May 12, 2012: Brothers and Sisters in Single Payer Bowling IV!

April 20, 2012

It’s that time of year again, folks, when we get together and bond-by-bowling with Donna and Larry Smith and all our favorite single payer peeps!
Paulie and Otis are back to welcome everyone to “Single Payer Bowling IV”, Saturday, May 12, from 2-5 p.m.!

This is a fundraiser and “split-tastic” coming together if you will, to support the great work of the ISPC, and a great time to meet, greet and mingle with all your single payer cohorts!  Other organizations endorsing single payer bowling  and working hard everyday to keep corporate healthcare from going OVER THE LINE include: PDA IL, PNHP, Chicago Single Payer Action Network and yours truly, Illinois Media Progressives.
$25. gets you 2 big hours of bowling, a pizza and a pitcher of beer or pop for your lane, and the company of the bestest health care activists this side of the Pecos.
Sign up today by calling Annie at (773) 619-8035 or contact Al at alpinge@gmail.com

You can also like ISPC on facebook and RSVP for bowling  at https://www.facebook.com/events/217095268396824/
Tell ’em Paulie and Otis sent ya!

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Dignity. Respect. Occupy.

January 25, 2012

Aurora, IL, weighs in outside of a Bank of America last Saturday, and shows that Occupy is as mainstream as an eviction notice or a health premium hike.
We are most certainly the 99%.

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You bet I will, Will!

October 1, 2011

A hearty “Huzzah!” to Will County activists who took the common sense and fiscal responsibility of single payer straight to Will County’s board.

Argue with ’em if you think you can, but we don’t think you can.
Well done!


Hi Wisconsin, Sorry We Missed You!

February 27, 2011

Hiya Wisconsin,
It’s your neighbors from Chicago. Just a note to let you know we took to the streets along with thousands across the country yesterday to deliver a simple message to corporate-minded politicians everywhere on your behalf.
Mess with one of us, you mess with all of us.

Chicago Solidarity Rally February 26, 2011.
Photos: Troy Martin

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

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Single Payer Bowling

December 2, 2010

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER FOR SINGLE PAYER BOWLING


“We know what you do at night.”

December 2, 2010

Sen. Rickey Hendon’s rhetorical mastery of the obvious deserves a watch.
It ain’t full equality, but at least it’s officially a conversation, with legal status.

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We’re Back, and We’re Bowling!

November 23, 2010

Illinois Media Progressives has as much trouble dealing with this post-modern economy as any honest American, but one thing we’ll never have an issue with is hurling a spheroid down an oiled wooden floor at a bunch of wooden sticks.

Especially if we’re doing it with single payer activists, some of our favorite peeps ever.

So we’re pleased as punch to co-host the third annual
“Single Payer Bowling” with special guests, Donna And Larry Smith.

And we’re downright thrilled to join with the Illinois Single Payer Coalition, Progressive Democrats of America, Chicago, and the Chicago Single Payer Action Network to make “SP Bowling III” the biggest and bestest yet.

Join us Saturday, December 11th, 1:30-4:00 p.m., Diversey River Bowl.

SIGN UP FOR SINGLE PAYER BOWLING HERE

And here’s a personal message from Single Payer Bowling Spokesbowlers, Paulie and Otis:

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Cleaning Up Chicago and Calling Out for Champions

April 22, 2010

Unsustainable energy sources are so 40 years ago but they continue to feed the need and in the process, muck up our lives and our planet.

Recently, IMPs met up with one of the leaders of the Chicago Clean Power Coalition Becky Clayborn at the April meeting of PDA Illinois. Clayborn, also of the Sierra Club, pointed out the deadly health and environmental risks of coal-fired power plants in the United States and in Chicago.

Specifically, the Fisk and Crawford plants on the South and near South West side of Chicago. These two plants have caused major health problems in their surrounding communities of Pilsen and Little Village.

“They have the highest population of individuals around these two coal-fired power plants in Chicago than of any other coal-fired power plant in America,” Clayborn said.

Among the many noxious toxins that these plants belch out, it’s the fine particulate matter that becomes disturbingly deeply embedded.

“Basically, it’s as if the inside of your lungs have been sunburned,” Clayborn said.

Ouch.

These particles can also be carried over long distances by wind and then settle on ground or water. This settlement makes lakes and streams acidic; changes the nutrient balance in coastal waters and large river basins; depletes the nutrients in soil; damages sensitive forests and farm crops; and affects the diversity of ecosystems.

Ouch, pt.2

Clayborn also discussed the plans to pass a new Chicago-Clean Power Ordinance that would significantly reduce these harmful emissions from Chicago’s coal plants, championed by Alderman Joe Moore of the 49th Ward.

At his April 13 City Hall press conference in front of nearly 200 supporters from a variety of environmental, social justice, health and neighborhood organizations Moore said:

“We’re asking these plants to do business in a way that does not endanger the health of Chicago’s citizens,” said Alderman Moore. “I’m asking my fellow council members to protect public health and improve Chicagoan’s quality of life by voting for the Clean Power Ordinance.”

UPDATE:
Here’s Moore himself at PDA’s May meeting asking for our support in getting our Alderpeople on board this historic city ordinance. “Chicago can lead the way.”
Go Joe!

This kind of pollution does not respect Ward boundaries, so good on every member who signs on.

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Strength, Strategy and Donna Smith

April 15, 2010

The fight continues in earnest for health care for all.

Activists from across the whole bleeding state of Illinois, including representatives from
PDA, CNA, Chi-SPAN, Champaign County Health Care Consumers and other members of the Illinois Single Payer Coalition gathered at Augustana Church in President Obama’s old Hyde Park neighborhood to talk about health care.
The consensus was:

We ain’t done yet!

We can do better and we can do more.

