Jim Hightower
DON’T DIAL 9-1-1 . . . DIAL H-M-O
Let’s
say you’re at home one evening, sitting there in your La-Z-Boy, maybe with a
cool one in your hand, when suddenly you feel a sharp pain in your chest, your
left arm is tingly and sort of numb. Heart attack! Or it least it could be one.
You go for the phone to get emergency help . . . but you don’t call 9-1-1 . . .
instead you call H-M-O.
What?!
Yes, it’s the latest "advance" in the wonderful world of managed
health care-instead of calling 911, you’ve got to call your HMO, and its
corporate bureaucrats will decide whether you get an EMS to come help you.
USA
Today reports that Kaiser Permanente, one of the largest HMOs in the country, is
the first to impose this new layer of corporate bureaucracy between you and the
medical service you need-a bureaucratic step that could waste precious minutes
as you explain to some Kaiser clerk sitting in a cubicle way out in Wisconsin
what your symptoms are and why you think you need an ambulance pronto, PDQ, post
haste, and, like, right now!
You’ll
be pleased to know that the HMO clerk at the other end of the phone has received
a good four weeks of training for the job, so of course he or she is perfectly
qualified to diagnose you from afar. If the clerk decides you need an ambulance,
one is then dispatched to you. But-get this-the HMO will send an ambulance from
a firm that it contracts with, even though another company’s ambulance is closer
to you.
Kaiser
says it’s doing a favor for the whole society because, according to its
emergency medical services director, "there’s a finite number of
ambulances. We want to reserve them for those who really need them." Great.
A corporation with a bottom-line incentive NOT to send an ambulance is going to
be the arbiter of whether you get one. And if the HMO makes a boo-boo, leaving
you dead at the other end of the phone, remember-the Republicans in congress
continue to give HMOs immunity from lawsuits.
This
is Jim Hightower saying . . .
Welcome
to the cold world of corporatized medicine.
"Who
do you call: 911 or your HMO?" by Julie Appleby.
USA
Today: August 24, 1999.
SEN.
MURRAY’S AMAZING LETTER
An
astonishing letter has come into my hands, and I want to share it with you. It’s
a letter that Senator Patty Murray, Democrat of Washington State, wrote to
President Clinton, and it’s filled with a breathtaking level of ignorance and
arrogance.
Her
subject is the big meeting of the World Trade Organization to be held in Seattle
this November. Clinton, other heads of state, WTO officials, and corporate
executives are gathering to prepare a whole new round of globaloney to shove
down our throats. But some uninvited guests are going to show up, too. Churches,
consumer groups, unions, farmers, citizen activists, environmentalists, and
other citizens are coming to protest the WTO’s anti-democratic agenda of
corporate supremacy.
This
upsets Sen. Murray, who tells Clinton in her letter that "The Seattle Host
Organization is reporting that many companies . . . are hesitant to become
active supporters because they are concerned about security and confrontations
with various demonstrators." Well my my, we sure can’t let the people’s
First Amendment rights ruffle the feathers of these distinguished corporate
executives.
So
she wants Clinton to do two things: First, give a national speech explaining
that [quote] "The WTO is the indispensable rule making, enforcement body .
. . for all countries." Hello . . . Patty . . . remember the Constitution?
When did we replace our own self-government with the WTO? Second, she wants
Clinton to call-in those pesky protesting groups and tell them [quote]
"that you do not want disruptive and damaging actions distracting the media
and the public from your important goals." Right on! We can’t have just
plain citizens assembling in the streets and speaking out like this was some
kind of a democracy-and we certainly can’t allow the people’s voices to distract
the media from Bill Clinton’s "important goals."
This
is Jim Hightower saying . . .
She’s
a U.S. Senator? Let’s send Sen. Murray back to a high school civics class. To
read her whole letter, go to my website: www.jimhightower.com.
THE
NAFTA RIPOFF
The
use of statistics has been called the art of drawing a straight line from a
wrong assumption to a foregone conclusion.
Well,
the Picasso of Statistics is the U.S. Commerce Department, which keeps telling
us how good NAFTA is for our country. For example, we’re told that our exports
to Mexico are up! Never mind that our imports from Mexico are waaaay up,
creating the third worst trade deficit that we have with any country in the
world. But let’s peek into that export number that officials are so proud of. It
turns out that four out of every ten products that we ship to Mexico are not
sold to the people there, but are parts sold to U.S. factories located in
Mexico. We’re "exporting" to ourselves. Then, General Electric and the
rest use these parts in their Mexican factories to make appliances, and what
not, shipping the finished product back here to sell to us. So the
"export" becomes an import.
If
that’s too confusing, don’t worry, because corporations like GE are going to
simplify the process, by getting the suppliers of parts to move to Mexico, too!
The Wall Street Journal reports that forty percent of the electric ranges that
GE sells in the U.S. are coming from Mexico, and now a U.S. company that makes
glass doors and tops for the stoves has moved there, as has a maker of burners,
and regulators. U.S. Steel, which sells 100 tons of sheet metal every day to
GE’s Mexico factory, also has built a steel plant, just 50 yards from the GE
factory.
The
bottom line is that America’s chief export is jobs. Thanks to NAFTA, U.S.
corporations can eliminate middle-class jobs here, move the factory to Mexico,
pay subsistence wages to people there, then send their stoves and other products
back to the U.S. without paying a dime in tariffs, selling the products for the
same high price they’ve always charged. The wage difference is pocketed by the
corporation.
This
is Jim Hightower saying . . .
What
a ripoff! I say it’s time to repeal NAFTA.
"Mexico
builds" by Joel Millman. Wall Street Journal: August 23, 1999.
"That
giant sucking sound." UTNE Reader: August 23, 1999.