Glenn W. Smith

Glenn W. Smith

Posted: November 6, 2007 05:48 PM

A Very Blackwater Thanksgiving: Profiteers Are Wrecking Our Health and Destroying Our Security

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As Thanksgiving approaches, we should pay homage to the 17th Century Blackwater-like private security firms who made the very first Thanksgiving possible. That's the message from Serviam, a magazine committed to the unstinting defense of private profiteering in every realm of human endeavor. By the magazine's stuffed-turkey logic we should give thanks for all the profiteering and the accountability-killing privatizing that dominates what was once a public sphere. From health care to a mercenary army, profit is alpha and omega, while the moral fabric that holds us together is being ripped apart by pirates. Yes, even our health has been blackwatered. Thank-yous are hardly in order.

Ann Jocelyn, writing for the privateers' private gazette, says, "If not for the private security contractor (PCS) business, there would have been no Thanksgiving at all."

That's a rather unfortunate claim, since Thanksgiving is an "invented tradition" according to the historian for the Plimoth Plantation, who ought to know. And, if there was no originary "thanksgiving" to take credit for, what becomes of the privateers taking credit for it? I'm not disputing that private ships carried the Pilgrims, who were, after all, fleeing the government that lorded over their public sphere. But inventing a role for yourself in a holiday that was itself invented is a bit disingenuous.

Serviam's claim also conveniently avoids a brute historical fact that the American Revolution was, in part, fueled by anger against the privateers. Here's how Thom Hartmann puts it:

Although schoolchildren are usually taught that the American Revolution was a rebellion against 'taxation without representation,' akin to modern day conservative taxpayer revolts, in fact what led to the revolution was rage against a transnational corporation [East India Company] that, by the 1760s, dominated trade from China to India to the Caribbean, and controlled nearly all commerce to and from North America, with subsidies and special dispensation from the British crown.

Taking credit for Thanksgiving is ridiculous, but then, the colonization of our historical consciousness is a key tactic of the privateers, and Thanksgiving is particularly vulnerable. With the possible exception of the idolization of a bunny to mark the resurrection of a divinity at Easter, perhaps no holiday has been as gobbled up by myth and fantasy as thoroughly as Thanksgiving. To set the record straight, big shoe buckles were not yet the fashion, and the 1621 Puritan/Native American harvest festival was a three-day, dance-and-eat-and-eat-and-dance party. It was not called a "thanksgiving" because that term referred to a pious religious event. Also, this was not even the first of a new tradition; it was a singular celebration.

The Easter Bunny and be-buckled Puritans have nothing on the blackwater movement when it comes to fantasy, however. Inventing a need for themselves is something of a tradition among mercenary birds-of-prey who somehow get us to stay still while they, all beak and talon, swoop down on our treasuries, our health, and our morality. "Who will guard our diplomats in Iraq if the privateers don't?" they ask self-approvingly. There is a clue in that rhetorical and misleading question to the sorry state of the American health care system, which is entirely dominated by Blackwater-like, privateering insurance companies. "Who will provide health care if you hurt our profits?" insurance company executives and defenders ask. "Our armed forces," should answer the private security executives' question. "Uh, doctors and nurses," should be the answer to the insurance profiteers.

It is not a stretch to refer to the invention of a private health insurance industry in America as the "blackwatering" of health care. The insurance industry did not even enter the health business until the 1940s. Before then, they couldn't figure out how to make a profit. Life insurance had a great business plan. Invest the premiums of a customer over a lifetime, and you will earn far more than you will have to pay out in (so to speak) once-in-a-lifetime death benefits. Likewise, most property does not suffer catastrophic damage requiring hefty insurance payouts. But everyone needs a little health care now and then and a few need a lot of health care all the time. Why, there's no time to invest those premiums. But wait, the insurance executives calculated, if we can exclude the risky and deny enough claims to policy holders, we can earn a profit. Katy bar the door. A new industry was born. Unfortunately, it was an industry that thrives by denying health care. A profiteer's ultimate dream.

The blackwatering of health care - putting the power in the hands of unaccountable, non-medical, private interests - has taken a deadly toll on our health and lives. We have been so long in the blackwater that we forgot what it would be like to breathe the air of a health care system based on empathy and responsibility, a system that puts citizens' health above private profits.

It's not lost on Blackwater that it will make more money the more dangerous our lives become. That's the logic of the arms industry. War is their profit center. And it's not lost on an insurance industry that the increased fear, imagined and real, of ill health leads to higher premiums and more profits when it is allowed to make its money by denying health care to those who need it most.

The health insurance industry has no more incentive to keep us healthy than Blackwater has in helping us avoid wars.

And the stories they tell us to convince us otherwise have no more reality to them than the Easter Bunny.

At least the Easter Bunny is a cute fiction.

 
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Insurance itself is a racket, paying money to
somebody is no guarantee against ANYthing
including getting stiffed at the cash register
on your way OUT of the hospital.

I can't wait for the day that you won't
be able to get a JOB until you can prove you've
got your own health insurance. I don't compare
it to blackwater, I compare it to the MOB.
Oh, and the Church mob wants to play, too.
"It's for the CHILDREN".....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 AM on 11/07/2007
- fmmcfarren I'm a Fan of fmmcfarren 2 fans permalink

speaking of being in the blackwater, you should mention that the Pilgrims were not the oppressed lovey-dovey people we were told about in school, rather they were/are puritans [hence the word puritanical]. They were a theocractic bunch who were forced out of England partially because they thought things in the 1600's were getting a little to liberal. They are responsible for countless acts of torture and oppression in the US, were behind the Salem witch trials, and were the inspiration for the Scarlet Letter. Think of Saudi Arabia style society and you get the idea.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puritan#Decline_of_power_and_influence
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puritan#Beliefs

The also went on to seed the extremely conservative branches of modern day Neo-con christians [though that is a broad extrapolation].
And you should have mentioned, Lincold "created" the Thanksgiving holiday to promote reconciliation and unity during the Civil War

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 PM on 11/06/2007

Excellent piece.
Your parallel certainly put things into a different perspective.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 11/06/2007
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