Taxes

How do we fix Social Security/Medicare and the lack of Health Care for the general public?

                                                                        September 12th, 2009   

 

   Everyone wants to fix the Social Security system, the Medicare system and provide Health Care for the general public.   Hello, everyone is going at these issues from the wrong angle.  What needs to be introduces is:

 

'My Fellow Americans...': The Speech President Obama Should Give to Congress Next Week

As imagined by Dave Lindorff

My Fellow Americans.

I stand before you a chastened president. I made a mistake. Two mistakes really. (wild applause from Republican side)

I thought that Congress could do its job and through the
deliberative process, produce a health care reform plan that would win
broad support across the aisle and among all of you. But I’m afraid
that I was wrong. Health care is an enormous industry—maybe the biggest
and most powerful industry in the country—and it has far too much power
in Washington. Literally thousands of lobbyists, carrying tens of
billions of dollars in campaign contributions—have invaded these halls (and my house!) (relieved laughter)
and distorted the process, and in the end have stymied reform. (some hissing)

Meanwhile, I have realized that the answer has been staring us in the face all along.

The Simple Answer to America’s Health Care Crisis: Medicare for All

By Dave Lindorff

When it comes to reforming America’s disastrous health care
“system,” there are two issues that need to be considered: access and
cost.

The so-called reform proposals being offered by the Obama White
House, the House and the Senate, are failing on both counts, and
deserve to die.

No progressives should allow themselves to be suckered into promoting one or the other.

Obama, Like Clinton Before Him, is Blowing the Chance for Real Health Care Reform

By Dave Lindorff

If you want to fix the disaster that is called the American
healthcare system, the first thing to do is to clearly point out what
its major failings are, and there are two of these.

The first is cost. America is one of the or possibly the most
expensive places in the world to get sick or injured. The corollary of
that is that it is one of the best places to make a killing if you are
in the medical business, whether as a doctor, a hospital company, a
pharmaceutical firm or a nursing home owner.

It's April 15: Time to Pay for War, Killing and Oppression Once Again

By Dave Lindorff

As you’re mailing out that tax return again this year, it’s time to
remember once again how much of your hard-earned bucks are being devoted to destruction, imperialist domination, slaughter and
war, to funding ridiculous programs like the failed anti-missile
system, and also to supporting a massively bureaucratic and overstaffed
military.

Even with the current US budget predicted to hit a record $3.5
trillion, thanks to a whopping $800 billion, two-year economic stimulus
package, and with several hundred billion being poured into a group of
banks and the bottomless pit called AIG, the $800 billion budgeted for the military to date
(a figure that includes an $85 billion “supplemental” request for the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan) represents 22% of total US spending.

Takin' It to City Halls and Statehouses, Not Just to the DC Streets

By Dave Lindorff

One impact of this deepening recession which is largely hidden
because it is spread out and distributed across the land is a wave of
budget crises swamping nearly every state government and every
municipal government in the country.

State governments, according to the Center for Budget Priorities,
are facing a $77-billion revenue shortfall for the 2009 fiscal year.
Municipal governments are probably facing a total revenue shortfall of
even more than that—perhaps closer to $100 billion. New York City, for
example, is reportedly facing a budget shortfall of $1.5 billion over
the next two years and Philadelphia, the nation’s fifth largest city, a
shortfall of $1 billion over the next five years.

The Power of "No"!

By Dave Lindorff

The Congressional switchboard is jammed. You can get through, but it
takes a dedicated finger on the redial button of your phone. Operators
at the Capitol say it's been that way for a week now, as Americans
across the country have been flooding their Congressional delegations
with phone calls (and emails) urging them to vote "No" on the
Bush/Paulson Wall Street bailout.

That today is no exception, after Democratic Party leaders (and both
major party presidential candidates, John McCain and Barack Obama)
bought into the plan after adding some window-dressing measures
designed to make it look more palatable. This shows that the public is
not fooled.

What Nobody's Saying: The Bailout Will Kill the Dollar

By Dave Lindorff

What nobody in the corporate media is mentioning amid all the
blather about the $700-billion Paulson bailout proposal is the impact
it will have on the US dollar.

We are told that this huge gift to the financial sector—the
assumption, at top dollar, of all the bad debt they’ve piled up--will
be at taxpayer expense, but that’s only the half of it. (Really only
the quarter of it because since the US government is technically
bankrupt already, spending more than it takes in each year, all that
money will be borrowed, and will be added to the national debt, meaning
that just as the real cost of the $500-billion Iraq War is closer to $2
trillion, the real cost of the $700 billion bailout will be more like
$1.5-2.5 trillion.)

Hang On to Your Wallet! The Government is About to Rescue Us

by Dave Lindorff

When the financial markets started coming undone earlier this week,
the Treasury Secretary and the Federal Reserve stepped in, and with $85
billion of our money (actually our children's money,
since they borrowed it from China and Saudi Arabia), bought foundering
AIG, the world's largest insurance company, and assumed its colossal
pile of crap debt.

That didn't help, and the stock market crashed further, falling to
levels not seen in three years. Banks, meanwhile, stopped lending,
figuring to just hold onto their money and try to weather the crash.
The US Treasury and the Fed stepped in again, this time pumping nearly
$300 billion more of our money into foreign money markets, and getting
European and other governments to do the same in an effort to get the
credit markets open again and to stop the stock market swoon. That was
on top of some $700 billion already spent on bailouts.

"Borrow and Spend Republicans"

Democrats nationally should start referring to "borrow and spend Republicans" when critiquing Republican fiscal irresponsibility. Republicans were successful in making "tax & spend Democrats" part of the lexicon, and it is highly irresponsible to borrow & spend our way into the largest debt in history.

 

So take note, pundit and advisor-type people: "Borrow & spend Republicans" is a phrase that will refocus the economic debate and hold Republicans accountable.

 

- Eric