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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-08-07 04:15 PM
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Fought for America? Bush Still Won't Give You Health Care
Fought for America? Bush Still Won't Give You Health Care

By Eric Haas, Rockridge Nation. Posted November 8, 2007.

Subjecting veterans to the profit-maximizing health insurance industry leaves our moral debt unpaid.


Last April, President Bush told members of American Legion Post 177 that "we owe the families and the soldiers the best health care possible."

That debt is still unpaid. According to a new report by Harvard Medical School researchers, published last week in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Public Health, millions of veterans and their family members have not been getting the medical care they need.

People assume that veterans automatically get health care from Veterans Affairs (VA). They don't. Despite their military service, the Bush Administration requires most veterans to pay additional money for insurance in order to get care. But many veterans don't earn enough money to be able to buy health insurance. At the same time, they aren't poor enough under Bush Administration guidelines to get VA care or to qualify for Medicaid. Abandoned, these veterans struggle alone to find health care. In the insurance marketplace, our veterans remain in harms way -- their service, and our debt, forgotten.

Why haven't we made good on our obligation? Our moral debt to our veterans, based on mutual need and shared responsibility, goes unpaid in the current health insurance system because it is based upon corporate self-interest. An insurance company's responsibility is to maximize profit, even when that means denying care to veterans. Clearly, our national moral responsibility is not the same as an insurance company's corporate fiduciary duty to maximize profits. (This concept is discussed further in our Rockridge Institute paper, The Logic of the Health Care Debate).

In fact, as the veterans' predicament demonstrates, these obligations can be quite contradictory. A vet is a national hero. Soldiers risk their lives. Many will be injured. Some will die. In return, we promise to support our troops in whatever way possible -- both on the battlefield and when (or if) they return as veterans. Certainly, our support includes medical care.

There is no price that can be put on the risks a soldier takes. Nor is there a way to estimate the care a veteran will need during their lifetime. Our mutual obligations are easily understood, but impossible to quantify.

But a health insurance company's duty is to its shareholders. Its legal and contractual obligation is to maximize profits. Health insurance companies do that by quantifying likely health costs, and selling the policies for more than they will pay out in benefits. If you cannot afford their policies, then they will not sell you one. Simply put, a veteran is just another potential customer.

more...

http://alternet.org/rights/67158/
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Dr.Phool Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-08-07 04:37 PM
Response to Original message
1. I tried to get a VA health card last year, when I lost my insurance.
But, my disability pension pays me too much to qualify. They told me when I enlisted at the height of the Vietnam war, that I'd always have the VA for health care.

Then a draft dodging chimp changed it. I would have signed up years ago, but I always had adequate insurance through my employer. I was supposed to have it for life. But when management ran the company into the ground, we lost everything.
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johan helge Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-08-07 05:41 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Can a draft dodging chimp just change
what you were told when you enlisted? God, I hate the Republicans.
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Crunchy Frog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-08-07 04:54 PM
Response to Original message
2. They can use the emergency room, just like everyone else.
:sarcasm:
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