Tag Archives: healthcare

Health Care Crisis

Here’s a letter I just sent my Congressman (my senators are useless). If you feel the same way, feel free to use parts of it as needed.

Dear Sir:

First of all, thank you for voting to release the Epstein files. These survivors were not molested by Republicans or Democrats, but by rich, entitled men (and Ms. Maxwell) who have been accustomed to having a lifetime of transgressions swept under the rug. It’s nice to know that there is some common ground inside the Beltway.

That said, I know that President Trump hates “Obamacare” and wants to kill any idea that particular president put forth. My answer? Fix it, don’t kill it.

[Insert personal – fact-based and apolitical – reason why this issue is important to you and your family. I used availability and affordability, plus loss in a poor county of both Medicaid and SNAP which are relied upon heavily here, that my husband and I will make it through but many here won’t, and that when housing and food are issues one $2K check from the government is not going to go to preventive health care.]

You know these people depend on you. The vast majority of them voted for you. Please don’t leave them behind.

Finding fixes to the ACA or a full-scale replacement requires time, dedication and honest conversations across the aisle. Unless and until Congress is willing to do that, please extend the subsidies. The ACA was years in the making and required a sustained, concerted effort by many talented government folks. A quick fix in terms of a $2K check would be an insult to the people who depend on you and your colleagues to do the best for us, the citizens of the great state of Texas.

Thank you.

Respectfully,

The “Haves,” Well, Just “Have”

In certain civilized nations, people just have health insurance. From the moment they’re born, they have health insurance, which means that the mother, who just gave birth, delivered this baby under health insurance. Amazing. For a long time I thought it normal that Anericans had their health insurance tied to their job.

Members of Congress used to be part of the Federal Employee Health Benefit Program (FEHBP) which was quite generous, more so than the current gold-level “Obamacare” they have now and would revert to if they were able to ban the ACA for their own purposes. Regardless, we pay for 72% of their premiums. Plus they get free or low-cost care from the Office of the Attending Physician and free care at any military outpatient facility in the Washington D.C. area. We don’t get any of that.

When Sen. Joni Ernst tells us that we’re all going to die, she means that she won’t die until she’s ninety or so, while it’s OK for the rest of us suckers and losers to die in childbirth, from a congenital disease or the measles as a child, a freak accident in our twenties, or a sudden heart attack in our forties. That’s ok, life’s just a roll of the dice unless you’re rich or in Congress (or both, as if often the case).

Other elected officials tell us that we have to “justify ouselves” in order to get health insurance. or “it’s up to us” to keep our Medicaid health insurance. A few years ago, before I reached retirement age, one piece of advice was incredibly cruel, that senior citizens are “a waste of food.” During COVID some politicians wanted seniors to just die because we were going to anyway. They called it ‘herd immunity” and of course seniors and poor folk, first to go, what a shame Grandma’s gone.

Some of our evengelical brethren will do anything to bring a fetus into the world, then don’t give a hoot if a home, food, or healthcare await to enable the resulting baby to survive in the world. What kind of Christianity is that? This so-called beautiful bill wants to reward mothers for having children but its authors have no idea of what it costs for a normal hospital birth, much less a caesarean or birth under less than ideal conditions such as a preemie. Forget the costs of car seats, strollers, food, clothing and, gulp, college.

But Congress and the president aren’t cutting health care for anyone in this beautiful bill, correct? They’re just going to flood Medicaid recipients with enough complicated forms that no normal person could possibly fill out and keep to new, unreasonable deadlines. Then it’s our fault if we get kicked off and miraculously save the government $900 million. No blame here but for us voters.

The $500 billion that will automatically be cut from Medicare the moment this bill is signed into law? That wasn’t in the bill. It’s in the PAYGO trip wire that the bill is causing to our debt level. So Congress isn’t cutting anything, really, it’s just up to us to figure out their new byzantine system. Imagine what Stephen Miller can envision now that Elon Musk has skipped town with his wife in tow. What, he has more time on his hands and can punish all of us to make up for his pain. Think kids in cages was bad? Imagine what’s next.

Please write your Senators and Representatives about this awful bill. You can look them up by googling who’s my representative and putting in your zip code. It’s that easy. Just say why health insurance is important to you and your family. Perhaps mention that the 2017 tax cut for the rich isn’t a priority for you and reducing the deficit is, without hurting poor people’s health and keeping food stamps from hungry kids. And while you’re at it, ask them to cut the part about the federal judiciary. Judges don’t have an army, but they need to be able to penalize for non-compliance with their orders otherwise why have a judiciary at all? Please take time out from the joys of watching the Trump/Musk slug-fest and write a letter. Thanks, Dee

Letter to Congress Rep. on House Budget Bill

By now I’m certain you’ve read the Big Beautiful Bill you voted to pass last week. Perhaps you missed a few things that I, as a new resident of your district, have looked into. First of all, this bill does too much, but it certainly succeeds in taking from the poor and giving to the rich.

