search results "tag:single payer"

Health Care Reform Passes First Senate Hurdle by Scott Galindez

In a party line vote of 60-39, the Senate voted Saturday evening to proceed with debate on a health care reform bill. All 58 Democrats and both Independents voted in favor of the motion while Republicans voted against it. Senate Majority Harry Reid closed debate and urged Republicans to support debate of the bill arguing that the framers of the Constitution didn't intend for the rules to limit a healthy debate. Following the vote, Reid said the "finish line is in sight." He added "that while we don't all agree how to get there we all agree something must be done." Reid went on to say that the bill will "save lives, save money and save medicare." Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Connecticut), told reporters that "everyone should have the right to quality health care" and that this bill will "move us down the path to health care for all Americans."

For Citizens to Consider as Congress Puts Lipstick on the Health Care Reform Pig

http://www.truthout.org/1028095 Jim Hightower sums up the stunning hypocrisy of Congress over what they themselves enjoy and what they withhold from the rest of us in terms of healh care: "Republicans and Blue Dog Democrats who have risen up on their hind legs in recent weeks to snarl and howl at any mention of a government role in meeting America’s health care needs. "Socialism," they bark — we won’t allow Barack Obama and the liberals to create a Washington-run, big-government intrusion into the hallowed private market. Sen. Jim DeMint, a South Carolina Republican, even pledged to fight so ferociously that the health care battle would be Obama’s "Waterloo." [snip] What these bellicose market-purists hope you don’t discover is that they are closet socialists. As members of the congressional elite, they and their families are governmentally blessed with their very own gold-plated, taxpayer-financed, Washington-run health care system. And, they loooove it. Theirs is such an effective system that not a single member of the hypocongress has been willing to give it up — even though they surely realize the political peril of being exposed as rank hypocrites for enjoying the very program they so adamantly reject for you."
no commentscategory: Congress karma: 78

Price-Gouging On Drugs: Another Argument For Single-Payer

For decades, I've heard that one big reason drug companies charge so much for their products is that they need plenty of money for R&D (research and development). Staying on the pharmaceutical cutting edge, the argument goes, is part of what has given America "the greatest health care system in the world." Yeah, it works just great -- for CEOs, stockholders and wealthy people in general. The difference between what the drug companies are charging and what Americans pay for most other products is astonishing.
no commentscategory: Progressive Issues karma: 67

Arlen Specter: the Democratic Party's magic bullet

Many of you are too young to remember the span of Arlen Specter’s career as a DC politician. In 1964 Specter was serving as junior counsel for the Warren Commission , the investigative body established after John Kennedy’s assassination to contain and spin that horrific event.

Oh Bummer: Army Sends Infant to Protective Services, Mom to Afghanistan

U.S. Army Specialist Alexis Hutchinson, a single mother, is being threatened with a military court-martial if she does not agree to deploy to Afghanistan, despite having been told she would be granted extra time to find someone to care for her 11-month-old son while she is overseas. Hutchinson, of Oakland, California, is currently being confined at Hunter Army Airfield near Savannah, Georgia, after being arrested. Her son was placed into a county foster care system. Hutchinson has been threatened with a court martial if she does not agree to deploy to Afghanistan on Sunday, Nov. 15. She has been attempting to find someone to take care of her child, Kamani, while she is deployed overseas, but to no avail.---
14 commentscategory: Military karma: 170

One and a Half Good Things About the House Health Care Bill and 10 Things That Make it Worse Than Nothing

http://www.pnhp.org/news/2009/november/squandered_a_golden_.php Dr. Carol Paris, in an irate letter to a Maryland newspaper editor, writes of the newly passed House health care bill: I agree with Wendell Potter, the former head of public relations for CIGNA, that this legislation could more accurately be titled “The Private Health Insurance Profit Protection and Enhancement Act.” The readers should know that this legislation was written by the insurance industry, for the insurance industry. We are being mandated to purchase a defective product from an industry that has demonstrated for the past 60 years that it puts profits before patients. Even the so-called public option will be administered by the private insurance industry and will enroll, at most, 6 million people in a multitude of anemic markets; it will not be a robust Medicare-like market at all. This public option is like sending in a peewee football team to compete with the NFL. It will not compete with the private insurance industry; it will become the default insurer for our sickest, least profitable citizens, leaving the younger, mandated, profitable citizens to enroll in the private plans provided in the exchange.
no commentscategory: Congress karma: 70

Kucinich Raises Questions about Stand Alone Vote on National Single Payer + No Bill is Better Than a Bad Bill

“Many years ago, people in states across America planted the seeds of single payer health care. Those seeds have sprouted and borne fruit where powerful state citizens’ movements exist to create not-for-profit health care. This led to passage of an amendment to the Health Care bill which protected the rights of states to pursue single payer. Unfortunately that amendment was taken out of the bill, and we must try to get it into the conference report."
no commentscategory: Congress karma: 178

Nine Arrested Protesting Lieberman's Healthcare Stance

"We're waiting to see if the senator for Aetna is ready to be the senator for the people," explained one protester. Capitol police dragged away nine protesters. After the arrests, five of the remaining protesters stood in the back of the chamber and quietly held up signs reading "Patients Not Profits" and "Insurance $$$ Makes Me Sick." "It's ironic Lieberman is chairing this meeting on corporate crimes," said Medea Benjamin, who characterized the practice of accepting campaign donations from health insurance companies as criminal.
no commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 124

Pelosi Arrested Us for Asking for Healthcare by Dan Hodges, Chair, Health Care for All-California

Around 3PM this afternoon I was one of 12 single payer activists who were escorted from the reception area of Nancy Pelosi's office in the San Francisco Federal Building and arrested by members of the Federal Protection Service of U.S. Homeland Security. Just before noon we went to Pelosi's office to ask Dan Bernal, the district director, make a phone call either to Pelosi herself or Terri McCullough, Pelosi's chief of staff in Washington. We wanted to directly communicate two demands: that the Kucinich amendment be included in the health care bill that will soon be brought to a vote in the House and that the Weiner amendment be voted on by the House, as previously promised by Pelosi.

