By Sam Smith
The pending health care legislation is as corrupt, cynical and contemptuous of simple decency as any bill I’ve seen in over a half century of covering national politics. Which still leaves the question of what to do about it.
After all, living in the Mafia neighborhood that contemporary America has become, survival can easily, and wisely, take precedence over principle.
For example the Institute of Medicine estimates that around 18,000 Americans die because of a lack of health insurance. A study in the December issue of American Journal of Public Health puts the figure for those 18-64 at 45,000 lives lost a year. Does one ignore such numbers in order to stand on principle against an indefensible payoff to the health insurance industry?
Continue reading Health Care: Of Lives And Principle