Category: Medicare for all

  • Lack of access to health care has hit a new high in the U.S., with over a third of Americans now unable to access quality care due to cost, new West Health-Gallup polling finds. The poll, released Wednesday, finds that 35 percent of Americans say they wouldn’t be able to afford quality health care if they needed it today, compared to 29 percent in 2021, when Gallup began polling this question.

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.


  • On February 25, US secretary of state Marco Rubio announced restrictions on visas for both government officials in Cuba and any others worldwide who are “complicit” with the island nation’s overseas medical-assistance programs. A US State Department statement clarified that the sanction extends to “current and former” officials and the “immediate family of such persons.” This action, the seventh measure targeting Cuba in one month, has international consequences; for decades tens of thousands of Cuban medical professionals have been posted in around sixty countries, far more than the World Health Organization’s (WHO) workforce, mostly working in under- or unserved populations in the Global South. By threatening to withhold visas from foreign officials, the US government means to sabotage these Cuban medical missions overseas. If it works, millions will suffer.

    Rubio built his career around taking a hard line on Cuban socialism, even alleging that his parents fled Fidel Castro’s Cuba until the Washington Post revealed that they migrated to Miami in 1956 during the Fulgencio Batista dictatorship. As Trump’s secretary of state, Rubio is in prime position to ramp up the belligerent US-Cuba policy first laid out in April 1960 by deputy assistant secretary of state Lester Mallory: to use economic warfare against revolutionary Cuba to bring about “hunger, desperation and overthrow of government.”

    Cuba stands accused by the US government of human trafficking, even equating overseas Cuban medical personnel to slaves. Rubio’s tweet parroted this pretext. The real objective is to undermine both Cuba’s international prestige and the revenue it receives from exporting medical services. Since 2004, earnings from Cuban medical and professional services exports have been the island’s greatest source of income. Cuba’s ability to conduct “normal” international trade is currently obstructed by the long US blockade, but the socialist state has succeeded in converting its investments in education and health care into national earnings, while also maintaining free medical assistance to the Global South based on its internationalist principles.

    Cuban medical internationalism: A core feature of Cuban foreign policy

    The four approaches of Cuban medical internationalism were initiated early in the 1960s, all despite the post-1959 departure of half of the physicians in Cuba.

    1. Emergency response medical brigades. In May 1960, Chile was struck by the most powerful earthquake on record, with thousands killed. The new Cuban government sent an emergency medical brigade with six rural field hospitals. This established a modus operandi under which Cuban medics mobilize rapid responses to “disaster and disease” emergencies throughout the Global South — since 2005 these brigades have been organized under the name “Henry Reeve International Contingents.” By 2017, when the WHO praised the Henry Reeve brigades with a public health prize, they had helped 3.5 million people in twenty-one countries. The best-known examples include brigades in West Africa to combat Ebola in 2014 and in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Within one year, Henry Reeve brigades treated 1.26 million coronavirus patients in forty countries, including in Western Europe.
    2. Establishment of public health care apparatuses abroad. Starting in 1963, Cuban medics helped establish a public health care system in newly independent Algeria. By the 1970s, they had set up and staffed Comprehensive Health Programs all throughout Africa. By 2014, 76,000 Cuban medical personnel had worked in thirty-nine African countries. In 1998, a Cuban cooperation agreement with Haiti committed to send 300 to 500 Cuban medical professionals there all while training Haitian doctors back in Cuba. By December 2021, more than 6,000 Cubans medical professionals had saved 429,000 lives in the poorest country in the western hemisphere, conducting 36 million consultations. And for two decades now, Cuba has maintained over 20,000 medics in Venezuela, peaking at 29,000. In 2013, the Pan American Health Organization contracted 11,400 Cuban doctors to work in under- and unserved regions of Brazil. By 2015, Cuban Integral Healthcare Programs were operating in forty-three countries.
    3. Treating foreign patients in Cuba. In 1961, children and wounded fighters from Algeria’s war for independence from France went to Cuba for treatment. Thousands followed from around the world. Two programs were developed to treat foreign patients en masse: The first is the “Children of Chernobyl” program which began in 1990 and lasted for twenty-one years, during which 26,000 people affected by the Chernobyl nuclear disaster received free medical treatment and rehabilitation on the island — nearly 22,000 of them children. The Cubans covered the cost, despite the program coinciding with Cuba’s severe economic crisis, known as the Special Period, following the collapse of the socialist bloc. The second program to treat foreign patients en masse was Operation Miracle, set up in 2004 for Venezuelans with reversible blindness to get free eye operations in Cuba to restore their sight. It subsequently expanded regionally. By 2017, Cuba was running sixty-nine ophthalmology clinics in fifteen countries under Operation Miracle, and by early 2019 over four million people in thirty-four countries had benefited.
    4. Medical training for foreigners, both in Cuba and overseas. It’s important to note that the Cuban state never sought to foster dependence. In the 1960s, it began training foreigners in their own countries when suitable facilities were available, or in Cuba when they were not. By 2016, 73,848 foreign students from eighty-five countries had graduated in Cuba while that nation was running twelve medical schools overseas, mostly in Africa, where over 54,000 students were enrolled. In 1999, the Latin American School of Medicine (ELAM), the world’s largest medical school, was established in Havana. By 2019, ELAM had graduated 29,000 doctors from 105 countries (including the United States) representing 100 ethnic groups. Half were women, and 75 percent from worker or campesino families.

    The monetary cost of Cuba’s contribution

    Since 1960, some 600,000 Cuban medical professionals have provided free health care in over 180 countries. The government of Cuba has assumed the lion’s share of the cost of its medical internationalism, a huge contribution to the Global South, particularly given the impact of the US blockade and Cuba’s own development challenges. “Some will wonder how it is possible that a small country with few resources can carry out a task of this magnitude in fields as decisive as education and health,” noted Fidel Castro in 2008. He did not, though, provide the answer. Indeed, Cuba has said little about the cost of these programs.

    However, Guatemalan researcher Henry Morales has reformulated Cuba’s international solidarity as “official development assistance” (ODA), using average international market rates and adopting the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) methodology, to calculate the scale of their contribution to global development and facilitate comparison with other donors. According to Morales, the monetary value of medical and technical professional services, Cuba’s ODA, was over $71.5 billion just between 1999 and 2015, equivalent to $4.87 billion annually. This means that Cuba dedicated 6.6 percent of its GDP annually to ODA, the world’s highest ratio. In comparison, the European average was 0.39 percent of GDP, and the United States contributed just 0.17 percent. Since the US blockade cost Cuba between $4 and $5 billion annually in this period, without this burden the island could potentially have doubled its ODA contribution.

    These costs exclude Cuban state investments in education and medical training and infrastructure on the island. There are also considerable losses to Cuba from either charging recipients below international market rates or, in many cases, simply not charging them at all.

    Medical services as exports

    During “the Special Period” in the 1990s, Cuba introduced reciprocal agreements to share the costs with recipient countries that could afford it. Starting in 2004, with the famous “oil-for-doctors” program with Venezuela, the export of medical professionals became Cuba’s main source of revenue. This income is then reinvested into medical provision on the island. However, Cuba continues to provide medical assistance free of charge to countries who need it. Today there are different cooperation contracts, from Cuba covering the full costs (donations and free technical services) to reciprocity agreements (costs shared with the host country) to “triangulated collaboration” (third-party partnerships) and commercial agreements. The new measure announced by Rubio will impact them all.

    In 2017, Cuban medics were operating in sixty-two countries; in twenty-seven of those (44 percent) the host government paid nothing, while the remaining thirty-five paid or shared the costs according to a sliding scale. Where the host government pays all costs, it does so at a lower rate than that charged internationally. Differential payments are used to balance Cuba’s books, so services charged to wealthy oil states (Qatar, for example) help subsidize medical assistance to poorer countries. Payment for medical service exports goes to the Cuban government, which passes a small proportion on to the medics themselves. This is usually in addition to their Cuban salaries.

