Progressive Malpractice
[noun]: ignoring the fundamental economic and political
roots of a crisis; taking a single-issue, band-aid approach
in hopes of gaining mainstream support.
Libertarian Narcissism
[noun]: promoting individual solutions for collective
problems; believing that market pressure alone can bring
out-of-control corporations under control; ignoring the
plight of the poor; pretending major problems can be solved
without serious grassroots organizing and government reform.
Welcome to Sicko Nation: Swimming
in a toxic soup of 100,000 synthetic chemicals-carcinogens,
neurotoxins, hormone disruptors, immune suppressors, excitotoxins.
Worn down by corporate junk food, tainted consumer products,
air and water pollution, incessant advertising, infectious
disease, synthetic drugs, cigarette smoke, and alcohol.
Zapped 24/7 with electromagnetic radiation. Stressed out
by poverty and economic insecurity, fear of crime, rampant
consumerism, and a murderous work pace. A growing number
of us are chronically sick and dispirited.
Aiding and abetting this massive assault, mainstream
medical practitioners, the corporate media, and elected
public officials ignore or cover-up the toxic roots of
Sicko Nation. Money-grubbing politicians offer band-aid
solutions, and then proceed to collect their rewards in
the form of campaign contributions from the pharmaceutical
industry and HMOs (Health Maintenance Organizations).
Big Pharma spends more on lobbying-$855 million between
1998 and 2006- than any other industry in the United States,
according to the Center for Public Integrity. In addition
Big Pharma feeds the insatiable appetite of the mainstream
media, spending more than $70 billion dollars a year on
advertising. Last but not least, U.S. doctors make more
money than any other medical practitioners in the world,
though they typically pay a steep price in terms of a
70-hour workweek, skyrocketing malpractice insurance,
and indentured servitude to HMOs and giant hospitals.
The Emperor of ill health has no clothes, but very few
of our so-called leaders are talking seriously about what
to do about it.
Consumers and employers will spend over two trillion
dollars this year on health insurance, pharmaceutical
drugs, and medical bills, yet we will remain-mentally
and physically- among the unhealthiest people on Earth.
Forty-eight percent of U.S. men and 38% of women can now
look forward to getting cancer. Eight percent of our children
suffer from serious food allergies, 17% are diagnosed
with learning or behavior disabilities, and a third of
low-income preschool kids are already overweight or obese.
Heart disease, diabetes, mental illness, cancer, and obesity
are spiraling out-of-control among all sectors of the
population.
The fundamental causes of most of our chronic health
problems are not genetic or inherited, but rather derive
from couch potato/commuter lifestyles; over consumption
of highly processed, high-cholesterol, nutritionally deficient,
and contaminated industrialized foods; and an increasingly
polluted, stressful, and toxic environment. These, of
course, are problems that even the most expensive prescription
drugs and high-tech medical procedures cannot cure. Unfortunately
the worst is yet to come. Within eight years, according
to the Kaiser Family Foundation, America's health care
costs will soar to $4.1 trillion annually, bankrupting
Medicare and millions of American families and businesses.
Unless we quickly change our priorities from "maintaining"
our Sicko Nation to universally preventing disease and
promoting overall wellness-including cleaning up our food
supply and environment-America's health crisis will become
terminal. This means we must put an end to tunnel vision,
single-issue health care politics and roll up our sleeves
to take on the real culprits: out-of-control corporations,
politicians, and technology.
With millions mentally or physically debilitated, permanently
hooked on the world's most expensive prescription drugs,
Big Pharma, HMOs, and insurance tycoons rake in billions.
According to Dr. Marcia Angell, former editor in chief
of the New England Journal of Medicine, in 2002, "The
combined profits for the ten drug companies in the Fortune
500 ($35.9 billion) were more than the profits for all
the other 490 businesses put together ($33.7 billion).
