Sunday, February 14, 2010
A Hornet's Nest
Politicians in the U.S. stink. They posture and hide, posture and hide. They tell you and the whole world that they are for health care reform, but once hidden from the public eye, they do what's best for the industries that reportedly bankroll their political campaigns. The biggest contributors to political campaigns are health insurance companies and big pharmaceutical industries, so it is only natural that those industries would command the passionate loyalty of love-struck suitors.
So many of the Democratic and Republican legislators are in the pockets of the health care industry and the behavior of many legislators reflects this Mephistophelian influence.
Fed up over the impasse on health care, I decided to write an "I'm fed up" letter - a reverse psychology, a devil's advocate kind of letter - to the liberal-leaning Las Vegas Sun last Monday. The Sun published it on Wednesday and unleashed a torrent of befuddled, annoyed, defensive reactions from other readers. Even the Sun editorial writers chimed in - twice.
Here was my letter that elicited the cascade of other readers' reactions:
"... President Obama and the Democrats promised the country health care reform legislation during the 2006 and 2008 elections and the country responded by giving the Democrats overwhelming majorities in Congress, not to mention the Presidency itself.
"If the Democrats fail to reform health care this year, the resultant carnage in the 2010 elections will make the 1994 Democratic debacle look like a 4th of July picnic. Democrats and Independents are fed up with the Democratic legislators they elected in Congress.
"I am a dyed-in-the-wool Democrat - have been since JFK - yet I have become convinced that for the sake of the country the Republicans must control both Houses of Congress. Many of my friends also feel this way. (This is known as the take-away close: if you don't shape up, we will take away your Democratic majority in Congress, hold up our noses, and give it to the other side.)
"The reason is simple. The Republicans act as one, think as one. They proved during the George W Bush years that they could pass major legislation with narrow majorities in Congress. The Democrats, working with absolute majorities last year, could not pass health care reform. They passed a stimulus bill, true, but it was an anemic bill. They rescued the banks but did not insist on restraint on bonuses and a promise that the banks would start lending.
"Many of the Democratic legislators are compromised in that they take money from lobbyists for industries they are trying to regulate. The Republicans are also in the pocket of the same industries, but at least the Republicans are not being hypocritical. We know what we are getting when we elect Republicans. They're the devils we know."
The Sun published Las Vegan Bart Atwell's letter which read in part:
"Regarding Cesar Lumba's Wednesday letter to the editor...Republicans offered little but obstructionism, publicly stating that they were going to use the health care issue to undermine the president... It strikes me that the real solution is to increase the Senate's Democratic majority so that legislation doesn't require unanimous Democratic support to pass. Increasing the number of Republicans would only further stymie the legislative process."
The Las Vegas Sun editorial writers joined in the fray - twice - by claiming that the Republicans offer nothing but obstructionism. It's lead editorial "Blocking Progress - Republicans should quit slash-and-burn tactics, help push country forward" argues that "Republicans have mounted an incredible effort to try to derail the president, and in doing so, have further inflamed the nation's angst. Republicans have spread their dire prophecies of doom and gloom about health care, the economy and just about anything else the president has supported. They have consistently derided Obama's plans and refused to work with him - and then they blame him."
I checked out the Las Vegas Sun website and to my amazement, there was an ongoing debate raging in the "Letters" section featuring Democratic and Republican partisans' reactions to my letter.
I am a Democrat first and an American second. In the end, I will always vote for the Democratic candidates. But I wanted to stir up a hornet's nest, hoping that some good might come out of going public with my frustration over the failure - so far - of the Democratic majority in Congress to pass health care reform.
Because health care has not been reformed, the issue hangs over the head of Obama and he cannot give 110% to his efforts to create jobs. Because health care reform has not passed, the country calls into question whether Obama and Congress shall be able to come up with a jobs-creation bill that is pure job-creation and not a sausage made up of Republican and Democratic pork.
Because health care has not passed, other major legislations that will transform the country are now called into question. Will the country pass cap-and-trade, which will limit the volume of noxious and global-warming gases released by industry into the atmosphere? Will the country finally make the huge effort to convert to renewable sources of power - solar, wind, steam - creating jobs and rendering the Middle East sheiks irrelevant in our major foreign policy decisions?
Will the President be able to pass another stimulus bill that will provide a much needed push to the earlier stimulus bill that is currently stalled in the extremely complicated maze of government and private industry bureaucracies?
There is so much work to do to make sure the country - the world - does not slip into a double-dip recession and push the world economy into another Great Depression.
Will President Obama and the Democrats be able to pursue the agenda that got them elected in the first place?
My disappointment was not over the Republicans' obstructionism. Republicans have always been obstructionist in recent memory. But they are not to blame for the failure of health care reform last year.
The Democrats had a huge majority in both Houses of Congress in 2009. They still do, the only change being that in the Senate they have one vote short of a filibuster-proof majority. Last year, the Democrats could pass any legislation they wanted to pass because they had a super majority in the Senate and the House, but they failed to pass health care reform.
