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I'm Down With Dennis
By David Swanson
Let me get this straight. The Senate will pass a public option if the House will. And the House will, because it already did. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi won’t allow it. So the mortal enemy of public-option backers is . . . Dennis Kucinich.
Why? Because when Congressman Kucinich said he'd stand for a public option he stupidly thought he was supposed to mean it.
Let's review a brief history of the disease known as "health insurance reform."
When the president and the speaker of the House thought it would be strategic to censor any talk of single-payer healthcare, almost every member of Congress and almost every astroturfing party-before-country activist group and labor union, and almost every follower of those groups, fell obediently into line. "We'll open the debate with the least we'll settle for, a pathetic token public-option," they thought cleverly, rubbing their hands together. "Then we'll compromise down from there."
But after demanding the "public option," too many people refused to toss it overboard, and public pressure grew to keep it in. So 60 congress members signed a letter to the speaker last summer insisting that they would not settle for a health insurance bill that lacked a serious public option. When they were presented with a bill that did not meet their demands, almost all of them voted for it anyway.
Now 51 senators say they will pass a bill including a super-pathetic token public option of the sort passed by the House last summer, but Pelosi wants to pass a bill without anything even called a "public option" in it. Almost all of the congressional public-option stalwarts want to go along with the speaker and the president. And almost all of the astroturfing party-before-country activist groups want to fall obediently into line.
Meanwhile several states are moving single-payer healthcare bills through their legislatures, but they face likely lawsuits from insurance companies over conflicts with federal law if they try to actually get their residents healthcare. Senator Bernie Sanders is advertising the Senate bill as solving this problem, routinely failing to mention that his solution, if it is one, does not kick in for seven years. But an amendment passed in a House committee last summer would have clearly and unequivocally taken care of states' concerns. The president told the speaker to strip that amendment out of the bill, and almost no members of Congress complained when she did so.
Where does Dennis Kucinich fit into this story? He's the reason the word "almost" appears in it so many times. He didn't open negotiations by proposing the lowest he'd accept. He pushed for a real single-payer solution. He single-handedly framed the public option as a compromise rather than a communist plot. Kucinich signed the letter committing to take a stand for at least a public option. But he made the mistake of thinking people actually wanted him to mean it. So he took that lonely stand. And he introduced and passed the amendment that would have allowed states to provide their residents with a serious healthcare solution.
Now, all the astroturfers applauded and encouraged taking a stand for a public option when there were 60 congress members pretending to do it, without apparently giving any thought to how greatly weakened progressives would be in Congress if they didn't follow through. Did they think the chance that a bluff might work was worth damaging all future campaigns? Did they disbelieve all their own talk about how the bill would be worthless without the "public option." It's hard to know. The so-called public option had shrunk to such a token gesture that it was always hard to know what good they imagined it would do if included. And today they talk about passing a bill without even that token included, and passing it "for political reasons," usually avoiding the question of whether the bill is actually better or worse than nothing.
But suppose that you honestly thought the public option was worth at least pretending to take a stand for, and now you no longer do, but you think the remaining bill does more good than harm. Why would you have no complaint with Pelosi who could put the "public option" back in and pass the bill? Why would you have no complaint with congress members who oppose the bill on the grounds that it protects abortion rights? Why would your complaints be focused on the one guy who stuck to what you used to want him to stick to? Could embarrassment be a factor here? Shame? Humiliation? Do you feel uneasy about asking that every congress member be an obedient slave to the president? Do you sense that progressives would then be excluded entirely? Does it worry you that you're protesting insurance companies in support of a bill that causes insurance companies' stocks to rise?
Even the activist groups that have acted on principle throughout this ordeal have fallen short of Kucinich's actions. Kucinich knew that real progress would come through the states, so he worked to pass an amendment permitting state single-payer. And virtually nobody backed him up. Activist groups either prattled on in a fog about national single-payer, or they focused exclusively on the so-called public option. These two camps wouldn't talk to each other, but they both agreed on leaving states' concerns by the wayside.
