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Jack Abramoff's associates take a shot at yours truly …

Posted by Joshua Holland at 11:56 AM on July 27, 2006.


They're really more tank than think.
dr nick
Dr. Nick on healthcare at the NCPPR

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The National Center for Public Policy Research (NCPPR) is among the most insidious of the many organs of corporate propaganda posing as "non-partisan' think tanks. According to Mediatransparency, it was formed in the 1980s to support Reagan's military interventions in Central America. In the 1990s, NCPPR got into the business of denying climate change -- ExxonMobil's a big donor. Jack abramoff was an active board member until … uh, recently. Abramoff, you'll remember, used the NCPPR to funnel lobbying money through non-profits. They paid for his infamous Scotland golf trip with Tom DeLay. And despite the fact that they're all lily-white right-wingers, they're also behind much of the infrastructure of the "black conservative movement," as I pointed out to their chagrin over a year ago.

They're ideologues who have their answers in advance, and work backwards from there -- the antithesis of public policy analysis.

And they have a blog, written by NCPPR's president, Amy Ridenour, a former bigwig among the College Chickenhawks Republicans and knee-deep in Abramoff's hanky-panky (the WaPo reported: "E-mails suggest Ridenour was well aware that Abramoff viewed her organization as a convenient pass-through").

On it, after a brief introduction by Ridenour, David Hogberg, a "senior policy analyst" (and American Spectator and NRO contributor), takes me to task for a recent post about making Medicare available to all:

Over at AlterNet, Joshua Holland argues that the way to universal coverage - which he inexplicably supports -- is to open Medicare to all of those who want to join, not just those age 65 and older.

Just the fact that someone might want every American to have health coverage is "inexplicable" to this senior policy analyst.

Holland's article is so riddled with ignorance that it is going to require more than one blog post to set it straight.

I can't wait for the follow-up. 'Til then, me and my prize-hog Rufus'll just be settin' here, stewin' in our ignorance.

Let's begin with the type of health care system that Holland believes is superior to the one in the U.S.:

Holland: The day you pass a law opening up Medicare enrollment to everyone who wants in is the beginning of the end for our bloated, overpriced private health care system. Within ten years, we'd have universal, single-payer health care, with just a small percentage of Americans sticking with private insurance (like in the UK).

If we were to go the UK route, we would soon end up with a health care system that would be overused because people would think (erroneously) they are getting something for free. In response, the government would have to ration care, yielding a system characterized by bureaucracy and inefficiency:

-We could have a system that results in over 770,000 people on a waiting list to get surgery, like in the UK.

-We could have a system that results in children with heart defects on waiting lists to see a specialist, sometimes for two years, like in the UK.

-We could have a system that results in about 61,000 surgeries cancelled annually due to lack of resources, like in the UK.

Thanks, but I will take what Holland calls "our bloated, overpriced private health care system" over the UK's any day of the week and twice on Sunday.

First the dishonesty -- these people can't enter the fray without it -- and then the substance.

The strawman here is that I never proposed a national health system like they have in the UK; I proposed a single-payer healthcare system with diverse providers, and said it would be like the UK only in that a small percentage of the population would remain privately insured (17% of healthcare in the UK was privately financed in 2004 compared to our 55% (OECD data)).

Let's move on to Hogberg's statement that he'd choose our bloated healthcare system "any day of the week and twice on Sunday."

He lists some of the problems with the UK's healthcare provision -- again, I didn't propose anything like that -- but fails to mention that we spend $5,267 dollars per person on healthcare, while the Brits spend $2,160 (OECD Data from 2004). It's an intentional and required ommission, one that economist Dean Baker is always bitching about when analyzing media stories about healthcare.

A free-marketeer like Hogberg (he was a big pusher of Social Security privatization) should understand that we might expect a lot more healthcare than the Brits, given that we're spending two and a half times as much as they are.

But we don't get it. They have some waiting lists and some elective surgeries get cancelled. But one in seven of us aren't covered at all. Our infant mortality rate is 36 percent higher than the Brits; they live a year longer than we do on average and they have more nurses per patient and more beds per capita.

Here's what a real analyst, Bernard Wasow at the Century Foundation, has to say:

… the United States appears to be doing badly, not just compared to Britain but compared to every advanced country in the world. Taking into account the overall standard of living and spending on health care, we should expect a newborn in the United States to live 81 years. In fact, life expectancy at birth is 77 years. Of 25 high-income industrialized countries, the United States is in last place, both in life expectancy at birth and in the gap between actual life expectancy and predicted life expectancy given the standard of living and spending on health care. The next worst outcome, behind U.S. life-expectancy deficit of four years, is a deficit of 2.7 years in Denmark. In contrast, a Japanese newborn is predicted to live about 79 years but actual life expectancy in Japan is nearly 82 years. A Japanese newborn can be expected to live two and a half years more than Japanese living standards and medical spending would lead one to expect, while an American lives four years fewer.

