Showing posts with label Michael Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Moore. Show all posts

Friday, July 27, 2007

Michael Moore says he's been served

United Press International :
BURBANK, Calif., July 26 (UPI) -- Michael Thursday said the Bush administration has served him with a subpoena regarding his trip to Cuba during the making of his new film, 'Sicko.'

The Oscar-winning filmmaker, who appeared Thursday on NBC's 'The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,' said he was notified about the subpoena at the network's studios in Burbank, Calif.


I wonder if there is some kind of privilege he can invoke to be able to ignore the subpoena--there's a lot of that going around. Maybe one called the First Amendment?

Monday, July 16, 2007

An Open Letter to CNN from Michael Moore

MichaelMoore.com : Dear CNN:
That's why I was so stunned when you let a doctor who knows a lot about brain surgery -- but apparently very little about public policy -- do a 'fact check' story, not on the medical issues in 'Sicko,' but rather on the economic and political information in the film. Is this why there has been a delay in your apology, because you are trying to get a DOCTOR to say he was wrong? Please tell him not to worry, no one is filing a malpractice claim against him. Dr. Gupta does excellent and compassionate stories on CNN about people's health and how we can take better care of ourselves. But when it came time to discuss universal health care, he rushed together a bunch of sloppy -- and old -- research. When his producer called us about his report the day before it aired, we sent to her, in an email, all the evidence so that he wouldn't make any mistakes on air. He chose to ignore ALL the evidence, and ran with all his falsehoods -- even though he had been given the facts a full day before! How could that happen? And now, for 5 days, I have posted on my website, for all to see, every mistake and error he made....

P.S. If you also want to apologize for not doing your job at the start of the Iraq War, I'm sure most Americans would be very happy to accept your apology. You and the other networks were willing partners with Bush, flying flags all over the TV screens and never asking the hard questions that you should have asked. You might have prevented a war. You might have saved the lives of those 3,610 soldiers who are no longer with us. Instead, you blew air kisses at a commander in chief who clearly was making it all up. Millions of us knew that -- why didn't you? I think you did. And, in my opinion, that makes you responsible for this war. Instead of doing the job the founding fathers wanted you to do -- keeping those in power honest (that's why they made it the FIRST amendment) -- you and much of the media went on the attack against the few public figures like myself who dared to question the nightmare we were about to enter. You've never thanked me or the Dixie Chicks or Al Gore for doing your job for you. That's OK. Just tell the truth from this point on.


Michael Moore is the rare non-governmental figure in an effective position to push back against journalistic attacks, and is making the most of it. While I don't look to Mr. Moore as the exemplar of "fair and balanced" in any sense, CNN's preening self-regard and self-promotion deserve a takedown, and this is a good one. Best since Jon Stewart. Bring it on.

Friday, July 13, 2007

BlueCross: "You would have to be dead to be unaffected by Moore's movie..."

MichaelMoore.com :From Michael Moore's website:

An employee who works at Capital BlueCross has sent us a confidential memo written and circulated by its Vice President of Corporate Communications, Barclay Fitzpatrick. His job, it seems, was to go and watch 'Sicko,' observe the audience's reaction, and then suggest a plan of action for how to deal with the movie.

The memo, which I am releasing publicly in this email, is a fascinating look at how one health care company views 'Sicko' -- and what it fears its larger impact will be on the public. The industry's only hope, the memo seems to indicate, is if the movie 'flops.'

Mr. Fitzpatrick writes: 'In typical Moore fashion, Government and business leaders are behind a conspiracy to keep the little guy down and dominated while getting rich.'

No. You don't say! That can't be!

BlueCross V.P. Fitzpatrick seems downright depressed about the movie he just saw. 'You would have to be dead to be unaffected by Moore's movie,' he writes. 'Sicko' leaves audiences feeling 'ashamed to be...a capitalist, and part of a 'me' society instead of a 'we' society.'

He walks out of the theater only to witness an unusual sight: people -- strangers -- mingling and talking to each other. "'I didn't know they (the insurers) did that!' was a common exclamation followed by a discussion of the example," according to Fitzpatrick.

