Saturday, March 31, 2018

Restore Julian Assange’s access to visitors and the outside world!










Brian Eno and Yanis Varoufakis



It is with great concern that we heard that Julian Assange has lost access to the internet and the right to receive visitors at the Ecuadorian London Embassy. Only extraordinary pressure from the US and the Spanish governments can explain why Ecuador’s authorities should have taken such appalling steps in isolating Julian.

Only recently the government of Ecuador granted Julian citizenship and a diplomatic passport, in a bid to allow him safe passage from London. The UK government, under heavy pressure from the US government, refused to exploit this opportunity to end Julian’s detention – even after the Swedish authorities announced that no charges were, or would be, laid against him.

Now, it seems that the Ecuadorian government that has been ‘leaned’ on mercilessly not only to stop attempting to provide Julian with a diplomatic route to safety but to drive him out of their London Embassy as well. In addition to US pressure, the Spanish government is also using its leverage over Ecuador to silence Julian’s criticisms of Madrid’s imprisonment of Catalan politicians and, in particular, of the arrest of Catalonia’s former premier in Germany.

Clearly, Ecuador’s government has been subjected to bullying over its decision to grant Julian asylum, support and, ultimately, diplomatic status. Naturally, Quito cannot admit that it is buckling under that pressure and it argues, in public, that Julian’s tweets over Catalonia are responsible for the decision to isolate him. Of course this is utterly unbelievable. Julian is now a citizen of Ecuador and as such enjoys the full protection of his freedom of expression guaranteed by the Constitution of Ecuador. Additionally, the only reason Julian is holed up in Ecuador’s London Embassy – and why Ecuador gave him asylum in the first place – is precisely because he empowered whistleblowers’ freedom of expression and defended our right to know the truth about practices of the US and other Western powers that the latter found ‘inconvenient’ once exposed to the light of day.

A world in which whistleblowers are hounded, small countries are forced to violate their cherished principles, and politicians are jailed for pursuing peacefully their political agenda is a deeply troubled world – a world at odds with the one the liberal establishment in Europe and the United States proclaimed as its artifact since the end of the Cold War.

With these thoughts in mind we call upon all citizens of good conscience to send a message to the Ecuadorian authorities asking that Julian’s access to the outside world be restored and another, more pertinent one, to the British authorities to end Julian’s detention.























Friday, March 30, 2018

The real reason why American progressives are so ineffective






Nation states alone cannot do the job—only a new political international has a chance of bridling global capital.  –Slavoj Žižek


BE REALISTIC; DEMAND THE IMPOSSIBLE!


Progressives of the world, unite!

Because of the “success” of the Bernie Sanders’ campaign last election cycle, organizations like the ones listed below now ask for small donations as well as other forms of assistance:

Brand New Congress,
Our Revolution,
Democratic Socialists of America,
Democracy for America,
Progressive Democrats of America,
#AllofUs,
Labor for Our Revolution,
People for Bernie,
Justice Dems,
Food and Water Action Fund,
National Nurses United,
Young Progressives Demanding Action,
Single Payer Coalition,
Common Defense PAC/Vets Against Hate,
Working Families Party,
Millennials for Revolution,
Women's March,
Good Jobs Nation,
#Fightfor15,
Healthcare Now,
Represent.Us,
MoveOn.org,
etc.

What's wrong with this picture?

Here are some of the issues/goals that these organizations want to work on:

Medicare for All,
Free College Tuition,
$15 Minimum Wage,
Women's rights,
Voting rights,
Climate Change,
Criminal Justice reform,
Immigrant rights,
taxes on Wall Street speculation,
etc., etc., etc.

But corporate democrats are worse than useless. Phony progressives like Kamala Harris and Cory Booker are just like Hillary Clinton. And Hillary is even more odious than Trump (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/jul/19/hillary-clinton-donald-trump-unpopular-polling).

Americans cannot accept the “c” word (communism). We need another name for the party that could wrestle power away from the billionaires in 2020, after Trump drives the USA into the ground. Progressives in the USA need various forms of interventions from progressives worldwide.
We need one movement, one party: a New Left International.