Specifically, to keep pushing hard for a single payer plan, like Medicare, improved and expanded to everyone. That’s the path to true health care parity. There is a heapin’ helping of piece of mind down that road and more and more Americans are taking up the fight to take the profit motive out of health care access.

We met a roomful of quality leaders and fighters that are more than up for the task.

Here are some snappy highlights with some big name cameo appearances, including Doc Young who recently wrote so eloquently at HuffPo

“Single-payer Medicare for All is the reform that’s required. Just like almost all other major areas of progress in American life, fundamental health reform requires a movement based on equity, justice, prudence and
science that is free of market greed. That movement today is single payer.”

Yup.

Here is a great conversation with PDA Illinois Chair-Maestro Bill Bianchi and buddy Donna Smith that inspires great hope for the future of the single payer movement and shows the strength and insight of two friends from Chicago fighting for all of us.

Boy, did IMPs miss ya!

Now meet all the member organizations that made this meeting a success.

Rah indeed!

Access Living

Downstate Democrats for Change

Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP)

National Nurses Organizing Commitee(NNOC)

American Medical Student Association (AMSA)

OWL-National Older Women’s League

Progressive Democrats of America Illinois Chapter(PDA)

Chicago Single Payer Action Network

Health Care for All Illinois

Gray Panthers

AFSCME: American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees

APJ: Aurora Peace and Justice

APU: American Patients United americanpatientsunited.org

CAEC: Chicago Anti-Eviction Campaign chicagoantieviction.org

CCHCC: Champaign County Health Care Consumers www.healthcareconsumers.org

ChiSPAN: Chicago Single-Payer Action Network-chispan.org

DP: Democratic Party

FVCPJ: Fox Valley Citizens for Peace and Justice

HC-N: Healthcare-Now www.healthcare-now.org

IMM: Illinois Media Progressives (Hi!)

IGP: Illinois Green Party ilgp.org

ISPC: Illinois Single-Payer Coalition ilsinglepayercoalition.org

JASC: Jane Addams Senior Caucus

LC: Longhouse Coalition www.longhousecoalition.org

NAARPO: National Alliance Against Racism and Political Oppression

NNOC/CAN/NNU: National Nurses Organizing Committee/California Nurses Association/National Nurses Union www.guaranteedhealthcare.org

PDA: Progressive Democrats of America

SADA: Springfield Area Disability Activists


Ain’t it grand to have so many friends!


Zen Master Larry

December 22, 2009

From Donna Smith:
“Larry says it feels a little like healthcare reform.”

“The path looks promising at first (maybe the mail came) but then it leads to nothing but retreat and defeat.
This is what our ice and snow look like in Maryland this morning.
Larry wanted me to share his thoughts and his photo.”

IMPs remembers before the snow fell, when no one dared even speak the words “single payer” much less on the Senate floor; when no one in Washington could even imagine protesting physicians, nurses and activists arrested at the Capitol and a Senator calling for more police, and when the American public still believed its elected officials represented their interests before those of corporations.

We’ve all learned quite a bit this year.

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Moron Bites Back: Rich Miller’s Revisionist History

December 9, 2009

An astute IMP reader informed us of “Capitol Fax” uber-blogger Rich Miller’s foray yesterday into the land of adolescent personality politics.

And it seems to be well worn ground for Miller, at least where it comes to one gentleman.

Apparently Rich has fashioned himself as an authority on Civil War politics, specifically Ole Abe himself, and has used/is using that hyper-inflated belief in an attempt to smear an individual for voicing an opinion over three years ago.

That individual would be one John Laesch, former Congressional candidate in IL-14 district.

John, if you don’t recall, came within a handful of votes of winning IL-14’s 2008 Democratic general primary, despite being outspent 17-1 by the eventual victor, Bill Foster.
Less than 1/2 of 1 percent, in a honest-to-gawd grass roots campaign.

So Rich Miller, who has shown an amazing amount of competence in bringing news of Springfield’s chicanery and general goings-on to the masses, apparently decided attacking John Laesch was worthy of the day’s news, and re-posted, in the words of commenter “How Diasappointing”, an “isolated soundbite” of video of Laesch at a campaign event over three years ago.

The clip, originally posted on a Laesch smear site on YouTube, is an 18 second excerpt from 2006, where Laesch suggests that President Lincoln acted predominantly upon economic, rather than moral concerns when issuing the Emancipation Proclamation.

Miller’s transcription of the clip:

“Abraham Lincoln, I don’t know if you know this, he didn’t [free the slaves] for the right reason, social justice. He just did it because so many white people were out of work because they couldn’t compete with slave labor.”

Miller finds that prospect, or we should say, that isolated video soundbite amusing, and when challenged by a commenter on his site,

– How Disappointing – Tuesday, Dec 8, 09 @ 4:22 pm:

Wow, Mr. Miller, personal attack politics do not become you…BTW, I do love isolated sound-bites that lead to historical discussions in the comments. Perhaps you could tell us, since you saw fit to try and ridicule Mr. Laesch for his opinion, what the impact of slave labor was, and please detail the evolution of Mr. Lincoln’s position regarding slavery as a moral question. Feel free to cite historians of note.

I’m assuming you must have this information, no?

Rich responds in a fit of rhetorical maturity:

– Rich Miller – Tuesday, Dec 8, 09 @ 4:32 pm:

HD, I’ve read quite a lot of Lincoln history, so I think I’d put my perspective up against yours any day. To defend Laesch’s moronic statement is just goofy, especially considering that legalizing slavery was an active subject in Illinois up to and during Lincolns tenure in the Illinois House and he fought against it.

So, bite me, moron.

The commenter responded:

– How Diappointing – Tuesday, Dec 8, 09 @ 5:42 pm:

Never suggested any expertise in the period-but figured you must, since you saw fit to try and ridicule someone else’s opinion.

