Forget politics or money. Racism explains why USA Will Never Get Medicare for all

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Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All

Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All
By Eduardo Porter

March 14, 2020
Forget politics or money. Racism explains why the country lacks the safety net its citizens deserve.

15porter-articleLarge.jpg

Keith Negley
The weirdest thing about the Democratic primary is how un-American it sounds.

For all their differences, Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden — the last men standing — both call for a robust expansion of government programs. Mr. Sanders wants “Medicare for all”; Mr. Biden wants a “public option” to compete against private insurance. Both call for a vast increase in Section 8 housing vouchers. Mr. Sanders wants to build 10 million affordable housing units.

So far, the debate around these ideas has focused on the fiscal and political obstacles (Mitch McConnell, ahem). But there’s a bigger problem. Americans have repeatedly rejected expansions of the social safety net because it inevitably collides with one of the most powerful forces shaping the American experience: uncompromising racism.

Racism has forever been a forbidding obstacle to the development of a welfare state, at least of the sort that Europe enjoys and many Americans aspire to. By standing in the way of solidarity, it has produced an exceptional country that accepts without flinching the most extreme wealth alongside deprivation that has no place in the industrialized world.

Why does the United States suffer the highest poverty rate among wealthy nations? Why does it have the highest teen pregnancy rate? Why are so many Americans addled by opioids? We blame globalization and technology. But these forces affect everybody — the French and the Canadians and the Japanese as much as us.

The United States alone has crumpled because it showed no interest in building the safeguards erected in other advanced countries to protect those on the wrong side of these changes. Why? Because we couldn’t be moved to build a safety net that cut across our divisions of ethnicity and race.

Take a look back through modern American history. There are few greater heroes to liberals than Franklin Roosevelt, the first architect of America’s welfare state. His New Deal to combat the Great Depression proposed the government as guarantor of the well-being of the governed.

On Roosevelt’s watch, workers gained the first national minimum wage, unemployment insurance and the right to form unions, strike and engage in collective bargaining. Older Americans got Social Security pensions.

But in order to win support of Southern Democrats, Roosevelt ensured that major parts of the New Deal excluded nonwhites. The Federal Housing Administration, to take one New Deal creation, is celebrated for expanding homeownership, but it also refused to back loans in predominantly black neighborhoods, or for black people period.

New Deal labor codes allowed businesses to offer whites a first crack at jobs and authorized lower pay scales for blacks. In their first incarnation, Social Security and the Fair Labor Standards Act excluded domestic and farm jobs, which employed two out of three black workers.

In the 1960s, Lyndon Johnson hoped to expand the New Deal to cover nonwhite Americans. He had some successes — not least civil rights legislation and the war on poverty. But he also fatally undermined the fragile political consensus between Southern and liberal Democrats that had defined the New Deal consensus.

Medicare and Medicaid, which became law in 1965, were the last major programs inspired by the New Deal. Since then, America has turned against welfare in favor of another, different tool of social management: prison. The same year Medicare and Medicaid passed, Johnson declared a war on crime; his successor, Richard Nixon, made crime fighting a central plank in his platform. In 1971 he declared a corollary war on drugs.

Race was at the heart of Nixon’s vision. “You have to face the fact that the whole problem is really the blacks,” he declared in 1969, according to notes in the diary of his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman. “The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not appearing to.”

By the 1980s, Ronald Reagan was slashing government spending and asserting that taxpayers were being defrauded by undeserving black “welfare queens.” In 1996 Bill Clinton, who began his presidency with a bold promise to deliver universal health insurance, instead ended “welfare as we know it,” replacing Aid to Families With Dependent Children, the federal government’s primary social-welfare program, with a block grant to states, which could withhold aid as they saw fit.

In the 1960s, the American government was roughly the same size as that of other rich nations: In 1965, federal, state and municipal taxes added up to just under 24 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, about 1 percentage point less than the average among industrialized nations in the O.E.C.D.

The other rich countries have become richer since then, and they have expanded and improved the health care, education and child care they provide — such services claim about 10 percentage points more of their G.D.P. than they did in the 1960s. In the United States, that proportion has barely budged. But imprisonment grew: By 2016, 679 out of every 100,000 Americans languished in prison or jail, almost four times the share in 1960.

Though the cold shoulder is grounded in the image of black and brown moochers living in the imagination of white Americans, the suffering caused by its miserly understanding of society is not limited to communities of color. Much of white America, the part addled by opioids, ravaged by suicide, despairing of a future, is also a victim of a nation that refuses to care.

