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Featured: Interviews for the Well-Informed

Featured: Interviews for the Well-Informed

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Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Resources for Facts vs. Myths, Distortions, and Outright Lies about Health Care Reform

Here is a growing list of resources for factual information and informed, civil dialogue.


Below is a letter i wrote in reply to a flood of email containing falsehoods about health care reform, which serves as my guiding principle for providing the above information:
________________________________
People:

Here is a link that shows the majority of people in a variety of surveys want single payer health care. This is not being offered in the current legislation, but the [email to which I was responding] seems to imply that it is. http://www.wpasinglepayer.org/PollResults.html

And here is a list of nations that have some form of universal health care that is successful:

Here is what doctors say about single-payer universal health care:

And I recently sent a message containing what a prominent evangelical minister says about health care.

My question is:

If we have evidence that universal health care is what the majority of citizens want and need, and...

If we have evidence that it can and does work very well for at least 28 other modern nations that we compete with, and ...

If we have testimony from doctors that health care is better when it is universal single-payer, and...

If we have statements from religious leaders that it is our moral duty to ensure that all among us, even the poorest of the poor, have the care they need, without regard to their ability to pay...

Then why is there so much talk saying health care reform -- particularly universal coverage -- can't work and shouldn't be adopted? Why so much attention given to fear mongers, and to people trying to prevent civil information meetings, shouting and ranting to disrupt all orderly conversation and exchange of information?

As concerned Christians and thinking individuals, should we not be the light in the darkness? Should we not be the people who show leadership to say, "Come, let us calmly and rationally look at the facts and discuss them, to arrive at what is best for the common good"?

Why not let's discuss the points the President makes? -- http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN0742097620090808?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews or the points Jim Wallis makes in the message I sent the other day?

If anything, rather than suggesting health care reform as currently proposed goes too far, many people are concerned it does not go far enough because it does not include single-payer universal coverage.

At the very least, I suggest we should see it as our duty to look objectively at the facts and spread truth. We, of all people, have a responsibility to be careful to avoid passing on false statements or those intended to spread fear. And we should be supportive of appropriate and needed change when the facts, rather than emotions, show they are needed and are in our best interest.

What are your thoughts?

Respectfully,

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