There goes the last Republican talking point.

Donald Trump’s accomplishments in office pale compared to Biden’s three years. Despite fighting Republicans, who have been devoted to stopping anything the Democrats propose, Biden has had a remarkably good term.

SIGNIFICANT BILLS BIDEN HAS PASSED IN 3+ YEARS
1. American Rescue Plan Act: A $1.9 trillion stimulus package aimed at addressing the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. It includes provisions for direct payments, unemployment benefits, child tax credits, and funding for vaccine distribution.
2. Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act: A $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill that focuses on improving physical infrastructure, including roads, bridges, broadband, and public transit.
3. For the People Act of 2021: This bill aims to expand Americans’ access to the ballot box, reduce the influence of big money in politics, and strengthen ethics rules for public servants.
4. COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act: This bipartisan legislation addresses the rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans during the pandemic. It aims to improve reporting and response mechanisms.
5. Juneteenth National Independence Day Act: Designated June 19th as a federal holiday to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States.
6. Emergency Temporary Standard for COVID-19 Workplace Safety: Issued by OSHA to protect workers from COVID-19 exposure in certain industries.
7. Climate Executive Orders: President Biden signed several executive orders addressing climate change, rejoining the Paris Agreement, and promoting clean energy initiatives.
8. High-Tech Funding and NATO Expansion Bills: President Biden signed two bipartisan bills into law. One bill provides funding for high-tech initiatives, and the other adds Sweden and Finland to NATO.
9. Medicare Drug Price Negotiation: For the first time, Medicare can negotiate the price of certain high-cost drugs. Additionally, a month’s supply of insulin for seniors is capped at $35, and seniors’ out-of-pocket expenses at the pharmacy are capped at $2,000 a year.

This is not an exhaustive list but highlights some significant legislative actions the Biden Administration took.

While Trump passed many bills, most were narrowly focused and of minimal significance to America. Most of Trump’s bills aimed to undo bills signed by Obama, a Trump fixation that continues.

SIGNIFICANT BILLS TRUMP PASSED IN 4 YEARS
1. The CARES Act was a stimulus package passed by Congress in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It helped provide direct cash payments and tax rebates to households, especially those with low income and children, support small businesses and workers through forgivable loans and increased unemployment benefits.
2. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Aimed to simplify the tax code, reduce tax rates for wealthy individuals and corporations, and stimulate economic growth.
3. First Step Act: President Trump signed a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill, the First Step Act, into law in 2018. It aimed to reduce recidivism, improve prison conditions, and provide opportunities for rehabilitation and reentry for incarcerated individuals.

Donald Trump preventing people from putting out a bonfire
TRUMP: “It’s an urgent problem, but don’t deal with it. I want to complain about it before the election.”

WHAT “ACCOMPLISHMENTS” TRUMP WON’T BRAG ABOUT
1. The economy lost 2.9 million jobs. (Under Biden, the economy added more than 14 million jobs.). The unemployment rate increased by 1.6 percentage points to 6.3%.
2. The S&P 500 index rose 67.8%. (Under Biden, the S&P 500 has increased 28.2% above Trump’s level.)
3. The number of people lacking health insurance rose by 3 million. (Under Biden, people without health insurance decreased by 0.7 percentage points or 2.4 million people.)
4. Handgun production rose 12.5% last year compared with 2016, setting a new record. (Under Biden, for three straight years, gun purchases declined.)
5. Under Trump, the murder rate in 2019 rose to the highest level since 1997. (In 2020, nine out of ten states with the highest per capita violent crime rates leaned Republican, while eight out of ten states with the lowest rates leaned Democrat. As to the murder rate specifically, states that voted for Donald Trump consistently exceeded states that voted for Joe Biden every year since 2000.)

In sum, the economy, employment, and crime improved under Biden compared to Trump. This left Trump to focus on immigration.

Trump claims that immigrants bring crime and drugs into America. However, research indicates that undocumented immigrants commit far fewer crimes compared to U.S. citizens. U.S.-born citizens are over twice as likely to be arrested for violent crimes and 2.5 times more likely to be arrested for drug crimes.

Although illegal immigrants actually are a net positive for the American economy — they consume, pay taxes, and work at low-pay, unpleasant jobs most citizens won’t accept — most Americans want to reduce the number of illegals entering America. Trump has based his presidency run on that topic.

And now, he has destroyed his own best talking point:

On Feb 10 and 11, the Lincoln Project played an advert blaming Trump for killing Biden’s bipartisan border deal. Based on the former president’s subsequent late-night rant on Truth Social, the ad really got to him.

“Donald Trump doesn’t care if your family’s safety or the lives of law enforcement officers are in the balance,” a voiceover said in the ad. “He’s on the side of the cartels, coyotes, and child traffickers.”

