Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The truth about universal healthcare

Republican Party spokespersons big and small are twisting themselves into pretzels trying to combat the positive message of the Democratic Party. Over the next few months, you will hear them call good evil and evil good in order to trick America into four more years of Bush-style fear-mongering, war-mongering and recession.

Healthcare may be the issue that shipwrecks their good-is-evil message. For years, Republicans told us that “universal healthcare” was a dangerous, wicked Democratic plan that must be opposed. They said if everyone had healthcare, there would be no healthcare at all! Back when most voters had adequate healthcare coverage, we swallowed the lies. We believed that if healthcare were extended to the masses, it would no longer be as good for us.

Times have changed. Many of us are finding ourselves under-insured, with huge deductibles to meet before our policy ever kicks in. Many more are uninsured altogether, either because we cannot afford the employee portion of the premium, or because our company can no longer afford to offer health insurance. Will people with little or no healthcare really buy the “universal healthcare is evil” mantra?

Michael Moore’s documentary “Sicko” really brought the issue to the forefront of the American conscience. It is not that Americans did not know about the crisis. Many of us have experienced it first hand. What the movie and the buzz about it revealed is that the healthcare crisis is widespread. We are not alone in our struggles.

In fact, one survey found that 30% of respondents had delayed seeing a doctor about a known and potentially serious medical condition, because of inability to pay. Medical inflation is currently twice as high as the standard rate of inflation, meaning this problem will not resolve itself. Workers are paying more but getting less, with premiums rising four times faster than wages.

Let’s consider it from another angle. Every American child has the right to an education, whether or not her parents can afford private school. There are schools on every corner – private schools, public schools, and kitchen-table home schools. To be sure, the public education system has flaws. (So do private schools and home schools, but nobody talks about that.) Despite the flaws, we can still say this: Any American child can walk through the doors of the public school house and receive an education.

Unfortunately, I know some people who would like to see public education abolished. As you can imagine, they are people who can easily afford to educate their children privately, and they do not appreciate having to foot the bill for other people’s children.

In the dreams of the selfish, their little Richie would never have to compete with the smart but poor kid down the road. Only the wealthy would be able to educate their children. As for the rest of Americans, well, they just need to be trained for manual labor and subordinate positions to little Richie.

Most of us would be appalled at such thinking. We have been raised to believe that a basic education is every child’s birth-rite. Aren’t health and life more important than education? If every child has the right to be taught to read, then does not every child have the right to receive treatment for a life-threatening condition like asthma?

Universal healthcare simply means healthcare for all. Private healthcare plans will not be eradicated any more than private schools have been eradicated. Those who are happy with their current healthcare can keep it.

Health care is at least as important as public education, public libraries, public transportation and other services that we make available to all citizens. It is time for the United States to step into the twenty-first century and provide healthcare for all Americans. To help us do that, vote Democratic!

Jeannie Babb Taylor
www.JeannieBabbTaylor.com



7 comments:

foxofbama said...

Jeannie:
I'm trying to get the son of the man who baptized Cindy McCain to engage this discussion. Baptizer Richard Jackson, a progressive Baptist colleague of our friend Johnny Pierce, is speaking in Texas next week to a group that just heard Melissa Rogers, one of the brightest folks on the ethics of political stump speaking out there.
Google up Melissa's Blog and persevere.
Am I too politically incorrect to imagine how many U Tube hits would score if Rolling Stones was music video at the Mormon Zion Compound outside San Angelo with cameo appearances by Paige Patterson and Al Mohler?

foxofbama said...

Correction:
Stones Under My Thumb was music for a video featuring Zion and the fundy Baps.

Anonymous said...

Did you seriously reference Sicko on your article? Surely you should know what that does to your credibility. If everyone has everything given to them what is the incentive to work hard and earn things.

Georgia Mountain Man said...

Good article. If something isn't done soon about healthcare costs, we are all going to find ourselves up a well known polluted stream without any means of motivation. Drug costs are outrageous and drug companies are allowed to go over Dr's heads to advertise to the general public. They could be using that advertising money to roll back prices on drugs. I feel very lucky to have pretty good healthcare, but I am continually nervous as a retired state govt. employee because the Ga Republican leadership keeps messing with healthcare and retirement plans.

Doug B said...

I have to hope and believe that reality is finally setting in to the point that universal health care will at last become a reality. The GOP arguments in opposition are transparent and ridiculous.

Anonymous said...

Funny how so many who denounce "Sicko" are enamored of "Expelled." Both rely heavily on propaganda. At least Moore addressed a major problem. Stein pretends his focus is a widespread problem, and it's not.

We're the wealthiest country in the world, and a significant number of our citizens can't afford even basic healthcare. Moore may not have given us an answer, but he sees the real problem.

Mary

Anonymous said...

Why don't you move to San Francisco so Nancy Pelosi can be your representative because your views do not reflect Northwest Georgia Values. Healthcare for all means Socialized medicine. Take a look at Canada's system and you'll see how it really works. But my guess is that you have on your rose-colored glasses and you can't see the truth.