Yesterday, via linking to a post by Goldni, I asked Congressman Jim Cooper (D-TN, the Fightin’ 5th!) to explain his vote for the Stupak Amendment. Last night, I received his answer:

“Health reform would simply not have passed without the Stupak Amendment. The Speaker of the House made this deal, and she is one of the strongest Pro-Choice members of the House. I think this just underscores how important this issue was to the passage of the bill. The health care bill only passed by two votes. Going forward, we need to better define the status quo regarding the Hyde Amendment because that is what most members support.

The reform bill does contain the most important health improvements for women in history, including bringing more women into a heath care system that includes reproductive health benefits. I continue to support affordable birth control and a woman’s freedom to choose, and I hope that we can make progress on these issues in the future with the Senate version of health reform.”

Thanks, Coop (He lets us call him that. OK, no he doesn’t.) for both your “Yes” vote for H.R. 3962, the health insurance reform legislation, and for the explanation of your Stupak Amendment vote.

Now, I’m satisfied with Congressman Cooper’s answers regarding his Stupak Amendment vote. I understand, however, that some are not. I understand that some still take issue with the way in which this vote went down.

Not me.

Instead, I take issue with those who were on the front line of this debate decades ago – when the term “pro-life” was first used – for scrambling to find a different term to describe their position instead of standing up and screaming, “How dare you! The definition of ‘pro-life’ doesn’t begin and end where you say it does, buster. I’m ‘pro-life.’ You’re ‘pro-life.’ We’re ALL ‘pro-life.’ Now stop being a dumbass and let’s work on ways in which we can eliminate the underlying reasons why women seek to have abortions in the first place. Hello? Lack of age-appropriate public school sex education? Hello? Lack of affordable contraception? Hello? Poverty? Hello? Lack of affordable child-care options? Hello? Hello? Hello?

The Stupak Amendment and the strangle-hold it had over the health insurance reform debate is a direct result of elected officials giving up the practical moral high-ground on this issue a long, long, LONG time ago. We reap what we sow.

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One question remains...

One question remains...

Eloquently worded below by Goldni is the question for Congressman Jim Cooper that’s on everyone’s lips. So, when you call to thank him today for his “yes” vote on the health insurance reform bill (Nashville Office: 736-5295 DC Office: 202-225-4311), you also might want to ask him,”Why yes on the Stupak Amendment?”

Congressman, I know you’re very smart and have an excellent command of legislative history. I know that you know about the Hyde Amendment of 1976, which forbids federal funding of abortion, and which is the established law in this country. I know you know that there was already a provision in the bill specifically stating that nothing in the bill could be construed as mandating or allowing for federal funding for abortion. I know you know that the Stupak amendment was unnecessary, and that even if you wanted it passed so that a few more people would vote for the final bill, your vote was not needed to make that happen. I know that you know that the whole thing would ultimately be unenforceable and would almost certainly get tangled up in legal challenges. And I know you’re generally not a fan of telling insurance companies what they can or cannot offer.

So why vote to tell them they can’t offer this one thing, especially when 85% of them offer it now with no issues and when it wouldn’t cost the government any money to allow them to continue to do so?

It’s not because you have some great love for fetuses. Your record is mostly pro-choice, but you have never demonstrated that you even particularly care about it all that much as an issue. The budgetary issues are much more salient with you, obviously. But it’s for that reason that I know that your vote for the final bill was not contingent upon this amendment passing. It wouldn’t have mattered to you one way or the other.

Are you trying to build up some “pro-life”* (a ridiculous term, I don’t know of anyone who is anti-life) credentials for your re-election bid next year in the Fifth District? That might work in Lincoln Davis’ district. I personally think that Lincoln Davis is a great representative for his district. But that’s not you anymore, and you need to remember that.

Is there a budget issue in here that I’m missing? This does not amount to taxpayer money going to fund abortion, it would still be private insurance companies offering coverage at their expense, and private individuals purchasing insurance through the exchange would still be using their own money. However, at this time I’d like to renew my objection to the provision in the Senate bill that DOES allow for federal funding for Christian Science prayer treatments.

So, why?

And, might I add, the Stupak Amendment will do absolutely nothing to reduce the number of abortions in the United States. It will, however, take away a potential life-saving treatment for more than half the population of the country. If legislators truly wanted to curtail the number of abortions in the US, they would work on curtailing the number of unintended pregnancies by increasing federal funding for comprehensive, age-appropriate sex education in the classroom and through public and private health agencies.

*We’re all pro-life.

