Looks like the Senate Finance Committee has released an outline of their healthcare reform plan. Single-Payer? Yeah, right. No, it seems they plan on requiring insurance companies to offer plans covering between 65 and 90 percent of your medical expenses (depending on whether you go for the bronze, silver, gold or platinum plan). Supposedly, they’ll be forced to cover anybody, with no pre-existing conditions provisions and no “status rating” (I’m sure those parts of the bill will be quietly stricken in conference – if they even make it that far). There will be penalties for large companies not offering insurance, and “tax credits” as incentives to individuals and small businesses for purchasing insurance. Sounds like a good deal for the insurance companies, doesn’t it?
For the really poor people, there’s medicaid. If you’re a childless adult living at the poverty level, you’ll be able to opt in. Pregnant women and children get to be living at 133% of the poverty level. So, let’s see. Looking at the HHS site, the poverty income level for a single adult is $10,830. That’s about $200 a week – less that $1,000 a month. $5.20 an hour, if you’re working 40 hours a week. And that’s not even minimum wage.
There’s no mention of how much this is gonna cost, but their last plan (basically the same as this plan, except this one is reduced) was estimated by the CBO to cost $1.6 trillion, so I’d venture to guess that this one will be at least $1 trillion. That’s a trillion dollar gift to the insurance industry (no to mention the co-pays and whatnot) from us to continue the shitty system we have now, and to encourage them to keep denying claims and making sick people (and their families) even more miserable than they need to be. All so they can keep raking in huge profits.
Sounds like a great plan. Right up there with Medicare Part D. I agree with Bernie Sanders. If you’re not gonna do it right, then don’t fucking do it at all.
The Chicago Sun-Times is reporting that Walter Cronkite is “gravely ill.” They don’t give any details, but he’s 92, so, well, it doesn’t sound too good. People around my age grew up getting the news from Walter.
He also did a Saturday show called “You Are There” – which started as a radio show – where they’d recreate historical events. Except they had CBS news reporters covering it. Always liked that show.
Anyway, I remember seeing Cronkite in an interview years ago, talking about his first “broadcasting” job , working for a bookie at a horse racing parlor (this being way before “Off Track Betting”). They’d get the wire reports from horse races around the country, and then he’d hang out in the back and “report” them “live” over a loudspeaker.
If you’re old enough, you probably got the news of JFK’s assassination from Walter Cronkite. You stayed up late one night in July, 1969, and watched humans walk on moon for the first time. And you heard “the most trusted man in America” tell you that the war in Vietnam was lost (effectively ending LBJ’s presidency).
Good luck to you Walter. If you can, try and stick around for a few more years. If not, may you pass easily. And do a remote report from the other side.
(CRONKITE: We had them on incidentally, we had the opponents on the air the very day of
the moon landing.
Walter Cronkite.
(CRONKITE: When the entire world was celebrating. … We had Kurt Vonnegut on the air we
had Gloria Steinem on the air I remember those two particularly who were bitter about the
fact we were on the moon. … And incidentally, they got a tremendous amount of insulting
mail I would suggest because it seemed that they were raining on our parade.)
I remember seeing this. I don’t remember it being on moon landing prime time but it was on. It was probably the first time I had seen these two but I admired their gumption going up against the voice of god and him for letting them. It got to Uncle Walter a bit and in the heat of the actual landing he actually had to mention those people who were ‘poo-pooing’ this great moment. I think he might have said that even they must have a lump in their throat watching the triumphant moment.
I wonder how Cronkite would fair in the TV news these days with all of the media dilution and overkill. Is there anyone around these days who we will remember in 40 or 50 years the likes of him or Huntley, Brinkley, Reasoner, Sevareid, Kuralt, Mudd, etc.
I listened briefly this morning, to Morning Joe. He and Buchanan were moaning about the deficit.
They had to remember how to moan about deficits as they never did so as Bush turned a surplus into a deficit or Reagan demonstrated that the Laffer curve was really just good for a laugh.
