Realistically speaking, the Republicans have, as usual, ignored the consequences of their actions. Sadly, it is what they do. It is the way Republicans have always done business, and it will have to be accepted. Recently, by engaging in two questionable wars, while at the same time lowering taxes, they almost managed to destroy social security whose surpluses they usurped to pay for those wars.
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Destruction of the natural laws of the "marketplace" and commerce have led to a second depression and almost bankrupted the entire planet. For the last fifteen years, the Republican Party, with the help of organized labor, has devastated the manufacturing base of this country. With our nation unable to compete with the rest of the industrialized world due to the lack of any global system of health care, of any global system of freight or passenger transport, the Republican leadership's position really is "more of the same."
Unfortunately, we Democrats, furiously riding to the rescue, have forgotten to pack our saddle bags. All of those plans that we have been making for some fifteen years filled with utter frustration, ironically, cannot be accomplished without the preparation thatshould have been done by our nearsighted opponents. High speed rail systems must be preceded by adequate local public transportation.
A single payer system must be preceded by the training of an adequate bureacracy that can handle three hundred thirty million members! It must also include elimination of hundreds of billions of dollars in gross overpayments by Medicare, most of which, historically, have been our responsibility as Democrats! Entitlement programs cannot continue to represent the second largest source of graft in the history of the nation, and, sad to say, the economy will never be saved by token cuts of "discretionary spending," suggested by the insufferable Republican rhetoric.
Until the real problem, the Military Industrial Complex, the sacred cow of incompetent, dishonest Republicans and Democrats alike, is tackled, the country will continue to follow the same road to ruin followed by the Roman Empire. Contracts for useless, often undelivered weapon systems, illicit arms sales by U.S. companies to terrorists, and unnecessary, wasteful privatization of military functions must finally be addressed. The Armed Forces need to be increased! They are the only military resource that continually increases in value. Our men and women in uniform learn how to become better citizens, better people, educated and understanding of the value of teamwork, and when their military service is completed, they return to rebuild the communities that we, at home, have destroyed.
Realistically speaking, the Republicans always seem to ignore the consequences of their actions. Sadly it is what they do. It is the way they have always done business, and it will have to be accepted. It is not the way conservatives have always done business. It started with the first Republicans, proudly getting the railroads built from coast to coast "for free." Well, almost "for free." There was the little matter of the fifty miles of land given to the railroad companies on either side of the railway. There was the little matter of upkeep of tracks and depots, costs the companies became tired of paying. Land development was much more lucrative than running railroads.
Sucking their money out of railways, bankrupting mass transportation in favor of developing their "free gift" from the Republican government became entirely too tempting for most of these new real estate entrepeneurs.
You see, while Republicans don't believe in taxes, true conservatives don't believe in regressive taxes. Taxes that pay for efficient mass transportation, as they do in almost every industrialized country, taxes that save hundreds of billions of dollars in fuel costs, taxes that limit the destruction of our environment and cut so deeply into our dedicated support of Middle Eastern terrorists, are not regressive! They are obviously progressive. For example, corporate taxes are often regressive. They can retard company growth and can cost the country many jobs. Long term capital gains taxes, until lowered by President Reagan, tended to be regressive. Short term capital gains taxes, strictly regulated to prevent "short selling," if kept low, would not be regressive taxes.
We Democrats, on the other hand, seem to love taxes; we do not seem to differentiate between progressive and regressive taxes. You guessed it! Democrats are not immune from failure to look at the consequences of our actions either. The difference, of course, is that we are "farsighted," looking far into the future, trying to prevent catastrophes with complicated, always complicated solutions. For instance, in proposing extra taxes on better insurance plans, we are in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and eventually, all insurance policies will have to be taxed. In a foolish attempt to force all people to purchase inferior, poorly regulated insurance or face punishment by the government, we may loseall government mandates when the Supreme Court calls the clumsy scheme by its real name: "protection racket." The reason for this can be found in: (1) Legislators' failure to properly lay the groundwork for most of their ambitious plans and (2) their all too obvious attempts to preserve the appropriate graft, without destroying their plans.
