The majority in favor of universal health care needs to speak up
It’s time for those of us in favor of progressive health care reform to speak out. Otherwise, much of the media will continue to act like we don’t exist.
Over the last month, with all the focus on those rude reactionaries yelling in the faces of elected officials at town hall meetings, you might get the mistaken impression that they represent the majority.
Not so.
When the reform effort began earlier this year, a CNN poll indicated that 62 percent of all respondents were in favor of universal health coverage. Nearly 70 percent, according to the same poll, were in favor of greater government intervention in the health care system.
Yet, somehow, these numbers got lost, and the people who held these views were by and large ignored in favor of the yellers at the town halls.
But the case for universal health care is a compelling one.
At the present time, more than 45 million Americans lack health coverage. That represents 15.3 percent of the population. Even more striking is the fact that 90 million Americans did not have health coverage for some portion of 2007 and 2008, according to a recent study by the National Coalition on Health Care.
Universal health care would solve this problem.
Those who do have health care are paying more and more for it. In the last 10 years, employer premiums have increased 119 percent, placing a strain on individuals and businesses.
Universal health care would solve this problem.
Systemwide, health care costs are escalating, and they are not sustainable. In 2007, $2.2 trillion was spent on health care. That is 16 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, and an increase of approximately 300 percent since 1990, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Universal health care would solve this problem too. It would eliminate the high costs of administering policies for many different insurance companies. And it would give the government the leverage to bargain bulk discounts with drug companies and other suppliers.
Some people say they don’t want the government involved in health care.
But in 2007, government-run plans such as Medicaid and Medicare and Veteran Affairs covered 83 million Americans. This is roughly 28 percent of the population. This demonstrates that government health care is already a major part of the United States and that millions of Americans are using it regularly and have used it regularly for years. What’s more, they have a highly favorable opinion of it.
Some elected officials, Democrats and Republicans, think that it is more important for them to be re-elected than it is for the country to achieve universal health coverage.
It isn’t.
Insurance companies are placing their claims to profit-making over Americans’ claim to health care as a right.
Many years ago, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. stated the issue well: “Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane."
If we don’t pass real health care reform this time around, it will be a moral failure for the nation, and a tragedy we will soon regret.
Brian Gilmore, a poet and a lawyer, lives in Takoma Park, Md. He can be reached at pmproj [at] progressive [dot] org.
- Login or register to post comments
- Printer-friendly version
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
This form needs Javascript to display, which your browser doesn't support. Sign up here instead
|
Resist Censorship in Tucson
- Banned in Tucson
- An Interview with Carlos Muñoz on the Tucson Book Ban
| Banned Authors Respond | |
CURRENT ISSUE: FEBRUARY 2012
Inside the Occupy Movement
Arun Gupta and Michelle Fawcett | We visited nearly thirty occupations in twenty states in two months.
What I got at Occupy Wall Street
Breanna Lembitz | I spent seven weeks in Zuccotti Park, and here is what I got.
Danny Glover
Ed Rampell | The Progressive Interview | March 2012 issue
To Wed or Not to Wed
Stephanie Fairyington | March 2012 issue
Progressive Matt
The Koch Brothers Conspire to Buy the White House
Ruth Conniff at the People's Legislature in Madison
Standing for Justice at the Capitol. Matthew Rothschild.
Come to Progressive Talks and Events
Feb. 18, 5:30 p.m.
Ruth Conniff, Progressive Principles Conference at Yale University 11-1
Read more >>
Thursday February 16 at 7:30 p.m.
VandeBurg Room, Pyle Center. Madison, WI
Not Just Gandhi: The Tradition of Nonviolence Among Muslims in South Asia
Amitabh Pal Managing Editor, The Progressive magazine.
Read more >>
Friday February 17 at 7:30 p.m. Kate Clinton at the Barrymore with Michael Feldman in Madison.
Thursday February 23 at 3:30 p.m.
Garden Key Room, Student Union, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
Islam Means Peace: Understanding the Muslim Principle of Nonviolence Today
Amitabh Pal Managing Editor, The Progressive magazine.
Read more >>








Comments