Over the past two decades the pharmaceutical industry
has [become] a marketing machine to sell drugs of dubious
benefit, [using] its wealth and power to co-opt every
institution that might stand in its way, including the
US Congress, the FDA, academic medical centers, and the
medical profession itself." http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17244
To put it bluntly we must put the "fear of the grassroots"
into the minds of elected public officials. But we will
only be able to accomplish this if can move beyond progressive
malpractice and libertarian narcissism. The critics of
corporate health care and Big Pharma must stop quibbling,
close ranks, and mobilize a massive united front of the
progressive single-payer health care movement, representing
those with no or inadequate health insurance; reinforced
by an army of radicals and libertarians, the 50 million
alternative heath consumers who have rejected Big Pharma's
trillion-dollar drug and heath maintenance scam altogether.
Unless we bring together liberals, radicals, and libertarians,
and mobilize this new majority, we will fail.
The toxic side effects of Sicko Nation are poisoning
the body politic. With much of the population fixated
on their health and psychological problems, worried about
losing their jobs or their health coverage, doped up on
prescription drugs or alcohol, and, for many, compensating
for their alienating jobs with rampant consumerism, politicians
and corporations run amuck. National and global mega-crises-climate
change, peak oil, and endless war-steadily grow worse.
Outgunned and out-maneuvered, public interest organizations
have defensively barricaded themselves in their respective
single-issue silos-competing rather than cooperating,
seldom if ever making the crucial links between food,
environment, lifestyle, work, tax policy, military spending,
and health. Intimidated and/or bought off by Big Pharma
and the medical industrial complex, few of the nation's
elected public officials-and none of the major Presidential
candidates-dare talk about the obvious solution to our
national health crisis: universal health care with a preventive
and holistic focus.
We need universal, publicly funded health care because
millions of the sick and disadvantaged are suffering and
dying. We need universal health care because Big Pharma,
HMOs, and insurance companies are gouging consumers for
two trillion dollars a year, profitably "maintaining"
their illnesses, rather than curing them, steadily moving
the nation along a trajectory that, combined with out-of-control
military spending and corporate tax evasion, will eventually
bankrupt the economy.
In every industrialized country in the world, except
for the United States, medical care is considered a basic
human right, alongside food and shelter, which a civilized
society must provide for all. Of course it's very difficult
for a corporate-indentured government like the U.S. to
afford universal health care, if big pharmaceutical companies
and HMOs are allowed to jack up their profit margins at
will, while the rich and the corporations are allowed
to evade taxes.
The Cure:
Disease Prevention & Complimentary Medicine
We need non-profit universal health care that promotes
wellness and prevents people from getting sick-before
they end up in the hospital or become permanently addicted
to expensive prescription drugs with dangerous side effects.
Simply giving everyone access to Big Pharma's overpriced
drugs, and corporate hospitals' profit-at-any-cost tests
and treatment, will result in little more than soaring
health care costs, with uninsured and insured alike remaining
sick or becoming even sicker.
To cure Sicko Nation and revitalize the body politic,
we will need to build up a comprehensive not-for-profit
public health system that not only guarantees everyone
access to health care, but makes the life or death connections
between food, diet, and health; exercise and health; exposure
to toxics and health; stress reduction and health; and
poverty and health.
As fifty million organic consumers and alternative health
consumers can attest, complimentary and preventive medicine,
utilizing natural herbs, minerals, food based supplements,
organic whole foods, lifestyle changes, and holistic healing
practices is safe, affordable and effective. Preventive
health care, natural medicine, and proper nutrition have
been linked to a broad range of health and social benefits,
including disease reduction, increased academic performance,
and lower health care costs. Unfortunately, a large percentage
of the U.S. population lacks access to health care, complimentary
medicine, and healthy foods. The only solution to this
unacceptable situation is to shift to a single-payer,
publicly financed, prevention-based, universal health
care system. The $350 billion in savings that will occur
by eliminating the profit motive and moving to a single-payer
system will allow us to insure and promote the health
and wellness of our entire population.