The health care bills in both House and Senate preserve almost all of the hundred billion dollars in illicit payments to pharmaceutical companies, durable goods and oxygen suppliers and major laboratories. They don't address the absurd, criminal payments to hospitals of seventeen thousand dollars to one institution and fifty thousand to another for the exact same procedure, under the exact same conditions. They don't address tort reform, because the CBO claims that it will not save enough money for patients. Arbitrarily cutting Medicare reimbursement for physicians by twenty percent, is also "a drop in the bucket" compared to the hundreds of billions of dollars the agency loses to graft in the form of those overpayments mentioned earlier in this paragraph. Somehow, equity, honesty, and above all, common sense, are nowhere to be found in House or Senate, among Republicans or Democrats.
Without correction of the gross inequities in Medicare and Medicaid, both will be bankrupt within a few short years. With the bankruptcy of Medicaid, two of its largest providers, Florida and Texas stand to go bankrupt as well, due to huge percentages of state revenue needed to service indigent patients. With the suspicious transfer of management from Humana to United Health Care, most medical historians would expect Tricare (military health insurance) to fail, in short order, as well.
Don't get me wrong. I believe in the inevitability of a single payer system. I believe in the value of a public option. I have nothing against the idea of extending Medicare. The problem is that "the people" are not yet ready for a single payer system, nor is our government's inept bureacracy. Medicare must be thoroughly fumigated and inoculated with real competitive bidding, bogus hospital billing corrected, and Medicaid overhauled before the government can be entrusted with a public option. Legislation should, rightfully, begin with private insurance reform and regulation, including divestment of current anti-trust exemption, with portability across state lines, and the initiation of some sort of tort reform. With these changes in hand, "the people" will finally begin to feel some amount of trust in their government. If nothing else, both labor and management can benefit from immediate cuts in the cost of health care.
Then, with saddlebags packed, we Democrats can ride out and engage in a fair fight with Republicans over public options and single payers.
Authors Website: http://www.ofinky.squarespace.com
Authors Bio:Dr. Allen Finkelstein, writing since 2006 under the penname “O’finky,” was born in New York, where he attended the Hebrew Academy of Nassau County as a boy. He continued his religious training in South Florida until his family, needlessly fearing that he would become a Rabbi, transferred him to public school. It was in the Hebrew day school where the young O’finky was strongly encouraged to write and exercise his imagination. Later, he managed to weather a stormy academic career at the University of Florida, where writing creatively was strongly discouraged. As an undergraduate, majoring in pre-med, English, and philosophy, each department strongly “advising” him to switch to another, he finally graduated with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy and a master’s degree in education.
After teaching math and science at various primary school levels for a few years, despite some fond regrets, O’finky left teaching for osteopathic medical school in West Virginia. After graduating as a D.O. in 1981, he moved back to the Tampa Bay area where he completed his internship and still practices and teaches family medicine. As a physician, the author became very active in the early ‘90’s desperately promoting to his largely deaf colleagues and to his patients the idea of rescuing Medicare from the hands of the greedy lobbies. In 2006, at the urging of his imaginative physician assistant, he started publishing a political blog, “The O’finky Factor.”
Writing as “O’finky,” the honorary name bestowed upon him by his Irish friend and the wonderful people he met in Ireland, the author’s articles have always been marked by great controversy and some have been republished in places as far away as Russia and South America. As Allen Finkelstein, O’finky has published some forty five articles in OpEdNews. A lifelong liberal Democrat, nonetheless his writing tends to decry the party’s penchant for trying to promote a righteous agenda far too quickly for acceptance by a moderate public, thus impeding the very progress which they so desperately seek. Ironically, it is the painstaking revelation that people would rather believe the truth hidden in fiction rather than in facts that was the inspiration for his first novel, The President’s Ledger, published in 2013.