The ad highlighted Trump’s role in killing Biden’s border deal, which was negotiated with several key Republicans and included significant concessions to conservative demands on immigration. Trump repeatedly urged Republicans to vote against the agreement, which they eventually did.

“Joe Biden is ready to protect America’s southern border,” the ad continued. “There’s only one problem” — at this point, the ad cuts to a clip of Biden, who finishes the sentence by saying, “Donald Trump.”

Trump took to social media to vent about the ad, writing a long, rambling post on Truth Social after midnight on the East Coast. He lashed out at what he called the “Failed Lincoln Project.”

“The perverts at the Failed Lincoln Project, who I was told were left-leaning RINOS that had lost their way and almost all of their financial support, just did an ad showing a grassy, calm, and peaceful Southern Border, not an Illegal Migrant in sight, explaining what a great job Crooked Joe Biden did in dealing with what has become just one of many Biden inspired, Country threatening, problems facing the United States today,” Trump wrote.

There is a certain irony in a man who has just been fined millions of dollars for attacking one woman and who has boasted about grabbing women’s genitalia, now calling members of the Lincoln Project “perverts.”

On Feb 4, videos went viral on X showing participants in the “Take Back Our Border” convoy expressing confusion at the distinct lack of chaos at the border. “They expected to see lines of immigrants lined up wanting entry and many trying to cross over outside the normal ports of entry,” Ford News wrote on X. “They say this isn’t happening at all.”

“In fact,” Ford News continued, “they aren’t seeing lines at all, no one crossing the border.… Some aren’t even sure now why they are there.”

The Lincoln Project also “didn’t happen to mention anything about the 18,000,000 Illegal Aliens that will have invaded our Country, many from prisons and mental institutions, by the end of the failed Biden Administration,” Trump wrote in his Truth Social rant.

In fact, as of 2021, there are about 10.5 million undocumented immigrants in the US in total. Between 2007 and 2021, the number of unauthorized immigrants in the country decreased by 1.75 million, according to the Pew Research Center.

As always, Trump inflates facts as he sees fit, hoping no one will notice. He was just fined $380 million for inflating the value of his real estate.

According to the Cato Institute, a conservative think tank, Biden’s Department of Homeland Security removed “a higher percentage of arrested border crossers in its first two years than the Trump DHS did over its last two years.

Moreover, migrants were more likely to be released after a border arrest under President Trump than under President Biden.”

“Nor did [the Lincoln Project] talk about the drugs pouring into the USA in amounts so large that no one, just three years ago, would have thought it possible,” Trump continued.

According to the National Immigration Forum, in 2022, 88% of fentanyl trafficking offenders were US citizens.

In an April 2023 report, Third Way revealed that “just 0.02% of people arrested by Border Patrol for illegally crossing possessed fentanyl.” 

That’s only two out of every ten thousand.

IN SUMMARY

Despite Trump’s false and ironic claim that Biden is incompetent, Biden’s records on the economy, healthcare, crime, employment, infrastructure, the environment, global warming, unemployment, and even immigration all are better than Trump’s.

This has reduced Trump to making provably fake complaints about illegal immigrants bringing in drugs and crime.

And now, even those complaints are gone at Trump’s own hands. He instructed his GOP toadies not to vote for an immigration control package that was created by Republicans together with Democrats because he cynically wanted to preserve it as a talking point before the election.

It’s as though he were telling his followers, “It’s a serious problem that hurts America daily. But don’t cure it. I want it to worsen before the election so I can whine about it. Also, I don’t want Republicans to work with Democrats. I prefer the chaos and stagnation of my presidency.”

So, as his next outrageous act, the worst pervert in U.S. presidential history is now left to claiming that those who criticize him are perverts.

You might wonder why MAGAs don’t open their eyes and see Trump for the lying, con artist, traitor, and psychopath he really is. But that would be missing the point.

MAGAs don’t care about facts. They use fact only as a rationalization for their feelings. They are afraid and believe Trump will protect them.

They are afraid of “them.” Nonwhite, the poor, gays, women, Muslims, Jews, immigrants, foreigners (except Putin) — these comprise “them.”

MAGAs, being afraid of “them,” hate “them,” because fear and hate are two sides of the same coin. You can’t hate someone unless, deep inside, you also fear them.

That is why Trump can “shoot someone on 5th Ave. and not lose followers,” as he famously claimed.

And that is why he can get away with claiming, against all evidence, that undocumented immigrants bring crime, drugs, and unemployment to America, poison our blood, do not pay taxes, and take without contributing. At the same time, Trump rejects Biden’s efforts to reduce undocumented immigration.

It makes no logical sense, but there is no logic. There are no facts. There is only fear and hatred stirred up by Trump, Fox News, Breitbart, and other immoral opportunists.

