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John Cavanagh

John Cavanagh

Posted: March 8, 2010 05:07 PM

Why I'm Breaking the Law for Health Care

What's Your Reaction:

On Tuesday, a drama will unfold in Washington that will be unlike anything we've seen in the first year of the Obama administration.

I will join dozens of leaders of unions and other public interest organizations and thousands of others to protest the major lobby that is blocking real health care reform in Congress. We will hold a rally and then march to a Washington hotel where America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), which represents all the corporate heavies in the health industry, will be plotting their next steps.

The demonstration is being organized by Health Care for America NOW!, a national grassroots campaign for quality, affordable health care. This coalition asked the directors of about 100 groups to risk arrest at the event. I will be joined by Institute for Policy Studies board member Barbara Ehrenreich, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, and other allied group leaders.

That dozens of leaders would risk arrest in confronting the corporations that stand squarely in the way of fundamental change represents a new moment for our social movements. There is a growing realization that giant health care, fossil fuel and financial firms will stop at nothing to block fundamental change. In this case, the leaders of the giant health insurance companies have joined with CEOs of the largest pharmaceutical firms to buy the votes in Congress to block fundamental health care reform.

Hence, we must up the ante if we are to create the change this country so desperately needs.
One thing that must change is the executive pay system. Chief executives of the top five health insurance companies raked in a combined total of more than $113 million in 2007 and 2008, according to executive pay experts at my organization, the Institute for Policy Studies. All five of these firms -- WellPoint, UnitedHealth Group, Cigna, Aetna, and Humana -- are represented on the board of directors of the AHIP lobby group.

The highest-paid health insurance exec was Ronald Williams of Aetna, who made $35.6 million over the past two years. It would take an American worker with average pay more than 1,000 years to make that much.

Soon to be released pay data for 2009 are likely to show continued executive excess, since these firms maintained high profit levels last year, while at the same time ordinary Americans were reeling from rising health care costs and soaring unemployment.

We know now that the out of control executive pay system was a cause of the financial crisis. But it's not just in the high finance world that outrageously high rewards encourage executives to take actions that put the rest of us at risk. The greater the potential reward, the greater the temptation to grab that reward by any means necessary. In the health insurance industry, that has meant denying coverage to people with health problems that might cut too much into the corporate bottom line.

A health crisis for the rest of us just means a bigger paycheck for the executives.
Throughout the economy, executives seeking massive personal rewards behave in ways that are bad for the economy in the long term -- reckless investing, shortchanging worker training and slashing R&D, hammering consumers, or, should all else fail, simply cooking the books.

UnitedHealth Group, the nation's largest health insurance company, was nabbed a few years ago for backdating stock options in order to jack up payouts for top executives. The firm had to oust their CEO and pay $895 million to settle a class action lawsuit over the scandal -- just one example of the kind of risks executives are willing to take in order to line their own pockets.

And, these firms have reaped enough profits from an increasingly unhealthy America that in addition to outrageous CEO pay, they have plenty left over to block most meaningful change in the "best Congress that money can buy."

The stakes are undeniably high: Just listen to the stories of people in your own communities who were denied coverage by their insurers. Just as the Biblical David faced down Goliath, one hundred of us are willing to go to jail tomorrow if it will send a clear message to the CEOs of our nation's health insurance plans: They cannot grow rich while the rest of us grow sick and tired.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1worldaddy
family man w/3 daughters
08:33 PM on 04/16/2010
John,
That was a kick ass stand you guys took.
I have been very involved since day one. I have sold health insurance for 20 years and I hate the scam we have had as status quo.
Alan Grayson has it right. Please do what you can to get momentum on Medicare for ALL
11:46 AM on 03/21/2010
I believe people know that insurance companies grant care based upon risk assumption. If you have a preexisting condition, chances are that you wont get coverage for that preexisting condition. If you are sick, you wont get any coverage at all. So lets say that we make it illegall to deny coverage based upon these terms. What would happen? Well first, people wont buy helthcare until they get sick (because they cant be denied), and second, the rest of us who have lead helthy lives will pay more to make up for money lost on theos who either havent or just arent lucky. So to fix this problem the governemtn will MAINDATE that we all pay for helthcoverage reguardless weather we want to or not. If we dont the government will FINE US. But the fine will be cheaper than paying for health insurance so we still havent solved the problem. Then, since the insurance companies cant grant coverage based upon risk assumption, chances are they will either raise their rates, fire their workers, reduce workers benefits, reduce coverage benefits, or go out of business or, most likely all of these. Socialization of helthcare through the destruction of America is exactly what this guy wants.
08:42 PM on 03/09/2010
Health Care for America NOW! needs to get the word out better. After reading all the posts it seems like a lot of people would be willing to join a march . I live in Indiana but very close to Chicago, so I will try to watch. Like I said earlier I would have joined the DC if we weren't so broke. I think that HC reform and unemployment are the most important issues that we should be focused on.
Did you see where Rush Limbaugh said he would leave the country if they passed health care reform, I wonder if that's a promise? My husband asked," I wonder where he would go?"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald Fannin
04:41 PM on 03/09/2010
Take pitch forks and shotguns for the confrontation. Guns are legal in DC the Supreme Court said so.
01:44 PM on 03/09/2010
Why didn't we know? People in every state could have protested in front of "some" insurance company, just to be united. Missed opportunity because I'm tired of the republicans continuously saying "Americans dont want health insurance reform".. I cringe every time. WHAT AMERICANS?!!!!
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nfatt1
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
01:31 PM on 03/09/2010
I think they mean a profit of 3 per cent a second, not a year.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Coinyer101
King of Doobiestan
01:31 PM on 03/09/2010
I'mma gonna break the law, too...., if this bill passes and they try to force me to buy private insurance, I ain't gonna buy it......., They can fine me if they want, but, I ain't payin' that either. They can't withhold taxes, 'cuz I don't earn enuff to pay taxes. I would qualify for the medicaid, but, I would rather have an 'affordable' health care system., that I could afford without gummint subsidies. Single-payer was our only chance to truly reform the system ,and Obama threw that out the first day, so, I hope the bill fails, so we can start over. If it passes, the system will fail anyways , because of no true cost controls, and a poor economy, and then we'll get a fair, single-payer system 'cuz we'll have no other options.....,