In the whole world, only five countries have a bigger gap between actual outcomes and what might be predicted based on spending. They are Haiti, Papua New Guinea, Laos, Russia and Guyana.

Here's a handy chart:

chart

It's not only life expectancy -- we're sicker across the board. A study looking at U.S. and British health released earlier this year found that "Americans had higher rates of diabetes, heart disease, strokes, lung disease and cancer -- findings that held true no matter what income or education level." Of course, that can't all be put on our healthcare delivery system -- there are lifestyle factors and whatnot -- but, remember, they're getting those outcomes while spending 40 cents to our dollar.

Wasow concludes:

Our health care system certainly delivers innovations in pharmaceutical and other technologies… But it does not deliver medical care equitably to all Americans. Those who can pay have access to the best health care in the world. Those with good insurance plans--a decreasing fraction of the population--get good, life-extending health care. The rest must make do. And the result is that enough people fall through the cracks to place us at the bottom of the rich country life expectancy tables.

That's the system that Hogberg would choose twice on Sunday. As they say, there's one born every minute.

I didn't intend my post to be a comprehensive look at a complex subject, nor did I propose it would be a magic bullet. It's a baby step. But before we go anywhere, we'll have to get past the hacks like Hogberg who, for a few dollars in wingnut welfare, are happy to whistle past the graveyard as our healthcare system remains in deep crisis.

Digg!

Joshua Holland is a staff writer at Alternet and a regular contributor to The Gadflyer.


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View:
inexplicably?
Posted by: brasilaron on Jul 27, 2006 12:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if i remember your (JH) original article i think you did explain that single-payer health insurance would be the ideal solution due to lowering overall costs yadda yadda wonky wonky talky talky. I think what they find inexplicable was the idea that anyone would want to cut into the corporate insurance world's profits. HERESY!!! He's a WITCH!!! BUUUURRRRRRRRRNNNNN HIM!!!!!

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» a premature...posting Posted by: brasilaron
Competing ideologies?
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jul 27, 2006 12:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm completely flummoxed. On one hand, you've got the ideologists who refuse to admit that there are significant problems in a modern healthcare system in which 44M aren't...healthcared (shh, I'm making a concerted effort to sound Presidential).

On the other, there are ideologues who'd completely scrap a system because it only works for 6/7th of the population.

Sigh; what happens when a big, obtuse, irresistable rock strikes a large, entrenched, immovable object?

Err...nothing?

Perhaps one set of ideologues or another could be moved to get busy on a "1/7th solution". Would 100% coverage still have some problems? You bet--there would be genuine problems, and still ideologues find something about it at which to toss the linguistic poo.

As an aside, significant part of the reason our infant mortality is increasing is because of the efforts of doc's keep (nearly) impossibly premature children alive. Sometimes it works, and the parents are happy, and the doc gets a write up in the local news, and maybe a journal article if he/she had to find a way to get the child through an unusual infection. Alot of the time it doesn't work--and a child that would normally be still-born or considered inviable in other countries is "heroically" saved in this one, only to die a few days/months later, thus increasing our infant mortality. From this point of view, a higher rate of infant mortality is somewhat expected

Also, having significant numbers of people who cross our borders without papers, who live here in relative poverty, and are scared to take their children (most often U.S. citizens) to a doctor doesn't do anything to improve those statistics.

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» RE: Competing ideologies? Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Competing ideologies? Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Competing ideologies? Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: Competing ideologies? Posted by: brasilaron
» RE: Competing ideologies? Posted by: ABetterFuture
» none taken Posted by: brasilaron
» RE: none taken Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: Competing ideologies? Posted by: Jesse
» Tax burden Posted by: Joshua Holland
» I want a pony ... Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: I want a pony ... Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: I want a pony ... Posted by: Joshua Holland
» I have a pony. I want justice. Posted by: Longdream
Congratulations, Joshua!
Posted by: Lizmv on Jul 27, 2006 2:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You've made it! Seems like you hit a nerve. Watch your back, I enjoy your articles too much to lose you now.

