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Thirteen in Congress Control Health Care Debate

by: David Sirota  |  Creators.com

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A young patient waits to see the doctor in Ashburn, Virginia.(Photo: Hyungwon Kang / Reuters)

    For those still clinging to quaint notions of the American ideal, these have been a faith-shaking 10 years. Just as evolutionary science once got in the way of creationists' catechism, so has politics now undermined patriots' naive belief that the United States is a functioning democracy.

    The 21st century opened with a handful of Supreme Court puppets appointing George W. Bush president after he lost the popular vote - and we all know the costs in blood and treasure that insult wrought. Now the decade closes with another cabal of stooges assaulting the "one person, one vote" principle - and potentially bringing about another disaster.

    Here we have a major congressional push to fix a health care system that leaves one-sixth of the country without coverage. Here we have 535 House and Senate delegates elected to give all 300 million of us a voice in the solution. And here we have just 13 of those delegates holding the initiative hostage.

    In the Senate, both parties have outsourced health care legislation to six Finance Committee lawmakers: Max Baucus, D-Mont.; Kent Conrad, D-N.D.; Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M.; Mike Enzi, R-Wyo.; Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Olympia Snowe, R-Maine. The group recently announced it is rejecting essential provisions like a public insurance option that surveys show the public supports. Meanwhile, seven mostly Southern House Democrats have been threatening to use their Commerce Committee votes to gut any health care bill, regardless of what the American majority wants.

    This, however, isn't about the majority. These lawmakers, hailing mostly from small states and rural areas, together represent only 13 million people, meaning those speaking for just 4 percent of America are maneuvering to impose their health care will on the other 96 percent of us.

    Census figures show that the poverty rates are far higher and per-capita incomes far lower in the 13 legislators' specific districts than in the nation as a whole. Put another way, these politicians represent exactly the kinds of districts whose constituents would most benefit from universal health care. So why are they leading the fight to stop - rather than pass - reform?

    Because when tyranny mixes with legalized bribery, constituents' economic concerns stop mattering.

    Thanks to our undemocratic system and our corrupt campaign finance laws, the health care industry doesn't have to fight a 50-state battle. It can simply buy a tiny group of congresspeople, which is what it's done. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, health interests have given these 13 members of Congress $12 million in campaign contributions - a huge sum further enhanced by geography.

    Remember, politicians trade favors for re-election support - and the best way to ensure re-election is to raise money to for TV airtime (read: commercials). The result is an amplifier of tyranny: Precisely because the undemocratic system unduly empowers legislators from sparsely populated (and hence cheap) media markets, industry cash can more easily purchase tyrannical obstruction from those same legislators. In this case, that means congresspeople blocking health care reform that would most help their own voters.

    Of course, there is talk of circumventing the 13 obstructionists and forcing a un-filibuster-able vote of the full Congress. Inside the Washington palace, the media court jesters and political aides-de-camp have reacted to such plans by raising predictable charges of improper procedure, poor manners, bad etiquette and other Versailles transgressions.

    But the real crime would be letting the tyrants block that vote, trample democracy and kill health care reform in the process.

  

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Comments

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When will the populace of

When will the populace of America get it? These elected officials to do OUR bidding only do their own. Not since the 'Sixies has legislation been passed that is actually good for the general public. They've all been for "special interests", ie., for those that can afford to buy off the gov't. Despicable.

These are the times in which

These are the times in which we will see what President Obama is made of. That's why we put him there.

Bloomberg.com reports 2 have

Bloomberg.com reports 2 have died from the bubonic plague in China. 10 are infected. Is 1 of the easiest & fastest spreading disease ever. Even with antibiotic treatments, about 15% die. This was what killed 25+ million in Europe during the Middle Ages. China is not that far away anymore. Why we NEED to have a unified 1-payer healthcare system in thisas the most efficient in this country & not the mideval fractured $Bceo- system we have today. From experience, in rural areas, a great number of people in rural areas have Medicaid, so as to already be enjoying 1-payer..

What are they talking or

What are they talking or ´representing´ about??? In the rural areas these 13 ´represent´, rural areas have 16% using Medicaid, opposed to 10% using Medicaid in non-rural areas-->THESE 13 ARE NOT REPRESENTING THE FACT THAT NEARLY 20% OF THEIR POPULATIONS ALREADY ENJOY 1PAYYERHEALTHCARE!!!![lost my previous thread]

It is apparent that not only

It is apparent that not only has the health insurance industry targeted these areas, but that they are counting on the Senators and Representatives from these districts to be as stupid and easily bought as their constituents must be to keep re-electing them. It is sad that the rest of the nation must pay for the power-hungry greed of a handful of people. Maybe it is time to start publicly campaigning against these types of politicians, not in the media, but door-to-door, face-to-face. We started this kind of campaigning in 2008 with the Obama campaign, and it worked. Now it is time to take it local and make it really work for the people. It is time to stop the media control of our minds and start thinking again for ourselves, balancing all the messages against the truth in our lives. Wouldn't that be a change we could believe in?

13 in congress hold the

13 in congress hold the nation hostage. What do they want? They already have the best health care. Are they doing this to take Obama down or do they believe we don't need health care reform? Or are they just on the side of insurance companies making huge profits while middle class Americans go bankrupt from health insurance costs?

The irony here is that the

The irony here is that the Democrats are as much if not more of a problem than the Republicans. This is really a problem with the two party system in this country, where in many elections it is hold your nose and pull the lever. Unless you can figure out how to change voting patterns in the high plains or the intermountain west there is little chance of real change. The interesting question is why such an important question is left in the hand of senators from several of our emptiest states.

One term for ALL political

One term for ALL political positions! No more re-elections! It is that simple. Serve your term then back to the public sector to work. It is that simple. Ron Paul wrote a bill for one term some years ago, but of course it was defeated. Americans need to demand it to stop the corruption, otherwise it will never stop.

Like these people from our

Like these people from our Imperial Congressional Monarchy even know what an emergency room even looks like. Love to see one of these privileged people go anonymous and head to the local hospital for "medical care." Such a damn shame that we pay so much and get so little, unless we are executives of Big Medicine. Money talks -- it always has and it does now, more than ever. It is a sad situation for most Americans.

On a related note: Bill

On a related note: Bill Maher was being interviewed by Wolf Blitzer this weekend on CNN and was asked if he thought that Sarah Palin could be elected president. Maher replied that he wouldn't be surprised at anything in "this stupid country". Immediately shifting into damage control mode, Blitzer questioned the "stupid" remark. Maher said that much of this country IS stupid, or at least it acts stupidly, citing the Bush administration as proof. What can I add to that? We Americans can behave so stupidly, it is a miracle that this country has survived as long as it has! As divided as we are, I wonder if we'll still be here in 20, 30, 50 years? Or if we'll have universal health insurance by then? Not if Baucus has his way, I'd wager.

Hey Mr Sirota, thank you,

Hey Mr Sirota, thank you, thank you for the excellent, pithy, and on-the-money talking points!!! The congress crittes cited above? I am writing to them as soon as I finish this...