Can we shake racism out of America’s social compact?

America’s racial boundaries are blurring. The black-white divide that has largely defined America’s race relations is giving way to a more diverse set of ethnic possibilities, driven by fast-growing Hispanic and Asian populations. By the early 2040s, minorities will account for the majority of the population. They could build the common bond that the American experience has lacked for so long.

I’m not optimistic, however.

The demographic determinism is problematic. Do we have to wait until the 2040s, or longer, to get the sort of country that cares for everybody?

What’s more, the idea of a takeover by the numbers is troublesome. The goal is not a future in which people of color bully white Americans. What this country needs is to overcome racial hostility and develop a comprehensive sense of society in which everybody fits.

The outline of this demographics-is-destiny argument is already 20 years old. And I remember the Republican Party’s moment of introspection after Mitt Romney lost to Barack Obama in 2012, when it acknowledged that relying exclusively on white voters was a recipe for long term failure.

The party has retreated since then. While minorities might eventually reshape American politics into something more inclusive, until that happens politics will be determined by the efforts of freaked-out whites to resist this change. Republicans’ efforts to ensure a conservative majority on the Supreme Court for a generation, like state-level efforts to suppress the vote of people of color and gerrymander districts to dilute their electoral clout, are a clear expression of white fear.

Whether Mr. Sanders or Mr. Biden wins the nomination, the Democrats will spend the rest of the primary promoting an expansive vision for America’s safety net. As they do, they also need to admit that they are envisioning an America that has never existed.

Ask yourself why the United States, alone among the world’s richest nations, still doesn’t provide its citizens comprehensive, universal health care. Ponder why Obamacare is being so relentlessly whittled down by Republican governors, the courts and the Trump administration. Racial animosity is at the root of all this — and until America finally grapples with it, even the grandest plans will amount to nothing.

Eduardo Porter, an economics reporter for The Times, is the author of the forthcoming “American Poison: How Racial Hostility Destroyed Our Promise,” from which this essay is adapted.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here's our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

Eduardo Porter joined The Times in 2004 from The Wall Street Journal. He has reported about economics and other matters from Mexico City, Tokyo, London and São Paulo. @portereduardo

A version of this article appears in print on March 15, 2020, Section SR, Page 7of the New York edition with the headline: Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
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'American Poison' Aims To Show How Race Is At The Root Of U.S. Problems
Gabino IglesiasMarch 23, 202012:07 PM ET
When journalist Eduardo Porter moved to Los Angeles in the 90s and started writing about the city, he realized race was everywhere — and that it determined "where you go to school, church, or work; how you dress and talk; whom you marry; how you fare when you run into the cops."

That realization became the seed of his latest book, American Poison: How Racial Hostility Destroyed Our Promise.

The book explores how racial boundaries shape American institutions and traces the history of the United States through the lens of racism. In doing so all the way to the present, Porter demonstrates how the fear of immigrants that was "lying dormant in America's subconscious propelled Trump to the presidency."

American Poison kicks off with a discussion of the atmosphere that lead to Donald Trump's win. According to Porter, there was a "mix of contempt and resentment across frontiers of religion, race, ethnicity, and citizenship" that was directly responsible for Trump's "seduction of sixty-three million voters." That's a strong claim, but Porter did his research and this book proves — via history, politics, and something akin to an academic literature review — that racism has played a huge role in shaping American politics since the birth of the nation. As Porter states, racism "defines who we are."

Porter's training as a journalist, he is an economics reporter for The New York Times, works in his favor in this book. The writing is clear and straightforward, and the variety and quality of sources is outstanding. In fact, one of the few flaws in this book, and I'm being nitpicky here, is that some passages resemble a literature review in an academic paper. That said, this isn't a book that invites the start of an argument about the role of racism in shaping this country; this is a book that cuts to the root of racism, traces it from slavery, Jim Crow, and segregation and brings it all the way to today with unblinking honesty and facts. The result is a hard-hitting narrative that exposes the rotten core of this country, a core that has been affected by bigotry and xenophobia every step of the way.

The amount of statistics, sources, and attention to detail in American Poison is superb. Porter pays attention not only to events but also to what they meant. For example, he discusses how Barack Obama's rise to the presidency allowed white voters to "convince themselves that racial discrimination against African Americans was a thing of the past." Then, he shows that past in subsequent chapters as he explains rampant racism in industrial unions, the role politicians played in maintaining segregation, the creation of the welfare state, and how institutions like the armed services discriminated openly:

"In 1940 there were forty-seven hundred blacks in an army half a million strong. There was not a single black in the U.S. Marines, the Tank Corps, the Signal Corps, or the Army Air Corps. Blacks were trained in segregated camps and assigned support duties, like digging ditches and cooking."

