A Message From Dennis Kucinich October 20, 2009 4:02 PM
Why We Desperately Need Health Care for All - Now
Dear Friends,
More about why we desperately need health care for all:
This past weekend, I visited a festival at a church in a working class
area of my district. These events are opportunities for people from the
community to gather, to eat ethnic foods, listen to music and enjoy
each other's company; before the brisk, brooding Cleveland winter
begins to set in. When I walked through the doors, I felt as though I
had stepped back in time, to when I was a child growing up in the inner
city of Cleveland where I witnessed people struggling every day to make
ends meet. From this early experience I have learned to recognize
poverty, the clothes it wears and the physical appearance it presents.
What I saw in the church were humble people whose shoes were well worn
and whose clothes were in need of repair. I also saw people struggling
with various stages of ill health, with obvious physical difficulties.
I know what poverty feels like and I felt it here and I was surprised.
What made this visit memorable was that it occurred in a suburban
community which had formerly been known for its solid middle class
housing.
Meanwhile about 400 miles away, in Washington, DC, the insurance
companies have wielded enormous influence to knock a public option out
of the Senate Finance Committee health care bill and we still struggle
to keep the public option alive in the House. A decision is due soon
from the full Senate. Will they actually pass a bill which requires
that Americans buy private insurance? The House continues to try to
determine the shape and content of our legislation.
The political system is failing the American
people. Money for Wall Street, not for Main Street. Money for War, not
for Peace. Money to move jobs out of America, not to create new jobs
here. Money for insurance companies, but what about the people?
While 47 million uninsured wait for an answer,
and another 50 million underinsured stand by, Americans are losing
their jobs, their homes, their health care and their retirement
security. How long can people wait for help?
I am asking you to continue to join me in the
push to have a state single payer amendment in the health care bill.
Whatever passes the Congress will be insufficient to meet the broad
based health care needs of the American people, which is why it is
important to give the states the option to move toward single payer.
Call your representative now and demand that the Kucinich state single
payer amendment remain in the bill.
In my community, and many others across our
nation, the level of human suffering from an economy "gone bad" is
rising to shocking levels. A recent US Census report states that in
this decade the number of northeastern Ohioans who live fractionally
above the poverty line has risen 10% - to a quarter of a million
people.
But I do not see cold statistics. I see real
people. I see the poverty lining their faces. I see their eyes asking:
Why?