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God's Politics

We Must Act on Health Care

by Jim Wallis 08-12-2009

As a nation, we are engaged in making decisions about our health care that will impact our families and communities for generations to come.

And I must personally share with you that I’ve had enough of the misinformation and, frankly, misleading statements coming from those who oppose the transformation of a health system that currently renders the best health care to the wealthiest, depletes the savings of solidly middle-class Americans, and leaves 46 million people with no health-care coverage at all.

We don’t have to fall victim to the naysayers – those seeking to prop up the status quo and sustain the profits of the massive insurance corporations.

Business as usual is not what we’re about. It’s not what change is about. It’s certainly not what people of good will from all faiths, who embrace the Golden Rule and seek the common ground of justice and fairness, are about.

During the last big national debate on health-care reform in the early 1990s, the religious community mostly stayed out of the discussion. Not this time.

A friend of mine recently traveled across several states in the U.S. visiting friends on summer vacation. He told me that, everywhere he went, people asked him to read e-mails they’d received. These e-mails had no author and no citations to support the misleading statements about health-care reform they contained – including the false claim that, if health-care reform passed, it would force families to see doctors and receive care dictated by a government panel. This is not true.

At a recent meeting of leading faith groups in Washington, D.C., a leader of a large, national organization said they were receiving calls asking if the elderly would be simply left to die if health-care reform passed. The answer is NO.

These egregious and false accusations are being created for only one purpose: to manipulate and instill fear in American citizens.

This must stop. We are the ones who can stop it. Together, speaking out, acting out, and joining as one on a mission, we can push back the clouds of misinformation and fear-mongering, and allow the light of truth to shine through.

Today, right now, let’s join together making the health-care debate factual, worthy of our families and communities. Let’s put the special interests on notice that we want real health-care reform, not misinformation and fear-mongering.

Sojourners has created a rapid response Web site where you will find what you need to fight for the truth: Sojourners’ Health Care Reform Resources.

At this Web site I want you to:

SIGN Sojourners’ Health-Care Creed and let Congress know you stand for values-based reform.

SHARE Sojourners’ Guide to the Health-Care Reform Debate with your church and neighbors.

DISTRIBUTE Sojourners’ two-page flyer with health-care reform facts and values at your small group or Bible study.

USE the messages and talking points that Sojourners has created in your discussions with others.

CALL your Members of Congress today, toll-free, at #1-866-279-5474 and ask them to vote for health-care reform.

We must act.

We must speak out in our communities, schools, and workplaces. If we all take part, then our voices will join thousands of others across the nation. Other things you can do include writing a letter to the editor of your local newspaper supporting health-care reform.

I pledge to you that I will do my part by keeping you updated on what’s happening here in Washington, D.C. Be prepared to receive action requests and notifications of conference calls that you should join.

Together, imagine the thousands of faithful voices speaking out, in unison – with all joining in.

Together, we can bring about the most sweeping change to our health-care system in history.

Together, passing health-care reform for our families is what people of good will from all faiths, who embrace the Golden Rule and seek the common ground of justice and fairness, can do. Join me.

Jim Wallis is CEO of Sojourners.

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  • ando
    How many of us average Joes and Janes have been able to read the -- what is it-- 1,000 pg. plan that has been outlined? Can any supporter sum up how this will improve health care to the poor, while lowering the deficit? Are the same people who nail the military about $700 hammers now defending this plan?

    And please tell me Mr. Wallis, can you have work with anyone on the other side of the aisle? Maybe this is a way that the Left is getting their comeupance for ignoring the abortion problem....
  • lemuria
    I say abolish insurance corporations. But before jumping to conclusions, I must also say that I believe we should likewise abolish government funded insurance, which is the source of the problem of high premiums, and even the need for corporate insurance. I'd rather be self-sufficient, thanks, but I can't be until it's economically reasonable.
  • 1Grace
    Well we do have a problem with the Constitution in regards to abolishing insurance companies . But I really would be more inclined to abolish political parties , it seems there is where much of problem has root .
  • vickeygaulding
    I agree with the "party" thing. Read George Washington's farewell address. You are in good company
  • Lord_Voldemort
    Whatever you do, don't call it astroturf.

