Sunday, September 6, 2009

Support Congress Members on Public Option, Potter: Rally Against Wall Street's Health Care Takeover

 
----- Original Message -----
 
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "Charles Chamberlain, Democracy for America" <info@democracyforamerica.com>
To: saidychess@sbcglobal.net
Sent: Saturday, September 5, 2009 9:00:28 AM
Subject: Last chance before Congress returns

Anthony -

Last chance to thank House Healthcare Heroes for standing up
This week, we kicked off September reminding Congress that passing the choice of a public health insurance option is about people -- not politics.

Organized by our partners at MoveOn, DFA members joined in holding over 350 "Can't Afford To Wait" vigils nationwide. Local papers covered many of the events whether there were 15 people attending or several hundred. And members of Congress were reminded that real people have real stories and are depending on them to pass real reform.

Take a look below at some of the great photos taken from the events, but vigils are just the start. Congress returns to D.C. next week and they need to know where you stand. The 64 Democrats who have stood up to draw a line in the sand need to know we have their backs. They need to know that no matter what happens we're depending on them to not back down.

Over 60,000 Americans have signed on to thank the House Healthcare Heroes for committing to not vote for a bill if it doesn't include a public option. We will deliver all the signatures next week. Can you help us get to 75,000 signatures by Tuesday night?
Last chance to thank House Healthcare Heroes for standing up
ADD YOUR NAME THEN PASS IT ON

President Obama will speak to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday. There's been a lot of speculation about what he might say. Will he draw a line in the sand? Will he sell out the public option for the insurance industry? Or will he continue to say that he feels the public option is the best way to achieve his reform goals, but that he's willing to consider alternatives? We won't know until he speaks.

What we do know is that thanks to our House Healthcare Heroes, a healthcare reform bill without a public option is DOA in the House of Representatives. So on Wednesday morning, hours before the President speaks, we'll deliver every signature to each of the 65 House Democrats and make sure they know that America has their back.

SEND A MESSAGE TO CONGRESS: "STAND UP FOR AMERICA AND WE'LL STAND UP FOR YOU"

We're near the end game. We will pass the choice of a public option this year. But victory is never easy. It takes the courage to stand your ground when the going gets tough.

Let's make sure our House Healthcare Heroes know when they stand their ground, we're standing with them.

Thank you for everything you do,

-Charles

Charles Chamberlain, Political Director
Democracy for America


Democracy for America relies on you and the people-power of more than one million members to fund the grassroots organizing and training that delivers progressive change on the issues that matter. Please Contribute Today and support our mission.
Paid for by Democracy for America, http://dfa2.convio.net/site/R?i=6X_gWbwQ22ZHfxLwBgfg9g.. and not authorized by any candidate. Contributions to Democracy for America are not deductible for federal income tax purposes.

***

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/09/01-14

Rally Against Wall Street's Health Care Takeover
by Wendell Potter

Common Dreams: September 1st, 2009

(Wendell Potter has served since May 2009 as CMD's Senior Fellow on Health
Care. After a 20-year career as a corporate public relations executive, last
year he left his job as head of communications for one of the nation's
largest health insurers to try his hand at helping socially responsible
organizations -- including those advocating for meaningful health care
reform -- achieve their goals.)

Saturday, August 29 I had the good fortune to speak at a community rally for
health care reform in a city park in downtown Portland, Oregon. It was a
broad-based and diverse group with many signs and placards supporting the
'public option' being debated by Congress, and others calling for 'single
payer' reform like that working effectively in other countries such as
Canada. Here is what I said:

I would like to begin by apologizing to all of you for the role I played 15
years ago in cheating you out of a reformed health care system. Had it not
been for greedy insurance companies and other special interests, and their
army of lobbyists and spin-doctors like I used to be, we wouldn't be here
today.

I'm ashamed that I let myself get caught up in deceitful and dishonest PR
campaigns that worked so well, hundreds of thousands of our citizens have
died, and millions of others have lost their homes and been forced into
bankruptcy, so that a very few corporate executives and their Wall Street
masters could become obscenely rich.

But It was only during the last few years of my career that I came to
realize the full scope of the harm my colleagues and I had caused, and the
lengths that insurance companies will go to increase their profits at the
expense of working families.

As I told the Senate Commerce Committee two months ago, the higher up the
corporate ladder I climbed, the more I could see how insurance companies
confuse their customers and dump the sick - all so they can satisfy those
Wall Street masters.

I described for the senators how insurers make promises they have no
intention of keeping, how they flout regulations designed to protect
consumers, and how they make it nearly impossible to understand -- or even
to obtain -- information consumers need.

