Question: "Separation
between Church and State." Who coined the Phrase? Give up? Answer:
Thomas Jefferson - one of the founding fathers of this geat Nation and a creator of
the U.S. Constitution and the First Amendment to that same Constitution. Thomas Jefferson, in 1802, wrote a Letter to the Dansbury Baptist
Convention, referring to the First Amendment to the US Constitution. In it he said:
"Believing that religion is a matter which lies solely between man and his
God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legislative
powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign
reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their Legislature
should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State."
|
"There ought to be limits
to freedom..."
George W. Bush,
commenting on the website
www.gwbush.com
CLICK
HERE FOR BOOKS ABOUT GEORGE W BUSH!!!
To date, the President's re-election
campaign has received over $100M from corporations, their top executives and their
lobbyists.
BUSH PAYS BACK DRUG INDUSTRY BY
MISLEADING SENIORS
Wednesday February 25, 2004 - President Bush
has done a lot of favors for those who have given him money, but few have benefited so
handsomely from their financial ties to him than the drug industry and CEOs like Pfizer's
Hank McKinnell - a Bush campaign "Ranger." While the president said he wants to
give "older Americans better choices and more control over their health care",
he is actually refusing to let seniors purchase lower-priced, FDA-approved medicines from
Canada. While a recent poll shows that two-thirds of Americans support giving seniors this
right and while governors from both parties support the idea, drug companies like Pfizer
universally opposed the idea because it would cut into the billions of dollars in profits
they make each year bilking Americans with high prices. President Bush, unfortunately, has
sided with Pfizer and against seniors, prohibiting seniors from purchasing lower priced
medicines from Canada.
Here are the details of the scam:
THE PAYOFF
President Bush and his Republican allies
have taken at least $74 million in hard and soft money contributions from the drug
industry since 2000. That's about $48,000 per day or $2,033 per hour, 24 hours a day and 7
days a week to President Bush since 2000 - a hefty salary, even for a well-heeled
lobbyist. On one night in 2002 alone, the president and his allies raked in $30 million
from the drug industry, with pharmaceutical companies paying $250,000 "for red-carpet
treatment" by the president just two days after his Capitol Hill allies unveiled an
industry-backed Medicare bill. The Bush campaign's top individual donors - euphemistically
named "Rangers" and "Pioneers" - are also chock full of drug industry
executives. Hank McKinnell, chairman and CEO of Pfizer, "has pledged to raise
$200,000" for the Bush campaign, while "in-house lobbyists from Bayer Corp,
AstraZeneca and Wyeth were named Pioneers." And the president has not just used
traditional channels to line his campaign's warchest with drug industry cash: in 2001, the
president took $625,000 from the industry to help pay for his lavish inaugural parties.
THE PAYBACK
With states, cities, and individual seniors
struggling to pay the skyrocketing costs of prescription drugs, many have defied federal
law and traveled to Canada to purchase lower-priced medicines. The drug industry, whose
ability to keep prices artificially high in the United States is threatened by
reimportation, has opposed these efforts and enlisted President Bush to kill all
legislation to formally legalize reimportation. Just last year, Congress passed a version
of reimportation, but the president stripped out the provisions from the final Medicare
bill. Recently, when a coalition of bipartisan lawmakers asked to meet with the president
and his health officials on the subject, they refused, and instead attended "a
meeting sponsored by reimportation opponents." Now, with pressure mounting from
seniors and powerful lawmakers like Senator John McCain (R-AZ), the president has resorted
to outright dishonesty in his fight to keep medicine prices high. Specifically, he is
claiming that importing prescription drugs from Canada is "unsafe" - yet even
his own Administration's health "officials can't name a single American who's been
injured or killed by drugs bought from licensed Canadian pharmacies." As the
president's own top FDA health official admitted, "I can't think of one thing off the
top of my head where somebody died or somebody got put in the hospital because of these
medications. I just don't know if there's anything like that." Professor Paul L.
Doering, one of the nation's leading experts, said the Administration's argument is
"hogwash" as "drugs purchased through the Canadian health care system are
every bit as safe as those available in the United States." He said simply that the
Bush Administration's tactics are "a smokescreen thrown up to conceal [their]
unseemly coziness with the drug industry."
