Hillary's Health Plan: annotated version

The Waffle Queen, also known as #WhichHillary, has responded to a request for her comments by the New England Journal of Medicine

An uncritical reading will think Medusa's "vision for health care" is just wonderful. However, we must read everything the Mad Bomber says, and parse it like a lawyer--just as she is and she does.

why working to expand health care access for every American and improving the health and well-being of kids and families has been the most important cause of my life.

Okay, if you calling support for mass incarceration, breaking up families of immigrants, bombing women and children in countries other than our own, and as a bonus, for terrorizing Bill Clinton's sexual victims as embodying the health and well-being of kids and families, then I got a bridge to sell you.

We need to expand Medicaid in every state so that everyone has access to care, regardless of their income and where they reside.

Medicaid, really? You know the plan that governors control and not the Federal government? Why not support Medicare as in Medicare-for-all?

As President, I will fight for every American to have access to affordable, quality health care.

"Affordable health care" is neither equitable, cost-effective, nor freeing us from being indentured Insurance company clients.

By securing new coverage for millions of previously uninsured people and providing peace of mind, the Affordable Care Act is an essential step toward universal health care.

Damn you Hillary, why can't we just have Medicare-for-all (MFA)? Why do you pussy-foot around this issue--is it because you don't really care and don't want to alienate Insurance companies and Big Pharma? This incremental change--if it's truly any change at all, will lead to an increase of preventable deaths for perhaps millions.

Why would your "snail-care" improvements of About to Collapse Anyway (ACA) prevent those unnecessary deaths?
Let's talk about a few of the many reasons people die unnecessarily in our current society.
1. People still can't get into see doctors:
A. 33 million (10% of the population) are still uncovered.
B. Even if they can get into see a health-care professional, many times they are so-called physician extenders, whom most of the time are "physician pretenders".

2. People who have had the correct evaluation and treatment plans are often unable to afford the treatments.
Many times, insurance companies deny standard of care treatment because it cuts into their bottom line--and your lifeline by rejecting payments for treatments. Use any excuse you can think of, it all amounts to the same thing: You ain't gonna get what you need anyway--because we say so.

3. Speaking about Medicaid, not Medicare, you have to be practically be completely asset-free and near poverty to qualify.

4. There are administrative requirements which make care-giving burdensome, affecting quality health-care, but that is a subject best deferred to another essay.

Instead of repealing the ACA, my plan will build on its progress. We must work to expand Medicaid coverage in the 19 states that have left 3 million Americans without health insurance because their states refused to expand Medicaid and enroll people eligible for coverage

But we're still talking about the onerous medicaid programs instead of MFA. Why can't you just stop this deflection to one of the root causes of our current health dilemma? Oh, I forgot who your sponsors are.

And finally, we need to ensure the availability of a public option choice in every state, and let Americans over 55 buy in to Medicare.

This sounds laudable--but why have a cutoff age on the public option at all? Why not just do the simple thing?

Taken together, these policies will increase competition, choice, affordability and the number of Americans with insurance.

Competition between insurance companies? Wait till I stop laughing...Okay, ready to proceed. If we are to have private insurers in the health market, open up each state to as many insurance companies that want to enter. They have pseudo-monopolies now (technically that's Insurance Company Oligopoly [ICO]).

First, to immediately relieve Americans of health cost burdens, I will extend a refundable tax credit of up to $5,000 per family for excessive out-of-pocket health costs. And I will impose a requirement on all insurers to limit out-of-pocket prescription drug costs to $250 a month on covered medications.

If we are to continue ICO, there doesn't seem to be a commitment to universal health care in the form of state markets because she discusses a Medicaid model which is notoriously politicized. The second part of that quote talks about "covered medications". Ha, ha. You can bet that the insurance companies will cover less and less drugs and non-medical treatment.

Second, to directly address rising prescription drug costs, I will work to remove barriers to competition by streamlining approval of high-quality biosimilar and generic drugs. That includes proposals to ensure that drug companies justify their prices, eliminate “pay to delay” practices, and allow Medicare to directly negotiate for better prices.

