Thursday, April 10, 2014

An Almost Awesome Evil

 
It always amazed me during the last presidential election how Mitt Romney gave President Obama so much grief over the affordable care act....If you study what Mitt did when he was Governor...You'll see that his healthcare plan and President Obama's plan or what it finally morphed into were not so very different after all..

I'm just glad that recently, someone in a position to know was able and willing to speak on this and give Republicans the tongue lashing they so desperately need for trying so hard (some would even say) above and beyond the call of duty to gut the affordable care act, also known as the dreaded Obamacare!

MIT economist Jonathan Gruber brings a unique perspective to the health care debate. He’s not only an expert in health care policy and the director of the health care program at the National Bureau of Economic Research, he’s also one of a small number of wonks who helped design both Mitt Romney’s health care system in Massachusetts and President Obama’s Affordable Care Act.
 
Mr. Gruber sat down for a fascinating talk a few days ago with Harold Pollack about where the broader policy debate stands, and while the whole discussion is worth your time to hear, I myself was struck by their focus on Medicaid expansion in particular. Jon Gruber insisted we “cannot talk enough” about the “life-costing tragedy [that] has taken place in America.”
 
He had this to say-
 
 
“…I’m offended on two levels here. I’m offended because I believe we can help poor people get health insurance, but I’m almost more offended there’s a principle of political economy that basically, if you’d told me, when the Supreme Court decision came down, I said, ‘It’s not a big deal. What state would turn down free money from the federal government to cover their poorest citizens?’ The fact that half the states are is such a massive rejection of any sensible model of political economy, it’s sort of offensive to me as an academic. And I think it’s nothing short of political malpractice that we are seeing in these states and we’ve got to emphasize that."
 
He also said-
 
"Conservative policymakers in these states] are not just not interested in covering poor people, they are willing to sacrifice billions of dollars of injections into their economy in order to punish poor people. It really is just almost awesome in its evilness.”
 
That's it in a nutshell...Awesomely evil the way they are working so hard to deny millions what they've had from day one...Healthcare.....and not just any healthcare, but the best healthcare....
 
 
Take, for example, the increasingly heated fight over Medicaid expansion in Virginia, where Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) campaigned on Medicaid expansion as a key element of his 2013 platform, but where Republican lawmakers in the commonwealth are prepared to do practically anything to block the policy – including a possible shutdown of the state government.
 
 
Dahlia Lithwick published a powerful piece two days ago,I believe, making the case that she’s “pissed” because “there is no excuse, not one, to block the Medicaid expansion.”
 
The Commonwealth of Virginia is modeling dysfunction yet again this month, as the legislature fights to the death over Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s proposed two-year, $97 billion budget. The government is imploding in large part due to the fact that state Republicans in the House of Delegates have decided to fight tooth and nail – up to and including shutting down the whole government if this is not resolved by July – to avoid expanding Medicaid benefits to cover up to 400,000 lower-income Virginians who fall into the health care coverage gap
 
These are the folks who can’t afford to purchase health care under the ACA, but make too much money to qualify for Medicaid. The ACA would have taken care of those people through an expansion of Medicaid – money from the federal government to the states to cover the gap. The high court, in 2012, left it to the states to decide whether to accept the expansion. Virginia is one of the states having a hard time making up its mind. As with all government shutdowns, the answer to “why is this happening?” is “Republicans hate Obamacare.” 
 
 Last week Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe proposed a two-year pilot expansion of Medicaid, which could be canceled if it proved unsuccessful. This seemed very reasonable. The House Appropriations Committee killed it. So yesterday, in Richmond, both the Senate Finance Committee and the Medicaid Innovation and Reform Commission met to argue and vote about stuff. Republicans blamed Democrats. Democrats blamed Republicans. Everyone blamed gerrymandering and gridlock and ideology.
 
And so on and so on and scooby dooby doobie!
 
 
Dahlia Lithwick added that without Medicaid expansion, it’s quite likely that some struggling Virginians will, in fact, die unnecessarily. She added that “the sheer nihilism on display in Richmond shows what happens when you convince yourself that government can fix nothing..And this is what in fact they have done.

Awesomely evil...Awesomely sad...Awesomely unnecessary!
 

3 comments:

Arlene said...

Awesome points!! These republicans desire to do harm to the people of their state. They would rather see folks die in the street than admit that a plan they named for a black man can help. Sometimes I think they think they're playing God with people's lives, but instead I believe they are paving their own road to hell! Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi seem to be represented by the "George Wallaces" of the 21st century. We'll have to change their minds! Remember what happened to George and why he changed?!?

Big Mark 243 said...

Great post Keith ... and instead of being afraid to run on it, Democrats should hammer home in NO UNCERTAIN TERMS exactly what the Rethugs are doing..!

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