UPDATE from the comments: Ruth Marcus writing in the Washington Post:

Going into Saturday’s debate on the House health-care bill, the measure included provisions designed to maintain the status quo against federal funding for most abortions. It took steps to ensure that federal subsidies to purchase insurance wouldn’t be used to pay for abortion coverage. It required that every exchange include one plan that did not cover abortions, so that no one would be forced to subscribe to a plan that violated anti-abortion beliefs. That wasn’t enough for the anti-abortion crowd, including the Catholic bishops. So House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was backed into a corner, facing the loss of anti-abortion Democrats unless she acceded to an amendment offered by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) that effectively prevents insurance companies participating in the new insurance exchanges from covering abortions. It passed, 240 to 197, with 64 Democrats voting in favor.

Under the Stupak amendment, no plan that accepts people eligible for federal subsidies is permitted to cover abortions. It’s hard to imagine a plan participating in the exchange that refuses to accept people with subsidies, since the vast majority of people in the exchanges will receive subsidies. Therefore, no abortion coverage in the exchange — except to save the life of the mother or in cases of rape or incest. If you are a woman whose health is endangered by a pregnancy, you’ll have to pay for an abortion out of pocket. Same if you are carrying a fetus with severe birth defects.

Stupak supporters argue that women will still be able to obtain abortion coverage by purchasing a separate rider to the policies. As if people plan ahead to have abortions. As if insurance companies will go to the trouble — and risk the controversy — of providing such riders.

According to Cooper’s office, and confirmed by Marcus’s analysis, it was either the Stupak amendment or no passage of the bill. Cooper’s choice is understandable. What’s sad – and what I most hate about this game – is that he was forced to make it.

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Does your health insurance cover exploding craniums due to maddening and unexplained selfishness?

Does your health insurance cover exploding craniums due to maddening and unexplained selfishness?

So we’ve been talking a lot about how the Republicans leading the charge against health security for all Americans already have health care coverage. Good health care coverage. It’s the classic, “I got mine, screw you guys” scenario.

But this weekend we learned, when several of the tea party protesters were treated during an event in D.C., that while some of us are languishing in a system designed to screw us out of everything we’ve ever worked for, members of Congress not only have solid health care coverage – they also have a backup. A BACKUP!

Yep. Members of Congress have affordable health care coverage. Twice.

From Joe Powell:

As a few thousand folks lined up to hear the Republican congressmen (most of whom were absent from actual committee votes on public policy) last week, some of those anti-healthcare bill protesters needed some emergency medical help from – gasp!! – government operated medicine providers.

One person suffered a heart attack and several others also needed medical care — all of it provided by government medical personnel. Other protesters denouncing government-run healthcare likewise benefited from a service they despise, though none refused medical assistance from the Office of Attending Physicians [OAP] who are always on hand to treat elected officials.

And how does the OAP work?

Members of Congress do not pay for the individual services they receive at the OAP, nor do they submit claims through their federal employee health insurance policies. Instead, members pay a flat, annual fee of $503 for all the care they receive. The rest of the cost of their care, sources said, is subsidized by taxpayers.

Last year, Congress appropriated more than $3 million to reimburse the Navy for staff salaries at the office. Next year’s budget allocates $3.8 million for the office, including more than half a million dollars to upgrade the Office’s radiology suite. Sources said additional money to operate the office is included in the Navy’s annual budget.

In 2008, 240 members paid the annual fee, though some sources say congressmen who didn’t pay the fee were rarely prevented from using OAP services.

The arguments against affordable health insurance from Bachman, Pence, King et. al. wouldn’t be so gag-worthy if they would just give up their health insurance. And the backup plan.

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Jim Cooper Must be Called

Cooperators are standing by.

Cooperators are standing by.

The House of Representatives is voting on the health care bill tomorrow. Jim Cooper must be called. And so must your Congressman.

Here’s the plea from Writer/Filmmaker/Speaker Molly Secours, who just came back from meetings with representatives in Washington:

Just got back from D.C. with a group of self-employed and small business owners to talk with representatives about the bill coming up for a vote. The stories from small business owners across the country were startling and devastating….

Taking time out to meet us in the hallway Rep. Cooper listened to the doctor and the man who may have to close his business because of exorbitant healthcare costs. The man reiterated that reform must stimulate competition and allow everyone access to insurance and, most importantly, needs to happen now–not next year. Patients are dying, employees are leaving or being layed off.

Rep. Cooper listened intently and assured them he was committed to working with others that are determined to make healthcare reform a reality–including a public option.

With Cooper there were no shiny smiles, slaps on the back, donuts or biscuits and gravy, just some good old fashion respect and humility. Cooper doesn’t feign to have all the answers and he has taken alot of hits on both sides of the political aisle.

