Healing the health care system

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Today corn is at least $1 below the cost of production. Yet the chicken, cattle and hog producers are still losing significant amounts of money in spite of reduced input costs. Agriculture seems to be going through its economic downturn, while the rest of the country debates health care.

In regard to health care, what is a public option, pre-existing condition, getting rid of yearly dollar caps, lifetime dollar caps, single payer, co-ops, death panels, illegal residents receiving insurance — what is true, and what is not? And why should rural folks even care, or is this just a big city issue?

While hog farmers are selling hogs at $20 to $30 below cost of production at 1974 prices, many working class families struggle to make mortgage payments, pay their water and electric bills, while at best receiving only cost of living raises.

In Fiscal Year 2009, Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM) registered a $429 million profit. ADM is also one of the largest convicted price fixers. Now let us address health insurance and companies like Aetna. Aetna reported a 28 percent decline in profits recently, which still showed $2.90 a share profit on a $28 stock. This is a very significant return for any company, but especially in tough economic times.

How do these companies extract these kinds of returns while ordinary people struggle to just hold on to our jobs, cash, and way of life? At the same time other corporations request the federal government (the taxpayer) to bail out irresponsible, high risk money schemes that were done in the name of free trade, free markets and deregulation. The common denominator with all of these corporations is greed and their abuse of the consumer or taxpayer.

The American Medical Association (AMA) and many state medical associations have filed class action lawsuits against a number of insurers including Aetna, Cigna and WellPoint, accusing them of engaging in price fixing to underpay local doctors and increase the patient’s share. While those are ongoing actions, Ingenix, a parent company of United Health has already settled a similar lawsuit for $350 million. This is the same company organizing against health care reform by scaring the elderly with death panels, their output of misinformation, and along with fellow insurers are sending their troops of lobbyists to wage war in Washington D.C. with a ratio of six lobbyists to each Congressman to kill health care reform.

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