The Republicans did not succeed in obstructing health care reform. It was the Democrats themselves who torpedoed the legislation. Joe Lieberman, the Senator from Tel Aviv, held the legislation hostage by threatening to join the Republicans in their filibuster if the public option was not dropped from the Senate version of health care reform.
Sen Ben Nelson of Nebraska said he would not vote for health care reform if he did not get a huge concession for Nebraska. Harry Reid agreed to an exemption for Nebraska from picking up additional Medicaid costs arising out of the health reform package.
Senator Mary Landrieu, Senator Blanche Lincoln, Senator Evan Bayh all threatened to join the Republican filibuster if the bill was not watered down and emasculated. The bill that came out of the Senate was something that nobody wanted. The majority of Democratic senators felt no passion for the bill because it would not control costs. It does not include a public option - a mechanism for the government to compete with the Pac-Man health insurance companies and keep costs down.
Senator Max Baucus of Montana put the manacles on his fellow Democrats when he made haste slowly in the Finance committee to make sure that Obama's before-the-2009-Thanksgiving-recess deadline would not be met. Max Baucus - but of course - is one of the biggest recipients of political contributions from health insurance companies.
These are all Democrats, except for Joe Lieberman, who is an Independent but who caucuses regularly with Democrats. He would have shown his true colors earlier if he did not caucus with the Democrats, He was, after all, the Vice-Presidential running mate of Al Gore in the 2000 elections. Until he turned traitor, it was generally assumed that he was a Democratic Party statesman in the Senate.
In other words, it was not Republican obstructionism that stalled health care reform, but Democratic obstructionism.
We as a country elected President Obama and a huge Democratic majority in Congress because we wanted transformative changes. We demanded action - bold action. Instead what we got was a limp-wristed approach to governance where Democrats simply laid over and played dead.
They went to the airwaves and denounced Republican obstructionism - which was truly abominable. But Republicans were powerless to stop the Democratic train. Whatever the Democrats wanted they could have gotten, because there were not enough Republican votes to stop them.
What stopped President Obama and the Democratic initiatives in Congress were fellow Democrats.
I wrote that piece in the Las Vegas Sun because I wanted to let my fellow Democrats know that the time for blaming Republicans was long past. We Democrats must figure out a way to pass major legislation by bypassing, by pole-vaulting past Republican obstructionism. We must convince the country that we are capable of "change that we can believe in."
If our Democratic legislators cannot do this, it will be time to turn over Congress to the Republicans because the Republicans proved in the Clinton years and in the George W. Bush years that they know how to pass major legislation with narrow majorities in both Houses of Congress.
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From Aquilino Alcantara, Jr., by email
ReplyDeletehey chay ...
is this a tongue in cheek or have you been convinced that the democrats are in bed with businesses as the republicans are? ... maybe not as bad as the republicans per your opinion ...
I still maintain my personal opinion on these people ... everyone of them, whatever their party affiliations, had a part in the current state of the govt ... their actions or inactions contribute to this mess ... all of them in all previous administrations including this one ...
boy alc
Yes, it's tongue-in-cheek, Boy. I would never work to make the U.S. Congress Republican again. I intend to make it a wake-up call.
ReplyDeleteMy guess is that Senate President Harry Reid reads the Las Vegas Sun, or his staffers do. If Reid gets wind that even rabid Democrats like me disapprove of the Democratic Congress, maybe their behavior will change. This, after all, is an election year and Reid is in danger of being retired by voters from the Senate.
Cesar L
From Ramon Franco, by email:
ReplyDeleteChay,
Don't worry. If it is any consolation, the situation is the same everywhere, in Australia, the Philippines, the USA, or even anywhere in the world. Politicians are a pain. Why we need them is anybody's guess. Probably because the alternative is dictatorships, despots, or just plain idiots.
Relax lang pare, I know it is difficult and frustrating. Look at the bright side. At least you can voice your opinion in public and not end up in jail, like China, or worst , flogged to death in public like Iran.
Have a nice day,
Ramon
Hi Ramon,
ReplyDeleteI have told Democratic fundraisers who call me from time to time that I will not contribute a single cent to Democratic campaigns anymore as long as I feel that Democrats are not using the huge arsenal at their disposal to frustrate the Republicans. And I mean it.
Not only will I save a few bucks by not contributing, I also feel that's the only way the Democrats in Congress will realize that they cannot ignore the progressive (left-of-center) wing of the party and win.
We progressives are the reason the Democrats control Congress and the Executive branch.
I'm also frustrated with Obama, who is the only person in the U.S. who doesn't seem to know that the Republicans will never cooperate with him. He wastes so much valuable time making nice with the Republicans who mainly want him proclaimed illegitimate because in their mind he is not a natural-born citizen.
But not to worry, I'm not losing sleep over my politics. I am merely voicing out what I sense is the frustration of millions of Democratic activists in this country.
