Law & Politics
SICKO - Reality and Rhetoric
As Michael Moore ventures deeper and deeper into politics, his film-making abilities are getting better and better. I enjoyed Sicko for its slick cinematography and the powerful use of disturbing images and stories. Since its release in June 29, 2007, it is clear that it will be overwhelmingly successful at the box-office, and is sure to do well across the world markets for anti-Americana. And for once, I am convinced anti-Moore critics are temporarily on the back seat.
However as far as Sicko’s message is concerned, looking beyond the scathing sarcasm and criticism of the health insurance industry its time for everyone to ask themselves a few basic questions.
Does the concept of socialized medicine have any relevance in the 21st century? Isn’t it as outdated as McCarthyism or Bolshevism? Simply stated, if you want to bring down the cost of healthcare, does it make sense to pay to exorbitant sums to the middleman, and then reward him for denying it to as many as possible? Well that is at the heart of the matter — universal healthcare in America cannot possibly co-exist with the insurance industry. The whole concept of free healthcare for everyone is so alien in this world of managed healthcare, that the mere mention of the word “reform” or “subsidized drugs” would bring healthcare stocks crashing down on Wall Street.
Despite the fact that nearly all other “capitalist” economies have deliberately kept healthcare out of the profit-sector, the question is a purely political one. The main point that Sicko raises is not about the 50 million Americans who do not have health insurance (as it is no different from homelessness or drug addiction to the lawmakers), but how having a middleman (the insurance industry) stands in the way of delivering it in a humanitarian spirit that medicine has been traditionally required under oath… And Sicko cleverly picks out those few aberrant instances where this has resulted in a complete breakdown in humaneness. Like the scene where the elderly woman was dumped from the hospital into the street by a taxi (is the driver any less inhuman for accepting such a passenger?) or being turned down for surgery for failing to disclose a past yeast infection.
Healthcare costs will continue spiraling, as Humana’s success on Wall Street is an affirmation that capitalism works in the US. But unless people see the glaring irony that the success of the healthcare industry (a.k.a. richer middlemen) and healthy Americans are antithetical, the debate on Universal Healthcare will continue.
But is there really any serious ground for debate on an issue that is obviously nonsensical to debate about? Its time to look beyond the rhetoric, deep within ourselves.
Related Articles
- The Huckabee Diet: A Flawed Model of Health Advocacy
- WHO Calls for Community Health Services to Address Mental Health Issues
- Make Money for Charity Debating Fundamentalists, Part II: The Ten Ethical Debating Rules
- Make Money for Charity Debating Fundamentalists, Part I: The Games
- Genetic Discrimination: A Real Threat?
2 Comments
Trackbacks
Leave a Reply
Monday, January 5, 2009
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- The Bipolar Trend
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- Is War A Psychosis?
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Health Care and Politics II - The Democrats
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Sleeping on the Job - A Program Director’s Take on IOM Recommendations
- Work and Mental Health
- Why a Smartphone is a Dumb Idea
- Sometimes It’s Good to Be Cold - Therapeutic Hypothermia
- Recognizing the Man in the Mirror
- Brain Blogging, Forty-Second Edition
- Happiness is Contagious, If Not For a Fleeting Moment
- Look Me in the Eyes - From Eye Contact to “Fear Blindness”
- The Doctor Can’t See You Right Now, He’s Napping
- Suicide Rates Could Rise
- Gingko Study Proves Nothing
- Exercise to Keep Your Brain Healthy and Increase Cerebral Blood Flow
- Personal Health Records and Mental Health
- New Option for the Management of Acute Pain
- Depression and the Risk for Cardiovascular Events
- Beating the Biological Clock - Clinical Trials of Tasimelteon
- Ginkgo Biloba Ineffective for Preventing Dementia
- A Special Thanks - Remembering a Man Who Remembered No One
- Psychiatric Conditions and Alcohol Abuse in the College-Aged
- Drugs and Pharmacology, Twelfth Edition
- Hi Kas,
Yes, we surely have been plagiarized once again by detoxinabox.com. Fin...
