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Are Liberal Netroots Groups Helping Obama Fail?

by: Jeff Cohen, t r u t h o u t | Report

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Obama responds to a reporter's question during a press conference on health care last week. (Photo: Getty Images)

    I've started deleting them as spam.

    I'm not talking about the enlarge-your-penis emails or "You've Won the Lottery" notices. I'm talking about the increasingly urgent emails coming for weeks from liberal netroots groups calling for a "public option" for health care - a government insurance plan citizens could choose to PAY FOR instead of private insurance.

    Never has so much passion been so misdirected. If what these liberal groups ultimately wanted out of President Obama and corporate-funded Democrats in Congress was a topnotch public plan to compete with the first-rate private plans, the wrong way to get it was to make that THE demand. Especially of a president whose instinct is toward conciliation and splitting the difference with big business and the right wing.

    Sure, Obama was a community organizer once. That was decades ago when Russia was still our mortal enemy, Nelson Mandela was still an official State Department terrorist threat and the White House was still funding Islamist fanatics in Afghanistan.

    For the last dozen years Obama has been a politician - and a consummate compromiser at that. Have we failed to notice?

    Activists must recognize the surest way to get a strong public option that could compete with the Cadillac of health plans. We needed to mobilize millions of netroots people, almost every union and 150 members of Congress to endorse a maximum demand: National health insurance ... enhanced Medicare for All. In other words, a cost-effective, single-payer system of publicly financed, privately delivered health care that ends private health insurance (and its waste, bureaucracy, ads, sales commissions, lavish executive salaries, profiteering).

    Had liberal groups sent out millions of emails building a movement that posed an existential threat to the health insurance industry, Senator Baucus and Blue Dog Democrats and their corporate health care patrons might well be on their knees begging for a comprehensive public option - to avert the threat of full-blown Medicare for All.

    As things stand now, as writers like Bob Kuttner and Norman Solomon have warned, a weak public option would institutionalize a two-tiered system with healthier, wealthier citizens getting the best (private) plans, and sicker, harder-to-treat people getting an inferior (public) plan. Newt Gingrich couldn't dream up a better scenario to discredit an enhanced government role in health care.

    To win serous reforms, we need activist leaders who are tough-minded progressives making maximum demands for reforms that truly address our nation's problems. Leave the inside-the-Beltway deal-making to the politicians, properly frightened and moved by the roar of mass movements.

    We need activist leaders who have a clearer idea of who Obama is. He's not one of us. He's one of them - a politician bent on placating corporate interests. We knew all we needed to know about his current world view from all the corporatists he put in top jobs. And from the fact that he felt the need - six weeks into his administration, after the middle-class bailed out Wall Street - to call up The New York Times and assure the world that his policies were NOT socialist but were "entirely consistent with free market principles." At a time the corporate greedsters and free-market ideologues had been exposed as having threatened the economic well-being of the world, they weren't the ones on the defensive. They weren't doing the apologizing. Obama was on the defensive; he was apologizing to them!

    When Democratic leaders start borrowing right-wing rhetoric, we know our activism has not been strong or progressive enough. At the AARP town hall on Tuesday, Obama described a public option as "controversial, I understand people are worried about that." He went on to assure his audience that "nobody is talking about ... government-run health care" or "a Canadian-style plan." At one point, he further assured seniors that no "bureaucratic law in Washington" would interfere in their health care decisions - seeming to adopt the faux populism of anti-government rightists. Yet, he seems incapable of anti-corporate populism, even with despised industries like Wall Street and health insurance.

    I have huge respect for the smart young activists who built up the netroots, unleashing all sorts of progressive possibilities for our country. But I'm bothered by their often ineffectual, Beltway-originated, halfway demands.

    I became active during the Vietnam War. We might still have troops in Vietnam if - instead of militantly demanding "All Troops Home Now" - we'd organized behind polite Beltway initiatives like: "Let's begin negotiations" or "Let's set a timeline for phased withdrawal."

    I fear that netroots leaders are doing the same dance with Obama today that they did with Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid in 2007 to 2008. Instead of demanding that Democrats in Congress bring our troops home by using the power of the purse to defund the war, netroots leaders rallied behind weak, nonbinding timelines and other halfway measures cooked up with Congressional leaders.

    Without a loud, clear demand for "troops home" from the huge online, out-of-Iraq forces, Democratic leaders started retreating and succumbing to Republican rhetoric. Reid proclaimed: "We will never abandon our troops in a time of war." Pelosi declared, "We will have legislation to fund the troops!"

    And the corpses kept piling up.

    Great social reforms have occurred in our country not when social movements took their lead from what the White House deemed possible, but when the White House was pushed by powerful movements demanding reforms bolder than what the president was comfortable with. Leading abolitionists pushed Lincoln toward ending slavery by demanding immediate abolition. Socialists' and workers' movements in the '30s sufficiently scared elites so that FDR could pass New Deal reforms far short of socialism. Martin Luther King and civil rights activists continuously pushed and prodded JFK and later LBJ.

    And these movements didn't have the Internet.