Streamlining drug approval has hidden dangers. Although the FDA usually carries the water for Big Pharma, sometimes drugs are rushed through phase 3 trials much too quickly so that exposure of more people to the treatment may reveal drug-associated risks unforeseen. There is also the matter of revolving door relations between FDA upper echelons and Big Pharma--just as harmful as the Wall Street revolving door with Treasury. Finally, regretfully, the FDA has frequently been lax in allowing drug trials which are not sponsored by the manufacturer to enter into evaluation. Corruption has seeped into the evaluative process. Adverse reports are suppressed. Statistics are misapplied. Data is even deliberately altered.

Who is to be the watchdog of these pay-to-delay (also known as it's cheaper if you die already) Big Pharma and ICO collaboration? What types of penalties will be allowed by the "Federal Consumer Response Team" (for medical issues) to assess? Will they have subpoena powers? Will the watchdog be able to issue penalties? Will the agency, if it indeed is created, be able to recommend criminal prosecution to the Department of Justice--and will the DOJ listen?

Incorporating the first-hand knowledge and experience of providers, we need to streamline and enhance the policies of private and public payers to move our health care system toward practices that reward high-quality, patient-centered care, improve outcomes, and reduce costs.

Wouldn't that be wonderful? It's doable. With Clinton's track record of reneging on promises, can we believe this goody-goody proposal? Personally I think such an effort if effectuated would be an excellent thing.

As we do, we must promote integrated mental health care, and enforce insurance coverage parity requirements to ensure that mental health care is not siloed.

Injecting a note of reality here, as I commented to another essay, my insurance agent told me that the two major problems that the ICO was having was for the inability to exclude pre-existing conditions AND EQUALLY as much to the mandated increased mental health care by the ACA. ICO will fight tooth and nail over these two points. I do not see HRC doing anything about this except for her readily-broken position statements.

This will improve our ability to respond to public health emergencies — from natural disasters, to issues of environmental justice like Flint, to escalating rates of addiction and obesity, to infectious diseases like Ebola and Zika.

Now actually I agree very much with this section--the problem reflexively returns to the lap of BHO. He could have put some punch into the EPA and DHS so that this clean water problem, especially including Flint--but many other locations as well. I realize I am deflecting--but Obama could have spent a few billion bucks on improving water infrastructure that he is otherwise diverting to useless stealth fighters, etc. With HRC essentially running an I'm-not-Trump campaign, she really seems to be Obama 2.0.

I will work to ensure that our scientific community and regulatory system are promoting innovation and will increase funding for biomedical research across all diseases, including specific investments for research into diseases like Alzheimer’s and HIV/AIDS.

So who is going to do this research? NIH for sure, but that organization farms out a lot of the R&D to Big Pharma. Plus Uncle Sam also "incentivizes" Big Pharma to R&D on new drugs and technology. If the U.S. does not pass MFA, at the very least Big Pharma should repay Uncle Sam the same proportion of money spent on drug development as contributed by the Feds to proprietary Big Pharma products. In other words if drug development for Drug A costs $6 B but the Feds contribute $3 B, then 50% of drug prices should be rebated to the treasury. I have not heard that idea debated--but in lieu of MFA, this sounds to be an equitable way to handle drug prices--in addition to drug price ceilings for each particular agent.

More available information — with careful protections for privacy and security — will make our markets more efficient and transparent.

It took me a few minutes to stop laughing when the Queen of Secrecy talks about "transparency". My Dad had a saying for that type of talk: "Clear as mud".

There are parts of her NEJM article which I did not quote but which do have admirable-sounding theses. But this is Hillary Clinton we are talking about--who believes anything she says?

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snoopydawg's picture

I'm not going to go over every damned lie she said except for this one.


For my entire career, I’ve fought to provide more fairness for families and more opportunities for children, so that every child growing up in our country can reach his or her God-given potential.

