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Controversial Michael Moore Flick 'Sicko' Will Compare U.S. Health Care With Cuba's

By Don Hazen, AlterNet. Posted April 23, 2007.


Moore's new film, debuting in Cannes this May, tackles the failures of the U.S. health care system and includes a segment where 9/11 rescue workers visit Cuba for treatment they couldn't get in America.

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To state that controversy and Michael Moore go hand and hand is to utter the obvious, and Moore's latest film Sicko will clearly be no exception.

Sicko, which will be premiering at the Cannes Film Festival in May, is a comic broadside against the state of American health care, including the mental health system. The film targets drug companies and the HMOS in the richest country in the world -- where the most money is spent on health care, but where the U.S. ranks 21st in life expectancy among the 30 most developed nations, obviously in part due to the fact that 47 million people are without health insurance.

The timing of Moore's film is propitious. Twenty-two percent of Americans say that health care is the most pressing issue in America. Health care will clearly be a major issue in the upcoming presidential campaign, as the problems with America's health care system have mushroomed during the Bush administration. For example, between 2001 and 2005 the number of people without health insurance rose 16.6 percent. The average health insurance premiums for a family of four are $10,880, which exceeds the annual gross income of $10,712 for a full-time, minimum-wage worker. In addition, the lack of insurance causes 18,000 excess deaths a year while people without health insurance have 25 percent higher mortality rates. Fifty-nine percent of uninsured people with chronic conditions such as asthma or diabetes skip medicine or go without care.

Under wraps, but one surprise out of the bag

The details of Moore's new film are being kept under tight wraps. According to inside sources, only a handful of people have seen the film, and both the film maker and Harvey Weinstein -- the film's distributor, who also distributed Moore's hugely successful Fahrenheit 9/11 -- are remaining tight-lipped about the film's contents.

Nevertheless, one aspect of the film will not be a total surprise. One of the film's segments, an increasingly controversial boat trip to Cuba, exploded onto the pages of The New York Post, the Rupert Murdoch-owned tabloid, when at least one 9/11 cleanup worker who had been invited to participate in a trip to Cuba for Moore's Sicko went to the press.

The boat trip, according to sources who spoke to both the NY Post and The Daily News, took ailing rescue workers to Cuba for health treatment for respiratory ailments which they suffer as a result of working at Ground Zero, and for which a number of the workers have no health insurance. The purpose of the trip, according to some, was to show that the free health care in Cuba is superior to the health care system in the U.S. Those invited on the trip, as described by Janon Fisher in the Post, were told the "Cuban doctors had developed new techniques for treating lung cancer and other respiratory illnesses," and that health care in Cuba was free.

Health care advances in Cuba

According to the Associated Press as cited in the Post article, "Cuba has made recent advancements in biotechnology and exports its treatments to 40 countries around the world, raking in an estimated $100 million a year. ... In 2004, the U.S. government granted an exception to its economic embargo against Cuba and allowed a California drug company to test three cancer vaccines developed in Havana."

Although trip participants signed confidentiality agreements prohibiting them from talking about the trip, some thought the trip a success. From the NY Post:

"From what I hear through the grapevine those people who went are utterly happy, said John Feal, who runs the Fealgood Foundation to raise money for responders and was approached by Moore to find responders willing to take the trip. "They got the Elvis treatment."

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Don Hazen is the executive editor of AlterNet.

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View:
MUST
Posted by: Eat Politicians on Apr 23, 2007 2:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WATCH....

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» I Can't... Posted by: motamanx
» Missing The Point Posted by: Itsthewater
» RE: Missing The Point Posted by: peaknik35
Welcome Back, Michael Moore
Posted by: Tom Degan on Apr 23, 2007 3:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've said this befor but it bears repeating: Michael Moore is a national treasure. His upcoming film will probably be his most controversial to date. To say that America's health care system is dysfunctional is the understatement of the century. So he took these 9/11 victims to Cuba to get treated? What a hoot! He is the political prankster supreme!

One hundred years from now when people like Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh are mere footnotes in American history - relegated to the historical trash bins - they will be conducting college courses on Michael Moore.

I'm seriously thinking about organiziing a Michael Moore Film Festival this summer. Not far from where I live, there is a little town callen Rosedale, NY which would be a perfect site for the event. It's an "arsty" little burg with a movie theater that tends to screen documentaries and classics. That would be one heck of a party! Maybe Fourth of July weekend. Anybody have plans for that weekend?