(What follows is an excerpt from:
“We Must Rise from the Ashes of Liberal Democracy,” by Slavoj Žižek)

The only way to defeat Trump— and to redeem what is worth saving in liberal democracy—is to detach ourselves from liberal democracy’s corpse and establish a new Left.

Elements of the program for this new Left are easy to imagine.

Trump promises the cancellation of the big free trade agreements supported by Clinton, and the left alternative to both should be a project of new and different international agreements.

Such agreements would establish public control of the banks, ecological standards, workers rights, universal healthcare, protections of sexual and ethnic minorities, etc.

The big lesson of global capitalism is that nation states alone cannot do the job—only a new political international has a chance of bridling global capital.

http://inthesetimes.com/article/19918/slavoj-zizek-from-the-ashes-of-liberal-democracy







































Big Oil and Climate Science on Trial









https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=26&v=pV06eBVYcUA





















































Thursday, March 29, 2018

Lula Leads in Polls as Court Upholds Conviction











https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=52&v=17NgsfvkMCw
































































Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Progressives of the world, unite!






"Everybody in the World Except US Citizens Should Be Allowed to Vote and Elect the American Government"
--Slavoj Žižek



























































































Lucrative Dealing in the Age of Austerity






MARCH 28, 2018











CounterPunchers such as Michael Hudson and Rob Urie have long informed its readers about what goes on in the financial sectors of the US economy in particular and the global economy more generally.

Their writings are usefully complemented for me by valuable accounts of how banking insiders do their work, ranging from the more journalistic (Michael Lewis and Matt Taibbi come to mind) to the more scholarly.  Among the latter, Doug Henwood’s Wall Street: How It Works and for Whom (Verso Press, 1987), although published over two decades ago is still pertinent, especially in view of the Senate’s recent vote, with Trump’s support, to roll back some of the Dodd-Frank legal provisions regulating “too big to fail” banks– thereby of course increasing the likelihood taxpayers will be stiffed yet again in the event of another major banking collapse (deemed to be “inevitable” by Bill Gates).

I have just finished Tony Norfield’s The City: London and the Global Power of Finance (Verso Press, 2016).  Norfield was a banker for 20 years, so a lot of what this book conveys is first-hand knowledge.

If Henwood showed, among other things, why the 2008 crash was virtually inevitable, Norwood’s book indicates, likewise among other things, why another such financial disaster will be just as unavoidable, unless significant changes are made, not just to the financial sector, but to the prevailing system of capitalist accumulation in its entirety.

The City makes four principal claims:

+ “A small group of powerful countries has a privileged position in production, commerce, investment and financial relationships compared to all the others”.

+ “The financial system does not sit on top of, or alongside what almost all economic commentators call the ‘real economy’; it pervades all economic activity”.

+ “The concept of finance is not tied to a particular type of institution, or to a separate ‘financial sector’. All kinds of capitalist companies conduct important financial operations”. Norwood provides the examples of the Ford Motor Company and General Electric, which have units engaging in financial-sector activity.

+ “It is a mistake to treat the UK financial markets as simply being satellites of the US markets. To use a more accurate astronomical metaphor, the relationship is better described as a ‘double planet’ system: rather than the UK simply orbiting the US, each country’s financial market exerts a significant ‘gravitational’ pull on the other, even though the pull of the US is obviously larger. More than that, the centre of gravity for the global system is determined the balance of power among all the major capitalist countries, a balance that will shift over time as their relative power changes” (Norfield’s emphasis).

These claims are substantiated via Norfield’s informative overview of day-to-day operations of the UK’s financial sector in relation to its US counterpart, and the part it plays in global capitalism.

While these financial sectors provide mechanisms which oil the levers and cogs of the real economy, they nonetheless require an important fiction for many of their operations.

Organizations (and the individuals who run them) in the financial sector extract revenues from assets which have not yet created value, and which may never in fact create the anticipated value (because the assets in question “tanked”).  The revenues extracted in this fashion are from asset-prices which move up and down in the market, with a more or less appropriately employed broker then placing a bet on a price, while of course not getting caught out by the market when prices fluctuate.