WHAT HAPPENED IN TEXAS? THE BACKGROUND
ON BUSH THINKING
HOUSTON (AP) -- August 30, 2000. The
state must improve access for children's care and fix other problems in its $11 billion
Medicaid system that provides medical coverage to more than 1.7 million low-income Texans,
a judge has ruled.
U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice ruled that the Texas Health and Human Services
Commission has not lived up to a 1996 agreement to make major changes in the Medicaid
system.
Justice's 175-page order could trigger sweeping changes in the state's program, prompting
it to back off a plan to push most poor people into managed care and to raise
reimbursements to dentists who treat Medicaid patients.
Justice ordered the commission to prepare a plan of corrective action by October.
``Basically, what we have is a Medicaid program in shambles,'' said Susan Zinn, a San
Antonio lawyer who filed the 1993 class-action lawsuit that resulted in the agreement.
Justice contended that the state had failed to address the
needs of about 13,200 abused and neglected children supervised by the Texas Department of
Protective and Regulatory Services. He also said the state failed to inform the nearly 1
million children enrolled in Medicaid about available benefits.
The judge's Aug. 14 ruling said the state had provided ``inflated and inaccurate'' data
about the frequency of checkups for children under the program, and he also criticized the
quality of those checkups.
The Texas Medicaid program also provides inadequate dental care to children, Justice said,
partly because of low reimbursement rates to dentists.
JUDGE'S HEALTH CARE RULING HITS BUSH AT HOME
COURTS: Texas' poor aren't well served by state, jurist says in Aug. 14 filing.
Governor, his campaign staff, not aware of criticism, seek to deflect it.
By MARIA L. LA GANGA, Times Staff Writer
CINCINNATI--Texas Gov. George W. Bush, who has
campaigned on his record of caring for needy Texans, was caught flat-footed Wednesday by a
federal court ruling that said his state has not provided adequate medical care for poor
children. U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice ruled earlier this month that
Texas had not lived up to a 1996 legal agreement to improve children's access to Medicaid
and to fix other problems in health care for the poor. Although the ruling was filed
Aug. 14 and the state attorney general's office was aware of it, neither Bush nor his
campaign staff had heard of the decision until Wednesday when they were peppered with
questions about it.
Bush landed here at the end of a campaign
day--which began in New Hampshire, touched down in Pennsylvania, started out on education
and warmed up with gibes at the Clinton administration--only to be asked repeatedly about
the decision.
Attorney General to Appeal Ruling Bush said he hadn't seen it and did not know about
it until Wednesday. "I look forward to seeing exactly what [Justice] was
referring to," Bush said. "But we've got a good record in signing up children
for Medicaid and we're going to continue to do so." The state attorney general
will appeal the ruling, said Karen Hughes, Bush's communications director. "The state
emphatically disagrees with the findings of this very activist liberal judge," she
said. The federal court decision stated, among other things, that Texas is not
providing adequate dental care for children receiving Medicaid, that checkups under the
program's managed care arm are inadequate, and that fewer than 10% of children are
receiving immunizations, according to Associated Press. Vice President Al Gore's
campaign--which has focused this week on proposals for covering uninsured
children--pounced on the issue. Gore spokeswoman Kym Spell said the ruling "is just
the latest evidence that Gov. Bush's policies have left countless families in Texas
without health insurance--most tragically children." Campaigning Wednesday in
Erie, Pa., Bush levied charges as well, saying America has endured an administration
unable to provide leadership on everything from Social Security to education. And he
touted his new plan to help make advanced schooling more widely available.
The nearly $7-billion, five-year plan would,
among other measures, increase the existing federal Pell grant program for first-year
college students to $5,100 from $3,300, which the campaign said would help an estimated
800,000 more students annually to start--and complete--college. During a speech that
touched on all of his education proposals to date, Bush said that his college plan would
"help a child access the universities of this country. It'll help a child stay in
college as well."
At an airport rally before the education speech
in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, Bush lit into the Clinton administration.
"After seven years of failed leadership and failed policy, I'm asking
America to give me a chance to work with both Republicans and Democrats to make sure our
seniors have got prescription drug coverage," Bush said. "After seven years of
talk and no leadership, it's time to get a new leader to Washington and do something about
Social Security." Bush started his day in Hampton, N.H., where he
unveiled the higher education plan, which would also kick off a merit scholarship program
to be molded by the states. Dubbed a "college challenge grant," Bush said the
federal government would pay $1.5 billion--or one-third of the cost for such an effort.