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY.
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: willymack
» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: AlienSlave
» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: mom'z the word
» National treasure?? Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: National treasure?? Posted by: cmaciain
» RE: Conservasaurus = Troll Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Conservasaurus Posted by: Eat Politicians
» RE: Conservasaurus Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Conservasaurus Posted by: Eat Politicians
» RE: Hi, Conservasaurus Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: National treasure?? Posted by: davidbdr
» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: drricklippin
» RE: Welcome Back, Michael Moore Posted by: Tom Degan
Also can't wait
Posted by: missjibba on Apr 23, 2007 3:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm also really looking forward to this movie.

I must make a slight correction, however. It was the masterful "Bowling for Columbine" which won the Oscar for best documentary. Who can forget Moore's stirring speech at the ceremony?

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Healthy and Wealthy
Posted by: DrLynn on Apr 23, 2007 4:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The boat trip, according to sources who spoke to both the NY Post and The Daily News, took ailing rescue workers to Cuba for health treatment for respiratory ailments which they suffer as a result of working at Ground Zero, and for which a number of the workers have no health insurance.

But you may remember that the government gave millions to the families of the stock brokers, bond dealers, etc that were in the twin towers when it went down - which some of the families said was not enough. But the workers do not seem to count enough even to get health care

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» YEP!!! Posted by: greekTowner
Cuba
Posted by: marxalot on Apr 23, 2007 4:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, it goes without saying that Castro's government would jump at the chance to be compared favorably to the U.S. in a high profile documentary. If I sneak into Cuba without Michael and his cameras, what sort of health care might I expect? Or prison cell maybe? Moore does embrace controversy, you got to give him that.

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» RE: Cuba Posted by: drmflorida
» RE: Cuba Posted by: AlienSlave
» RE: Cuba Posted by: WitchyNy
» RE: Cuba Posted by: davidg
Moore is no journalist—thank God!
Posted by: HughScott on Apr 23, 2007 5:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you want accurate reporting, ignore Michael Moore and read newspapers instead. But if you want American society exposed with all its faults (and glory), see his films.

I will never forget watching President Bush in Fahrenheit 9/11-- frozen by what only could’ve been fear after being told about the first Twin Tower attack.

I couldn’t helping thinking that John Kerry would have immediately left the room and taken command of the situation. Not Shrub. For seven long minutes, he continued reading a grade school book ironically titled “The Goat” while waiting for someone to tell him what to do. Had more Americans made that connection – inaction and inept leadership -- Kerry would have won in 2004.

Hugh E. Scott, editor of King-George.biz -- the only website with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

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Bowling Again
Posted by: Urstrly on Apr 23, 2007 5:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As the sad story of the Virginia Tech massacre unfolded in the media and Tom Delay called for arming students, I could only think that "Bowling for Columbine" needs a re-release. Michael Moore is a propagandist of the best kind; we give free speech to Exxon, for Pete's sake, and smile tolerantly when they lie about global warming. If Moore can give us a vision by which we can reform our health care system, he should get another Oscar and a Pulitzer to boot.

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View from the UK
Posted by: Cruella on Apr 23, 2007 5:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The frightening think here is that while our health system may be superior ro the US, we are hurtling in the direction of yours at an alarming speed. Privatisation and increasing fees for services and "patient choice" - meaning you have to pay for anything above the absolute minimum of care.

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» RE: View from the UK Posted by: WhatNow?
» RE: View from the UK Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: View from the UK Posted by: Gisele
» Sorry Gisele Posted by: famouspipeliner
» RE: Sorry Gisele Posted by: Gisele
» RE: View from the UK Posted by: CatDad
MOORE IS LATE WITH SICKO
Posted by: drricklippin on Apr 23, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think most would agree that the U.S. Health Care System is on the ropes and finally ripe for change

Moore's film will just be another nail in the coffin. I would have liked to see it come out at least a year ago.

His comparison to Cuba will probably not be taken too seriously by the health care reform players.

Still I can't wait to see SICKO!