    In 1993, a National Health Insurance bill gained 100 co-sponsors in the Democrat-led House, plus endorsements from many unions, even Consumers Union. There was, unfortunately, no Internet then when the Clinton White House undermined this growing movement by proposing an incredibly complex plan that left big insurers dominating the system. Clinton's plan inspired few and confused many. After it went down in flames, talk radio host Jim Hightower asked President Clinton why he didn't back an easily-explained Medicare for All approach that had so much support in Congress. Clinton said he'd thought it was politically too difficult, but now wondered about that judgment.

    Here we are 16 years later. Neglected by large netroots groups, John Conyers today has 85 House co-sponsors for HR 676, the Expanded Medicare for All Act , as well as the endorsement of many unions and Obama's longtime personal physician. If all those emails I've received lately had been about building the HR 676 movement and a public system instead of a "public option," the bill would have many more co-sponsors and could be pressuring Democrats to stand tough today.

    For Obama to feel secure about reform and standing up to the right, he needs to feel that he's in the center pushed by noisy forces to his left. He's admitted as much. The way to help him succeed is to mobilize seriously to his left.

    The way to help Obama fail is for netroots and liberal groups to collapse toward him from the get-go.

    And if Obama does fail, we can quit laughing at a Republican Party in disarray due to Bush, religious extremism, hypocrisy and anti-intellectualism.

    Because, in this period of crisis and fear, unless a progressively-prodded White House delivers reforms that actually improve lives soon, right-wing reaction could rebound more dangerous than ever in 2010 and/or 2012.

  

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Jeff Cohen is an associate professor of journalism at Ithaca College, founder of the media watch group FAIR, and former board member of Progressive Democrats of America.

Comments

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Cohen is dead on. In April I

Cohen is dead on. In April I met with two very progressive friends who each run a progressive grassroots organization. I was appalled when neither of them was willing to campaign for Single Payer because they agreed with Obama's assessment that the country wasn't ready for it. I think that the left has been largely seduced, and that the seduction must come to a screeching halt right now.

I totally agree with this

I totally agree with this article and have been saying the same thing from the beginning. I agree that most of the organizations, from Moveon to League of Conservation Voters are sounding more and more like the over-compromising, spineless, and foolish Democrats in Congress. They should be demanding that we at least start from the best solution before we compromise, instead of beginning with a compromised position and then compromising that until it is worthless or worse.

Mr. Cohen, I think the

Mr. Cohen, I think the problem lies in the fact that Progressives are Progressives exactly because they care about other people, and that makes them fair-minded and polite. Right-wingers apparently aren't burdened with the empathy gene. So, while Progressives are trying hard to be polite and fair and improve the lot of everyone right-wingers are sneaking around doing everything they can to thwart any "liberal" progress in any way possible. Lies, trickery, any despicable behavior, and the right-winger thinks his actions morally defensible because he has been manipulated into viewing himself as serving moral principles. The end justifies the means for these people. Ironically these "moral principles" generally involve the "worship" of Jesus Christ, arguably the most liberal human to have ever lived, by suppressing all semblance of rational thought. Until Progressives realize that their enemies cannot be dealt with politely or rationally any more than an attacking mad dog can be dealt with politely or rationally --- they will continue to lose. Snarling aggression and snapping teeth will always trump good intentions, fairness, and a polite demeanor.

Mr. Cohen, I think the

Mr. Cohen, I think the problem lies in the fact that Progressives are Progressives exactly because they care about other people, and that makes them fair-minded and polite. Right-wingers apparently aren't burdened with the empathy gene. So, while Progressives are trying hard to be polite and fair and improve the lot of everyone right-wingers are sneaking around doing everything they can to thwart any "liberal" progress in any way possible. Lies, trickery, any despicable behavior, and the right-winger thinks his actions morally defensible because he has been manipulated into viewing himself as serving moral principles. The end justifies the means for these people. Ironically these "moral principles" generally involve the "worship" of Jesus Christ, arguably the most liberal human to have ever lived, by suppressing all semblance of rational thought. Until Progressives realize that their enemies cannot be dealt with politely or rationally any more than an attacking mad dog can be dealt with politely or rationally --- they will continue to lose. Snarling aggression and snapping teeth will always trump good intentions, fairness, and a polite demeanor.

Jeff Cohen is right. When

Jeff Cohen is right. When negotiating to buy a car, Republicans demand the car for free plus twenty grand. Democrats ask if they can get AM/FM. Time to quit being polite.

Those of us who are either

Those of us who are either former or are current healthcare workers, HAVE been writing and calling our own representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate, plus writing and calling Senator Max Baucus' office in Washington, D.C., calling for single payer, medicare for all. Plus, we HAVE made loud, clear demands - via fax, Email, postal letters and phone calls to our representatives in the House of Representatives and the Senate - for not only "bring all the troops home from Iraq", but also: "remove all the mercenaries and sub-contractors from Iraq", and: "stop all kidnapping and torture at home and abroad." We have tried repeatedly to reach Speaker Pelosi also, but even when you call her office in Washington, D.C., the staff refuses to talk to U.S. citizens, and immediately shunts everyone into voice-mail; Our faxes, Emails, postal letters and phone calls to the Speaker Of The House, are NOT responded to at all. We also HAVE been been writing and calling Harry Reid's office, on all of these topics. The problem is NOT on the side of many of the U.S. public, but is on the side of many of the Democrats and the Republicans currently in office. Both are often at fault, as they often only listen to corporate lobbyists, NOT to the U.S. public. The U.S. corporate media - which no longer deserves to be called "mainstream", generally ignores all of this (in print media, Harpers Magazine and a few others being exceptions). In U.S. broadcast media, we do see coverage on Bill Moyers Journal on PBS, and from Amy Goodman at Democracy NOW!, but not much anywhere else.