The MAGAs love to wave American flags to prove their patriotism. But, like members of every cult, their allegiance is not to America but only to the cult leader, who promises to protect his followers while fleecing them of everything they have.

Want further evidence? See the comment section of this post.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell, Search #monetarysovereignty, Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

Is saving healthcare money a good idea?

Is saving healthcare money a good idea? Before you jump to an answer, I’ll give you the answer: It depends on whose money is being saved.

Think about it as you read the following article:

In Medicare payments fight, hospital lobby shows strength
Phil Galewitz and Colleen DeGuzman,
KFF Health News

Phil Galewitz, KFF Health News
Phil Galewitz

Hospitals are deploying their political power to protect their bottom lines in the battle to control healthcare costs.

The point of contention: For decades, Medicare has paid hospitals — including hospital-owned physician practices that may not be physically located in a hospital building — about double the rates it pays other doctors and facilities for the same services, such as mammograms, colonoscopies, and blood tests.

The rationale has been that hospitals have higher fixed costs, such as 24/7 emergency rooms and uncompensated care for uninsured people.

I can understand why federally funded Medicare would pay more to organizations with higher fixed costs, but why would they pay less to organizations with lower fixed costs?

I know. That sounds like double talk. If you pay more to one group, you pay less to another. But there is a point to be made.

Colleen DeGuzman

Medicare is an agency of the Monetarily Sovereign federal government. Contrary to popular wisdom, Medicare is not funded by FICA taxes.

All federal tax dollars, including FICA, are destroyed upon receipt by the U.S. Treasury.

The dollars begin in the M2 money supply measure, but when they reach the Treasury, they cease to be part of any money supply measure.

Effectively, they are destroyed. There cannot be a money supply measure for an entity with the limitless ability to create dollars by clicking computer keys.

Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency. There is nothing to prevent the federal government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody. The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always print the money to do that.”

All federal agencies — Congress, the White House, SCOTUS, the military, etc. are funded the same way: By federal new money creation. That includes Medicare and Social Security.

Since the federal government can create dollars, why should it try to save dollars? It shouldn’t.

When there is a question about how much the federal government should pay for anything, the wise course is to err on the side of paying more. That would add growth dollars to the economy at no cost to anyone.

Suppose the goal is to pay hospitals the same rate as other doctors and facilities for the same services. In that case, the federal government shouldn’t cut hospital pay but rather increase the pay to other doctors and facilities.

Insurers, doctors, and consumer advocates have long complained it’s an unequal and unfair arrangement that results in higher costs for patients and taxpayers.

It may or may not be “unfair,” but why would hospital pay be considered too high? No one has demonstrated that hospitals should receive less money. So why is reducing hospital pay the cure for “unfairness”?

It’s also a profit incentive for hospitals to buy up physician practices, which health economists say can lead to hospital consolidation and higher prices.

It would seem that the real profit incentive is not with the hospitals to buy physician practices. Instead, there would be an incentive for doctors to sell their practices, depending on how Medicare dollars are split between doctors and hospitals.

In December, the House passed a bill that included a provision requiring Medicare to pay the same rates for medical infusions, like chemotherapy and many treatments for autoimmune conditions, regardless of whether they’re done in a doctor’s office or clinic owned by a hospital or by a different entity.

The policy, known as site-neutral payment, has sparked a ferocious lobbying battle in the Senate, not the first of its kind, with hospitals determined to kill such legislation.

There would be no need for “ferocious lobbying” if doctors’ pay were increased rather than hospitals’ pay decreased.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, the House legislation would save Medicare an estimated $3.7 billion over a decade.

To put this in perspective, the program is projected to pay hospitals upward of $2 trillion during that same period. But hospitals have long argued that adopting site-neutral payments would force them to cut jobs or services or close facilities altogether — particularly in rural areas. And senators are listening.

“Saving Medicare $3.7 billion is identical to saying, “cost the economy 3.7 billion it otherwise would have received.”

“The Senate is very much attuned to rural concerns,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who chairs the Finance Committee, told KFF Health News. His panel has jurisdiction over Medicare, the health program for seniors and people with disabilities.

“I have heard many questions about how these proposals would affect rural communities and rural facilities,” he said. “So we’re taking a look at it.”

Outpatient departments at rural hospitals can have outsize importance to their communities. Taking any funding away from stand-alone rural hospitals is seen as risky. Scores have closed in the past decade due to financial problems.

With fewer patients, rural hospitals often struggle to attract doctors and update technology amid rising costs.

Taking money from rural hospitals impoverishes them while doing nothing for doctors or for the federal government, which has infinite money. This is how economics ignorance hurts everyone.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a physician serving on the Finance Committee, indicated he was apprehensive about the legislation.

