Could You Explain a Vote Against Children’s Health to the Children? — Rockridge Nation

Could You Explain a Vote Against Children’s Health to the Children?

Created by glenn_at_rockridge (Rockridge Institute staff member) on Wednesday, September 26, 2007 12:16 PM

For those in U.S. House or Senate inclined to sustain a presidential veto of a bill that will provide basic health care to more than 3 million additional American children, ask yourselves this question: Are you willing to explain your decision to a schoolroom of fragile young children who cannot afford treatment for whooping cough or measles, leukemia or juvenile diabetes? Are you willing to explain this to them, human to human?

The U.S. House voted overwhelmingly for an expanded children's health care program (SCHIP), 265-159. President George W. Bush has said he will veto any expansion of the program, and supporters fear they will fall short of votes necessary to override Bush's veto. And what's Bush's reason for the veto? Well, SCHIP works, and because it works it may lead the nation toward (gasp!) a health care security plan that doesn't measure the nation's health or moral standing by the size of private health insurance company profits.

Bush has a point. If 10 million American children are made healthy through a government managed program, the next thing you know some more of the 100 million or so uninsured or under-insured Americans might recognize that their health has been sacrificed on the altar of a private insurance industry that didn't even exist 70 years ago.

That's right. The property and life insurance industry didn't want to get into health insurance because they couldn't figure out how to make a profit. Insuring houses was a piece of cake. Only a few burn down, after all. And the companies get all those premiums from all those people whose houses don't burn down. Life insurance worked because premiums paid to a company over a lifetime could be invested, earning more for the company than would have to be paid in death benefits. But health? Heavens, everyone gets sick, everyone ages and weakens. Benefits would be paid continually to everybody who paid premiums. Where's the profit in that?

Then the insurance executives figured it out. By excluding the tired, the poor, the sick and the wretched refuse from coverage and by denying claims to those who had purchased coverage, tidy profits could be made. Funny thing is, this was not really capitalism any longer, since it is an industry that makes money by NOT delivering the service it is paid money to deliver. It is not protection. It is the protection racket, and sooner or later all of us get kneecapped. Even the children.

Now closing in on 70, the modern profit-first health insurance industry (Blue Cross started pooling health care payments for Elks Lodges and Lions Clubs in the 1920s; the modern industry was born in the 40s) is nearing the average American life expectancy. Maybe it's time to exclude that industry from the Congressional insurance it purchases with millions in premiums, I mean contributions, paid to politicians. We'll exclude the industry because of its pre-existing condition: cold-hearted greed. (The Rockridge Institute will soon launch its Health Care Security Campaign to thoroughly explore these issues, and you can sign up to be notified when it begins.)

But that possibility is not yet on the table in Congress. The lives and health of three million children are. We're talking about the simple and straightforward expansion of a popular and effective program that Americans of all political stripes and economic circumstances support.

But it appears some members tremble at the thought of defying the most unpopular president in modern American history.

So I return to my question. Are you, our elected representatives to Congress, afraid of explaining to the children that their health must be sacrificed? Would you tell them that once upon a time there was Adam Smith, who revealed the existence of an "invisible hand" and a "free market" that would ultimately make all things right and just even while creating temporary injustices? Or would you tell them that if God has not provided them the resources to treat their illnesses that you, a mere mortal, should not provide what God has refused to give? Or would you say you cannot deny a campaign contributor's demand?

What exactly would you say to that schoolroom of children? How could you explain to them that they will have to bear the illnesses and the deaths of their friends without your help or the help of millions of Americans who are willing to help but who you keep at bay by starving SCHIP?

This is how advocates for SCHIP should frame the issue. The health insurance industry earns its profits by denying adequate health care to 100 million Americans, including millions of children who can't be blamed for their own economic circumstances. To sacrifice the lives of those children to any abstraction about the role of government or the magic of a supposedly free market is immoral and inhuman.

If an elected official cannot muster the courage to explain their anti-SCHIP vote to the children themselves, in a public setting we all can witness, then they must vote for the bill, and, ultimately, vote to override Bush's veto.

I promise it will be much easier to explain yourself to Bush than to children whose lives and health you are tempted to condemn.


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Childrens' Health Care

collapse Posted by keechiegreen at Wednesday, September 26, 2007 07:17 PM

This message is to anyone who will be involved in voting-or advocating- for funding childrens' health care-if America is still really the great nation we claim it to be-we must take care of our most fragile--young children-people of any age that are "helpless" -and the elderly.A nation is judged by how it cares for its most fragile.

Oregon's Measure 50

collapse Posted by phastphil at Wednesday, September 26, 2007 08:17 PM

Here in Oregon we have Measure 50 - The Healthy Kids Initiative on our ballot this November. It is very similar to and in fact will work right along with SCHIP on the state level. In order for our Democratic legislature to get it on the ballot it had to presented as an amendment to our Oregon state Constitution. Basically because the Republicans in the legislature didn't want the Democrats to have another victory. Lots of legislative shenanigans never the less.
I wrote the following letter to my local newspaper:

The last few weeks Oregonians have been inundated with TV commercials and mailings from the Tobacco Industry opposing Measure 50 - the Healthy Kids Initiative. Most of this I would characterize as misinformation. Questions that need to be asked are as follows:

Parents if you send your child to school and they become ill because their classmate’s parents can’t afford Health Care coverage are you protecting your children? Is your family more secure? Are you willing to wait for a perfect law to protect your family?

Oregonians ask yourself – What’s more important protecting children or protecting the Tobacco industry? Studies have concluded that every 10 percent increase in the price of cigarettes will reduce youth smoking by seven percent and overall cigarette consumption by three to five percent.

Oregonians don’t allow perfect to be the enemy of good. Politics is the art of the possible.
Vote Yes on Measure 50.

Accuracy in Quotations

collapse Posted by BryanB at Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:52 PM

The conservative publication machine has been very big on one (or more) quotations from Adam Smith, his "invisible hand" and "free market". These are technically correct quotes (I assume, I have never read "The Wealth of Nations") but they are not the only thing that he said in his five volume work. Adam Smith in his "The Wealth of Nations" described how market forces work and devoted most of Book V "explaining why the state has powerful responsibilities regarding defense, justice, infrastructure, and education, areas in which collective action is required to complement, or substitute for, private-market forces."

We should not let conservatives get away with partially quoting or misquoting sources and we should not fall into the trap of letting them frame the issues by simply accepting their quotations at face value. For the record, the quoted phrase above came from The End of Poverty by Jeffrey D. Sachs Subtitled: Economic Possibilities for Our Time. The specific quote comes from Chapter 18. A very interesting book I might add.

Regarding the quotation from Sachs, I think we could add medical care to the list as in the time of Adam Smith the options for medical care were pretty much "Don't Get Sick" or "Pray".

Could you explain a vote against children's health...

collapse Posted by ednagler at Thursday, September 27, 2007 01:37 PM

Bravo, Glenn. Mentioned in dispatches at The Broad View. http://www.thenewpolitics.com/2007/09/security-ju-jit.html

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