I also told the Committee how the industry has conducted duplicitous and
well-financed PR and lobbying campaigns every time Congress has tried to
reform our health care system -- and how its current behind-scenes-efforts
may well shape reform in a way that benefits Wall Street far more than
average Americans.

I noted that, just as the industry did 15 years ago when it led the effort
to kill the Clinton reform plan, it is using shills and front groups to
spread lies and disinformation to scare Americans away from the very reform
that would benefit them most.

Make no mistake, the industry, despite its public assurances to be
good-faith partners with the President and Congress, has been at work for
years laying the groundwork for devious and often sinister campaigns to
manipulate public opinion.

The industry goes to great lengths to keep its involvement in these
campaigns hidden from public view. But I know from having served on many
trade group committees that industry leaders are always full partners in
developing strategies to derail any reform that might interfere with their
ability to increase their companies' profits.

My involvement in those activities goes back to the early '90s when insurers
joined with other special interests to finance the activities of an
organization called the Healthcare Leadership Council, which led a
coordinated effort to scare Americans and members of Congress away from the
Clinton plan.

A few years after that victory, the insurers formed a front group called the
Health Benefits Coalition to kill efforts to pass a Patients Bill of Rights.
While it was touted as a broad-based business group, the Health Benefits
Coalition in reality got the lion's share of its funding from Big Insurance.

Like most front groups, the Health Benefits Coalition was set up and run out
of a big and well-connected PR firm. One of the key strategies developed by
the PR firm as the coalition was gearing up for battle in late 1998 was to
stir up support among conservative talk radio hosts and other media.

The PR firm formed alliances with groups like the Christian Coalition and
the Family Research Council and persuaded them to send letters to Congress
and to appear at press conferences. The firm also launched an advertising
campaign in conservative media outlets. The message was that President
Clinton owed a debt to the liberal base of the Democratic Party and would
try to pay back that debt by advancing the type of big government agenda on
health care that he failed to get in 1993. Those tactics worked. Industry
allies in Congress made sure the Patients' Bill of Rights would not become
law.

The insurance industry has funded several other front groups since then
whenever the industry has been under attack. It formed the Coalition for
Affordable Quality Healthcare to try to improve the image of managed care in
response to a constant stream of negative stories that appeared in the media
in the late '90s and the first years of this decade.

It funded another front group when lawyers began filing class action
lawsuits on behalf of doctors and patients.

The PR firm the industry hired to create that front group, by the way, had
planned and conducted a similar campaign for the tobacco industry a few
years earlier.

The insurance industry hired that same PR firm again in 2007 to help blunt
the impact of Michael Moore's movie, "Sicko." It created and staffed a front
group called "Health Care America" specifically to discredit Moore and to
demonize the health care systems featured in the movie.

Among the tactics the PR firm used once again was to enlist the support of
conservative talk show hosts, writers and editorial page editors to warn
against a "government-takeover" of the U.S. health care system. The term
"government-takeover" is one the industry has used many times over the years
to scare people away from reform.

Health Care America also placed ads in newspapers. One of those ads carried
this message, "In America, you wait in line to see a movie. In
government-run health care systems, you wait to see a doctor."

With this history, you can rest assured that the insurance industry is up to
the same dirty tricks, using the same devious PR practices it has used for
many years, to kill reform this year, or even better, to shape reform so
that it benefits insurance companies and their Wall Street investors far
more than average Americans.

Americans need to be alert to how the industry and its allies are working to
influence their opinions and lawmakers' votes. I know from years as an
industry PR executive how effective insurers have been in using scare
tactics to turn public opinion against any reform efforts that would
threaten their profitability.

I warned earlier this year that Americans and the media should pay close
attention to the efforts insurers and their ideological buddies would
undertake to demonize health care systems around the world that don't allow
for-profit insurance companies to have the free reign they have here.

Americans must realize that the when they hear isolated stories of long
waiting times to see doctors in Canada and allegations that care in other
systems is rationed by government bureaucrats, the insurance industry has
written the script.

And Americans must realize that every time they hear we will be heading down
the "slippery slope toward socialism" if Congress creates a public insurance
option to compete with private insurers, some insurance flack like I used to
be wrote that, too.

Every time you hear about the shortcomings of what they call
"government-run" health care, remember this: what we have now in this
country, and what the insurers are determined to keep in place, is Wall
Street-run health care.

And know that we already have one of the most insidious means of rationing
care in the world -- not by people we can hold accountable on election day
but by insurance company executives who answer only to a few wealthy
investors and hedge fund managers who care far more about earnings per share
than your health and well-being.

If Congress goes along with the "solutions" the insurance industry says it
is bringing to the table and fails to create a public insurance option to
compete with private insurers, the bill it sends to President Obama might as
well be called the Insurance Industry Profit Protection and Enhancement Act.