From welfare to anti-lynching laws, there's nothing Porter refuses to tackle, and that makes American Poison an uncomfortable read — and one that should happen in every school in the country. While the United States has built a discourse about its superiority, Porter incisively points out its plethora of weaknesses:

"Take a pick of virtually any measure of social progress over the last four decades, and you will find that for all its claims to greatness the United States in fact lags the rest of the industrialized world. It may still be the undisputed leader in terms of military might, economic growth, and technological innovation, but when it comes to measures of social health and cohesion, the portrait of the American experience is alarming."

The deconstruction of the superiority discourse is sharp and hard to swallow. So are some of the points Porter makes, especially for those who have trusted what mainstream media and politicians have led them to believe. For example, we often hear how minorities syphon Social Security. That's not the case, according to Porter. Minorities, explains Porter, still get "a raw deal from Social Security, typically receiving more meager payouts than whites, even though they are more likely to suffer poverty in old age." Blacks for example, die younger than whites because the healthcare and education systems have failed them and because they are more likely to end up in jail. Similarly, Hispanics contribute to a Social Security system that is "less generous than the one that uses their payroll taxes to provide benefits to mostly white retirees."

American Poison is a devastating, brutally honest, wonderfully researched read. It is also necessary and incredibly timely. From its discussion of how racism affects everything to its invitation to African Americans and Hispanics to unite and battle it together, Porter has crafted a narrative that ultimately becomes a statement: What we've done so far is wrong, and it's time to change it.

Gabino Iglesias is an author, book reviewer and professor living in Austin, Texas. Find him on Twitter at @Gabino_Iglesias.
 
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Counter Racist Male

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Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All

Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All
By Eduardo Porter

March 14, 2020
Forget politics or money. Racism explains why the country lacks the safety net its citizens deserve.

15porter-articleLarge.jpg

Keith Negley
The weirdest thing about the Democratic primary is how un-American it sounds.

For all their differences, Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden — the last men standing — both call for a robust expansion of government programs. Mr. Sanders wants “Medicare for all”; Mr. Biden wants a “public option” to compete against private insurance. Both call for a vast increase in Section 8 housing vouchers. Mr. Sanders wants to build 10 million affordable housing units.

So far, the debate around these ideas has focused on the fiscal and political obstacles (Mitch McConnell, ahem). But there’s a bigger problem. Americans have repeatedly rejected expansions of the social safety net because it inevitably collides with one of the most powerful forces shaping the American experience: uncompromising racism.

Racism has forever been a forbidding obstacle to the development of a welfare state, at least of the sort that Europe enjoys and many Americans aspire to. By standing in the way of solidarity, it has produced an exceptional country that accepts without flinching the most extreme wealth alongside deprivation that has no place in the industrialized world.

Why does the United States suffer the highest poverty rate among wealthy nations? Why does it have the highest teen pregnancy rate? Why are so many Americans addled by opioids? We blame globalization and technology. But these forces affect everybody — the French and the Canadians and the Japanese as much as us.

The United States alone has crumpled because it showed no interest in building the safeguards erected in other advanced countries to protect those on the wrong side of these changes. Why? Because we couldn’t be moved to build a safety net that cut across our divisions of ethnicity and race.

Take a look back through modern American history. There are few greater heroes to liberals than Franklin Roosevelt, the first architect of America’s welfare state. His New Deal to combat the Great Depression proposed the government as guarantor of the well-being of the governed.

On Roosevelt’s watch, workers gained the first national minimum wage, unemployment insurance and the right to form unions, strike and engage in collective bargaining. Older Americans got Social Security pensions.

But in order to win support of Southern Democrats, Roosevelt ensured that major parts of the New Deal excluded nonwhites. The Federal Housing Administration, to take one New Deal creation, is celebrated for expanding homeownership, but it also refused to back loans in predominantly black neighborhoods, or for black people period.

New Deal labor codes allowed businesses to offer whites a first crack at jobs and authorized lower pay scales for blacks. In their first incarnation, Social Security and the Fair Labor Standards Act excluded domestic and farm jobs, which employed two out of three black workers.

In the 1960s, Lyndon Johnson hoped to expand the New Deal to cover nonwhite Americans. He had some successes — not least civil rights legislation and the war on poverty. But he also fatally undermined the fragile political consensus between Southern and liberal Democrats that had defined the New Deal consensus.