It would also allow parents to prepay tuition or take part in tuition savings
programs for kindergarten through college without having to pay taxes on the money.
Bush in Internet-TV Interview A day after his campaign staff said it was looking
into high-tech options for three fall debates, the Republican nominee for president also
took part in his first simultaneous Internet-television interview. Bush fielded
questions that came in via CNN.com--some in real time--on issues ranging from Social
Security to his tax plan, school violence to school vouchers. Asked whether he
thought that a presidential candidate could be elected without running negative ads, Bush
sounded a lot like President Clinton when he said: "I guess it all depends on your
definition of negative ads." Although he believes that "you can win a
campaign without tearing someone apart," he did say that "comparative ads are
fair." He was also asked how he planned to reach out to the thousands of
America's neediest children, who are eligible for federally funded Medicaid insurance but
are not receiving the benefit, which is administered by the states. Bush's response
was a testy defense of Texas' efforts to insure children who have no health coverage. In
addition to the recent federal court filing, Texas has come under the gun for the way it
administers the Children's Health Insurance Program, a federal effort designed to get
health care to children of the working poor. "I've heard the political rhetoric
saying we don't want to sign up children to our Children's Health Insurance Program, and
that's just not the truth," he said. "Our state of Texas is a compassionate
state. . . . We're actively signing up children to the Children's Health Insurance
program."
In fact, Hughes points to the program as proof of
Bush's positive Texas record in light of the federal court filing. That filing was the
most recent step in many years of litigation. The original suit to improve Medicaid
for young Texans dates back to 1993, during the tenure of Bush's Democratic predecessor,
Gov. Ann Richards. The consent decree--nearly 150 measures that the state agreed to
take--was finalized in 1996, during Bush's first term as governor. "Since that
time, Texas has significantly increased access, enrollment and funding for Medicaid,"
Hughes said.
Sure they did!!!!!!! Uh Huh. And
Donkeys Fly.
This is Compassionate Healthcare?
QUOTES OF THE MONTH:
"While the rest of the country read a
lot about Bush's shortcomings on health care this week, his record comes as no surprise to
Texans. As governor, he directed that a $6.5 billion budget surplus be used primarily for
property tax relief and public school improvements...rather than tackle Texas' poor health
record."
WHAT IS BUSH'S PROBLEM?
In
a state with one of the nation's worst public-health records, Bush might have used the
surplus to deal with stubborn problems:
* Of the 50 states, Texas had the
second-highest percentage of adults and children who lacked health insurance. Only
Arizona's percentage was higher, according to 1998 figures by the Kaiser Foundation.
* More than 27 percent of adults ages 19 to 65 lacked health insurance compared with about
20 percent nationwide.
* Nearly four of 10 children from low-income families were uninsured.
Bush could have made things better. He could
have opened the doors of Medicaid to the hundreds of thousands who are eligible but not
enrolled largely because the state's eligibility program is overly cumbersome. Texas is
one of the few states that still requires face-to-face interviews with applicants, who
typically work.
Instead, on health care Bush was largely silent. Until his presidential campaign, Bush
made just two speeches dealing with the topic of health -- in 1995 and in 1998. (Those
were to trade associations.) In his 1999 state of the state address, he spoke about fixing
courthouses, but said nothing about the CHIP program the Legislature would be considering
in the 1999 session to cover uninsured children of the working poor. He never mentioned
the 1.4 million children from families too rich for Medicaid but too poor for private
insurance coverage.
It was a telling time, his silence on the issue, considering his forceful and welcome
stance on getting children to read on grade level by third grade or extending quality
education to children stuck in low-performing schools. For such goals to be achieved,
children need to arrive at school healthy and ready to learn. In the end, from the
statehouse to the White House, compassion has to mean more than words. In the end, Bush's
health-care plan requires a more generous tax subsidy for low-income workers to afford
health coverage that is out of reach today and not likely to be affordable tomorrow
despite the candidate's compassionate words." --Austin American-Statesmen Ediorial,
4/14
"The key element in the new Bush plan is pretty simple. He would give a tax credit
worth up to $1,000 to uninsured individuals to help defray the cost of health insurance.
