Posts Tagged ‘Senator Max Baucus’

September 30, 2009

Baucus Tells America: No Public Option, Horatio Alger is Role Model

Long live Horatio Alger, the Congress said yesterday.  The Senate Finance Committee, by its vote against a public option in health reform legislation,  told the American people  that  if you can’t be Horatio Alger–if you can’t suffer and persevere and make it on your own when it comes to health care– tough luck.  Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus lives too much on the frontier.  He  obviously still believes in the Horatio Alger myth–that is,  that America can be sustained by  rugged individuals who, like the boys glorified by the 19th century dime-store novelist  Horatio Alger,  can go from rags to riches on their own solely by hard work and clean living. 

Without a public option, Baucus is saying that if you get sick, don’t have a job, lost your job, can’t pay your bills, get insurance coverage, figure out the insurance system, there must be something  wrong with you.  You’re not living right. You didn’t follow the Alger rules. The government will not help you.

 Shame on Senator Max Baucus. Shame on the Finance Committee. Shame on President Obama for letting the Congress act on its own on health care.  Shame on  America for not protesting in favor of a public option.

 This is the 21st Century.  Horatio Alger is not the role model we should be admiring. Did Horatio get an inherited form of cancer? Did Horatio lose his job because thieves on Wall Street were “too big to fail?”  There are forces at work beyond the control of any one person.  No one can make it on his  own these days—and no one should be blamed for that.

Horatio Alger  can no more protect his health in the modern world than he can provide for his own defense with a musket in the corner of his room in the boarding house!

 The government should protect its people with a health care program just as Horatio Alger –in the end– was saved from poverty with the help of a wealthy benefactor.

September 8, 2009

Baucus to Uninsured: Pay Up or Face Fines

According to reports about  Sen. Max Baucus’ latest plan for health reform, fines would be imposed on those individuals and families who do not buy health insurance–$950 for individuals and up to $3800 for families.  Senator Baucus, what kind of reform is this?   Talk about wasting resources.  How will the plan be monitored and enforced?  Maybe the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Transportation Security Administration can add insurance surveillance  to their duties.  As you are screened at airports, you have to show your insurance card.  Will Senator Baucus create the insurance police or just ask the OIG to create a new department?  Will neighbors be asked to report on neighbors and become insurance spies with some incentive program for reporting?  What happens  if you pay the fine and still don’t buy insurance?  Will you just pass GO and head directly to jail?

I can’t understand such a proposal.   Is Baucus worried about not throwing enough business to his backers–the insurance companies?  Reform should be so good that everyone wants “in.”   Something tells me that Baucus is not offering much if he has to fine the non-participants.   Sounds like our current system where people, mostly for financial reasons, do not buy insurance.   Today, many people say, “OK, I’ll pay the medical bills for my post-college age kid because health insurance premiums are either too high or don’t provide decent coverage.”

In Baucus’ plan, we see he penalizes the victim–adding insult to injury to those people who cannot afford insurance–even with a government subsidy, which will amount to peanuts.  So we make the non-insured pay a fine–and then what?   Do they still go the emergency room of an academic health center hospital to get care?  Will Senator Baucus pay for that?