A national single payer

A national single payer health system is the only solution that will enhance the economy of the nation while providing top flight health insurance for all the people. Insurance companies are money sucking vampires that rip off the customers to pay themselves exorbitants salaries, high dividends, and let the country be damned.

I clicked on this link with

I clicked on this link with a roll of the eyes and finished it cheering. Right on!

The all-or-nothing crowd

The all-or-nothing crowd never quits. Cohen's assertion that this is the way to win health care reform is just that- an assertion with no evidence backing it up. It could just as well be asserted that a single-payer plan would be dead on arrival, considering the attitudes of the Rs and the Blue Dog Dems. So, I'm putting my money on a strong public option (one that won't allow the cherry picking that Colen asserts will happen), and a provision allowing for single payer plans in those states that want it.

Good article. I haven't

Good article. I haven't read anything about our county(s?) existing Public Health System and the coverage it provides to millions of people. Care to comment in a future report ?? Thanks !!

Liberals: Here, I want the

Liberals: Here, I want the control of giving you a fish each day. Conservatives: Let me teach you to fish so you can be your own person. So, who really cares for people? Von Mises: It was a weel-known fact that Nazis, Communists, and Fascists all wooed and competed for the same people, the same mindset (National Socialists); that would translate into American liberals in the USA. Healthcare a right? Oh, I guess medical students and their student loans are things the tax-payer should pay. Doctors salaries.. to pay for a service rendered, guess you liberals don't want to pay for anything, expecting you are so special everyone else has to pay? But to hide your selfishness and laziness, make sure everyone is paid for by... who? Everyone else? Many Libs want everything free and another to pay for it, and haven't the brains or critical thinking skills to address ALL the complex variables. Just one or two, drrrr. So have to call people names on the opposing party , ad hominem attacks to avoid the complexities of the argument and "rights" versus "responsibilities" or "privileges." Like driving, a "privilege" not a right, given by the DMV. Love to slam their failed utopias down peoples throats whether they like it or no. I like choice. So does everybdy else with a mind of their own.

A lot of words that say

A lot of words that say little. That is, what are you trying to say? Should liberals give up? Is something better than nothing? I don't get what you are saying other than Obama is not a liberal, and on that issue you are quite correct. Please rewrite your article and make your point more pointed and to the point. It's obviously a most important topic.

We already have a PROVEN

We already have a PROVEN single payer system in place, MEDICARE! All we would have to do is expand the coverage to younger people in groups... Why invent the wheel, when we have a functioning system. There is little to no chance of this occurring because of lobbyists from insurance, pharmaceutical companies and others who are getting richer with the status quo ! Personally, I like a little kissing when I am being screwed!

Jeff is right! Obama is a

Jeff is right! Obama is a wimp. He is compromising too much! As a result, we will get nothing real in the way of change and reform! Obama will get a plan that he will be damned if he signs and damned if he doesn't. Its not going to be a good plan. Something is better than nothing? The dems should tell the reps to stick it and should do the right thing!

Obama doesn't need help

Obama doesn't need help failing - he's doing just fine all by himself. Obama and Hillary both took huge donations from big Pharma, and that is why we will not see the real reform, which would be to eliminate the conflicts of interest that have deeply corrupted the FDA (and all the other regulatory agencies of this country). This discussion of progressives not pushing hard enough for the rights of the poor to receive their toxic, disfiguring, disabling, wildly expensive treatments for free is no 'change' at all - it is more of the same. This country's health care bill would be one third of what it is if there were simply widespread dissemination of the peer reviewed research that is basically kept out of medical schools, which shows with little doubt that basic nutrients and supplements not only prevent but also treat most of what people go to doctors for, while the toxic garbage that passes for food in this country causes the disease in the first place - MSG and it's analogs by thirty names, artificial sweeteners and other artificial chemical additivies. The so called preventive medicine of vaccination has now ballooned into a series of highly toxic substances of dubious value, which are foisted upon the innocent without adequate testing and leading to the rampant and and debilitating neurological and immune system disorders that have swept this country. That the cost of dying in this country is roughly equal to the cost to buy a one bedroom house is the predictable outcome of decades of corruption should turn our focus to a study of the care itself and less of a focus on how we got here. As a lens through which to view the whole problem, study vitamindcouncil.org and see how one nutrient all by itself could eliminate half the health care costs in this country within a few years - the cancers, diabetes, high blood pressure, lipid imbalances, hormonal imbalances. The mass delusion of it all is truly spectacular in it's scope and cost.

This critique expresses

This critique expresses exactly the problem with the "election integrity" movement, which pushes to get behind ridiculous so-called "compromise" election reform like Rush Holt's disastrous bill HR2894. Instead of addressing the real problem, which is the privatization of our elections and concealed computerized vote counting, Holt proposes "paper records" as "verification" of the concealed computerized count controlled by private corporations. This is as far from anything resembling democratic, public elections as anything could be. Yet the citizens' movement rallies behind this treacherous bill saying, "we have to compromise!" Compromise? On what? Democracy? Freedom? Liberty? I don't know if the "progressive" movement is just filled with stupid people or if it has simply been effectively infiltrated and neutered. Either way, it is doing us all in.