Please do provide cites, and why you feel they are the most accurate historical works…And the use of sound bites from political attack sites is not only poor journalism, it’s also reflective of the poster’s personal integrity.

(Please feel free to read the –whole thread– IMPs is happy to drive traffic to Rich’s site for this one) There were 45 comments when he closed the thread last evening.

So IMPs, not well-versed in 19th century American history, (not unlike the commenter) turned to teh almighty Google which took exactly .31 seconds to return this piece, published in the New York Review of Books earlier this year.

Esteemed Northwestern University Professor Garry Wills reviewed a book edited by esteemed Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (yes, President Obama’s beer buddy) on Abraham Lincoln’s own words on racism and slavery.

Prof. Wills:

So deep was Lincoln’s belief in a free market of labor that he condemned slavery for impinging on the free whites’ right to the fruits of their work. The slave owners’ profits from the unrequited toil of their slaves gave them an advantage over those who paid their workers, making the latter less competitive than they would otherwise be. One of the reasons Lincoln wanted to keep slavery from the territories was to protect the opportunities of free white workers…

.31 seconds. Love technology.

So intellectually, Rich’s attempt to smear Laesch is unsound to say the least, and although we will acknowledge that a young candidate’s attempt to shorthand a complex issue was somewhat clunky, we also acknowledge that Laesch’s point is in fine intellectual company in the ongoing historical debate as to Lincoln’s motives.

The exchange between Miller and the commenter continued, with highlights including Miller’s use of the words “sillyness”, “moronic”, and a plea in defense of the right to make fun of people. All in a rather blood-bathy string of comments, in which even Georgia (Georgia10, former front-pager for Daily Kos, now an employee of the Gianoullias’ campaign) felt need to jump in to defend her credentials.

IMPs knows politics is not a business for the faint of heart or willowy of spine, but we wonder, why John Laesch?

-As Miller was attempting to hold Laesch up to ridicule to reflect upon the gentleman for whom he now works, one hypothesis suggests his loyalties could lie with the opposing camp.

-A less strategic and base musing is that Miller holds some personal vitriol for the man.

-And the armchair guess following a few libations was that Rich, once the outsider blogging voice for Springfield, has become entrenched in the “inside the corn-belt-way thinking” that he had initially charged himself with exposing, and is well on his way to becoming part of that problem.

Feel free, at this point, to infer that IMPs holds John Laesch in high regard, which is true, and we are few of many (31,587 Democratic voters within IL-14 alone).

But we offer full disclosure – before IMPs was IMPs, we had occasion to work for John Laesch, primarily because of his political courage and intestinal fortitude to run on what IMPs considers the obvious: that a single payer, expanded and improved Medicare for All solution to our nation’s health care crisis was, and still is, the only fiscally and morally responsible reform.

But this was only one plank of a platform that included fair, not free trade with a focus on jobs, and (as a Navy veteran), strong opposition to Bush’s Iraq war, investment in green energy and locally, opposition to the Hastert highway.

This was while his opponent was hawking biometric national ID cards as an immigration solution.

John’s positions were consistently measured against the obvious, that Illinois families are hurting (which is still horribly true).

His campaign inspired many to become further involved in politics, including a few of his old staff who have run for office themselves. And for IMPs, anyway, we were moved to take a serious look at his present employer’s campaign after John became involved, because we knew there would be a strong voice in support of Illinois’ working families. They are hurting, you know.

But none of this is apparently relevant to Rich Miller, who takes more delight in channeling his nine year-old self.

The question as to why remains open, but since our political encounter with John Laesch, IMPs is proud and honored to count him among our most trusted and respected friends, which is why we feel a compelling need to stand against what would appear to be chronic, coordinated character defamation.

And this is unfortunately old news. During his last run for Congress, Laesch was also at the receiving end of one of the most vicious smear campaigns IMPs has witnessed, and Miller took the low road back then too in not taking a strong stand against the politics of personal destruction.

The three year old smear site on YouTube that Miller chooses to reference is also a little peculiar in its following:

Rich, you’re on the wrong side of history on this one, and you owe John Laesch an apology.

cross posted at Progressive Fox

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For Those Disenfranchised, We Salute You.

December 8, 2009

President Obama had a meeting of the minds last week at the White House Jobs Summit.
The minds included the chief executives of top companies including Google, Disney, FedEx, a handful of small business leaders, as well as economists Paul Krugman, Joseph Stiglitz, Jeffrey Sachs and topping it off with the mayors of Des Moines, San Antonio and Allentown.
Their mission: To get our economy back to pre-recession levels.

According to White House advisor Valerie Jarrett when she appeared on “Good Morning America“, discussions in the job summit will focus on infrastructure, small jobs, exports, green jobs and “innovative ways to retool our workforce.”
But how to retool a workforce that is mostly out of work is a big head scratcher even for these big minds.
Nearly 1 in 5 Americans is either out of work or under-employed.

Hard working Americans are hardly working as the middle class continues to disintegrate.

Quoth Daffy Duck: “And brother, when it disintegrates-it disintegrates!”

And quoth Elizabeth Warren, Chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel created to oversee the banking bailouts, in HuffPo: :

While the middle class has been caught in an economic vise, the financial industry that was supposed to serve them has prospered at their expense. Consumer banking — selling debt to middle class families — has been a gold mine. Boring banking has given way to creative banking, and the industry has generated tens of billions of dollars annually in fees made possible by deceptive and dangerous terms buried in the fine print of opaque, incomprehensible, and largely unregulated contracts.