    In 2018, the first year Cuba’s Office of National Statistics published separate data, “health services exports” earned $6.4 billion. Revenues have since declined, however, as US efforts to sabotage Cuban medical internationalism have succeeded, for example in Brazil, reducing the island’s income by billions.

    US criminalization of Cuban medical internationalism

    Already in 2006, the George W. Bush administration launched its Medical Parole Program to induce Cuban medics to abandon missions in return for US citizenship. Barack Obama maintained the program until his final days in office in January 2017. By 2019, Trump renewed the attack, adding Cuba to its Tier 3 list of countries failing to combat “human trafficking” on the basis of its medical internationalism. The US Agency for International Development (USAID) even launched a project to discredit and sabotage Cuban health care programs. In 2024, the US House Committee on Appropriations bill included exposing the “trafficking of doctors from Cuba,” withdrawing aid from “countries participating in this form of modern slavery,” and prohibiting funds to Cuban laboratories. Meanwhile it allocated $30 million for “democracy programs” for Cuba, a misnomer for the regime change that Mallory strategized in 1960.

    The service contracts that Cuban medics sign before going abroad are, in fact, voluntary; they receive their regular Cuban salary, plus remuneration from the host country. The volunteers are guaranteed holidays and contact with families. Whatever their motivations to participate, Cuba’s medical professionals make huge personal sacrifices to volunteer overseas, leaving behind families and homes, their culture and communities, to work in challenging and often risky conditions for months or even years. Interviewed for our documentary, Cuba & COVID-19: Public Health, Science and Solidarity, Dr Jesús Ruiz Alemán explained how a sense of moral obligation led him to volunteer for the Henry Reeve Contingent. He went on his first mission to Guatemala in 2005, West Africa for Ebola in 2014, and to Italy in 2020 when it was the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic. “I have never felt like a slave, never,” he insisted. “The campaign against the brigades seems to be a way to justify the blockade and measures against Cuba, to damage a source of income for Cuba.”

    In the same documentary, Johana Tablada, deputy director for the United States at Cuba’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, condemned the “weaponization and criminalization” of Cuban medical internationalism that has “wreaked havoc,” particularly in countries pressured to end their partnerships with Cuba shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic, such as Brazil and Bolivia. “The reason that the US calls it slavery or human trafficking has nothing to do with the international felony of human trafficking.” This is cover, she says, for a policy of sabotage that is “impossible to hold up to public scrutiny.” The United States cannot tell people in developing countries to give up medical services provided by Cuban medical brigades “just because it doesn’t match their policy to have international recognition and admiration [for Cuba].” The US is certainly not offering to replace Cuban doctors with its own.

    The threat of a good example

    The predominant global approach, exemplified by the United States, is to regard health care as an expensive resource or commodity to be rationed through the market mechanism. Medical students “invest” in their education, paying high tuition fees and graduating with huge debts. They then seek well-paid jobs to repay those debts and pursue a privileged standard of living. To ensure medics are well remunerated, demand must be kept above supply. The World Economic Forum projects a shortfall of ten million health care workers worldwide by 2030. But the Cuban investment in medical education raises the supply of professionals globally, thus threatening the status of physicians operating under a market system. Critically, the Cuban approach removes financial, class, race, gender, religious, and any other barriers to joining the medical profession.

    The key features of the Cuban approach are: the commitment to health care as a human right; the decisive role of state planning and investment to provide a universal public health care system with the absence of a parallel private sector; the speed with which health care provision was improved (by the 1980s Cuba had the health profile of a highly developed country); the focus on prevention over cure; and the system of community-based primary care. By these means, socialist Cuba has achieved comparable health outcomes to developed countries but with lower per capita spending — less than one-tenth the per capita spending in the United States and one-quarter in the UK. By 2005, Cuba had achieved the highest ratio of doctors per capita in the world: 1 to 167. By 2018, it had three times the density of doctors in the US and the UK.

    Today Cuba is in the midst of a severe economic crisis, largely resulting from US sanctions. The public health care system is under unprecedented strain, with shortages of resources and of personnel following massive emigration since 2021. Nonetheless, the government continues to dedicate a high proportion of GDP on health care (nearly 14 percent in 2023), maintaining free universal medical provision, and currently has 24,180 medical professionals in fifty-six countries.

    Revolutionary Cuba was never solely concerned with meeting its own needs. According to Morales’s data, between 1999–2015 alone, overseas Cuban medical professionals saved 6 million lives, carried out 1.39 billion medical consultations and 10 million surgical operations, and attended 2.67 million births, while 73,848 foreign students graduated as professionals in Cuba, many of them medics. Add to that the beneficiaries between 1960 and 1998, and those since 2016, and the numbers climb steeply.

    The beneficiary nations have been the poorest and least influential globally; few have governments with any leverage on the world stage. Recipient populations are often the most disadvantaged and marginalized within those countries. If Cuban medics leave, they will have no alternative provision. If Rubio and Trump are successful, it is not just Cubans who will suffer. It will also be the global beneficiaries whose lives are being saved and improved by Cuban medical internationalism right now.

  • First published at Jacobin.
  • The post Cuba Sends Doctors, the US Sends Sanctions first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Following the shooting in December of United Health Care CEO, Brian Thompson, the response from Americans was not your typical “sending thoughts and prayers.” The rage, frustration, and disgust directed at the “victim” surprised many. Quickly enough, it became clear why people were responding with anger and not condolences. Many recognized that the victims included people who have been wronged by a cruel, expensive, failed broken health care system. Brian Thompson symbolized an ugly, rapacious industry. It was hard to mourn its death.

    The post Call To Action May 31, 2025: Demand Health Not Profit! appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Health workers and patients are mobilizing against the appointment of Dr. Mehmet Oz as head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), one of several controversial health-related nominations submitted by the Trump presidency. Many have expressed concern over what Dr. Oz’s leadership would mean for the largest US healthcare programs and, consequently, access to healthcare across the country.

    If confirmed, Oz would be in charge of over USD 1 trillion and overall coverage administration. While he is a recognized surgeon, he is better known for promoting dubious nutrition advice through his public platforms.

    The post Dr. Oz’s Nomination Fuels Fears For Crucial Health Programs appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • In the heart of the Cuban capital, the Dr. Cosme Ordoñez Carceller Teaching Polyclinic stands as a testament to the nation’s unique approach to healthcare: universal, free of charge, accessible, regionalized, community-centered, and deeply rooted in preventive medicine. Unlike the profit-driven models that dominate much of the world, Cuba’s system prioritizes equitable access, public health education, and early intervention.

    At the core of this approach is a commitment to health promotion through education, disease prevention through habit management, and the integration of medical care and rehabilitation. By emphasizing proactive healthcare rather than reactive treatment, the system ensures that communities receive continuous, comprehensive support to maintain overall well-being.

    During a recent visit to the Dr. Cosme Ordoñez Carceller Teaching Polyclinic in Havana, the staff detailed how the system was developed and how it ensures that no Cuban, regardless of income, is left without medical care.

    The Structure of Cuba’s Healthcare System

    Cuba’s National Health System operates as a hierarchical, state-run model designed to ensure seamless coordination of care. At the top, the National Assembly oversees the Ministry of Public Health, which sets national policies and directs specialized health institutes that tackle broader public health concerns.

    Below the Ministry, provincial governments, answering directly to the Assembly, oversee provincial health departments, which manage larger hospitals and specialized medical facilities. These provincial bodies, in turn, delegate responsibilities to municipal governments, which run the municipal health departments and smaller hospitals that serve local populations. At the community level, municipal health departments manage Cuba’s extensive polyclinic network, the cornerstone of the country’s healthcare system. These polyclinics not only provide specialized care, diagnostics, and emergency services, but they also coordinate closely with family doctor-and-nurse teams, who serve as the first point of contact for Cuban citizens.

