Vice-President Joe Biden, managing Obama's killer
budget cut negotiations with Congress, has declared,
"Everything--including entitlements (Medicare and Social
Security)--is on the table." But in fact, the uprising by
citizens at Town Halls over threats to cut Social Security and
Medicare, has made cuts in Medicaid the Obama gang's opening
focus--the "backdoor" approach to mass killing of the elderly,
because they calculate it's not as politically explosive.
Many Americans think Medicaid is a program for poor people,
while they consider Social Security and Medicare as programs
which provide retirement income and health benefits to workers
which workers themselves pay a tax for every payday. The truth
is, while 77% of the 58 million people enrolled in Medicaid are
children and families, and only 23% are elderly or disabled, in
fact, 64% of the money Medicaid spends is spent on older and
disabled people. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, 7 of
every 10 nursing home residents are on Medicaid, because
middle-class patients can quickly use up their savings at nursing
homes which charge $5,000-7,000 per month. Then, they need
Medicaid to stay there.
The "block grant" mechanism is proposed as the way to cut
Medicaid--once the allotted money is spent, treatment is over.
The state can decide how its block grant is spent--it could
exclude certain life-saving procedures, like organ transplants,
as was done in Arizona. A modern twist to the Hitlerian idea:
once the block grant, the pittance allotted after the Federal
government bails out the banks has been used up, your life is
"unworthy to be lived." As Lyndon LaRouche said today, "Let the
banks die--we can create new banks anytime!"
In Florida's "pilot program" to reduce Medicaid spending,
the program is being turned over to HMOs to manage the care "more
efficiently." Florida's proposed new Medicaid law "requires that
HMO organizations be paid less for each patient than what the
state has paying under the "fee for service" system"--where, if a
doctor prescribes treatment, the state must pay for it.
The House Republican budget plan would throw as many as 44
million low-income adults and children out of Medicaid over the
next 10 years and likely leave them with no health care coverage,
according to a new study by the Kaiser Family Foundation. [agg]
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