Dr. Rick Lippin
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com
Single payer with much more prevention advocate

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» RE: MOORE IS LATE WITH SICKO Posted by: anonimus1
» RE: MOORE IS LATE WITH SICKO Posted by: drricklippin
Red Brown and Blue Party comment
Posted by: redbrownandblueparty on Apr 23, 2007 6:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Moore is a clever communicator. His pairing of the free socialist system of Cuba and the expensive capitalist system of the U.S. is instructive. We are so brainwashed by the MSM and their moneyist/capitalist owners that it's almost impossible to get a clear perspective. The RBB believes each person has a right to health care which would be easily affordable in a just society that wasn't addicted to war and money. We the People come before We the Money on a scale of just values.

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» RE: ed Brown and Blue Party comment Posted by: redbrownandblueparty
» RE: ed Brown and Blue Party comment Posted by: Roberta_RansleyMatteau
This was a real gem
Posted by: AdamG on Apr 23, 2007 6:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On the other hand, some balked at the idea of going: "I would rather die an American than go to Cuba," Joe Picurro told the NY Post. Picurro, an ironworker with a laundry list of respiratory and other ailments, said, "I just laughed. I couldn't do it. "

So Joe, let's get this straight. Your own government pulls a false flag operation, you get sick being "collateral damage", but you're too patriotic to get treatment from a pinko commie dictator? You Joe, are a real American, you make us all proud.

God Bless America!

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» RE: This was a real gem Posted by: Parcival01
» RE: This was a real gem Posted by: MartianBachelor
» RE: Picurro, duh? Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
"The Hospital"---- 1971
Posted by: zooeyhall on Apr 23, 2007 6:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"We have created the most enormous medical entity ever conceived, and people are sicker than ever! We cure NOTHING! We heal NOTHING!"

---George C. Scott, in "The Hospital" (1971)

Check out this great movie from the early 70's, a time when they made real movies about REAL issues. A movie still pertinent today.

Sadly, we have not only made no progress from 30 years ago, but have actually gotten worse.

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Sick Care
Posted by: snowhound on Apr 23, 2007 6:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The American health care system is a fraud from the ground up. It's not about free health care for all. Our health is controlled by the drug companies who spend billions in advertisement money to promote more drugs that make people sick. They control the FDA and supress Alternative medicine and drive up drug prices to ridiculous levels. The US child mortality rate is ranked 44th in the world. Did you know that when Japan changed their vaccine schedule for infants to begin at the age of 2 years they went from 21st to # 1 in this category. This proves how dangerous vaccines can be to our children. Autism has risen to epidemic levels. We are a sick nation because we have a Sick Care system that is more interested in making money than actually making people healthy. Our seniors are on so many prescription drugs at the costs of our federal tax dollars. How about growing old and dying when it's time instead of being pumped up on loads of drugs just to stay alive in a semi-vegetative state for maybe 3 more years. The greatest health advancement in the last 100 years has been sanitation and clean water. Antibiotics can be considered life saving, but even those are over prescribed. The problem with drugs is that they don't treat what's causing the problem, they mask it. They all have eventual side effects which lead to taking more drugs. On a good note we have the best emergency care in the world. If you have been in an accident our surgeons are the most skilled and you have a good chance of recovering.

It's time to start eating whole healthy foods that are not stripped pf their nutritional value by pasteurization or irradiation. Seek out local food sources that don't use pesticides and meat that is pasture raised. Take control of your health and realize that God created your body with innate intelligence to heal itself. Seek out Alternative therapies and natural medicines. Use detoxification as a way to enable your body to heal itself.

Our government wants to eliminate all forms of natural food and medicines because a sick nation on drugs generates trillions of dollars into the pockets Pharma companies and ultimately themselves.

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Take From An Insider
Posted by: NoPCZone on Apr 23, 2007 6:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
20 years in healthcare. The US system is an effing mess, designed to make the most money for the most minimal service delivered in the most impersonal fashion. The MBA's moved into healthcare and have ruined everything they have touched.

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» RE: Take From An Insider Posted by: particle
Michael Moore gets it wrong again
Posted by: Bobsays on Apr 23, 2007 7:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He blew it with 'Bowling for Columbine' by totally misleading the public with the evidence: in fact the whole high school shootings thing started in Canada (check the facts it was in 1976 in Ottawa), and Canada's gun control laws have not made the place immune to nut jobs going ballistic with a weapon (Montreal 1989, 2006 etc. etc.).

