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Our Health: A Privilege?

 

Like most Republicans, Congressman Rodney Frelinghuysen voted to support Rep. Paul Ryan's Medicare plan. This plan would do away with Medicare as we know it, replacing it with a voucher system that most health experts agree would not cover the cost of comprehensive coverage. The rest of the expense would fall on the American people.

It appears that Mitt Romney has endorsed the Ryan plan, but no one seems quite sure, least of all Mr. Romney. Ryan hastens to point out he has modified his plan to allow those over 55 to keep the current plan while those under 55 would have a choice, the old plan or the new one. Dividing Medicare into two separate plans cannot result in both of them remaining strong. Ryan, for example, fails to note that the traditional Medicare program would be at significant risk if younger, healthier recipients opt for the voucher system. 

By supporting the Ryan plan, Frelinghuysen has attacked the president’s plans for Medicare. It is important to note there are several points the defenders of the Ryan plan persist in misrepresenting:

  1. The President has not cut dollars from Medicare, but rather reduced the rate of growth in the program.
  2. The dollars moved from Medicare to the Affordable Care Act are used for Medicare purposes, gradually filling, for example, the so called “doughnut hole” for seniors needing prescription drugs. No one with traditional Medicare will suffer a loss of any services, though Medicare Advantage, an optional managed care plan that purchases private coverage, is being cut. Managed Care offered the promise of reduced cost, but over the years has proven more costly than the standard fee-for-service Medicare, hence the cuts.
  3. Ryan cuts the same $716 billion in his plan as the president - but where the president cuts from providers, Ryan’s cuts come from recipients.

The Republican Party platform obviously does not want affordable health care for all Americans. The Ryan plan – supported by Frelinghuysen – dismantles the Affordable Care Act that finally gave health care benefits to more Americans, cuts current no-cost  screenings (one wonders why anyone would be against preventive health care services), and would soon raise costs on retirees across the country by up to $6,000 a year.

There are industrialized countries on this planet that provide health care for all citizens. There are countries where health care is considered a human right, not a privilege for the wealthy. If we follow the Romney/Ryan/Frelinghuysen plan, health care in the United States will remain a privilege. Under the Republican plan, more than 45,000 Americans will continue to die every year just because they don’t have health insurance. Luckily, we have the privilege to choose which approach to our health we prefer by voting in the upcoming Nov. 6 election.

WCaldwelldweller

9:58 am on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Is this a joke? Do you really think that the public will simply read your irresponsible statement "The Republican Party platform obviously does not want affordable health care for all Americans" and vote for Obama? Shameless posturing. Oh, by the way, healthcare is not a right, nor is it a priviledge reserved for the wealthy. It is impossible to put the term into a bucket and label it along party lines. We must work responsibly to ensure the future of it and Obama seems to have rammed this through without acknowledging that it has long term consequences.

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Pete Mock

1:02 pm on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

I also dislike such blanket statements as that, and he could make his point without it. I'm sure all politicians, left and right, would agree that they want affordable health care for all Americans, it's just a question of how it should be addressed and who pays. I would, however, agree with that the Republican Party platform does not address affordable health care for all Americans, and in general the Republican Party does not have a plan that does anywhere near what the ACA does to make health care affordable.

Whether health care is a right is debatable, but I tend to believe the Preamble to the Constitution covers it with ”promote the general Welfare…", and the Declaration of Independence hits on it with “certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

Regardless, I find the conservative notion that the Constitution must be frozen in time and we must base our laws on the "framer's intent" to be about as logical as sticking with the horse and buggy and using gas lamps.

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Dan Grant

1:33 pm on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

This isn't a joke. It happens to be the truth. They have fought every social safety net program since Social Security. What is missing in the Republican agenda is the historical fact that under a freemarket the costs of healthcare and the Insurance Protection for those costs have gone out of sight. Now they want to put the people most at risk into some kind of voucher system that will place all people into an unrepentent for profit system which will take the heathy people out and leave the elderly in. The fact that Romney has been caught lying about the $716 million that the President's plan would take to reduce the payments to providers says it all. They want to end the most successful social program that America has developed. Just so you know what is happening in NJ, private equity firms are buying hospitals and turning them into for profit hospitals. That is not a good sign for the health and safety of NJ Residents.

John Lee

10:25 am on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

LOL ~ The people who whine about ACA use the same arguments that were made about the creation and implementation of the GI Bill, the VA, Social Security and Medicare; which have proven to be lifelines for those who have given so much for these United States.

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tryintosurvive

10:26 am on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Does the patch allow this type of posting?
For some reason John Arvantes has decided that he will use the posting of "articles" on the Patch as a way of promoting his campaign and his party. This seem to be inappropriate.
Doesn't the Patch need to post equal articles from each side if you are essentially running campaign advertisements.

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Jack Durschlag

10:30 am on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Tryintosurvive: We have made numerous inquiries to his opponent Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen asking him to blog and have never received any reply. We continue to offer the congressman space here to blog and tell his side of the story. Thanks for your comment.

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John Lee

4:58 pm on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

LOL! on Montclair Patch its "all Roland Straten all the time" and on Belleville-Nutley Patch local teapartier Steve Rogers makes appearances that rival the Khardashians, and lets not forget Sue Ann Penna on Bloomfield Patch (she's made so many appearances that local fashion blogs have credited Patch for the popularity of the home perm! But seriously, its been my experience that Patch is very fair and balanced with coverage and reaching out to people of different viewpoints, but in order for that viewpoint to be shared other candidates and activists needs to respond.

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Empty Suit

6:34 pm on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Who is JA? Google "Empty Suit"

Matt Krayton

7:41 pm on Tuesday, August 28, 2012

WC, John Arvanites is running for Congress in the New Jersey's 11th Congressional District. If you click on his name at the top of the page you can read his profile.

Matt

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Travis

10:33 am on Thursday, August 30, 2012

The headaches got worse. I think I got stomach cancer. I shouldn't complain, though. You're only as healthy as you feel.

You're only.

As healthy.

As.

You.

Feel.

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Jon

9:52 pm on Thursday, August 30, 2012

Dear John Arvanites - If healthcare is a right then who should be forced to provide that care? Are you going to line up doctors and make them perform medical procedures? I have come to realize that liberals have good intentions but those intentions are not based on common sense and rational thought.

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