“In some cases,” he said, higher Medicare hospital payments are “justified.”

“In some cases, it doesn’t seem to be,” he said. He told KFF Health News he was planning to introduce legislation on the issue but didn’t provide details, and his office didn’t respond to inquiries.

As the two senators show, the issue doesn’t break cleanly along partisan lines. In December, the House quickly passed the Lower Costs, More Transparency Act, the broader bill that included this Medicare payment change, with 166 Republicans and 154 Democrats voting.

Whenever Congress votes for “lower costs for the federal government,” it means “Fewer growth dollars for the economy, i.e., the private sector.” Lower costs for the federal government means taking money from you.

In short, you pay for all federal savings.

“It’s more about how close different members are to the hospital industry,” said Matthew Fiedler, a former White House health economist under President Obama and now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

Barack Obama was notoriously ignorant about federal finances. He famously claimed the federal government had to “live within its means.”

The federal government always lives with its means because its “means” are infinite. It never can run short of dollars.

Obama also signed the Budget Control Act to cut annual government spending by about $1 trillion over the next 10 years. Additionally, the act charged the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction with finding an additional $1.5 trillion in savings.

Translation: The Budget Control Act aimed to reduce the economy’s supply of growth dollars by $1 trillion and charged the Joint Select Committee on Economic Growth Reduction with taking another $1.5 trillion from the American people.

The American Hospital Association described the site-neutral policy as a “cut” to hospital Medicare payments.

It said in a statement to a House subcommittee that it “disregards important differences in patient safety and quality standards required in these facilities.”

Rather than cutting payments to hospitals, Medicare could accomplish equality by increasing payments to healthcare suppliers, not in hospitals. This would satisfy rural hospitals, grow the economy, and improve the nation’s healthcare.

Chip Kahn, president and CEO of the Federation of American Hospitals, representing for-profit hospitals, offered a similar characterization of the House-passed legislation.

“This is no time for so-called ‘site-neutral’ Medicare cuts that could harm beneficiaries,” he said in a statement.

Right. There has never been a time to make cuts to save the federal government money.

“This is not a hospital cut. It is rolling back an unethical price increase,” said Mark Miller, a former MedPAC executive director now an executive vice president at Arnold Ventures, a philanthropy founded by John and Laura Arnold.

No, it’s a hospital cut. All the mealy-mouth rationalizations don’t change that fact. It is an unnecessary cut with zero benefit to America and much pain to the economy and our hospitals.

Large hospital systems with the money to buy physician practices, Miller said, have exploited the disparity between Medicare payments to physician offices and hospitals to increase their revenue and consolidate.

Miller said he’s hopeful the site-neutral provision of the House bill will be part of a larger government spending bill that must be passed next month to keep the government open.

If lawmakers need to offset the bill’s costs, “then it is more likely to get in the funding package,” he said.

But, lawmakers do not need to offset the bill’s costs. The reluctance to spend and keep the government open is total bullshit. Yes, there is no better way to state it: Total bullshit that has been fed to the American public.

The purpose of the bullshit is simple: To make the middle- and lower-income groups stop asking for federal benefits. When the people are told (falsely) that Medicare and Social Security “can’t afford” more benefits or even existing benefits, they meekly accept their impoverishment.

And that makes the rich, who run America, richer.

Sorry, folks, but your representatives are cheating you by keeping you ignorant of federal finances. Ignorance is costly.

The House-passed legislation is viewed as an “incremental” change, said Fiedler, but it faces a rough path forward.

Evening out Medicare payment for physician-administered drugs, hospitals fear, could lead to similar moves for other outpatient services.

“Hospitals have a lot of money at stake and will fight this hard,” he said. “Hospitals feel if they lose here, there will be more substantial steps down the road.”

Yes, the rich will fight like hell to widen the Gap between the rich and the rest — if we let them get away with the Big Lie — the bullshit that the federal government can run short of dollars.

President Kennedy was wrong when he said, “My fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.”

He should have said, “Ask not how much you can pay your federal government — ask how much your federal government will pay you.”

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

A strange and puzzling interlude

My club offers dinner-party events where I may find myself seated with people I’d never met. Last night was such an event and it had me puzzling all day, today.

I sat to the immediate right of a man who was a quintessential — no, that is the wrong word — a caricature of a New Yorker — the extreme image of what we Midwesterners visualize when we think of New York people.

Yes, I know. Generalizations are odious, especially negative generalizations, but this man could have been sent by Central Casting. He was that perfect. loud mouth boor

Big. Loud. Rude. Interruptive. Overbearing, Overly opinionated. Braggart. He had only just sat down when he leaned over and began to tell me what a great businessman he was, even from the age of fourteen.

By the time he was thirty-six, he had retired.

