Monday, March 29, 2010

Thoughts on Health Reform

Last week, the House passed H.R. 4872, the highly contested Health Insurance reform bill the country desperately needs. The provisions within the bill should help millions of Americans either already insured, or those uninsured combat the abuses and out of control insurance rate increases of the current health care system. Many of the projections for what the bill will do are not set in stone. They rely heavily on a step-by-step implementation process to curb the rising costs and increasing population of those who daily become uninsured. I will admit that some things may not align accordingly with all the projections set forth by the administration or economists, and future fixes are still needed, but this legislation, no matter how inchoate you may think it is, was a necessity. Reactions to the bill have been varied, ranging from the left's now complete crush on Obama (regardless of how he handles job creation and banking reform) to the despicable, unapologetic, and violent rhetoric and actions of the Tea Party movement. Perusing the blogosphere, I've come across some interesting arguments for why exactly this bill is so bad for our country, and will take this opportunity to offer counter arguments.

1. Health Care reform was not necessary.
The simplest of argument against the passage of the bill is plainly just ill-informed, or blind to the facts. Since 1980, the cost of health care, based on GDP, has nearly doubled. Over the next two decades (which would be right around the time my generation is reaching the critical age of 50), without reform the amount of money spent by the average American on health care would be right around 30% of their income. Imagine trying to save for retirement all the while dealing with some chronic, life-threatening illness and paying monthly, or even weekly, for prescription medication (which would of course be more expensive than it is today). Reform was something that could wait no longer. A Republican controlled House, Senate, and President did nothing to steer the industry from the precipice. The runaway train was hurtled at the Democratic party, who successfully laid their body out over the broken rails.

2. Now my premiums are going to go up.
This has been a humorous argument to see come up. In case you haven't been listening, insurance premiums were already rising at an astronomical level, far out-pacing inflation. Just weeks ago, some companies were reported to raise rates on individuals up to 39%, and on small businesses up to 75%! The Health Insurance reform looks to curb these arbitrary rate hikes by adding more people, and more competition into the market. Personally, I feel having some regulations in place so that insurance companies cannot raise rates without warning, or viable excuses, or denying coverage altogether is a plausible position. Liken this to the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. Repealing Glass-Steagall in 1999 deregulated Wall Street and set us up for the Great Recession, allowing the financial giants to take risky bets for the possibility or enormous profits (They lost...). Millions of people are up-in-arms over arbitrary credit card rate increases, but many of these same people are against insurance regulation. Are you kidding me? No regulation on Wall Street was disastrous. The same can be said about "Health Street." Yes, premiums will continue to rise (at a far less inflated rate than previously), but legislation was set in place so that even though you may pay a little more in premiums your total personal health care costs ultimately go down (as well as the government's, reducing the federal deficit). That's an important distinction to make.

3. Forcing 32 million Americans to have health insurance is just a big gift to the insurance industry.
Strictly speaking, this seems like a no-brainer argument from the left. Yes, adding 32 million more people as customers to the insurance corporations numbers looks like it would undoubtedly raise their revenue stream, quite substantially too. But this complex system doesn't mean at all the insurance giants' profits will soar. Look at the numerous examples brought to national attention by the media of everyday Americans who after learning they were sick, spent months in the doctor's office, racking up hundreds of thousands in bills, thinking all the while their visits and treatments were covered, only to learn their insurance company will in fact not pay for treatment because the corporation either found some loophole to establish a preexisting condition, or the person reached their coverage limit and they were dropped. All over the country this was happening leading to the record profits the health care companies garnered in 2009, despite the recession. Under the new laws, this no longer happens. Which means that yes, they have more customers and more revenue generating into the system, but they are now required to cover all treatments, no matter the cost; they cannot arbitrarily drop coverage, and the coverage limits are no longer viable. Most likely, these changes will off-set any projections for insurmountable profits by the insurance companies without damaging the companies' bottom-line.

4. No abortion coverage for women?
Liberals are especially angry over this one with the President. And it's not even his fault. Of course he wanted the measures in the bill to include coverage for abortions, but it was the House wrangling that ultimately defeated any abortion coverage. The House passed the legislation with 220 votes, just 4 more than the needed 216. To get those votes, the House needed 12 votes from conservative Democrats called the "Stupak 12." The "12" threatened to vote against the Senate bill if there was any language preserving federal dollars for abortions. So, the President did what needed to be done; he signed an executive order. This tallied the final votes needed for passage. As Bill Clinton said during his own fight for Health Care reform, "Do not let the perfect be the enemy of the good." Overall, the bill was needed. Not every provision could be included (see Public Option, also), but ultimately we've moved forward. Now, if you're angry about the abortion part: first, stop blaming the President. If it wasn't obvious, he wasn't happy about having to sign an executive order. Case and point: the totally unceremonious signing of said order the day after the bill passed the House. No cameras, no media allowed. Also, an executive order can be repealed by...an executive order. That simple. Further, if you want to see abortion rights progress in this country, go volunteer. Work to ensure Representatives like Bart Stupak are not reelected and replaced by more Pro-Choice Reps.

