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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBernie Sanders: The Foundations of American Society Are Failing Us
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/19/opinion/coronavirus-inequality-bernie-sanders.html?smid=fb-share&fbclid=IwAR16Bv5aZ0UQ2o7L5IjLSwe_RjrHpbcjeHY8_GratvycVI81Jeufivan3kAThe absurdity and cruelty of our employer-based, private health insurance system should now be apparent to all. As tens of millions of Americans are losing their jobs and incomes as a result of the pandemic, many of them are also losing their health insurance. That is what happens when health care is seen as an employee benefit, not a guaranteed right. As we move forward beyond the pandemic, we need to pass legislation that finally guarantees health care to every man, woman and child available to people employed or unemployed, at every age.
The pandemic has also made clear the irrationality of the current system. Unbelievably, in the midst of the worst health care crisis in modern history, thousands of medical workers are being laid off and many hospitals and clinics are on the verge of going bankrupt and shutting down.
In truth, we dont have a health care system. We have a byzantine network of medical institutions dominated by the profit-making interests of insurance and drug companies. The goal of a new, long-overdue health care system, Medicare for All, must be to provide health care to all, in every region of the country not billions in profits for Wall Street and the health care industry...
Rich people get the virus and rich people die. But it is also true that poor and working-class people are suffering higher rates of sickness and are dying at much higher rates than wealthy people.
This is especially true of the African-American community. This disparity in outcomes from exposure to the virus is a direct reflection not only of a broken and unjust health care system but also an economy that punishes, in terrible ways, the poor and working class of this country.
In addition to millions of lower-income families not having any health insurance, Covid-19 virus is vicious and incredibly opportunistic in attacking people with pre-existing conditions and weakened immune systems. For a wide variety of socio-economic reasons, it is the poor and working class in this country who are exactly in that position as they suffer higher rates of diabetes, drug addiction, obesity, stress, high blood pressure, asthma and heart disease and are most vulnerable to the virus. Poor and working-class people have lower life expectancies than rich people in general, and that tragic unfairness remains even truer with regard to this pandemic.
Further, while doctors, governors and mayors tell us that we should isolate ourselves and stay at home, and rich people head off to their second homes in less populated areas, working-class people dont have those options.
When you are living paycheck to paycheck, and you lack paid medical and family leave, staying home is not an option. If youre going to feed your family and pay the rent, you have to go to work. And, for the working class, that means leaving your home and doing jobs that interact with other people, some of whom are spreading the virus.
The pandemic has also made clear the irrationality of the current system. Unbelievably, in the midst of the worst health care crisis in modern history, thousands of medical workers are being laid off and many hospitals and clinics are on the verge of going bankrupt and shutting down.
In truth, we dont have a health care system. We have a byzantine network of medical institutions dominated by the profit-making interests of insurance and drug companies. The goal of a new, long-overdue health care system, Medicare for All, must be to provide health care to all, in every region of the country not billions in profits for Wall Street and the health care industry...
Rich people get the virus and rich people die. But it is also true that poor and working-class people are suffering higher rates of sickness and are dying at much higher rates than wealthy people.
This is especially true of the African-American community. This disparity in outcomes from exposure to the virus is a direct reflection not only of a broken and unjust health care system but also an economy that punishes, in terrible ways, the poor and working class of this country.
In addition to millions of lower-income families not having any health insurance, Covid-19 virus is vicious and incredibly opportunistic in attacking people with pre-existing conditions and weakened immune systems. For a wide variety of socio-economic reasons, it is the poor and working class in this country who are exactly in that position as they suffer higher rates of diabetes, drug addiction, obesity, stress, high blood pressure, asthma and heart disease and are most vulnerable to the virus. Poor and working-class people have lower life expectancies than rich people in general, and that tragic unfairness remains even truer with regard to this pandemic.
Further, while doctors, governors and mayors tell us that we should isolate ourselves and stay at home, and rich people head off to their second homes in less populated areas, working-class people dont have those options.
When you are living paycheck to paycheck, and you lack paid medical and family leave, staying home is not an option. If youre going to feed your family and pay the rent, you have to go to work. And, for the working class, that means leaving your home and doing jobs that interact with other people, some of whom are spreading the virus.
As Governor Cuomo reminds us, what we do today will determine tomorrow.
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Bernie Sanders: The Foundations of American Society Are Failing Us (Original Post)
ancianita
Apr 2020
OP
Unless you can go to Congress now Senator and fix it...I don't want to hear it...where are your
Demsrule86
Apr 2020
#1
He has a bill. Putting this in the NYT is part of trying to build popular support for it,
thesquanderer
Apr 2020
#5
Demsrule86
(68,768 posts)1. Unless you can go to Congress now Senator and fix it...I don't want to hear it...where are your
concrete solutions?
Budi
(15,325 posts)3. That's my exact thought after reading his statement.
What are YOU, Senator Sanders doing in the Senate to drive home your point.
Walk the Talk, my friend.
thesquanderer
(11,998 posts)5. He has a bill. Putting this in the NYT is part of trying to build popular support for it,
for when there may be a congress and president he can work with. IOW, he's doing his job.
msongs
(67,478 posts)2. spending $1 trillion on F 35s is a clear indication of politicians' values nt