The left certainly put their

The left certainly put their foot down with on torture/war crimes. Obama, your supposed "consumate compromiser" didn't compromise anything. He sold out completely everything the Democratic Party stood for and believed in on human rights and made us war criminals and collaborators. Get it out of your head that Obama is "compromising." Obama is traitor to the Democrats, and a war criminal. We've all been fools. We've all elected a neo-con to the Presidency as a Democrat.

I agree absolutely, but . .

I agree absolutely, but . . . the reason our predecessors were so much more militant, radical, and effective is that they were personally and physically affected more, much more than we are today. They saw their fellow unionists shot, their fellow veterans run down by cavalry on the White House lawn, their children crying from hunger, and their civic leaders and pastors attacked with dogs lead by the local police. We lost our "retirement luxury in Miami and Sun City" funds. The horror -- not! Only when we are in genuine pain will be know that Obama, though a very nice guy, is not our friend, and act accordingly.

This is not new.

This is not new. Progressives have consistently campaigned for things they don't believe in because they think the conservatives will like them better. Remember candidate John Kerry. He was "electable" right? And Dennis Kucinich or Ralph Nader are unelectable! Conservatives won't like you whether you are Max Baucus or Cornell West. Progressives need to remember this and speak from their hearts and the souls about what they think is best. And as Cohen says ... let the politicking happen inside the beltway

Indeed, the so called roots

Indeed, the so called roots are so far up high that don't even touch the ground anymore! But, that is what the conservative wanted, if they were smart enough to predict it. The result could well be akin to the 'Credit Card Bill of Rights', another lame attempt at reforming what once used to be illegal (the Mafia loan sharking operations charge LESS interest than Citi and others!). In the end, if We, The People stay asleep through all of this and don't make our will known, loud and clear, thing will only get worse.

"make me do it", said Harry

"make me do it", said Harry Truman when he was asked for a decision he felt he did not HAVE to make, unless......

All the US can hope for in

All the US can hope for in this round of health care reform is an embryonic Canadian-style system, with provisions that will allow its competitive superiority to gradually squeeze out privatized insurance schemes. This would seem to be the only route between the Scylla of the status quo, and the Charybdis of neocon misinformation.

Mr. Obama starts an idea.

Mr. Obama starts an idea. The rest is up to the public to generate pressures at points where it counts. Those with networks, are at the forefront of such a strategy. Glad someone is point the potential for great achievements in this administration. Best,

Jeff, you are so right!

Jeff, you are so right! I've been distributing single payer material to everyone I know over the past 2 months, and EVERYONE I've talked to so far, including my very right-wing relatives, is enthusiastically in favor of it. If we're lucky, maybe the health care industry's sleazy disinformation campaign will backfire by killing the inadequate proposal now being created by our timid, out-of-touch congress. Then, as Marcia Angell has suggested, we can start all over. Unlike the concoctions we are currently being presented with, Single-Payer is easy to describe, and the bill itself (HB676) is accessible on line and easy to understand. Just one thing is needed...a rational, plain-spoken leader who is not afraid to take on the fight.

Thanks Jeff Cohen for an

Thanks Jeff Cohen for an accurate, much-needed call to action. It may be late, but not too late. If the MoveOn's and HealthcareNOWs of the nation don't step up to organize this movement from a truly progressive stance, we're in trouble. My choice is: do I want my job, or do I want healthcare? I want both, but I need my job, and organizing is a full-time job. Organize me. All the calls and emails and petitions evidently just aren't enough. We need mass organizing and bold leadership to raise the tenor of this issue on Americans' behalf. In lieu of such organizing leadership, everyone can collect signatures in their neighborhood supporting HR676 and S 703 with the goal of 50 million signatures, and send them to HealthcareNOW in NY for delivery to DC. Even 5 million would be a wake-up call which may extend debate in favor of single payer, the ONLY plan we need to be discussing in contrast to the status quo. A public option is a loss for America.

I agree wholeheartedly with

I agree wholeheartedly with Mr. Cohen. And I think we need to go farther. In addition to mobilizing mass protests in favor of single payer, we need to be strategizing about what forceful, concrete actions we will take when/if our demands for health care for all are not met. Check out the French: they don't just march politely down the streets in favor of keeping their 35-hour work week. They organize massive strikes that shut down whole sectors of the economy, blockade highways, etc. If we fail to demonstrate our willingness to take actions that will actually disrupt business as usual, our protests--however massive--are toothless, just more spectacles in a culture numbed to spectacle. If Congress passes a bill which requires people to purchase insurance from private, for-profit companies while providing no meaningful alternative, I think we need a campaign of massive and direct non-violent civil disobedience. Hell, let's start now! How much more do we need to suffer to get it that no one but we ourselves will fight to take our lives back from transnational corporate raiders? But I think things will have to get a whole lot worse before lots of Americans will feel that they have nothing left to lose and get off their couches and take effective--and therefore inherently risky--action. I don't know why we as a culture are so prone to believing our own ideology and rhetoric in the fact of contradictory reality, but we are. I feel sadness and fear when I contemplate what drastic circumstances may be required to free us from this devastating addiction.