Families would get up to $2,000. This means, Bush says, that a family earning $30,000 a
year could buy $2,000 worth of health insurance for only $18.50 a month. Great, but
where's a family going to find such a plan? On average, families buying their own
insurance pay more than three times as much. So even with a $2,000 tax credit, it's a safe
bet that relatively few $30,000-a-year households would be able to scrape together the
extra thousands." --USA Today
"Families USA executive director Ron Pollack says that a typical family health plan
costs $5,000 to $6,000 a year and even with the $2,000 tax credit, that leaves a $3,000 to
$4,000 balance that won't be picked up by employers and would be unaffordable for low-wage
families. To many health-care advocates, Gore's proposal looked paltry when set beside
former Sen. Bill Bradley's plan for getting to universal coverage quickly. But if forced
to choose between Bush's plan and Gore's plan, they will side with the vice president.
Beyond the issue of how many people would be covered under each plan, Brookings
Institution senior fellow Henry Aaron worries that Bush's plan might erode the
employer-based coverage by creating a shift toward individual coverage. "If we unwind
the system of workplace-based coverage, short of having subsidies larger than anyone is
talking about, then we'll discover at the end of the day that we have fewer people insured
than more," Aaron contends. Since companies buy health insurance policies in bulk,
the process keeps costs down, Aaron said. Without that buying power, the individual market
has more overhead and administrative costs." --Salon, 4/14
Another Bush Plan For The Poor Goes Up In Smoke. Part of Bush's "New Prosperity
Initiative" for the poor is the plan to get them into college by having special
education bank accounts set up in which an individual could deposit up to $300 a year into
the account and use that amount as a tax credit, with the bank matching the deposit. While
Bush hasn't accounted for where the bank will get the money to match the poor person's
deposit, the real kicker is how long it would take the individual to earn 4 years of
college for his new-born son or daughter. "At that rate, saving enough for a semester
of college could take 20 years," reports Cox News. Gee, thanks, Mr. Bush.
"These are his priorities: Gov. Bush has proposed about $15 in special-interest tax
schemes for every $1 of health care investment. What's the priority? Gov. Bush has
proposed about $100 in special-interest tax schemes for every $1 in education investment.
What's his priority?" --Al Gore, 4/13
BUSH HEALTH PLAN TOO EXPENSIVE FOR UNINSURED
POOR.
John Goodman, president
of the National Center for Policy Analysis, a conservative research group, has helped
numerous GOP lawmakers craft health care tax credits, and now he's done so for Republican
presidential candidate George W. Bush. An estimated 44 million Americans don't have health
care insurence, and Bush has implied that his new health care plan will cover those
people, but that's far from the truth. An analysis indicates that those uninsured earning
under $40,000 will remain uninsured and will have to depend upon questionable, congested,
expensive, and inadequate emergency room access for their health care needs.
"Under Bush's plan, poor families earning up to $30,000 would get tax credits for
buying private health insurance," according to an AP story. "The aim is to give
them the freedom to choose their own coverage and provide tax relief to families that have
already bought private insurance, said Goodman, who has helped GOP lawmakers craft similar
tax credit proposals. He estimates that the $2,000 credit would cover about half of what a
family would spend to buy a basic health insurance policy from a private insurer."
The problem with Bush's plan is that research suggests his health care proposal would not
work, even if he had enough money to administer it, which he doesn't. "Coverage for a
family costs at least $6,000 a year. At that rate, families earning $30,000 would have to
spend $4,000, or more than 10 percent of their earnings, to buy insurance. Karen Davis,
president of the Commonwealth Fund, says studies show that people won't buy health
insurance if their out-of-pocket costs exceed 5 percent of their income. "This is
really not affordable for anyone below $40,000," said Davis.
Once again, we have a Bush plan with weasel words. "Goodman said those who don't buy
insurance will be taken care of by "safety net" providers such as public
hospitals and free health clinics. He said that Texas families who have no insurance get
about $4,000 of free care from these providers each year. Yet studies have shown that many
safety net providers have curtailed services and are under severe financial strain because
of budget cuts and the loss of paying patients to private hospitals and clinics."
Bush should know by this time that whenever he alludes to his Texas record to prove his
point, he's probably in trouble. In this instance what conservative adviser Goodman calls
"safty net providers" is what Bush's Commissioner of Health Care, Dr. William
Archer, calls "emergency rooms." Dr. Archer is presently under fire for Hispanic
slurs he made in relation to comments about the uninsured poor. As for using emergency
rooms to treat the uninsured poor, the NYT's Bob Herbert believes that " Dr. Archer's
easy acceptance of this wretched method of delivering health care mirrors that of Governor
Bush. Referring to a hypothetical uninsured mother of two, the governor said in a
television interview last month: "She's got accessibility, in my state at least, to
health care in emergency rooms and clinics." He admitted that wasn't the "most
affordable" or "the smartest way to run a health system." But it was, you
know, access."