He has a large house, a very large house. And the house rests on city property, but is so big it includes, not a garden but a small farm. So big he hired a farmer to tend it.

And he never needs to pay for anything because he trades his vegetables for every kind of merchandise.

And his children all are brilliant, all magna cum something. His infant grandchildren, too.

And he’s going to vote for Trump, because Biden is too old, and weak, and mentally shot. And yes, he knows Trump is a lying “sack of “sh*t,” and he wishes he didn’t have to vote for him.

And yes, he knows Biden grew the economy and cured inflation, but anyone could have done that.

And Biden gives too much to “those” people, “You know what I mean.” (I said I didn’t, but he was already on to another boast.”)

And the food here in the club is better than last year because he told the club manager the food was no good.

And he’s still mourning his mother who died three years ago. And he’s trying to reconcile with his stepmother (whom, incidentally, I know to be a sweet lady), and he’s happy his father is happy, but can’t get over the idea of a stepmother.

And the music at this party is too slow. And he’s not much into dancing.

And as he makes each point, he repeatedly lays his hand on my sleeve as though he were confiding in his buddy. Each time I would look down at his hand, then he immediately would withdraw it, as though he realizes he has crossed some boundary.

But shortly, some new revelation about his charmed life arrives along with his hand.

And all along he keeps telling me how much he likes me.

Had this been a movie, I would have said he was overacting to an amateurish script. But it was painfully real.

At one point, I smiled and said, “You know what I like about this club?”

He, “What?”

Me, “No one here talks money or politics.”

He agreed, then lurched into another soliloquy about how he travels to the most expensive destinations, and stays in the most expensive accommodations, eats at the most expensive restaurants, and engages in the most expensive activities.

Soon, I grew so weary of his voice I tried to comment but he interrupted me. Or tried to.

I was determined to say something, however insignificant. But he didn’t stop talking.

So, I didn’t stop talking.

I forced myself to finish my first sentence, then said, “You can’t interrupt me.” Over and over and over. And all the while he kept trying to interrupt. It was comical, the two of us talking over each other with nonsense.

And his wife, sitting to his left neither smiled nor spoke, but kept glancing at me with the saddest face.

My primary thought during this unpleasant experience was, “Why me?” Not in a self-pitying way, but rather as a scientific inquiry — why did he feel compelled to pour out all this magnificent personal history to me, a much older, total stranger?

Today, I’ve been trying to sort through his fire hose of unwanted information. As I recall, he’s in his fifty’s; he’d lost his father when he was only 14 (a bit confused because of the “stepmother” contradiction) and has had to work full time ever since.

I wondered whether he was under constant pressure to prove himself to a world dominated by people triple his age. Carrying my Freud act a bit further, I’ll guess he carries a lot of resentment toward circumstances that put him into that position.

So knowingly or not, he may have decided to fight back in the only ways he knew, with aggression and self-promotion.

At some point during the evening, he must have decided I either couldn’t be impressed, or I was sufficiently impressed, I don’t know which, because he suddenly turned to his wife and asked her to dance.

Perhaps a half hour later, he returned to the table, and announced they were leaving for another engagement. He then turned to me, told me how much he enjoyed talking with me and how much he “really liked me,” and shook my hand with a surprisingly weak grip.

And they were gone.

Now, I wonder if there was a better way to handle such a situation?

I could have turned away from him and studiously ignored him. But that would be cruel when he only had been boorish, not mean, so he didn’t deserve cruelty.

I could have humored him by nodding eagerly and repeatedly expressing false admiration for his marvelous exploits, but that would have been even crueler if he caught on to my act.

Instead, but for our moments of talking over each other, I simply sat there and looked at him, showing no emotion or reaction whatever, which upon reflection, may have been cruelest of all if he were fishing for approval.

Or perhaps, it made no difference if he was so wrapped up in his own world, he was oblivious to me, as though he were talking to a chair. I don’t know.

The point to all this is that he and I, and to some degree all of us — we each live in our own world, trying to survive in a harsh universe that every minute tries to kill us in many different ways, and eventually will succeed.

While fighting this battle we know we will lose, we each can be what other people find unpleasant.

The man (I still don’t know his name) may be the most generous, honest, kind human on the planet or he may be a scoundrel. Whichever he is, it’s unlikely he was born that way.

Each day of his life he received many trillions of inputs, which together chiseled him as though he were a piece of ice being carved by an ice sculptor, slowly we melt away, to irresistibly become a formless puddle.

There is a philosophic question about how much control we have over who we are. I suspect it is very little, perhaps none. four corks floating in water

Most of my friends are “nice,” or at least they act in ways I find pleasing. Do they do that intentionally? Do they understand what pleases me or even care?

Or are we all just corks bobbing in a crowded ocean, flung by twirling tides, rubbing and bumping.

