Tag Archives: Tony Snow

Cancer Knows No Party, and Neither Does Blue Cross of CA: They Screw Everybody

Elizabeth Edwards’ acknowledgement of the recurrence of her breast cancer (which I hope is not more serious than the Edwardses made it out to be, but which I fear is) was but one story of cancer attacking prominent political figures.  Tony Snow will have surgery for a small growth under his abdomen; he had colon cancer two years ago, so we hope that it’s nothing more serious.  And most tragically, conservative commentator and blogger Catherine Siepp succumbed to lung cancer.  Cancer is not a disease that picks between political affiliations for who it afflicts, that much is clear.  And so a problem affecting everyone must be solved with a universal solution.

Before she died, Catherine Siepp wrote about her experiences with Blue Cross of California.  It was a bit shocking to hear a committed conservative talking about the failures of our health care system in such a frank and direct manner, but when a health insurance conglomerate acts so dishonestly, anyone in that position would be offended regardless of their politics.

over…

By law, insurance companies aren’t allowed to adjust your monthly premiums just because you get sick. But they can raise the out-of-pocket cap for all of their members anytime they like, which amounts to the same thing because it affects only the unvalued sick members. (And, of course, getting sick means that even while one’s medical costs go up, the ability to pay goes down — earnings potential is curbed when life becomes a series of treatment appointments.)

Lucky you, if you don’t know what your out-of-pocket cap is. And if you’re like every single healthy person I’ve queried, you probably don’t. But you should know, because the out-of-pocket cap is the most important part of your policy, meant to stave off financial disaster in case of catastrophic medical expenses […]

Another thing working in insurance companies’ favor is that cancer patients rarely have the energy to argue about such nickel-and-diming. I recently managed to spend a morning forcing my way through multiple disconnects and transfers on the Blue Cross 800 number, but I was eventually told that the company would probably reimburse me for the extra $90 a month I was paying for that weekly anti-nausea drug if I filled out the right forms. My far bigger worry is that out-of-pocket cap, which is essentially what insurance is for. To drastically raise it seems the definition of bad faith.

Or so I thought — until I began getting letters from Blue Cross in February announcing that it was retroactively disallowing the anti-cancer drug Avastin treatments it had been paying for since October, at $5,000 a pop every other week. It seems Blue Cross decided this new and expensive targeted therapy is experimental. (It looks as if Blue Cross is not asking to be repaid for my relatively unexperimental chemo, which had been costing about $2,500 every single week, but who knows?)

To decide after a therapy has proved beneficial that it’s merely “investigational” and therefore should not be covered — that, actually, seems the definition of bad faith.

Today, the LA Times reported that Blue Cross of CA is being fined a million dollars for illegally dropping the policies of sick clients for trumped-up reasons.  Recission is harsher, but generally of a piece with what Siepp had to put up with near the end of her life.  That fine is embarrassingly low (they made three billion last year) and won’t make a dent in Blue Cross’ policies.  But at least the state of California has publicly stated that this health insurer is motivated solely by greed and will gladly let their customers suffer rather than carry out their responsibilities.  As an individual policyholder with Blue Cross, exactly the profile that they dishonestly drop as a matter of routine, this scares the heck out of me.

I am truly sorry for Catherine Siepp and her family, along with any other family out there who has had to deal with the scourge of cancer.  We need to ensure that these families get the best medical attention and all the support they need; it ought to be an inalienable right of this country not to have to suffer due to some corporate balance sheet.  The current insurance system will never get us to such a goal.

John Kerry’s Brouhaha and Its Implications For Angelides

(Cross-posted at The California Courage Campaign)

Yesterday in Pasadena, when stumping for Phil Angelides, John Kerry made the following comment about education:

"You know, education, if you make the most of it, you study hard, you do your homework and you make an effort to be smart, you can do well. And if you don't, you get stuck in Iraq."

You look at the front page of FoxNews.com, it's the top story, whereas on any other online news outlet, it's nowhere to be found. And all day on Fox News today they've been replaying the video of Kerry making the statement, in which he goes on to rave about Phil Angelides and California's two senators. I haven't seen Angelides's name get this much play since his campaign began.

Today, Tony Snow and the administration hit back, calling Kerry's comments "an absolute insult" to the troops.

"The clear implication here is, if you flunk out, if you don't study hard, if you don't do your homework, if you don't make an effort to be smart, and you don't do well you, quote, 'Get stuck in Iraq,'" Snow said.

See Kerry's remarkable response to this over the flip.

"If anyone thinks a veteran would criticize the more than 140,000 heroes serving in Iraq and not the president who got us stuck there, they're crazy. This is the classic G.O.P. playbook. I'm sick and tired of these despicable Republican attacks that always seem to come from those who never can be found to serve in war, but love to attack those who did.

Oh hell yes. More:

The people who owe our troops an apology are George W. Bush and Dick Cheney who misled America into war and have given us a Katrina foreign policy that has betrayed our ideals, killed and maimed our soldiers, and widened the terrorist threat instead of defeating it. These Republicans are afraid to debate veterans who live and breathe the concerns of our troops, not the empty slogans of an Administration that sent our brave troops to war without body armor.

Tony Snow and now John McCain are calling for an apology from Senator Kerry. Instead of an apology, Kerry just made the following statement in a press conference:

Let me make it crystal clear. I apologize to no one for my criticism of the president and of his broken policy. If anyone owes the troops in the field an aplogy, it is the president and his failed team.

He went on to call his statement yesterday "a botched joke about the president…not about the troops"; that he meant that he was ripping on those that took us into Iraq, not those fighting there. Kerry is clearly purging the demons of 2004. 

I'm not going to give them one ounce of daylight for their distortions. I learned that hard and deep lesson two years ago.

Not surprisingly, Fox News is trying to make this, as Carl Cameron put it, "a moment" such as Senator Wellstone's funeral, during which Democrats' behavior may have contributed to Walter Mondale's loss in his attempt to replace Wellstone. They will do their best to make sure this story has legs since, as Britt Hume said in post news conference analysis, "this clearly helps Republicans." But even the Fox News anchor seemed impressed with Kerry's tough stance and his refusal to apologize.

Over at CNN, there was a different take altogether. The anchor put conservative Bay Buchanan on the defensive:

So you're saying the president did his homework when he took us into Iraq?

The first thing out of Buchanan's mouth:

No…

I couldn't believe it. They were adopting Kerry's frame of his statement, literally calling into question whether Bush was adequately educated about Iraq before he took us in. That is the frame that needs to emerge from this story. That, and the toughness of John Kerry.

The big question though is whether Phil Angelides will implicate himself into the fray, getting more play and having Kerry's tough talk rub off on him. Phil's biggest goal this final stretch as I see it is not to win new voters, but to make sure Democrats show up for him on Tuesday. That is what John Kerry's antics yesterday and today can do for Phil if he plays it right.