Jeff is spot on! I am

Jeff is spot on! I am afraid The Industry is once again hijacking public policy for profits. Forcing people to buy a commercial product (health insurance) and using taxpayer money to subsidize those who can't afford it, is NOT reform. Furthermore, by design, the public plan option will struggle because the sickest most expensive patients will gravitate to it. Not only that, it won't be available until 2013. Years later, when it fails, The Industry will point to it as proof the Single Payer won't work. It will be the wrong lesson. In the meantime, our health care non-system will continue to break our fragile bank. I don't know about you, but this is bad for my blood pressure. Oregon PNHP is going to do something about this. Visit MadAsHellDoctors.com to find out more. Paul Hochfeld, M.D.

Watching the so-called

Watching the so-called "health care reform" debate has been painful. The right wing launched an all out attack on single payer or Medicare for All and that made progressives, democrats, and others believe that a Medicare for All system was not feasible at this time. Why wilt at the first blast of hot air from the right wing blowhards -- who are paid shills of the medical industry. Cohen is right. Progressives should fight for what they really want. If the public option does not take substantial amounts of money out of the private, for-profit system, it will not be affordable. The US spends right now more than enough money to provide everyone with great health care. But the money is now being misspent on profits, bureaucratic overhead (i.e., marketing), and high salaries. Why not just eliminate those wasteful expenditures.

From the beginning my issue

From the beginning my issue has been it seems as though our people have no idea how to negotiate. The Republicans, insane as they've been, seem to grasp it instinctively. Ask for FAR more than you ever hope to get and act like what you end up with is worthy only of grudging acceptance. Don't ask for the least you expect to get. Any other professional negotiator who did that would soon find him or herself unemployed.

At last, a gusty,

At last, a gusty, truth-telling manifesto that makes sense. The servants of the insurance companies, a.k.a our Congressional representatives (Democrats as well as Republicans) are laughing at us. They gave themselves decent healthcare but assure us--on our dime--that we can't afford anything nearly as good for the people. I'm sending Mr. Cohen's article to all my friends. I urge others to do the same thing. But we probably also need to be in the streets as in the old Vietnam days. We need to scare our "leaders," and not tremble before them and their lies. PS: This isn't for me. I'm on Medicare and I have a good retirement plan. This is for my kids, their kids, and all the younger people who need true reform.

This is exactly why the

This is exactly why the Dems. should run a true Progressive against Obama in 2012. We thought we had one but what we got was a namby pamby, please everyone, non leader. Its like a parent telling their children, "I love you all equally" - sure you do. When Obama tries to make everyone happy the only ones happy are his critics. They rejoice in his uncanny ability to castrate himself in front of the nation and the rest of the world. The phrase "leading by consensus" could never be more aptly applied. We, the true Progressives, have been fooled. We got bait and switched. We were shown one product but when we walked in the store it was nowhere to be found. Next time we have an election maybe we should even put a true Liberal in office. Then when they backslide they may be only Progressive. ( Vote for single payer health care.)

Cohen has it right. Obama

Cohen has it right. Obama correctly assessed the situation and then took Single-payer off the table to ensure the failure of a comprehensive health care delivery system for the people. Obama is a proponent of Free Trade and that translates: he is protecting the rich while screwing everyone else. The netroots have accepted Single-payer being off the table instead of fighting for what is best for the country. I'm shocked they could be so stupid. Obama is no better than George W. Bush and I hope he never sees a second term. We need Dennis Kucinich.

Absolutely agree, and thank

Absolutely agree, and thank you so much for saying it. About a dozen of us former Obama campaign volunteers walked out on an OFA--Obama health care advocacy meeting about a month ago, hoping to convey the message that we were for single-payer and single-payer only. Of course we realized that down the road, compromise might happen. But you don't start negotiations by giving away the farm, which is exactly what the Obama public option plan does. I too have been deleting MoveOn emails and others that support the public option plan. There ARE orgs that promote SINGLE PAYER, and if you google SINGLE PAYER you will find their action alerts. It's too bad they aren't as organized and widespread as MoveOn. I'd take a yard sign. I'd go to a rally. If there were any near me.

A progressive is one, in my

A progressive is one, in my mind, does not equivocate on her ideals. A liberal, on the other hand compromises and is dishonest.... does not say what she really wants, tries to outthink those in office and the public, coming up with something not very different that what already is. I, too, rolled my eyes when first connecting to this link, but after reading the article, I must agree. It made me smile inside. Even if it didn't work, it would have been an "honest" effort to make REAL change, not just talk. WE NEED TO WALK OUR TALK. Thanks for this article. I wish it were so.

Yes, right on on every

Yes, right on on every point. I reiterate (all over again) in cinsonance with this article: What is needed is a ten million patient march on Washington, led by one hundred thousand people in wheel chairs!

@BillyDoc: If progressives

@BillyDoc: If progressives really cared about people and not just massaging their own egos, they would fight tooth and nail for single payer and to stop funding the imperialist wars of aggression. Case in point: Ralph Nader. Case in point: Cynthia McKinney.