Moore does the same again with healthcare. In fact both Britain and Canada are by the day adopting the American mixed market model. Just today the British Medical Association has published a report detailing how people in the UK have to pay extra to get treatment in that 'free' system and that the whole thing is moving rapidly to becoming a market system. We see in Canada similar trends well underway.

What is good about the US system, apart from the British and Canadian, is that you pay and you get something. In Britain you pay through your taxes and national insurance, and then you have to pay again when you actually need healthcare. Only because it is a stalinistic, sneaky system, nothing is made clear and you have to do the equivalent of bribing doctors to jump the queue and get timely treatment before you die. That is why Brits more and more take-off to Europe to get treated because, hey, if you got to pay, you might as well pay less and get a system that doesn't kill you off with deadly bugs and incompetence. Because that is Britain.

Healthcare needs to be managed through insurance schemes: there are just too many choices these days. I do agree the Cubans have an excellent community health system (I have used it) and we could learn a lot from it. But as for Canada and the UK, forget it.

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» The better question is... Posted by: Bobsays
» Obesity up... Posted by: Bobsays
» RE: Obesity up... Posted by: Gisele
» Hey asshole, I'm an oldie! Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Michael Moore gets it wrong again Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Michael Moore gets it wrong again Posted by: Eat Politicians
Moore, the perennnial useful idiot
Posted by: Robert2007 on Apr 23, 2007 7:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Michael Moore was taken to the hospitals that Castro has built for tourists and foreigners who are living in Cuba and are able to pay the dictator with euros, Canadian or American dollars.
But to say that regular Cubans receive that same type of health care is preposterous and shows Moore's lack of information about the reality of life under Castro for the regular Cubans.
If you want to see how the hospital for Cubans look like, not the ones where Moore was taken to by his Cuban handlers, click here:
http://www.therealcuba.com/Page10.htm

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» RE: Moore, the perennnial useful idiot Posted by: stormchilde1975
» RE: Moore, the inciteful documentarian. Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
More of the same old shit from the fat liar.
Posted by: dikaiosyne on Apr 23, 2007 8:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love it when you guys start using that fat fraud Michael Moore or one of his movies as grounds for a movement against another facet of the capitalist system. The problem with "sicko" is that it is one more use of lies stated as fact and presented to the sychophant left who all rise and shout "hurrah"!...let the "truth" be told! Guess what? Cuba's healthcare ain't near as good as American health care and it will never be as good as American healthcare. You see the problem with Cuba is that they have no developing medical technology and no drug R&D and they have little in the way of specialized treatments for conditions such as AIDS. I know Michael Moorer would like to see the world develop into his vision of Utopia.... but the reality is that there is no and never will be an Utopia for liberals no matter how much you wish it so. You might as well realize that the best damn medical care available is right here in the good old US of A. Our system has problems but we should be working to minimize those problems and streamline the ability for the working poor to obtain basic insurance coverage. Tax credits perhaps might work for the poor. Subjecting the country to a gummint controled medical care system isn't going to help anyone except the neo-totalitarian wanna-bees who think gummint the end all and be all of life.

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» RE: More of the same old shit from the fat liar. Posted by: Roberta_RansleyMatteau
USA vs Cuban Infant Mortality...
Posted by: picket on Apr 23, 2007 8:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There were several news articles past weekend re the rising infant mortality in the deep south, specifically Mississippi.

11.4/1000 in Mississippi [2007]
6.0/1000 in Cuba [2002]

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MUCH BETTER DOCUMENTARIES, WATCH THESE INSTEAD
Posted by: anonimus1 on Apr 23, 2007 8:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Aaron Russo, the guy famous for making the movies "The Rose" and "Trading Places," and for bringing Led Zeppelin to America, makes Michael Moore look like he works for the Bush Administration. Russo's film gets straight to the core point of America's problems. WATCH HIS FILM.

AMERICA: From Freedom to Fascism, by Aaron Russo
http://video.google.com/videoplay? docid=-4312730277175242198&q=aaron+russo&hl=en (remove space after ? in this link)

Also worth watching, as it goes more in-depth on the same topics...
The Money Masters - How International Bankers Gained Control of America
http://video.google.com/videoplay? docid=-515319560256183936&q=money+masters&hl=en (remove space after ? in this link)

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AARON RUSSO MAKES MICHAEL MOORE LOOK INFANTILE
Posted by: anonimus1 on Apr 23, 2007 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Aaron Russo, the guy famous for making the movies "The Rose" and "Trading Places," and for bringing Led Zeppelin to America, makes Michael Moore look like he works for the Bush Administration. Russo's film gets straight to the core point of America's problems. WATCH HIS FILM.