These are bets, says Norfield, but we should resist the temptation to view the market as a mere casino– the market operates, ultimately, in order to take control of the world’s resources.  The betting element ensues from the fact that no value is created by prices simply going up or down, even if there is a “return” to be reaped by the broker/investor who happened to make a good bet on a particular price movement.

Marx used the notion of “fictitious capital” to describe money gained in this way, and Norfield shows us how fictitious capital works today, rightly characterizing it as a form of “constructive parasitism”.

Norfield’s argument in this book shows why we need to disregard the conventional wisdom that the much-publicized malfeasance and corruption prevalent in the financial sector can only be addressed by draconian punishments for those running banks and investment houses who stray from the “narrow” path of probity and rectitude.

An example of this wisdom is provided by a US congressional aide who, during the 2008 financial crisis, said to Matt Taibbi with reference to Lloyd Blankfein, the egregious CEO of Goldman Sachs: “You put Lloyd Blankfein in a pound-me-in-the-ass prison for one six-month term, and all this bullshit would stop, all over Wall Street.  That’s all it would take. Just once”.
Punishing individual parasites will not overcome the conditions, intrinsic to capitalism, which conduce to “constructive parasitism”.  With the ready connivance of the political order, ways will be found to maintain this systemic parasitism, while perchance this or that financier, deemed dispensable by the ruling elites, gets pounded in the ass behind bars.

Financialization per se may not generate value, but instead enables its operators and beneficiaries to harvest “earnings” which can then be used to acquire and control resources in the real economy.

For those who know a little religious history (and this is my extrapolation from Norfield), the deployment of these fictions in the creation of fictitious capital is somewhat analogous to the medieval sale of papal indulgences.  Riches accrued to the papacy from their sale, but the indulgences themselves were fictions, despite the pretense they were otherwise.

No pope worth his salt in our somewhat more cynical times would get away with trying to enhance the “earnings” of the Vatican Bank by flogging off these conjured-up indulgences to believers.

If insider accounts are to be believed, the Vatican Bank today espouses realistic banking practices and makes its money from deals with the mafia.  O tempora, o mores!

Norfield’s book shows, in principle, that any effective arrival of this cynicism with regard to capitalism will have to be coterminous with its demise, just as its post-medieval equivalent in Christianity led to the expiry of the sale of papal indulgences, and the breaking-up of the church.

Until this happens to capitalism, those who benefit from these fictions of capital—the Trumps, Waltons, Murdochs, and Kochs of this world– will exert a ruinous command over our lives.

Anyone convinced that our lives are bettered by Trump, Murdoch, and the Waltons and Kochs, in all likelihood had an ancestor or two who believed they secured their salvation by purchasing indulgences from a medieval pope.

Today’s financial capitalism is a systemic racket akin to the one run by medieval Christianity, since each like the other is an occultation, albeit with terribly real effects.

History shows that medieval Christendom bit the dust, so the solution with regard to capitalism’s fictions is thus really so damn simple; and yet its implementation so damn difficult.


















Monday, March 26, 2018

As Putin has proven, political madness is the new status quo















We used to hope that politicians wouldn't be held back from pursuing their personal visions by unnecessary bureaucracy and shadowy forces. Now we pray that they are



Slavoj Žižek





Addressing members of the Russian parliament, Vladimir Putin said last week: “The missile's test launch and ground trials make it possible to create a brand new weapon, a strategic nuclear missile powered by a nuclear engine. The range is unlimited. It can manoeuvre for an unlimited period of time.

“No one in the world has anything similar,” he said to applause and concluded: “Russia still has the greatest nuclear potential in the world, but nobody listened to us. Listen to us now.”

Yes, we should listen to these words, but we should listen to them as to the words of a madman joining the duet of two other madmen.

Remember how, a little while ago, Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump competed about buttons to trigger nuclear missiles that they have at their disposal, with Trump claiming his button is bigger than Kim’s? Now we got Putin joining this obscene competition – which is, we should never forget it, a competition about who can destroy us all more quickly and efficiently – with the claim that his is the biggest in turn.