Though I found the man annoying, I’m trying very hard not to dislike him. But then again, can I really control how I feel?

In a strange way, I hope we meet again, just to see what happens and has happened. How have the tides moved us?

Science marches on.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

Medicare Advantage, the prior authorization scam

Preface

Medicare Advantage exists only because the federal government tells you the Big Lie in economics that federal taxes fund federal spending.

They don’t. Federal taxes fund nothing.

Federal taxes are destroyed upon receipt by the Treasury. Federal spending is funded by new dollar creation.

The purposes of federal taxes are not to fund federal spending but to:

  1. Control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to reward.
  2. Increase demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring taxes to be paid in dollars.
  3. Widen the Gap between the rich and the rest by convincing those who are not wealthy that giving them benefits requires raising taxes, a lie.

Let us examine an article about the Medicare Advantage scam:

Enrollment in Medicare’s private-sector alternative is surging — and so are the complaints to Congress.

What it Takes to Prevail in a Florida Bad Faith Property Insurance Claim — Florida Personal Injury Lawyer Blog — November 11, 2022
Cheap insurance can be a trap for the unwary.

BY DAVID LIM AND ADAM CANCRYN | AUGUST 23, 2023

More than 30 million older Americans are enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans, wooed by lower premiums and more benefits than traditional Medicare offers.

Since Medicare is funded by the federal government (not by FICA taxes), how is Medicare Advantage able to “woo” people with lower premiums and more benefits? What is their secret to saving?

But a bipartisan group of lawmakers is increasingly concerned that insurance companies are preying on seniors and, in some cases, denying care that would otherwise be approved by traditional Medicare.

Is this a surprise? Preying on seniors and denying care is the whole point of Medicare Advantage. The government created the program to reward the rich.

Any thinking person could predict that a private, for-profit program, competing with a government not-for-profit program, would have to deny services and fool customers. How else can they make a profit while taking business from the government program?

“It was stunning how many times senators on both sides of the aisle kept linking constituent problems with denying authorizations for care,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said in an interview, referring to a bevy of complaints from colleagues during a recent Senate Finance Committee hearing.

Businesses are strongly motivated to deny authorizations for the most expensive procedures, the exact procedures for which people most need insurance. Prior authorization is a notorious scam.

Congress has already gone after insurers for their celebrity-filled ads and misleading directories. But its scrutiny of these care denials, expected to continue into next year, could have a far greater impact and reshape the rules for one of the most profitable parts of the insurance industry.

The private health insurance industry cannot survive without prior authorization or some other process that skims away their highest costs.

“CMS is very attuned to what is going on on the Hill,” Sean Creighton, managing director of policy for consulting firm Avalere Health, said of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. He added that next year will likely bring “more scrutiny by the Hill and CMS on this, and there will be more reporting requirements for the plans and actions the plans are required to take to lessen the burden on providers and patients.”

Yes, “more scrutiny and more reporting requirements” — anything to avoid doing what really should be done: Eliminate FICA and offer federally funded, comprehensive, no-deductible, no-copay Medicare for every man, woman, and child in America.

The federal government could pay for the whole thing by tapping a computer key, and it could do it without the need to supervise private insurance services.

The hugely profitable private healthcare insurers, who bribe Congress,  would object.

And, of course, the rich who run America don’t want it, because it would narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest of us. Keeping the poorer poor is how the rich stay rich. That is what the rich bribe Congress to do.

Legislation requiring insurers to more quickly approve requests for routine care passed unanimously in the House in 2022, but stalled in the Senate over cost concerns.

Can You Sue a Hospital or Doctor for Denying Medical Treatment? - The Law Offices of Dr. Michael & Associates
What do we do now? Medicare Advantage won’t pay.

Federal “cost concerns” are unnecessary.

Because the federal government is Monetarily Sovereign, cost never should be a primary consideration.

The government can pay for anything. In fact, the more the government pays, the more the economy grows.

The Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act, which mandates insurers quickly approve requests for routine care and respond within 24 hours to any urgent request, was reintroduced this year in the House and passed out of the House Ways and Means Committee this summer as part of a larger health care package.

Still, lawmakers are peppering the Biden administration with demands for reforming the commonly used tool called prior authorization, the process in which health insurers require patients to get insurer approval ahead of time for certain treatments or medications.

Without prior authorization, Medicare Advantage would have no price “advantage,” and scant ability to compete with Medicare.

It “has turned into a process of basically just stopping people from getting care,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), leader of the House Progressive Caucus.

Stopping people from getting care — i.e. stopping health insurers from paying big bills — is the point. Imagine a car insurer demanding that people get prior authorization before starting the car, and then denying any long or more risky drives.

Jayapal was one of more than three dozen House Democrats who told CMS this month of “a concerning rise in prior authorizations,” accused health insurers of prioritizing “profits over people” and asked for “a robust method of enforcement to rein in this behavior.”

