Human
Events...
The
Expanding Catalogue of Obamacare
Fables
by
Michelle Malkin
07/15/2011
Is
there a health insurance horror
story disseminated by the White House and its allies that ever turned
out to be
true? Obamacare advocates have exercised more artistic license than a
convention of Photoshoppers. Now, a prominent sob story shilled by
President
Obama himself about his own mother is in doubt. It’s high past time to
call
their bluffs.
The
tall-tale-teller-in-chief cited
mom Stanley Ann Dunham’s deathbed fight with her insurer several times
over the
years to support his successful push to ban pre-existing condition
exclusions
by insurers. In a typical recounting, Obama shared his personalized
trauma
during a 2008 debate: “For my mother to die of cancer at the age of 53
and have
to spend the last months of her life in the hospital room arguing with
insurance companies because they’re saying that this may be a
pre-existing
condition and they don’t have to pay her treatment, there’s something
fundamentally wrong about that.”
But
there was something fundamentally
wrong with Obama’s story. In a recently published biography of Obama’s
mother,
author and New York Times reporter Janny Scott discovered that Dunham’s
health
insurer had in fact reimbursed her medical expenses with nary an
objection. The
actual coverage dispute centered on a separate disability insurance
policy.
Channeling
document forger Dan
Rather’s “fake, but accurate” defense, a White House spokesman insisted
to the
Times that the anecdote somehow still “speaks powerfully to the impact
of
pre-existing condition limits on insurance protection from health care
costs”
-- even though Dunham’s primary health insurer did everything it was
supposed
to do and met all its contractual obligations.
No
matter. Expanding government
control over health care means never having to say you’re sorry for
impugning
private insurers. Democrats have dragged every available human shield
into the
contentious debate over Obama’s federal takeover of health care.
Personal
anecdotes of dying family members battling evil insurance execs deflect
attention from the cost, constitutionality and liberty-curtailing
consequences
of the law. The president’s Dunham sham-ecdote is just the latest entry
in an
ever-expanding catalogue of Obamacare fables:
--
Otto Raddatz. In 2009, Obama
publicized the plight of this Illinois cancer patient, who supposedly
died
after he was dropped from his Fortis/Assurant Health insurance plan
when his
insurer discovered an unreported gallstone the patient hadn’t known
about. The
truth? He got the treatment he needed in 2005 and lived for nearly four
more
years.
--
Robin Beaton. Also in 2009, Obama
claimed Beaton -- a breast cancer patient -- lost her insurance after
“she
forgot to declare a case of acne.” In fact, she failed to disclose a
previous
heart condition and did not list her weight accurately, but had her
insurance
restored anyway after intense public lobbying.
--
John Brodniak. A 23-year-old
unemployed Oregon sawmill worker, Brodniak’s health woes were
spotlighted by
New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof as a textbook argument for
Obamacare.
Brodniak was reportedly diagnosed with cavernous hemangioma, a
neurological
condition, and was allegedly turned away by emergency room doctors.
Kristof
called the case “monstrous” and decried opponents of Democrats’ health
care
proposals as heartless murderers. The truth? Brodniak not only had
coverage
through Oregon’s Medicaid program, but was also a neurology patient at
the
prestigious Oregon Health and Science University in Portland (a
safety-net
institution that accepts all Medicaid patients). Kristof never
retracted the
legend.
--
Marcelas Owens. An 11-year-old boy
from Seattle, Owens took a coveted spot next to the president in March
2010
when Obamacare was signed into law. Owens’ 27-year-old mother, Tiffany,
died of
pulmonary hypertension. The family said the single mother of three lost
her job
as a fast-food manager and lost her insurance. She died in 2007 after
receiving
emergency care and treatment throughout her illness. Progressive groups
(for
whom Marcelas’ relatives worked) dubbed Marcelas an “insurance abuse
survivor.”
But there wasn’t a shred of evidence that any insurer had “abused” the
boy or
his mom. Further, Washington State already offered a plethora of
existing
government assistance programs to laid-off and unemployed workers like
Marcelas’ mom. The family and its p.r. agents never explained why she
didn’t
enroll.
--
Natoma Canfield. The White House
made the Ohio cancer patient a poster child for Obamacare in 2010 after
she
wrote a letter complaining about skyrocketing premiums and the prospect
of
losing her home. After Obama gave Canfield a shout-out at a health care
rally
in Strongsville, Ohio, and promised to control costs, officials at the
renowned
Cleveland Clinic, which is treating her, made clear that they would
“not put a
lien on her home” and that she was eligible for a wide variety of state
aid and
private charity care.
Since
Obamacare passed, the amount
workers pay in health care premiums has soared an average of nearly 14
percent;
thousands of businesses have sought waivers in search of relief from
the law’s
onerous mandates; medical device makers have slashed jobs and research;
and the
private individual health insurance market is in critical condition.
Post-Obamacare truth is bloodier than pro-Obamacare fiction.
Read
it at Human Events
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