If, in stark contrast to what was done, labor unions and activist groups and progressive media had taken their agenda from their membership and brought it to Washington, rather than the reverse, then very quickly Kucinich would not have been alone in demanding single-payer, and the right-wingers would have soon been begging for a token public option as a compromise.
Healthcare is only one issue. There are dozens of stories like the one above, with different issues but the same characters and plot. When dozens of congress members commit to opposing war funding, Kucinich commits and then follows through. When it comes to ending the wars or impeaching the war criminals, Kucinich leads, in opposition to his political party but in support of his constituents, the American people, the rule of law, and the stated goals of progressives.
I hope self-loathing partisan sycophants realize that the corporate media will equally depict either passage or nonpassage of a "health insurance reform" bill as a defeat for Democrats. And, in this case, rightly so. But the long-term impact of a reform that doesn't reform, one that rather compels Americans to pay their hard-earned money to institutions even more hated than Congress, namely health insurance companies -- THAT would be the real political loser, with or without a privately run program for 3 percent of us called "the public option." And, again, rightly so. Kucinich is saving the Democrats from themselves by helping to block their health insurance bill, but they can't see what's in front of them through the fog of their constant dreaming about mountains of money and a naked Rahm Emanuel poking them in the chests.
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WALK AWAY FROM THESE CLASS AND IMPERIAL WHORES.......THEY WILL SELL THEIR OWN MOTHER FOR CORPORATIONS, FREE MARKET??? CORPORATE FASCISM....
He stands for the people each and every time!
http://www.anitastewartsoilandwater.com
http://www.myspace.com/anita.stewart
I believe everyone in the U.S. should have access to single-payer health care, but to put states providing it to their residents while the federal government refuses to provide it on a national basis is to be PROMOTED. The states that would do this should only be PRAISED and THANKED, including by everyone across the USA. After all, the more states that would make sure that their residents have access to single-payer health care, the more other states not yet providing this could only be influenced to do the right and therefore same thing.
So I believe everyone in the USA should have access to single-payer healthcare, but if the federal government refuses to provide, then states should be ENCOURAGED to individually act to provide this kind of access. It's really an [essential] service.
States wanting to do this and being threatened with legal actions if they do should tell the federal government leadership to shove their heads up where the sun never shines and then sit down and never get up again; or to go f*ck themelves.
Since when don't states have rights to govern themselves, to provide quality government for their residents?
Wedded couples go through justified divorces on lesser grounds.
Quoting from the article:
"And, again, rightly so. Kucinich is saving the Democrats from themselves by helping to block their health insurance bill, but they can't see what's in front of them through the fog of their constant dreaming about mountains of money and a naked Rahm Emanuel poking them in the chests."
Dreaming, and also CONCEIT. Dreaming was the "nice" way of describing them; these [fiends].
Anyway, excellent article or statement, and I'm glad to read about Dennis Kucinich's excellent efforts.
Mike Corbeil
Dennis has GOT to be getting fed up with "his" party with all the insanity and corruption in it; all the politicos who say one thing then vote another; the ones who would rather "play nice" than fight for "We the People".
He has been looking tired, frustrated, and angry lately and I guess you get that way when you are fighting alone against a crew of arrogant politicians whose "career" (I thought it was supposed to be about "service"?) and ego are more important than their duty to citizens.
David, this is a great piece and I know you are trying to get Dennis to leave the Dems BUT is he even thinking about it in the slightest? It is a PERFECT time for him to go Green and take the rest of us with him. WHY WON'T HE?! This is NOT his grandfather's Democratic Party any longer!!!
The Election Laws and Campaign Laws, along with the U.S. News Media coverage are deliberately rigged to make it impossible for a 3rd-Party President.
The best hope for change is to infiltrate the existing Parties. At least that way you get into the Debates, and you get some coverage. Dennis Kucinich won 1st place in the Move On poll for President during 2007. He was heard on TV during the debates. Mike Gravel was also heard during the TV debates and brought down Hillary Clinton (who appeared to have it locked up), by scolding her right in public on TV about her Iran Warmongering and vote on classifying them as "terrorists" (it was then that Clinton began to unravel, and Obama stepped into the vacuum).
