Am I my Brother’s keeper?
Tuesday, November 10th, 2009
Late in the evening on Saturday November 7, 2009, the United States House of Representatives passed the new healthcare reform legistlation. The bill, which has to meet approval in the United States Senate, is one of the most substantial bills ever passed in US history, in both scope and costs. The 2,000 pages of legalese, has roughly 400,00 words and is the size of a major metropolitan city’s phone book, both yellow and white pages.
Fortunately for everyone, House members, who are known not to read bills before taking a vote, had a whole week to read it carefully and decide. Thank goodness they can read so fast.
Anyhow, Am I my brother’s keeper? These are the famous lines from the Old Testament uttered by Cain when speaking to his father about the whereabouts of his brother, Able. Of course Cain had secretly slain his brother but kept the truth from their father. These are also the words spoken by the character Nino Brown, a drug kingpin in the 1991 classic urban film, New Jack City. Whenever Nino Brown wanted to reaffirm his fairness and generosity to the community and his organization, somet
imes by giving away goods or help, he would ask rhetorically, ”Am I my brother’s keeper?”. Strangely, Nino couldn’t see the impact he was having on the community. People were strung out on drugs and increasingly poor. His own organization was rife with corruption, but he was too blinded by greed and the bundles of cash rolling in. What does any of this have to do with the healthcare legistlation?
Well I asked myself, where is the good in this plan? Expanding a system that is already dysfunctional and overly expensive? Expanding health insurance costs to everyone whether they want it or not? Whether they can afford to pay it or not? And the only thing that came to mind was the line, asked by Nino, ”Am I my brother’s keeper?” It’s good politics to appear to look out for the poor and the sick. It’s good politics to force the healthy or wealthy to pay for treatment of the sick and the poor. But how about reducing illness thru education, good nutrition, and healthy alternatives? How about helping the poor get jobs or raising their income at a time when inflation is rising and unemployment is at 10% and rising? Unfortunately, that isn’t the plan.
It is all about perception? How do I look? The same Nino who sells the drugs gives away free turkeys to the community at Thanksgiving to keep up a good image. What are we really talking about here with health care reform? Are we really talking about helping the poor? The same poor who are given sub standard education? The same poor who are unemployed and underemployed? The same poor with little to no income? The same poor who are a majority of America’s prison population? Or is this thanksgiving and Nino is handing out the turkeys to the poor?
The problem with health care is largely that it isn’t about health. It is mostly about the sale of prescription drugs and vaccines. Massive, unconscionable amounts of toxic drugs. Which brings me back to Nino Brown and the famous lines “Am I my brother’s keeper”? The reality is that Nino Brown wasn’t his brother’s keeper. He sold drugs and lots of them.
The gigantic pharmaceutical companies who fund politicians stand to benefit most by expanding the number of participants in this massive, nationalized forced health insurance plan, ie drug game. Worst of all the costs are passed on to those who are healthier and younger, who will be forced to pay for what they won’t often use. And to those who are wealthier, through a mandatory additional 5% tax on their income. And to unborn citizens, who will inherit the ballooning federal deficit.
These folks really are their brother’s keeper, only not by choice, by force. I’m sure Nino, who only had an aparment complex (The Carter) on lock down, would be envious of this operation, which locks down the entire United States. Wow!
Are there any benefits to the national health insurance plan? Sure, if it was made available by choice. If it was actually affordable. But to compel participation? That is wrong, even if it comes with the distribution of the ”free insurance” for the poor. And look, it is right around Thanksgiving. Am I my brother’s keeper?
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