No need to rehash how much damage welfare reform did to children in this country. By the time they left office poverty rates had sky rocketed!
It been over 6 f'cking years since the ACA was passed and I haven't heard that one person was working to make it better so that it is THE step toward universal health care.
And as we all know, just having insurance doesn't mean jack if people's deductibles are too high!

I'm sorry Hillary, I heard pretty much this same bullshit from Obama during his first candidacy and while I and millions like me were calling, emailing and signing petitions during the health care debate, I found out that he had already made deals with the insurance and pharmaceutical companies while congress was still working on it.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

riverlover's picture

puts it right into the NO bin. That is just how I think.

As well, don't many Doctors refuse or limit the number of Medicaid patients, too low a compensation?

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Alligator Ed's picture

but if they participate in Medicare (meaning CMS submits payment to them directly) they must see Medicare patients, even if they also have Medicaid.

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tapu dali's picture

but in a recent post, I do feel for teacherken. Think of him what you will, but this is sad beyond belief:

It all started with my recent physical, where my personal care physician, a physician’s assistant in an internal medical practice,

A 70 yo man with multiple health issues, can only see a physician's assistant for evaluation, Dx and Tx?

Has he never seen his "Doctor"?

When I see my physician (yes a real one, BSc, MSc, MD, FRCPS(C), FRCFM)(*) it's often with his "intern" (what the British call a "junior doctor", i.e. having his MD but not yet fellowship) by his side and the two of them interacting between them.

I know enough med to help them with their Dx.

What degree/diploma does a "physician's assistant" have? No wonder US-style health care is so bad, if even patients like TK can't see a fully accredited physician for health care.

*1 Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada
*2 Fellow of the Royal College of Family Medicine

PS It is not unusual in Canada to see a "real" doctor, rather than a junior, for anything else than a sniffle.

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There are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don't know we don't know.

mimi's picture

need. Trade runs in families. Apparently running for political power is a trade and gets inherited from one generation to the next. Appropriate for imperial regimes.

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Citizen Of Earth's picture

but no one has ever smoked themselves to death. I know people who crashed cars while drunk, but no one who has even been ticketed for a traffic violation when driving while stoned.

As a Hellery surrogate pitching the evils of Reefer Madness, Chelsea can go to hell.

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Donnie The #ShitHole Douchebag. Fake Friend to the Working Class. Real Asshole.

lunachickie's picture

just like her mother.

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says Jimmy, "if you combine marijuana with dark skin and a cop.
Then it can, definitely. Definitely."

Yep, thanks. If it weren't for Trump Clinton would lose California too.

Biggrin Goood morning.

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There she is, ready to step into Mom and Dad's authoritarian shoes. I can see it now: "Ready for Chelsea?" "It's her turn!"

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Twain Disciple

Alligator Ed's picture

After all, she operates a Hospital for Decrepit Secretaries of State.
Let's just forget that fracking is orders of magnitude greater danger to your health. Chelsea let's be scientific--we must list Fracking as schedule 1 and let NIH study it before releasing into public water supplies. Oh, I forgot, Chelsea attended the University of Petrochemicals, where her mother sits on the board of Directors.

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Medicare and Medicaid are substantially privatized (Medicare Advantage and Medicaid managed care). As such they do not provide a foundation for universal comprehensive publicly funded healthcare.

HR 676 “Expanded and Improved Medicare for All” provides this foundation. A national health service (VA for All if the privatization occurring in the VA were reversed) would also provide this foundation. Anything that leaves profit in the insurance picture will not.

Allowing insurance companies to “compete across state lines” is a right-wing meme. Insurance companies are increasingly consolidated into a few large companies. They are not subject to anti-monopoly regulations. Insurance companies will incorporate into the state with the fewest regulations, a race to the bottom.

The ACA provided an 8-year patent protection for biologics which was bad enough. The TPP provides for 12 years. Where does Clinton/Kaine stand on this?

