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FOCUS: Bidencare Is a Scam Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46960"><span class="small">Natalie Shure, Jacobin</span></a>   
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 10:31

Shure writes: "Biden's new health care plan does little to address Obamacare's failures and keeps alive a predatory private insurance industry. Medicare for All is still the only plan that guarantees health care as a human right."

Joe Biden. (photo: Getty Images)
Joe Biden. (photo: Getty Images)


Bidencare Is a Scam

By Natalie Shure, Jacobin

17 July 19


Biden’s new health care plan does little to address Obamacare's failures and keeps alive a predatory private insurance industry. Medicare for All is still the only plan that guarantees health care as a human right.

fter months on the presidential campaign trail, alleged Democratic frontrunner Joe Biden has finally rolled out just the sort of health care plan everyone expected of him: a marginal improvement upon the Affordable Care Act, pitched explicitly as a safer, saner alternative to Medicare for All. Bidencare would create a public insurance option to be sold on ACA exchanges and distributed at no-cost to Medicaid-qualifying individuals in non-expansion states, as well as remove income caps for premium subsidies. In isolation, such incremental measures would slightly improve the status quo, while leaving intact the most corrosive features of the health care system that Obamacare failed to fix.

The American health care system is a thoroughly complicated colossus plagued by no shortage of problems, but most boil down to this: it’s run as a business, and patients are framed as consumers. This is why hospitals maximize revenue by building fancy new orthopedics wings adorned with philanthropists’ names, why they hire consultants to teach them new billing code tricks to get more money per patient, and why they merge with other hospitals to increase their market power. And what are insurance premiums but rent payments for a ticket into the health care system, each of which comes with its own stipulations and user fees? What is a deductible but a strategy to force customers to foot their own bill for as long as humanly possible?

Rather than upend this dynamic, the ACA made market-based health care slightly gentler by subsidizing poorer patients and halting the more galling practices of the insurance industry, like denying coverage to people with preexisting conditions. But most mechanisms for harm survived: the astronomical price-gouging, the shifting of those costs onto patients themselves, the millions of people locked out of any care at all, tens of thousands of whom will die because of it.

Bidencare concedes none of this, opting instead to hitch its wagon squarely on Obama’s legacy. “For Biden, this is personal,” his website reads, despite having privately cautioned against the ACA as vice president. “He believes that every American has a right to the peace of mind that comes with knowing they have access to affordable, quality health care. He knows that no one in this country should have to lay in bed at night staring at the ceiling wondering, ‘what will I do if she gets breast cancer?’ or ‘if he has a heart attack?’ ‘Will I go bankrupt?’ He knows there is no peace of mind if you cannot afford to care for a sick child or a family member because of a pre-existing condition, because you’ve reached a point where your health insurer says “no more,” or because you have to make a decision between putting food on the table and going to the doctor or filling a prescription.”

The whole paragraph is a brazen lie. Joe Biden does not, in fact, believe that health care is a right. The ACA doesn’t make it one. His proposed changes don’t either. Every one of the scenarios he lists off in his folksy “I’m a good person” spiel persist today, and still would under his plan. Tens of millions of uninsured and underinsured people can hardly be assumed to have “peace of mind.” Breast cancer patients delay treatment when their insurance plans have high deductibles. Medical bills are still a factor in some two-thirds of personal bankruptcies. If insurers can no longer flat-out deny patients with preexisting conditions, they can certainly still bilk them with high deductibles and coinsurance. While reporting recently on skyrocketing insulin costs, I was struck by just how many diabetes patients burdened by these prices have insurance but nonetheless struggle to pay out-of-pocket until they hit their deductible. Several of them explicitly mentioned skimping on groceries to buy insulin instead.

Truly codifying something as a right means more than just making it “affordable” to “access.” It requires public administration and financing to guarantee it universally, free at the point of use. Under the ACA, health care is still overwhelmingly distributed based on wealth rather than need. You can either uphold health care as a right, or fight for Bidencare, but you can’t do both at the same time.

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Racism Comes Out of the Closet Print
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 08:20

Krugman writes: "The dog whistle days are apparently over."