"Answering a question about health care on a Fox News program in January, the
governor said: "You go to emergency rooms in my state. . . . They're full of people.
They're full of people. There's access." Mr. Bush said affordable insurance was his
health care goal, his "mission," but he saw the crowded emergency rooms in Texas
as proof that his constituents already had access to health care. This is not good. The
governor appears to be clueless about health care, both unaware and unconcerned."
Yet, Bush says his new health care plan will provide insured coverage for the poor. This
is not true. --Politex, 4/13/00
WHY THE BUSH HEALTH CARE PLAN WILL FAIL
Because Bush doesn't have enough money to finance it. George W. Bush's proposed $4.3 billion tax credit for the poor to buy
helth insurance will fail because the money isn't there, and Bush and his advisors know
it. What voters who need health care insurance will be faced with is voting for Gore, who
plans to set aside enough money in the federal coffers to finance an adequate plan, or
voting for Bush, who plans to provide an anti-federal philosophy rather than the needed
cash. As conservative economist and Bush adviser Grace-Marie Arnett put it the other day,
"The visions are very different. It sets us up for a good policy debate." One
suspects most of the uninsured poor will shout, "Show me the money!" So why
isn't Bush coming across? Because he's spent most of his proposed budget on tax cuts, 60%
of which will benefit the top 10% of the population, Bush's well-off backers. It's the
same thing he did as governor of Texas, so we shouldn't be surprised.
But it isn't as though Bush's health care advisers didn't try. "The strains are
rippling through the Bush camp," reports the Wall Street Journal. "Developing a
health-care policy was a long and turbulent process, involving numerous advisers with
competing points. Last week, the campaign was considering a tax credit half as generous as
the one unveiled Tuesday. More low-income health initiatives are expected when Mr. Bush
tours a St. Louis community health clinic" today. However, it's all smoke and
mirrors, as the Bush economists know. Most of the money has already been spent on tax
cuts, so 50% of nothing is still nothing. But don't take our word for it, let's look at
the numbers.
In order for the Bush budge proposal to work, we're asked to believe that the federal
government is able to collect substantially less taxes, give back the lion's share of the
surplus collected in the form of tax cuts, and still launch new, costly programs.
"Budget projections of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office also show why
fitting health care into the Bush budget is a squeeze," opines the WSJ. "The
most commonly accepted CBO projection, which assumes no new programs or tax cuts and
builds in increases only big enough to maintain programs' current services, forecasts a
$3.2 trillion surplus through fiscal 2010. Of that, $2.3 trillion comes from Social
Security taxes that both parties now agree won't be touched for other purposes. That
leaves $893 billion. But Mr. Bush's tax cuts, which mainly would replace the current
five-tier income tax rates with four lower rates, would reduce revenue more than $1.3
trillion over 10 years."
The Bush financial shell game of using CBO budget projections which are based upon non tax
cuts and no new programs and then going beyond the projections is predicated upon
assumptions that fly in the face of historical fact. "Mr. Bush typically uses the
$483 billion, five-year cost projection for his tax plan, but that understates the price
tag since the tax cuts aren't fully effective until after 2006. Still, the $483 billion is
$236 billion more than the CBO figure suggests will be available in non-Social Security
surpluses. Both Mr. Bush and the GOP Congress rely on a second CBO estimate showing bigger
federal surpluses ahead, yet that figure assumes the president and Congress will abide by
spending caps set in 1997. They haven't done so yet, and both sides concede they won't
this year again."
Now we come to Bush's version of Reagan's "trickle-down" theory. "At the
same time, the booming economy has caused the CBO to underestimate recent years'
surpluses; the Bush camp insists that Mr. Bush's tax cuts will stimulate so much economic
growth that more revenues will flow into the Treasury....Still, the CBO projections show
why budgeting for health care is a tight fit despite the economic good times. Moreover, it
isn't only health programs that Mr. Bush is trying to squeeze in. In recent days, he has
proposed two education-spending increases, bringing his education total to about $19
billion over five years. He has called for $20 billion more over five years for defense
research and development, and $1 billion more annually for a military pay raise."
