It
hasn’t been. It’s been worse. Yet given a malign history and a GOP dedicated to
aborting the law before it breathes, how could it have turned out otherwise?
In
2009, rather than go all out on job creation, Barack Obama went all in on health
care. Then, instead of asking for up-or-down votes on key provisions, he threw
it into a Congressional snake pit from which a 2000-page bill emerged, larded
with a sickening display of tradeoffs for constituents. (The public saw too, and
thus was the Tea Party born to take over the House the next year.)
The
President's mistakes did not end there. Brushing off charges of care rationing
and death panels, he kept stressing the altruism of covering millions of
uninsured, expecting Americans to respond with empathy rather than fear of less
care for themselves.
So
many miscalculations, so much political damage. When it was over, health care
reform was a Phyrric victory for Democrats. Voters didn't understand most of
it, didn't like what they did and were sold a bill of goods by GOP liars that
Obamacare was an expensive government takeover. Even keeping children covered
until 26 and barring disqualification for pre-existing conditions were lost in
the shuffle as the law’s pluses.
Now,
trying to understand how the rollout turned into disaster, a New York Times report concludes: “The
serious technical problems threaten to obscure what some see as a nationwide
demonstration of a desire for more affordable health insurance...
“The
response was huge. Insurance companies report much higher traffic on their Web
sites and many more callers to their phone lines than predicted.”
What
would-be enrollees got, instead of information and help, were frozen computer
screens and interminable telephone holds.
Such “glitches”
from the most tech-savvy Administration in American history must have more meaning than “Oops!”
Was
it just too much to ask Americans to penetrate a screen of opaque choices,
obscured by a cloud of partisan distortions and lies? Or is what’s happened to
the Obamacare rollout just another symptom of a deeper malaise that afflicts us
all. Would-be Obamacare enrollees may get a technical fix for their problems,
but the prognosis is not good for the body politic.
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