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save us from medical bureaucracies
Posted by: mwildfire on Jul 27, 2006 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I work in a community mental health center, as a case manager. Recently I got an e-mail from headquarters explaining a new policy, to which I sent this response:
"We spend 90% of our time NOW on paperwork, 'accountability,' justifying what we do. At what point--95%? 98%?--will we have to stop seeing clients altogether?"
So you think a single-payer system would lead to bureaucracy? What do you think we have now, HERE, with the incredibly STUPID, cumbersome, corrupt system through which health care providers must struggle? I live in a poor, rural region where nobody has private health insurance and certainly not for mental health, so we just have to deal with Medicaid and Medicare mainly. And it's still a big headache. I can just imagine what it's like to try to provide healthcare in a city where the billing people have to deal with scores of different insurance companies, each with multiple plans. The insurance industry does not belong in healthcare, period. It adds nothing useful, siphons off resources, and adds enormous complexity (mandating the killing of trees for all those megatons of paperwork). It should be booted out--but the insurance companies have enough political power in our system to ensure that won't happen, no matter how poorly the whole US electorate is served. Why? Because they prudently funnel a small percentage of those bloated profits into Congressional pockets.
Think about it: "democracy" comes from Greek words and means "rule by the people." What we have is pornocracy--rule by the prostitutes. It's not a matter of the individuals currently in Congress, nor will electing Democrats help. The SYSTEM we have ensures political power in proportion to wealth. Thus nothing is done about enormous looming problems like global warming and the end of cheap oil--because oil companies are in charge in the White House. Thus we have wars killing brown people by the thousands at all times, somewhere in the Third World, because that makes for fat profits for weapons companies. Thus we have tremendous national debt and tax cuts for the rich. And on and on--including the world's least cost-effective health care system (yes I know there are plenty of African countries with much worse outcomes. But they're spending $3 a head on their inadequate care--we're spending almost twice as much as the second highest spenders, Canadians. Canadians spend a little more than half what we do, and get an extra two years of life expectancy.

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» MEDICARE FOR ALL Posted by: lb
very cool
Posted by: aurora2484 on Jul 27, 2006 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You know you're doing something right, when they're rankled enough to stop, think and reply.

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Damn Josh!!! A WHOLE THINK TANK!!!!
Posted by: Againstthewindwalking on Jul 27, 2006 5:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I knew you had it in ya when You spurred that troll out of the gate a while back! Rode his ass to school, and made him cary your books as I remember! (sniff) I'M SO PROUD OF YA!!!!!!(sniff)

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» RE: Damn Josh!!! A WHOLE THINK TANK!!!! Posted by: Joshua Holland
No Shame …
Posted by: Joshua Holland on Jul 27, 2006 6:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The more I think about it, ithe more it strikes me how offensive it is that Amy Ridenour has the nerve to sit there and post stuff as if she’s just a run-of-the-mill blogger and political hack, just a few short months after being dragged across the front pages, neck-deep in the biggest, sleaziest lobbying and corruption scandal in decades.

Why hasn’t the NCPPR folded up its tent and why haven’t these people slithered back into whatever hole they came out of in the first place?

These are the pertinent parts of that WaPo article linked in the post above:

“The Senate committee report also details Abramoff's dealings with … Amy Moritz Ridenour, president of the National Center for Public Policy Research, which sponsored a golf trip in 2000 to Scotland for then-Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Tex.). […]

“Ridenour, appearing before the Indian Affairs Committee last year, acknowledged that her organization had accepted grants lined up by Abramoff and disbursed funds at his suggestion. She insisted that she told Abramoff that the National Center for Public Policy Research would be willing to finance only programs consistent with the group's tax-exempt purpose …

“But dozens of e-mails show that Abramoff and his team considered the national center … a ready resource in their efforts to influence Congress.

“In one instance, Abramoff's team wanted to send two lawmakers on a trip to the Mississippi Choctaw reservation in 2001, but one congressman's office had concerns about accepting such a trip from a gaming tribe.

"How about getting National Center for Public Policy Research to sponsor the trip?" Abramoff suggested…

“E-mails suggest Ridenour was well aware that Abramoff viewed her organization as a convenient pass-through.

In September 2002, Abramoff suggested to one of his associates placing $500,000 in client funds with the national center because the group "can direct money at our discretion, anywhere if you know what I mean."

“The same morning Abramoff messaged Ridenour: "I might have $500K for you to run through NCPPR. Is this still something you want to do?" Ridenour was enthusiastic: "Yes, we would love to do it."

“As far back as 1996, Abramoff was using Ridenour's National Center for Public Policy Research to hide the source of funding for trips and other ventures intended to boost the interests of his lobbying clients, e-mails show.[…]

“Abramoff used the center to hide his sponsorship of an all-expenses-paid trip in 2000 for three congressional staffers to the Northern Mariana Islands that now figures in the investigation. The trip is listed as an illicit activity in the plea agreements of Abramoff and three associates.