And when various forms of this creative banking triggered economic crisis, the banks went to Washington for a handout. All the while, top executives kept their jobs and retained their bonuses. Even though the tax dollars that supported the bailout came largely from middle class families — from people already working hard to make ends meet — the beneficiaries of those tax dollars are now lobbying Congress to preserve the rules that had let those huge banks feast off the middle class.

And Salon’s Angela Blackwell who is also jumping up and down and pointing “Over here Mr. President! LOOK!”

Decades of disinvestment in many American communities has left us reeling. We are wasting the most precious resource we have — the ingenuity and hard work of millions. We need all Americans working on all cylinders to keep our economic engine running. A stagnant economy that leaves millions behind cannot compete in the global marketplace.

So will the way it was be the way it will be?
Remember the good old days?

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“Full of sound and fury…”

November 25, 2009

…but ultimately, it would seem, signifying bupkis.

So goes the threat by the Democratic party leaders to revoke the insurance industry’s anti-trust exemption, as reported by HuffPo.
Given the lackluster negotiating skills displayed so far (as evidenced by the current House bill) we can and should expect any tough talk of revoking the industry’s “special rights” to evaporate like an evening mist on a trucker’s overheated windshield, as the present House bill provision is ground into the pavement like an unfortunate squirrel.

Seems like maybe Sen. Harry Reid might be playing Sen. Ben Nelson who seems to be playing Harry, as they both play their fiddles.
And what’s left? A U.S. Senator duking it out with AHIP spokescreature Robert Zirkelbach for the “Tragic Ironist Du Jour” award.

Sen. Nelson, as reported:

Nelson argues that repealing the exemption wouldn’t hurt the big insurers because they’re already so big they don’t need to collude with each other. Repealing it, he argues, would only hurt the little guys.

And Mr. Zirkelbach:

The focus on this issue is a political ploy designed to distract attention away from the real issue of rising health care costs,”

Hurm…


Because Nothing’s Scarier than a Pediatrician

October 30, 2009

Yesterday Dr. Margaret Flowers was arrested, yet again for trying to have a conversation about single payer.
She was part of a Mobilization for Health Care for All sit-in at a Baltimore CareFirst health insurance office and was arrested with 4 others, one of whom, Charles Loubert, is 81 years old. She and Charles were planning to stay in the hoosegow until the CEO of CareFirst, Chet Burrell, agreed to a public meeting with her.

Here are Margaret’s own words on risking arrest for single payer:

In short, I am going to be arrested again because I believe that it is my professional responsibility to advocate on behalf of those who can’t and because it is clear that the other traditional advocacy tools are not working. The phrase that runs continuously through my mind is “To be silent is to be complicit.” I cannot be complicit in the face of an industry that profits at the cost of human lives and in the face of an administration and Congress that are too dysfunctional to stop this practice.

Apparently, this mother of three is pretty scary, because despite Margaret and Charles’ efforts, the authorities got spooked and would not keep this pediatrician in the pokey. In fact, they wanted rid of her.
In a message from Margaret:

Margaret Flowers is home because Central Booking in Baltimore would not send me to jail. Our presence caused quite a stir – not the usual arrestee – and they weren’t sure what to do with us. A long day but we are all well and ready to continue!”

Boo!

As you may know, Dr. Margaret first felt the zip-ties around her wrists in Washington D.C. as part of the Baucus 8, a group of doctors and advocates who stood up in Sen. Max Baucus’ Senate finance hearing on health care, with a simple question: Why are there seats for the insurance industry but not a single seat for single payer?

One by one the activists stood up from their seats-in the audience, and asked the question. No answer was given. The gavel was rapped repeatedly for order.
Dr. Margaret Flowers stood up. She wanted to talk about single payer as a solution. She wanted to talk about why she can’t care for her patients because of corporate bureaucracy.
But she was promptly escorted out of the room, put into a paddy wagon and charged with disorderly conduct for disrupting a Congressional hearing.
Max didn’t want to talk.
Soon Sen. Baucus found he could not continue the hearing with the interruptions from the crowd and asked for “more police.”
Donna Smith wrote about what she saw that day, eloquently and from the heart as usual.

This day the doctors of the Baucus 8 acted as they always have and always do – they acted in the best interests of the patient. Even though they were facing legal consequences for protesting the lack of a single payer voice in Congress and even though they had their own concerns, they quite literally dropped everything and acted on our behalf.
For me, this evidence of professional integrity and commitment spoke even more loudly to their message about healthcare reform. For Senator Baucus, this is a political process which will feather his cap and pad his coffers ever so comfortably if he keeps the for-profit interests protected and enhanced through this health reform legislative process. His health and his standing in life are safe and secure in ways most of us can only imagine – yet he would deny that health security to all Americans.

This “political process” to which Sen. Baucus subscribes, allows 45,000 Americans to die each year.

Reality is simply more terrifying.
Happy Halloween.

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“Cigna 7” Chicago, Jennifer’s Story

October 13, 2009

Because it needs to be told.

Mobilize for Health Care, Thursday, October 15th.
Join the nationwide protests.
This stops, when we say.

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Oh Irony Meter..Bank of America’s Got You Pegged

October 13, 2009

As Bank of America basks in its $45 billion of bailout, turns out it comes up a little short on using that bounty to actually help people.

Just outside the elevators of their vast third-floor command center, attached to the wall, is a cardboard thermometer that shows them inching toward their goal of signing up 125,000 struggling borrowers for a federal program to modify their mortgages…But with weeks remaining to meet the November deadline set by the Obama administration, Bank of America is trailing well behind the other large banks, according to Treasury Department data.

BOA’s mortgage relief temperature may be tepid, but leave it to BOA to raise it to a boil with a dose of surrealistic irony.

…some Bank of America employees continue to express skepticism about whether all of those seeking assistance really need it. “There’s a difference between hardship and entitlement,” said Jerry Durham, Bank of America’s vice president of home retention.