Economist Paul Krugman. (photo: Getty Images)
Economist Paul Krugman. (photo: Getty Images)


Racism Comes Out of the Closet

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times

17 July 19


The dog whistle days are apparently over.

n 1981 Lee Atwater, the famed Republican political operative, explained to an interviewer how his party had learned to exploit racial antagonism using dog whistles. “You start out in 1954 by saying ‘Nigger, nigger, nigger.’” But by the late 1960s, “that hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like, uh, ‘forced busing,’ ‘states’ rights,’ and all that stuff, and you’re getting so abstract. Now, you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you’re talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is, blacks get hurt worse than whites.”

Well, the dog whistle days are over. Republicans are pretty much back to saying “Nigger, nigger, nigger.”

As everyone knows, on Sunday Donald Trump attacked four progressive members of Congress, saying that they should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.” As it happens, three of the four were born in the U.S., and the fourth is a duly naturalized citizen. All are, however, women of color.

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Democratic Congresswomen Urge Trump to Go Back to Russia Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Tuesday, 16 July 2019 13:49

Borowitz writes: "Four Democratic congresswomen issued a brief statement on Monday urging President Donald Trump to go back to Russia and improve the dire conditions of that country."

Congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley. (photo: Instagram)
Congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley. (photo: Instagram)


Democratic Congresswomen Urge Trump to Go Back to Russia

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

16 July 19

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."


our Democratic congresswomen issued a brief statement on Monday urging President Donald Trump to go back to Russia and improve the dire conditions of that country.

In the tersely worded statement, the four lawmakers—Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of New York; Ilhan Omar, of Minnesota; Ayanna Pressley, of Massachusetts; and Rashida Tlaib, of Michigan—indicated that Russia was “broken and crime-infested” and required Trump’s immediate attention.

The statement went on to suggest that, once Trump had fixed the problems plaguing Russia, he could return to the United States and “show us how.”

In a tweet, Trump mocked the congresswomen, contrasting them with the “real revolutionaries” honored over the weekend on Bastille Day. “In 1789, these brave people stormed Louis XVI’s airports,” he wrote.

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Goldbugs for Trump Print
Tuesday, 16 July 2019 08:27

Krugman writes: "It's clear that Trump's motives are and always have been purely political: he wanted the Fed to hurt President Obama, and now he wants it to boost his own reelection chances."

Economist Paul Krugman. (photo: Forbes)
Economist Paul Krugman. (photo: Forbes)


Goldbugs for Trump

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times

16 July 19


They sold their principles a long time ago.

efore going to the White House, Donald Trump demanded that the Fed raise interest rates despite high unemployment and low inflation. Now he’s demanding rate cuts, even though the unemployment rate is much lower and inflation at least a bit higher. To be fair, there is a real economic argument for rate cuts as insurance against a possible slowdown. But it’s clear that Trump’s motives are and always have been purely political: he wanted the Fed to hurt President Obama, and now he wants it to boost his own reelection chances.

It’s not surprising, then, that Trump is also trying to stuff the Federal Reserve Board with political allies. What may seem surprising is that many of his would-be appointees, like Stephen Moore and now Judy Shelton, have long records of supporting the gold standard or something like it. This should put them at odds with his efforts to politicize the Fed. After all, one of the supposed points of a gold standard is to remove any hint of politics from monetary policy. And with gold prices rising lately, gold standard advocates should be calling for the Fed to raise rates, not lower them.

But of course both Moore and Shelton have endorsed Trump’s demand for rate cuts. This creates a dual puzzle: Why does Trump want these people, and why are they so willing to cater to his wishes?

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Tiptoeing Around Trump's Racism Is a Betrayal of Journalistic Truth-Telling Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=43579"><span class="small">Margaret Sullivan, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Tuesday, 16 July 2019 08:25

Sullivan writes: "Are journalists going to embrace or abandon their primary job, which is truth-telling? If they are going to do that job, they must embrace direct language and clear framing of important issues."