Lately our media reports on the more and more ridiculous exchange of insults between Kim and Trump. The irony of the situation is that, when we get (what appears to be) two immature men hurling insults at each other, our only hope is that there is some anonymous and invisible institutional constraint preventing their rage from exploding into all-out war. Usually, of course, we tend to complain that in today’s alienated and bureaucratised politics, institutional pressures and constraints prevent politicians from expressing their personal visions – now we hope such constraints will prevent the expression of all too crazy personal visions.

But does the danger really reside in personal pathologies? Each side can, of course, claim that it wants only peace and is only reacting to the threat posed by others – true, but what this means is that the madness is in the whole system itself, in the vicious cycle we are caught in once we participate in the system.

Although the differences between North Korea and the US are obvious, one should nonetheless insist that they both cling to the extreme version of state sovereignty (“North Korea first!” versus “America first!”), plus that the obvious madness of North Korea (a small country ready to risk it all and bomb the US) has its counterpart in the US still pretending to play the role of the global policeman, a single state assuming the right to decide which other state should be allowed to possess nuclear weapons.

This global madness becomes visible the moment we ask a simple question: how do the protagonists of nuclear threats (Kim, Trump, Putin) imagine pressing the button? Are they not aware of the almost 100 per cent certainty that their own country will also be destroyed by retaliatory strikes? Well, they are aware and not aware at the same time: although they know they will also perish, they talk as if they somehow stand out of the danger and can strike at the enemy from a safe place.

This schizophrenic position combines the two axioms of nuclear warfare. If the basic underlying axiom of the Cold War was MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction), today this axiom is combined with the opposite one, that of NUTS (Nuclear Utilization Target Selection), i.e. the idea that, by means of a surgical strike, one can destroy the enemy's nuclear capacities while the anti-missile shield is protecting us from a counterstrike. The very fact that two directly contradictory strategies are mobilised simultaneously by the same superpower bears witness to the fantastical character of this entire reasoning.

In December 2016, this inconsistency reached an almost unimaginable ridiculous peak: both Trump and Putin emphasised the chance for new more friendly relations between Russia and the US, and simultaneously asserted their full commitment to the arms race – as if peace among the superpowers can only be provided by a new Cold War. Alain Badiou wrote that the contours of the future war are already drawn: “The United States and their Western-Japanese clique on the one side, China and Russia on the other side, atomic arms everywhere. We cannot but recall Lenin’s statement: ‘Either revolution will prevent the war or the war will trigger revolution.’”

There is no way to avoid the conclusion that a radical social change – a revolution – is needed to civilise our civilisations. We cannot afford the hope that a new war will lead to a new revolution: a new war would much more probably mean the end of civilisation as we know it, with the survivors (of any) organized in small authoritarian groups. North Korea is not a crazy exception in a sane world but a pure expression of the madness that drives our world.











Is the United States becoming more belligerent?







Foreign policy hawk John Bolton is to take over as US national security adviser.






https://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidestory/2018/03/united-states-belligerent-180323183238198.html










































A Koch-Supported Coup at the VA? The Veterans Health Administration Risks Being Dismantled


















Tuesday, March 20, 2018By Michael CorcoranTruthout | Report











The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has long been the subject of aggressive privatization efforts. However, veteran organizers say the fate of the program, drowning in fresh scandals under embattled Veteran Affairs (VA) Secretary David Shulkin, has never been in more danger than it is now.

The efforts to outsource veterans care are waged by the Koch brothers and their front group Concerned Veterans for America (CVA), among other advocates of privatization. The group held a press conference to discuss its privatization efforts -- which they like to call "choice" -- on Friday in DC. Should they succeed in their goals, it will have consequences not only for veterans, but also for the broader movement for a public system like Medicare for All. The VHA is the only truly public, fully integrated health system in the US. The attacks against it aim to undermine public support for government-run care. 

In recent weeks, two critical VA Inspector General (IG) reports were released: one about Shulkin's excess spending during travel, the other about bad conditions in a VHA hospital in DC. Reports say the scandals could cost him his job. A Washington Post investigation described Shulkin's efforts to save his job "amid a mutiny," and relayed a surreal anecdote about the secretary working with an armed guard outside his door. His own aide was trying to push him out, according to several media reports.

