As the debate over health care reform heats up this summer, I'm in grave danger of tearing my hair directly out of my head if I hear the word "socialism" one more time. Look, every time the word "socialism" crops up, your internal lie detector should sound a code red. People who use the word "socialism" to describe anything that the Democrats are proposing with regards to health care either don't know what the word "socialism" means, or are cynically exploiting the former group's ignorance. Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele has made his contempt for the average intelligence of his own voting base clear. When an audience member asked Steele during a recent speech if Obama's health care plan was socialism, Steele simply answered, "Yes. Next question."
It's hard to decide what's more insulting -- that Steele thinks it's appropriate to lie so blatantly, or that he thinks that the public is too stupid to notice that he's lying. Unfortunately, a whole lot of people out there really do think that we're one health-care-reform bill away from living under a communist dictatorship.
Charges of "socialism" are popular with conservatives trying to find easy, if mindless, ways to denounce universal health care. In part, it's because it's hard to know how to respond. Do you start asking people what they think socialism is and try to assess what they think the dangers of it are, or do you just deny that any of the potential bills have any relationship to this so-called socialism? Both strategies have their pluses and minuses.
Click here to read Amanda's take on the "Socialist Scourge" after the jump.
Some tactics for dealing with the question of socialism:
1) Define socialism and then discover what's so wrong with it. Most people fling the word socialism around to describe a system much like that in Western Europe -- nations that have a strong social safety net and a lot of labor protection. Socialism is used to describe England's National Health Services, France's 35-hour work week (with five weeks paid vacation), or the tuition-free universities in countries like Germany. But the existence of these benefits doesn't make Europe any more socialist than the United States.
Why not? Well, just like the U.S., most European countries have an economic mix where some parts of the economy are run by the state and some are left to private enterprise, and some are a a bit of both. The U.S., in fact, has "socialized" education through high school, "socialized" highway systems, and even "socialized" fire departments. Most people screaming "socialism" don't have a problem with free highways or public schools, making them socialists in their own right. And yet, capitalism hasn't gone away. Spending two or three minutes in Paris or London, where advertising is as prevalent as it is in New York City or L.A. would confirm this to any reasonable person.
2) Point out that there's nothing "socialist" about the proposed health-care reform. The cry of "socialism" is there to hoodwink you into thinking that the Democrats are trying to move us to a single-payer system, such as the one they have in Great Britain, where the government provides your health care for free, and everyone's on the same plan. This would be great from my point of view, but sadly, it's not what they're actually proposing.
Instead, it's a hodge-podge of reforms designed to make sure more people can buy private insurance, mainly by limiting what an insurance company can dump you for. There's also a good chance we'll be allowed to buy a publicly owned insurance similar to Medicaid, which should warm the hearts of anyone who believes that we should have more choice. Republicans trying to shut down this option are simply removing a choice from your plate and forcing you to go with private if you don't want it. But it's completely silly to pretend that a plan centered around making sure you can keep your private insurance is "socialist."
A quick perusal of the RNC's Web site opposing universal health care shows that they fully intend to fight back through disinformation and outright lies. That includes the banner picture showing a line out the door of the emergency room. Obviously, the intent is to make you think that if everyone is insured, they'll all go to emergency rooms and clog up the waiting room ... instead of what? Does the RNC actually think that people without insurance will stay at home and die instead of going to the E.R.?
In truth, universal health care would do a lot to cut down on waiting times in the E.R. And a lot of people who typically use the E.R. as primary health care would be able to go to a regular doctor before their situations became dire if they had insurance. If waiting times for hospital treatment are your concern, then you should be a supporter of universal health care. And if the opponents of health care are being deceitful about that, what else are they being less that truthful about?
Amanda Marcotte is the author of "It's a Jungle Out There" and writes about politics daily at Pandagon.net.












Comments:
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Thursday 23 July
By MRS
PLEASE, let's not get political on this site! I like visiting this site to get away from all that junk. Just a fun site to read some brain-mush-garbage (and the occasional useful story). Sometimes we need that. If I want to read about politics, I'll go to CNN.
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Thursday 23 July
By Katie
THANK YOU! I'm sick of hearing "socialism" thrown around (especially when it's followed by "fascism," good lord, they must be dumb if they think both can be applied to the same politics).
