-Caveat Lector-

FYI, interesting observations by Media Research Center's Chair, Brent
Bozell, on TV/media coverage of PBR. No wonder there are folks out there
complaining about HMOs, especially after they're fed such filth by the
major news networks. [Isn't it something like 70% of folks who get their

news from the evening news broadcasts?]
MRC [http://www.mediaresearch.org/] is a media watchdog group.
-A

>      *Touting A "Patients' Bill Of Rights"
>
>      By L. Brent Bozell III
>      July 22, 1999
>
>      The first fight in any political debate is over semantics. Who
could be against the "Clean
>      Air Act"? Who could oppose controlling "assault weapons"? The
"right to choose"? The
>      800-pound gorilla in the semantics debate is, of course, the
"objective" press. The
>      media have the power to make or break the slogans partisans use.
>
>      It is common practice for the liberal press to attach the word
"so-called" to GOP
>      initiatives. When the Contract with America became the "so-called
Contract with
>      America" in news reports, its proponents were placed squarely on
the defensive. So
>      prevalent is the "so-called" curse that the media now attach it
to organizations
>      themselves, thus bringing doubt to bear not on the issues, but on
the participants. When
>      Dan Rather files a story about the "so-called Christian
Coalition," it's a clear message to
>      the viewer not to believe the group, period.
>
>      The Democrats, on the other hand, have no such problem. Whatever
they say, and
>      however they put it, is accepted immediately. The latest semantic
manipulation in the
>      Democrats' favor is the "patients' bill of rights." The vast
majority of press reports from
>      the Senate debate on regulating health maintenance organizations
refer without quotes to
>      a "bill of rights," which offers "protections" for patients and
doctors against mean,
>      cost-cutting HMO bureaucrats. The Democrats are the champions of
this
>      wonderful-sounding idea and the Republicans who oppose it, are
well, monsters. So the
>      Republicans have (again) knuckled under with a watered-down
version, since who
>      would want to be against "rights" or "protections"? In USA Today,
reporter William
>      Welch began: "Senate Republicans, ending a week of bitter
partisan debate late
>      Thursday, approved a limited set of federal rights for patients
in managed care health
>      plans."
>
>      Reporters ought to be dropping "so-called" into sentences like
this. First, what are
>      patients' rights? To hear the typical Democrat talk, a patient
has the right to walk into a
>      hospital and order whatever procedure he wants, and cost is no
object.
>
>      The "patients' bill of rights" is a completely perverse abuse of
terminology, a direct
>      opposite to our classic understanding of individual rights,
specifically the right to
>      property. What the Democrats are supporting here is their classic
understanding of an
>      "entitlement," something that everybody should have no matter how
much everybody
>      "else" pays. If Republicans weren't duck-and-cover types, they'd
call this the "patients'
>      bill of entitlements." And if the media weren't so blinded by
their support of the
>      Democrats, it might occur to them, too.
>
>      The media also tell us that this "bill of rights" is being
advocated by "consumer groups,"
>      while those who oppose it are simply bought and paid for by the
insurance industry.
>      Now consider these "consumer groups." Many of these groups, like
Families USA, are
>      strident left-wing advocacy groups who would love to see
Canadian-style single-payer
>      health care installed in the United States. Do they favor
"consumers" or some hidden
>      agenda?
>
>      Question: If insurance groups are protecting their profits and
"buying" politicians, then
>      who's "buying" the Democrats? You'll never see the press
investigate that one.
>      Reporters are not explaining how the Democrats' push for a right
to sue HMOs is a
>      favor to one of their biggest donor groups, the trial lawyers.
Somehow, the trial lawyers'
>      push for expensive litigation puts them among the "consumer
groups," too.
>
>      By contrast, note how quickly CBS reporter Bob Schieffer puts the
Republicans in
>      someone's pocket: "Pushed by the big insurance companies, the
Republican majority
>      stuck together as expected and killed the Democrats' HMO reform
plan, plank by
>      plank. On near party line votes, Republicans killed the
Democratic proposal to give
>      doctors, not insurance companies, the final say on treatment."
Schieffer also brought on
>      the new president of the American Medical Association to express
his outrage.
>
>      But do you remember five years ago, when the AMA and those people
complaining
>      about choice for doctors were the cavemen who opposed the Clinton
health plan? If the
>      Clintons had their way then, those same doctors would be asking
the government how
>      high to jump now.
>
>      Over at NBC, Tom Brokaw bluntly pitted the Republicans against
the little guy. "You
>      and your HMO. What happens if something goes terribly wrong? Can
you sue? Not if
>      the HMO is regulated by the federal government. The Republican
majority in the U.S.
>      Senate made sure that remains the case in a heated debate and a
vote that tonight has
>      the Democrats in full cry."
>
>      Of course, NBC loved HMOs when they were the Clintons' solution
for keeping health
>      costs down. The morning the Clinton plan came out, reporter Jim
Maceda waxed:
>      "Managed care already works in ten states, and, the reformers
insist, is saving money."
>
>      As usual, whether it's mangled semantics or political theatrics,
the network outrage
>      manufacturers aren't interested in patients or doctors, but in
helping Democrats and
>      hurting Republicans.
>
http://www.mediaresearch.org/columns/news/col19990722.html
* FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY

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