This chaos and negativity around the VA is in line with the sorts of circumstances that the Kochs have thrived on in the past, notably when they "exploited the Veterans Affairs crisis," as a 2014 Nation article observed, to further attack the "the idea of government-provided healthcare." Many veterans and organizers say Shulkin's troubles have little to do with traveling expenses and are more about an effort to push a militant ideologue in power to privatize the VHA.

"Veterans groups are worried that privatization advocates are using the [Inspector General reports] to get their way," according to James Clark at Task and Purpose, a news outlet devoted to veterans issues. 

This sentiment was evident from public statements from veterans’ service organizations (VSOs) about the possibility of Shulkin being replaced.

"Their goal is to have somebody in place who, a couple days after they are confirmed, will go about bulldozing VA facilities," said Will Fischer, the director of government relations at VoteVets, a progressive veterans organization.

Trump's Ominous Phone Call to Koch Associate

Rumors of threats to Shulkin's job security come amid a flurry of changes in major positions in the Trump White House, including at the head of the State Department and the CIA. While initially Trump supported his VA chief enthusiastically, he recently scolded Shulkin at a meeting, Axios reported on March 11.

During the meeting he took the unusual step of calling former Koch associate Peter Hegseth (now a Fox News pundit) to discuss how best to privatize the agency. Hegseth, former CEO of CVA, was strongly considered for the post during the transition -- an ominous sign for Shulkin, who is seen as too moderate by many conservatives in the White House.

"If Trump picks Hegseth, it's going to be war," Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA), told The New York Times  during the Trump transition.

These ideological factors, and not merely the ethical issues raised in the IG report, help explain why right-wing commentators are so loudly calling for Shulkin's ouster, while VSOs, which largely oppose privatization, are still mostly supportive of Shulkin, despite his political liabilities.

"We don't want to see someone come in and start over. I think we will see the VSOs remain supportive of Shulkin," said William Attig, executive director of the Union Veterans Council, AFL-CIO, in an interview with Truthout. "There is a lot of money for some to make by farming out services to the private sector, but what the VHA needs is to be fully funded, not privatized."

Even if Shulkin manages to keep his job -- he is not likely to go down without a fight -- he will be in a weakened state at an agency where Trump's conservative "staffers are advancing health policy at odds with his own," according to a ProPublica/Politico report from February, which said war was "raging between the White House and veterans' groups, with Shulkin caught in the middle."

It's possible that Shulkin could accelerate privatization efforts to appease Trump or deflect the news away from his personal scandals. Meanwhile, whatever becomes of Shulkin, the Koch war on the VHA is clearly reaching a boiling point.

A Mixed Record on Privatization

Shulkin is not a progressive icon by any means. His appointment, however, did bring about relief for many veterans and Democrats. He was appointed by President Obama to be the VA's undersecretary of health, and wrote a book praising the VHA. During his confirmation hearings for his position under Trump, where he was unanimously supported, he said the privatization of the VA "will not happen on my watch." He won the support of key VSOs who "had fended off far worse candidates."

This is not to say everyone is pleased with his performance. Some argue he has not followed through on this promise and has been complicit in Trump's ongoing efforts to privatize the system. "He is an unreliable advocate for the VA health system," said Suzanne Gordon, author of The Battle for Veterans Healthcare, in an interview with Truthout. "He sometimes doesn't call it privatization, but that is what he is doing. He has also been using the same conservative rhetoric about the VA being broken."

Six months into the Trump administration, Shulkin wrote a USA Today op-ed that insisted, once again, that he would not privatize the VHA, saying "nothing could be further from the truth." But in the same article he added that veterans should get the best care possible, "whether it comes from the VA or the private sector." Shulkin put forth these contradictory arguments while lobbying for $2 billion to extend the controversial VA Choice program for another six months through a variety of cuts and fees that were opposed by VSOs. Shulkin also suggested farming out the VHA's optometry services because "there is a LensCrafters in every corner."

None of this has stopped VSOs from standing with Shulkin, if only to avoid his replacement. As Clark wrote (emphasis in original): "the rallying cry for Shulkin amounts to: Better the VA chief we know."

