Friday, December 18, 2009

Lost Opportunity

There's a ton of "I know it looks like shit, and it smells like shit, and it tastes like shit, but really, it's not as shitty as it seems" pleading out there, and it's tempting to go along. Unfortunately, we haven't believed in Santa Claus for quite some time.

Digby counters the "it's the best we can do" case:

That doesn't make sense and if Obama is able to persuade liberals with that incoherent line of reasoning then he really is good and they really are stupid.

If this is the only chance for reform in generations, wouldn't it have made more sense to fight for a truly comprehensive bill that actually solved the problem? If you've only got one bite of the apple every couple of decades, it seems remarkably foolish not to really go for broke. To end up with a bill like this as your once in a generation liberal accomplishment is about as inspiring as a Bobby Jindal speech.

And Obama can say that you're getting a lot, but also saying that it "covers everyone," as if there's a big new benefit is a big stretch. Nothing will have changed on that count except changing the law to force people to buy private insurance if they don't get it from their employer. I guess you can call that progressive, but that doesn't make it so. In fact, mandating that all people pay money to a private interest isn't even conservative, free market or otherwise. It's some kind of weird corporatism that's very hard to square with the common good philosophy that Democrats supposedly espouse.

Nobody's "getting covered" here. After all, people are already "free" to buy private insurance and one must assume they have reasons for not doing it already. Whether those reasons are good or bad won't make a difference when they are suddenly forced to write big checks to Aetna or Blue Cross that they previously had decided they couldn't or didn't want to write. Indeed, it actually looks like the worst caricature of liberals: taking people's money against their will, saying it's for their own good. --- and doing it without even the cover that FDR wisely insisted upon with social security, by having it withdrawn from paychecks. People don't miss the money as much when they never see it.

And as for the idea that insurance reforms are a huge progressive victory that can only be accomplished once in a generation, well that's a pretty sad comment on our country --- and progressivism.

What this huge electoral mandate and congressional majority have gotten us, then, is basically a deal with the insurance industry to accept 30 million coerced customers in exchange for ending their practice of failing to cover their customers when they get sick --- unless they go beyond a "reasonable cap," of course. (And profits go up!) If that's the best we can expect of progressivism for the next generation then I'm afraid we are in deep trouble.

*I realize that the subsidies and the medicaid expansion are meaningful. But they are also going to be subject to ongoing funding battles in an age of deficit hysteria. I don't hold out much hope for any improvement on that count. Indeed, I fully expect they will be assailed as welfare and eliminated as soon as Republicans gain power. They have learned from their mistakes --- don't let any liberal "entitlement programs " become entrenched. That's why a big comprehensive program would have been better. It's much harder to disassemble.

Update: I think it's really cool being lectured to by Obama about not getting everything you want. I would imagine that Joe Liberman laughed and laughed and laughed at that one.

Whatever crap Obama signs is not the best we could do; it's not even close to good enough. Don't let anyone undermine the long, hard fight ahead by claiming otherwise.

1 comment:

mud_rake said...

What point does this disaster of a health care bill prove about us Americans?

We are a dumb as dirt and as gullible as children.

By the way, i have proof. Did you see the recent survey? Only 29% of Americans 'believe' the scientific communiity's warnings of climate change.

Yet, 72% of Americans 'believe' in Heaven.

Does this help explain things?