Unintended Master of the Obvious Award Recipient du Jour,
Self Awareness Not Included.

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Chicago “Cigna 7”: Arrest This

October 8, 2009

Seven members of various Chicago single payer groups put their butts on the line this morning by placing them firmly on the floor of the Chicago Cigna headquarters lobby, and refused to remove them until the Chicago police did it for them.

Apparently word hadn’t reached them that Senator Max had taken single payer off the table, or more likely it had, and they don’t rightfully give a good goddam what Max says.
Or anyone that insists for-profit health care financing is anything but a moral, ethical and fiscal abomination.

Representing the Illinois Single Payer Coalition, the Chicago Single Payer Action Network, Progressive Democrats of America and Physicians for a National Health Care Program, the Cigna 7 were taken into custody by the Chicago police late this morning.

Here’s what it looked like:

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Politics made from scratch, not with…

September 30, 2009

But that won’t deter activists like these.
Kudos to those arrested today. And the Baucus 813 before them.
You are proof that we are stronger than a majority of those who represent us.
You took them to school.

Washington is not strong enough to compete with doctors like these.
Dr. Quentin Young, National Coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program, Studs Terkel’s doctor and lifelong fighter for social justice had some wonderfully scratchy words to wear out Sen Max Baucus’ hide in his introduction to the Mad as Hell Doctors on Saturday at the UIC College of Pharmacy.
Doctor Young just celebrated his 86th birthday btw.
Enjoy.

And Dr. Paul Hochfeld, an emergency physician and head Mad as Hell Doctor is on his way to Washington D.C. with a message for President Obama:
Please admit it, you are not strong enough to fight these interests.
At least not without us.

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Chicago’s Congress Crashing Weekend with the Mad as Hell Doctors

September 29, 2009

Yup.
Chicago got them for a whole weekend!
First stop-SK Tools picket line and then a jam packed reception at Joey’s Brickhouse with the Progressive Democrats of America.

These Mad as Hell Docs are barreling down on D.C. with the momentum of thousands of supporters who have heard the doctor’s message loud and clear: Single payer now!
State by state, hundreds of people have gathered to share their stories with the doctors and joined the movement in spirit and sedans.

Here are some highlights from Joey’s…More to come on this Congress Crashing Eve!
Roll on Docs!

All the best!
-IMP

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SK Tool workers get some Mad as Hell Doc support

September 27, 2009

Heard the story?
SK Tool workers in Chicago lost their health insurance with absolutely no word of warning.
“Poof”
On Friday Sept 25th, the Mad as Hell Docs barreled into Chicago making their first stop…On the picket line of SK Tools.
Here’s Doc Paul Hochfeld and some shots we got from the front lines.

More to come.
-IMPs

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Apple with a capital “D”

September 27, 2009

File this one under “Corporate Culture Under-estimates PR Backlash from Really Dumb Move”.

PALO ALTO, CA –Apple, Inc. has censored an iPhone application promoting health insurance reform in the United States.

Single payer or pub opt supporter- doesn’t matter, this move is just dumb.
From the app’s creator:

iSinglePayer, an iPhone application that advocates for single-payer health care reform was rejected from the App Store by Apple because it is “politically charged.” The application displays charts and bullet points about single-payer health care systems, and it allows users to call members of congress. iSinglePayer even calculates your local congressperson using GPS, and displays the amount of money donated to each congressperson from the health sector.

The application was submitted on August 21 and rejected on September 26, more than five weeks after it was submitted. Most applications take 10-14 days to approve. The rejection was made over the phone by a representative from Apple. The representative explained that the application was “politically charged” and was rejected for this reason.

Apple informed Floatopian (which is pretty much just me) that iSinglePayer was rejected in part because it was the product of a lone developer. There are applications developed for particular political candidates, like the official Obama application, but since those have the official support of a politician they are acceptable. When a single developer wants to voice his opinions, Apple censors it.

This one just pegged my dumb-o-meter, and it’s already inspired a physician backlash, from the Mad as Hell docs that Ellen of the Tenth wrote of this morning:

Leaving Chicago on our way to Toledo. Can’t believe the black out of Single Payer on all levels. The dark clouds thicken as we head closer to corporate occupied territory. Please go to your nearest Apple store and tie a white ribbon on it. They have censored our movement and shown a new side to their business.

Think different indeed.

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Harry and Louise? Meet the Mad Doctors.

September 22, 2009

Courtesy of CA Werks

Mad Docs in Chicago!
This weekend!
Visit http://MadDocsChicago.com

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Tie a White Ribbon on your dog’s Weiner Amendment.

September 17, 2009

Just tie white ribbon somewhere!
Show your support for single payer.
Rep. Anthony Weiner gets it.
Tear down the idea of “cost control” and replace it with “sustainability”.
Improved and expanded Medicare for all.

Our friend Nick always said that when activists hold fast to their principles, they find that what was politically infeasible a week, or a month or a year ago suddenly becomes feasible.
Moments of great social change never start with compromise.
We’ve seen in the recent weeks what happens when you start backpedaling.

If it takes a group of Oregon Doctors in a Winnebago speaking, lobbying and tying white ribbons everywhere, then more (of our) power to them.

Dr. Margaret Flowers joined up with the doctors recently and added her voice to the growing choir.
Doctors are Mad As Hell at the insurance industry consistently preventing them from doing their job.
Their job is life and death.
They want to take care of us, and they do not like it when industry bureaucrats step in and tell them “No you can’t.”
It’s about care, not currency.

Dr. Flowers, we bow to your sincerity and will follow your lead to tie Congress down to real reform.

