On thing that's consistent about American politics is the practice of hiding your worst vices by preemptively accusing your opposition of it. If your practice of rationing health care to maximize profits hangs around your neck like a decomposing albatross, if you let people die because your top executives need their 20 million dollar salaries and the lobbyists and Congressmen need to be kept rich and happy, you make up a story about Obama and rationing and you stage public events where people pretend to be furious at it until eventually people do become furious enough that they stop thinking and start screaming.
Ask Wendell Potter, former vice president of CIGNA quit his job at Corporate Communications because of the company's decision that the life of 17 year old Nataline Sarkisyan was not worth saving: the liver transplant cost too much so the CIGNA Death Panel refused, calling it "experimental." Although outcry from the public and organizations such as the California Nurses Association caused CIGNA to re-focus on how much the bad publicity was costing them and relented, it was too late and the girl died.
Now rationing is the thing with transplants. The supply is severely limited and systems are in place that attempt to make distribution equitable, but it's not based on the cost. That's not the case at CIGNA nor is it indeed in American health care. Our "system" if you can call it that, will decide how much your life is worth to them and whether or not you've paid your premiums, they will refuse treatment if it will eat into profitability. They will do so even though profitability is growing rapidly. Rationing of health care: it's nothing personal, it's just business and it's just about profits.
"I know from personal experience that members of Congress and the public have good reason to question the honesty and trustworthiness of the insurance industry."testified Potter to the Senate Commerce Committee last month. He related how unprofitable companies were purged, to maximize profits and he's now telling CNN that the buzz words and hackneyed phrases being shouted at Town Hall meetings come straight from the wordsmiths of the Insurers.
"People talk about the government takeover of the system ... that's a buzz term that comes straight out of the insurance industry," says Potter.
Rationing of treatment is not new, nor has it anything to do with who's providing it. When resources are limited, it has to occur, whether it's because there aren't enough organs or operating rooms or surgeons or equipment. Indeed when kidney dialysis was developed in the early 1960's, a committee was set up in Seattle's Artificial Kidney Center for instance, to ration the use of their machinery. I hesitate to call it a death panel, but if you needed time on the machines, a group consisting of a minister, a banker, a labor leader and a housewife picked by the Center would ration it based on such criteria as your record of Church attendance, net worth and marital status. In other words private parties could decide what your life was worth and factor their profit into the equation. It wasn't until the "government takeover" which was Medicare that opened up access to almost everyone in need and perhaps lessened the ability of insurers to indulge in profit based rationing. They sure as hell don't want much more of that at CIGNA.
A great deal of thought goes into choosing words like "death panel" and "rationing" and "takeover." They are chosen with surgical precision so that using by them as accusations, the corporate death panels, the corporate rationing of health care and the monopolistic trusts that indulge in them are protected from the truth.
Now contemplating just how dumb are the people plugged into the corporate matrix, I'm back to wanting to give it all up and let the country sell itself deeper into slavery and dependency on those who see the American People as sheep to be fleeced.
Excellent post.
ReplyDeleteI was up at the nursing home visiting my elderly and fading Father (Dick) the other day and took the opportunity to explain that once Congress passed Obama's health care plan very likely the Sisters of Providence would have to cut him loose. He argued that he had plenty of money to pay for continued care but I assured him that his property and savings would be 're-distributed'. 'Face the facts, Dick, you're time is up. Game. Set Match.'
I carefully explained that money spent on easing the last months of an elderly person's life could be better spend elsewhere and it's the elderly's job, once they become a burden, to get out the way. Simple as that.
Now it's unclear this week whether Obama is a corporatist, collectivist or Islamofascism so I couldn't with any real accuracy tell Dick where his money would actually go but, trust me, I said, it will be used unwisely.
Seriously though.
My Mother died almost two years ago after the rapid onset of lung cancer. Roughly eight months from diagnosis to her death. She died at home with hospice. She opted out of treatment save for pain management. Both she and my father had established Living Wills and Health Care Directives years before describing in detail their wishes.
My Father is in a steady, very peaceful decline in a nursing home and I consult regularly with his doctors and nurses and, following his wishes written when he was clear about his intentions, I oversee his care.
The fear-mongering, lying and obfuscating around our present attempt at health care reform is preposterous,
And completely unsurprising. I'm glad my Mother doesn't have to put up with this latest load of reactionary b******t.
Thought the idiocy of Palin, Grassley and the rest would have amused her.
You need to quit focusing on Palin's words while she is talking and just hit the "mute" button and watch her breasts bounce up and down and she makes one of her idiot points....
ReplyDeleteCall me sexist if you will, tell me I am vulgar, whatever....
But one more news conference of her and her stupidity, and she is a VERY STUPID PERSON...and I am giving up on conservatives.
The next republican convention is going to be ANIMAL HOUSE - 21st Century!
TAO: "Call me sexist if you will, tell me I am vulgar, whatever...."
ReplyDeleteYikes! I hear Squid merging from the deep right now, so you better look out. Dangerously dangerous, that one.
As much as I enjoy good conversation about bouncing breasts, I had to relate this story Captain. Today in USA Today, John Boehner gave his response against the health care plan going through Congress. One of his deluded points was that a panel would decide whether or not treatment was appropriate. Godddamn wouldn't that be cool not to have a panel decide whether or not you get a doctor ordered MRI or something? Ooops. My HMO has a panel that decides whether or not my doctor ordered treatment is appropriate already. I wonder if that idiot Boehner knows this or if he's just getting his talking points from the samew shadow group that's feeding the same lines to the town hall protestors?
ReplyDeleteThank you Arthurstone I really do need reminding that not everyone in this country is mentally ill and stupid.
ReplyDeleteTruth speaks the truth once again. The very heart of this matter is that the corporate death panel is doing a kind of triage based on how much money they can save by letting people die and depriving them of medical care and telling their doctors to stop treatment if it's too expensive. It's only another case of another nut case accusing others of his own sins.
Who knows what the idiot Boehner knows? It's who owns him that matters and that's no mystery. For what it's worth I do not pronounce that "bayner" - ask any German why.
Thanks Captain. Bye the bye are you a real Captain?
ReplyDeleteI enjoy your work. Good stuff in these here parts.
Don't be so hard on Boehner. Perhaps I'm projecting a little but it sounded to me he made it all the way through his Press Secretary composing his op-ed piece without weeping.
It read that way at least.
That said he really is an odd color.
Thanks Captain. Bye the bye are you a real Captain?
ReplyDeleteI enjoy your work. Good stuff in these here parts.
Don't be so hard on Boehner. Perhaps I'm projecting a little but it sounded to me he made it all the way through his Press Secretary composing his op-ed piece without weeping.
It read that way at least.
That said he really is an odd color.
Captain: "For what it's worth I do not pronounce that "bayner" - ask any German why."
ReplyDeleteShould rhyme with "burner" with the emphasis on "BURR" in our side.
Jawohl, Herr Krake.
ReplyDeleteI'm real and I am the captain of my own boat.
Excellent.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work!
When I was 15 (1967) my father showed up out of the blue with a 34' 1952 Chris Craft Express Sedan. It very nearly wrecked my parent's marriage. Mother was not fond of boats. She was particularly not fond of varnish.He kept it one year until he could re-sell it.
They remained on shore & were more or less happily married for another forty years.
My wife likes boating - good for her since it's love me, love my boat around here. There's a picture of my 33' Sea Ray in my monday post. I like to tell myself it's a getaway vehicle for when the Republicans start the second civil war.
ReplyDeleteI do wish I had a classic Cris Craft like that today, but wood boats are way too much work.