The first standup act I saw live was George Carlin. I was 18-years-old
and Carlin was playing on campus my freshman year at Rutgers University in New
Jersey. I sat on the floor in the
student center multi-purpose room. The show took place three years before Carlin
was arrested for violating obscenity laws in Milwaukee after his legendary
routine: "Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television."
Carlin was a social critic whose acts included his thoughts on
politics, the English language, religion, and a variety of taboo subjects. He complained
that American English is replete with euphemisms because Americans have
difficulty dealing with reality. His views pre-dated the term “politically correct.”
Carlin said that we use euphemisms to shield us from reality, that we
use “soft language.” To illustrate he said that poor people used to live in
“slums” and now "the economically disadvantaged" occupy
"substandard housing" in the "inner cities." He said, maybe
if we were not to use this type of language, people would realize what is going
on, and that there are actually problems in the world. And maybe we could solve
them.
Carlin’s advice comes to mind when I think about health care. One of
his memorable lines on the subject was, "Isn't it a bit unnerving that
doctors call what they do 'practice'?"
Columnist Paul Krugman wrote in the New
York Times: “How did it become normal, or for that matter even acceptable,
to refer to medical patients as ‘consumers’? The relationship between patient
and doctor used to be considered something special, almost sacred. Now
politicians and supposed reformers talk about the act of receiving care as if
it were no different from a commercial transaction, like buying a car - and
their only complaint is that it isn't commercial enough.”
Maybe the impersonal quality of such language made it easier for the
majority members of the U.S. House of Representatives to pass the American
Health Care Act (AHCA).
The facts are that if the AHCA become law, as written, basic
protections for individuals with preexisting conditions will be eliminated and
the federal requirement that mental health and addictions care be included by
insurers as an essential benefit will be removed.
Maybe instead of “preexisting conditions” we should refer to it as
“people who will suffer and die without affordable and timely healthcare.”
In any case, if the House’s AHCA passes the Senate, it will result in
more families that are struggling with mental illness and addictions finding
their loved ones in emergency rooms, in costly institutional settings, on the
street, in jail, or in the ground.
Treatment is the most effective way to help those with mental illness
and addiction ― treatment that often needs insurance coverage, just like any
other health problem.
The answer is not “Obamacare” or “Trumpcare”. We need “Bi-partisancare”
that puts the American family first.
One thing is for sure, if George Carlin were still around to weigh in
on the AHCA, he would be invoking "Seven Words You Can Never Say on
Television" and, I’m certain, a few choice new ones.
by Andrew Malekoff
First pubished in Long Island Weekly, June 2017
https://longislandweekly.com/george-carlin-say/
https://longislandweekly.com/george-carlin-say/
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