A tax credit doesn’t do any good for a person who doesn’t have the cash to pay for treatment in the first place.

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I have been covered since 2005 (Parts A-Medical and B-Hospital). Can't even afford a co-pay now much less my slice of the four hundred bucks an hour doctor bill, but it is good to have for emergencies I guess. Better than nothing. The 2017 Handbook arrived couple days ago. Look at what is not covered (hint: don't grow old)

What's not covered by Part A & Part B?

Medicare doesn't cover everything. If you need certain services that Medicare doesn't cover, you'll have to pay for them yourself unless you have other insurance or you're in a Medicare health plan that covers these services.

Even if Medicare covers a service or item, you generally have to pay your deductible, coinsurance, and copayments.

Some of the items and services that Medicare doesn't cover include:

Long-term care (also called custodial care)
Most dental care
Eye examinations related to prescribing glasses
Dentures
Cosmetic surgery
Acupuncture
Hearing aids and exams for fitting them
Routine foot care

Find out if Medicare covers a test, item, or service you need.

Insurance industry "needs more healthy people in the pool!" lol

Thanks

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Except for cosmetic surgery and acupuncture HR 676 Expanded and Improved Medicare for All covers all the items in this list. There are no premiums, co-pays, or deductibles. https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/house-bill/676

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Seriously? Then why does the 2017 Handbook list them as not covered? Did you try the coverage link or are you making copy pasta? Nothing wrong with that, but "no premiums, co-pays, or deductibles" does not match up with my experiences by which I have eternal debt to show for. Maybe you are talking about Medicare Advantage, I don't know, never could afford the extra policies to cover everything.

Peace

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I was describing the coverage and payment provisions proposed in the bill HR 676 - Expanded and Improved Medicare for All. It is not the same as making today's Medicare (whether "original" or Medicare Advantage) available to everyone, or as a buy-in option.

Edit: Also to clarify: There are not 2 Medicares. Both “original” Medicare and Medicare Advantage cover the same percentage of the same services. With the former the government pays the provider. With latter the government pays a private insurance company which pays Medicare. In the past Medicare Advantage cost the government a lot more than original. Some of this was supposed to be corrected by provisions of the ACA.

Medicare Advantage plans may offer additional benefits, and people with “original” Medicare may purchase supplemental plans to pay an additional percentage of the cost of Medicare covered services.

2nd edit: With latter the government pays a private insurance company which pays Medicare the provider.

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I see you were suggesting a fix, a new Medicare-for-all law. Thanks for that.

I swear the first time I clicked the link to that bill returned this:

Latest Action: 03/16/2015 Referred to the Subcommittee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs.

and now:

Latest Action: There is no latest action for this bill

? ~shrug~

Why it shows Actions (8) when there are none I don't know. Tax dollars at work.

Cheers

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hellinahandcart's picture

I am going to start including it in all my correspondence w/ anyone in the House (or in the Senate for that matter), and tell them to push it. Perhaps we should start a coordinated effort.

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Bollox Ref's picture

More God Given incrementalism.

Just what the country doesn't need.

A Clinton presidency is going to be a complete waste of time, money and lives.

(And Chelsea Clinton, despite Stanford and Oxford, appears to be an idiot.)

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

It's not easy to lie on cue, to free-associate lies, and to remember the party line lies you've already told to avoid contradicting yourself. Chelsea's new at this. Her parents have been at it for decades.

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Twain Disciple

MsGrin's picture

Competition between insurance companies? Wait till I stop laughing...

They've been copying each other's most exclusionary practices - from the beneficiary's side (maybe we're just consumers these days and no longer beneficiaries...), we experience the collusion by insurance companies as a race to the bottom.

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'What we are left with is an agency mandated to ensure transparency and disclosure that is actually working to keep the public in the dark' - Ann M. Ravel, former FEC member

MsGrin's picture

Who is to be the watchdog of these pay-to-delay (also known as it's cheaper if you die already) Big Pharma and ICO collaboration? What types of penalties will be allowed by the "Federal Consumer Response Team" (for medical issues) to assess? Will they have subpoena powers? Will the watchdog be able to issue penalties? Will the agency, if it indeed is created, be able to recommend criminal prosecution to the Department of Justice--and will the DOJ listen?