Now there is a struggle between the VSOs and conservative power brokers within the Trump administration. Although the attempted VA "coup" on Shulkin, to use The Washington Post's phrase, is "popular in the White House, the effort is viewed skeptically by the American Legion and other veterans groups that fear it will lead to VA's downsizing."

Louis Celli, national director for veterans affairs for the American Legion -- the largest VSO in the country -- called the attack on Shulkin a "salacious conspiracy," and "treason." VoteVets filed a Freedom of Information (FOIA) request for documents about replacing Shulkin.

Meanwhile conservative lawmakers and media called for Shulkin's ouster. "His main agenda is to block any real reforms for veterans, which includes expanding their ability to obtain care from private doctors and hospitals," said syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin. "He needs to hear those famous words from [Trump]: 'You're fired.'"

On February 15, a day after the first IG report was released, The New York Times reported that critics within the Trump administration wanted to "knock Shulkin down a peg or two" for "not pushing harder for privatization." Some conservative/Koch-funded attacks on Shulkin predate not only the IG report, but the Trump presidency. In 2016, when Shulkin was under secretary for health at the VA during the Obama presidency, Concerned Vets for America criticized Shulkin for embarrassing the VA. "The American people were treated to a show of incompetence and shifting of responsibility by Dr. David Shulkin," a story on their website said of a congressional hearing.

The Veterans' Health Administration: Myth vs. Reality

Negative press on the Veterans Health Administration is not new. In many ways it mirrors the US media's treatment of foreign health systems, such as Canada, which get similar treatment in the national debate. (This is improving since awareness of single-payer has grown, due in part to the Bernie Sanders campaign in 2016.)

The popular narrative of the VA as a frightening case study in the horrors of "socialized medicine" is largely the result of an effective Koch-fueled messaging campaign. The Kochs make it easy to attack the VHA, amplifying any bad news they can find from around the country on their front group's website and on social media using the hashtag #VAFail:


Often they use this hashtag to push legislation such as the Veterans Empowerment Act promoted by Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-Colorado), which would privatize the VHA in major ways. 

Rarely, however, do the pundits who mock the VHA compare it to private insurance using metrics like cost, quality and patient satisfaction. The VHA, studies show, is superior to private health options, is more cost efficient and has happier patients. The VHA has, according to numerous reports, been found to "compare favorably" to our private system: Better surgical conditions, higher vaccination rates, better outcomes with stroke treatment and controlling blood pressure are just a few of the areas where VHA care was superior. This helps us understand why the VHA scores high on satisfaction surveys among its patients. One Gallup poll from 2015 showed veterans as the most satisfied group of patients in the country, followed by Medicaid and Medicare recipients, with private care being last.

In the New England Journal of Medicine, Shulkin himself boasted that the VA outperforms private industry in "lower risk-adjusted mortality rates, better patient-safety statistics, and better performance on a number of other accepted process measures."

It also ranks especially well in mental health services. As a 2016 report from Psychiatric Services, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Psychiatric Association, concluded: "We found that the quality of care provided by the VA to veterans with mental and substance use disorders consistently exceeded the quality of care provided by the private sector for the performance indicators examined, sometimes by large margins."

The VHA was recently praised for having a good record with transgender patients, compared with private insurers. "This is an optimistic and promising finding for VA and perhaps reflects the recent advances in transgender health in VA," concluded the Journal for Medical Care in September 2017.

The VHA, of course, has major flaws. While the Kochs often amplify bad stories, the VA has made their job too easy with public scandals. There were serious problems in the aforementioned 2014 incident involving falsified reports to hide long wait times, which still hamper the agency today. This was only six years after another high-ranking VA official, according to Veterans for Common Sense, "cooked the books" on suicide data, to make the crisis seem less severe.


The VHA compares favorably to private care, but it is still lacking in many ways. Many veterans with PTSD receive subpar care, in part due to a lack of mental health staff. The VA estimates that about 20 veterans a day commit suicide.

Underfunding is a major problem. "Congress left the VA woefully unprepared for all the problems that took place in two wars in Afghanistan and Iraq," Attig said. "My feeling is if you can afford to send people to war, waged for some questionable reasons, you should be able to afford to take care of them when they come back."