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Backpedaling for Bad Policy

September 16, 2009

IMP friend Ellen of the Tenth speaks on the slow semantic walk away from organizational support of the public option, as the administration continues its quest for a ‘political victory’, (or at least something they can spin as such) over any substantive policy progress.

I pointed out a few days ago that our local HCAN dropped mention of the public option from their last call for volunteers. Scroll down for that. If you’ve read any of my HCAN saga here, you’ll remember that they shared the passion with OFA, not against those trying to kill reform, but against people like me who want reform very badly because we were going too far and might not please the Chamber of Commerce crowd.

And she also quotes her cousin, the esteemed Dr. David Gill, Congressional candidate (IL-15), in his response to the President’s speech:

He might as well have stood strong & tall with Single Payer–the venom from the Right would have been just the same, but he would have been forcefully supported by those who voted for him, believed in him, and worked so hard to win the day in November 2008.

The path he’s taken has robbed his supporters of so much of their passion; in trying to please all, he seems to be pleasing so few.

And so Ellen of the Tenth becomes Master of the Obvious Du Jour and ponders,

I can’t decide if OFA and HCAN got played or if they are they ones playing us.

*NOTE*
Dr. David Gill will be joining the Mad as Hell Doctors, IL Rep. Mary Flowers and Dr. Quentin Young, Friday, September 25th, for a Progressive Democrats of America fundraiser/reception at Joey’s Brickhouse.
Hear the good Doctor speak and meet the Mad Docs.
More info at PDA Chicago.

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Mad as Hell Doctors Keep it Simple.

September 14, 2009

MadBlogHeader
What a revelation, by Senator George McGovern. Apparently, his simple wisdom has prompted a nationwide “slapping of the head”, by gum.

It’s simple. Medicare for all.”

That’s the message the Mad as Hell Doctors are bringing to Chicago on Sept. 26th, and to Congress on September 30, and to President Obama, if you keep calling and emailing.

Our home town hero Dr. Quentin Young will be joining the Mad Docs, along with single payer supporters from across the state, Saturday Sept 26th at the UIC College of Pharmacy, 833 S Wood St. Chicago to meet the doctors LIVE!
Go to MadDocsChicago.com to let ’em know you’ll be there too.

And we’re all gonna holler, “It’s simple. Medicare for all!”

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“It’s Simple: Medicare for All”

September 13, 2009

Says George McGovern in today’s Washington Post, showing the wisdom of his age:

But what seems missing in the current battle is a single proposal that everyone can understand and that does not lend itself to demagoguery. If we want comprehensive health care for all our citizens, we can achieve it with a single sentence: Congress hereby extends Medicare to all Americans.

Former Senator McGovern displaces reigning Master of the Obvious Rep. Antony Weiner as he details the enormous amounts of money flowing into Washington from the industry Washington is supposed to regulate.
And as to “socialism”?

As matters now stand, the insurance companies claim $450 billion a year of our health-care dollars. They will fight hard to hold on to this bonanza. This is a major reason Americans pay more for health care per capita than any other people in the world. The insurance executives didn’t cry “socialism” when their buddies in banking and finance were bailed out. But to them it is socialism if the government underwrites the cost of health care.

Thanks, Senator McGovern, for weighing in on single payer.

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Zombies for Single Payer. Yes. Zombies.

September 11, 2009

Who’d a thunk it, but even the undead are getting their message out, and it seems to always start with, “Blerrrggrouttupp…”
Funny thing, zombies are single payer supporters, and we’re not sure if it’s because they want healthier brains to munch on, or they think they might get cured with universal health care.

Hard to tell, with the ‘blerrgg’ and all…

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Dr. Quentin Young Welcomes the Mad Docs to Chicago

September 10, 2009

At 11 a.m. on Sept. 26th, at the UIC College of Pharmacy Auditorium, the Mad as Hell Doctors will be making their stop in Chicago on their way to Washington D.C., advocating for a single payer solution.

Dr. Quentin Young will be part of the welcoming party.

Here are his well wishes.

We will see you there!

RSVP

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Thank Gawd for 38.

September 10, 2009

Says it all, rather unfortunately.

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Mad as Hell Docs Announce Chicago Stop

September 9, 2009

MadBlogHeader

Got their motorhome running and headed our way!

We’re sure that when the “Care-A-Van” gets here on Sept. 26th, they will be seriously honked off.

Just look at those wheels!

Winnie

Winnie

“We’re mad as hell because our health care system is run by people who profit from illness,” says Dr. Paul Hochfeld, lead Mad As Hell Doctor. “Other wealthy nations have test-driven single payer, and it works. But elected officials in America have closed the door to discussion. We’re here to open it.”

Aces!

Get the local scoop at MadDocsChicago.Com and follow them across the nation at MadAsHellDoctors.Com

This event hosted by the Illinois Single Payer Coalition, invites us all to catch up with the docs on their historic road trip to Congress.
Join them at the UIC School of Pharmacy, Lecture Hall 134.
That’s on 833 S. Wood Street with starting at 11am.
Celebrate and support these ramblers on the road to health care for all!

The original Mad as Hell Doc Quentin Young, National Coordinator of PNHP will be on hand to welcome the crew to Chicago.

RSVP ASAP!

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Rep. Greg Harris, Decreasing the Disparity

September 3, 2009

As a follow up to our report on the frightening disparity in breast cancer mortality rates in “Survival of the Fittest Zip Codes”, we caught up with Rep. Greg Harris of the 13th District of Chicago, who we remembered as a man with a plan to try to rectify this ridiculous rationing of care.

His legislation, HB 5192, The Reducing Breast Cancer Disparities Act was an attempt to attack the problem with increased reimbursements, incentives and patient outreach. That bill is now law, and Rep. Harris wants to get the word out to women, as to what their options are now and what changes have been made to protect their health.
We spoke with him at his district office:

It’s rare we get to follow the legislative process to fruition, so we thought we’d hop in the Way-Back-Machine and share an excerpt from our initial interview with Rep. Harris back in Dec of 2008 on good ol’ Access Chicago.