    These frontline providers play a crucial role beyond immediate treatment, emphasizing preventive care, home visits, and alternative therapies such as nutrition counseling, acupuncture, and plant-based medicine. Despite supply shortages exacerbated by U.S. sanctions, this integrated, top-down approach ensures that resources are distributed efficiently, maintaining consistent healthcare access nationwide.

    Founded in 1974, the Dr. Ordoñez Carceller, Polyclinic serves approximately 13,000 residents, offering care in medical specialties such as cardiology, orthopedics, fertility consultations, and genetic testing. The clinic is named after Dr. Cosme Ordoñez Carceller (1927–2019), an epidemiologist and pioneer of Community Medicine, who championed the polyclinic model that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s. He played a key role in training young physicians in comprehensive general medicine and launched innovative programs like the Grandparents’ Circles, a senior care initiative so effective that it was replicated nationwide.

    Unlike the profit-driven models that dominate much of the world, Cuba’s system prioritizes equitable access, public health education, and early intervention. The country’s healthcare approach is rooted in promoting health through education, preventing disease by managing habits, and ensuring comprehensive medical care and rehabilitation. Unlike the fragmented, for-profit U.S. healthcare model, Cuba’s integrated, community-based approach ensures better health outcomes and higher patient satisfaction. At polyclinics like Ordoñez Carceller, primary care is not just about treating illness but about education, prevention, and holistic well-being. This commitment to accessible, people-centered medicine reflects Cuba’s broader philosophy: that healthcare is not a privilege, but a fundamental human right.

    Cuba’s Healthcare Achievements: A Global Leader in Public Health

    Despite enduring over six decades of economic embargo, Cuba has achieved remarkable public health milestones. The following list highlights key accomplishments of both the Ordoñez Carceller Polyclinic and the Cuban healthcare system as a whole:

    • AIDS: Cuba identified HIV in 1983 and quickly set up a system to track and treat it. By 2014, it eliminated mother-to-child transmission of HIV and syphilis, a milestone the U.S. has yet to reach.

    • COVID: Cuba developed two COVID vaccines, kept infections low, and even sent vaccines abroad.

    • Diabetes: The nation has developed an effective medication that treats diabetic ulcers (skin wounds that result from poor blood sugar control)

    • Alzheimer’s Research: Cuba developed a drug that may help reverse Alzheimer’s effects.

    • Maternal-fetal medicine: 99% of Cuban children are vaccinated, and the country has a lower infant mortality rate than the U.S.

    • Nutrition: While obesity is not an issue in Cuba, malnutrition is an increasing concern due to shortages caused by the U.S. embargo

    • Home health Doctors make house calls to care for the elderly and new mothers.

    Profit vs. Public Health: How Medical Education and Healthcare Delivery Differ in Cuba and the U.S.

    The paths to becoming a doctor in Cuba and the United States could not be more different. In the U.S., medical students take on crippling debt, often exceeding $200,000, before ever treating a patient. The pressure to repay loans steers many toward high-paying specialties, leaving primary care and rural communities underserved. The system is structured around financial incentives rather than public need, reinforcing the idea that medicine is a business first, a service second.

    Cuba takes the opposite approach. Medical education is fully state-funded, allowing students to focus on patient care instead of profit. Training begins immediately after secondary school, with students placed in community clinics early in their careers. By the time they specialize, they have already served in primary care settings, ensuring that the system produces physicians committed to public health, not private wealth.

    A Focus on Prevention, Not Just Treatment

    Cuba’s prevention-first model stands in stark contrast to the reactive nature of U.S. healthcare. While American medicine often prioritizes treatment over lifestyle interventions, Cuban doctors routinely incorporate nutrition, exercise, and disease prevention strategies into care plans. The country’s polyclinic system ensures patients receive consistent, community-based healthcare rather than navigating a fragmented, for-profit system that often leaves them behind.

    The U.S. Blockade: An Unjust Barrier to Health

    The U.S. embargo continues to hinder Cuba’s healthcare system by restricting access to essential medicines, medical equipment, and scientific research. Pharmaceutical and shipping companies, fearing U.S. penalties, avoid business with Cuba—leading to severe shortages of everything from aspirin to cancer treatments.

    Even medical journals and online resources are blocked due to U.S. restrictions, forcing Cuban researchers to work under constraints that most Western physicians never encounter.

    Yet, rather than succumbing to these barriers, Cuba has turned to self-sufficiency, investing in biotechnology, vaccine development, and herbal medicine research to compensate for limited imports. If freed from economic sanctions, Cuba’s contributions to global healthcare innovation could expand exponentially.

    For decades, Cuba has exported medical expertise worldwide, sending doctors to disaster-stricken and underserved regions. These global medical brigades have provided care to millions, particularly in Latin America, Africa, and the Caribbean. Yet, rather than supporting these humanitarian efforts, Washington has sought to dismantle them. In February 2025, the U.S. expanded sanctions on Cuba’s international medical program, further restricting its ability to send doctors abroad. The move reflects a deeper failure to understand Cuba’s model of solidarity-driven healthcare, a stark contrast to the U.S. system, where medicine is often dictated by profit rather than public service.

    It is within this profit-driven framework that Cuba’s medical missions are misunderstood, labeled as “forced labor” by those who cannot imagine doctors choosing service over salary. The very idea of healthcare as a human right, rather than a commodity, challenges the U.S. worldview, leading to efforts to discredit and sanction those who practice it differently.

    What Could Be if the Embargo Were Lifted

    Cuba’s healthcare system is a model of resilience and innovation, but its full potential remains hindered by decades of U.S. sanctions. If given access to global resources and technology, Cuban researchers could expand medical advancements in infectious diseases, chronic illness treatment, and disaster response. For now, Cuban doctors continue their work—undaunted by external pressures, committed to the principle that healthcare is a right, not a privilege.

    The post The Healthcare System in Cuba first appeared on Dissident Voice.

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  • Trump’s Presidency thus far exhibits the most extreme example that I have ever found of a national leader who not only represents ONLY the extremely rich but who especially despises the poor — it’s a value-system that a person’s moral value is his/her net worth: a person’s value is his/her wealth, neither more nor less than that. The four main federal expenditures that Trump and Musk are investigating for “waste, fraud, and abuse” are Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Assistance to the poor. Whereas Social Security and Medicare are relatively safe against being cut, since those are not annually appropriated by Congress, Medicare and assistance to the poor (both of which serve ONLY the poor) ARE appropriated annually by Congress, and signed into law by the President; and, so, those two will likely be cut the most. (They are in what our Government calls “discretionary spending.” You know: they’re things such as yachts.)

    The federal Department that the Trump Administration is the least seeking for cuts is the by-far costliest federal Department (at roughly $900 billion per year), which is the only federal Department that has never been audited and that consequently is the most corrupt and wasteful, the Defense Department (Pentagon), which Department is the basic or even only market for the products of firms such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, General Dynamics and Northrup Grumman, etc., which firms (except for Boeing) don’t even have any significant consumer markets — their profits depend totally or almost totally on sales to the U.S. Government itself and to its allied Governments; and, so, they need to control the U.S. Government in order to control their markets, which they consequently do, by means of America’s furiously revolving-door between the public sector and the private sector, so that becoming a part of this “military-industrial complex” is the surest way to become and remain a billionaire in today’s America, regardless of whether or not the U.S. economy is doing well from the standpoint of consumers (the general public — which includes lots of ‘worthless’ people, individuals who owe more than they own).

    Trump’s first major achievement as America’s President was to arrange the largest single armaments sale in all of history, which was $404 billion to the Saud family in 2017 (“Made In America” of course, by companies that are in his debt.)