Reporters shout questions during a news conference by U.S. president Donald Trump at the White House. (photo: Carlos Barria/Reuters)
Reporters shout questions during a news conference by U.S. president Donald Trump at the White House. (photo: Carlos Barria/Reuters)


Tiptoeing Around Trump's Racism Is a Betrayal of Journalistic Truth-Telling

By Margaret Sullivan, The Washington Post

16 July 19

 

ong before Donald Trump ran for president, an inside-journalism battle was raging over the ideas of objectivity and balance.

It went like this: Should reporters and editors strive for a kind of neutral evenhandedness, long considered the hallmark of responsible journalism?

Or should they declare their biases up front and let news consumers know where they are coming from, an approach seen by some as more useful and honest?

With Trump dominating politics and media, a third — more important — question arises.

Are journalists going to embrace or abandon their primary job, which is truth-telling?

If they are going to do that job, they must embrace direct language and clear framing of important issues.

Early in Trump’s presidency, the question of whether to use the word “lie” arose.

Most mainstream news organizations were wary about it. Some 10,000 false or misleading presidential statements later, many now use it when appropriate — that is, when there is a clear intention to mislead. Which is quite often.

Now the question is the word “racist.”

Were Trump’s tweets portraying Democratic legislators of color as foreigners merely “racially tinged”? Were they just sprinkled with racially tinted pixie dust?

And should descriptions of what Trump stands for be put only in the mouths of his critics — a step removed from the journalists themselves?

Or should stronger language and sharper focus be used?

It depends on only one thing: whether journalists want to be clear about saying what’s right there in front of everyone’s eyes and ears.

Not all of this comes down to a single word. Consider, for example, Peter Baker’s analytical story that went online Sunday.

No polemicist, the New York Times’s chief White House correspondent nonetheless was remarkably direct.

High up in his article, he wrote: “When it comes to race, Mr. Trump plays with fire like no other president in a century.” No other modern president, he wrote, “fanned the flames as overtly, relentlessly and even eagerly as Mr. Trump.”

It was hard to miss the point.

It was even harder to miss the point in a Los Angeles Times editorial (representing the views of the paper’s editorial board), the headline of which was “Trump is Truly America’s Bigot-in-Chief” and which used words such as “repugnant” and “disgusting” to describe the president’s statements.

Or in CNN’s use of “racist rant” in its headlines and on-screen banners.

Others didn’t go there.

In general, the network news shows, with their efforts to appeal to everyone, regardless of political affiliation, like to be particularly careful not to offend.

So they used what CNN’s Brian Stelter accurately called, in his media newsletter, a “crutch” — for example, on NBC, Kate Snow noted that “many were decrying [the tweet] as racist.”

In a New York Times news story (not an analysis like Baker’s), reporters wore kid gloves in describing Trump’s urging the lawmakers to go back to their countries of origin:

“Wrapped inside that insult, which was widely established as a racist trope, was a factually inaccurate claim: Only one of the lawmakers was born outside the country.” Earlier, even less direct language had it that “Democrats slammed” Trump’s words as a racist trope; editing changed that for the better.

The Washington Post used language similar to that second (improved) version in some of its news coverage. A Monday article about Republican silence on Trump’s attacks used this description: “Insinuating that people of color are foreigners, the president used a trope broadly viewed as racist.”

It makes good sense for media organizations to be careful and noninflammatory in their news coverage. That kind of caution continues to be a virtue.

But a crucial part of being careful is being accurate, clear and direct. When confronted with racism and lying, we can’t run and hide in the name of neutrality and impartiality. To do that is a dereliction of duty.

Former New York Times reporter and columnist Clyde Haberman, in a Sunday tweet, put it simply and well, describing his own transition:

“Despite decades of evidence that Trump is a racist, I’ve resisted calling him one because it’s polarizing language that’s rarely helpful. But his go-back-where-you-came-from harangue tears it for me. He’s a bigot, and if GOPers don’t call him out, they’re complicit.”

That goes for the news media, too.

Journalists don’t need to see themselves as political advocates when they say obvious things in plain terms. And doing so doesn’t make them Democratic operatives as their pro-Trump critics are sure to charge.

It just means they are doing the most fundamental job they have: telling the truth as plainly and directly as possible.

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