There’s currently something going on in Washington that Twitter has called “912dc” (New York Times story); it’s a protest against not any particular act by government, but against government itself. More Jeffersonian than anarchistic, though.
This protest bothers me a lot, and I thought that maybe if I wrote down my ideas as to why, it’d bother me less. There are a few reasons why people protest what they call “big government”:
- They feel that they don’t need the services provided. — This covers a lot of the rich-white-libertarian group and doesn’t get a response
- They feel that private industry can provide the services better than public government.
- They actually only disagree with some action of the government, but are protesting the whole thing anyway. — The foreign-born-Obama and 912dc intersection falls here
- (most rarely) They actually think the government is too big.
I’m sure that there are people at this rally for all of those reasons (and probably a few that I haven’t considered), but there’s really one that bothers me, and it’s one that I hear espoused a lot.
Private vs. Public
A lot of people like to bandy around the term “socialism”. The OED defines socialism as
A theory or system of social organization based on state or collective ownership and regulation of the means of production, distribution, and exchange for the common benefit of all members of society; advocacy or practice of such a system, esp. as a political movement. Now also: any of various systems of liberal social democracy which retain a commitment to social justice and social reform, or feature some degree of state intervention in the running of the economy.(ref)
Now, I would argue that none of the things variously called socialism (bail-outs of the banking industry, or even a public option for insurance) really count as socialism — they certainly lack the Marxist focus on “means of production”, and we’ve still got more than enough capitalism to go around.
Nonetheless, I think this definition lets me make an important point. Our government, in its very constitution, defines its own purpose.
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.
(emphasis mine). The goal of our government is, among other things, to “promote the general Welfare”. One of the idealistic goals of socialism is to benefit all of society. And what about business? What is the goal of corporations? To make money. To provide for the good of their shareholders. So I have to ask, all of you who insist that private industry is always better: why? Why do we think that a system of competing selfish interests is better than a system designed to provide for the good of all? It’s true, there have been plenty of instances of corruption, of failure, in government, on both sides of the aisle. But is it so crazy to prefer to hope that government can meet its stated goals rather than to have some crazy wish that corporations will exceed theirs? Does having that preference make me a socialist? I don’t think Marx would think so, but I think a lot of the people out there in Washington today, and a lot of the people at these “health care town hall meetings” (which aren’t about health care, aren’t town hall-style, and really aren’t meetings) would.
Health Care
Of course, this all comes back to health care. It’s the hot-button issue right now, and, really, it’s been an issue for decades. Nobody’s arguing that Americans pay more for health care than people in other first-world countries. Nobody’s arguing that there’s waste and excessive cost throughout the health care system. Nobody (at least, nobody who’s actually lived there) is seriously arguing that places like Canada and the UK have bad health care. So what are we arguing about? Partially, we’re arguing about things like “death panels” that are slogans to mobilize the feckless masses. The level above that, we’re arguing about whether it’s right for the government to assume the “socialist” position of supporting health care reform. And, in the end, I think we’re really arguing about trust. Do we trust that the government will do well by us?
Leaving the “public option” aside for a minute, let’s consider another contentious part of the health care plan: comparative studies. Nobody in their right mind thinks that comparative studies themselves are bad. When there are two options for solving a problem, every first grader knows that you compare them and pick the best one. But comparative drug studies inspire a lot of fear in some people; fear that essential drugs for a disease will be rationed because they’re too expensive. Fear that those with rare maladies will be left untreated. Those fears sort of make sense to me. However, the supposition that somehow private insurance (which we all know already excludes the sickest, and doesn’t even pretend to find the best drug for the illness) will do better — that boggles my mind.
And now the public option. I personally fully support it. No, not even that. I support a full single-payer system. No hobbled public option that’s not allowed to use Medicare/Medicaid resources. No limitations that try to let a bloated insurance industry compete with government (side note: if you’re bad enough at your job that a federal bureaucracy can do it more efficiently, you don’t deserve to compete). The government provides your base insurance, bottom line. If you want additional insurance, then you can purchase a supplement plan. Now, there are lots of logical reasons for my position (efficiency, cost, compassion). Perhaps there are good reasons to be so strongly against a public plan that almost half of Congress is acting like they’re three years old and sticking their fingers in their ear (at taxpayer expense!) all day, but I don’t know them.
Conclusions
So, what do I think is going to come out of all this? I think that the Democratic Congress isn’t unified enough and isn’t strong enough to push through what I suggest in the paragraph above, even if they could agree to like it. I don’t even know if they’re strong enough to push through a highly-limited public option. I think it’s more likely that we’re going to get a 10,000 page bill that subsidizes everybody who asks for it, achieves almost nothing, and gives us a resounding Republican victory in the 2010 midterm elections. Which is sad.
I think we’ve managed to radicalize a whole group of people, young and old, by providing fodder for the likes of Rush Limbaugh and not providing any solid response. President Obama is intelligent, literate, and persuasive — everything that Bush wasn’t. So why can’t he do a better job of winning over his political opponents than W.? Why do we have people chanting in the streets whose information on the issues comes out of a place of hate and fear? Where is the compassionate, bi-partisan response? Hm?
I don’t know all (or even many) of the answers. But I still feel better having written this. So, after all that, I think I’ll leave you with some humor. Angry Town Hall.