Here's where we are to date, then. With Bush spending most of his budget money on tax cuts
and with the Gore-Tex promise to protect Social Security, there isn't enough money
available to fund the governor's health care proposals, his education plan, and all of his
other more "compassionate" programs that he claims separates him from those
other Republicans. Further, his optimistic surplus projections are based upon faulty
assumptions and his "trickle-down" approach to the poor has been found to be a
sham a long time ago. Even his father has admitted that. The only unknow in this equation
is what Bush plans to propose as spending cuts, but any reasonable observer knows that
there are no possible spending cuts deep enough to cover Bush's pie-in-the-sky budget even
if, as he said in one debate, he planned to "make the pie higher." It appears
that Bush wants to win the votes of the poor, the minorities, and families in general by
promising them what he clearly can't deliver.
Chart. Wall Street Journal
WHAT'S BEHIND BUSH'S MISERABLE HEALTH CARE
RECORD?
In 1998 the Texas comptroller's office reported that "health conditions in the
Texas-Mexico border are among the worst in the U.S., so distressful that reports on health
conditions suggest a remote country in need of medical missionaries, not a part of
Texas....Cases of hepatitis A, a gastrointestinal virus borne by contaminated food and
water, are four times as common in the Rio Grande Valley as in the rest of Texas."
(note) A story in the NYT concludes that Texas "ranks near the top in the nation in
rates of AIDS, diabetes, tuberculosis and teenage pregnancy, and near the bottom in
immunizations, mammograms and access to physicians."
Yet, Texas Governor George W. Bush has never even given a speech on Texas' health care
problems and his plans for dealing with them. "George W. Bush became governor in
1995, he has not made health a priority, his aides acknowledge. He has never made a speech
on the subject, his press office says. His administration opposed a patient's bill of
rights in 1995 before grudgingly accepting one in 1997, and fought unsuccessfully to limit
access to the new federal Children's Health Insurance Program in 1999." For a man who
is trying to convince the nation's voters that he is a new kind of Republican, a
"compassionate" conservative, his actions are singularly lacking in compassion
when it comes to the health needs of his fellow Texans, particularly Hispanics.
"The worst health in Texas, with disease rates at Third World levels, is on the
Mexican border. Almost a fourth of the state's population lives in 43 border counties
along the 1,264 miles of the Rio Grande from El Paso to Brownsville, and as far from the
river as San Antonio, about 125 miles. Except for San Antonio, it is a poor area. El Paso,
Laredo, McAllen and Brownsville are four of the five poorest cities in the country. About
a third of the population lives below the poverty level. All but two of the counties have
a shortage of doctors."
Nearly all the leading health care professionals, administrators, and officials agree that
the key to better health care for Texans is better insurance, and the statistics show that
things have gotten worse under Bush. "Health insurance coverage in Texas has been
stagnant for years. According to the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured,
among Texans 19 to 65 years old, 27.5 percent were uninsured in 1998, compared with 19.7
percent for the nation. In 1994, before Mr. Bush took office, the Texas percentage was
27.8 and the national figure 18.6 percent. Among poor children the coverage was much
worse. In 1998, 39.1 percent of Texans under 18 living at no more than twice the poverty
level lacked insurance, compared with 25.7 percent nationally. In 1994, 36.7 percent of
poor children in Texas and 22.8 percent of poor children nationally were uninsured."
Yet, when Bush had an opportunity to reverse the trend of more uninsured Texans, he
actively fought against providing insurance to the needy. "Of the 1.4 million to 1.5
million children without health insurance, the number may drop sharply in the next year
when Texas finally starts enrolling children in the children's health insurance program,
known as CHIP, which was enacted by Congress in 1997. Mr. Bush let the question wait until
the 1999 legislative session, and fought to limit its coverage to children with family
incomes up to 150 percent of the poverty line, although the federal law allowed covering
children up to 200 percent of the poverty level. The Bush approach would have excluded
200,000 of the 500,000 who became eligible when the legislature insisted on the higher
level."