Today the AARP and AMA (American Medical Association) backed HR3962 (The Affordable Health Care For America Act) being voted on this Saturday. TN Rep. Jim cooper is a heavy hitter in this game…and NEEDS to hear from as many people as possible with just 3 words:

Robust Public Option.

Tell him you are one of the 61% who support it. Under 2 minutes folks. Call (202)-225-4311 or (615) 736-5295.

After meeting with him I’m convinced he wants to vote yes, but like all politicians needs support. I promised I would help flood his office with calls between 8am-5pm tomorrow.

Jim Cooper must be Called. Now. (202) 225-4311 or (615) 736-5295.

Or, find your Congressperson and make your call.

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Tallying the Uninsured Dead

While the anti-health care reform crowd gathered at the Bachmann Tea Party Overdrive in Washington yesterday to try and stop progress, and the Congressional Budget office issued a report critical of the Republican health care plan saying that it would reduce the federal deficit by $36 million less than the Democratic plan, only one lone Congressman was illustrating the ethical obligation we have to enact health care reform.

On the House floor this week, Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) read off the estimated number of people represented in Republican congressional districts who will die next year due to a lack of health insurance.

Here are Grayson’s numbers for congressional districts across the South.

Alabama District 1, Joe Bonner: 114 dead
Alabama District 3, Mike Rogers: 88 dead
Alabama District 4, Robert Aderholt: 114 dead
Alabama District 6, Spencer Bachus: 69 dead
Arkansas District 3, John Boozman: 151 dead
Florida District 1, Jeff Miller: 130 dead
Florida District 4, Ander Crenshaw: 116 dead
Florida District 5, Ginny Brown-Waite: 200 dead
Florida District 6, Cliff Stearns: 152 dead
Florida District 7, John Mica: 143 dead
Florida District 9, Gus Bilirakis: 129 dead
Florida District 10, Bill Young: 138 dead
Florida District 12, Adam Putnam: 133 dead
Florida District 13, Vern Buchanan: 160 dead
Florida District 14, Connie Mack: 159 dead
Florida District 15, Bill Posey: 152 dead
Florida District 16, Thomas Rooney: 165 dead
Florida District 18, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen: 199 dead
Florida District 21, Lincoln Diaz-Balart: 195 dead
Florida District 25, Mario Diaz-Balart: 195 dead
Georgia District 1, Jack Kingston: 123 dead
Georgia District 3, Lynn Westmoreland: 102 dead
Georgia District 6, Tom Price: 100 dead
Georgia District 7, John Linder: 156 dead
Georgia District 9, Nathan Deal: 159 dead
Georgia District 10, Paul Broun: 120 dead
Georgia District 11, Phil Gingrey: 113 dead
Kentucky District 1, Ed Whitfield: 113 dead
Kentucky District 2, Brett Guthrie: 102 dead
Kentucky District 4, Geoff Davis: 83 dead
Kentucky District 5, Harold Rogers: 130 dead
Louisiana District 1, Steve Scalise: 111 dead
Louisiana District 2, Joseph Cao: 98 dead
Louisiana District 4, John Fleming: [garbled on video]
Louisiana District 5, Rodney Alexander: 132 dead
Louisiana District 6, Bill Cassidy: 105 dead
Louisiana District 7, Charles Boustany: 112 dead
Mississippi District 3, Gregg Harper: 117 dead
North Carolina District 3, Walter Jones: 100 dead
North Carolina District 5, Virginia Foxx: 97 dead
North Carolina District 6, Howard Coble: 103 dead
North Carolina District 9, Sue Myrick: 82 dead
North Carolina District 10, Patrick McHenry: 101 dead
South Carolina District 1, Henry Brown: 157 dead
South Carolina District 2. Joe Wilson: 118 dead
South Carolina District 3, Gresham Barrett: 112 dead
South Carolina District 4, Bob Inglis: 133 dead
Tennessee District 1, Phil Roe: 110 dead
Tennessee District 2, John Duncan: 85 dead
Tennessee District 3, Zach Wamp: 94 dead
Tennessee District 7, Marsha Blackburn: 71 dead