    All other federal Departments (the ones that serve the public instead of serve mainly the billionaires who own controlling interests in ‘defense’-related corporations) are being subjected by the Trump Administration to heavy pressure to cut all other Departments, this pressure coming from President Trump and from America’s wealthiest individual Elon Musk (Trump’s biggest-of-all campaign contibutor at over $270 million (“SpaceX”), whose fortune was built upon $38 billion in investments from the Pentagon but also from some other (‘defense’-related) federal agencies. You know, he is one of America’s ‘self-made billionaires’. (Trump, who is himself a billionaire, was born to Fred Trump, the NYC real-estate tycoon.)

    As I headlined and explained on March 5, “Only the US Defense Department’s Budget Will NOT be Cut.” That is exactly the opposite of what the American people want, as I shall now document:

    On February 14, the AP had headlined “Where US adults think the government is spending too much, according to AP-NORC polling,” and listed in rank-order according to the opposite (“spending too little”) the following 8 Government functions: 1. Social Security; 2. Medicare; 3. Education; 4. Assistance to the poor; 5. Medicaid; 6. Border security; 7. Federal law enforcement; 8. The Military. That’s right: the American public (and by an overwhelming margin) are THE LEAST SUPPORTIVE of spending more money on the military, and the MOST SUPPORTIVE of spending more money on Social Security, Medicare, Education, Assistance to the poor, and Medicaid (the five functions the Republican Party has always been the most vocal to call “waste, fraud, and abuse” and try to cut). Meanwhile, The Military, which actually receives 53% (and in the latest year far more than that) of the money that the Congress allocates each year and gets signed into law by the President, keeps getting, each year, over 50% of the annually appropriated federal funds.

    On March 5, the Jeff-Bezos-owned Washington Post headlined “GOP must cut Medicaid or Medicare to achieve budget goals, CBO finds: The nonpartisan bookkeeper said there’s no other way to cut $1.5 trillion from the budget over the next decade.” Though the CBO is ‘nonpartisan’ as between the Democratic and Republican Parties, it is (since both are) entirely beholden to America’s billionaires; and, so, that term there is deceptive. What that ‘news’-report is reporting is that the sense of Congress (even including Democrats there) is that a way needs to be found to cut $1.5T from ‘Medicare or Medicaid” (which, since only Medicare, health care to the poor, is ‘discretionary’, Medicare is not) over the next ten years.

    On March 8, ABC News and Yahoo News headlined “DOGE is searching through Social Security payments looking for fraud,” and reported that “The Department of Government Efficiency is sifting through $1.6 trillion worth of Social Security payments — records that include a person’s name, birth date and how much they earn — in an anti-fraud effort that has advocates worried the Trump administration could start denying payments to vulnerable older Americans.” It reported the lies by the Trump Administration to ‘justify’ what they are doing, but the matter will be settled in court, by politically-appointed judges; and, so, mere truth and falsity won’t necessarily deterrrmine the ruling, especially not if a billionaire is worth a thousand mere millionaires (and paupers are worth nothing).

    Heck, the U.S. Government spends around $1.6 trillion per year on its military ($900 billion of it paid by the Pentagon, and $700 billion of it out of other federal Departments), and yet still has only the world’s second-best military (Russia’s, costing a tenth of that, being #1); and the amount of corrution there is astronomical; so, if Trump/Musk REALLY wanted to cut what’s euphemistically called “waste, fraud, and abuse” (but is overwhelmingly corruption) ALL of the cuts would be coming from there.

    What is supposed to happen when a Government represents ONLY an aristocracy? In 1776, the answer was Revolution. We are there again — or else we never will be again, and will instead continue to accept the continued systematic looting of the American people, this time by DOMESTIC (instead of English) billionaires. It’s not a conflict between Democrats versus Republicans; that’s merely the method to distract us. It is a conflict between the billionaires versus the public.

    As the liberal (Democratic Party) wing of America’s aristocracy said, in the person of its Warren Buffett, “There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.” (He told this to the conservative Ben Stein reporting in the aristocracy’s New York Times, under the headline “In Class Warfare, Guess Which Class Is Winning,” on 26 November 2006, but that newspaper won’t let readers access the article online, and instead prefer to charge anyone who seeks to see whether or not the quotation is authentic — it is. And the statement is true. But the 31 March 2019 issue of Forbes headlined “Reimagining Capitalism: How The Greatest System Ever Conceived (And Its Billionaires) Need To Change,” and reported: “‘America works, and it works now better than it ever worked,’ Buffett says.” Better for himself and other billionaires, that is. But not for the bottom 90%, and it worked lousy for the bottom 50%, and still worse — economic decline — for the bottom 25%. But to the liberal Buffett, that’s still “better than it ever worked.”

    Liberal versus conservative makes little real difference nowadays, but is more of a difference in style, so as to distract the public from the REAL conflict. They do it all the time.

    The post Trump’s Main Targets to be Cut first appeared on Dissident Voice.

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  • While living in the Middle East, a Palestinian friend taught me about Arabic culture, which he said was still preserved in Yemen. Arabic etiquette, he told me, was that a guest was to be protected, housed, and otherwise looked after.

    White House etiquette is something else. I was quite taken aback by viewing how Donald Trump and JD Vance ganged up on their Ukrainian guest Volodymyr Zelenskyy. This is not to side with Zelenskyy who is a disagreeable personage to me; by refusing a security agreement, he set the stage for an unwinnable war against Russia which has condemned hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian men to death.

    Zelenskyy made some bizarre and distorted utterances during the videoed meeting. Nonetheless, there is a proper way for Trump and Vance to express disagreement. But diplomacy, etiquette, and niceties are often rare in the bullyverse of Trump.

    Moreover, an often heard complaint from Trump is that things are not fair. Was it fair to have two native English speakers against one non-native English speaker?

    Fairness

    A common saying tells us that bees are more attracted to honey than vinegar. Maybe the Trump-led administration doesn’t give credence to this saying, or it believes it can bully others into submission — probably the latter. Trump believes he can use tariffs as a big stick to gain an upper hand in trade. Given the size of the US economy and its willingness to resort to violence to back its demands, smaller countries find themselves in a precarious situation. Without another big country’s backing, smaller countries are susceptible to regime change operations. Witness was happened to the Syrian government in late 2024.

    Fortunately, China is willing to engage in win-win trade with other nations. The Chinese honey appears to be preferable for much of the Global South to the American vinegar. China is also a military power, and it can readily defend itself against any US military provocations. China is unlikely to let the US physically interfere in its trade arrangements with willing partners. Neither is Russia about to do this. This has led to a global realignment, one feature of which is the deepening relationships of China and Russia with African countries.

    But the record shows that Donald Trump does not limit himself to smaller countries. During his first administration, Trump began a trade war with China, and he does not look to be letting up this time. Trump, however, considers the world as his oyster, to deal with as he pleases. Even the US’s erstwhile allies are targeted, including its northern neighbor, Canada.

    Will Canada Supplicate Trump?

    United States President Donald Trump sounded off during the first cabinet meeting of his second term, among other topics was that of Canadian sovereignty:

    I say Canada should be our 51st state. There’s no tariffs, no nothing. And I say that we give them military protection. They have a very small military; they spend very little money on military. On NATO they are just about last in terms of payment because it’s not fair. It’s not fair that they’re not paying their way. And if they had to pay their way, they couldn’t exist.

    Upon what basis does Trump claim that the US is protecting Canada? Because Canada is a member of NATO and NORAD? The latter allows the US military access into Canada, the junior partner in the relationship. And just who are these enemies that the US is purportedly protecting Canada from? Is there any country posing a credible military threat to Canada? If so, it seems that the US would come first to mind. If Canada is a willing and uncoerced member of certain military organizations, then Canada should abide by its agreed upon commitments. Canada does come up short of the 2% minimum of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to defence spending in NATO, but that 2% minimum is a guideline and not a hard-and-fast obligation. Trump speaks about fairness, but how fair is it that one NATO member gripes about what it determines another member’s contribution should be?

