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#Blogger: GOP health care proposal amounts to ?sweatshop insurance?

Von: 5272 Dead, 405 since 1/20/09 (dead@dead.com) [Profil]
Datum: 07.11.2009 18:57
Message-ID: <zMqdnY8QOaK-KGjXnZ2dnUVZ_jNi4p2d@posted.carinet>
Newsgroup: alt.fan.rush-limbaughtalk.politics.misc alt.society.liberalism
http://rawstory.com/2009/11/webb-gop-proposing-sweatshop-insurance/

Blogger: GOP health care proposal amounts to ’sweatshop insurance’

By Muriel Kane
Friday, November 6th, 2009 -- 10:40 pm

According to blogger Bruce Webb, House Minority Leader John Boehner's
proposed amendment to the health care reform act is "a fricking
nightmare."

"It is worse than I could have imagined," Webb writes. "Someone tell me I
have got this wrong. Or remove all sharp objects within my reach. Because
they cannot be this brazen."

Webb explains that Title III of Boehner's proposal, which is enticingly
called "Expanding Choices by Allowing Americans to Buy Health Care
Coverage Across State Lines," would actually do little to help most
Americans but would offer a great boon to insurance companies, which
could choose to be registered in any state and sell insurance anywhere in
the nation following only the laws of that state.

As the proposal itself spells out very clearly, this means that insurance
purchased by consumers would not have to comply with the laws of their
own state, offer "services or benefits mandated by the law of that
state," or be "subject to all the consumer protection laws and
restrictions on rate changes of the state."

What's more, the list of acceptable states in which insurance companies
could register includes Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa
and the Northern Marianas -- locations that are not necessarily known for
their devotion to consumer protection.

"In any event," Webb concludes, "if you like your 'Made in the U.S.A.' t-
shirt made by near slave labor in Chinese owned sweatshops in the
Northern Marianas you are going to love your 'Made in the U.S.A.'
insurance plan regulated by the somewhat notorious government of the N.
Marianas."

Webb also points out that the Northern Marianas are notorious for their
long-term relationship with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who helped
see to it that the islands would remain free of pesky US labor
regulations. Webb does not mention, however, that Boehner has his own
Marianas connections by way of his former chief of staff, Barry Jackson.

Jackson worked for Boehner from 1991 until he joined the Bush
administration as a deputy to Karl Rove -- a position in which he was
occasionally lobbied by Abramoff's associates, according to the report of
the House Government Reform Committee on Abramoff's activities.

Several years prior to that, however, in 1996, Jackson was one of a group
of Congressional aides invited to Saipan by Abramoff's clients on the
islands, at a time when the House of Representatives was considering
strengthening immigration and labor standards for the Northern Marianas.

According to a print article quoted at Daily Kos, Jackson accepted the
invitation. Jackson himself has claimed that he didn't actually go on the
junket, although he cannot recall why.

Either way, the Jackson connection suggests that Boehner ought to be well
aware of the kind of regulatory standards that his own party has helped
maintain in the Northern Marianas. Though perhaps a man who can't tell
the difference between the Constitution and the Declaration of
Independence shouldn't be expected to trouble his mind with such petty
details.

--
Slavery: The belief that people can be property
Corporatism: The belief that property can be people.


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