Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid today declared that the Senate
will vote on a health care bill with a modest, conservative public option.
This is very exciting!Of course, it's not exactly the
Progressive's dream. We knew this would never happen. What is my dream health care bill, you ask? Simply put, it is "medicare-for-all," a Canadian system in America where the government simply takes over the
funding aspect but not the
administering aspect. That would be the best bill.
Unfortunately, we won't be able to do that. Why, you may ask? Because the Democratic super-majority is not a
Democratic super-majority. The majority we have is a cluster of Progressives and Conservatives, and many of these people are either held to special interests or are, simply put, spineless. But hey! At least these guys and gals have been able to rally around a public option.
An opt-out public option. Where states can decide whether they want to take part.
An opt-out public option, restricted to the uninsured. One that only can cover those without health care.
Is this competition? Of course not! The bill Reid is talking about does include a public option, but it is one where the legislators of a state, not the People, but the legislators, decide whether their state will take part in it. And, once a state chooses to take part, the only citizens that can take part are its uninsured!
The Senate fundamentally misunderstands the reason for a public option. Progressives don't favor government control of anything for no reason. We aren't socialists. The public option should be a fair option, and its goal should be to
increase competition in the US insurance market. Its objective is to force the insurance companies to be answerable to its consumers.
Let's remember some things.
Firstly, like I said, the Progressive Doctrine must espouse the idea of Medicare-for-all, the deletion of "over 65" from the Medicare requirements, and a 100% insurance rate. The elderly in this country are happy with Medicare, and if anyone should know about health care, it is the elderly. If a 70 year old with diabetes is happy with the care they receive, a healthy 25 year old will too.
Secondly, if this is not a part of the Progressive Doctrine, then the only other belief we should include is a nation-wide formula based on the Veteran's Health Administration, which is basically based on the British model. The government chooses the doctors and funds the whole operation. Basically, rather than a government takeover of the funding of health care, the government would take over the
administration of health care. It owns the hospitals, the nursing homes, and the clinics. The veterans are happy with it, and if its good enough for the men and women who serve our nation, it must be good enough for the citizens they protect.
Lastly, the public option that is both restricted to the uninsured and tagged with the opt-out option is
not what the American People want, but they
do want a public option (
CNN/Opinion Research Corporation: 61% support public option). They want a public option everyone can take part in, one that assures real competition. You know, the thing most people on the
left in Congress want. But Americans are still in the center-right.
Yeah.
This
is a big step. At the very least, we are exploring options and, maybe in a few more years, with the success of this public option, we can explore nation-wide Medicare or a
real public option. Until then, I applaud Reid for his...open mindedness.
To leave you with a sobering note:
every year, 18,000 people die a year due to lack of health insurance. I've seen numbers of upwards to 45,000.We must work together, brothers and sisters. Looking to religion for some type of guidance, we see (among many passages) the story of the Good Samaritan, in the Bible. Luke 10: 25-37 tells of a man who found a complete stranger, beaten and robbed, lying in the road. The wealthy Samaritan felt compassion toward his fellow brother, brought the man to an inn after dressing his wounds and paid for the man's stay, along with aid he would need. It is a lesson in compassion. It is a lesson we should take to heart.