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Towards a just & healthy democracy in the Commonwealth... and beyond!

Stein Says Insurance Industry the Real Winner in Health Reform Bill

by: eli_beckerman

Tue Mar 23, 2010 at 14:53:48 PM EDT


VOWS TO CONTINUE THE FIGHT AS CRISIS ACCELERATES.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 23 March, 2010
Contact: Daryl Sprague, 617-459-0784

LEXINGTON, Massachusetts - Jill Stein, Green-Rainbow Party candidate for governor, described the health care bill passed by Congress Sunday as lobbyists' legislation which offers few benefits at staggering cost. She warned Massachusetts residents to brace for skyrocketing prices and an accelerating health care meltdown, and vowed to renew her push for "real solutions."

Here are her remarks, made in a speech to supporters during a teleconference Tuesday morning:

"The health reform passed on Sunday is not the solution the American people have been looking for, but rather a triumph of business-as-usual. It will bankrupt individuals and local governments by forcing them to buy the expensive policies in a health-care system designed to exploit instead of to serve. Starting today, we begin the real battle to move beyond this costly non-solution and replace it with the health care system America needs.

eli_beckerman :: Stein Says Insurance Industry the Real Winner in Health Reform Bill

In shaping this bill, the Democratic Party excluded the cost control measures that would truly reduce the price of health care. They excluded the public option, Medicare buy-in, drug price negotiation, and expanding use of generic medications. Without such effective cost controls, our individual premiums are going up. And our taxes are going up to pay for health coverage for government workers.

This bill is almost identical to a plan that the insurance company lobbyists released back in 2009. It's no wonder that their stock prices have shot up 28% since Congress released it first health reform bills.

We've been told that "Something is better than nothing." A few features of the bill are indeed positive, but these could easily have been enacted without being attached to this massive mess of a bill.

Now the real battle for health care reform begins anew, with the people who understand that health care profiteering is at the root of our problems, and that the current system needs fundamental change. The Democratic and Republican Parties - who let the insurance companies write this legislation - are protectors of the status quo - not reformers. They put on a great show of arguing with each other, but neither is willing to do what it takes to come up with a real solution. It's time for the American people, who have so much at stake, to take the lead in this struggle.

Any discussion of reform must include the one solution that has been proven again and again to work - an "improved Medicare for All", or single-payer system. This key reform can cover everyone, lower our health care costs, and get the private insurance companies out of the business of telling doctors and patients what they can and can't do. We know it works because it is working in many developed countries around the world, which pay half as much as we do per person and have better health to show for it.

Democrats will certainly lose votes as a result of enacting this boondoggle. But it would be a mistake to consider the loud complaints coming from Republicans as meaning that they have a viable solution. They have shown no intention of reining in insurance company abuses or moving us beyond health care profiteering. The insurance companies will laugh all the way to the bank if people vote Republican to protest the Democratic Party sell-out. That's why the Green Party is key to solving the health care crisis. Since we're not taking money from the health insurance companies, we can tell it like it is, and offer real solutions. Every Green vote in November will send a clear message to put people's health ahead of satisfying the health insurance lobbyists."

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Winner, sure-- after Round 1. We can go fifteen. (0.00 / 0)
An exemplary statement (needless to say, I'm not surprised).

Best line: "A few features of the bill are indeed positive, but these could easily have been enacted without being attached to this massive mess of a bill." An important distinction, since too many are praising or damning the whole thing as either divinely inspired or a total disaster. I still feel it's a positive start--it sets a precedent for government involvement--but it's nothing more than that, and it's going to take leadership AND grassroots support that ain't going to come from the Democrats to move to where we need to be.

Statements like this one make it clear to me where the leadership WILL come from. It's up to us to demonstrate, over the next seven months, that the grassroots support is there as well.

Right on, too, in regard to the absurdity of voting GOP to protest Dem ineptitude when it comes to genuine reform. We're damn fortunate to have a real alternative here in MA (and they're springing up all over the country!). And we'd be damn fools not to work overtime making sure everyone else avails themselves of the same.

Did I say seven months?--yikes! Let's get to work!



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Quotes
"Now, is this the deal I would have preferred? No. I believe that we could have made the tough choices required - on entitlement reform and tax reform - right now, rather than through a special congressional committee process. But this compromise does make a serious down payment on the deficit reduction we need and gives each party a strong incentive to get a balanced plan done before the end of the year. Most importantly, it will allow us to avoid default and end the crisis that Washington imposed on the rest of America."
--President Barack Obama on the debt ceiling "deal"



"Despite Democratic control over the White House, despite Democratic control over the Senate, despite overwhelming opposition from the American people, a small minority of the members of the Republican-controlled House have successfully pushed an extreme right-wing agenda onto the American political landscape. It is an ideology which believes that despite the fact that the rich are getting richer, the middle class is shrinking, and poverty is increasing, all - all of the burden for deficit reduction should rest on working people."
--Independent Senator Bernie Sanders on the debt ceiling "deal"


Then and Now

Then...

"Last year Evergreen, a Massachusetts company, agreed to establish their first-ever United States based manufacturing facility here in Massachusetts. They did so, or are doing so, at Devens. They have now agreed and chosen to triple their size at Devens. Their next phase of expansion, right here in Massachusetts, a signature company in a signature sector, and we congratulate all of the folks at Evergreen and look forward to continuing to work with you... We made a personal commitment to Evergreen for the sake of Evergreen, but also because we wanted to show that there are ways in which state government, in working together with private industry and with the utility companies, could begin to create a different kind of environment, a different kind of business climate here, to grow that sector, and it is happening. It's happening. Evergreen is one of the most prominent examples, but there are a whole host of examples."
--Governor Deval Patrick, April 7, 2008, boasting about state investment in Evergreen.

and Now...

"Evergreen Solar Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday, completing a stunning reversal of fortune for a high-flying alternative-energy company that once seemed to herald a new era for the Massachusetts economy... At its peak, Evergreen employed roughly 900 people locally and attracted more than $50 million in state support, as its stock price soared above $100 a share.
Yesterday, Evergreen's stock closed at 18 cents. The company shuttered its manufacturing plant in Devens earlier this year and now has only 85 employees left. Massachusetts is one of its top creditors, owed $1.5 million in rent."
--Erin Ailworth, Boston Globe, August 16, 2011


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