Don’t vote for Dean Heller, he is not your health care friend
Jen Huntley wrote a piece in the Reno News and Gazette. It is so crystal clear in its discussion of the arguments taking place in Congress and across the nation I just have to bring it here in full and verbatim. It is perhaps the most important issue facing Americans.
Since I live in Nye County, U.S. Congressional District #2, and because our current Congressman, Republican Dean Heller, represents my district I also want you to judge for yourself whether Heller is looking out for your best interests rather than the corporate health industry interests.
I don’t think he is. He is up for election in 2010. I will not vote for him. Here is Huntley’s article
Summer is here at last, along with all-American pastimes like barbecues, baseball games, and partisan bickering. Witness conservative responses to health-care reform: Insurance companies and Republicans are running ads across the country proclaiming reform efforts as a “government takeover” of health care, one that will eliminate options for privately-funded care—one step short of socialism, as more radical voices proclaim. These tired scare tactics are weak on factual detail and long on willing suspension of disbelief. Nevada Congressman
Dean Heller toes the party line in his recent opinion to the Reno Gazette-Journal, suggesting that reform will force people into “a ‘one size fits all’ government program,” a “scheme to place bureaucrats in charge of a government-run health care system.” As if health care isn’t currently run by bureaucrats—just privately-funded ones with no independent oversight and no accountability except to shareholders.
It’s a familiar tune, this anti-government rhetoric, and one that apparently plays well with a lot of Americans. But I am curious as to why people buy it. Sure, government bureaucracies can be cumbersome and wasteful, but so are corporate bureaucracies, as the health care industry demonstrates so forcefully. Sure, government can be corrupt and can have other interests at heart than those of the average Joe, but at least we have a political system that is supposed to be accountable to voters, and time and time again voters have successfully turned around government policies. Not so with private businesses and corporations, whose explicit duty is to satisfy shareholders’ need for profit, and whose practices are far more immune to reform efforts. Somehow, over the past 20-odd years, advertisers and conservative politicians have managed to map a false path from “freedom” to “freedom of choice” to “free market” in our public consciousness. In following this path, we reject the specter of government “intrusion” while submitting without question to increasing corporate control.
Meanwhile, back on the farm, our blind acceptance of free market fundamentalism—as some critics call it—has led Nevadans into a health-care quandary of magnificent proportions.
As with foreclosures, Nevada leads the rest of the country in the severity of its health care crisis. Nevada has one of the highest uninsured rates in the country and last year dropped from 39th to 42d. In contrast with the vague scare tactics of conservatives, Nevada health care statistics recently released paint a truly frightening scenario:
• From 2000 to 2007, health insurance premiums in Nevada increased by more than 54.6 percent while median yearly wages increased only 21.4 percent.
• In five years, the percentage of children in poverty has nearly doubled from 9 to 14.
• Nevada’s median yearly wage in 2007 was only $30,859, but the average health care premium for a family was $10,341.
• In 2008, the average premium for family coverage in Nevada was $11,124. By 2016, that number is expected to be more than $19,000.
High costs, low health index, and a shortage of doctors combine to create a perfect health care storm for Nevada, exacerbated by state government cuts in state employee health benefits. In the 1990s, Hillary Clinton’s efforts to reform health care were successfully torpedoed by a coalition of insurance industry lobbyists and conservatives. Since that time, the free market has had plenty of opportunity to demonstrate its ability to meet our health care needs, and our current situation is a crystal-clear example of its failure to do so. Nevadans simply can’t afford the current health care model, and until they can offer a viable alternative, conservatives like Dean Heller should just get out of the way.
Now that you’ve read that may I urge you to read Health Care Stories for America. They are stories of real people with real health care issues. The stories were written by thousands and thousands of Americans all across the United States. The stories provide undeniable proof that Heller, the health industry lobbyist, and his Republican Party, have failed in their approach to the problem. Retention of the status quo will not cure the failed health care system.
I will not vote for Dean Heller in 2010, nor will I vote for either Senator John Ensign or Senator Harry Reid if they fail to vote for healthcare reform, with a public option, preferably single-pay health care.
The health care industry can pump all the campaign finance money in the world in the finance coffers of Heller, Ensign and Reid. But all that money cannot buy my vote, even if it might theirs.
I urge each of you who read this to remember Pogo. Those in Congressional power either votes for us or find we won’t vote for them in 2010. Doesn’t matter whether they are Republican or Democrat.
Related posts:




4 comments
This is a good action article for those who are already in action. (Those who read, listen, or watch political news.) The majority of potential new Democrat activists are just as disinterested in politics
as I used to be. They will never see or know about this kind of action unless you give them the kind of in the face action that I have been talking about over and over again.
Thanks for the comment Frank. I’ve come to the conclusion that perhaps we’re all better off letting disinterested persons who don’t pay attention to political news remain apathetic and inactive, so long as they don’t vote.
We need to start a grass roots campaign to get rid of Heller and that lying cheater john ensign, you start one and Ill sign up,we dont need those idiots in Nevada!
Well Charles. This blog is part of a grass roots campaign to rid Nevada of Dean Heller. Just signing up doesn’t do it. It takes organizations of a lot of people informing other people about Heller’s voting record and then getting out the vote when election day comes and voting him out of office. There are two Democrats in Heller’s Congressional District (District 2) that are running for Heller’s seat. One is Paul Reeves and the other is Jack Schofield. Why don’t you sign up to join in one of their campaigns. Both have campaign websites on the web. Schofield is here. and Reeves is here. Good luck.
Leave a Comment