As things currently stand, there really is no way to point out errors against patients/consumers. There is SUPPOSED to be a mechanism, and it's written into the U.S. code and all, but the insurance companies simply ignore the requirements and... well and they do nothing but whistle. No one cares. I've had one of these situations, and I complained until I was hoarse. The answer to your question about whether the DOJ will listen or not is that A) one must get an attorney (an attorney must file these claims with the DOJ), and B) one must act as a whistleblower and file a case under seal. They DOJ may or may not take up the matter... if they do, the whistleblower gets a cut of what the gov recoups. Otherwise, one is free to have their attorney pursue the matter (which is nearly impossible to talk a law firm into doing, no matter how clear-cut the case).

If one wants to read up on Qui Tam cases.

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'What we are left with is an agency mandated to ensure transparency and disclosure that is actually working to keep the public in the dark' - Ann M. Ravel, former FEC member

Shockwave's picture

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The political revolution continues

Important parts of the coalition supporting Killary are against single payer because they think it would mean losing jobs in insurance offices for their members, esp. bilingual jobs.

Mind, I don't begrudge anyone a good job, but something has to give somewhere.

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Mary Bennett

Alligator Ed's picture

and not just Spanish. Another Clintonist lie.

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terriertribe's picture

Because you've got to pay up front, and next year you'll get your money back.

And did you notice, it's up to $5000 for excessive costs, which means first you hit a threshold, THEN you get a tax credit.

That's sure going to help a lot of people.

............
Edited to remove evidence that I didn't read the parent carefully enough.

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Now interviewing signature candidates. Apply within.

Late Again's picture

tell that they either don't get it, or do get it and just don't give two shits (I lean hard towards the latter): tax credits.

*hawk**spit* Tax credits. Fucking tax credits. They do jack shit for the vast majority of people.

It's reminiscent of Romney and his plan to cut capital gains taxes. Well, that's just fucking ducky when half the country doesn't even know what the hell capital gains are in the first place, because they've never had money to invest. Ever. And never will.

If they really gave a damn but still insisted on tweaking the ACA instead of offering a real solution? Then cap the goddamned premiums and/or eliminate the fucking deductibles. I thought the ACA was supposed to outlaw policies that were no more than catastrophic plans yet here we are, with 99% of policies utterly useless because you have to cough up $10,000 dollars or more before the insurance companies will even consider covering a damn thing.

Well, I don't have a spare $10,000 dollars per year just lying around, just like I don't have parents who can nonchalantly part with a million dollars so I can start a business.

The 99% are not even on their radar and never have been. They couldn't possibly make that any clearer - they really can't - unless one of them were to come right out and say, "fuck you, go eat cake".

I so desperately wish we could get a general strike organized; I truly believe that's our last option before violence. Unfortunately I don't see it happening. I just don't.

(I apologize for all the f-bombs but the whole subject makes me furious. My husband desperately needs medical care for several issues and he'll never get it, yet there's that bite out of his paycheck every week, money we need for other things, money thrown out the window, never to be seen again.)

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"When we remember we are all mad, the mysteries disappear and life stands explained." - Mark Twain

Alligator Ed's picture

I tried to keep my essay semi-serious so I avoided the F-bomb carpet bombing that analysis of Hillary's "Health Care Plan" deserved.

Here's an idea, probably useless, but consider it anyway: We can organize National Hospital Day, where as many people as can be motivated coordinate and then go to each Hospital Emergency Room in the United States and wait to be seen for "serious illnesses" like cough, cold, sore throat, diarrhea. By law , Hospitals must evaluate you, even if no treatment is rendered. The down-side of my proposal is that legitimate patients would have to wait inordinate time for treatment actually needed.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

I so desperately wish we could get a general strike organized; I truly believe that's our last option before violence. Unfortunately I don't see it happening. I just don't.