- ...
- Hi Simes,
Thanks for bringing this to my attention. These thieves...
- Do you know you've been plagiarised at www.detoxinabox.com/blog/which-came-first...
- I found this an excellent post on a very professional blog, and have selected it...
- As a psychologist somewhat familiar with the sleep deprivation research, it stri...
- We can spread happiness by simply smiling at others. We make ourselves happy in ...
- The 6 months I was unemployed (having had a stressful- but not anxiety inducing-...
- Detractors can argue all they want. My now 15 year old was 4 months old and cryi...
- USC doctor Gerald Loeb and Jonathan Kellerman are guilty of implanting un-consen...
- try relaxation techniques. yoga, massage....anything. ^_^...
- I think we all have a place in society for helping people with mood disorders an...
- I've always had a hard time separating my work life from my home life. It took ...
- I have been on the Donor 's list for 17 years, never got a call. But I would sti...
- Very nice work. Thanks......
- Good Day,
I have been diagnosed with Essential Tremor and would like to recei...
- Widely available forms of MCT oil include nonhydrogenated coconut or palm oil, b...
- The only practical way to stop hospital staff and doctors from seeing records th...
- The point that there are cultural differences in individual and societal respons...
- Late 1980s I was under massive stress, blackmail froma hospital (investor) and l...
Brain Blogger's Historical Brain Illustrations









Sponsored Links
Neuroscience & Neurology
December 23, 2008 | 3 Comments | By Erin Falconer, MS
Look Me in the Eyes - From Eye Contact to “Fear Blindness”
More In Neuroscience & Neurology
- Are Boys Really More Hard-Wired for Math than Girls?
- School Bullies - Is the Amygdala to Blame?
- Reversing the Irreversible - Neuromotor Prostheses for Spinal Cord Injury
- Electrical Brain Stimulation Improves Hand Motor Skills
- My Amygdala Made Me Vote for McCain/Obama
Neuroscience & Neurology
Opinion
December 31, 2008 | 1 Comment | By Sajid Surve, DO
Why a Smartphone is a Dumb Idea
More In Opinion
- Suicide Rates Could Rise
- The Gift of Life - Part 3
- China’s Tainted Reputation
- HIPAA Doesn’t Exist For Doctors
- Some Funny Stories From the Trenches
Opinion
Psychiatry & Psychology
January 02, 2009 | 3 Comments | By Chadwick Royal, PhD, NCC, LPC, ACS
Work and Mental Health
More In Psychiatry & Psychology
- Recognizing the Man in the Mirror
- Psychiatric Conditions and Alcohol Abuse in the College-Aged
- Conditioned Response - An Alternative to Antidepressant Drugs?
- Pulling Your Hair Out - Complexities of Trichotillomania
- Are We Worshipping Celebrities or Heroes?


It’s simply not true that other capitalist economies have kept health care out of the for-profit sector: Michael Moore simply mis-represents what’s happening in other countriesl. Only Canada has a complete government monopoly on hospital and physicians’ services, and it is crumbling under the weight of a 2005 Canadian Supreme Court decision that the government monopoly violates Canadians’ civil rights. Shortly after the release of SiCKO, BUPA, Britain’s largest private insurer, sold its hospitals to a private equity partnership. In France, private hospitals compete against public ones for publicly insured patients. Read the Wall Street Journal last week for a feature on Holland’s reforms allowing more private insurance choices in order to reduce waiting times for treatment.
Nor is most U.S health care for-profit: about 85% of U.S. private hospitals are non-profit, including the examples in SiCKO. Most of the U.S. insurers attacked in SiCKO are non-profit. Michael Moore simply chooses not to know what he is talking about.
I will be speaking on a panel following a film screening of SiCKO and other movies in Los Angeles on September 27 at a free event. Please register at http://liberty.pacificresearch.org/events/ID.37/detail.asp and join us!