Single payer is MUCH better

Single payer is MUCH better than any other system. But, we didn't have a movement focused on that. Now, it's too late. The public option, however imperfect, is a place to begin, a foundation to build from. If you think that the Public Option is worthless, and won't accomplish anything, then why are the big insurance companies and their lackeys, the Republicans so adamant, so strident, so fearful and so panicked in their opposition? Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good, Jeff. If John McCain were in the White House we wouldn't even be having this public dialogue.

Obama made a novice

Obama made a novice negotiator's mistake: Instead of coming out for Single-Payer, the proven-effective solution in the UK,Canada,France,Costa Rica, etc, he made the Public Option his initial proposal, Never,never,never tell the guy across the table the lowest price you'll take for your house, used car, labor or any other contract provision because he will always assume you'll take less. Obama should have known the GOP/Bluedog coalition would take that cue to bargain it down to Zero!

Amen! It's time to put

Amen! It's time to put medical care back in the hands of the Doctor and Patient, removing the Insurance Companies, Big Pharma, Employers and bureaucrats from our health care. We the people should be the only one exercising both our health and financial responsibility, on a universal insurance basis, removing the cost from businesses and truly pooling the risks of all our citizenry. The government pays for 60% of our health care costs currently, and a single payer plan would not raise costs above the present level of expense.

As a member who worked with

As a member who worked with one of these liberal/progressive groups, MoveOn, I'm happy to see this article saying exactly what I've been complaining about to MoveOn. I sent them e-mails along the same lines, and was quite angered when they didn't want to go any farther than what Obama is already saying--even no mention of even trying to push for Single Payer, which is the most popular and only plan that makes the most sense. Yet, they are too wimpy to speak up, speak truth to power. So what good are they? Democrats are the new Republicans, folks. Obama gets elected (good), but then what happens? The whole movement Left collapses? Come on! Maybe the ruling class was smart to put Obama in power, since that seemed to do the job of zapping out the commitment, focus and energy of real progressive visions, channeling them into dead ends like this? Since when is the job of the progressive left to be cheerleaders for the White House? Ignore crazy republicans, they are irrelevant, and not in power. Its the democrats who are in the way. We don't fight them by becoming one of them. We have to be ourselves. Wake up, left!

Even the Public Option is

Even the Public Option is dead. Obama, besides going back on his word that he was for a Single Payer plan, made a mistake when he said it's allright for Congress to wait until Fall to give him a bill. In August, the Repulicans will be spending over a million dollars a day to brainwash the public against any plan. They will win on this one. The polls show their message is gaining strength every day. Maybe we need a million people to march on Washington when Congress returns from their recess in the Fall. Another thing, these messages are going to those who already want a Single Payer. How can we reach those who don't know any better? They probably don't read Jeff Cohen.

What most people are getting

What most people are getting wrong is that the healthcare reform is NOT about pleasing everybody but about keeping election (campaign) promise that makes accessibility to health a right as it is in most European countries that are not as rich as United States. And there is a kind of twist of reasoning abroad on this healthcare for all. Now, the journey is not that long on historical lane when some Democrats, then minority in Congress and Senate, voted with Republicans on what has gone down in history as bipartisan endorsement of the inglorious war in Iraq. But this time around, the issue is good news. It is about HEALTH that is going to give happiness to those who could not afford it before the reform and whose contribution to the economy is also is incalculable in terms its effect on Gross National Product. Why, I keep asking myself, is it not possible for the Democrats to stand together now on an issue that is laudable and why is it difficult for the Republicans to pay the debt of support they got to wage a war that constituted a weight, amongst others, to Obama Administration? Why? I havent the answer to this question because I cant just understand the logic, if any, behind the ongoing ping-pong on the heathcare reform which is health for all.

THIS IS JUST HOW IAM STARING

THIS IS JUST HOW IAM STARING TO FEEL. DOES THE LEFT WANT TO HELP THE RIGHT FAIL OBAMA. I NO THE CORPORATE MEDIA LOVE HIM FAILING. ALL THEASE LEFT GROUPS SAYING WHAT OBAMA MUST DO. AND THE DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS GIVING FAILED REPUBLICANS A HELPING HAND. WHEN THEY HAVE RUINED THIS COUNTRY WITH FAKE WARS BLOWING THE DEFICIT. AND TAPPING AMERICANS PHONES. A TERRORIST BEHIND EVERY BUSH. AND LOOK WHAT OBAMA GOT HANDED!!! AND LIBERALS ARE WHINNING WHEN HE'S TRYING TO STANCH THE BLEEDING. MAYBE YOU WANT A BUSH DADDY BACK. KEEP TEARING HIM DOWN AND THE DADDY WILL BE BACK!!!!

Most of those who have been

Most of those who have been paying even a moderate amount of attention to this issue have long ago concluded what would happen before it happened. Just follow the money. It's as easy as that. Look up who got what from whom and you can pretty much get how the vote will go. Until there is campaign finance reform, we'll be seeing the same thing happen with any legislation that is even close to being progressive. These people like the power in Washington, and no amount of verbal pressure will sway them from that. Show up with a pile of cash, and you're on your way to getting whatever it is you desire. Until we're willing to outspend the deep pockets of the corporations, campaign finance reform is what is needed. Anything short of it, and we'll be fighting this same fight the next century with the same results. .