Texas District 1, Louie Gohmert: 155 dead
Texas District 2, Ted Poe: 126 dead
Texas District 3, Sam Johnson, 144 dead
Texas District 4, Ralph Hall: 134 dead
Texas District 5, Jeb Hensarling: 151 dead
Texas District 6, Joe Barton: 136 dead
Texas District 7, John Culberson: 103 dead
Texas District 8, Kevin Brady: 132 dead
Texas District 10, Mike McCaul: 127 dead
Texas District 11, Michael Conaway: 164 dead
Texas District 12, Kay Granger: 156 dead
Texas District 13, Mack Thornberry: 144 dead
Texas District 14, Ron Paul: 146 dead
Texas District 19, Randy Neugebauer: 132 dead
Texas District 21, Lamar Smith: 119 dead
Texas District 22, Pete Olson: 150 dead
Texas District 24, Kenny Marchant: 138 dead
Texas District 26, Michael Burgess: 162 dead
Texas District 31, John Carter: 124 dead
Texas District 32, Pete Sessions: 209 dead
Virginia District 1, Robert Whitman: 68 dead
Virginia District 4, Randy Forbes: 93 dead
Virginia District 6, Bob Goodlatte: 99 dead
Virginia District 7, Eric Cantor: 76 dead
Virginia District 10, Frank Wolf: 81 dead
West Virginia District 2, Shelly Moore Capito: 102 dead

Too bad he didn’t calculate the numbers for Bart Gordon’s district since Congressman Gordon has decided to base his voting decisions not on any kind of shared values like “providing health security for all Tennesseans” or “Tennesseans shouldn’t have to risk their homes, life-savings, and the ideal that is the American Dream because of mounting medical bills brought on by being denied life-saving treatment by bottom-line focused insurance companies” but on the lies spread by the talk radio wing of the Republican party.

(Hat Tip: The Institute for Southern Studies)

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Last night, Keith Olbermann devoted his entire show to the dire need for health care reform in the U.S.. His morally-based arguments for reform and health care for all are arguments we have far too infrequently.

If you don’t have time to watch the full show, at least watch the last two parts (see below) and embrace Keith’s idea to enable the National Association of Free Clinics to organize clinics in the districts of the 6 Senators who could potentially help filibuster the healthcare reform bill.

“Respect Pain and Patient”

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“A Wake Up Call to Washington”

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On September 8th a ‘Care-A-Van’ of Oregon Doctors began a cross-country trip to Washington DC. Today the Mad as Hell physicians will be in Nashville to deliver their clear and simple message to our elected officials in Washington:

“HEALTH CARE FOR PEOPLE – NOT PROFIT!”


You can hear the doctors at 1:30pm on WVOL’s 1470AM “Open Forum” hosted by Rev. T.J. Graham. Listen online at wvol1470.com.

Then from 4:30 – 6 PM they will lead a rally at the headquarters of HCA (Healthcare Corporation of America) at One Park Plaza.

Dinner with the Doctors at 6:30 will be at the Shoney’s on White Bridge Road.

For more info contact Warren Duzak at wduzak@hotmail.com ot 615-292-5608

The Mad as Hell Doctors visit to Nashville is sponsored by Healthcare-NOW, Physicians for a National Healthcare Program, National Nurses Organizing Committee, Nashville Peace and Justice Center, Nashville Peace Coalition, Green Party of Middle Tennessee & others.

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David Gregory convened a health care reform panel this morning on Meet the Press with Tom Daschle, Dick Armey, Rachel Maddow, and Sen. Tom Coburn. Coburn called the American health care system “one of the best in the world.” Daschle fought valiantly to get a word in about real policy. Armey shouted about “MoveOn.org” whenever he felt threatened. And Maddow did her best to dismantle Armey’s lies. It was frustrating to hear Coburn and Armey, who I’m sure both have very good health insurance, argue cooly about the cost of reform while completely ignoring the moral imperative we have to fix the system.

But the most frustrating part was listening to Coburn say on a national news program that there is “no indicator anywhere in this country that the quality of medicine has declined” one hour, and then reading about the health care services provided free by a Remote Area Medical field hospital to thousands in Los Angeles who can’t get them otherwise the next:

They came in their thousands, queuing through the night to secure one of the coveted wristbands offering entry into a strange parallel universe where medical care is a free and basic right and not an expensive luxury. Some of these Americans had walked miles simply to have their blood pressure checked, some had slept in their cars in the hope of getting an eye-test or a mammogram, others had brought their children for immunisations that could end up saving their life.

In the week that Britain’s National Health Service was held aloft by Republicans as an “evil and Orwellian” example of everything that is wrong with free healthcare, these extraordinary scenes in Inglewood, California yesterday provided a sobering reminder of exactly why President Barack Obama is trying to reform the US system.

The LA Forum, the arena that once hosted sell-out Madonna concerts, has been transformed – for eight days only – into a vast field hospital. In America, the offer of free healthcare is so rare, that news of the magical medical kingdom spread rapidly and long lines of prospective patients snaked around the venue for the chance of getting everyday treatments that many British people take for granted.