"The reason given at the time for the Bush position, legislators said, was a fear
that a big new program would be costly by itself and turn up a "spillover" of
many thousands who were already eligible for Medicaid, which has an income ceiling of 100
percent of poverty." This scenario suggests Bush sacrificed uninsured Texans to his
tax-cut package, which gives the state's surplus to his wealthy, property-owning financial
backers rather than to poor Hispanics in the Texas border counties. Another reason offered
by legislators at the time was that the Theocrats didn't want federal health care money to
include care for teen age pregnancies, including abortions, and Bush supported their
position.Even after the Dems in the legislator insisted on a 200 percent CHIP rate, the
Bush-Theocrat faction attempted to split the rate, keeping the 150% rate for kids between
11 and 18 years old. This scenario suggests Bush sacrificed uninsure Texans to satisfy his
Christian conservative backers.
When it became time to appoint a new state Commissioner of Health in 1997, Bush found an
anti-abortion advocate, Dr. William Archer, who was willing to assert that, in spite of
Texas' terrible health statistics, providing insurance to the uninsured would not change
anything. "Archer, the son of retiring U.S. Rep. Bill Archer, R-Houston, has been a
longtime proponent of abstinence-based sex education. As a midlevel federal official under
former President George Bush, he was the chief defender of a now-defunct regulation -- the
so-called gag rule -- that barred workers at tax-supported health clinics from discussing
abortion with pregnant clients," writes Scott Greenberger
Archer was the perfect do-nothing appointee for Bush, because his past record suggested he
was more interested in calming the fears of the anti-abortion Theocrats than getting the
uninsured better health care through insurance. As Archer recently said, ""If I
were to go to a Hispanic community and say, `Well, we need to get you into family
planning,' they say, `No, I want to be pregnant.'. "It doesn't work very well."
Archer's sub-text to this comment is don't bother to spend money on a culture that doesn't
use it as he sees fit. "Society values pregnancies in teen-agers as bad, but certain
communities within society may feel differently," he said. Apparantly, Bush's idea of
a health care czar is one who worries about health care spending for abortions and family
planning, rather than for health care needs across the board.
Bush's national health care plan promises more of the same--a plan that is created by
economists after the tax-cut budget is in place, a plan that has been formulated by those
who represent the financial interests of the wealthy Bush backers. (see Kondracke10/6) .
Deborah Steelman, his major health care adviser is a lobbyist for the health care
industry. Ms. Steelman earns a living as a Washington insider, a lobbyist representing the
interests of Cigna, Pfizer, Aetna, United Healthcare Corporation, the Healthcare
Leadership Council, and Prudential. Her interests dovetail nicely with Bush's, since he
has received maximum campaign contributions from many executives at Prudential, Cigna, and
Aetna, and he has many close friends with close financial ties to the Health Care
industry, such as Richard Rainwater, his billionaire friend and number one financial
mentor.
Steelman identifies herself as his "senior advisor" on the five member Bush
dream team. In a story in the Albion Monitor, Jeremy Breningstal describes the other
members: "The team is composed of John Goodman, from the National Center for Policy
Analysis, a conservative think tank; R. Glenn Hubbard, a market-leaning economics
professor at Columbia University; Donald Moran, president of a health care consulting
group, Timothy Muris, a law professor and recently a consultant for Aetna in an anti-trust
case; and William Roper, senior vice president at Prudential HealthCare before becoming
dean of the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. None
are practicing physicians or consumer advocates, and their philosophy is decidedly not
patient-oriented." (more)
Steelman chaired a Medicaid committee for Poppy during his presidential tenure. Even then,
consumer groups chided her selection because she so clearly favored the industry over the
consumer. As one GOP observer recently said about a report she made to the House
Republican Conference, she was like, "the NRA coming in and writing gun legislation,
except with her there was no disclosure." Breningstal: "Bush is staying miles
away from any sweeping reform of the health care industry, and the needs of 45 million
uninsured Americans -- a number expected to rise to as high as 60 million in the next
decade." ---Politex, 4/11/00
Note The Comptroller's report referred to was "Bordering the Future: Challenge and
Opportunity in the Texas Border Region," researched by John Sharp's staff and written
by Kelly Fero. Among other things, the analsysis found that if the 43 Texas border
counties (in itself, a new way to define the border region) were the 51st state, it would
rank first in poverty, first in unemployment, first in adults without a high school
degree, second in death rate from hepatitis per-capita personal income. Lt. Governor Rick
Perry's response when "Bordering the Future" was released? "It should be
called 'Bordering on the Obvious.'" Indeed... which makes it even more unfortunate
that the report's 50+ specific recommendations have thus far been ignored.