5. We have to wait until 2014 before so many provisions are enacted??
Yes. Part of the entire debate centered on the bill was the threat it would plummet our national deficit into unsustainable, and irreversible levels. "This bill will bankrupt us!" was the cry. As I mentioned in the introduction, the bill was written as a step-by-step implementation. First, the initial provisions occur to keep people insured: tax credits, the beginning of closing the 'donut hole' in Medicare, restrictions on denying coverage to children, or those with preexisting conditions, and dropping people arbitrarily. All these work to keep the amount of people already insured, insured, instead of having over 1400 people per day lose their insurance, as was the numbers prior to passage. Eventually this builds towards insurance for all. To cover 32 million extra Americans the government would have needed incredible capital to do that immediately (and in case you didn't know, we have a bit of a debt problem right about now). The only way to raise that kind of money quickly: taxes. And we all know how the majority feels about those. So enacting every provision immediately just was not fiscally possible, or responsible.
Furthermore, to contend that waiting until 2014 for these other provisions to kick in means John or Jane Doe, already on death's bed, will not see any benefits from the legislation is a terrible argument against any health reform. Would you rather we wait another 16 years before a Democratic majority attempts health care reform again? Would you rather not have the reformation process begin now so that Chris, or Sue, or Rosana, or anybody else who in the next 3 1/2 years will be diagnosed with some malicious, but curable disease, who without health care reform starting now, they would not have the coverage they need at that time to survive? It will happen, and most likely to someone you know. Now they have a far greater chance of survival and it boils down to simply giving people the coverage. This should have been done when Pres. Clinton was in office, and it hurts me to think of all those who suffered and ultimately died because reform was not achieved back then. But the past is gone, that bleak horizon of darkness. And standing here in the present as I am, the future, to me, just got a hell of a lot brighter.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

The Preamble

For months I've struggled searching for a foundation to this blog (political, a Brooklyn journal of living, the environment, etc), delaying the necessity of having one because I could not conclude what it was I wanted this site to be about. Simply speaking, it was foolish to delay. A completed work is never a mirror of the work at commencement; nor is it just a hardened, fortified shell of its adolescent self. Yes, the completed work grows, blossoms and flourishes from its inception. And yes, the completed work resembles somewhat its infantile state. But the completed work is almost always a thing born of a single idea, which at the end represents many ideas, many ideals, various opinions, at times contradictions within itself, and many different people. In essence, it is a living, breathing thing spun from the lips of a living, breathing human.

Hi.

Our bodies decay and reconstruct on a daily basis. In a seven year time span, all the cells in your body will have died and been replaced by new ones. I'm 28. I've rotted and reconstructed four times entirely in my life. Am I the same person today as I was 28 years ago? I'm digressing, and there will be plenty of time to explore the existential and metaphysical elements of life as we progress forward. But my point is: I'm -we're all- constantly changing. This living, breathing thing that I have begun will be constantly changing (and hopefully constantly updated!). To try at the beginning to pigeonhole this work into one set niche I think would be a mistake.

But that is not to say certain themes will not run through the posts consistently. I, like all, have my own beliefs, and values, and certainly they will spring up often, if not always, whether consciously or not. And I will try to uphold the principles that I live by within the posts, and hope that should I get out of hand, or severely off course my readers will right my path, provide the beacon of light to bring this unsteady ship into shore. "When people lead, leaders follow." I hope to provide you sound arguments for a more peaceful world.

Hence the name. For those familiar with the Japanese Anime Trigun, the "Humanoid Typhoon" is the name branded on the protagonist, Vash the Stampede, from civilians on the planet. He has been given this moniker because it seems that everywhere he travels, through every city he steps a foot, he leaves only rubble and death in his wake. He is proclaimed a criminal with a bounty for his capture. But those who come to know Vash, what he is and what he believes in, know that it is not he who causes such destruction- for he a kind and gentle man- but those in pursuit of him, either due to the bounty on his head or the gang of ruthless mercenaries sent to kill him because of his beliefs and his values. You see, Vash beliefs all people have the basic right to life, that not even he (who, as revealed, wields far more power than any average person) has the right to take the life of another, even knowing they are criminals, or those malicious souls sent to kill him; even in retaliation to murder, Vash does not condone "eye-for-an-eye" ideology. He upholds two basic principles, sets his moral compass to them, and delineates from them never: "love and peace."

Regardless of topic or rhetoric, I hope each post posits one of these ideals at the forefront and moves readers towards them. I'm sure disagreements will be had, and misunderstandings of my methodology or logic pertaining to certain topics will exist, leading some to label me the "humanoid typhoon." But I will work to calm the winds of hatred, fear, and ignorance from where destruction truly is derived.