    And why is Trump demanding 5% of each NATO member’s GDP as a contribution? This is alluded to by NATO:

    To carry out its missions and tasks, NATO needs Allies to invest in interoperable, cutting-edge and cost-effective equipment. To that end, NATO plays an important role in helping countries decide how and where to invest in their defence.

    Which country is best situated to reap the financial benefits of demanding interoperability among NATO members? According to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the world’s leading seller of arms, the US, increased its arms sales from 34% in the period of 2014 to 2018 to 42% in the period of 2019 t0 2023. Adhering to the Trumpian definition of economic fairness, is it fair that the US with 4% of the world’s population should dominate arms sales, especially considering that interoperability is expected among NATO members?

    The National Post listed Trump’s fickle justifications for engulfing Canada:

    The rationale, at various points, have included: building up domestic American industry, preventing the illegal importation of fentanyl, stopping illegal border crossings, and reducing the United States’ modest trade deficit with Canada. Trump has also complained about the access of U.S. banks to Canadian markets and the amount of money the U.S. spends on continental defence.

    The National Post questioned Trump’s facts: “he often says the United States subsidizes Canada between $100 billion and $200 billion. The trade deficit, in fact, is more like $32 billion, while America’s global trade deficit [is] around $1 trillion.”

    Trump is unrestrained vis-à-vis the US’s biggest trade partner: “We don’t need them for the cars, we don’t need them for lumber. We don’t need them for anything. We don’t need them for energy, we have more energy than they do.”

    Although Trump has claimed the US doesn’t need Canadian oil, economics analyst Sean Foo makes the case that the threat of tariffs is about getting more Canadian cheap oil.

    A Snowball’s Chance in Hell

    Among the many reasons, there is one area of deep importance that suffices to emphatically underline why Canadians will never allow themselves to become Americans under present conditions. Canadians are very fond of their medical-care-for-all system. The system is not perfect, and Canadians will complain about when the governments (health is a provincial jurisdiction) curtail funding; long waiting times; and the shortages of doctors, nurses, and healthcare workers. However, many Canadians have heard about the financial horrors that can be visited upon susceptible Americans who are without medical coverage. That is something the vast majority of Canadians would never countenance in their country.

    Given the desire of most Americans for medical care for all (62% according to a Gallup poll conducted 6-20 November 2024) maybe they ought to clamor to become Canada’s 11th province.

    The post How about the US Becoming the 11th Province? first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Now that Trump has ‘Muskrat’ using his chainsaw on this and then that within the federal government, beware MAGA seniors. This writer sat in a coffee shop right before the election, next to seven elderly MAGA men. How did I know? Easy, by the Trump 2024 baseball caps they all wore. I’m a baby boomer and these old guys (I refuse to say Fools in hopes of reaching them and their fellow MAGAs) were definitely near or above 80 years old. Before they ended their morning breakfast with hand holding prayers ( with one guy doing the Speaking in tongues bit) their consensus was for Trump to Deport those drug carrying lazy illegals on DAY ONE. My better half was outraged at this rhetoric, and came close to confronting these guys. She didn’t and thank goodness they were finished with their little circus and left.

    I would have liked to give those old MAGA lemmings the story of my late parents, when they were ready for assisted living, followed by a nursing home. We had to get them to apply for Medicaid by spending down their money (which was very meager). Thank goodness they then were able to be placed in a nursing home nearby. This was 25 years ago, when Uncle Sam subsidized Florida Medicaid BDS (Before DeSantis). I wanted to go into the parking lot of that coffee shop and shake a few of those old baseball cap wearing men. Most of them looked like how my parents looked in 2000, going by their attire. These guys had to be retired working stiffs. “What’s going to happen to you when you get frail and need to go into a nursing home dude? Do you have the $10k to $20k a month to stay there? Trump and his ‘Muskrat’, along with Captain Ron DeSantis want to cut federal aid for Medicaid, and your lovely Red States are going to cut it down locally. Keep praying guys.”

    The post You’re Next, MAGA Seniors!! first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • Before I begin on the Democrats, allow me to make this assertion: The Republican Party, for as long as this baby boomer can remember, are but a pack of wolves. They devour anything that is for working stiffs and the poor. Recently, the Republicans are pushing this lie that their reinstatement of Trump’s tax cuts will “Help small business and working people.” Meanwhile, the overwhelming benefit will be for the Super Rich and Corporate America, and not Mom and Pop.

    Onto the Democrats. Factor out but a minor percentage of both their legislators and supporters and you have a party of pragmatists. This writer’s definition of a pragmatist is the guy standing in front of the firing squad asking for a blindfold. The leaders of this party believe all that matters is to get out and vote… nothing more… oh sorry, except to send donations. Let’s go back to 2006 when, during the height of the Bush-Cheney ( or is it Cheney-Bush?). The Cabal’s phony war and occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, the Democrats took over the House of Representatives. Rep. John Conyors, he of the Judiciary Committee, had promised a year or so earlier “Once we take over the House and I am chair of the Judiciary Committee, we are going to have major hearings on the run-up to the invasion of Iraq.” Then, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave the order that “The hearings are OFF the table.” Bye Bye all chances of holding the Cabal responsible for, in my 70+ years of existence, the equally horrific foreign policy act by my nation as the Vietnam War!

    So, in my little hamlet of Port Orange, Florida, population at the time of around 60,000, we organized weekly street corner demonstrations against the Iraq invasion and occupation. We stayed at it from before the 2004 presidential election right up until Obama became the candidate in 2008. Once he was the front runner of his party, the 25-30 folks we had on that corner each Tuesday at rush hour now became three or four of us stalwarts. The BS Democratic Party mouthpiece MoveOn.org refused to get behind  regular street demonstrations. No, now it was time to spend all energy in getting Barack elected. Meanwhile, many of us on what is called The True Left wanted Medicare for All. Mr. Obama said he liked the idea of a Public Option, which in essence was just that in a more pragmatic (here we go again) manner. Then, when Obama was out receiving campaign donations of $21+ million vs. $7+ million  for John McCain from the Health Care and Insurance Industries, he changed course. No public option on the table for his Bully Pulpit. Just the Affordable Care Act, another (here we go again) pragmatic program, which helped stop some of the bleeding but not the cause of the wound.

    Bill Clinton gave us the Welfare Reform Act which made those folks in dire need feel like interlopers inside the empire. He and his wife really screwed up any idea for Medicare for All, didn’t they as well? You see, those who walk the line between doing good and doing what the empire wants always fall on their faces… or rather their supporters do. Thus, Obama as President during the middle of the terrible Sub Prime Crisis left it up to his chief of staff Rahm Emanuel to run his “best and the brightest” meetings while Barack went home to dinner with his family. Emanuel twisted arms and came up with more TARP money gifts to the Wall Street predators, instead of what Ralph Nader and many conservatives and progressives demanded: Putting the toxic Wall Street companies into Receivership. Uncle Sam could have paid pennies on the dollar for those shitty assets, and then sold them to highest bidders down the road.

    When it came to the phony Iraq and Afghanistan wars, Obama and his party leadership did squat about the lies and misinformation the Cabal issued to justify those invasions and occupations. We are still suffering as a nation from that mess. Now we have Trump 2.0 or shall I say Trump-Musk 1 and what will the pragmatists on the other side of the aisle finally do? Will they push out all those empire serving hypocrites from their party and rally Americans for real, viable change? Kamala Harris actually took in more money from the big donors and still lost the election. Her party’s leaders and their lemmings said it was because she was a woman and of mixed race (wasn’t Obama mixed race?). No, she lost because Kamala kept dancing to the same Neocon tune that Sleepy Joe sang to. Working stiffs nationwide could not see any difference between her and Trump 2.0. Harris, Biden, the Clintons, Obama et al. forgot what FDR accomplished to save the Capitalism that they all love, by sticking it to the Super Rich with his New Deal. Because of their failings we can today see how Trump and his party are pushing us back in time to that glorious Gilded Age and 21st Century Feudal America.