Some in the media believe the health insurers have already won. That's not
only because the debate over reform seems to have been hijacked recently by
insurance company shills and people who believe the lies they have been
spewing, but because of the billions of dollars the insurers have been
spending to influence votes on Capitol Hill.

Folks, it is not too late to keep the insurers from winning, but time is
running short. We need to think of the coming weeks as some of the most
important weeks in the history of this country. We need to think that way
because they will be, and we must redouble our efforts to make sure members
of Congress put our interests above those of private health insurers and
others who view reform as a way to make more money.

If we want to take back control or our health care system from the big
for-profit companies that have wrecked it, we must take back control of this
debate. We must begin to talk in ways that reach our friends and neighbors
who have been influenced by the lies.

We need to tell them that we can continue to have a system that allows
20,000 Americans to die every year because they don't have insurance, or we
can have a system that will make sure their sons and daughters are not one
of them.

We should ask the skeptics of a public option, who are afraid that giving
people a choice of a government-run plan will lead to socialism, if they
would want to go back to the day when Americans had to buy private fire
insurance.

Tell them if they lived in Ben Franklin's day and they didn't have a shield
on the outside of their house indicating they were insured, their town's
private fire insurance companies would let their house burn down. The
private insurance companies would keep your fire from spreading to your
insured next-door neighbor's house, but your house would soon be nothing
more than a pile of ashes.

We must remind our family members and our friends and neighbors why we are
having this debate in the first place. If they tell you they don't think
their tax dollars should be used to pay for someone else's coverage, point
out to them that they already are paying for the care uninsured people
receive when they go to the emergency room and can't afford to pay the
exorbitant bills they get from the hospital. Those of us who are insured pay
an extra thousand dollars in premiums every year just to cover that
uncompensated care.

If they say they don't want to saddle their children and grandchildren with
additional taxes, ask them if they have thought what might happen to their
children and grandchildren if they found themselves among the millions of
people without health insurance or, maybe more likely, among the
underinsured.

Ask them how they would feel if their daughter came down with breast cancer
soon after she and your son-in-law moved into their dream house and just as
your grandchildren were beginning to think about college.

Ask them how they would feel if their daughter and son-in-law learned that
the insurance they thought would be there when they needed it required them
to pay so much out of their own pockets that they couldn't afford to pay for
their daughter's cancer treatments and also make the house payments.

Ask them how they would feel if their children and grandchildren were forced
out of their dream home and into bankruptcy, and ask them how they would
feel if their grandchildren had to give up their dreams of going to college.

Ask them how they would feel if their granddaughter fell into the wrong
crowd and died of a drug overdose just as her high school friends were
graduating from the college she herself had once dreamed of graduating from.
Ask them how they would feel when they found out that this all happened
because their daughter's private insurance company forced her to pay more
for her care than her family could afford just so it could continue to pay
its CEO $30 million a year and meet Wall Street's profit expectations.

Folks, I believe we Americans by and large are a compassionate people. Yes,
we believe in individual responsibility, but we also believe in the Golden
Rule.

I don't know a single American -- or at least I hope I don't -- who would
knowingly wish the future I just described on anyone's family. But the sad
reality is that many of the people who have become unwitting spokespeople
for the insurance industry -- the people who are objecting to a public
insurance option because they have bought into the lies the insurance
industry's shills are telling them -- will ensure that that horrific future
is a reality for millions of Americans, including their loved ones, if the
insurance industry wins this debate again.

So over the coming weeks, we must tell our conservative friends who are
worried needlessly about a government-takeover of our health care system
that what we all should really be concerned about is the Wall-Street
takeover that has occurred while we were not paying attention.

It is that takeover that has led to more and more working Americans being
forced into the ranks of the uninsured. It is that takeover that has forced
millions more of us into the ranks of the underinsured because insurers are
making us pay thousands of dollars out of our own pockets before they'll pay
a dime.

It is that takeover that has forced many of our neighbors out of their homes
and into bankruptcy. And it is that takeover that is causing more and more
small businesses to stop offering coverage to their employees because of the
exorbitant premiums that greedy, Wall-Street-driven insurers are charging
them.

I want to close by thanking you for being here today and for the hard work
you've already been doing to try to persuade members of Congress to do the
right thing. But as I pointed out earlier, the coming weeks will be some of
the most important weeks of our lives.

Let's pledge to each other that we will work even harder to ensure that
America joins the rest of the developed world in making sure that ALL of its
citizens -- our brothers and sisters, our sons and our daughters, our
neighbors and our co-workers -- have good coverage we can all have the peace
of mind knowing will be there when and if we need it. Thank you.



Wendell Potter is the Senior Fellow on Health Care for the Center for Media
and Democracy in Madison, Wisconsin.

 

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