What’s in and should be in the health care reform legislation

Note: this is about 1800 words long. You might want to print it out. The health care reform legislation that will be enacted by Congress later this month contains a number a different elements. It’s not easy to grasp it in its entirety. But there are a few key parts that you should understand for two reasons: first, because there is still time to make the legislation better and second because you should understand how much this legislation will accomplish, even if it doesn’t contain everything we want. Let me say one word on the last point before jumping into the details. We are not going to get everything we want in this legislation. But don’t let your disappointment about that blind you to how much we will accomplish, especially if we get most of the best provisions of the House and Senate bills in the final legislation. We will… Continue reading

I wish you could have joined Georgeanne Koehler in Washington

There have been many moments in the campaign for health care reform that have been hard and frustrating. But two things have kept me going: the stories I’ve heard about people who are suffering or have died for lack of health insurance and the effort so many Pennsylvanians have made to push Congress to enact good reforms. I’ve been inspired again and again by these stories and by the hard, thankless work so many people have done on behalf of reform. On December 17 I took part in an event that moved me more than anything else I’ve done in the 18 months of the campaign because it joined both of these elements. Continue reading

Holden needs to get his facts straight

Published in the Harrisburg Patriot-News, December 31, 2009 http://www.pennlive.com/editorials/index.ssf/2009/12/holden_needs_to_get_facts_stra.html It’s sad but not unusual to find big insurance companies misleading people in their fight against health care reform. But it’s distressing to see a member of Congress, Tim Holden (D-Schuylkill), repeating these same misleading claims to justify his vote against legislation that would benefit so many people in his district. Congressman Holden said he voted against the health care reform bill because it included cuts to Medicare and Medicaid benefits. This is what the big insurance want people to believe. It is what their misleading TV ads directed toward seniors say. It is simply not true. Continue reading

Your love is not like a faucet

Love is just like a faucet it turns off and on Love is like a faucet It turns off and on Sometimes when you think it’s on baby It has turned off and gone Billie Holiday Fine and Mellow Your love is like a faucet You can turn it off and on Albert King Don’t Throw Your Love on Me So Strong And I have felt A presence that disturbs me with the joy Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime Of something far more deeply interfused, Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns, And the round ocean and the living air, And the blue sky, and in the mind of man; A motion and a spirit, that impels All thinking things, all objects of all thought, And rolls through all things. William Wordsworth Tintern Abbey We usually think that power, strength, and achievement in politics and the world of ideas—and… Continue reading

Send yourself my posts as PDF files!

I jut found and installed a new WordPress that will let you send one of my blog posts to your email address as a pdf file. Given that I tend to write long, meaty, thoughtful (or just wordy) posts, this should make reading me a lot easier. Look for and fill out the the box at the bottom of each post. And make sure you click “more” to see the whole post before you do so. Continue reading

Where do our health insurance premiums go?

Published in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday,  December 20, 2009 http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09354/1022041-109.stm   A smaller and smaller percentage actually goes to health care, reports MARC STIER of Health Care for America Now Do you know where your health-insurance premiums go? Fifteen years ago, the answer to that question was easy. Whether you got insurance from a for-profit insurer, a nonprofit insurer or Medicare, the answer would about the same: 95 percent of your premiums (or, in the case of Medicare, your tax dollars) went for health-care benefits. Fast forward to now and things are very different. Continue reading

The House plan really is progressive reform

See two notes at the end, where I point to one unfinished part of this analysis and also show how my approach is similar to and different from that of Nate Sliver at 538. With the possibility that a public option won’t be part of the health care reform legislation passed this year, progressives are looking more closely at the rest of the legislation. And some of them have been worried by what they are seeing. For even when subsidies are applied in the Exchange, moderate income families will pay a substantial amount for health care in both premiums and out of pocket expenditures. Some progressive are asking how we can justify asking moderate income families to pay so much for health care? But, in fact, the health insurance program that would be created under the House legislation would be highly beneficial to moderate income families. Subsidized insurance under the Exchange… Continue reading

About the “progressive organizations” seeking to kill health care reform

Just to let you know: I’m keep track of all the so-called progressive so-called organizations sending me emails saying we need to kill health care reform. In the future, when they jump on another issue campaign to build their email lists—and that is when you hear from them because basically that is all they do–I’m going to get out here, on Twitter, on Facebook my blog and anywhere else I can, a reminder that these are the people who care more about attracting your dollars with misleading appeals to ideological purity, then about doing something that actually makes life better for poor and working class people. Continue reading