Kucinich: Protect Rights of Consumers Free From Economic Death Grip of Insurance Companies!

Plus video. "Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) today made the following statement about the House health care plan on the floor of the House of Representatives: “Even though insurance companies make money not providing health care, the so-called reform bill gives so much power and money to the insurance companies that we are giving far too much for the few benefits which the bill may confer. “The insurance companies get at least another 26 million customers."
no commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 163

Single-payer health care advocates arrested in protest

"Three single-payer health care supporters were arrested Monday after protesting outside the Mission Valley office of Blue Shield of California. Click here to find out more! The protest was a part of a nationwide campaign to dispute health care companies, who demonstrators claim have been raising premiums throughout the recession and have lobbied against the single-payer system."
4 commentscategory: Progressive Issues karma: 163

Failure by Design – the ‘Public’ Option

Do you know what the “public option” does or who it covers? If you’ve had trouble finding out, it’s not your fault. If you think that the current version of the public option will provide a choice for a government administered health program, you’re right. If you think that this option was designed for the general public, then you’re wrong. It will apply to only some of the uninsured, possibly as few as six million citizens.

Obamacare Will Go Untested Until After 2012 Election: Appearance of Reform vs. Reality of Faux Reform

It occurred to me yesterday that when the new health care system kicks in, it will be AFTER the 2012 election. Obama’s re-election won’t be all that dependent on the actual outcome of his health care reform. This revelation makes me all the more cynical about the health care bait-and-switching and in-your-face pro-corporate cronyism we have been witnessing since Obama’s election. My broken, bitter, single-payer-loving heart concludes the appearance of achieving reform seems to be a greater priority with Obama than the quality of said reform. How frustrating for him when those darn obstructionist Republicans robbed him of the "appearance" of bipartisanship reform, too. Nevertheless, there will be celebratory spinning by many when all is said and done soon. And those representatives railing the loudest against the new bill will be from the Right. They will not be the sad moralists, but even harsher saboteurs to the basic needs of a desperate citizenry.

Dennis Kucinich: Government of the people or a government of the corporations?

Kucinich on New Health Care Bill: ‘Is This the Best We Can Do?’ “Is this the best we can do? Forcing people to buy private health insurance, guaranteeing at least $50 billion in new business for the insurance companies? “Is this the best we can do? Government negotiates rates which will drive up insurance costs, but the government won’t negotiate with the pharmaceutical companies which will drive up pharmaceutical costs.
6 commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 151

Sanders to Push for Single-Payer Vote in Senate

U.S. Sen. Bernard Sanders will likely make history this year when - for the first time ever - he brings a bill creating a national single-payer health care system to the floor of the Senate for a vote.
15 commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 128

Dennis Kucinich on The Ed Show: state-level single-payer provision stripped from health bill

Rep. Dennis Kucinich explains on The Ed Show how a state-level single-payer admendment (which PASSED in the House Committee on Education and Labor) was STRIPPED from the current health care bill. (with Video)
no commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 61

Common Sense Health Care: Individualism or the Commonweal

All those who accept Medicare ought to allow it for everyone. And for those who quote Thomas Paine in defense of withholding healthcare from every American, they need to reread him.

Funny What News of CBO Scoring Single Payer Can Do

Yesterday we had a rush of healthcare news coming out. The funny thing is how as soon as excitement broke out across the Blogosphere on the news confirmed by Rep. Weiner's "Nice Person" that the CBO was in the process of scoring Single Payer so they would have numbers to look at before there was a vote on it on the House floor two things jumped out in the news to follow. I can't wait to see what becomes "BREAKING!!!" news if the CBO scores Single Payer well...
no commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 163

UnitedHealth’s Helmsley Earns $57,000 a day—Will It Increase After Obamacare?

The LA Times used the word “bonanza” recently in describing what Obama’s and Congress’ health care “reform” will mean to the insurance/pharma industries. Criminalizing the uninsured, i.e., making purchasing insurance mandatory, will bring massive profit-making for an industry whose profit-making already has crippled the present health care system so badly that 45,000 uninsured Americans die each year prematurely – unnecessarily — according to a recent Harvard study. What our President and Congressional representatives, ostensibly employed by and committed to us, seem to be doing these days is exchanging true health care reform for their own campaign financing needs. It is the proverbial elephant (and donkey) in the room. To shift animal metaphors, these representatives are entrusting the public hen house to the foxes, in the guise of reform for citizens. Yes, waiving “no pre-existing conditions” would be of significant value, but what will be the giveaways? What devastating, small-print, loop-hole ambushes will unfold as painful epiphanies in our individual futures?

Insurance Industry Report Should be Rallying Cry for Single-Payer

Man, leave it to the health insurance companies. They are getting a sweet deal in the Senate Finance Committee. The legislation there amounts to nothing more than corporate welfare on the backs of working Americans for the health insurance companies. This should please them right?? I mean, when someone mandates millions of new costumers for you without making you compete honestly with a public option for their business that is a good thing right??
2 commentscategory: Health and Wellness karma: 144
« previous12345678910» next

who are we
code: license, download  |  images license
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional    Valid CSS!   [Valid RSS]