I have to remember not to listen, ever.
The subcommittee’s chairman, Democrat Bart Stupak of Michigan, called the hearing to highlight the obnoxious and unethical practice called rescission. His researchers produced performance reviews of insurance company bureaucrats who were praised and rewarded for kicking people off their coverage.
Then Stupak asked three health insurance executives the big question: Will your company pledge to end the practice of rescission except in cases of intentional fraud?
All three health insurance executives said no.
It was as dramatic as congressional testimony gets. Yet it got no airtime on the networks, nor, as far as I can tell, on cable news, although CNN.com did run a story. Time’s Tumulty was all over it, as was Lisa Girion of The Lost Angeles Times. But the story did not make The New York Times.
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/06/19/begala.health.care/index.html?eref=rss_topstories
Does anyone else here podcast BRL using iTunes? Yesterday’s show never came down.
And Sue, that hearing should be used as the very reason why Single Payer is the only real solution to our healthcare problem. Which is why you won’t see it on the news.
I don’t use iTunes, but I do podcast it. I think they’ve been getting the show out late. It was still transcoding by the time I had to leave this morning. If you use this link, you can download it manually:
http://breakroomlive.blip.tv/rss/ or audio only at http://airamerica.com/ondemand/podcast/86877/full
You might have to ask iTunes for permission first, though. 😉
Sarod maestro Ali Akbar Khan dies
🙁 :om: :gate:
After the Rochester billionaire Tom Golisano brokered the coup last week that threw the State Senate into chaos, he strolled the halls of the Capitol proclaiming himself a reformer on a mission to shake up Albany’s old ways of questionable ethics and self-dealing.
But what Mr. Golisano did not advertise is that his own political action committee, Responsible New York, is under investigation, as are two other groups run by his top adviser, Steven Pigeon, who helped him engineer the Republican takeover of the Senate.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/19/nyregion/19golisano.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=groups%20controlled%20by%20golisano%20and%20aide&st=cse
Pigeon also had some help in the coup. He admitted last week that Roger Stone was in on the action too. Stone, of course, is a shady Republican political operative who has done a lot of his own damage in New York and also has ties to Specter.
So Arlen Specter, who switched from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party in late April, is siding with two characters who have been key players in the dysfunction going in the New York State Senate. Pigeon and Stone both had a hand in taking apart the Democratic majority (something both men surely got a lot of pleasure out of) and now Specter, who is trying to show just how much of a Democrat he is, is welcoming their support. Pigeon is playing a role in raising money for him and Stone has held a fundraiser in the past for Specter.
http://www.thealbanyproject.com/diary/6625/pasen-arlen-specters-ties-to-steve-pigeon-roger-stone
been reading a lot of books from the 1800’s lately.
interesting perspectives.
some fairly good rants about how full of BS congressmen and senators can be.
makes you realize that greed and stupidity are universal
and have real staying power.
makes you wonder as we teeter on the edge of global destruction if we’ll ever develop enough common sense to re-establish our balance with reality.
Pigeon coup?
Trying to regain momentum on a core issue of Barack Obama’s presidency, House Democrats on Friday unveiled legislation they said would cover virtually all the nearly 50 million uninsured Americans.
Major provisions of the draft bill would impose new responsibilities on individuals and employers to get coverage, end insurance company practices that deny coverage to the sick and create a new government-sponsored plan to compete with private companies.
But it remained far from clear how the Democrats intend to pay for their plan, even as they vowed to take the legislation to the House floor by the end of July. Lawmakers got sticker shock this week after budget analysts estimated costs of $1 trillion-plus on just partial plans.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31442604/ns/politics-capitol_hill/
I just heard that Al Sharpton is going to try to broker some kind of resolution to the Albany Circus. This, at least, should be fun.
If only the House showed as much courage passing meaningful legislation as they do passing meaningless resolutions.