there’s this short documentary from bill moyers, and this one from frontline, which as always, comes through.
part of the beauty of politics is that it offers the potential to reduce the very personal into cold, reasoned calculations, which usually revolve around money. perhaps this doesn’t strike everyone as something beautiful, but it allows decisions to be made in an objective, rational way to maximize benefits across groups, much like economics. unfortunately, too often distortions in politics, which also typically revolve around money, prevent this from happening, and that is when the politician becomes an epithet.
but in this cold, calculating machine, there is the opportunity, even the inevitability, that the original motive for acting will be forgotten. with health care this is particularly true, for why personal, anecdotal accounts are very moving, the language used to describe them is anything but.
consider the phrase “pre-existing condition.” that could mean a thousand things, from a heart palpitation to diabetes to kidney disease, any one of which would infect every minute of every day of someone’s life, particularly if they were forced to pay out of pocket for treatment. through the powerful medium of television, and perhaps radio and photography, the heart-wrenching ramifications of this problem resurface.
also, my two cents on the political negotiations