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God's Politics

Truth-telling and Responsibility in Health Care

by Jim Wallis 08-06-2009

I have said that one important moral principle for the health-care debate is truth-telling. For decades, the physical health and well-being of our country has been a proxy battle for partisan politics. Industry interests and partisan fighting are once again threatening the current opportunity for a public dialogue about what is best for our health-care system. What we need is an honest and fair debate with good information, not sabotage of reform with half-truths and misinformation.

Yet in recent weeks, conservative radio ads have claimed that health-care reform will kill the elderly (it won’t), that it will include federal funding for abortion (it doesn’t), and that it is a socialist takeover of the health-care system (it isn’t). The organizations promoting these claims, including some Religious Right groups, are either badly misinformed, or they are deliberately distorting reality.

A particularly egregious example is an ad that the Family Research Council has run in selected states. It depicts an elderly man and his wife sitting at their kitchen table. He turns to his wife and says, “They won’t pay for my surgery. What are we going to do?” He continues, “and to think that Planned Parenthood is included in the government-run health-care plan and spending tax dollars on abortion. They won’t pay for my surgery, but we’re forced to pay for abortion.”

These kinds of ads should be stopped. They do not contribute to the debate that is needed to ensure that all Americans have access to quality, affordable health care. It is rather exactly the kind of misinformation campaign that could destroy needed reform. We should all denounce these ads and urge that the debate be about the real issues.

President Obama said, “I think we also have a tradition of, in this town, historically, of not financing abortions as part of government-funded health care. Rather than wade into that issue at this point, I think that it’s appropriate for us to figure out how to just deliver on the cost savings, and not get distracted by the abortion debate at this station.” There is growing agreement from both pro-life and pro-choice that health-care reform should not include funding for abortion, but should be abortion-neutral. We will continue monitoring the ongoing legislative process to maintain that principle.

Even worse than advertising, since Congress has gone into its summer recess, organized protests are being mounted at local town hall meetings. The Washington Post reported this morning that Democrats have been met by taunts, jeers, and, in one case, an effigy. Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Tex.) was confronted by some 200 people holding signs calling him a “traitor to Texas” and a “devil to all people.” And the Post cited a “‘strategy memo,’ issued by the Connecticut-based group Right Principles, which calls on conservatives to ‘pack the hall’ and ‘yell out and challenge’ lawmakers.”

We must all say loudly and strongly that misinformation and angry mobs are not how democracy functions. While freedom of speech and freedom of assembly are certainly our rights, those rights must always be exercised with responsibility and accountability.

Health-care reform that will provide quality, affordable health care for all Americans is essential. It is a moral imperative that in a nation as prosperous as ours, no American should go without health care, especially the poorest and most vulnerable among us.  Reasonable people may differ on how best to accomplish this goal, and I welcome the rigorous policy debate currently under way in the House and Senate. But in the final analysis, it should be a moral priority for all of us.

I urge you to write your member of Congress, attend local town meetings in your communities, and respectfully but strongly make these points. It is our moral obligation as people of faith.

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  • justintime
    This is the ugly face of the health insurance industry, protecting their obscene profits from an extortion racket, preying on Americans.
    GOP teabaggers and the anti health care Christian soldiers who are disrupting town hall meetings across America must not realize they're being used by a corrupted industry.
  • I voted for Obama and I am for Healthcare reform - a nationalized system, however, the plan that is being proposed will directly hurt small businesses. I hear everyone going on and on about it form both sides....has anybody actually read it? You can download all 1000 pages of it and read for yourself...this is not the plan to insure America. This plan saddles all the responsibility onto the small business owner. If you have a payroll of over $250,000 (which happens to be most small businesses) and you do not buy insurance for all your employees you will be fined 8% for each employee. You will get half of that back in the way of a business credit which you can use if you make a profit. Most businesess do not make a profit...they barely make a living. We will have to lay off people because we cannot afford to pay the 8% penalty or buy the insurance for all of our employees. If you try and pass some of those costs back to the employee you will be fined! This plan will cripple small businesses which is the backbone of our economy. I envision a National plan....off of the backs of small business, similar to Medicare where everyone pays in and if you want something better you buy a supplement. Please people....READ THE BILL!!!
    It is obvious that the people writing the bill have never run a business and have no idea how hard it is just to stay in business and provide a paycheck for your employees.
    !!! I am sure that after most people see everything in it they will not want this to pass!!!!!
  • justintime
    Sounds like a bad idea.
    The health care bill changes every week.
    Did you read all 1000 pages?
    Do you have a link?
    Can you give us chapter and verse on the 8% fine for small businesses who do not insure their employees?
    Is this in the bill, in a proposed amendment or something you heard someone say on tv?

