Truthout Original

Health Care and Ghosts of War

by: Norman Solomon, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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As $2 billion a day is spent on funding military operations, 47 million Americans still cannot afford health insurance. (Photo: Reuters)

    Speaking in a time of war, Martin Luther King Jr. said: "Somehow this madness must cease."

    Forty-one years later, young soldiers are returning to the United States from terrifying zones of carnage. The old claims of a justified war have melted away. So have the promises of a humane society back home.

    Statistics about the war dead tell us very little about human realities. And familiar downbeat numbers about health care - 47 million Americans with no health insurance, perhaps an equal number woefully underinsured - tell us very little about the actual consequences or other options.

    "The shocking facts about health care in the United States are well-known," Yes! Magazine noted in the autumn of 2006. "There's little argument that the system is broken. What's not well-known is that the dialogue about fixing the health care system is just as broken."

    That's an apt description. For all the media focus and political rhetoric on health care, the mainline discourse is stuck in a corporate-friendly rut. But there are signs that a movement for a rational, humanistic health care system in this country is gaining strength.

    A few hours after writing these words, I'll be at a large demonstration in San Francisco. The lightning rod for this historic June 19 protest is a national meeting of America's Health Insurance Plans, an outfit that cheerily pitches itself as "a national trade association representing nearly 1,300 member companies providing health benefits to more than 200 million Americans."

    As it happens, this meeting of America's Health Insurance Plans got underway just as news broke that the Congressional "leadership" has devised a formula to fully fund more war. "Democratic and GOP leaders in the House announced agreement Wednesday on a long-overdue war funding bill they said President Bush would be willing to sign," The Associated Press reported. The bill would "provide about $165 billion to the Pentagon to fund military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan for about a year."

    There's a lot of profit in death. Under the guise of national security. And under the guise of health care.

    Today, across the United States, people are dying because they don't have access to health care. But policy solutions are available. In Congress, about 90 cosponsors are backing H.R. 676, a bill to provide "comprehensive health insurance coverage for all United States residents." Call it whatever you like - "single payer" or "improved Medicare for all" or "universal health care with choice of providers and no financial barriers." What it adds up to is the policy option of treating health care as the human right that it is.

    In the latest edition of "Health Care Meltdown," author C. Rocky White identifies himself as "a conservative Republican who has always held an entrepreneurial 'pull yourself up by your own bootstraps' free-market philosophy." A longtime physician, White describes "the frustration I began to experience while trying to provide compassionate, quality health care in the context of a market in which the accustomed rules of business economics don't apply."

    Dr. White immersed himself in research on health care policy and finance. Then he pored through reams of the latest data on the tradeoffs of reform options. "No matter how I turned the cube," he writes, "the answer never changed. That answer was nearly impossible for me, a free-market Republican, to accept."

    Here are Dr. White's two key conclusions in his own words:

  • "Until we remove the motive of profit from the financing of health care, we cannot and we will not resolve our current health care crisis."

  • "Any group that proposes reform policy that maintains the use of for-profit insurance companies in a so-called free market is being driven by one single motive - to protect the golden coffers of their share of the $2 trillion cash cow!"
  •     Dr. White adds: "To continue down this road is paramount to suggesting that we privatize our fire and police services and turn them into for-profit organizations. You do that and people will die - just as they are dying now under our current health care system!"

        Grotesquely, the insurance and hospital industries at the center of health care in the United States are, in effect, profiting from priorities that condemn many people to death and many more to avoidable suffering.

        Meanwhile, corporate enterprises continue to make a killing from US military expenditures now in the vicinity of $2 billion per day.

        During a wartime speech in 1969, Nobel Prize-winning biologist George Wald said: "Our government has become preoccupied with death, with the business of killing and being killed."

        The preoccupation continues.

        "When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people," Martin Luther King observed, "the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism and militarism are incapable of being conquered."

        Still, somehow, this madness must cease.

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    Norman Solomon, the author of "War Made Easy," is a national co-chair of Healthcare NOT Warfare. The other co-chairs of the campaign, launched by Progressive Democrats of America, are Donna Smith (featured in "Sicko"), Marilyn Clement (national coordinator of Healthcare-NOW) and Representative John Conyers, chief sponsor of H.R. 676

    Comments

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    meanwhile we spread depleted

    meanwhile we spread depleted uranium around the world, causing birth defects, while building the biggest consulate ever in a area we have already polluted.....I wonder who will end up working in said consulate, right there in the glowing zone, and who will pick up their healthcare?? Surely it won't be the same treasonous rats that are making a worthless Federal reserve note off the spread of these wonderful nuclear waste products......

    Re Too true Obama saying he

    Re Too true Obama saying he was going to put Hillary in charge of health care reform would be a good start if not the complete answer. The real problem is Americans have been brainwashed to hell, as soon as you start asking for health care, the health profiteers cry socialism. I've heard many young people who have bought in to that argument. Of course it is socialistic, that is the point! In socialism the many take care of the needy (like Jesus said to do), but we have been taught socialism is a dirty word. It's time to put that "CHANGE" thinking cap on.

    Would that all writings

    Would that all writings about the costs of the preemptive military invasion and armed occupation of Iraq always include the costs to the children of Iraq! How many hundreds of thousands of children under the age of 15 has our invasion killed, injured, deprived forever of anything approaching a normal life? What will we do if a bill for reparations comes due on top of the debt incurred for Bush & Cheney's follies?

    Too true, & the US Supreme

    Too true, & the US Supreme Court continues to take the US down that road. It was a big mistake for the Radical Republicans of the Lincoln era to persuade the courts to treat corporations as humans, i.e., endow them with civil rights. They now have greater rights than many humans in the US do. I could not agree with that GOP MD more--on that issue, anyway. Question is: how do we elect people with the guts to take on the US health insurance industry & its lobbyists?