    The post The Pragmatist Party first appeared on Dissident Voice.


    This content originally appeared on Dissident Voice and was authored by Philip A. Faruggio.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The murder of UnitedHealth Group executive Brian Thompson, and the subsequent arrest of Luigi Mangione, focused media and policymakers’ attention on the savage practices of private US health insurance. In the immediate aftermath, major media outlets scolded social media posters for mocking Thompson with sarcastic posts, such as “I’m sorry, prior authorization is required for thoughts and prayers.”

    As public fury failed to subside, it began to dawn on at least some media organizations that the response to Thompson’s murder might possibly reflect deep, widespread anger at a healthcare system that collects twice as much money as those in other wealthy countries, makes it difficult for half the adult population to afford healthcare even when they’re supposedly “insured,” and maims, murders and bankrupts millions of people by denying payment when they actually try to use their alleged benefits.

    The post Corporate Media Coverage Of Healthcare In 2024 Elections appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The murder of UnitedHealth Group executive Brian Thompson, and the subsequent arrest of Luigi Mangione, focused media and policymakers’ attention on the savage practices of private US health insurance. In the immediate aftermath, major media outlets scolded social media posters for mocking Thompson with sarcastic posts, such as “I’m sorry, prior authorization is required for thoughts and prayers.”

    As public fury failed to subside, it began to dawn on at least some media organizations that the response to Thompson’s murder might possibly reflect deep, widespread anger at a healthcare system that collects twice as much money as those in other wealthy countries, makes it difficult for half the adult population to afford healthcare even when they’re supposedly “insured,” and maims, murders and bankrupts millions of people by denying payment when they actually try to use their alleged benefits.

    The post Corporate Media Coverage Of Healthcare In 2024 Elections appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • American doctors are accusing US health insurance giants of causing deadly delays to vital medical procedures and care – and putting profits ahead of their patients’ health.

    Firms including United Healthcare have denied basic scans, and taken months to reconsider, according to physicians who spoke to the Guardian.

    “There’s good evidence that these kinds of delays literally kill people,” said Dr Ed Weisbart, former chief medical officer for Express Scripts, one of the largest prescription benefits managers in the US. “For some people, this isn’t just an inconvenience and an annoyance and an aggravation.

    The post US Health Insurance System Is Failing, Say Doctors appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • It’s the beginning of the end for corporate control of health care. The tsunami of outrage against the health insurance industry in the wake of the shooting of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, can propel an urgent, unyielding demand for the removal of profit from healthcare and the enactment of a universal, national single payer system. That is, if the single payer, Medicare for All, national health service movement can summon the vision and audacity to rise to the occasion.

    The post Improved Medicare For All Can Heal This Sick Country appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • My gastroenterologist gulped as he read the results of my colonoscopy. The images confirmed what I had already been told: A malignant tumor was blocking nearly the entire pathway of my colon. I could sense his guilt. After all, he had initially placed me on a two-month waiting list for the procedure — on top of the three months it had taken just to get an appointment with his office.

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • People in the US pay billions towards the health insurance industry, yet many in the healthcare field believe that this industry does little to ensure quality care to patients. While US healthcare spending is by far the highest of any country in the world, the country has the lowest life expectancy among other nations with a similar GDP.

    In recent weeks, the rage against the for-profit healthcare industry in the United States has intensified. The reality faced by many in the US, of avoiding seeking medical care in an emergency for fear of costs, or having health insurance claims repeatedly denied despite paying thousands to private insurers, has become too much to bear.

    The post Is Public, Quality Healthcare Possible In The United States? appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on December 4 has sparked a reaction that few may have suspected. The perpetrator has received an outpouring of popular support, and a profound debate on the brutality of the US for-profit healthcare system has been sparked, with many accusing healthcare corporations of reaping their profits directly from human misery.

    Thompson was shot and killed while heading to an investors meeting in Midtown Manhattan on December 4. Police have arrested 26-year-old Luigi Mangione in connection with the crime, who quickly has become a working class hero in the eyes of many in the US public, especially after his alleged manifesto revealed that he was motivated by outrage towards healthcare corporations.

    The post US Healthcare Corporations Reap Profit From Human Misery appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The killing of UnitedHealthcare’s Brian Thompson — a brazen assassination of a wealthy CEO in the streets of midtown Manhattan — shocked the United States. But the tsunami of mass anger unleashed against a hated for-profit health care system has so far defined the story in the news. The killing sparked a deluge of personal testimonies of horrifying experiences with health insurance corporations.

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • The proportion of Americans who say that it is the government’s responsibility to ensure health care coverage for all has reached a nearly two-decade high, new polling finds. According to a Gallup survey released Monday, 62 percent of Americans now say that the federal government should ensure that all Americans have coverage, versus 36 percent who say it should not. Support is highest among…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Advocates for a government-run healthcare program applauded U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna for pushing back during a Sunday morning interview in which ABC News anchor Martha Raddatz casually dismissed Medicare for All as a proposal that has no chance of ever being implemented. Khanna (D-Calif.) spoke to Raddatz days after the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York City — an…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • A report out Thursday shows that the United States’ for-profit healthcare system still ranks dead last among peer nations on key metrics, including access to care and health outcomes such as life expectancy at birth. The new analysis from the Commonwealth Fund is the latest indictment of a corporate-dominated system that leaves tens of millions of people uninsured or underinsured and unable…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • The last time the Democratic Party released a platform, mass death and illness were haunting the political landscape. By mid-August 2020, more than 160,000 United States citizens had died from COVID-19, and the daily mortality rate had just climbed above 1,000. Vaccines were still months away from being available, and nationwide cases exceeded 5.4 million. Inundated with corpses…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • A federal analysis released this week projects that U.S. healthcare spending is set to rise to $7.7 trillion by 2032 and account for nearly 20% of the nation’s economy, findings that single-payer advocates described as yet another indictment of the country’s for-profit system and further evidence of the need for Medicare for All. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Office of the…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Healthcare is one of the top issues on the minds of the American people, yet many are misinformed about policy packages that could provide it.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • When retired veterinarian Richard Timmins went on a Medicare Advantage plan in 2016, he admits that he knew very little about Traditional Medicare (also called Original Medicare) or the more than 3,800 Medicare Advantage plans that are marketed to seniors and the disabled. “I went to a so-called Medicare Information Session and took the recommendation of the speaker and ran with it…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • The failure of a health care “reform” fostered within the blight of the capitalist model reveals how incrementalism cannot solve the most formidable ecological and social crises of our day.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • For two summers in a row, squash bugs and vine borers have decimated my zucchini. This year I tried to delay the inevitable. I grew my squash from heirloom seeds, lovingly planted in fertilized mounds surrounded by dill, nasturtium and other plants that attract wasps known to prey on squash-loving insects. I watered them daily and watched with eager anticipation as the vines flourished and bees darted in and out of each sun-yellow blossom. But in the end, it didn’t matter. My soil still harbored the infestation from the previous year. By late June, the squash bugs began rutting and laying triangles of copper-colored eggs on the undersides of leaves while vine borers began chewing frass-ridden holes in the roots and stems.   

