How was your weekend, loves? Mine was fabulous!
But Obamacare’s weekend was kind of rough.
On Sunday, The Daily Kos reported that the frustrating, glitchy, failure-face of a website that is Healthcare.gov is such a mess, in part, because of coordinated conservative hackattacks.
That’s right. You heard me correctly.
Conservatives are hacking into Healthcare.gov to prevent it from working correctly.
Specifically, hackers have been launching DDoS attacks—an acronym that stands for Distributed Denial of Service—against the site, which function to make a network unavailable to users.
Sound familiar? I think so! How many gazillions of stories have you heard about uninsured, Obamacare-enthused folks getting kicked off the site, denied access to sign up for their government-sponsored health benefits?
Probably a lot.
And that’s not all. In addition to these hackattacks—which are being launched with a tool called “Destroy Obama Care,” no joke—conservative lawmakers are encouraging insurance companies to fraudulently screw over their customers, and blame Obamacare for the ridiculousness.
For example, in Florida, douchebag extraordinaire Governor Rick Scott required insurance companies to blame Obamacare for any canceled plans, even if their reasons for canceling those plans had NOTHING AT ALL to do with Obamacare.
Lie, he said. It will be profitable, he said.
But actually. Because let’s be real here. Insurance companies make a lot of money for doing very, very little. They make healthcare prohibitively expensive. They’ve made medicine less about saving lives, and more about making money.
I mean really. The U.S. is the only country in the world where Breaking Bad makes any goddamn sense.
So when conservative lawmakers freak out about how horrible Obamacare will be, they’re really just lamenting the oncoming fall of big business. Of insane wealth disparities. Of that line in the sand that separates the haves from the have-nots.
Because what LOGICAL reason exists to vehemently defend the existence of companies that make healthcare INACCESSIBLE to the vast majority of Americans?
Seriously. Let’s look at a hypothetical example, shall we?
Mom gets breast cancer. It’s fairly advanced, but not untreatable.
She doesn’t have health insurance, because it’s way too expensive. She made a choice between paying for her monthly groceries, and electricity, and heat, and part of her mortgage payment—OR paying for health insurance. Years ago, she chose the former.
So now, here we are. Breast cancer. It wasn’t caught earlier because Mom lives in a state where women’s health funding has been slashed. Her local women’s clinic closed down. (Thanks Republicans.) She hasn’t had a mammogram in years. Preventive care wasn’t readily available to her.
Now that she has her diagnosis, Mom faces a choice. She can get treatment for her breast cancer, but she’ll go bankrupt paying for it. Or, she can forgo treatment, continue scraping by for now, and wait for the inevitable.
The reality for Americans without insurance is completely absurd. They live in a wealthy, developed nation, where there are clean hospitals, abundant medicine, and well-equipped doctors. Quality medical treatment is right here. It’s there for the taking.
But it’ll cost you your house. And your groceries. And the clothes on your back. Actually, if you take advantage of all those lifesaving facilities, you’ll likely wind up bankrupt and homeless.
So really, for these Americans—for this fictional, hypothetical working mom with breast cancer—what’s the point of being American? What’s the point of living in the United States? She might as well live in a struggling, rural nation that has very few hospitals, and very little medicine. Her access to those facilities would be roughly the same.
And that’s completely insane. It makes no sense that uninsured people in the United States must choose between two life-destroying options: forgo treatment and wait for death, or go into total financial ruin.
The only reason anyone should forgo medical treatment is if treatment does not exist. You can’t go to the hospital for chemotherapy if there is no hospital, if there is no chemo.
But we do have hospitals. We do have chemo. And so, people should be able to use them. While also keeping a roof over their heads and food in their mouths.
This is not a difficult argument to make. This is just common sense.
But conservatives are abandoning that logic. They’ve made it their mission to defend a system that clearly isn’t working. They’re defending a healthcare system that bankrupts people. They’re defending insurance companies that lie and swindle their customers. They’re encouraging those insurance companies to act fraudulently.
This is stupid, am I right?
So lovelies, let’s try and put an end to this madness, mmkay? Obamacare is not ideal, but it’s a step in the right direction. It’s a step toward affordable and accessible healthcare for all. So let’s get behind it.
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Featured image courtesy of [LaDawna Howard via Flickr]
[Featured image courtesy of the LA Times]