He then assesses the film's impact: "[T]he impact on small business decision makers, our members, the community, and our employees could be significant. Ignoring its impact might be a successful strategy only if it flops, but that has not been the history of Moore's films ... If popular, the movie will have a negative impact on our image in this community."

The BlueCross memo then suggests a strategy in dealing with "Sicko" and offers the BCBS "talking points" to be used in discounting the film.


As regular readers will know, I'm a huge fan of SiCKO (recognizing it as what it is and is (mostly) meant to be, and not mistaking it for a dispassionate documentary mired in detail and obligatory, "on the other hands...").

Those threatened by the movie's central truths are well into their counterattacks, and Moore is pushing back. It can be tricky when Moore is put into the position of a "talking head" expert suitable for the NewsHour, which IMHO does not suit his particular gifts (indeed, genius). But when the opposition mounts its own polemics and irrelevancies (since they have very little large substantive truth to fall back on--our existing system is both terminally ill and grossly immoral), so that Moore can mount a counter-offensive, he can be quite effective. This is one example; there will be more.

The insurance executive's letter is, needless to say, worth reading in full on Moore's website.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

A National Gut-Check: Who Lives Better?

New York Times (Editorial):
Let’s stipulate that Moore is a one-sided pamphleteer, with a bit of Mark Twain and Pat Robertson in his schtick. But like all propagandists, his job is not to find some objective truth, but to anger, challenge, ask hard questions. ...

With health care, the anecdotal often carried the argument. One day, a tenant farmer named Sergio, our neighbor, woke with a terrible eye infection. He was full of pain, unable to see. Sergio got world-class care in Florence. After three days of attentive fussing in the hospital, he came home entirely well and without a bill.

Had he showed up at any American hospital — poor, no insurance — well, good luck. Especially in a place like Texas, where 30 percent of adults lack health insurance and what can pass for medical care is a get-in-line form of triage.

But even with insurance, Americans are stuck with what may be the worst of all systems: one that lets a handful of corporations make life-and-death decisions, with incentive to dump and deny.

Little wonder that the United States ranks 37th in effectiveness of health care. Italy ranks 2nd. This is a country that can’t form a government to last longer than the soccer season, and yet, they make our medical system look barbaric.

If our system doesn’t kill you — see the infant mortality and life expectancy rates, bringing up the rear — it can put you in the poorhouse. Medical catastrophes are the leading cause of bankruptcy, and most of those are people who have some insurance, clinging to the frayed edge of the middle class.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

"Sicko" Vs. A Sick Show

TomPaine.com:By Isaiah J. Poole
...The real choice, as 'Sicko' makes clear, is between a radical rethinking about how the nation views health care—as a right of every individual rather than a commodity to be bought and sold—and the perpetuation of a system that impoverishes the many for the profit of the few. There is an army, led by Bush, that wants to put window dressing on a fundamentally dysfunctional system, one that measure after measure shows is leaving Americans with a lower life expectancy and higher infant mortality—but higher costs—than many other developed countries that, yes, 'put more power in the hands of government.'...

Some critics are blasting Moore for painting an overly utopian picture of health care in Canada, Great Britain, France and Cuba. But the critics dodge the fundamental difference between health care in those countries and health care in America: the difference in values. In America, while charity is good, the bottom line is each person's health care is their responsibility. You're on your own. In the countries that Moore examines with universal care, health care is a shared responsibility, and the notion that everyone pays into a system that provides for the needs of everyone is not any more questioned than is the concept in America that we all pay for the military and police services that protect us all.

That is the broader discussion that "Sicko" promotes, not just what should we do about the 49 million uninsured in America but what do we do about the overwhelming majority of Americans who have health insurance but do not have health assurance—who could find, as I did recently, that a doctor can prescribe a medical procedure to protect your health, but, to borrow Bush's words, "an insurance bureaucrat can make medical decisions."