    For a while, I postponed the devastation with pruning and vigilance. But as I pruned away rotted branches, I remembered an essay I’d read more than a decade ago. Written in 1959 by the late policy professor Charles Lindbolm, “The ‘Science’ of Muddling Through” articulated two distinct approaches to developing public policy, the Rational-Comprehensive model–which Lindbolm called the “root” method–and the Successive Limited Comparisons method–which he christened the “branch.” As the monikers suggest, the “root” method involves revolutionary change, what Lindbolm described as “starting from fundamentals anew each time … prepared to start completely from the ground up.” In contrast, the “branch” method involves “continually building out from the current situation, step-by-step and by small degrees.” Lindbolm concluded with an endorsement of the second method, which became known as incrementalism. 

    As my garden decayed, I continued to think of Lindbolm’s essay. Despite my effort, despite the time I spent flicking wriggling bodies into cups of soapy water or squirting bacterial insecticide into the exposed hollows of the stems, by early August, the fruit had shriveled, sucked dry by a parasite’s thirst. Just like last year, my plants had so deteriorated that the slightest jiggle pulled the whole rotted mess out of the ground, roots and all. 

    A System Sucked Dry by Parasites 

    I read Lindbolm’s essay in 2010, in the aftermath of the financial crisis and right after President Obama passed the supposedly landmark Affordable Care Act (ACA). From the get-go, even as a candidate, Obama’s promises for health care reform were modest and nothing like the “revolution” supporters and detractors claimed it was. In a 2008 analysis, the Commonwealth Fund described how Obama’s proposal “would build on the current system of mixed private and public group insurance.” Essentially, the Obama plan pantomimed the private-market reforms of the 2006 Massachusetts health care bill implemented by then-Governor Mitt Romney. 

    During the first decade of this century, the drive for profits had riddled the entire American health care system with rot. While today’s private-public partnership remains demonstrably bad, resulting in more than 27 million uninsured Americans, as well as a lower life expectancy and higher costs per capita than any other wealthy nation, the pre-Obama system was even worse, especially for those with pre-existing conditions. Previously, insurers often discriminated against people who were already sick. Insured Americans with chronic diseases like diabetes, asthma, or atrial fibrillation lived in constant fear of letting their insurance lapse, as future insurers could legally refuse to cover the insulin, inhalers, or beta blockers they needed to survive. Insurers even had the right to drop newly diagnosed insureds from their plans, or impose caps on their coverage, inflicting sudden financial catastrophe on people at their most vulnerable. 

    In a 2009 speech to Congress, Obama recounted several egregious examples of insurers denying coverage: 

    “One man from Illinois lost his coverage in the middle of chemotherapy because his insurer found that he hadn’t reported gallstones that he didn’t even know about. They delayed his treatment, and he died because of it. Another woman from Texas was about to get a double mastectomy when her insurance company canceled her policy because she forgot to declare a case of acne. By the time she had her insurance reinstated, her breast cancer more than doubled in size.” 

    Despite acknowledging the evils of for-profit health care, Obama’s “reforms” amounted to nothing more than pruning a rotted system. The 2010 PBS Frontline documentary “Obama’s Deal” recounts the political maneuvers that brought about the Affordable Care Act. With dramatic black-and-white stills of Obama’s furrowed brow interspersed with somber music and voice-overs from pragmatic Washington insiders like former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, the documentary suggests that Obama’s 60-vote Senate majority as well as Democratic control of the House was not enough to pass reform without the support of insurance lobbyists, particularly Karen Ignagni, the President of America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the chief lobbying group for the American health insurance industry. 

    The lobbyist infestation resulted in two of the worst aspects of Obama’s health care reform–the mandate that all Americans be required to buy health insurance–and the failure to deliver on a promised “public option,” which would have allowed Americans to seek coverage outside the exploitative market system. During the negotiations, Wendell Potter, a former CIGNA executive turned whistleblower, characterized the lobbyists’ role in developing what came to be known as Obamacare: 

    “The industry knew that it was going to be under attack …They want to make sure that they get a requirement that all of us buy health insurance. They want to make sure that we are all forced to buy products from them. And they want to make sure that there’s no alternative other than the private insurance market. That’s why they’re so adamantly opposed to the public option.”  

    Rather than using his 60-vote majority to enact meaningful change, Obama pruned a couple of rotting branches and planted seeds that would eventually bloom into future profits for insurers. He did all this under the direction of the same parasites who had already sucked the system dry. In reference to the bill, Democratic chair Howard Dean admitted, “The insurance companies literally did write it.”  

    A System “Designed to Fail”  

    Even though the ACA implemented some marginal reforms, like the prohibition against dropping coverage for pre-existing conditions and the requirement to cover preventative care, the American health care system remains a failure. Dr. Margaret Flowers, a pediatrician and health care activist, predicted this failure in a 2010 interview with Bill Moyers.   

    A few weeks before Flowers’ interview with Moyers, President Obama outlined his proposed health care bill and issued a challenge to the American public: 

    “If anyone from either party has a better approach that will bring down premiums, bring down the deficit, cover the uninsured, strengthen Medicare for seniors and stop insurance company abuses, let me know … I’m eager to see it.” 

    The next morning, Dr. Margaret Flowers accepted that challenge, appearing at the White House gate with a letter explaining how to implement a national single-payer health care system, which would both save lives and address the President’s fiscal concerns by saving billions of dollars in yearly health care spending. She was turned away. She and colleague Dr. Carol Paris tried again the next day, appearing at an Obama event in Baltimore, letter in hand. This time they were arrested. 

    Moyers asked her what she would have said to the President had she been allowed to speak with him. “I would have told him that the American people were expecting more from him,” she said, “that there’s been such a huge amount of suffering in this country–and preventable death–and that is completely unacceptable.” As a doctor who had personally witnessed how the insurance industry harmed her patients–by denying coverage to life-saving medicines or forcing her to send patients home before they were well–she knew that a program designed by bloodsuckers was just going to draw more blood. 

    “We knew that what they were passing was designed to fail, but if it passed, it would take years for people to realize … if you look at the number of people that are dying in this country every year, and you say, ‘Okay, we’re going to wait four or five or six years to see whether this works or not,’ when we already know from a health policy standpoint that it’s not going to work, it’s that many more people that are going to be lost during that period.”  

    Unfortunately, Flowers’ predictions of failure were right. Last year the CDC reported that US life expectancy had dropped to the lowest levels in two decades, to an average lifespan of 76.1 years. Recent studies have shown that the COVID-19 pandemic caused a worldwide drop in life expectancy, but in comparison to 29 other industrialized nations, the United States’ decline has been worse. Only Slovakia and Bulgaria have had more years cut from average lifespans than the United States.  

    The Commonwealth Fund took this a step further and analyzed pre-pandemic deaths from “avoidable mortality,” which they defined as “deaths that could have been prevented with appropriate health care.” Their analysis found that US states like Mississippi and West Virginia had more avoidable deaths than any other industrialized nation, including Mexico and Latvia. West Virginia was the worst, with 416 avoidable deaths for every 100,000 people, roughly equivalent to the number of deaths caused when a 747 jet crashes. Thus, with a population of 1.7 million, West Virginia’s lack of health care killed the same number of people as 17 jet crashes in 2018-2019. Even Minnesota, the state with the fewest preventable deaths, still had a higher avoidable mortality rate than most industrialized nations, including Greece and Slovenia.  

    Obama’s Efforts to “Keep What Works” for the Ownership Class  

    As Dr. Flowers predicted, Obama’s incremental pruning of the for-profit system has catastrophically failed. As she noted in her 2009 letter, if Obama had truly wanted to build a successful health care policy on the foundation of an existing model, he could have simply improved and expanded the government-funded Medicare program. In the earnest plea that led to her arrest, Flowers wrote:  

    “You said that you wanted to ‘keep what works’ and that would be Medicare. Medicare is an American legacy of which we can feel proud. It has guaranteed health security to all who have it. Medicare has lifted senior citizens out of poverty. Health disparities, which are rising in this nation, begin to disappear as soon as patients reach 65 years of age. And patients and doctors prefer Medicare to private insurance.” 