Private insurance providers, however, have major problems too, including wait times that are worse than the VHA, according to a September 2017 study commissioned from the American Legion. "Does anyone doubt that many Americans have died while waiting for approval from private insurers?" asked Paul Krugman of The New York Times in 2014. 

Indeed, every health system has flaws. If the VHA were sufficiently funded, and there were more public investment in it, it could improve its care dramatically. Conservatives, however, have been effective at telling Americans that the problems are caused by government. The story of the VHA is one largely being told by its harshest critics.

Socialized Medicine Saves Lives 

But there is another story to tell: about the VHA that saves lives.  Samuel Jay Keyser, 82, is a professor emeritus of linguistics and philosophy at MIT. At 78, he went paralyzed from the chest down and was told by doctors he would never walk again. After spending months in the Intensive Care Unit, rehab and various other hospital beds, he was told he would no longer be able to have his treatment covered.

A nurse heard he served in the Air Force in the 1960s and suggested calling the VHA, he told Truthout. "This was my introduction to 'socialized medicine,' and the difference was palpable. I had been through virtually every part of the US health system, and the VHA was the only place where money didn't seem like a major priority," he said. 

Now Keyser spends time talking about his story, and how the VHA was the only place that didn't give up on him until he was healthy enough to go home. "Everyone should be able to experience care like that," he said.

Save the VHA: An Election Issue?

The effort to stop the Koch/Trump attack on the VHA is a subject on which VSOs, progressive groups and single-payer advocates can find common cause. While single-payer advocates routinely defend systems in Canada, the United Kingdom or Taiwan, the VHA is far less frequently noted, though it is the only socialized health care system in the United States. It could be held as a model for the benefits of public health care.

VSOs have also taken similar positions as progressives on several contemporary health care issues. VoteVets has opposed Trump's latest attack on Medicaid via work requirements, saying Trump "has now officially declared war on veterans in need." For similar reasons, they were among the many veterans groups that opposed the Medicaid cuts in Trumpcare bills from 2017.

More than 30 percent of veterans make less than $30,000 annually, Attig maintains, and depend on these social programs. The VHA covers about 9 million veterans and has strict eligibility requirements that leave many former service members unable to use the service. "Cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, unemployment -- they are all cuts to veterans as well," he said.

If the Democrats chose to put a lot of political capital into protecting the VHA, they could rightly hit Republicans for cutting support for the troops. This priority could also appeal to single-payer advocates and the 80 percent of Democratic voters who support a public health system.

"I would like to see candidates put this issue at the center of their campaigns," Attig said.

So far, however, VSOs have mostly had to fend for themselves, with the media and the Democrats focused so strongly on other issues. If Democrats aren't interested in making the preservation of the VHA a priority, advocates say, organizers and veterans groups will have to continue to pressure them.

"Privatization is a very real issue right now," Verna Jones, executive director for the American Legion, recently told reporters at the National Press Club. "This isn't something we can sit idly by and hope that it doesn't happen."
















Mercer's Cambridge Analytica 'Utterly Sleazy'













https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nm0h8U9R-MI



























































Bolton: 'The Most Dangerous American'









https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MyTBpdG_h4
























































Friday, March 16, 2018

The VA Is the Closest Thing We Have to Single Payer. Now Trump Wants to Privatize It



















Aaron Hughes, who was deployed to Kuwait and Iraq in 2003 and 2004, now has a serious, very rare lung condition. But he told In These Times he gets “really outstanding care” at the nearby Jesse Brown VA Medical Center. “The doctors are at the top of their class,” he said.
Because his condition is so rare, Hughes has been sent to a hospital outside of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) for specific tests. And his taste of the private healthcare system has been sour. “As soon as I went there, all hell broke loose,” he said, explaining there were problems with sharing records between the two institutions.
“With the VA system, when you do tests, it’s all integrated.” Every doctor Hughes sees is aware of all the other treatment he gets, from vision to mental health. The private hospitals, on the other hand, often refuse to send the records back to the VA.
“The private sector isn’t about sharing your information,” Hughes explained. “It’s not about healthcare, it’s about ownership of care.”