AMERICA: From Freedom to Fascism, by Aaron Russo
http://video.google.com/videoplay? docid=-4312730277175242198&q=aaron+russo&hl=en (remove space after ? in this link)

Also worth watching, as it goes more in-depth on the same topics...

The Money Masters - How International Bankers Gained Control of America
http://video.google.com/videoplay? docid=-515319560256183936&q=money+masters&hl=en (remove space after ? in this link)

Remove the corporate-owned US Federal Reserve from power, and I'll bet the healthcare system in the USA will clean itself up -- since there won't be a secret governing body working behind the scenes to destroy the middle class in the USA.

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Our current health-care debate is rooted in the 1930s
Posted by: kathat on Apr 23, 2007 10:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Newsweek
April 16, 2007 - Jonathan Cohn has studied health care for a decade, and he's heard hundreds of grim tales—people who skimp on doctors' visits and skip medications so they can make the rent; patients who died because, as he writes in his new book, they "literally could not afford" to fall ill. That book, "Sick: The Untold Story of America's Health Care Crisis—And the People Who Pay the Price," focuses in heart-rending detail on nine of those stories, the kind of which may well find their way into stump speeches in 2008. But it also brings a fresher perspective to the health-care debate, thanks to a second, more surprising source: Depression-era documents that tell nearly identical stories. Then, too, ailing people went without care as politicians and physicians sparred over its spiraling costs. "It's frightening how parallel the situations are," Cohn says in an interview. But America isn't necessarily doomed to repeat its history, as long as there's still time to learn from it.
Cohn begins his saga around 1910, a time when Doctors had pioneered anesthesia and antiseptics, transforming hospitals "from places where people were lucky to survive to places where people expected to be cured," he writes. But by the late '20s, many of the shiny new facilities looked like ghost towns. As medicine's abilities grew, so did its costs; from 1918 to 1929 the tab nearly doubled from 7.6 percent of a family's budget to 13 percent. A week in the hospital cost more than what most workers made in a month. Health insurance didn't exist at the time, so the only option was to pay out-of-pocket—and once the Depression hit, few could.
The empty hospitals were as much a disaster for underworked doctors as they were for patients. So in 1927 a high-powered committee of docs started conducting the country's first "medical census." After five years, the committee concluded that America needed a national health-insurance system like some already in place in Europe. One fan of the proposal described its core mission by cribbing a phrase from Karl Marx: "That all basic public-health services should be available for the entire population according to its needs."
In hindsight, Marx wasn't the best of spokesmen. The Washington Star sarcastically suggested expanding the plan "to include all the other things about which the poor are worried. Why not socialize food and clothing, rent and fuel?" The Boston Evening Transcript dismissed the proposal as "entertaining." And although the committee consisted largely of doctors, it didn't, apparently, represent the rest of the medical community. The Journal of the American Medical Association published its own editorial branding the authors of the report "medical Soviets."
By 1933, the New Deal was underway, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt was considering national health insurance as part of it—but conservative doctors, then as now, were a powerful lobby. "They were out in front fighting this, arguing that it would interfere with the practice of medicine," says Cohn. "The cynical interpretation is that they were concerned about their incomes. The generous interpretation is that they were concerned it would mean worse medical care." FDR ultimately dropped the issue so it wouldn't derail the Social Security Act. Doctors then created the first private health-insurance plans, as well as rural medical groups that mutated into HMOs in the 1970s.
With every major change in policy from the 1930s on, including the foundation of Medicare in 1965, says Cohn, America had the same debate all over again. Cohn argues that "the last 80 years have been a test case of whether we as a country made the right choices" in the late '20s and early '30s. Whatever your politics may be, it's hard to read the modern-day stories in his book and come away thinking we did.

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GOD I LOVE MICHAEL MOORE-
Posted by: WitchyNy on Apr 23, 2007 10:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He reminds me so of John Lennon. While everyone else is running around like chickens without heads...he speaks the plain simple truth.

And God, the rich scum running this country hate the truth....

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