Oh, really” A business that prioritizes profits? Who could have predicted that? There would be no need to “rein in this behavior” if the federal government funded health care.

Unlike traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage plans can employ prior authorization and restrict beneficiaries to certain doctors within their network. Those are among the incentives private insurers have to participate in the program and enrollment has doubled during the last decade.

But Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) said some hospitals in his state won’t take Medicare Advantage plans any more. “We can’t do it because we can’t afford the constant chasing from all the denials,” he said.

AHIP, the trade group representing insurers, told POLITICO that prior authorization was among the tools that can curb wasteful spending.

Prior authorization has very little to do with wasteful spending and everything to do with cutting big costs. If a doctor, who knows a patient, authorizes a procedure, and some lowly insurance company employee, who never met the patient refuses to pay for the doctor-authorized procedure, how does that prevent “wasteful spending?

“These tools are important when coordinating care, reducing unnecessary and low-value care, and promoting affordability for patients and consumers,” said spokesperson David Allen in a statement.

Utter nonsense. It’s double-talk for “the less we pay, the more we make.”

CMS has a track record of responding to liberal concerns, which could translate into big changes for Medicare Advantage in the coming years. Earlier this month, it proposed a rule to improve the standards for behavioral health networks following complaints from Congress about woefully inaccurate mental health provider directories, which some lawmakers said amounted to fraud.

1 in 5 Americans Say Their Family Got a Surprise Medical Bill in 2022
How are we going to pay this? I thought we were covered.

It also for the first time this year is evaluating Medicare Advantage television ads before they air, following prodding from lawmakers and numerous complaints from elderly consumers who felt duped by the ubiquitous ads.

Interesting that Medicare Advantage can provide “more benefits” at “lower prices,” and still afford all that television advertising, reap profits, and even pay taxes — and compete with Medicare. Do you believe in magic? Where does all the extra money come from? Service refusal.

CMS also proposed a rule earlier this month that plans be required to factor the impact of prior authorization denials on marginalized and underserved communities, part of a larger effort by the agency to close gaps in health equity. The rule, if finalized, would take effect in 2025.

You can be sure that the insurance companies will find a way around that one. Service denial is the bedrock of Medicare Advantage.  Without service denial, the program could not exist.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who wants the agency to go further, has proposed an amendment that would require CMS to collect and publish data from Medicare Advantage plans on their prior authorization practices to make public the number of prior authorization requests, denials and appeals by type of medical care.

She has support from Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), who said during a recent hearing that his support for Medicare Advantage plans “does not mean that I like the prior authorization process and that I do not see some problems here that need to be solved.”

Original Medicare does not require prior authorization. Congress could outlaw the whole prior authorization, service denial scam, but that would end Medicare Advantage and all those wonderful profits, along with all those wonderful political bribes.

Insurer advocacy group Better Medicare Alliance told POLITICO it supports legislation and regulations to create an electronic prior authorization process that could expedite prior authorization decisions that typically take up to a week or more.

No, expediting a failed process doesn’t make it a good process. The whole process says, “We know more than your doctor about your health needs” and/or “Your doctor is crooked, so we’ll have one of our flunkies make your healthcare decisions.”

“Our goal has always been to protect prior authorization’s essential function — coordinating safe, effective, high-value care— while also strengthening and streamlining this clinical tool to better serve beneficiaries,” Mary Beth Donahue, president and CEO of the group, said in a statement.

Pardon me if I laugh, but does anyone believe the purpose of prior authorization is to “coordinate safe, effective, high-value care, while strengthening blah, blah, blah”? The purpose of prior authorization is to save money via service denial. Period.

BY DAVID LIM AND ADAM CANCRYN | AUGUST 23, 2023 
Creighton suspects insurers would be fine with implementing guardrails for prior authorization, as long as they can continue to use it.

“It is super important that in this case one doesn’t throw out the prior authorization with the bath water,” he said. “It is just finding that balance.”

No, that is exactly what should be done: Throw out prior authorization. It’s an invitation to cheating helpless, sick patients stuck with big bills or no service.

But many physicians complain that balance has tipped too far in favor of Medicare Advantage plans.

A survey released earlier this month by the physicians’ trade group Medical Group Management Association found 97 percent of medical group practices said an insurer delayed or denied medically necessary care.

Another 92 percent said they had hired staff specifically to process prior authorization requests. A December 2022 survey from the American Medical Association also found that 94 percent of physicians reported care delays due to prior authorization denials or processing.

“Even when you are doing the most cost-effective treatment, you are going through the [prior authorization] process,” said Vivek Kavadi, chief radiation oncology officer for U.S. Oncology, a network of more than 1,200 physicians.

