight them there so we don’t have to fight them here.” I believe Jesus would say “Help the needy” (see Matthew 25), the Religious Right say “No Socialist Health Care!”
Why? Why do Christians (as a whole) seem to be so off? The only answer I can come up with is “Someone told them that.” Why was
my wife opposed to Wall-E? Because someone told her it was somehow un-Christian. I don’t think anything that was lampooned by the movie is anything Jesus would not condemn. Why do so many Conservatives/Christians/whatever seem to believe whatever they’re told? Are none of them capable of thinking for themselves?
The other night I watched “Sicko”. Just on a whim. I wanted to see what liberally biased crap Michael Moore was spewing in this movie. I’d never liked him because he was obviously a rampant Liberal with an agenda and a movie camera. While I did spot a few places in the movie that were obviously biased, for the most part it
was a dismal and unfortunately accurate depiction of the piss poor state of health care in America. I’m shocked at how much better it is almost everywhere else. And he identified why it’s different here, and traced it back to Nixon and Edgar Kaiser in 1971. It’s appalling that in this country we give doctors bonuses on being able to deny as many people health care as possible, while in England doctors are given bonuses on crazy dumb-ass criteria like how many people they got to stop smoking.
I was so surprised by my own reaction to this movie, I wanted to share it with my wife. Her first question was “Is this that Michael Moore movie?” and was uninterested in anything that came from it. She was intentionally rejecting anything she might have
learned from it based solely on things she had heard about Michael Moore, presumably from her religious right friends. I’m glad I didn’t let my own bias stop me. I’ve finally realized that despite being an ignorant conservative for years, I’m really a flaming liberal and I’m finally coming out of the closet. While most people my age are becoming more conservative and start voting Republican, true to the story of my life I’m doing exactly the opposite, I’ve wised up. I’m actually looking in to becoming an activist.
I’m aware that war only begets more war. Our actions in the Middle East are inspiring hate and fear of the West in the youth of that region and actively swelling the ranks of those who want to destroy us. I’m aware that that it takes strength to say “we will not negotiate with terrorists”, but it takes more strength to stick to that principle when the time comes. I’m aware that that it takes a kind of
strength that’s hard to find to say “we will not submit to terrorism, but neither will we become terrorists ourselves.” It takes one kind of strength to stand up and criticize people like George Bush and Dick Cheney for sacrificing America’s principles when times were dark, and it’s entirely another to stick to those ideals when you find yourself in their position. The recent disappointments from President Obama serve to illustrate that he, just like the rest of us, is only human. Still, let’s hope it doesn’t happen again.
