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Monday, July 27, 2009

Why the rationing and wait times lies have traction despite being lies

For anyone who has even a vague memory of the 1993 health care debates, the same tired lies about socialism and health care rationing are even more threadbare and obvious.  Unfortunately, as I discovered when I wrote a piece for Lemondrop about what the word “socialism” means, how the way it’s used is to describe a concept that Americans already support (public ownership of some sectors of the economy), and how the proposed plan for health care doesn’t even come close to being “socialized”—-especially not compared to the way that our military and education system are socialized, or at least were before Republicans started to find ways to go around the public will—-and I got a feet-kicking resistance from conservatives who feel no need to have their talking points assailed by the mere truth. 

The problem is that no matter how bullshitty these talking points are, they have a ton of traction in a media environment where everything is about what this person says versus that, with very little real journalism designed to tell you the truth.  As such, the subject of health care rationing gets out there, but no one talks about the reality of the situation.  Which is that health care is already rationed severely, and reform is about finding a way to loosen the grip.  Of course, when insurance companies do it, they prefer just to deny your claims, and kick you off the insurance plan while keeping your money.  So that form of rationing will be restricted, giving more people access to health care.  Then there’s the rationing of keeping 46 million Americans off insurance altogether.  But even if you have insurance, and even if they can’t find a way to kick you off if you do get sick, there’s plenty of rationing.  Media Matters quotes Kathleen Sebelius explaining the whole thing quite sensibly:

  SEBELIUS: Well, you know, actually, what’s interesting about that fear is that it goes on everyday. It’s private insurers who often are telling their clients that, “No, you can’t get this recommended treatment that the doctor has made”; “No, you can’t get this drug”; “No, you’re not going to be able to stay in the hospital an extra day”; “No, you’re not going to get this because we’re concerned about costs.”

  So, people who say that, “Oh, this is a terrible idea; this could happen someday in the future,” it’s happening every day. But it’s really private insurance plans that are making those decisions. What we’re hoping to do is change that situation. Private insurance companies should no longer be able to decide who gets health coverage and who doesn’t, what kinds of benefits are available. And we want to make sure that it’s really health care providers that make those choices in the future.

I’ve noted before that the Republican tactic in battling health care reform is to take things that are already happening and claim that they will happen if we reform health care, and that the world you’re experiencing now is actually the future, because attempting to access health care through a private insurer means that you’re sent through time to a dystopia where that insurer has to work through a government system mandating care, which perversely means you don’t get it.  And while you’re in the future (thinking you’re in the past), your generous insurer, oblivious to the need to make a profit, is trying valiantly to find out what happened to you so they can pay for everything and buy you flowers while they’re at it.  As a persuasive technique, the time traveling one has its limits, or so you’d think.  But luckily, Republicans have an ace in the pocket with their base, which is their deep paranoia and fear of having to share stuff with the hoi polloi, especially when the hoi polloi has a darker skin tone on average than the Republican base would prefer.

 

 

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Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 10:27 AM • (93) Comments