Saving Obamacare Is Not Enough—We Need Medicare for All
Friday, March 24, 2017
The terms of the health-care debate must be shifted.
People protest on March 21, 2017 against the congressional
Republicans’ plan to remake Medicaid.
(Photo: Erik McGregor / Sipa via AP Images)
The health-care debate in America is essentially an argument
over what kind of private insurance market people should have access to:
President Obama’s, where the insurance companies made out like bandits, or President
Trump’s, where insurance companies will make out like bandits.
Let’s change the debate by making it between for-profit insurance
vs. not-for-profit health care. That’s what I and Congressmen
John Conyers and Jim McDermott sought to do in 2003 when we wrote and
introduced Medicare for All, HR 676, in the House of Representatives.
Six years ago, I was the last Democrat hold-out on “Obamacare.”
My constituents desperately needed coverage for pre-existing conditions and for
their adult children. I reluctantly voted for it to prove that some reform was
possible, not because it was an acceptable end-point.
It still left out millions and left consumers at the mercy of
insurance companies. And everyone knows insurance companies make money by
providing as little health care as possible.
Here is what the for-profit insurance system brings:
·
Rising premiums and co-pays.
·
Diminishing coverage.
·
More government subsidy of private insurers.
·
Rising costs for prescription drugs.
·
More people going bankrupt because of hospital bills.
·
More people losing their homes because of hospital bills.
More seniors forced into poverty, losing everything they worked
for their entire lives.
This is not about Democrats vs. Republicans, liberals vs.
conservatives, left vs. right. This is about life vs. death.
This is about whether we, as Americans, can recognize a common
interest in using the vast resources of our nation to insure the health of our
people.
Heath spending approaches nearly 18 percent of the $20 trillion
GDP. Nearly a trillion dollars of that amount goes for corporate profits, stock
options, executive salaries, advertising, marketing, and the cost of paperwork.
If we took all the money that people and the government are
presently paying into the for-profit system and applied it to care for people
in a not-for-profit system, we could provide for basic health care for all Americans,
including prescription drugs, vision care, dental care, mental-health care, and
long-term care.
That is what HR 676, Medicare for All, was all about.
Medicare for All is an idea whose time has come. Let’s make all
Americans healthy and wealthy. Let’s lift up all of our families, save our
homes, and help our businesses and industries. Let’s join every other
industrialized nation in the world and offer health care to all of our people.
The terms of the debate in Washington must be shifted. We must
not be stuck between competing for-profit health-insurance
schemes. Let’s renew the debate: Medicare for All or profit for a few.
© 2017 The Nation
Dennis Kucinich is former US Congressman and two-time
presidential candidate from Ohio who served 16 years in the U.S. House of
Representatives. Visit his website at KucinichAction. Follow him on Twitter: @Dennis_Kucinich
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"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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