Why A Strong Public Option Is Essential – By jacksmith — Working Class
Robert Reich explains the pubic option: http://bit.ly/dDYSJ http://robertreich.blogspot.com/
It’s not just because more than two thirds of the American people want a single payer health care system. And if they cant have a single payer system 77% of all Americans want a strong government-run public option on day one (86% of democrats, 75% of independents, and 72% republicans). Basically everyone.
It’s not just because according to a new AARP POLL: 86 percent of seniors want universal healthcare security for All, including 93% of Democrats, 87% of Independents, and 78% of Republicans. With 79% of seniors supporting creating a new strong Government-run public option plan, available immediately. Including 89% of Democrats, 80% of Independents, and 61% of Republicans, STUNNING!!
It’s not just because it will lower cost. Because a strong public option will dramatically lower cost for everyone. And dramatically improved the quality of care everyone receives in America and around the World. Rich, middle class, and poor a like.
It’s not just because it will save trillions of dollars and prevent the needless deaths of millions more of YOU, caused by a rush to profit by the DISGRACEFUL, GREED DRIVEN, PRIVATE FOR PROFIT MEDICAL INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX!
It’s not just because every expert in every field, including economist, and Nobel laureates all agree that free market based healthcare systems don’t work. Never have and never will. The US has the only truly free market based healthcare system in the World. And as you all know now, IT IS A DISASTER!
It’s not just because providing or denying medically necessary care for profit motivations is wrong. Because it is WRONG! It’s professionally, ethically, and morally REPUGNANT!, Animalistic, VILE and EVIL.
THE REASON THE PUBLIC OPTION IS ESSENTIAL:
The public option is ESSENTIAL because over 200 million of you are trapped in the forest of the wolves. Which is the forest of the DISGRACEFUL, GREED DRIVEN, PRIVATE FOR PROFIT MEDICAL INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX! With no way out except through needless inhumane suffering, and DEATH. While the wolves tear at your flesh, and rip you limb from lib. Then feast on your lifeless bodies like a dead carcase for transplant parts.
At the most vulnerable times of your lives (when you were sick and hurting), millions of you have had to fight and loose cruel, but heroic battles. Fighting against the big guns of the DISGRACEFUL, GREED DRIVEN, PRIVATE FOR PROFIT MEDICAL INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX! in the forest of the wolves. All because you have no place else to go. You have no other CHOICE!
But the PUBLIC OPTION will give you someplace safe to go. And it will give us someplace safe to take you. The public option will be your refugium (your refuge). Where the wolves cannot get at you when your down, hurting, and vulnerable. Where everyone who needs it can find rest, security, comfort and the care they need. Protected by the BIG GUNS of We The People Of The United States. THE MOST POWERFUL PEOPLE AND COUNTRY ON EARTH.
This is why it is so critical that we do not lead another 50 million vulnerable, uninsured Americans into the forest of the wolves, without the protections of a Strong Government-run public option. We The People Of The United States MUST NOT LET THAT HAPPEN to any more of our fellow Americans. If healthcare reform does not contain a strong public option on day one. YOU MUST! KILL IT. Or you will do far more harm than good. And millions more will die needlessly. Rich, middle class, and poor a like. NO INDIVIDUAL MANDATES! without a Strong public option on day one.
To those who would continue to obstruct good and true healthcare reform for the American people, and who seek to trap millions more vulnerable Americans in the forest of the wolves. We will continue to fight you. We are prepared to wage all out war against you, and will eagerly DESTROY! you. Time…is…UP! YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED! No Co-op’s! No Triggers!
Healthcare reform can be the GREATEST! Accomplishment of our time and century. A time when future generations may say of us, that we were all, AMERICAS GREATEST GENERATIONS.
BUT WE MUST ACT!
I therefore call on all my fellow Americans and the peoples of the World. To join us in this fight so that we may finish becoming the better America that we aspire to be for everyone.
SPREAD THE WORD!
I have been privileged to be witness as many of you fought, and struggled to take your first breath, and your last breath on this earth. Rich, middle class, and poor a like. Life is precious.
Whatever the cost. WE! MUST SUCCEED.
God Bless You My Fellow Human Beings
jacksmith — Working Class
No Triggers! http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jason-rosenbaum/a-trigger-for-the-public_b_277910.html
Triggers http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-sirota/weve-seen-these-triggers_b_283583.html
Krugman on heathcare (http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/25/why-markets-cant-cure-healthcare/)
Senator Bernie Sanders on healthcare (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSM8t_cLZgk&feature=player_embedded)
Two points:
“Do we trust that the government will do well by us?”
No, not really. Everything the government does is backed up by the threat of coercive force. When writing the constitution, the founding fathers put in a system of checks and balances to limit the power the government had over the people. From their perspective they were protecting themselves against a possible tyrant. When you ask, “Should the government do something?” the question you really need to ask is, “Is it worth jailing someone over this? Is it worth killing someone over this?”
“A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government big enough to take from you everything you have.” -Gerald Ford
“Nobody (at least, nobody who’s actually lived there) is seriously arguing that places like Canada and the UK have bad health care.”
Mark Steyn is doing just that.