In addition, scientific evidence is mounting that Americans'
daily exposure to 100,000 different synthetic chemicals
(less than 10% of which have ever been safety tested)
in our food, water, medicines, body care products, cosmetics,
toys, home environments, etc. are undermining our health
and fueling an epidemic of debilitating and deadly diseases
including cancer, heart disease, asthma, allergies, obesity,
and chemical sensitivities.
Of course we still need conventional medicine and practitioners:
hospitals, diagnostic tests, surgeons, and specialists,
as well as preventive and holistic healers.
To restore public health and bring Big Pharma to heel
will require, as a minimum first step, that we organize
a broad united front between the nation's 100 million
supporters of single-payer health insurance (many of whom
have an outdated or conservative belief system regarding
the relative effectiveness of conventional versus alternative
medicine), and the more radical, often libertarian, 50
million alternative health consumers and practitioners--who
typically hate Big Pharma and the entire medical industrial
complex with a passion.
This united front will require us to move beyond current
"progressive malpractice," whereby single-payer health
care activists work in isolation from alternative health
consumers, often dismissing complimentary medicine and
its advocates as "snake oil salesmen." Similarly "libertarian
narcissism" is just as counter-productive: alternative
health enthusiasts who basically say "to hell with all
government programs" and "socialized medicine," in effect
ignoring the plight of 50 million poor and low-income
Americans who have little or no access to healthy food,
nutrition and health information, or access to quality
health care. Beyond uniting liberal, radical, and libertarian
critics of Big Pharma and the medical industrial complex,
the entire activist rainbow, including environmentalists,
trade unionists, tax reformers, peace activists, and other
progressives will have work hand in hand to treat and
cure our profoundly sick nation.
Forty-seven million Americans currently have no health
insurance, while 50 million more are woefully underinsured.
Unfortunately, being able to afford conventional health
insurance yourself or getting it through your employer
may not help you very much, since Big Pharma and profit-obsessed
HMOs and hospitals are focused mainly on selling you overpriced
(often hazardous) prescription drugs ($300 billion a year),
running expensive tests, and basically keeping you on
permanent health maintenance, rather than preventing and/or
curing our most common ailments such as cancer, hypertension,
heart disease, lung problems, diabetes, obesity, stroke,
and mental illness. Rampant medical malpractice and the
failure of conventional medicine to address our serious
ailments is the primary reason that 50 million alternative
health consumers are taking matters into their own hands
and paying $30 billion dollars a year out of their own
pockets for complimentary medical supplements and practitioners.
Even worse than just expensively maintaining-rather than
curing-chronic illnesses, the collateral damage of Big
Pharma's business as usual can only be described as catastrophic.
As an AMA (American Medical Association) publication admitted
a decade ago, drug related "problems" kill. 198,815 people,
put 8.8 million in hospitals, and account for up to 28%
of hospital admissions." Over the past decade this carnage
has increased. Newsweek magazine, among others, has reported
that side effects from prescription drugs are now the
fourth leading cause of death in the U.S. As medical analyst
Gary Null warns: "A definitive review and close reading
of medical peer-review journals, and government health
statistics shows that. the number of people having in-hospital,
adverse drug reactions (ADR) to prescribed medicine is
2.2 million .the number of unnecessary antibiotics prescribed
annually for viral infections is 20 million. The number
of unnecessary medical and surgical procedures performed
annually is 7.5 million. The number of people exposed
to unnecessary hospitalization annually is 8.9 million.
The problem is clear. The solution is obvious. The trillion-dollar
life or death question is whether we can overcome our
sectarian divisions and mobilize the grassroots power
of the 150 million Americans who are sick and tired of
living in a Sicko Nation. Can we heal the perennial split
between proponents of conventional medicine and the alternative
health consumer movement? Can progressives and libertarians
reach out to the economically disadvantaged and stressed-out
majority to create a massive grassroots pressure that
will literally force the politicians to "do the right
thing?"