TWB on The problem with Michael Moore's policy ideas

Slate Magazine: (Response to article by Austan Goolsbee --click link for original)

I don't know much about Austan Goolsbee. He describes himself as a "free market type" and as an economic advisor to Barach Obama. He largely agrees with the initial "critique" half of Michael Moore's Sicko, but then savages Moore's policy prescriptions. Some of his points are legitimate, and important: every health care system has to make some decisions about what care to provide, and moving from an existing system to a new one will involve significant transitional complexities that need to be taken into account. Fine. But Goolsbee's use of these fundamentally correct (if hardly novel) insights runs aground on a litter of straw men and Republican-style talking points.

I don't have time or energy to essay a point by point rebuttal of Goolsbee's particulars, but let me try a couple of key issues.

The US spends a far higher percent of GDP on health care than anyone else. The only country that comes close is Canada, and that is far behind. No one contends that the US population would be happy with a health care system funded at the level of Britain's NHS. That argument is a straw man. But if we were able to reduce our expenditures to a percent of GDP akin to Canada's, we could devote hundreds of billions of dollars to making access to reasonable care universal.

Would doctors earn less money under a single payer, universal system? Probably, although the effects would vary by specialty and plan design. Many experts argue that a more salary-based system would (and should) favor primary care providers relative to subspecialists currently highly compensated for performing large numbers of expensive procedures. It is not clear that this should be counted against a universal system. Many think it would improve the mix of physicians and the quality of most patient-physician encounters.

Would drug companies make less money in a universal payer system? Yes, as they do with the VA system, and in most deals they make with large buyers. A moment of silence, please. Would this affect innovation? Perhaps so. It might also affect (downward) marketing expenses for direct to consumer advertising and the variety of thinly veiled bribes to some physicians. Again, should this be counted as a negative? Why?

Malpractice issues? Puh-leez. This is pure talking point drivel. The statistics make clear that in terms of overall health care costs, this is "rounding error" level. In fact, a system in which patients (and jurors) are better treated, less angry with the system, and feel in greater solidarity with fellow patients may well reduce the incidence and the costs of malpractice claims.

Denial of service? Every health care system, absent an infinite budget, will need to "ration" some care in one form or another, whether directly and explicitly, or in a less direct and visible form. The method of rationing may be more or less rational (in something like cost-benefit terms) and more or less fair (allocated by medical need, or by ability to pay). A key truth is that the existing American "non-system" does both these jobs exceptionally poorly, and that tinkering around the edges is unlikely to make a great difference. One responsibility of a system of universal access/coverage will be to make these decisions in a more transparent, fair and accountable fashion. It is not that the current system is not already making these decisions; rather, insurance companies and HMOs are doing so behind closed doors, with little public accountability or sense of fairness. Michael Moore does an especially powerful job of revealing that reality.

A system of universal access to care will not magically do away with all hard choices and difficulties in the health care system. (Britain, France, Canada, Cuba, all counties continue to cope with the challenges of providing and paying for quality health care for their populations, and so will we.) It will provide a new, firmer foundation for a more just and efficient system, in place of the rotting timbers of what we now have. To return to Goolsbee's choice of metaphor, this junker is ready for the trash heap. I hope Barack Obama is not relying too heavily on his counsel.

Monday, July 2, 2007

The Rx From "SiCKO:" More Choice

Truthout: By Dean Baker
The pundits are working overtime trying to defuse the message from 'SiCKO,' Michael Moore's new film. They are trying to convince the public that the United States could not possibly do what every other rich country (and even some not so rich countries) have managed to do: guarantee their people decent health care.

The centerpiece of the pundits' whine is that universal health care could not work here. They claim the systems which work in other countries require a larger roll for government in health care than Americans want. While this claim is contradicted by poll after poll on the topic, we don't have to argue with the pundits, rather pointless task in any case.

We can just give people a choice and let them vote with their feet. Suppose the government were to establish a Medicare-type program and open it up to all individuals and employers in the country. Those who already have insurance can switch to the government-run plan. Similarly, employers can switch to it as well. Individuals who do not already have insurance would have the option of buying in to the expanded Medicare plan as would employers who do not currently provide insurance for their workers. We can also have a system of expanded subsidies for health care for low and moderate income households, which will make health care insurance more affordable for those families.

This is more or less what both John Edwards and Barack Obama have proposed in their presidential campaigns. To get to universal coverage, there are important issues like mandating that individuals have health care insurance, and also questions about the revenue source for subsidies, but the key point is to establish a national Medicare-type insurance system that can get costs under control and eliminate the enormous waste in the private insurance system.

