http://www.zerohedge.com/article/economist-health-care-bill-just-another-bailout-financial-system
Economist: Health Care Bill "Is Just Another Bailout Of The Financial System"

Submitted by George Washington on 12/30/2009 14:16 -0500


It is obvious that many republicans oppose the proposed health care bill. But 
many liberals and progressives oppose it as well.

For example, economist L. Randall Wray writes: 

  Here's the opportunity, Wall Street's newest and bestest gamble: there is a 
huge untapped market of some 50 million people who are not paying insurance 
premiums-and the number grows every year because employers drop coverage and 
people can't afford premiums. Solution? Health insurance "reform" that requires 
everyone to turn over their pay to Wall Street. Can't afford the premiums? That 
is OK-Uncle Sam will kick in a few hundred billion to help out the insurers. Of 
course, do not expect more health care or better health outcomes because that 
has nothing to do with "reform" ... Wall Street's insurers... see a missed 
opportunity. They'll collect the extra premiums and deny the claims. This is 
just another bailout of the financial system, because the tens of trillions of 
dollars already committed are not nearly enough.

Wray points out that - with the repeal of Glass Steagall - the financial sector 
and the insurance businesses (the "f" and "i" in the "fire" sector) are 
somewhat merged.


Wray is no conservative. He is Ph.D. is Professor of Economics at the 
University of Missouri-Kansas City, Research Director with the Center for Full 
Employment and Price Stability and Senior Research Scholar at The Levy 
Economics Institute - which focuses on inequality in the distribution of 
earnings, income, and wealth.

Dr. Andrew Coates describes the bill as "a guarantee of insurance industry 
dominance and the continued privatization of health care in every arena."


Dr. Coates is no conservative. He is a medical doctor, a member of the Public 
Employees Federation, AFL-CIO, secretary of the Capital District chapter of 
Physicians for a National Health Program, and teaches at Albany Medical 
College. 

And - as I have previously pointed out - progressives such as law school 
professor Sheldon Laskin, anti-war activist David Swanson, and Miles Mogulescu 
are calling the bill authoritarian and unconstitutional because the government 
cannot legally force people to buy private health insurance.

Indeed, given Wray's point that this is just another bailout in disguise, the 
bill should more properly be called a "wealth reform" bill than health reform 
legislation.

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