Monday, November 23, 2020

Truest statement of the week II

In the United States, losing employment often means losing health insurance. On top of the 30 million people who are already uninsured, it is estimated that  nearly 15 million people lost their health insurance due to becoming unemployed as of June. The current number of people without health insurance is not known, but as Biden takes office, it could surpass the 44 million who were uninsured when Obama took office in 2008.

Biden’s healthcare plan looks like a replay of the health reform process of 2009-10 when the Democrats effectively divided the movement in support of national improved Medicare for all and pushed through the so-called Affordable Care Act (ACA), which passed without Republican support.  Health insurance and pharmaceutical corporate profits have soared since then while people struggle to afford healthcare.

In a time of the COVID-19 pandemic when over 250,000 people have already died and the University of Washington predicts  over 500,000 deaths by the end of February, we cannot allow a repeat of the failed ACA. It is unconscionable to create anything less than a universal single payer healthcare system.

 

-- Dr. Margaret Flowers, "​​​​​​​We’ll Have to Fight Corporate Democrats for Medicare for All" (BLACK AGENDA REPORT).

 

 

 

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