Medicare's administrative expenses are a small fraction of the administrative expenses of private insurers. Medicare uses just 2 percent of the money that flows through the system to cover administrative costs. By contrast, private insurers spend between 10 to 20 percent of their premiums to cover administrative costs. They use this money for marketing, high CEO salaries and dividends to shareholders; all expenses that Medicare does not have.

This is the reason Medicare always wipes the floor when it competes against private insurers on a level playing field.

Sunday, July 1, 2007

Michael Moore's Sicko reviewed

Slate Magazine:By Dana Stevens
Even those viewers who are ideologically in sync with Michael Moore can find plenty to critique in his methods: the gimmicks, the deck-stacking, the deliberate neglect of opposing points of view. On the other hand, even Moore's worst ideological enemies would be hard put to dispute the basic argument of his new film Sicko (Weinstein Co.): The American health-care system is a sick joke and has been for a very long time....

...[Moore's] chosen to focus on Americans who have insurance and find themselves screwed up the yin-yang anyway. This is a wise choice from a rhetorical point of view, because by exploring the dilemmas faced by those who have shoveled out premiums for decades, Moore can show that our status quo doesn't just have a few soft spots—it's rotten to the core....

In one of the movie's best segments, insurance-industry insiders frankly admit that their profession is rapacious. A former medical director for an HMO, testifying before Congress, delivers a scathing rebuke both of the insurance industry and of her own role in denying patients care. Another whistle-blower describes the industry's tactics with stark clarity: "You're not slipping through the cracks. Somebody made that crack and swept you toward it." A woman who does customer service for a major insurer weeps as she recalls denying sick customers coverage, then adds, "That's why I'm such a bitch on the phone to people. … I just can't take the stress."...

In a democracy, of course, complaining about something is doing something about it, as long as some of that griping is done at the polling booth. In that spirit, Sicko is less a documentary than a clearinghouse of rage.

I think this gets it right.

SiCKO is brilliant (and incredibly funny). See it now.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Michael Moore takes to the phones to promote Sicko

Slate Magazine: By Christopher Beam

The other day, a Slate staffer got a call from a person—a real, live person—asking if she planned to go see Michael Moore's new movie, Sicko. She said that she was indeed planning to see it but didn't know exactly when. The caller insisted that she go this weekend, to 'send a message' to the Bush administration that the country is fed up with the health-care system. What was this—an advertising campaign? Political mobilization? Some kind of Get-Out-the-Audience phone-a-thon?

All of the above. The Weinstein Company, Sicko's distributor, has hired a Democratic 'phone vendor' to contact a select group of potential moviegoers and encourage them to see the film. Phone vendors are usually employed by political campaigns and other interest groups to promote a candidate or a cause. But in this case, they just want you to watch a movie. They've already made 'tens of thousands' of live calls, with another slew of 'robo calls'—recorded messages read by Moore himself—on the way...

On the one hand, it's encouraging to see a studio believing that a film actually matters, and acting on that belief. But on the other, something troubles me about a major production company stealing a grass-roots campaign tactic. These callers aren't volunteers sharing their enthusiasm for a cause; they're getting paid to praise the virtues of universal health care. ... Even more disturbing is what this means for movie advertising. It's hard to imagine a scenario more horrific than Hollywood discovering telemarketing. ...

I'm on a do not call list, which I think protects me from unsolicited commercial (but not political) calls. Which is this?

