Richard Astukewicz, Hoping for Presidential Failure, and Patriotism
In the wake of the February, 18 release of a Dept. of Health and  Human Services report documenting the coming unprecedented growth in the  cost of health care premiums over the next year, and after reading  Richard Auskewitcz's nonsensical column in the Daily News the day  before, I could not not write this essay.
In his column, Mr.  Astukewicz threw out all his usual right wing boiler plate nonsense  about socialism, dictatorship, and his hopes that President Obama fails  at everything he attempts.
I can only wonder what Mr. Astukewicz  and others of his ilk think, if they bother to think at all beyond  regurgitating right wing talking points, of the news about the 24  million dollars a year some of the CEO's of America's biggest health  insurance companies received in compensation last year.
I wonder  what Mr. Astukewicz thinks of health insurance industry profits soaring  more than 250%  between 2000 and 2009, even while more and more  Americans go without coverage or have their claims denied.
But  the news gets even more disturbing no, disgusting in fact.
When  it appeared Dick Armey and the health insurance industry lobbyists had  all but defeated health care reform, especially in relation to a genuine  public option, the value of industry stocks soared into the  stratosphere.
Apparently, that windfall was not enough.
Anthem  Blue Cross of Calfornia recently announced premiums will increase by  39% this year.
The Dept. of HHS, in its report, predicted  premiums in other states could increase by as much as 30%, or more, this  coming year.
Here are some specific examples of what lies  ahead.
BC/BS of Connecticut last year requested a 24% premium  rate increase. The state denied the request, but a similar request is on  the table again and it is expected to be granted. Ah, the power of the  industry lobbyists!
Anthem of Maine requested an 18.5% premium  increase last year, which the state denied. But it is now asking for a  23% increase this year and, as in Connecticut, it seems likely the  request will be granted. Again, you gotta love those  corporate lobbyists.
Blue Cross of Michigan is seeking a  whopping 56% premium increase on its individual private plans this  year.
United Health, Tufts, and BC/BS of Rhode Island are  requesting premium increases this year of between 13 and 16%.
In  Washington state, insurers hoped to increase premiums on private  individual plans by as much as 40% this year, but it appears the state  legislature has intervened and put the kibosh on that chicanery.
Finally,  Wellpoint. United Health Care Group, Cigna, Aetna, and Humana took in  combined profits of over twelve billion dollars in 2009, up 56%  over 2008 - all the while the number of America's uninsured and  under-insured continues to grow.
Now, one of the rallying cries  of those like Mr. Astukewicz who oppose health care reform, aside  from the right wing lunacy that it is "socialistic" and will bring on  another "Holocaust", was that it, especially if it included a public  option, would send costs through the roof. Ah, excuse me folks, but  costs are going through the roof, not because we are actually providing  millions of Americans access to health care, but because the insurance  execs, much like their counterparts in the banking industry, are  greedy  "mother you know whatters", and they've come to believe they can get  away with it.
But that may be changing. Recent polls show strong  support still exists for genuine reform with the public option  included.
Congressional Democrats, at long last, seem to  be realizing they are the majority and, as a result, it looks like they  are getting their mojo back and may invoke reconciliation, exercise  their legitimate democratically bestowed authority, and pass  meaningful health care reform - perhaps even with the much needed public  option contained in that reform.
Now, current  conventional wisdom says the Dems would be shooting themselves in the  foot by doing that.
But I don't think so.
Approximately  37% of the national electorate is adamant they will not vote for any  Democrat in November. Roughly the same number is equally adamant  they  will vote only for a Dem come November.
The rest of the  electorate is up for grabs.
Current conventional wisdom says the  Right is ascendant in American politics, with the faux grassroots Tea  Party movement being cited as the clearest evidence but, again, I don't  think so.
I personally, for example, know numerous intelligent  independents, and even some frustrated Democrats, who voted for Scott  Brown over Martha Coakley mainly because he was, simply put, a much more  appealing and likable candidate than Coakley.
They were willing  to give him a chance.
Many of those same people, after learning  about his ties to the "Birther Movement", his putting six foot tall  cardboard cut outs of then candidate Obama dressed as Osama bin Laden in  his front yard, and his publicly stated position that issues pertaining  to people's civil rights should be put to a popular vote,  have told me  there is not a snowball's chance in Hades they will vote for Bill Hudak  against John Tierney.
They view Hudak as a fringe candidate,  more aligned with the increasingly paranoid, extremist, Palin, Tea Party  wing of the GOP than they are comfortable with.
They have,  however, made very clear to me that if the state GOP could get either  Bruce Tarr or Brad Hill to enter the race, John Tierney would be in for  the race of his life and, frankly, would probably lose.
Those  same independents, after watching the so called Tea Party Convention in  Nashville, are distancing themselves from a movement that once held some  appeal but quickly is revealing itself to be increasingly racist,  xenophobic, homophobic, and not at all representative of the points of  view of many, many independents hold, especially on important social  issues.
It's for all these reasons that I do not accept the  wisdom du jour that some new "American, right wing, revolution" is  underway.
If the Democrats maintain their mojo, if they pass  truly meaningful health care reform, if the Obama administration can  continue to report progress against the Taliban in Afghanistan, if the  Dow stays above 10,000, if the stimulus continues to create jobs, as we  know it's been doing thanks to a recent impartial assessment by a  bipartisan group of economic research firms, and, perhaps most  importantly, President Obama takes off the white gloves and comes out  swinging the way he did on the campaign trail, and if the Democrats can  campaign this summer and fall on genuine accomplishments, with health  care reform at the top of the list, the current obits being  written about both the Democratic party and President Obama himself, I  predict, will be proven to be very premature, very premature indeed,
But  that's why Mr. Astukewicz and others of his ilk are so desperate for  Barack Obama to fail.
After the mess the previous  administration, in concert with its GOP majority in both the House and  Senate for six years created, they know that if the Democrats and  President Obama are viewed as even moderately successful by the American  people, they and theirs will be banished to the political wilderness  for a decade, perhaps even a generation or two.
Michael Cook
PV  de Limon & Nbpt
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
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5 comments:
why????? please return to posting gillian, this isn't worth the keystrokes it takes to visit your page.
ditto
Why? Because you don't agree?
I thought that was the whole purpose of blogs and the like, for differing ideas and opinions to aired and shared.
then he should start his own blog. i'd rather read about newburyport on the port reporter unlimited. thats why i visit this blog, because gillian has a knack for finding interesting tid-bits about Newburyport and sharing them with us.
well, i enjoy reading Cook's POV as well as Gillian's.
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