As we gaze this week at the wonderland we call Congress, it
might amaze us that Congress actually shut down the federal government over the
implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
Rep. John Culberson of Texas grinned like a Cheshire Cat as
he explained it this way in an outlandish interview on CNN, “we do not want the
federal government socializing health care as they have in England and in
France.”
This is socialized medicine?
Really?
He wasn’t content to leave it there, adding a new “sacred” right
to the Constitution to
explain further his position.
“The right to be left alone as Americans is probably our
most important right.”
As the Mad Hatter would
say, “Why, you might just as well say that ‘I see what I eat is the same as I
eat what I see.’”
But Representative Culberson was on a roll. Literally.
This was two days after he
was reported to have shouted “let’s roll!” as House Republicans concluded a
caucus in which they re-affirmed their intent to shut down the government if
Obamacare weren’t defunded.
He explained that he was invoking the memory of the 9/11
heroes who brought down the airplane in Pennsylvania that was headed to
Washington. Was the irony lost on
Representative Culberson? That plane was
in all probability heading toward the Capitol, and the heroes who brought it
down may not only have kept our government open that day, they may have saved
Representative Culberson’s life, and the lives of many of his colleagues.
Meanwhile, as Representative
Culberson – a House member since 2000 – was giving his interview, some really bad
things were happening to Americans hoping for an end to the economic quagmire he
helped to create.
The Dow was shedding 129 points in anticipation of the
shutdown. In the last week, U.S. companies
lost about $200 billion in value – more than the combined value of every
company in Poland.
And we have had to suffer through all this because giving a
$6000 tax credit to families earning $50,000 per year who purchase their own private
health insurance is too “socialist” for Culberson.
I believe in our government.
I believe it is there to protect our actual rights (not ones Representative
Culberson invents) and to work toward the common good.
And I am bothered because
there is no charity in Representative Culberson’s view, only malice.
Toward the people who are helped most by Obamamcare – people
with serious mental illnesses and other chronic conditions, lower-income
workers, and uninsured people, for sure.
And toward the President on a disturbingly personal level,
too – because this shutdown is not really about debt or deficit either.
Does anyone really
think that if Ronald Reagan – not Barack Obama – were to be magically transported
down a rabbit hole to the presidency today, then Representative Culberson would
be saying the same things?
Five years into Reagan’s presidency, our
national debt, which would triple during his term, was up over 100 percent –
more than it has grown during Obama’s presidency. Our federal deficit had grown from $74
billion to over $212 billion.
Medicaid was being transformed from a mostly long term care
program for elders to a safety net health insurance program for families. By 1988, eligibility was increased to 185% of poverty for
pregnant women and children and even more for some through the Katie Beckett
waiver. These are far more generous than
the 138% of poverty level Obamacare established for adults with chronic
conditions.
Before he left
office, piled on top of all that debt, Reagan even proposed the bare outlines
of much of what became the Affordable Care Act.
He asked Congress to include catastrophic insurance,
limiting out-of-pocket costs to $2,000, for every American covered by Medicare –
along with a $60 a year increase in premium to pay for it. He proposed a federal/state partnership to
promote the formation of state-based risk pools to provide insurance for those
who could not obtain it. He called on states
to mandate enhanced employer-based health insurance coverage. And in his February
1987 radio address calling for all of these things, he said that the
federal government should work with the private sector to promote public
education about the choices and options available.
Representative Culberson was serving his first term in the
Texas House of Representatives in 1987. Do
you imagine he – one
of only two sponsors of legislation to put Ronald Reagan’s image on the $10
bill- favored a government shutdown to prevent Reagan’s “socialized health
care?”
Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com. Twitter: @pgionfriddo. Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo. LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/
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