Medicare and Medicaid, which became law in 1965, were the last major programs inspired by the New Deal. Since then, America has turned against welfare in favor of another, different tool of social management: prison. The same year Medicare and Medicaid passed, Johnson declared a war on crime; his successor, Richard Nixon, made crime fighting a central plank in his platform. In 1971 he declared a corollary war on drugs.

Race was at the heart of Nixon’s vision. “You have to face the fact that the whole problem is really the blacks,” he declared in 1969, according to notes in the diary of his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman. “The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not appearing to.”

By the 1980s, Ronald Reagan was slashing government spending and asserting that taxpayers were being defrauded by undeserving black “welfare queens.” In 1996 Bill Clinton, who began his presidency with a bold promise to deliver universal health insurance, instead ended “welfare as we know it,” replacing Aid to Families With Dependent Children, the federal government’s primary social-welfare program, with a block grant to states, which could withhold aid as they saw fit.

In the 1960s, the American government was roughly the same size as that of other rich nations: In 1965, federal, state and municipal taxes added up to just under 24 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, about 1 percentage point less than the average among industrialized nations in the O.E.C.D.

The other rich countries have become richer since then, and they have expanded and improved the health care, education and child care they provide — such services claim about 10 percentage points more of their G.D.P. than they did in the 1960s. In the United States, that proportion has barely budged. But imprisonment grew: By 2016, 679 out of every 100,000 Americans languished in prison or jail, almost four times the share in 1960.

Though the cold shoulder is grounded in the image of black and brown moochers living in the imagination of white Americans, the suffering caused by its miserly understanding of society is not limited to communities of color. Much of white America, the part addled by opioids, ravaged by suicide, despairing of a future, is also a victim of a nation that refuses to care.

Can we shake racism out of America’s social compact?

America’s racial boundaries are blurring. The black-white divide that has largely defined America’s race relations is giving way to a more diverse set of ethnic possibilities, driven by fast-growing Hispanic and Asian populations. By the early 2040s, minorities will account for the majority of the population. They could build the common bond that the American experience has lacked for so long.

I’m not optimistic, however.

The demographic determinism is problematic. Do we have to wait until the 2040s, or longer, to get the sort of country that cares for everybody?

What’s more, the idea of a takeover by the numbers is troublesome. The goal is not a future in which people of color bully white Americans. What this country needs is to overcome racial hostility and develop a comprehensive sense of society in which everybody fits.

The outline of this demographics-is-destiny argument is already 20 years old. And I remember the Republican Party’s moment of introspection after Mitt Romney lost to Barack Obama in 2012, when it acknowledged that relying exclusively on white voters was a recipe for long term failure.

The party has retreated since then. While minorities might eventually reshape American politics into something more inclusive, until that happens politics will be determined by the efforts of freaked-out whites to resist this change. Republicans’ efforts to ensure a conservative majority on the Supreme Court for a generation, like state-level efforts to suppress the vote of people of color and gerrymander districts to dilute their electoral clout, are a clear expression of white fear.

Whether Mr. Sanders or Mr. Biden wins the nomination, the Democrats will spend the rest of the primary promoting an expansive vision for America’s safety net. As they do, they also need to admit that they are envisioning an America that has never existed.

Ask yourself why the United States, alone among the world’s richest nations, still doesn’t provide its citizens comprehensive, universal health care. Ponder why Obamacare is being so relentlessly whittled down by Republican governors, the courts and the Trump administration. Racial animosity is at the root of all this — and until America finally grapples with it, even the grandest plans will amount to nothing.

Eduardo Porter, an economics reporter for The Times, is the author of the forthcoming “American Poison: How Racial Hostility Destroyed Our Promise,” from which this essay is adapted.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here's our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

Eduardo Porter joined The Times in 2004 from The Wall Street Journal. He has reported about economics and other matters from Mexico City, Tokyo, London and São Paulo. @portereduardo

A version of this article appears in print on March 15, 2020, Section SR, Page 7of the New York edition with the headline: Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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Thanks for reading The Times.



Delusions and more delusions.:shaq2:


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desjardins

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It's true. I ran across a FB thread that was full of white people mad as hell that "Obama phones" were holding up the bill that would reward trillions to big corporations :dead:
Someone said something to the effect that they were sick of their tax dollars "supporting them" and they weren't talking about bail outs :dahell:
The cognitive dissonance is mind boggling sometimes
This country will NEVER move forward because at least half of the population is willing to bite their nose to spite their face if it means being above black people
 
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