"Bottom line is: if other
countries around the world are providing quality care to all their people, we
can do the same."
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is
launching a campaign Wednesday to promote his planned Medicare for All
legislation, engaging directly with voters across the nation.
The senator is asking
supporters to sign on to the proposal as "citizen co-sponsors" via a
digital ad campaign. In an article by the Guardian, Sanders's team
described the operation as an effort to dispel myths about government-run
healthcare, which is offered to the general populations of almost every western
country and number of developing nations.
"Bottom line is: if other
countries around the world are providing quality care to all their people, we
can do the same," Sanders told
NPR on Tuesday. "The American people are familiar with Medicare. By and
large it's quite a popular program. But it starts now when you are 65 years of
age...It should be available for every single person in this country."
A longtime proponent of
Medicare for All, Sanders has laid out his plan for the system on his
website, noting that it would be paid for with taxes on capital gains,
dividends and estates of the wealthiest Americans, as well as with savings that
would be gained by eliminating healthcare tax expenditures.
"We outspend all other countries on the planet and our medical spending continues to grow faster than the rate of inflation," Sanders's website says. "Creating a single, public insurance system will go a long way towards getting healthcare spending under control."
Ahead of the ad campaign,
Sanders sent an email to his supporters asking for ideas regarding how to
implement a Medicare for All plan, counter right-wing attacks on government-run
healthcare, and bring all Americans into the fight for healthcare access.
Within 24 hours, Sanders had raised $65,000 and received 19,000 responses.
The positive response follows
months of signs
that Americans and their lawmakers are embracing Medicare for All. The Pew
Research Center found
in June that 33 percent of citizens supported government-funded healthcare for
all Americans, up five points since January and 12 points since 2014. Fifty-two
percent of Democrats supported the plan.
Senators including Elizabeth
Warren (D-Mass.) and Kirsten Gillbrand (D-N.Y.) have also spoken up in favor of
Medicare for All, with Warren urging
her party to strongly endorse government-run healthcare while Republicans
attempt to do away with the Affordable Care Act.
Sanders's Medicare for All
digital campaign will include ads on Facebook and Google and is planned to last
through the Senate's August recess. When lawmakers reconvene after Labor Day,
the senator plans to bring his proposal to the Senate floor for debate.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License
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.
Excerpt from:
“We Must Rise from the Ashes
of Liberal Democracy”
BY Slavoj Žižek
http://inthesetimes.com/article/19918/slavoj-zizek-from-the-ashes-of-liberal-democracy
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