    LV
  • ashpenaz
    I'm going to send my money to Sarah Palin instead. She has a much better grasp of the issue than Wallis. I'm not afraid of Christian women in leadership positions speaking their minds.
  • joshuaa
    wow.....just....wow....the same Palin that didnt know South Africa was a country?
  • BillH1129
    Obama thinks we have 57 states. He's been to all of them.
  • dlowen
    From the brilliant mind of Sarah Palin, “The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s ‘death panel’ so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their ‘level of productivity in society,’ whether they are worthy of health care. Such a system is downright evil.” That on Friday last, then on Monday calls for restraint, and then Wednesday back to the "death panel" rhetoric.

    The really sad part is that people believe this nonsense. Perhaps the people of the United States are just too downright stupid to throw off the shackles of the Insurance and Pharma companies that put profits ahead of the welfare of the sick. It could be that we just have the healthcare system (more accurately disease state management industry) that we deserve.
  • ashpenaz
    I believe that. I'm not downright stupid. I read--have you read Brave New World? Or read Vonnegut's short story Welcome to the Monkey House? "Death panels" is exactly what will happen when the government has to distribute money for health care--those most useful to the government will be first in line. And I think Sarah Palin has a brilliant mind--and the backbone to speak that mind. She is simply repeating Mary's Magnificat in the current political situation.
  • WaveTossed
    The entire issue of Medicare covering end-of-life counseling is off the table. So if your 80-year old grandmother wishes to consult her doctor on end-of-life issues (living will, whether or not she wishes extraordinary care, etc.) -- she will have to pay for this out of her own pocket. Medicare isn't going to cover it.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125012322203627...

    Relevant excerpts:

    "But growing complaints over the provision are leading key lawmakers to conclude that the health overhaul should leave out any end-of-life counseling provisions. A group in the Senate Finance Committee that is attempting to craft Congress's only bipartisan health bill has decided to exclude such a measure, Senate aides said this week.
  • geno57
    The old abbreviated question comes up, WWJD? I can't believe He would leave nearly 50-million Americans without decent health care. I can't believe He would want entire families to lose everything, just because of a catastrophic injury or illness.

    It's time to change the system that the wealthy have come to love.
  • noflyzone
    I am curious about your position on the profits that Hollywood stars and professional athletes make. At least the drug companies, after spending millions on drug research to find lifesaving medicines, have contributed to improving society and deserve to receive a profit for their risk-taking expenditures. There are probably many expensive experimental tests for drugs that never produce profitable results. The really "sad part" is that the people of the United States were "too downright stupid" to see through Obama before the election.
  • lumens
    "Whatever you do, don't call it astroturf."

    Thousands of voices speaking out in unison sounds pretty fascist to me. This will soon turn into Kristallnacht.
  • jeffp
    Yes, with Purple Shirts (SEIU) replacing the Brown shirts and doctors and insurance companies being the target. Good job lumens, you nailed it.
  • Like Jello to the wall.
  • DITE
    This is a door scrape waitin to happen
  • lumens
    Turkratzernacht, night of door scrapes and astroturf.
  • JamesM
    I am sure that Eric77 will soon be by to call you out on using the "f" (fascist, that is) word as it impairs the otherwise highly constructive dialogue we've been having with you.

    Nah...I wouldn't hold my breath.
  • Eric77
    *rolls eyes* Kevin is mocking those of you who were using the word on the other blog post. See, it's an attempt at satire. A joke. Sarcasm. Not always conducive to dialogue, but not the same thing as calling someone a fascist. Again, calm down.
  • lumens
    I didn't even realize he was responding to me. One of my pet peeves is when people take statements meant in jest, and pretend as though they were intended seriously.
  • mscynthia
    Thank you for leading by example. I already sent your reliable information to my parents and I am thinking up more people to send it to.

    Its time to make it rain and clean the war paint off the faces of Big Health Care and expose them for who they really are.
    Lets put Ralph Reed and friends in time out so the rest of us can finally have a fair argument at the kitchen table.

    Thanks for getting everyone in the kitchen Ralph, now go sit in time out where you belong. We do not need you and your cronies to tell us what we are thinking. We can do it for ourselves. Just because some of us are over 50 doesn't mean have lost all the brain cells in our heads!!!

    Now its time for the grown ups to continue the rest of the conversation, and finally get some authentic work done on this project. As long as we have everyone's attention its time to start providing them with reliable facts.

    Americans deserve an opportunity to have a fair conversation about this issue. Lets give the rest of America a turn at the microphone and a chance to participate before they leave in frustration over the bedlam Ralph was hired by BHC CEOs to create.
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