Obamacare, with its promise of healthcare reform, took the wind out of the sails of the single payer movement.
In the House of Representatives, the number of co-sponsors of the single payer bill, HR 676, today is at 53 ā down from a high of about 100.
Under Obamacare, 30 million Americans are still uninsured and tens of millions more are underinsured.
Itās a down year for single payer and activists are asking ā what to do?
Whatās the next step?
Single Payer Nowās Don Bechler says we have to hit the streets.
Heās been doing it for years ā building a database of about 25,000 people ā mostly in California ā who support HR 676.
How does he do it?
He and his fellow activists go out and ask people to sign a card calling on President Obama to support HR 676.
The card goes to the citizenās member of Congress and then ā hopefully ā on to the White House.
Only about 43 percent of the people who sign the cards put down an email address.
Bechler is clear on one thing ā single payer wonāt be won online.
Clicktivism wonāt secure single payer.
Street activism will.
We have to meet our fellow citizens face to face ā and convince them ā one by one.
Not everyone is online.
Almost everyone is in the streets.
āWhen we talk to people about single payer, they ask questions,ā Bechler says.
āI say ā would you like to sign a postcard for national healthcare,ā Bechler says. āAnd I shut up and let them ask questions. And they do.ā
Does single payer cover long term care?
Yes,Ā all medically necessary services, including primary care and prevention, Ā inpatient care, outpatient care, emergency care, prescription drugs, durable medical equipment, Ā long-term care, mental health services, dental services ā excluding cosmetic dentistry, substance abuse treatment services, chiropractic services, basic vision care and vision correction ā excluding cosmetic laser vision correction, hearing services, including hearing aids, Ā palliative care and podiatric care.
What happens if I move out of state?
Benefits are completely portable and would move with you. They would continue to be available through any licensed, legally qualified, healthcare provider in the United States.Ā (Check out Single Payer Nowās Question and Answers About HR 676.)
Bechler says that online, itās primarily single-payer activists talking with single payer activists.
In the streets, youāre getting a good cross section of America.
āIf you want the same slice of the pie, stay online,ā Bechler says. āIf you want to a bigger slice of the pie, you go out on the streets and find new people.ā
Bechler also questions the time activists spend talking about āframingā the single payer issue.
āYou go to a national single payer conference, everyone goes to the media or framing workshops,ā Bechler says. āYou get on these phone calls, they are always talking about the best way to say things. There is the illusion that they have will access to a microphone where if they say something this way or that, they will breakthrough. But whereās the microphone? The press hates our guts. Itās the corporate media, the only place you get a hearing is on Amy Goodman.ā
āThe whole framing argument is useless. There is no perfect sound bite for single payer. You canāt say something in four sentences. When you are out on the streets, talking with human beings, they ask questions about single payer and you answer. Thatās it. No sound bit is going to win this thing.ā
Bechler says there is a fundamental difference between communicating online and communicating face to face.
āIf Iām your neighbor, I canāt lie to your face,ā Bechler says. āFace to face has more legitimacy to it.ā
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2 Comments
Canada supposedly has a single payer health care system which the right wing tory party tries to dismantle even though its cheaper to run, more efficient and has superior outcomes to privatized systems.
Dismantling is easy as it requires only gradual under-funding until the wait list become untenable and that allows the privateers entry into the program. a second factor in dismantling is to gradually fold programs omitting necessary services from those in need. So in Canada health care is rationed to those who can’t afford to go the private care route. The wealthy have no trouble accessing quality care.
A good single payer system would look after hearing, sight, oral, health as well as competitive bidding for qualified drugs.
Great Piece!
“Clicktivism” (nice term) won’t achieve anything.
Let your legs – and arms, and bodies, and voices AND COURAGE – do the walking and talking and take it to the streets!