Studies show that oncology faces the most prior approval requests.

“I’m sorry Mrs. Jones, but we can’t operate on your cancer until we get prior authorization. It could take weeks, while your cancer grows and metastasizes. Or the procedure could be denied in which case you’ll be on the hook for $50,000 which will bankrupt you and your family. Or maybe, you’ll just die. Which do you choose?”

Five oncologists told POLITICO that prior authorization requests are increasing as more patients migrate from traditional Medicare to Medicare Advantage. This surge of insurer prior approval demands has put a strain on their practices’ resources, they said.

The people who migrate tend to be the ones who least can afford to pay for denied procedures. As usual, the rich have found a way to cheat the middle and the poor.

Insurers may at times contract with radiation benefit managers, companies that manage claims processing and keep a cut of savings they generate.

This can encourage more services requiring prior authorization and create a “greater incentive to identify opportunities where denials can be pushed on to the provider,” said Constantine Mantz, chief policy officer for the oncology network GenesisCare.

If you pay people to deny services, they will deny services.

EviCore, a radiation benefit manager, said its work is meant to ensure patients receive care grounded in the latest clinical evidence as quickly as possible. “For requests that don’t meet evidence-based guidelines, the [physician] has the opportunity to discuss the case … which can help resolve any concerns prior to initiating a formal appeal,” the company said in a statement.

So, the goal is to prevent a doctor from prescribing an unnecessary procedure, and this will be cleared up when the doctor discusses the case with a “benefit manager”?  Really?

BMA did not wish to comment and AHIP declined to respond to a list of questions on radiation benefit managers.

Medicare Advantage plans have been slow to update their coverage policies and at times lag Medicare in which treatments are covered, Mantz said. This can lead to situations where a Medicare Advantage plan denies care after a prior authorization request that would be covered under traditional Medicare.

Of course. What other outcome could there be? The whole purpose of prior approval is to deny payment.

BY ALICE MIRANDA OLLSTEIN AND LAUREN GARDNER | OCTOBER 05, 2023 05:00 AM
HHS’ Office of the Inspector General in a 2022 report found 13 percent out of a sample of claims from Medicare Advantage plans in which care was denied under prior authorization for services that should have been approved.

You can be sure the 13 percent figure is low, but even if were accurate, would you go to a hospital knowing there was a 13 percent chance your legitimate procedure would not be covered? I wouldn’t.

If a request is denied, a doctor can file an appeal and eventually speak with another physician to plead their case.

This is exactly what you don’t want your doctor spending his valuable time doing: Pleading his case to another doctor who has not seen you and doesn’t even know you.

Recent studies have shown that most appeals to a denial get overturned. In 2021, Medicare Advantage plans fully or partially denied more than 2 million claims through prior authorization, but 82 percent of those were overturned after an appeal, according to an analysis from the think tank KFF.

A 2019 survey from ASTRO found 62 percent of oncologists, who appealed on behalf of their patients, got their prior authorization denial overturned.

If the vast majority of denials are overturned,  something clearly is wrong with the denial process. It would be informative to know why denials are overturned. What are the circumstances that cause all those “bad” denials and their cancellation.

Apparently, those denials were unnecessary, and when the doctors caught the insurance companies with their hands in the cookie jar, the denials were reversed. The insurance companies seemingly tell their people, “Deny everything you can, but if a doctor objects, reverse the denial. Just make the process as tedious as possible.”

But doctors say getting through the appeals process can take weeks.

“It feels more like the business model is a way for insurance companies to potentially reduce costs by feeling that physicians won’t want to participate in this peer-to-peer process because it is a burden on time,” said Amar Rewari, chief of radiation oncology for the Maryland-based health system Luminis Health.Mei

The insurance companies increase profits by making the process difficult for patients and doctors. This is the opposite of what one would expect from a health service.

SUMMARY

No public purpose is served by transferring the cost of health care to the private sector, where profitability requirements can supersede healthcare needs. Though cutting prices is a selling strategy, it is a poor tradeoff for bad service.

Innocent consumers, lured in by lower prices and coverages not offered by Original Medicare, too often find themselves uninsured at just the times when they need help most, with bankruptcy-causing bills or not receiving medical care at all.

The federal government already had proved its capability of funding healthcare services with Original Medicare. a relatively no-hassle service.

Unnecessarily, Medicare saves money by not paying for everything. There are co-pays, deductibles, and some services not covered. But the federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, does not need to save money. It has infinite dollars.

The federal government is financially capable of providing comprehensive, all-inclusive, no-copay, no-deductible Medicare to every man woman and child in America, without collecting a penny in taxes.

The purpose of government is to improve and protect the lives of the people. The U.S. government, having unlimited financial capability, and already having the experience funding medical care, should carry out its mandate.