Kudos to Rep. Harris on his work in the General Assembly on behalf of women’s health.

More info can be found at ChicagoBreastCancer.Org and KomenChicago.Org

Only when single payer becomes law of the land will every woman in Illinois and the nation have equal access to treatment and choice of doctor, regardless of income or zip code.

It’s encouraging to win these battles but we desperately need to win the war.

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Jeff Smith: Discourse Out of Discord

September 2, 2009

In the tumult outside of Monday’s town hall meeting in Skokie, we caught up with candidate Jeff Smith who is vying for a seat in the Illinois House in the 18th district.

As the tea baggers blustered and optioners opined, the din receded as Jeff spoke calmly of moving ahead with legislation on health care that is not “diluted.”

Amen Brother.
According to the Urban Institute, 22,000 people die a year simply because they lack health insurance and therefore lack access to health care.

When it comes to health care, we say we deserve the strong stuff.

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Pfizer’s Not So Pferocious Pfines

September 2, 2009

HuffPo is reporting on naughty pharmaceutical manufacturer Pfizer’s settlement with the Justice department today, as they agreed to $2.3 billion in fines for basically making things up about their products.

Bextra, a painkiller with a standard-issue obtuse yet meaningless product name, was one of the drugs which Pfizer peddled “for unapproved uses and dosages, backed by false and misleading claims about safety and effectiveness”, offering free golf, resort junkets and undoubtedly fancy branded pens.

Not their first time either- Pfizer has coughed up over $11 billion over the last decade for their naughtiness, so I think we can all agree how effective a deterrent billion dollar fines are.

“There’s so much money in selling pills, that there’s a tremendous temptation to cheat,” said Bill Vaughan, an analyst at Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports.

Not to worry, as Pfizer took the opportunity today to also announce their acquisition of Wyeth for $68 billion, which will make them the largest pill pusher in the world, based upon revenue.

Kudos to the whistle blowers within Pfizer-hopefully they got a cut of the action, or at least a few handfulls of Viagra.

Today’s announcement really does put the recent deal the White House brokered with pharma in perspective, as they gave up negotiating drug prices for pharma’s $150 million in public ads promoting the health care reform plan.

Toot toot.

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A Tale of Two Americas’ Paychecks

September 2, 2009

CEO of a government-financed bailout recipient? You’re styling.
Minimum wage worker trying to pay for basic necessities?
You’re screwed.

The Institute for Policy Studies reports today on CEO compensation for financial firms receiving the government largesse of the bailout, and the numbers, although sadly not surprising, are still shocking.

Bloomberg reports:

Lenders including Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. paid CEOs an average of $13.8 million last year, topping the $10.1 million for S&P 500 leaders…

How unfair can life be? That $3.7 million difference is the helipad for the yacht and the gold-plated bidet.

Cut to… those who clean the bidet:
The NY Times reports on a new study of minimum wage workers in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles.
Seems that labor violations are more common than Prada in the Hamptons:

In surveying 4,387 workers in various low-wage industries, including apparel manufacturing, child care and discount retailing, the researchers found that the typical worker had lost $51 the previous week through wage violations, out of average weekly earnings of $339. That translates into a 15 percent loss in pay…The study found that 26 percent of the workers had been paid less than the minimum wage the week before being surveyed and that one in seven had worked off the clock the previous week. In addition, 76 percent of those who had worked overtime the week before were not paid their proper overtime, the researchers found.

Don’t worry ’bout the riff raff tho, the Gulfstream is idling on the tarmac for a quick getaway.

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“From forth the fatal loins of these two foes, a pair of star-cross’d lovers, take their life.”

August 30, 2009

Flashback Sunday, and this fascinating clip of the health care debate under Richard Milhous.

The American political establishment’s love affair with illness-profit, treating health care as a commodity and health care access as a
class-tiered privilege would be a rather vulgar anecdote, if it were not for the collateral damage.

Wake up Washington, eh?
And learn some history so we can finally stop this deja vu all over again.

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An Apple A Day, and Profit Away!

August 28, 2009

Dr. Dean Ornish, medical editor for HuffPo, felt compelled today to carry some bi-partisan water for those intent on profiting off our fellow citizens’ illness, in a piece entitled, Don’t Tread on Me: Transcending the Left Wing/Right Wing Health Care Debate.

I hate to break it to the Doc, but health care reform ceased to be a left/right issue long ago.
As it stands now, it’s purely populist/corporatist, and that transcends all party labels.

Rep. Anthony Weiner, present IMP Master of the Obvious designee laid it all out succinctly during his recent dust-up with Joe Scowlborough, when he asks what the value of having private, for-profit insurance in the mix.
Short answer, bupkis.

But Dr. Ornish sidesteps the free market elephant in the room, and proceeds to lay out his bi-partisan suggestions for perpetuating illness-profit, our own uniquely American macabre lifestyle choice.

For Democrats, it’s a way to make true health care (not just sick care) available to the 48 million uninsured while reducing costs rather than dramatically increasing them, as I outlined in an earlier column.

For Republicans, this approach emphasizes freedom of choice and personal responsibility, not to blame people but to empower them. These are things you can do to heal yourself, to keep you and your family healthy that also, by the way, substantially reduce health care costs while improving the quality of care.

His solution? Diet and lifestyle.
Yoikes.
Funny thing that this is all the rage now, as the free market has had free reign over our collective health care for countless decades, and has had all the opportunities in the world to promote healthy lifestyles and cost reduction, so the status quo is a direct reflection of what the free market has brought to our nation’s health.