BUSH PLANS TO "REFORM" NATION'S
HEALTH CARE THE WAY HE "REFORMED" TEXAS' ENVIRONMENT.
In the George W. Bush lexicon the word "reform" means to pass whatever bill he's
pushing. Here's how he would use the word in a sentence: "I'm going to reform that
bill when it comes to my desk." When he tells the Washington Post's Terry M. Neal
that he's "the reformer with the results," Houston citizens start laughing but
end up coughing. The way Bush "reformed" Houston's air, making it ground zero of
the nation's smog center, is he called in lobbyists and other representatives of Texas'
pollution causing energy corporations, who happen to contribute a lion's share of cash to
the governor's political campaigns, and had them help draft a new energy bill for possible
passage in the next legislature. The resulting bill grandfathered in the offending
polluters so that they would not have to follow the most recent environmental guidelines
and jawboned them to do better in the future, but in the long run it was up to them. Since
it was up to the polluters to clean the air, the air remained dirty, thrusting Houston
into the lead as the nation's smoggiest city. Now Bush wants to do the same thing with the
nation's health care system. Deborah Steelman, his major health care adviser is a lobbyist
for the health care industry.
Ms. Steelman earns a living as a Washington insider, a lobbyist representing the interests
of Cigna, Pfizer, Aetna, United Healthcare Corporation, the Healthcare Leadership Council,
and Prudential. Her interests dovetail nicely with Bush's, since he has received maximum
campaign contributions from many executives at Prudential, Cigna, and Aetna, and he has
many close friends with close financial ties to the Health Care industry, such as Richard
Rainwater, his billionaire friend and number one financial mentor. Steelman identifies
herself as his "senior advisor" on the five member Bush dream team. In a story
in the Albion Monitor, Jeremy Breningstal describes the other members: "The team is
composed of John Goodman, from the National Center for Policy Analysis, a conservative
think tank; R. Glenn Hubbard, a market-leaning economics professor at Columbia University;
Donald Moran, president of a health care consulting group, Timothy Muris, a law professor
and recently a consultant for Aetna in an anti-trust case; and William Roper, senior vice
president at Prudential HealthCare before becoming dean of the School of Public Health at
the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. None are practicing physicians or consumer
advocates, and their philosophy is decidedly not patient-oriented."
Bush's Texas record of Health Care in Texas is market-driven and rewards those with the
money. As Professor Hubbard has said, ""We have the best health care in the
world and we pay a lot for it." Answering attacks from Democrat Gary Maura in the
last governor's race, Bush said he felt every citizen had the right to go outside his HMO
for the doctor of his choice if he had the money to pay for it. Meanwhile, Texas has one
of the highest uninsured health care rates in the country. And there are 600,000 uninsured
children in Texas who are eligible for Medicaid. It's only a matter of proper
administration, since the money comes from the feds, not Texas. Hospitals throughout Texas
are cutting their services and closing their doors because of Federal cutbacks, and Texas
has not picked up the slack. Yet, Bush brags about his $2 billion tax cut, a tax cut that
has not reached most citizens in Texas. He also brags about the Texas Patient Protection
Act, which was passed during his watch, but
Texas observers say that his input was negative.
And what Health Care "reform" does Bush propose on the federal level? Bush's
" limited list of goals -- privatizing Medicare, providing pharmaceutical drug
benefits, and limiting a patient protection legislation -- all mesh closely with policies
Steelman has been advocating in her lobbying capacity on the Hill all year," writes
Breningstal. A National Observer article had Bush proposing that tax cuts be given to the
poor who can't pay for insurance, but Breningstal reports that Poppy suggested the same
thing during his administration and it didn't work, partly because the tax reduction in
the income bracket of the poor hardly covered medical costs.
Getting back to Dubya's Health Care Senior Advisor, it turns
out she chaired a Medicaid committee for Poppa Bush during his presidential tenure. Even
then, consumer groups chided her selection because she so clearly favored the industry
over the consumer. As one GOP observer recently said about a report she made to the House
Republican Conference, she was like, "the NRA coming in and writing gun legislation,
except with her there was no disclosure." Breningstal: "Bush is staying miles
away from any sweeping reform of the health care industry, and the needs of 45 million
uninsured Americans -- a number expected to rise to as high as 60 million in the next
decade." Bush is a reformer? You've got to be kidding. ---Politex, 2/9/00
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