Hughes thinks these problems could get worse if efforts to fully privatize the VA are successful. President Donald Trump has supported privatizing the system, and has called to make permanent the Veterans Choice Program, an experiment Congress launched in 2014 that gives vouchers to veterans to see private doctors, while cutting other parts of the agency. These developments have provoked concerns that Trump will usher in a full private sector takeover. 

“I worry that my care will become a profit motive,” Hughes said. “And that means it’s not about me anymore, it’s about making money.”

Now Hughes’ organization, About Face: Veterans Against the War, has joined other veterans’ groups, unions and healthcare advocates to launch a campaign to stop the privatization of the VA. After several months of building the coalition, the mobilization now includes Veterans for Peace, Service Employees International Union, the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) and National Nurses United. Healthcare advocacy groups including the Illinois Single Payer Coalition and the Democratic Socialists of America Healthcare Working Group have also joined the campaign. When the organizations came together on March 1 to hold a panel event in Chicago, more than 100 people showed up.

The combination of unions and veterans’ groups is potent. “We as veterans can argue and demand things and raise issues that the unions can’t, and the unions can inform us about issues that we don’t understand,” Hughes said. “We’re seeing outside, and they’re seeing inside of the system. We’re able to have this inside/outside strategy that I think is really a winning strategy.”

Organizers believe the time is right to invest in that teamwork now. “It came to our attention last fall that things under the Trump administration have been getting really bad,” Roberto Clack, an organizer with the Right to Heal VA Campaign, told In These Times.

“There are problems with the VA, but the VA works,” Clack said. “It provides quality care for the people that use it, and it saves lives.” A 2016 RAND Corporation analysis found that the VA provides good quality care compared with other health systems, usually in a timely manner. Private providers, on the other hand, could expose veterans to lower-quality care, longer wait times and doctors who aren’t familiar with military service.

“We agree that it could be better,” Clack said, “but the way to make healthcare better is to have a fully supported VA, funded VA, and staffed VA.”

Privatizing the VA wouldn’t just risk veteran’s healthcare, however. It could also threaten the unionized public sector employees who work for it. AFGE represents more than 700,000 federal workers, 250,000 of whom work at the VA. It would be “a serious death knell for unionization in this country,” said Anne Lindgren, president of AFGE Local 789.

Privatization is “absolutely the wrong response,” Clack said. “Privatization’s not going to make anyone’s healthcare better.”

But the idea that the VA doesn’t work has become embedded many media reports and the general public. “What we’re really up against is debunking the narrative that it’s just this broken system,” Clack said.

So while the long-term goal is to block the privatization of the agency, the short-term goal is to raise more awareness. “We recognize that [stopping privatization] is a big elephant, and you can’t eat an elephant in one bite, you need to eat it in small bites,” Lindgren said.
“For that to happen we need to educate and organize the public.”

After the launch event, the groups held a call-in day to have people contact their members of Congress and urge them to oppose a currently bill that would expand the Choice program. Next will be actually visiting members of Congress. “Frankly we’re going to take this to the streets and let not only Republicans know, but also Democrats who are vacillating on this issue, you have to have a firm ‘no’ on privatization efforts,” Clack said.

Participants also hope to create an organizing model that can be replicated in other cities and communities across the country. “We’re not going to win this fight if it’s just a Chicago fight,” Clack said. “We definitely want to see this organizing spread to other parts of the country.”

The goal is also to move their efforts beyond just saving the VA from privatization to making a proactive argument that the VA should be expanded and itself serve as a model for the whole country. “I believe our community of veterans organized has the potential to not just fight for our healthcare, but healthcare for everyone in this country,” Hughes said.

That’s why the launch event included activists who are focused on universal healthcare and a single-payer system. “The VA really resembles the closest thing there is to a single payer system in our country,” Clack said. It’s not just the largest hospital system and healthcare provider in the nation, but it’s also the only system that negotiates directly with pharmaceutical companies over drug prices, and it’s also a one-stop-shop for veterans seeking all kinds of care, from mental health to physical issues to social work.

“We really want to make a case that the public sector provides quality services,” Clack said. “The VA’s a great example of the public sector working.”