Diet and lifestyle are core factors, but perhaps our childhood obesity epidemic is the strongest proof of how much our political infrastructure, D or R, values free market tenets and campaign cash over societal health. Happy Meal anyone?
The Doctor cites his attempt to promote healthier lifestyles, but then draws a conclusion which undercuts his very argument.

I understand those who think that single-payer health care is the way to go. However, after needing 14 years to get Medicare to do something as obvious as paying for intensive lifestyle changes scientifically proven to reverse heart disease despite the strong personal support of those at the highest levels of government and the leading experts in the scientific community, I share the Republican concern about greatly expanding the power of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. I’m as deeply suspicious of big government as anyone…
Bureaucracies tend to perpetuate themselves, whether they are multinational corporations or large government institutions such as Medicare, often at the expense of those that they are supposed to serve. Too much power in any institution tends to stifle innovation.

So Medicare is the fall guy once again, the one government program which has done more for the wellness of our citizenry than any private insurer, as the power of the insurance bureaucracies gets a free pass, the power that denies care outright to maximize profits and contributes nothing to the overall health of America.

Doc, with all do respect, come join us in working American reality, because your defense of for-profit health care financing only perpetuates our national health care tragedy.

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Yoink!

August 26, 2009

yoink

That would be the sound of your health insurance being taken away without notice.
It’s what workers at SK Hand Tool Corporation heard recently and prompted them to strike in Chicago and McCook.

According to today’s Sun-Times employees began to notice that premiums were no longer being deducted from their paychecks.
Now they are living in fear.

“I’m afraid because I might have to go to the hospital,” said Prach, 51, a 25-year SK employee. “I may break down and die at home.”

“This has been devastating,” Richard Berg, president of Teamsters Local 743 said. “It’s like anybody else in society. If you don’t need health insurance, you’re fine, but when you need it, you really need it.”

At least the company “wishes” it could cover it’s workers.
But, see, it’s not their fault.

The company said in a statement, “We realize that employees want to have health care, and we wish that we could provide them with coverage. The elimination of the coverage was not our choice; rather, it was due to a third-party’s decision to remove coverage, which was beyond our control.”

Undoubtedly it was that ‘third party’ that neglected to inform SK’s employees.
Meanwhile back on the picket line…

“People are threatened with losing their homes, with financial ruin.” said Berg.

Because in this country losing health insurance means losing access to care, which means huge financial and physical risk.
Rather gruesome, no?

A high blood-pressure patient, Kim Prach, is supposed to go to the doctor every three months. His last visit was two months ago, and he’s not planning another anytime soon, he said.

Other countries find it inconceivable and inhumane to put off medical care, and barbaric that receiving care can bankrupt an individual.

But this is America, land of the free market and the home of the “yoink”

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Mad as Hell Docs Rock!

August 26, 2009

MadBlogHeaderThe Mad as Hell Doctor tour won’t officially start for another two weeks, but in Sequim, Washington last night, they drew nearly 700 concerned citizens and activists for a town hall meeting on health care.

The Mad Docs will begin their trek to D.C. on September 9 with a stop in Chicago on September 26.
They bring a voice overlooked in the present health care debate, that of the providers.
The Docs are crossing the country in support of a single payer solution to our national health care tragedy.

IMPs will post video of the event when it becomes available, as well as keeping you informed of their progress across the country, but for now, we offer you tape of one of our local health care heroes, Dr. Anne Scheetz of PNHP, explaining how only a single payer solution will allow her to do her job to the best of her ability.

To all the physicians, nurses and health care professionals who are adding their voices to the call for a single payer solution, IMPs say humbly, kick ass and take names!

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“A fundamental right for all, not just an expensive privilege for the few.”

August 26, 2009

Sen. Edward Kennedy on health care.

Let’s all hope his words are heeded, as we are all only as strong as the least among us.

We honor the Senator now with a strong commitment to protect the health and security of our country, and if the industries that have been lobbying so tenaciously to protect their profit margins do not understand their ‘shared responsibility’ to our nation, then we also commit to protect our nation from them.

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Ah, Sweet, Sweet Cognitive Dissonance

August 26, 2009

Brought to you this week by RNC Chair Michael Steele.

Late last night, IMPs opened a bottle of 100 proof and decided to watch Michael on FOX riffing on the “Senior Bill of Frights” that emerged Monday, and it wasn’t the barrel aged libations that made our heads spin.

If you choose to watch, hang on to something, ideally your lunch.

Mr. Steele opened by stating that Medicare, “a program our seniors have come to rely on” will remain “largely intact”.
The FOX spokesmodel then chimed in, referring to the “first tenant” (really, tenant!) of the Bill of Frights, protect Medicare.

Cut to Rep. Anthony Weiner, who’s been slicing through the hypocritical right wing gobbledy goo like a diesel-powered comb through the ghost of Ronald Reagan’s hair, citing the 40% of all our tax dollars that presently go to either a single payer system (Medicare, Medicaid) or (gasp!) honest to gawd socialized medicine (V.A.).

Rep. Weiner then wins the Master of the Obvious Award for the week, when he states that if the Republicans don’t want to cut Medicare, they’re supporting a single payer system.
When Michael’s patronizing chuckles wind down, he states that,

“this single payer program known as Medicare is a very good example of what we should not have happen with all of our health care…Government cannot run a health care system, trust the private markets to do it the right way.”

In summary…
Perhaps the most popular and efficient health care system in our country, Medicare, defended by seniors who will take to the streets to protect it, is completely inefficient, and we should instead trust the private market to “do it the right way”. Which, in turn, is exactly why we need to protect Medicare for the continued care of our seniors.
Got it?
We didn’t, we tried, we gave up, and ended up watching this.
It’s kind of the same bit, but actually funny.

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