-Caveat Lector-

So, the press could have a liberal slant after all.  Hhuum. . .
Amelia
who has said so for years but is always surprised when folks do not see it.


----- Original Message -----
From: A.C. Szul Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 1999 11:52 PM
Subject: [CTRL] FWD: MRC's Bozell on "Patients Bill of Rights"


> -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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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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