I, too, see the violence appearing and lasting quite a while.

I was alive (and reading at an adult level) in 1968. I remember what that was like. (NOT fun!)

And the violence I foresee in our future will make 1968 look like a walk in the park in the Spring time. Or Hellery and Co. will get us into a fullblown war with Russia and China at the same time to keep the violence from happening here at home, by getting everybody killed off overseas instead.

I do not want this to happen -- any of it -- but unless serious, radical changes are made, I fear it will happen. And anybody who doesn't fear that isn't paying attention!

Bad

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

The War on The World requires cannon-fodder - and what a great way to get rid of ALL of those pesky protesters/young political activists/organizers! All Ready For Hillary! (No revolution/democracy for you!)

http://www.cnn.com/2016/02/02/politics/women-military-draft-generals/ind...

U.S. military generals want women to register for draft
Jennifer Rizzo-Profile-Image

By Jennifer Rizzo, CNN

Updated 2:58 PM ET, Tue February 2, 2016

... Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller and Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley agreed that the current policy, which requires only males register for the Selective Service System, should be changed after restrictions that barred women from trying out for combat jobs were lifted last year.

"Every American who's physically qualified should register for the draft," said Neller at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing Tuesday that examined the new policy to admit women into combat units.
"I think that all eligible and qualified men and women should register for the draft," Milley added. ...

... Congress would have to change the law in order for women to be drafted to the military.
Murphy said he encourages "the legislative body to look at" the issue.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/15/us/politics/congress-women-military-dr...

Senate Votes to Require Women to Register for the Draft

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER JUNE 14, 2016

... Under the Senate bill passed on Tuesday, women turning 18 on or after Jan. 1, 2018, would be forced to register for Selective Service, as men must do now. Failure to register could result in the loss of various forms of federal aid, including Pell grants, a penalty that men already face. Because the policy would not apply to women who turned 18 before 2018, it would not affect current aid arrangements. ...

... “It’s my personal view,” Gen. Robert B. Neller, the commandant of the Marine Corps, told the Senate Armed Services Committee in February, that with the complete lifting of the ban on women in combat roles, “every American who’s physically qualified should register for the draft.” ...

Because the world's largest military needs to be bigger than ever - how else can they invade so many of other people's countries to kill them and take their country and stuff for American Business Interests and Multinationals? And even if it takes every American citizen there is to do that, it still leaves Those Who Matter safe, sound and profitably in control, right? Heil Hitlery?

http://www.stripes.com/news/house-bill-requires-women-to-sign-up-for-dra...

House bill requires women to sign up for draft

By TRAVIS J. TRITTEN | STARS AND STRIPES Published: February 4, 2016

WASHINGTON — Two House Republicans introduced a bill Thursday requiring eligible women in the United States to sign up for the military draft, just days after it was recommended by the Marine Corps and Army.

Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., a Marine veteran, and Rep. Ryan Zinke, R-Mont., a retired Navy SEAL, filed the Draft American’s Daughters Act to stoke debate over the military’s historic move to fully integrate female troops into all combat roles. If passed, women from 18-26 years old would for the first time have to join men in registering with the Selective Service program and potentially be forced to fight in future wars. ...

... Millions of women might now suddenly and unexpectedly be required to register due to the Pentagon decision on combat roles.

Neller, who initially requested exemptions for women in some combat positions, said he thinks it is fair that women now face being called up to wartime service.

“Every American that is physically qualified should register for the draft,” said Neller, who had requested but was denied the exclusion of women in some Marine combat jobs.

Job creators!!! (Cue heavenly music a la Maher)

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/15/us/politics/congress-women-military-dr...

Senate Votes to Require Women to Register for the Draft

By JENNIFER STEINHAUERJUNE 14, 2016

... On Tuesday, the Senate approved an expansive military policy bill that would for the first time require young women to register for the draft. The shift, while fiercely opposed by some conservative lawmakers and interest groups, had surprisingly broad support among Republican leaders and women in both parties. ...