Monday, June 25, 2007

Medical industrial complex LAUNCH SMEAR CAMPAIGN AGAINST MICHAEL MOORE

From Center for American Progress

In his new documentary SiCKO, filmmaker Michael Moore exposes the deplorable tactics practiced by some health insurance and pharmaceutical companies who deny coverage to individuals who are insured.
Moore is now facing "a multifaceted counteroffensive" from front groups supported and funded by the insurance and pharmaceutical industries. FreedomWorks, for example, recently launched a new campaign claiming that under policies favored by Moore, "healthy individuals" would "wind up subsidizing people like Moore, who are overweight and and/or live decidedly unhealthy lifestyles by frequenting fast-food restaurants, smoke, or use drugs."
Several health care industry members serve on the FreedomWorks board of directors, and the group is run by former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, whose PAC has received significant contributions from the health care industry.
The Cato Institute, which has written numerous pieces attacking Moore's film that argue that he "ignores the positive side of American health care," receives funding from multiple insurance and pharmaceutical companies, including Amerisure Insurance, Pfizer, and Merck. Additionally, a senior fellow at The Manhattan Institute, which receives funding from multiple pharmaceutical giants such as Bristol-Myers Squibb, started a site called Free Market Cure, which argues SiCKO is "set to inject a large dose of misinformation and propaganda into our national dialog about health care policy." Other health care industry front groups -- such as the Galen Institute, Pacific Research Institute, and the Heritage Foundation -- have also recently launched their own attacks on Moore's film.
The health insurance and pharmaceutical industries clearly view Moore's film exposing some of their misdeeds as a serious threat, and they have no shortage of funds to try to attack it.

There is a First Amendment.
While I have my doubts whether the Supreme Court's ready assimilation of corporations to "natural persons" and of commercial speech to core political speech were fully justified in the first instance, I favor robust debate on matters of public consequence--including the identification of the source of funding of such PR campaigns. I'm also curious about the tax treatment of money supporting such campaigns. Is such funding support regarded as a legitimate business expense or as a non-deductible political contribution-- or as a bribe?

Saturday, May 26, 2007

The Moon and the Sun Over Miami

Donna Smith: The Huffington Post:
But on that boat in the bay we were all quiet. The wind blew through our hair as the daylight drifted away, and we were left with our imaginings. The sound of the boat's engine and the flap of the flag droned in the background. What brought us to this spot and this moment was pain. What was easing us into what was to come was an emulsion of nature and wonder and fear and hope. I wanted to tuck the image away somewhere safe in my soul. I wanted it etched there forever. What I did not know was how many moments like it would come in the days ahead.

For me, the past 20 years had been filled with fights about insurance coverage, humiliation about not being able to pay large deductibles and co-pays, and general strain on my marriage and my family that resulted from the financial pressure. Though we never, ever went without insurance, we had been bankrupted by the crushing medical costs not covered by insurance. Few people understood how we got into that financial boat, and we not only faced my husband's heart disease, my cancer and several major medical crises, but also the shame of failing financially. We felt so alone and lost.

I wrote a response to Michael Moore's call for 'health care horror stories' back in early 2006, and here I was nearly a year later as part of this amazing group of fighters and heroes, traveling on this unknown journey together.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Sicko!

Film Offers New Talking Points in Health Care Debate -From The New York Times:
Few of them may become Michael Moore fans. But some insurance industry officials and health policy experts acknowledged yesterday that the film documentary “Sicko,” Mr. Moore’s indictment of health care in this country, taps into widespread public concern that the system does not work for millions of Americans.

The movie, which had its first showing at the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday and received many favorable reviews, presents a series of heart-rending anecdotes meant to illustrate systemic failures and foul-ups under the nation’s insurance industry — even if many of the major pieces of evidence are ones that have been widely reported elsewhere and in some cases date back 20 years...

Uwe E. Reinhardt, a health economist at Princeton, said that based on reviews, the movie is “exaggerated, biting, unfair,” but he added that a number of recent books and reports by academic experts had been at least as critical...“My point is we are on the verge of a populist reaction to the health system,” Professor Reinhardt said. “The American people are on the point of being fed up.”...

“They hate the system — it’s too expensive — but we have been hearing about these things for 35 years,” Professor Altman said. “Unless we have a meltdown which affects the middle class — that is nowhere near happening — we will not be willing to fundamentally restructure the system.”...

The conversation turned to whether Mr. Moore planned to back any of the current proposals for health care reform, or whether he would come up with his own plan. Some suggested that he stick to his position that the insurance companies be done away with, replaced by national universal health care system.

“Let’s be honest, no one’s going to support dismantling the private health care system,” Mr. Moore replied. “I don’t think the insurance companies are just going to give up the profit motivation.”