By David Hogberg on 6.26.07 @ 12:07AM
Sicko scores some points against HMO's. Otherwise, it's as potent as sweetened cough drops.
It is hardly news to point out that Michael Moore is a very
talented filmmaker. Sicko only confirms this: Moore takes
a potentially very dry subject like health care and makes it
entertaining. Unfortunately, such a film in the hands of as skilled
a propagandist as Moore is almost certain to mislead its audience.
On that score, Sicko does not disappoint.
Having seen Sicko on Saturday, here are my thoughts in
no particular order:
What I Liked: Moore does a big service by
exploring the lengths to which health insurance companies will go
to avoid paying for care, a serious problem in our system. Even
though I suspect Moore has not given us the full story on some of
the cases he examines, those cases are nevertheless heart wrenching
and it is clear that insurance companies, especially health
maintenance organizations (HMOs), treat some of their customers
inhumanely.
From there, though, it's all down hill. Moore diagnosis of the
problem -- the profit motive -- is wrong. Within the next week I'm
going to pen an article exclusively about profit and health care
since it is an issue that is popular among the left. Suffice to say
for now that many other insurance industries -- homeowners, auto,
life -- also make a profit and there aren't anywhere near the
problems that there are in the health insurance industry. The
difference is that there is far more government involvement in the
health insurance industry, which often puts making a profit and
providing good coverage at odds.
Is This Movie About Health Care Or...: At
points in the film it seems that Moore is more interested in
bashing America for not having as generous a welfare system as
Europe's than focusing on health care specifically. For example, he
gushes about all of the great stuff that France has, such as free
university education, free day care, government-mandated education,
and government-mandated paid maternity leave. He interviews a
middle-class woman with a new baby. Not only does France give her
much longer maternity leave than we have in the U.S., the French
government provides her with a nanny for up to four hours a day.
She will, we are informed, help the mother cook dinner and, to
Moore's great delight, do her laundry for her. Do you suppose that
the U.S. will become more or less anti-French when it becomes
common knowledge that the government in France does their citizens'
laundry?
Moore continues in this vein with a rather odd interview with a
British chap who suggests that the reason we don't have such
services in the U.S. is that the "ruling class" here keeps the
people afraid of the government, and people who are afraid,
especially the poor, don't vote. If they did, the U.S. would have a
far larger welfare state. Someone should tell Moore that indulging
Chomsky-ite fantasies doesn't make his movies any more
credible.
The Contradictions: Also undermining
Sicko's credibility is the number of times Moore shoots
himself in the foot. Some of it is small potatoes. For example, to
mock Americans' fear of socialized medicine, Moore points out that
a number of our systems are socialized, such as our school system.
But later, Moore chastises the state of our schools by pointing out
that most public school graduates cannot find Great Britain on a
map.
Other contradictions are more serious. Sicko indicts
our system of private sector insurance by showing the ugly side of
HMOs. Later, however, it notes that our system of HMOs is largely
the result of Richard Nixon's 1973 HMO Act. In other words, the
growth of HMOs are not the natural outcome of private sector
insurance but the spawn government policy. Nor does this instance
of government bungling do much to bolster his case for a government
takeover of our health care system.
Other contradictions are less glaring but no less serious. After
condemning HMOs, Sicko laments the failure of Hillary
Clinton to establish a system of universal health insurance in the
U.S. during the early 1990s. But if HMOs are so bad, why would
Moore be so sympathetic to HillaryCare? After all, Clinton's plan
was dubbed "managed competition" because it would have put
Americans in one of a number of heavily regulated HMOs. However,
Moore leaves that fact about HillaryCare out of Sicko, so
perhaps that's more a case of deception than a contradiction.
The Deceit: I sure hope Moore got paid by the
governments of Canada, France, and the United Kingdom for the
romantic way he portrays their health care systems. Moore plays a
montage of American commentators claiming that the Canadian system
has waiting lists for surgery. After his visit to Canada, Moore
claims that "what we've been told about Canada is just not true."
But his "investigation" into the Canadian system involved chatting
with some of his Canadian relatives, interviewing one man who had
surgery on his elbow, and visiting a hospital emergency room. He
did much the same for the United Kingdom. Clearly he didn't spend
much time looking for people who had spent time on waiting lists,
although a bit of searching on the Internet would have been sufficient.
As for France, Moore spends all of his time interviewing people
who seem to be largely drawn from France's upper-middle class. No
doubt the government services they receive are reasonably good. But
one wonders if he might have found something different had he spent
time in one of France's Muslim ghettos. Nor did he spend any time
looking at how the breakdown of France's health care system
contributed to the nearly 15,000 deaths from a heat wave in August
2003.
The Shameful: Moore should be ashamed of his
decision to take ill and desperate Americans to Guantanamo and then
Havana, Cuba. Showing Americans getting treatment at what was
clearly a Potemkin hospital in Havana was despicable. Uncle Fidel
must have been smiling as he recovers from the surgery that was
initially botched by his Cuban doctors. If Moore had any decency,
he would have compared the medical treatment that America gives the
prisoners at Guantanamo with the treatment political prisoners in
Castro's gulags receive. One such prisoner, Guido Sigler Amaya, is in pretty bad
shape:
Due to the inhumane prison conditions he is forced to
endure Guido is suffering from more than ten serious illnesses:
oral infection with bleeding sores on his gums and tongue,
hypertension, renal and duodenal cysts, chronic gastritis and
migraines, dilatation of the aorta, partial loss of vision,
inflamed prostate, premature aging, excessive weight loss,
difficulty in ambulation, dehydration, thrombosed hemorrhoids with
one surgical intervention and more planned.
Alas, that would have undermined that Bash-America-First theme of
Sicko.
Some conservatives are worried that Sicko will move us
in the direction of socialized medicine. I doubt it. While
Sicko may inform the health care debate in this country
for the next month or so, it will probably have about as much
impact on our health care system as Fahrenheit 9/11 had on
the 2004 election -- which is to say, not much. Through contacts in
the film industry, conservative author Byron York discovered that
Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 had outperformed expectations in
"Blue America" areas like San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York
City, but underperformed in "Red America" areas like the Midwest.
Chances are, Moore's new love affair with big government will
suffer a similar fate. Furthermore, its timing leaves something to
be desired, being released over a year before the next
presidential election, when it might have had a much bigger
effect.
Besides, with the exception of some folks on the left, most
Americans probably realize by now that Moore is not really a
documentary maker. He's just a propagandist.
David Hogberg is a Washington writer and host of the
website Health Hog.
topics:
Education, Health Care, Movies