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Thursday 23 July
By T. Katrina
Thank you for saying what's needed to be said. And as for the previous comment -- it's not "getting political" in my book to point out that a great number of people are morons. As far as I'm concerned, Amanda's said what needed to be said months ago, and hopefully this article gets linked and retweeted and spread all over the place.
What I wish is that the media, who are meant to be giving us NEWS, not crazy opinions (regardless of their political leanings), would actually fact-check things and not help perpetuate the problem.
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Friday 24 July
By John Doheny
I agree with the commenter at the top about not "going political" but for different reasons. The current health care reform debate should be about delivering the best health care at the best price for all Americans, not peddling shopworn ideology and stale 1990s talking points, as the Republican party is doing. This is not about protecting the profits of the insurance industry.
As someone who lived in Canada for 30 years, it's particularly distressing to me to watch how much air time is afforded to partisan hacks with an axe to grind, and how little to genuine health care experts, or to people like me who actually dealt with "socialized medicine" and were very happy with it. Frank Luntz and Liz Cheney can cherry-pick through millions of Canadian health care transactions and find a few instances of screw ups, because even in the best run systems people occasionally fall through the cracks. Meanwhile literally hundreds of thousands of Americans (myself among them) find themselves in the position of not being about to access needed health care, not because it is 'rationed' (though this 'rationing' in the rest of the world involves helping the sickest people first, not the richest, as we do here) but because our overpriced and inadequate "health insurance" is so riddled with co-pays, deductables and obscurely worded clauses designed to trip the customer up that we can't afford it. Accessing health care should not be like buying a used car from an unscrupulous dealer, and yet that is exactly what current congressional testimony is revealing the health insurance industry in this country to be. These are people who get bonuses to deny your claim.
I'd take what I had in Canada in a heartbeat over this mess. I received excellent care in a timely manner (including three surgeries) and I never, ever saw a bill.
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Saturday 19 September
By Leigh Allen
So, I just have to ask, If it is so much better in Canada, why did you come to America?
Thursday 23 July
By domino
Obama's healthcare reform doesn't even measure up to socialized healthcare, don't believe me just ask the people in (massa) taxachuttes about the failure of this program and lies they were led to believe about mandatory healthcare.
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Saturday 25 July
By Lisa Shumaker
You have got to be kidding me with your rhetoric. I live in Massachusetts. We are experiencing what Obama wants for the rest of the country. Since passed (yes..I know by a REPUBLICAN) my premiums have gone up and wait time to get an apt has also gone up. Because everybody has insurance and there are no more primary care doctors then before this bill was passed, it is nearly impossible to find a primary care doctor accepting new patients. When you do get into see a doctor, you are rushed through the apt..making you feel .like a number rather then a consumer. Again, higher premium (if insurance companies are forced to enroll EVERYBODY who normally they would not accept WHO do you think pays for this)??? and subpar service. There are allready programs available for people under the poverty level to get health insurance. The 45-50m # Obama tosses out is BS. It represents those who are eligible for subsidies but do not apply for it, people over 50 who make alot of money and choose not to get it, and ILLEGAL immigrants.
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Monday 22 March
By Haseeb
Just because you have money does not mean that your health is more valuable then someone with no money. Your longer wait times is due to not enough health care workers.
Monday 22 March
By Haseeb
“Heaven forbid we save a few lives at the expense of the stockholders.”
“Medicine is a universal need and it must be universally provided and a society that can’t see that isn’t much of a society at all.”
- Tommy Douglas
Thursday 23 July
By Billy Wharton
Obama's attempt to create reform while allowing the private health insurance companies to continue to profit is like putting lipstick on a pig.
Read more here:
http://socialistwebzine.blogspot.com/
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Thursday 23 July
By MrWarmth
In keeping with great ideas and implementations of new programs and agencies formed by the elitist of the federal government, how's that Department of Energy doing that Jimmy Carter established ??? Seems like energy is a bigger problem now than when Jimmy Crack Corn established that oversight department......