Kill the bill, or suffer the consequences in the fall.....,
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
429freckles
Ex Republican Now Devoted Democrat
02:20 PM on 03/09/2010
WHAT??? "I would quality for the medicaid but, I would rather have an 'affordable' health care system" REALLY??? Dude, you are insane. I say SOME health care "medicaid" is better than "NO" health care. By the way, you won't be FORCED to buy private insurance -- if you qualify for medicaid. You won't be FINED because you quality for medicaid. You ignorance astounds me. IF you happen you become ill with say cancer, I bet you'd graciously be proud to accept any type of coverage you can get... medicaid or other, the free-er the better. OR, maybe judging from your icon picture -- you think medical marijuana will cure all your ills.....????
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
hipichick7
I'm still walking, so I'm sure that I can dance!
01:27 PM on 03/09/2010
I'm with you in spirit. Just called my Senators (although McCain and Kyl will not listen) and requested the same health care that congress has.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mavsguy842
01:26 PM on 03/09/2010
I'm a fan of a tactic used about 100 years ago. When people would be arrested in a certain town for protesting or attempting to organize workers or otherwise agitating, groups such as the IWW would flood the town with their members until the jails were completely filled, essentially forcing the town to allow protests to continue. Those in jail, being all ideological brothers and sisters, could protest together from inside the jail, really making things tough for the authorities: a jail full of still-protesting activists with even more agitators outside and nowhere else to lock them up.
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amaboss52
Jesus died for your sins...get your moneys worth!
01:20 PM on 03/09/2010
I wish I was there with them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Retrofuturistic
see things as they really are
01:17 PM on 03/09/2010
Finally, a demonstration! But it's only a 100 people? I say "Bravo" to these 100 people, but I wish the rest of us had known about it....
01:03 PM on 03/09/2010
President Obama on television said that this bill would hinder the doctor-patient relationship. He said that someone "snuck" the provisions into the bill. I just wonder what else has been "snuck" into this 2400 page monstrosity?
01:02 PM on 03/09/2010
For all those that can't fight...thank you!
12:54 PM on 03/09/2010
It seems so strange to hear such villification of the insurance companies. They make a profit of 3%. Compared to other sectors of our economy that make 15%, 20% and even 25% profit that is next to nothing. Sure costs are going up but the insurance companies are not causing that increase. There are many other factors involved.
01:09 PM on 03/09/2010
Hahahahahahahahaha you're funny.
01:13 PM on 03/09/2010
I know funny but true. Look it up.
01:12 PM on 03/09/2010
Funny you didn't mention them.
01:27 PM on 03/09/2010
Mentions what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lyra201
12:38 PM on 03/09/2010
i've been wanting to march on this for a long while, and i'm on everyone's email list, but i don't think i got notice about today's march. marches are most effective when there's lots of people, yes?

i join the chorus in saying i probably could not afford to get to dc to march today, but i would like to have tried.

yesterday i spent 8 hours in the emergency room. my friend had some heart palpitations. while there i saw and heard others. one guy was there because he had no doctor and ran out of heart medication. he complained that he hated coming to the er for this because it always took so long. one woman was there because her boyfriend hit her in the face. she and her friend kept the waiting room in stitches telling tales of hilarious abuse. bizarro world.

my friend left without knowing why her heart feels funny. we were told to get to a specialist and get a 30 day event monitor. neither of us had health care insurance. neither of us can afford even our living expenses right now.

guess we'll just be back at the er on another occasion.
12:45 PM on 03/09/2010
Do you think there will be no lines with Government controlled health care. Have you been to a post office lately?
TryToBeFlexible
MENSA, Gay, Atheist, Believer in justice, age 57
12:57 PM on 03/09/2010
I don't mind the lines at the post office too much. I WOULD mind if they decided to charge me $100 to mail a letter because I "mailed too much stuff", then when I got to the front of the line, they just told me "NO, we don't think we will deliver your letter".

That is more like the insurance companies. However, there is no place else to go once they turn you down, and then you die, or lose your entire life savings and house.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
purplet
01:02 PM on 03/09/2010
HAve you been to the ER lately? or had your insurance company deny a claim?
or refuse treatment?
01:50 PM on 03/09/2010
Everyone who is drinking the free market Kool Aid seems to conveniently forget about a little company called Enron.
02:11 PM on 03/09/2010
Everyone drinking the socialistic koolaid seems to have forgotten about a little country called the USSR