    This proposal should have appealed to Obama’s incrementalist instincts, but the President likely knew that although expanding and improving a government program may seem incremental, the thought of expanding that program to ALL would be a huge paradigm shift. This is primarily because most Americans below 65 rely on their employers for health insurance. It’s one thing to provide government-funded care to those who are elderly or disabled, those who have fallen out of the labor market’s grip, but if health care were available to all Americans, regardless of employment status, large employers would lose their ability to hold health benefits hostage during contract negotiations. In the current American system, the one Obama upheld, the ownership class can always use this universal need as a bargaining chip in larger struggles for living wages and workers’ rights.  

    A recent Status Coup News interview epitomizes how large corporations like Ford, GM, and Stellantis gain a competitive advantage over other employers by offering this human right as a “benefit.” On day three of the United Auto Workers strike, reporter Jordan Chariton spoke with Josh, a UAW member who makes $19 an hour. Due to the industry’s tiered wage system, he cannot afford to move out of his parents’ home. Here Josh addresses the often-repeated question, “If you’re unhappy, why don’t you just get another job?” 

    “I can’t go to another job … This is one of the only few jobs that still gives you health insurance, dental insurance … vision insurance. This is like the only job that still has all those kind of benefits, whereas anywhere else you go to, they don’t even want to give you health insurance … So a lot of us are here for those benefits and kind of sticking around for those benefits, but at the same time, we wish we were being paid the same as the senior people.” 

    Even a plan as incremental as expanding and improving the existing Medicare program could produce a seismic societal change if it meant upending the current employer-based system. Rather than fighting against the erosion of their human right to medical care, unions supporting people like Josh could spend more time focusing on living wages, equitable pay, and humane working conditions. Moving to a universal government-funded healthcare program would essentially mean ripping out the current market-based system, roots and all, and replacing it with one where the well-being of all citizens is not contingent on employment.  

    But such a shift was more than what President Obama and his corporate allies wanted. In a 2009 blog post, journalist David Sirota charitably characterized the President as “afraid of being attacked by moneyed interests that enjoy the status quo.” Whether Obama’s aversion to single-payer was the result of fear or something more calculating, his incremental, market-based “reform” has resulted in massive suffering and loss of life. As Dr. Flowers foretold, the legacy of Obamacare, a policy planted in the soil of a parasite-ridden industry, has borne its shriveled, unpalatable fruit. 

    Eradicating the Parasitic Drive for Profit from our Basic Needs 

    Like policymakers, gardeners struggle to learn from past mistakes. This August, after the insects had killed the last of my zucchini, they turned their thirst on my cucumbers, and within a couple of weeks, no members of the cucurbit family had survived my squash bug apocalypse. 

    Charles Lindbolm’s love of incremental change did not account for apocalypses or the real-world dilemma of developing policy within a corrupt and parasitic framework. Americans face numerous existential crises, from megadroughts and wildfires, to ballooning household debt and homelessness, and at the beating heart of all these calamities lies capitalism, which eschews any nominal desire for the well-being of people in favor of the drive for profit. A system that prioritizes profit over human health has led to what economic anthropologist Jason Hickel has dubbed an ecological and social “double crisis,” which he argues is caused by “the structure of the capitalist system of production.” 

    Americans can no longer afford to let this profit-driven model supply basic needs like health care. Throughout the American health care system marches an army of service reps, actuaries, business analysts, software engineers, marketing specialists, and others who make a living from this industry even though they lack the knowledge or skill to diagnose or heal sick people. Beyond those employed directly by the health insurance industry, we have additional armies of HR generalists, coding specialists, bill reviewers, and all those whose jobs interact with this industry. The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that nearly two million jobs would be lost due to a transition to a more just and equitable single-payer health care system. 

    As a monetarily sovereign nation with its “debt” denominated in its own fiat currency, the United States has the fiscal capacity to fully fund a national single-payer system, but a single-payer system alone will not address the widespread job loss or sudden onslaught of demand that will occur the day that all Americans have access to publicly funded health care. A new health care system cannot germinate in the soil of this profit-driven model, where over two million people are currently employed in jobs that will be rendered moot by a transition to public funding, and where we already suffer from the growing scarcity of workers trained to heal and care for the sick.  

    For years now the US has been funneling its educated workforce into careers that would not exist were it not for the capitalist imperative to financialize basic needs like medical care. Modern American health care is built on the labor of people whose jobs should not exist, whose working lives have no societal value, outside of the money they help earn for the shareholders and executives of the health insurance industry. To build a system from this starting point would be like planting a garden bed in infested ground. 

    For that reason, the incremental improvement and expansion of Medicare cannot, by itself, solve our health care crisis. Rather, we need a more robust, ground-up approach that will simultaneously fund health care as a universal basic service while also providing societally useful career paths for displaced insurance and financial sector workers. As economists like Fadhel Kaboub have suggested, a push toward a universal health system MUST include a federal job guarantee, which would provide local jobs with community-determined value irrespective of their ability to produce profit.  

    At the same time, we cannot meet our nation’s growing health care demands with our current medical workforce, which continues to dwindle due to burnout, retirement, and a lack of education funding and resources. Our current system burdens future doctors, nurses, dentists, and psychiatrists with hundreds of thousands of dollars in student loan debt, making it impractical and unprofitable for young medical professionals to serve in lower-paying, underserved communities like inner cities or rural towns. Free public college and an increased investment in nursing and medical school programs would be another vital prerequisite for implementing a new national health care program. 

    Of course, if we were to dig through each layer of our policy garden, we would find another stratum contaminated by the urge to profit from societal needs. For that reason, the organization March for Medicare for All has outlined a list of additional services that should accompany any holistic approach to health care, including safe and reliable transportation, substance abuse treatment, and caregiving. It’s not hard to imagine how a federal job guarantee could replace the current army of insurance workers with a new army ready to drive patients to appointments, counsel people with addictions, and care for those with special needs. It’s also easy to imagine that creating highly compensated jobs with the goal of providing community value rather than corporate profit would vastly improve our collective well-being. 

    In 1959, Charles Lindbolm could not envision the prolonged suffering caused by the incremental tweaking of policies rooted in corruption and decay. The failure of a health care “reform” fostered within the blight of the capitalist model reveals how incrementalism cannot solve the most formidable ecological and social crises of our day. We must root out the parasitic thirst for profit from all our basic human needs. Only a ground-up revolution that includes a Federal Job Guarantee and fully funded Universal Basic Services including health care and education can root out the infestation that President Obama allowed to fester.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Ady Barkan, a powerful moral force in the fight for a just healthcare system, died at the age of 39 on Wednesday from complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as ALS. Following his terminal diagnosis in 2016 — just months after the birth of his son, Carl — Barkan campaigned tirelessly for Medicare for All and other progressive causes, frequently taking part in Capitol Hill…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • On Tuesday, the Biden administration announced the first 10 medications it will require pharmaceutical companies to negotiate prices on, as part of a provision passed in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) last year to lower drug costs, particularly for seniors. Of the 10 drugs listed, four are for diabetes, while the remainder are for treating heart failure, psoriasis and arthritis, blood cancer…

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  • In New York, a battle is brewing over a bill called Coverage for All that would use a surplus of federal funds to pay people who are undocumented to enroll in the state’s Essential Plan under the federal Affordable Care Act, potentially granting 250,000 people access to healthcare. Immigrant advocates are rallying for the bill’s inclusion in a two-day special legislative session despite Democratic…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • The American health insurance system is expensive, actively antagonizes patients, and leaves millions of people without access to coverage — and, as a new poll shows, is often dysfunctional even for the majority of people who have an insurance plan. According to a new nationally representative survey of 3,605 people with health coverage released by KFF on Thursday, roughly 6 in 10 adults with…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.