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Friday 24 July
By no thanks
Obama's proposed plan is a disgrace. Before you make blatantly ignorant statements such as, "it's completely silly to pretend that a plan centered around making sure you can keep your private insurance is "socialist."". Actually, the proposed deal makes sure that as soon as a minor turns 18(legal age), the individual is automatically added to the government healthcare. I would like one of you intelligent Obamabots to explain how that "makes sure we can keep our private insurance". I'm sure SOME brave person will show up and make a brilliant statement.
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Friday 24 July
By G Giltner
nice try. I had friends from the UK and France tell me the horor stories of
National Health care in their countries. The bitch obaba is trying to make it
manditory that we all join. Get your socialist head out of your ass little one
Semper Fi, shit bird
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Friday 24 July
By Amanda Marcotte
I'm afraid that's just a blatant lie. I know you probably got it from some right wing media source, but you have to ask yourself---why are you trusting people who think you're a rube? By believing their lies, you're proving them right.
There is no *one* plan, to start with. And it's not really Obama's, either. Congress writes bills, and there's three on the table, with one still being stuck in the Senate Finance Committee. They're all different and will be merged into one bill to be voted on by both houses of Congress. Schoolhouse Rock has a helpful refresher. ;)
Anyway, despite their differences, all three have this in common---you will choose your own health care plan. Your employer-provided insurance won't change, unless your coverage is so poor the basic mandated coverage forces them to improve it. Under the House version, you will have an opportunity to buy a public plan, if the private insurance companies can't offer you a good enough deal.
And that's why right wingers are upset. They know that private insurance can't compete on a free market with a public plan. Which of course proves that they're not about the free market at all, since they want to make sure that big corporations are shielded from competition.
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Saturday 25 July
By Emir Ramos
You mean to say Fox news and Rush Limbough are lying to the public! I can't believe it!!!! I hope your reply educated this fellow although sadly I doubt it.
Friday 24 July
By Donald Marder
You are obviously advocating the liberal point of view, which is your right. Isn't it pathetic, however, that you have to provide "talking points" to the mindless liberals who don't or can't think for themselves? Your arguments are naive and reflect a lack of knowledge of the lessons of history. Our health care is the best in the world. It is the health care delivery system that must be improved to mitigate cost increases. We don't need incompetent, politically driven government officials intruding between our citizens and their physicians. And, we don't need rationing of health care such as they have in the UK and Canada. People come here from all over the world for our health care. We certainly can't depend on the current administration, and the liberals in charge of Congress to provide us with truthful, accurate information about anything. They are motivated strictly by ideology they intend to force on those of us who don't want any part of it.
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Thursday 13 August
By Mel
and I don't want some for-profit CEO telling me what healthcare coverage I can get. You are worried about it being between me and my doctor, well right now it isn't that way. You are worried about it becoming Canada? Well not one of the proposed bills will make us "like Canada."
I am so fed up with the mind set of Americans. Grow a brain and think about it. The overhead costs of Medicare (gasp! a governement run program) is far less than the overhead costs of private companies. You think they are in the business of providing care? At this time, through consolidation, there are about 7 companies that provde healthcare to 40 percent of this nation. They are in the business of making money, and idiots that any oppose healthcare reform are just perfect customers for these money making giants!
I for one, wish not to be.
Friday 24 July
By Thomas Ballantyne
Health Care Plan Losing in Polls on Facebook!
Check out the report:
http://pestcontrolseo.wordpress.com/2009/07/24/health-care-plan-losing-in-polls-on-facebook/
Reply
Friday 24 July
By Delta Sierra
If gov't health care is socialist, isn't the public school system also?
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Friday 24 July
By Donald
Socialism is defined by Webster as: "A theory or method of social organization and government whereby the citizenry jointly owns the means of production and distribution, and the power of administrative control is vested in the state....".The school system is comprised of public, private, and religous schools, as well as home schooling in many areas. That means that citizens have choices. If the liberals have their way in Congress, a new health care system will be mandatory and the ultimate administrative control will be in the hands of the government. If a "public option" is enacted to compete with private insurance, it will be less expensive and the private sector will be unable to compete and will ultimately shrivel, leaving only the government run program. That's socialism in health care, and with it comes long waits for care and rationing. Anyone who believes otherwise is naive, delusional, or irrational, or has a political agenda.