By PAUL KRUGMAN
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President Obama will soon release a new budget, and the commentary is already flowing fast and furious. Progressives are angry (with good reason) over proposed cuts to Social Security; conservatives are denouncing the call for more revenues. But it’s all Kabuki. Since House Republicans will block anything Mr. Obama proposes, his budget is best seen not as policy but as positioning, an attempt to gain praise from “centrist” pundit.
No, the real policy action at this point is in the states, where the
question is, How many Americans will be denied essential health care in
the name of freedom?
I’m referring, of course, to the question of how many Republican
governors will reject the Medicaid expansion that is a key part of
Obamacare. What does that have to do with freedom? In reality, nothing.
But when it comes to politics, it’s a different story.
It goes without saying that Republicans oppose any expansion of programs
that help the less fortunate — along with tax cuts for the wealthy,
such opposition is pretty much what defines modern conservatism. But
they seem to be having more trouble than in the past defending their
opposition without simply coming across as big meanies.
Specifically, the time-honored practice of attacking beneficiaries of
government programs as undeserving malingerers doesn’t play the way it
used to. When Ronald Reagan spoke about welfare queens driving
Cadillacs, it resonated with many voters. When Mitt Romney was caught on
tape sneering at the 47 percent, not so much.
There is, however, an alternative. From the enthusiastic reception
American conservatives gave Friedrich Hayek’s “Road to Serfdom,” to
Reagan, to the governors now standing in the way of Medicaid expansion,
the U.S. right has sought to portray its position not as a matter of
comforting the comfortable while afflicting the afflicted, but as a
courageous defense of freedom.
Conservatives love, for example, to quote from a stirring speech Reagan
gave in 1961, in which he warned of a grim future unless patriots took a
stand. (Liz Cheney used it in a Wall Street Journal op-ed article
just a few days ago.) “If you and I don’t do this,” Reagan declared,
“then you and I may well spend our sunset years telling our children and
our children’s children what it once was like in America when men were
free.” What you might not guess
from the lofty language is that “this” — the heroic act Reagan was
calling on his listeners to perform — was a concerted effort to block
the enactment of Medicare.
These days, conservatives make very similar arguments against Obamacare. For example, Senator Ron Johnson
of Wisconsin has called it the “greatest assault on freedom in our
lifetime.” And this kind of rhetoric matters, because when it comes to
the main obstacle now remaining to more or less universal health
coverage — the reluctance of Republican governors to allow the Medicaid
expansion that is a key part of reform — it’s pretty much all the right
has.
As I’ve already suggested, the old trick of blaming the needy for their
need doesn’t seem to play the way it used to, and especially not on
health care: perhaps because the experience of losing insurance is so
common, Medicaid enjoys remarkably strong public support.
And now that health reform is the law of the land, the economic and
fiscal case for individual states to accept Medicaid expansion is
overwhelming. That’s why business interests strongly support expansion
just about everywhere — even in Texas. But such practical concerns can be set aside if you can successfully argue that insurance is slavery.
Of course, it isn’t. In fact, it’s hard to think of a proposition that
has been more thoroughly refuted by history than the notion that social
insurance undermines a free society. Almost 70 years have passed since
Friedrich Hayek predicted (or at any rate was understood by his admirers
to predict) that Britain’s welfare state would put the nation on the
slippery slope to Stalinism; 46 years have passed since Medicare went
into effect; as far as most of us can tell, freedom hasn’t died on
either side of the Atlantic.
In fact, the real, lived experience of Obamacare is likely to be one of
significantly increased individual freedom. For all our talk of being
the land of liberty, those holding one of the dwindling number of jobs
that carry decent health benefits often feel anything but free, knowing
that if they leave or lose their job, for whatever reason, they may not
be able to regain the coverage they need.
Over time, as people come to
realize that affordable coverage is now guaranteed, it will have a
powerful liberating effect
But what we still don’t know is how many Americans will be denied that
kind of liberation — a denial all the crueler because it will be imposed
in the name of freedom.
#Πηγή:
By PAUL KRUGMAN
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/08/opinion/krugman-insurance-and-freedom.html?ref&_r=0
For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.
Published: April 7, 2013 690 Comments#
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