Cesar L
Cesar
From Dido, by email:
ReplyDeleteCesarL wrote:
x-
I am a Democrat first and an American second. In the end, I will always vote for the Democratic candidates...
-x
Says a lot.
x-
I am a dyed-in-the-wool Democrat - have been since JFK - yet I have become convinced that for the sake of the country the Republicans must control both Houses of Congress.
-x
Confuses me a lot.
CesarL,
1. What do you like about Obama or ObamaCare?
2. Which health care system in the world do you tink is best?
Trying to get some education. :)
dido
Hi Dido,
ReplyDeleteI want the Democratic Congress to know what we progressives (liberal, left-of-center) Americans are thinking right now: that we have been abandoned by the Obama administration and the Democrat-controlled U.S. Congress.
I think the Canadian system is best. I don't like the health care reform legislation that came out of the Senate, yet, for the sake of the country we must adopt it. It's a whole lot better than nothing.
Cesar L
From Dido, via email:
ReplyDelete> > 1. What do you like about Obama or ObamaCare?
> > 2. Which health care system in the world do you tink is best?
Hi CesarL,
You answered Question #2 only.
Can't blame you.
Canadian Health Care
YouTube:
Recently Canadian premier Danny Williams went to the U.S. for his health care.
ObamaCare
Wall Street Journal
Excerpt:
x-
So even as Democrats themselves acknowledge that one reason the public hates ObamaCare so much is the corrupt tactics they have used to advance it through Congress, they still plan to try to land this Pelosian triple-handspring-quadruple pole vault to passage.
-x
Can you kindly comment on the above article, Cesar?
Maraming salamat!
dido
Hi Dido,
ReplyDeleteThere is no such thing as Obamacare. It is a fiction foisted upon us by the right-wingers who want to lump together the health care reform movement with Obama, who a lot of right-wingers believe was born in Kenya and not in Hawaii and is therefore an illegal immigrant in the U.S. and much less deserving than the black men who used to run the elevators at the Waldorf Astoria.
The U.S. Congress has come up with two bills - one passed by the House of Representatives and another passed by the U.S. Senate. One of the frustrations many of us liberal Democrats feel about Obama's tactics is that he has not come out and drawn a line in the sand. He has not told the country what the basic minimum features he wants to see in health care reform. He is intentionally vague about his wishes because it is good politics.
For myself, I prefer the House version, which includes a strong public option. A public option - a government-run program that will compete with private insurers - is the only defense that hapless Americans have against the greed of private health insurers. (Anthem Blue Cross has announced plans to increase premiums by more than 20% in the near future. Other insurers are expected to follow.)
Health care costs Americans 17% of the country's gross domestic product. It is the single biggest expense of Americans. And what do we get for that? A third-world health care system that produces one of the highest infant mortalities in the world and widespread dissatisfaction with the health maintenance of the population. Close to 40 million Americans are uninsured and every time those uninsured Americans go to the emergency room - and they often go to the emergency rooms because the doctors in E.R. are the only ones who would treat them - every insured American pays the bill through increases in health insurance premiums.
The public option must be included in health care reform. The fact that exclusions for pre-existing conditions, prohibitions against interstate coverages and other important features of the House plan make it the more attractive version. The Senate plan is sausage-making at its worst. Because of the need to please and pacify some important Democratic senators to assure their votes, Senate President Harry Reid was forced to come up with a health care reform package that does not reform health care.
I hope this answers your questions, Dido.
Cesar Lumba
From Carlos (cdvictory) by email:
ReplyDeleteI agree w/ your position, Cesar L.
With regard to Obama not coming out w/ the basic minimum features he wants, isn't that Bill Clinton did? He didn't get very far w/ that approach.
Obama's approach seems to put the responsibility where it belongs: in Congress (both houses). We may not get health care reform, but we will clearly know whose failure it is - that of Congress.
Obama may lead the people into changing Congress first, and then push through legislative agenda that the country needs. So far it seems clearer now to the American public that both houses of Congress (but probably more especially the Senate) does not have the country's best interest at heart. It has the outcome of the next elections at heart.
Very sad...and hopefully it can be rectified.
From Lolita Farmer, via email:
ReplyDeleteCesar L & Dido,
May I share information on the topic.
The Canadian health care system as you said is the best. I still will say the Australian health care system is the the envy of the world for according to some Hillary Clinton's health care proposals were more along the lines of the Australian cover.
Canada and Australia are both members of the Commonwealth and share similarities in its immigration policies too for both practice what we call here the principles of multiculturalism
In Australia everyone has Medicare card ( government owned and free) and also can choose to have private health insurance for items not covered under Medicare.
The health cover Medicare is one factor why seniors have second thoughts on retiring in the Philippines.This is one issue that we would like to take up on the portability of Medicare. My lobby with the Philippine Government representatives here found out that the difficulty lies in the Philippines side for it cannot reciprocate same benefits here in Australia.
Loli.