I’ve read that your district has a higher poverty rate than Texas as a whole. And that 16.4% of your constituents are on Medicaid now, and 16.2% have no health insurance at all. This bill, H.R.1, also trips the PAYGO wire, automatically triggering $500 billion in cuts to Medicare, which I’ve been on for the past year since I turned 65. That is a serious concern to me and a lot of people I’ve met here in X County.

Here, the poverty rate in 2023 was 20,9%, yes, abysmal. At an orientation to help kindergarten and first grade students read at X Elementary next school year, I also learned that 97% of the children there are eligible for free lunches. Having suffered two bouts of bacterial pneumonia this past March and April, I found out that the patient:clinician rate in the County is 5,998:1.

That said, going with the flow and voting to lower the tax rates of the rich while placing the burden on your constituents may not be the best recipe for your congressional career. I know the “party line” is that no-one will be kicked off Medicaid (but there’s still a “savings” of $900 billion) and that Medicare will not be touched (but it will, it’s not in the bill but PAYGO kicks in and decimates Medicare). Our rural healthcare will leave here, nursing homes will close due to lack of Medicaid funding, and additional work requirements for both Medicaid and SNAP will render your people hungry as well.

The bill also cuts the legs off the federal judiciary, rendering them unable to secure judgements. The Republican Party is also moving along a bill to cede Congressional power to the Executive to single-handedly “reorganize” the entire federal government, close departments and ignore your carefully worded laws willy-nilly.  Watch, at the last minute, it’ll be folded into this omnibus bill and we’ll no longer have separation of powers, and you won’t have a job either. 

At 22, I became a legislative analyst for the NY State Assembly Speaker, writing laws that affected over thirty million people. Having grown wiser with age, I use both my age and experience to help people (and animals) in need. I don’t know how long I’ll be here but you’ll find me helping young students read in the Fall, and doing whatever else I can to help the folks here mitigate the negative effects about to be imposed on them by the officials they elected to represent them.

Please reconsider your vote on the bill as written. Thank you.

Note to Dear Readers: Write now! I’m coming up with a pilot program for rural areas but need local buy-in and being a Northerner, and female, down here isn’t exactly an asset. It’s worth a try if it means doing my part to save our country. Let’s do the work, folks. If our government reps were able to talk to each other and compromise we wouldn’t have to suffer idiocy and subject our kids and grandkids to huge budget deficits. Dee

Thirteen Days

That’s what the Kennedy administration had to deal with the Cuban Missile Crisis. It is what we have to decide about life and work.

On scale it may not be important but it is to us. All the forces are coming down upon us and some change must happen and soon.

I’m the one on point. Please let me meld healthcare, retirement and other items so we can live a peaceful life. Thanks, cheers, Dee

One Question

Is Congress being paid right now? If so, let’s turn off that faucet as well. Stop their security, limo drivers, congressional cafeteria privileges. No flights, fancy meals and no lobbyists coming to call with big checks for re-election.

No more specialty health care that is way better than the usual US Citizen can get even with ACA. No more morning lattes. No on D.C. apartments or office costs. No on their home and home office.

Unless they pay for it out of their checking account, not ours, they don’t even get cereal and milk in the morning. Yes, their kids would suffer too, and they do not deserve it.

Young people, old people, people with pre-existing conditions even though they don’t even take an aspirin are counting on you to represent us. By staging this action, you are only going after Americans who vote and believe in a representative democracy. Would you prefer that the NRA rules and voters take over Congress? Think about it, get your people under control and do your jobs. Dee

No More Clandestine Dr. Visits?

Did the healthcare industry scare the White House? At age 50 I joined AARP and was told that even though I’m healthy I may have rheumatoid arthritis and they won’t touch me with a ten-foot pole. But they asked about my younger healthy husband, trying to make profits, and I said no way. He was working as a consultant at the time but the recruiter “missed” filing for health insurance so we had to go on COBRA for a few months.

To those who suspended these “clandestine” studies today, if it’s a matter of paying people to go check things out I bet a whole lot of people will do it without being paid to do so just to try to get to a doctor or get their kids to see one. I’d hate to think the insurance and medical lobbies shut down this study as the people to blame for this right now are the policy wonks who advertised this study or leaked it to the press in advance.

I’ve worked with insurance lobbyists before and their answer is always “no, no, no.” Sounds like the tea party, except insurance has all our money and the Tea Party doesn’t until they find something to lobby for. Dee