    Go to a town hall meeting, find out the facts, call your representatives and voice your concerns.
  • It is SEC. 313 EMPLOYER CONTRIBUTONS IN LIEU OF COVEAGE page 149 of the bill. The bill has many other flaws in the bill...basically another issue at least as it is currently worded states that only residents will be penalizes 2.6% which will be deducted from the payroll by not having mandatory insurance, however, non residents are exempt....hence illegal immigrants will basically continue to have free coverage. I do believe it does need to be mandatory to make it work but for each indiividual to responsible not for small businesses to bear the responisibilty of covering everyone.
  • justintime
    Where does it say 8% penalty?
    Which bill are you referring to?
    Please provide a link.
    Thanks.
  • It is the healthcare reform bill which is available to download from the govt website.
  • WitnessforPeace
    According to this exerpt, it would end new enrollment in private health insurance:The current version of Obamacare working its way through the House of Representatives is a 1,018-page monstrosity that no lawmaker has actually read, and that they're assuming no citizen will take the time to read either. Fortunately, you only have to wade through to page 16 to find out things aren't exactly as advertised.

    Under the section entitled, "Limitation on New Enrollment," it states in black and white: "Except as provided in this paragraph, the individual health insurance issuer offering such coverage does not enroll any individual in such coverage if the first effective date of coverage is on or after the first day" of Obamacare's enactment.

    Plain English: those of you who have private coverage, you can keep it – but you can't change it. And if you decide to leave your current job to start your own business, you won't be able to purchase individual plans from private carriers. Page 16 forbids it.
  • naekwon
    Not sure if this has been posted or not, but you should all check out the website

    http://pleasecutthecrap.com/

    It deconstructs the right wing email that makes blatant false claims about the current house bill. It's not that I like the house bill, but I don't like they lies being generated by my insurance premiums either.
  • BluegrassRiver
    It is not an 8% fine on small business. It is a fee to pay if you do not provide health insurance coverage to the employees in your small business. Talk to a few business owners of 20 or 30 employees and you might find they would love to give up that obligation for 8% instead of what they pay now.
  • justintime
    Thanks for the clarification.
  • WaveTossed
    I thought that employers get a 100% tax break for providinig health insurance to their employees. Which would be only just. But maybe they just get a little deduction -- which some of the Repubs (and also some Dems) want to take away. Which would result in a tax raise.
  • Most small businesses do not carry health insurance because it is to expensive. We used to carry it but could no longer afford the premiums. When you have12 laborers who are making 12 -15 per hour and you have to pay workmans comp on all 20 people, you cannot pass those costs along. Most small businesses are not even making a profit...they are making a living and i do not mean a six figure living...This bill is unfairly putting the responsibility for paying for health insurance directly on the small business owner. They will not be able to expand and hire and in many cases will be forced to layoff people. THEY DO NOT HAVE THE MONEY....PERIOD! Small business is the engine the drives this entire economy.What we need is a "national health care" system that is fairly distributed to everyone. Each person needs to be accountable for themselves.
  • The summer months affect more than advertising.
  • Feminae
    Here's a link where you can read the bill - http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d111:H....
  • WitnessforPeace
    I am worried very much by two things: 1--the haste with which the President insists we act. This leaves no time at all for the reasoned debate Wallis champions. Jim should speak up on this. 2--And saying it's abortion neutral--what exactly does that mean anyway--doesn't mean it IS in fact neutral. If Planned Parenthood is supporting it.........
  • joshlore
    The relative haste? Our present health-care industry has been destroying the sustainable fabric of health-care in America for decades. This debate has been going on for a very, very long time. I agree that the crap must be cut from this discussion, but I also believe that if that were actually done, there would be little necessity left for much debate--debate does not end, so let us not confuse the refining of debate with the arrival at decision. This reform is long overdue and there has been no haste involving this discussion, only delay.
  • WitnessforPeace
    I'm no fan of insurance companies, trust me. But I sense a lot of assumptions behind your defense of haste: you're suspicious of profit, and you see a huge mandate in Obama's electoral vote, among others. Fifty-three percent is hardly an overwhelming popular margin, and even many of those good folks are having second thoughts, as it becomes obvious that the Democrats stand for politics as usual. Their haste is that they know they'll lose a lot of seats 15 months from now, so this plan is to be shoved down our throats ASAP—even though most Congresspersons who vote for it will never take the time to read it! Another moral imperative, Rev. Wallis: read before you sign. To change the livelihoods of a huge proportion of the working people in this company after a debate of only a few months is unwise—so unwise that it, too, should be part of Jim's “moral imperative”
    A final assumption, well meaning no doubt, is that complete equality is achievable, and that government as practiced in the US in this very year is the perfect medium to devise Heaven on Earth. A very thoughtful and non-ideological discussion of this is in Miriam Adeny's “Idols of our Time”
    I hope you take the time to read her thoughts.
  • WitnessforPeace
    Oops, I mean "in this country" not "company"
    For you Freudians out there, this has clearly exposed me as an EVIL CAPITALIST. Beware of anything I post!!!
  • tryingtolisten
    It is my understanding that there is no final bill to vote on, and that there is consideration to raise the qualifier to $ 500,000. Would this make it more reasonable? I also believe the 8% should not apply to small business because it is unlikely that you would provide healthcare anyway and your employees would more than likely fall into the group that would need financial help to purchase their own policy which we know is very very costly for individual, hence the need for a public plan.
  • justintime
    Finally we get someone who's trying to listen.
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