ThatDamnedPanda
Posts: 6060
Joined: 1/26/2009 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: philosophy Well, given the responses here it seems odd that health care reform hasn't been top of the agenda before. Seems like it would be a populist (ie attractive to politicians) thing to do. The problem is, the majority of the people in the country still have health coverage, and the conservatives who oppose health care reform have done a good job of frightening them into thinking that health care reform might mean that they would wind up with even less coverage than they already have, or pay even more than they are already paying. So anytime someone proposes any fundamental changes, you get a lot of knee-jerk responses from people who feel threatened. The only way we're ever going to get a serious populist effort to change the system is when a sufficiently large critical mass of people have either lost their coverage, or finally start to understand how precarious their coverage really is. Then the majority of people will feel more threatened by the certainty of that than by the uncertainty of change, and we'll have finally reached the tipping point. Access to health care is an extremely emotional issue for everyone. It affects people on a visceral, instinctive level. The challenge for political leaders who decide to champion this issue is to convince people who already have health coverage right now that if they don't accept changes in what they have, there'll be a point in the relatively near future where they won't even have that much anymore. And that's a very tough thing to explain to people when they're scared. Clinton wasn't able to do it, and he could talk a bird out of a tree. I think Obama's got a better chance; partly because he has oratorical skills that are at least on a par with Clinton's, and partly because the situation has gotten so much worse since Clinton tried that he has fewer people to convince, and even most of those people are a lot closer to grasping the matter than they were 15 years ago. I do think we're finally going to get something done here in the near future. Unfortunately, I'm not as optimistic that it will be a good solution, at least on the first try. I think it's going to be butchered by too many special interest groups and lobbyists. My biggest hope for the first attempt is that they come up with something that will be relatively easy and painless for them to fix and improve upon when it starts to fall apart.
< Message edited by ThatDamnedPanda -- 3/25/2009 9:50:56 AM >
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Panda, panda, burning bright In the forest of the night What immortal hand or eye Made you all black and white and roly-poly like that?
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