By George Neumayr on 10.29.09 @ 6:08AM
Sifting through the claims of the Medicine Man party.
The rhetorical misdirection of the Democrats on health care is
impossible to exaggerate. Nancy Pelosi is now calling the public
option the "consumer option." Say anything, that's the strategy
at this point.
The Democrats are more like medicine men than health care
experts. That the plan wouldn't take full effect for some years
appeals to them. Once people start complaining about rationing
and high taxes, many of the Democrats, like medicine men who
scoot to the next village before their "cures" are exposed as
frauds, will have left office and become health care
lobbyists.
"Bipartisanship" for President Obama consists of talking
with Republicans who already agree with him.
But even that bogus definition won't hold up now that Olympia
Snowe has distanced herself from Harry Reid's plan.
Still, Reid has come up with an opt-out provision for an
opt-out president who likes deceptive compromises. "Our public
option isn't a left proposal or a right proposal," said Reid at
the press conference announcing the opt-out. "This is a
consensus, a compromise that represents months of hard work and
debate and will benefit all Americans."
Obama likes to appear as if he is taking the middle
position between conservatism and liberalism even as he intends
to sweep past the old liberal one. It is always more instructive
to look at the fine print in his plans than his summaries of
them. And what he denies today he can decree tomorrow. During the
primary with Hillary Clinton, he found it useful to run to her
right on the issue of compulsory insurance. Now he thinks it is a
great idea.
His denials about abortion funding in the heath care bill are
equally interim and disingenuous. The plan
deliberately excludes the Hyde Amendment, but listening to
Obama's speeches and his aides' opportunistic comments (Robert
Gibbs, batting away an objection at a recent press conference,
said, "There's a law that precludes the use of federal funds for
abortion") one would think it does apply to the plan and that
Obama was one of its co-authors. Would Obama have voted for the
Hyde Amendment when it was first proposed? No, and were it
re-submitted to him now, he would never sign it. He denies
that illegal immigrants fall under the plan, then calls for an
amnesty that would guarantee it.
An opt-out public option in any case wouldn't stay one for
very long. It is a way station like the Defense of Marriage Act
that the Democrats have to occupy temporarily while making other
plans. But it is contrary to the egalitarian thrust of their
legislation. If government-run health care is a "right," then how
can they rest until all states carry
it?
That Obama and the Democrats have had to resort to a range
of gimmicks and semantic somersaults in this debate contradicts
their claim of widespread support for the public option. If the
public supports it in polls, that's because they don't know what
the "public option" is. The same polls indicate that the public's
confidence in the federal government is plummeting. How can one
square the two if the public understood the public option to mean
insurance provided by the federal government?
So the game is to keep the people confused, thinking it is
a "consumer option," as Pelosi spins, or something else, but
never to let them see the fine print about it written up in Harry
Reid's office.
To pep up their spirits, Democrats have been chortling
about George W. Bush's recent appearance as a motivational
speaker. But Obama's failed presidency is a topic they won't
broach. His primary accomplishments so far are a stimulus package
that hasn't stimulated the economy and a peacekeeping award won
without any discernible peacekeeping. The pressure is on to sign
a bill, any bill, and claim "sweeping health care reform" before
the people know what has hit them.
topics:
Health Care, Democratic Party, Hyde Amendment