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Aquarian
Weekly 3/24/10
REALITY CHECK
HEALTH
CARE U.S.A.
A
Half-Century of Fear, Morality, Lobbying, and Defeat Gets Its
Vote
One thing I can say about this Barack Obama guy, he kicks my cynical
ass every time. No way an African-American, liberal, neophyte
can even show up to a fight with the Clinton machine, much less
defeat it for a shot at the most powerful post in the land. Really?
No way this guy can turn around and beat a white, right-wing military
veteran in a mostly center-right and still annoyingly xenophobic
nation. No? And there is no way in my lifetime there will ever
be any sort of national health care reform, never mind a single
piece of significant sweeping social legislation with the kind
of national debt, unemployment and rabid anti-government fervor
throughout the land. Guess what?
In
a few days from the writing of these words, there could be an
actual passing of a bill through congress that will in some way
ultimately affect -- one side argues completely, the other slightly
--17 percent of the United States economy. Agree, disagree, whoop
it up or gnash your teeth, this is a big one. As far as presidents
and history go, a really big one; politically, socially, and perhaps
even indefinably.
If
you think fourteen months of hemming, hawing, pushing, lying,
paying-off, manipulating, decrying, backstabbing, protesting,
more lying, and normal, ugly democratic silliness, then try over
fifty years of it. This is how long this country and its elected
officials, mainly Democrats with the notable exception of Richard
Nixon, have attempted in some way shape or form to tackle the
enormous and in many ways unwieldy United States health care system.
Harry
Truman, in the wake of an age of big foreign military triumphs
and HUGE government reforms, coupled with the last gasp of overwhelming
trust in the nation's political system, could not do it. Neither
could it be accomplished by the otherwise domestically effective
Lyndon Johnson, the last chief executive to work with the legislative
branch to this mass degree. The aforementioned Nixon gave it a
go, but stalled. And the last guy to make it a political clarion
call armed with a predominantly Democratic congress, William Jefferson
Clinton, mucked it up. Not this guy. It looks like this guy is
going to pull it off.
Not
since LBJ's Great Society and the Civil Rights bill has a president
asked his party to fall on a sword for a vote. In 1964, Johnson,
a dyed in the wool Southern Democrat from the old-school, asked
similar Southern Democrats representing racist counties all through
the South to cast a vote that assured the extinguishing of their
profession. It was filibustered and argued and threatened as tyranny
then, as this bill is facing now, on the grounds of state sovereignty
and other fair and salient legal and constitutional arguments.
But the Civil Rights bill and the martyrs from both sides of the
aisle were on the side of not just a moral argument, but a Bill
of Rights one.
This
time, however, there is no bi-partisan effort nor is there any
more than a hazy ideological divide on what is exactly moral;
allowing millions of Americans in the world's richest nation to
go without some kind of health care or the stringent idea that
it is something of a gained privilege to be able to afford to
see a doctor if one is ill. And then there is the fall-out; simple
human nature to inevitably abuse such programs, wherein an entitlement
becomes just another teat for the unfortunate or even lazy to
suck dry at the expense of the always-burdened middle class.
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When
something needs to be done, we're warring and banning and
throwing money and political rhetoric around as if the very
structure of existence depended on it, or we do absolutely
nothing. It's an either-or game we play with everything.
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And
how far to go? This is always the quarrel, whether it's the extent
and expanse of the unregulated business monopolies or creating
massive government entitlements to curtail the damages of an historic
economic meltdown. Sure we need to fight the Commies, but at what
cost, for how long, and how many lives are sacrificed for how
many screw-ups? Sure, let's federalize the banks, create a national
highway system, or how about crush one half of the American economy
at the end of the gun because slavery is immoral. Maybe all these
restructures could have been piecemealed, brought along slowly
to see what happens, but that's not the American way. It never
has been.
When
something needs to be done, we're warring and banning and throwing
money and political rhetoric around as if the very structure of
existence depended on it, or we do absolutely nothing. It's an
either-or game we play with everything. What is also the American
way is to water down what is left of the original intent of a
progressive all-consuming government-controlled, single-payer
pool, as practiced by Great Britain and Canada and other smaller,
less diverse nations, to twist in the most convoluted way as to
not be estimable by the most learned among us.
This
is how things get done and have been done since those who came
before us made it up and then amended it, and still there are
the exceptions, like when two presidential candidates are battling
out an election in the courts and one is handed the job and the
rest complain that its illegitimate, but it's really not, it's
just the way it goes.
And
that's history in a nutshell, from war and peace to bill-making
and ballot-counting.; petty, underhanded, spiteful, and mainly
jerky. It is simple math: The majority of the vote sends those
to their gig and they do what they will, and if it doesn't sit
right after a period of time, they go bye-bye. In November of
2008, the United States elected Barack Obama and a boatload of
Democrats. You would have to assume people, even those who use
the Daily Show and Glenn Beck as their news sources, understand
the ramifications of this maneuver. You're going to get government
stuff. Just as you know when you elect Oil Men, you're going to
get crazy wars for oil.
Still,
it is hard to fathom its come this close, and if a Health Care
Reform Bill becomes law this week than this is what the Barack
Obama administration will take into history as its legacy. Nothing
done from here on in, barring another in an endless series of
pointless wars will be as significant for good or ill.
Reality
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