“The congressional staffers on the Marianas trip worked on the campaign of a Marianas politician who pushed through a $100,000-a-month government lobbying contract for Abramoff.

“Abramoff e-mailed instructions to his assistant, Susan Ralston, and others to conceal the true source of funding for the "very important" trip. "The tickets should not in any way say my name or our firm's name," Abramoff wrote. "They should, if possible, say 'National Center for Public Policy Research.' We should pay using my Visa."

“Ridenour readily agreed to help, e-mails show… Abramoff instructed Ridenour to write checks to cover the travel costs of the congressional staffers and Edwin A. Buckham, a former DeLay top aide and lobbyist.

"’We'll call the bank first thing in the a.m. and confirm that the money has arrived, and then I will get checks out to you and Ed,’ Ridenour wrote.”

And, yet, she has the nerve to show her face in public. They’re simply shameless.

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» RE: No Shame … Posted by: AlienSlave
if you were a real leftist, they would just ignore you. They promote fake Leftists/cryptoRight
Posted by: unperson on Jul 27, 2006 7:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The National Center for Public Policy Research (NCPPR) is among the most insidious of the many organs of corporate propaganda posing as "non-partisan' think tanks.


When other posters here have claimed that nonprofit foundations and think tanks are actually vehicles for political propaganda, you have accused them of being conspiracy theorists. Are you willing to apologize for that now?

Or it is just when posters claim that both GOP and Democratic think tanks are political vehicles that you scream "conspiracy theorist!"?

I agree with you that this think tank you cite is an evil propagtor of upper class memes. Ultimately, that is what you meant, right?

I would wager that the reason they are mentioning you is that your writing marks you as a Tame Leftist, a fake leftist, a cryptoRightwinger. I refer to your supoprtive setup of the election verification system in Mexico you pave the pave for the stolen election there by praising the election verification apparatus as unbiased); and of course your ubiqitous focus on Identity politics, gender and race. Alway appreciated by the upper class!

By choosing you as an example of the Left, this think tanks has set the boundaries for what is Leftism. You admit that you do not advocate european style leftist medical care, You instead have chosen to align yourself with the Democratic fakeLeftist fake-national healthcare Plan. That means you are useful to them. Remember that the think tanks are set up with longterm goals--not just to reelect GOP politicians, but also to mold the debate on both the left and the right. What better way than to publicize Leftists who do not advocate leftist positions? Hence the free publicity you are getting. If you were a real leftist, they would just ignore you. They are all about propagating memes, not debating teh virtues of true leftist economics. That is a debate they cannot win. Just look at Europe ( you show some of that in your bar graphs).

I know, this is already terribly complicated and byzantine, but that is the way of the world. Your teevee pseudoPolitics is simple, but real life is not.

I think the Big Money has found your Fake Leftism acceptable, Josh. You will go far!

But watch out for the bar graphs. A bit too real for a fake leftist.

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» "your writing marks you as..." Posted by: aurora2484
» RE: "your writing marks you as..." Posted by: Joshua Holland
» are you claiming... Posted by: brasilaron
» Go Fuck Yourself, Crybaby. Posted by: Longdream
Why it will never happen.
Posted by: wli on Jul 27, 2006 11:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, any solution puts private healthcare out of business. They would lobby intensely for their survival if they had to, but as it turns out they've got enough of Congress in their pockets they don't even have to try.

Second, no significant pressure will arise from other elite sectors. Denial of healthcare to the lower socioeconomic strata serves the useful purpose (to the ultra-wealthy) of killing "useless eaters," and as yet another "stick" with which to "discipline" the labor force.

Last, but not least, if anything of the sort ever happened, it would provide evidence of govt. intervention being able to act as a positive influence. It would then constitute the "threat of a good example," which must, of course, be warded off at all costs.

Ultimately, scientific healthcare of any kind is to be reserved solely for the very highest socioeconomic strata. As for the rest of us, the ultra-wealthy will cackle in glee from the mansions in their well-guarded gated communities (if not foreign residences) as we die for want of it.

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» RE: Why it will never happen. Posted by: Joshua Holland
Grow some hair.
Posted by: douglashoyt on Jul 28, 2006 7:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And buy some new clothes.

It would get "others" less to complain about.

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» What is with you? Posted by: HeroesAll
» RE: What is with you? Posted by: Joshua Holland
» found hoyt's pic .. Posted by: aurora2484