Today, the US Supreme Court upheld the
Affordable Care Act (ACA), often called by critics ‘Obamacare.’
The simplistic dichotomy peddled by the
mainstream media is that if you oppose Republicans/The Tea Party, you support
Obamacare. If you oppose Democrats/Pres. Obama, you oppose Obamacare.
Everything’s neat, simple and tidy. Anything that varies from that easy
narrative is pretty much ignored. Frankly, MSM journalists should have read
some of the discussions my friends and I participated in today. A progressive
hating on the ACA, a libertarian praising it... the nuance would make their
heads explode.
So here I am a progressive who is disappointed
that the ACA is still the law of the land.
Obamacare is akin to solving the problem of
hunger by mandating everyone eat three meals a day.
In its decision, the Supreme Court has ruled
that health insurance (ACA has nothing to do with health care) is the only
private commodity that all Americans are required by law to purchase as a
condition of citizenship, as a condition of being.
The health insurance industry is surely sending
a huge thank you to the corporate Supreme Court, for this greatly expanded and
government-mandated (under penalty of fines) pool of buyers for their racket.
This is a huge step backwards for real health
care reform. Liberals, who know in their brains that Medicare for All (single
payer) is the real solution to the problem of access to affordable health care,
will be neutered for at least the next 20 years. They think Obamacare is just
fine. People who think the situation is just fine don’t agitate for something
better, especially when it’s completely different.
The ACA also pre-empts further efforts real
reform because it gives the private health insurance industry even more of an
incentive to preserve the status quo at any cost.
This is what passes for ‘choice’ in America.
Mitt Romney and the Republicans are running against a health insurance scheme
he inspired. Obama and Democrats are defending a health insurance scheme their
hated opponent inspired. This pathetic state of affairs illustrates so perfectly
why America needs real multipartyism.