Same thing with Ron Paul. He got on TV and made arguments against the War policies, against the corrupt Federal Reserve, against NAFTA, against Torture, etc. Yet he would have been totally invisible as a 3rd Party candidate.
So we have to play the same game that they do.
Inflitrate the apparatus, and then shape it and move it in the progressive direction.
We need candidates who run politically smooth campaigns, but have the intergrity to really defend the public interest once in office. The blueprint is John Kennedy, who in 1960, who actually ran to the right of Nixon on Foreign Policy, but then once in office:
. He refused to Invade Cuba (The 1st setup: 'The Bay of Pigs').
. He refused to Bomb or Invade Cuba again (The 2nd setup: 'The Cuban Missile Crisis').
. He blocked and stopped "Operation Northwoods" (the Pentagon plan to simulate 'terrorist' attacks on the U.S., and blame Cuba).
. He fired leading CIA architects (Dulles, Cabell, Bissell).
. He refused to go along with the Vietnam Ground Combat Troops Military plans.
. He refused to escalate the Cold War (instead he signed World's first Nuclear Ban Treaty).
. He ordered the 1963 withdrawal of Vietnam Troops, with all personnel out by 1965.
. He bypassed the Federal Reserve Monopoly and printed Debt-Free "United States Notes" (like Lincoln had).
. He vowed to dismantle the CIA.
. He challenged the Soviet Union not to an "arms race", but to a PEACE Race.
. He fathered the Medicare legislation (that was his proposal), and used the bullypulpit to unwaveringly fight for it (and move people in that direction).
. He threw the weight of the Federal Government behind the Civil Rights movement.
. He also cut off the Oil Monopolies corporate welfare ("depletion tax allowance"), and fought the U.S. Steel companies until they finally gave in to lower prices.
--
That's the best President we have had. But could John Kennedy have ever won as a 3rd-Party?
Not a chance.
We need Dennis Kucinich's and Alan Grayson's to continue operating inside the Democratic Party, and push it. Sometimes leadership can be contageous, and if we could just get 1 damn Seantor to fillbuster the War Funding, then the house of cards on these Wars/Occupations would come crashing down.
JFK was a brilliant president and the 50th anniversary of his election takes place this year. Karl Rove has already planned to drown out JFK's positive achievements listed so eloquently by FreeSociety - by getting Fox News and their surrogates at CNN to concentrate on his personal life instead of his presidency.
FreeSociety is dead right about keeping Kucinich in the Democratic Party. Grayson merely appears to be a progressive - and on domestic policy he falls into the category - but he is a dyed-in-the-wool supporter of AIPAC and the Israel Lobby. He voted with the majority to suppress the Goldstone Report and Max Blumenthal has exposed Grayson's card-carrying membership in the Israel Lobby in his column, "Progressive Hero Alan Grayson’s Secret Life As An AIPAC Tool."
So many people have been totally led astray by the corrupt Corporate Media about John Kennedy, and as a result have no knowledge at all about the big battles that he fought, the incredible integrity that he had, and just how deeply he took on the Establishment.
Somehow we must get the truth out about the steps that he tried to take to FIX this Country, because all the exact same corruption and probems exist today -- and no Democrat or Independent is really confronting these problems.
CLASS AND IMPERIAL IDEOLOGIES ARE THE MAINSTAY OF BOTH CORPORATE, CRIMINAL, FASCIST APPEASING CLASS PARTIES......IT CANNOT BE REFORMED FROM WITHIN, UNLESS THERE IS A WHOLESALE REJECTION OF THES CLASS IDEOLOGIES WITHIN THE DEMOCRATIC OPPOSITION.......GET A CLUE.
All it would take is just one Senator to endlessly Fillibuster Obama's War Funding, and Obama's War Games then would be forced to be brought to a halt.
That's exactly what happened with Richard Nixon. Senator Mike Gravel Fillibustered, and wouldn't stop.
Dennis Kucinich is the great example today. We just need a few more like him. But no 3rd-party candidate can even get into the debates anymore -- not even Ross Perot the way the rules work today.