Let's have a reality check,

Let's have a reality check, folks!!!! I'm about as liberal as they come --- but it is dismaying to see the idealists insist that their view is the only one. And apparently have no practical sense of reality. Yes, in an ideal world, perhaps "Medicare for All" would be the choice -- maybe. Remember who pays for Medicare -- four workers paying Medicare tax out of their salaries for every retired person receiving Medicare. To cover everyone, the increase in the payroll tax would have to be huge. And big insurance companies are not going to just disappear because we don't like them. Even in Germany and other civilized countries, private health insurance is a valid part of the health care system --- and it works.

Remember: Obama is not a

Remember: Obama is not a progressive, not even a "liberal", he is a corporatist stooge. Waste no more time on Obama, instead, galvanize, and find the proper and resolute progressive for 2012!

Wake up advocates of the

Wake up advocates of the public option. If it were what Obama seems to have proposed(while carefully being vague) and as Howard Dean described, it would be a fairly good start.Not great, but fairly good(well, maybe). However, what has come out of congress so far is NOT a strong public option. In fact from news reports. I read it has been gutted already Incredibly, while the Senate Finance Committe has stripped the public option out of their version of the proposed bill. the House is proposing that the public option be UNavailable to anyone who has insurance. Say what?! 60 % of Americans have employer-based health care. Add to that all the folks on Medicare and Medicaid and in the VA and who's left? Only a small percentage of the population. Not much of a public "option" if it is in fact not an option for you, or you, or you. It is essential that we insist to our legislators that they support the Kucinich amendment which will permit a waiver for states that want to go single payer on a state by state basis. Call Congress today!

Finally! Some one -- Jeff

Finally! Some one -- Jeff Cohen -- has explained the fiasco perfectly. Mr. Cohen, can you get yourself some bookings on Cable TV and explain this to the hoi polli? Or, better still, get yourself a job on Obama's staff -- because, man oh man, he needs help! He's off track.

It's a sad day when it

It's a sad day when it becomes clear that Obama has gone from inspiring orator, hopeful leader and 'Man Of The People' to the mere measure of just how CORPORATE OWNED AMERICA REALLY IS... And S0--Welcome to the C.R.A.P..!!... The Corporate Run American 'Paradise'... Where WE THE PEOPLE have been, more than not, willingly hoodwinked and transformed into little more than THE AMERICAN CONSUMER and where we have allowed our Government to become THE USeless CONGRESS OF CORPORATE FACILITATION................. Do you hear that..??... Its the FAT LADY and she's singing loudly and clearly...

Let's ask and the Blue Dog

Let's ask and the Blue Dog Democrats and the anti-anything-Obama Republicans if they are willing to live with the same options available to the lowest-paid workers in the country. Let's ask them if, should the nay-sayers succeed in killing healthcare reform and a single-payer option,they swear to opt out of the generous government-sponsored health care opportunities available to them. Let's ask if they'll forego such government health plan perks as no waiting period, right to choose, and payment by taxpayers, US, of 75% of the cost, in addition to on-site pharmacy, emergency care, X-rays, etc. Sweet deal, huh, for people who hate government health care! Let's ask: How about some honesty instead of hyprocisy? How about putting nasty, me-first, party-first behavior away and serving the public instead of their own re-election aspirations.

We're all backseat drivers,

We're all backseat drivers, in the end. Monday morning quarterbacks. We're all sure we have the answer, and it's so obvious. Doesn't matter whether we're R or D or I... I wish everyone would just shut up and let the man do his job. Keep an eye on him, hold his feet to the fire, make sure he follows the law, and those who work for him (and all of us), and get the hell out of the way. We had a chance to see what an evil man could build for eight years, with little to no opposition. Let's see what a good one can do, under the same circumstances. At least we'll be able to understand his speeches.

Mr Cohen I think you are

Mr Cohen I think you are trying to have it both ways and both ways seem to criticize both the Obama administration and the progressive grass roots movement. How will that help anyone but the republicans? As a progressive I can tell you right now single payer wouldn't even be on the table if it weren't for the efforts of the progressive movement. Furthermore and in spite of the bluedogs who are in the pockets of the corporate health care lobbyists, I believe president Obama is trying to do the right thing. The problem is the bluedogs, many of whom are in republican territory fear for their jobs with their conservative constituency. Yes Max Baucus was a bad choice(or perhaps a brilliant choice as a means to an end) but I like many progressives believe that Obama is going in the right direction and doing what he must do to get things done. Yes he is a politician but one thing we must never forget is people evoke change, not politicians. I would further add that progressives do not want Obama to fail. That is why we place pressure where it's needed. A viable single payer health care plan, which will save the US taxpayer billions of dollars annually as it insures everyone, will also insure him another victory. Anything short of that will not. I see it as a matter of either him getting reelected and perhaps losing some bluedog seats in congress, or the same phony democrats winning there, Obama losing the presidency and with that, an end to any mention whatsoever of a public health care plan again.