... Under the Senate bill passed on Tuesday, women turning 18 on or after Jan. 1, 2018, would be forced to register for Selective Service, as men must do now. Failure to register could result in the loss of various forms of federal aid, including Pell grants, a penalty that men already face. Because the policy would not apply to women who turned 18 before 2018, it would not affect current aid arrangements. ...

... Military experts say that even if the efforts to compel women to enlist fails in Congress, the issue is not going away.

“I think the change is inevitable,” said Nora Bensahel, a military policy analyst at American University’s School of International Service, “whether in this debate or through the courts. It just seems that now that you have women allowed to serve in any position in the military, there is no logical basis to say women should not be drafted.” ...

Yup, All Ready For Hillary, all right!

http://www.cnn.com/2013/03/13/us/military-sexual-assault/index.html

Military rape victims: Stop blaming us

By Josh Levs and Ashley Fantz, CNN

Updated 6:22 PM ET, Thu March 14, 2013

BriGette McCoy described how she was raped on her first military assignment, two weeks before her 19th birthday. She described how, later that year, she was raped by another soldier in her unit.
Then came sexual harassment by two officers -- including one who requested that she be moved to work directly for him, she said Wednesday.
Testifying before lawmakers, the former Army specialist described the "anguish" and "entrapment" she felt, and the horror of the ordeal that followed.
"I no longer have any faith or hope that the military chain of command will consistently prosecute, convict, sentence and carry out the sentencing of sexual predators in uniform without absconding justice somehow," she told the Senate Armed Services Committee's subcommittee on personnel.
"It even starts at recruitment," she said. "We have quite a few of our men and women that are being raped and sexually harassed during the recruitment process." ...

About 19,000 men and women suffer sexual assault each year in the military, former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said, though he noted that only about 3,200 assaults were reported. ...

... They helped paint a picture of the military as a place where victims are often pressured to remain quiet or endure having their reputations and careers tarnished for coming forward. ...

So, a bill can pass sending women into combat - but not one to give them recourse against military rapists, in order to stop it, or at least reduce the incidence...

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/09/sexual-violence-american-mil...

... In 2013, Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) introduced the Military Justice Improvement Act, which was designed to change the ways the military prosecutes sexual-violence crimes and restricts commanding officer's power to set aside or overturn convictions for sexual violence. But in March 2014, the bill fell 5 votes short of the 60 required to avoid a filibuster. ...

... But the violence of rape and the ensuing emotional trauma are still compounded by what victims see as the futility of reporting the attacks to their commands. Take the case of Kate Weber, who says she was raped one week into an Air Force deployment to Germany when she was 18. After she reported the attack, she says she was stalked and harassed. "I just lost everything," Weber says. "I know he was a repeat offender the moment he touched me. He was able to get away with it because the chain of command allowed it." ...

... Dr. Nancy Lutwak, a VA emergency room physician in New York, opened up a room just for female vets so they could have a safe place to share their experience of being raped in the military and the health problems they face due to the assaults. ...

... Tiffany Berkland and Elisha Morrow were sexually harassed by the same man when in basic training after joining the Coast Guard. "He haunts your person by day and your dreams at night," Morrow says. They did not report the harassment for fear of being kicked out but came forward when they met a third victim. When their case went to trial, they met a fourth young woman who had been raped recently by the same superior. Berkland and Morrow say they're guilt-ridden for not coming forward sooner. ...

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2011/dec/09/rape-us-military

Rape in the US military: America's dirty little secret
A female soldier in Iraq is more likely to be attacked by a fellow soldier than killed by enemy fire

Lucy Broadbent

Friday 9 December 2011 17.59 GMT
Last modified on Tuesday 20 September 2016 12.04 BST

... Since the lawsuit became public in February, 400 more have come forward, contacting attorney Susan Burke who is leading the case. These are likely to be future lawsuits. Right now they are anxiously awaiting a court ruling to find out if the lawsuit will go to trial. The defence team for the department of defence has filed a motion to dismiss the case, citing a court ruling, dating back to 1950, which states that the government is not liable for injury sustained by active duty personnel. To date, military personnel have been unable to sue their employer. ...