In the first two days, more than 1,500 men, women and children received free treatments worth $503,000 (£304,000). Thirty dentists pulled 471 teeth; 320 people were given standard issue spectacles; 80 had mammograms; dozens more had acupuncture, or saw kidney specialists. By the time the makeshift medical centre leaves town on Tuesday, staff expect to have dispensed $2m worth of treatments to 10,000 patients.

Health insurance company whistle-blower Wendell Potter told us about the life-changing experience he had after seeing a field hospital in action and a 60 Minutes segment showed the pain in the faces of the people who were turned away. These people whose only access to health care is through these randomly scheduled appearances of field hospitals in their community are not the faces of a “best in the world” system. Tom Coburn is, though. Lucky man.

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“The Republican Old Guard are in the fix an atheist would be in if Jesus showed up and raised his mother from the dead: Their world view has just been shattered.”

That’s how Frank Schaeffer, Monday’s guest and author of Crazy for God: How I Grew Up As One Of The Elect, Helped Found The Religious Right, And Lived To Take All (Or Almost All) Of It Back begins his latest piece posted at AlterNet. In it he explains why Dick Armey et. al. have sunk to the politics of the gutter and describes the recent healthcare town hall meeting disruptions as the result of a “Fascist formula:”

Here’s the emerging American version of the fascist’s formula: combine millions of dollars of lobbyists’ money with embittered troublemakers who have a small army of not terribly bright white angry people (collected over decades through pro-life mass mailing networks) at their beck and call, ever ready to believe any myth or lie circulated by the semi literate and completely and routinely misinformed right wing — Evangelical religious underground. Then put his little mob together with the insurance companies’ big bucks. That’s how it works — American Brown Shirts at the ready.

It’s “insurance industry funded fascism,” he says, and goes on to suggest what can be done:

“It’s time that this whole shabby (and insane) business be exposed, vilified in run out of town on a rail by whatever responsible Republicans — if any — that are still in the party and who want to see the fortunes of their party revived.”

While we wait until some (any?) Republicans are brave enough to break The Eleventh Commandment, you can watch Rachel Maddow do the exposin’, read more from the piece, and hear Schaeffer live on Liberadio(!) with Mary Mancini & Freddie O’Connell this Monday, August 10, from 7 to 9 am on WRVU 91.1 FM.

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The Rachel Maddow Show investigates RecessRally.com and the people behind the people disrupting the town hall meetings. What Maddow and her staff find is that they’re professional, Republican-staffed organizations and companies who are doing the bidding of their corporate healthcare overlords and who are very adept at using the American people.

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“These guys are the pros. This is an industry. Americans are showing up at these events to shout down the discussion and chase their Congressman and they are enraged. And they’re enraged at least in part because they’re being riled up by over-the-top fabricated conspiracy theories about healthcare. And they’re being directed and orchestrated by corporate interests that do this for a living and do it very well.

Recessrally.com is not some organic outgrowth of American anger. This is how corporate America creates the illusion of a grassroots movement to support their own interests. This is what they do. They are professionals. This is an industry. To talk about these town hall events as some organic outpouring of average American folks who have concerns about healthcare is to be willfully blind to what is really going on which is, professional PR operatives generating exploitative manufactured strategically deployed outrage in order to line their own pockets.

These PR spinmeisters get paid a lot of money for doing it. The corporations they work for get to kill legislation that would hurt their profits. And the real people who they launch into these town hall settings after they’ve been told that healthcare reform is a secret Commie plot to kill old people and to mandate sex changes? Those real people get more and more and more and more angry and more and more and more alienated. And ultimately they get left like the rest of us with a healthcare system that is broken and doesn’t work in the interest of the American people and that does work in the interestes of the corporations who profit from the way the system is now.

This is professional, corporate-funded, Republican-staffed PR…and it should be reported as such.”

Would you like fries with that manipulation?

I just heard a story on NPR about a spontaneous protest twenty years ago by some older Americans trying to get their Congressman to listen to them. He wouldn’t give them any time so they waited outside his office and, trying to be heard, they yelled at him and followed him out to his car.

Now, Americans have an opportunity to be heard about about healthcare – you know, the real concerns most of us have about meaningful reform with a public option – and instead of allowing these concerns to be heard, they are being thwarted by other Americans who have been armed with lies and misinformation and who, because of their bad behavior, won’t allow a real healthcare discussion to take place.

What about the other Americans who are attending these town halls hoping to learn something or get a question answered? Is it a coincidence that along with their elected official, they aren’t being heard either? Uh, no. When recent polls show that over 70% of the American people want healthcare reform, not allowing them to be heard is part of the plan.

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