Thank you for this

Thank you for this completely accurate analysis. To the commentor who put MoveOn and HealthcareNOW in the same category: check again! HealthcareNOW (healthcare-now . org) is not HCAN (Healthcare for America Now); HealthcareNOW! is the older single-payer group hose name HCAN (the compromise group) "copied", IMHO deliberately, to create confusion. They certainly succeeded! Healthcare-NOW! members, along with members of Physicians for a National Health Program (pnhp . org) and the California Nurses' Association, comprised the Baucus 13, who were arrested for taking direct action at two Senate Finance Committee hearings in May by asking for a seat at the table for a single-payer representative. These three groups have been consistently working for REAL healthcare reform since well before the 2008 campaign, although that's about when I became involved. Any negotiator knows that you ask for the moon, then settle for something close to what you want. "HuffPo" had an article by Rose Ann DeMoro titled something like "Has MoveOn Gone Crazy" asking why they were supporting compromise so early; MoveOn also got many complaints for taking that stand without consulting its members. Keep fighting, current activists! The only reason that so many people are "happy with their insurance", if indeed there are that many, is because they haven't become seriously ill. When I talk about single-payer, I generally find that people agree or are worried about the concept; which I have learned enough to ease most of these with concrete information and explanations. When I give single-payer literature to those I know, they often come back in agreement.

Cohen is so right. This

Cohen is so right. This month is the time for people to get out on the streets with unambiguous signs, demanding universal single-payer health care. Visit the local offices of reps; picket them if necessary; send letters to local papers and local reps (original, if possible), call in to talk radio programs (not Limbaugh, of course). Do everything you can think of to keep this choice alive.

You refer to Obama as the

You refer to Obama as the "consummate compromiser". Unfortunately, the current debate is not between two sides with opposing arguments of equal weight. The "healthcare" lobby, with millions of dollars to wage a public campaign, has decidedly tipped the scales in their favor. In addition to placing misleading ads on the public airwaves intended to frighten the electorate, they have donated heavily to a handful of unscrupulous and immoral elected representatives all too eager to take the money. What's more, the collective constituents of these reps make up less than one percent of the total population of the United States. How can there be "compromise" when one of the sides is so disproportionately represented?

If anyone has worked with

If anyone has worked with any OFA people you know how true this is. Rather than DEMAND real reform, these people seem intent on not upsetting the offenders who are causing undue financial and physical harm to Americans. If all these "liberal" groups would unite and tell their man that they think he should have the you know whats to be the first black president they all thought he would be, we would have had a health care bill signed into law by now. Until Obama can let go and tell his minions that it's okay to go for broke, we will all continue to keep receiving those emails asking us to support a public option that is has not even legislatively materialized yet.

Many good ideas here! I

Many good ideas here! I think a national strike would be the best way to let everyone know we mean business. So many people are on board with single payer health care reform that we could have an impact if we quit squabbling and work together. This opera isn't over yet in spite of what the "Politicos" want us to believe. First we begin a notional boycott. No one buys anything during one weekend a month (say the second weekend of each month?)and if that doesn't get some attention and cooperation, then no one goes to work for one day (except emergency responders and people who taking care of folks who would otherwise die without them: nurses, doctors, fire fighters, etc). If that doesn't do it, then no one works for 2 days (or buys anything since we are all at home). My boss probably wouldn't like this, but if we got her on board beforehand, she would probably join us. We have the power to change the dynamic of this conversation because, bottom line, all of this goes away without our participation. The French have the right idea, and we should remember the roots of our friendship with them and get off our butts and organize something that will work.

I think a good start would

I think a good start would be to strip all congresspersons of their government-sponsored health care and force them to enter the marketplace just like all the Joe Shomoes at their minimum wage jobs. Let them pay the ever-increasing premiums out of their own pockets. Let them haggle with insurance companies again and again over denials of coverage. Let them have to make decisions about whether they can afford a procedure or medication. No government-provided health care for them until it's available to everyone in America.

the need is health care, not

the need is health care, not insurance!

Ha! Ha! The absurdity of

Ha! Ha! The absurdity of the premise. See www.blackagendareport.com for analysis of the plan and what's missing. Obama supported single payer when he was a State Sen. in Il and speaking at a labor group meeting. The nation wants single payer - the Dems and Repubs are not in sync with the public, which Chomsky calls "democracygap".

Here Here. Considering that

Here Here. Considering that health care is consistently a top three issue among voters of all persuasions, I see in my crystal ball a lot of incumbents being fired in 2010. At least if the patterns of 2006 and 2008 continue. As for Obama failing, I think he's doing a pretty good job of that all by himself. Which is too bad, because, politician or not, he did have potential. But I am starting to get nauseous every time I hear "the Obama Administration has decided to continue Bush Administration policy regarding [fill in the blank]." Apparently someone lost the memo that we hired the guy because we wanted nothing more to do with the monstrous policies of the previous administration or its party.

Hey, mysterioso: I love the

Hey, mysterioso: I love the idea of running a true Progressive for President in 2012 . . . but . . . I'm struggling to recall if a true Progressive ever ran for President in the US. No doubt it is timely - it was timely in 2004, that's for sure! As long as lobbying is not considered - and prosecuted as - a crime, there will be no Progressive president in the US. I'll be jumping up & down for Progressive candidates for Congress in 2010, for sure.

Healthcare is a serious

Healthcare is a serious issue. When I need to solve a problem, I look around to see who already has solved a similar problem, study what they have done, and synthesize my plan of action. What and where are the best medical services in the world? I'll bet, all things taken into account, it is in a government system with a private option, not the other way around. Real competition is good... Go, Dennis K.