... She is now married and lives in San Francisco with her four children, but even after years of therapy, still cannot sleep at night. "Rape is so widespread in the American military, it's sick."

Worse still, the victim is likely to be blackballed by her own unit, and sometimes even demoted, according to Weber. "I first tried reporting the rape to my staff sergeant, he told me to be quiet and not tell anyone. So then I tried to tell a woman sergeant, who was beneath him, because I thought she'd be more sympathetic. She just cursed me for jumping the chain of command and not coming to her first. I went to the doctor, who did at least make a record of it, but he did nothing. I also told my 'battle buddy', a fellow female soldier. She said, 'I know that guy. He's married and he would never do such a thing. You're a liar and a slut.' Before long, I was being called a whore and a bitch by everyone. The guys were warning each other: 'This one will accuse you of rape, so stay away from her.' I was 18 years old, it was the first time I had ever been away from home. I had no idea what to do."

Stories such as Weber's are commonplace. On mydutytospeak.com, where victims of military rape can share their experiences, there are breathtaking tales of brutality and mistreatment. ...

... It is so well known that sex offenders go unpunished and victims penalised for reporting incidents, that most say nothing. Michelle Jones describes how she was still lying on the floor of her room in the barracks, her ripped shorts by her ankles, when her rapist stood over her and said, "I'll tell everyone you're a dyke and you'll get booted out if you report this." ...

... She was two-thirds of her way through her service. "I didn't want to lose my job," says Jones, 39, who is now an IT consultant living in San Jose, California, and gay. Under the (now-repealed) US Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy, openly gay people were barred from the military. Jones wasn't even sure she was gay at the time. But it wasn't worth the risk of reporting. "If I had spoken out, I would have been the one investigated," she says. "And it wouldn't have done any good anyway. I could tell you about 15 other women I know who had tried to report a rape and got nowhere." ...

... Bhagwati refers to the case of 24-year-old lance corporal Maria Lauterbach, a marine preparing to testify that she was raped by fellow marine, Cesar Laurean, when she went missing in 2007. Although it was never proved that Laurean raped her, he was later convicted of her murder. Weber found her attacker hiding in her room three times in the months that followed the rape. "He'd lie in wait just to scare me," she says. ...

... the sheer statistics beg the question: why is rape in the American military so common in the first place? "We looked at the systems for reporting rape within the military of Israel, Australia, Britain and some Scandinavian countries, and found that, unlike the US, other countries take a rape investigation outside the purview of the military," explains Greg Jacob, policy director at the Service Women's Action Network. "In Britain, for example, the investigation is handed over to the civilian police.

"Rape is a universal problem – it happens everywhere. But in other military systems it is regarded as a criminal offence, while in the US military, in many cases, it's considered simply a breach of good conduct. Regularly, a sex offender in the US system goes unpunished, so it proliferates. ...

Something more than cannon-fodder, I guess...

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Alligator Ed's picture

This is an aspect of Health Care, as well as justice, too infrequently discussed. Use of women as combatants should be voluntary. Women are the care givers in our society and rarely are murderers, military or not.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

There are parts of her NEJM article which I did not quote but which do have admirable-sounding theses. But this is Hillary Clinton we are talking about--

..... which means we're probably dealing with a bunch of admirable-sounding feces.

Diablo

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Lenzabi's picture

Don't forget, Military is the riskiest job(wars) at the lowest pay level one can get. Most Privates are lucky to clear 750monthly after taxes! Low cost cannon fodder for the Corporatocracy wars, fighting for the Oligarchy is more "privilege" than job, and dying for your Oligarchs is your sacred duty as God told them so!

Snark alert!

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So long, and thanks for all the fish