Obama and Rahm Emanuel really don't want there to be any "fixes" of any consequence made to their happy Insurance Monopoly bill. And without Presidential leadership and support, any reconcilliation efforts will quickly fail, and may never even see any formal debate or consideration (as the Democratic Leadership always happily succumbs to the pressures exerted by Rahm Emanuel and Obama -- like yet another massive War Funding bill).
Perhaps the best thing that could happen here would be that the Obama Health Care Bill falls short by a vote or two in the House. At that point, instead of a $70 Billion Bailout to Insurance Fat Cats, and IRS fees for poor, defenseless U.S. citizens, the whole process would then have to be rethought.
In the event of Obama and Rahm having failed to shove a Insurance Monopoly bill down our throats, perhaps then a set of individual, stand-alone bills could be brought forward to make some real progress on Health Care Reform. For example:
. A stand alone bill to end the denial of care based on "pre-existing conditions" (even many GOP members support this provision).
. An expansion of Medicare, or Medicare-Buy-In, passed through the reconcilliation process.
. A repeal of the existing Anti-Trust rules that protects the Insurance Monopoly.
. Funding for local, cost-effective Health Care Clinics.
. How about a bill to actually allow the reimportation of cheaper generic drugs from Canada? (Rahm and Obama would be pissed)
. Dennis Kucinich's State single payer protection admendment.
The Democratic talking-point here that the Obama's sell-out bill is "the only way" to ever make forward progress on Health Care, is just like the same faulty logic that we heard before with the crooked Goldman Sachs/Wall-Street bailouts (who by the way are now making big profits, and the CEOs are getting huge bonuses -- with that money that we gave them).
Lies don't equal reform.
And neither does a corrupt system of bailouts, and mandates made in the service of a Monopoly.
So I contend that Dennis Kucinich is right.
If the Senate bill passes, there will then be no meaningful fixes. Obama will close that process off. For the Senate Bill is exactly what Obama pushed for right from the beginning since day one. Way back in early 2009, he sought a Chuck Grassley-Olympia Snow-Joe Lieberman-Max Baucus type of "solution" to the Health Care debate, and aggresively pushed aside all the genuine reforms, and the progressive ideas right from the get go. He has even gone out of his way to publically demonize single-payer advocates as "extreme", and demonize the concept of single-payer as being incompatible with "American" values.
So I think Obama has to fail, and be seen as having failed. In this vacuum, the progressives, the grassroots, then can bring individual measures forward (listed above) to make real forward progress with our Health Care system, and try to pass it through the reconcilliation process. Obama will then look like a fool if he tries to ever veto it.
But this requires a lot of independence coming from Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, which clearly they are incapable of. Yet the voices of Howard Dean, Alan Grayson, and yes Dennis Kuicnich will have more signficance, and more power than they do right now, should this happen.
Today Medicare only covers just 1/8th of the population. Incremental reform is possible by just simply increasing that ratio (by lowering the Medicare eligibility age), one bracket at a time.
It is the grassroots, and the progressive voices that must be heard, and not the sell outs (Markos, Obama, Rahm).
At the 2008 dem convention dennis jumped up and down cheer leading for the war criminal Obama,no mention of constitutionally mandated impeachment.?!?!? Iowa caucus 2008 Kucinich cant get it together enough to participate and backs Obama the war criminal.?!?!? He gives the dems cover. Chris Dorsey, RVA4Peace
Would Gawd be perfect enough for you? Dennis, unfortunately, in my opinion, was a team player back in the days you mentioned. Haven't you noticed the change and frustration with "the team" lately? Let's let the future unfold without predicting negatives, O.K.?
He plays for a different team than I do. There is a big difference between being "perfect" and being a pawn for the criminal status quo. Chris Dorsey, Justice Enforcement League
I've heard he is holding a press conference at 10:00 A.M. eastern to make an announcement on his vote/position.
What a terrific tribute to Kucinich; but what is more - what a great mind to see through the maze and be able to pen such a great article.
I congratulate you David Swanson. Having been a student of spirituality It is my conviction that a person is not able to see through the maze unless they have freed themselves from worrying about themselves and therefore are courageous in seeing and speaking the truth.
I thank you for this piece. May all of us read it and meditate on it.
Kucinich is another one who has arrived.