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Quote of the Day

George Lakoff: Don't Think of a Sick Child

The Logic of the Health Care Debate

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By George Lakoff, Eric Haas, Glenn W. Smith and Scott Parkinson
Rockridge Institute
October 18, 2007

Introduction

Most health care reports advocate a policy, describe it, and argue for it. We take a different approach. In this paper, we describe the logic of the overall debate over the U.S. health care system — the assumptions, the arguments, who makes them, and why. We do come out of this process with recommendations, but not of the usual sort.

This analysis presents something new and important: a distinction among three modes of thought — progressive, conservative, and neoliberal. What’s new here is a deeper understanding of neoliberal thought, as it affects the discourse on health care. Briefly, it accepts the progressive ethic of care, insisting on maximizing coverage. Meanwhile, neoliberal thought accepts a conservative version of market principles that guarantees profits to insurance and drug companies. Often, this is done in the name of political pragmatism, as a way to mute expected conservative opposition. This creates an inherent tension between the moral mission of government to provide for the protection — in this case the health security — of all of its people and the profit-maximizing insurance marketplace, which works only by denying care.

The neoliberal mode of thought is at the center of the health care debate. It can also be found in issues across the board.

In the health care debate, positions based on the progressive values of empathy and responsibility for oneself and others are focused on the well-being of human beings. The current health care system is focused on insurance company profits, which insurance companies maximize through denying health care to millions of Americans. Neoliberal plans that sincerely seek market solutions or simply appease conservative opposition and protect insurance profits are unlikely to remedy our current health care tragedy. We conclude that progressives who adopt a neoliberal mode of thought, or align themselves with others who do, could inadvertently undermine progressive values and policy goals, surrendering them in advance — anticipating conservative resistance even before negotiations occur — and before the public has a chance to even consider such values.

The other sections of this report:

A Bit of History

A Basic Fact

Your Interests? Or Theirs?

The Conservative Mode of Thought

The Progressive Mode of Thought

The Neoliberal Mode of Thought

Analysis Of The Arguments

What We Can Do

http://www.rockridgeinstitute.org/health (For the 18 page PDF version of this report, under Campaign Resources: The Logic of the Health Care Debate, click on PDF.)

Comment:

By Don McCanne, MD

Most of us have greatly appreciated the guidance on framing the debate that George Lakoff has given us through his publications such as “Don’t Think of an Elephant!”

Professor Lakoff and his colleagues at the Rockridge Institute now provide us with important guidance for understanding and framing the health care debate.

Don’t just sit there and think of a Sick Child. Download the report now! We’ve got work to do!

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