A Doctor With a Cure: ‘Medicare for All’
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/11/11-5
Gene Farley and I shared a deep affection for Tommy Douglas, the Baptist preacher-turned-statesman who as the leader of Saskatchewans Cooperative Commonwealth Federation established the framework for what would become Canadas single-payer national health care system.
Douglas, who is often recalled as "the Greatest Canadian," had a congenial style that belied his determination to address social and economic injustices he knew to be immoral. The inescapable fact, he argued, is that when we build a society based on greed, selfishness, and ruthless competition, the fruits we can expect to reap are economic insecurity at home and international discord abroad.
Paraphrasing Tennyson, Douglas roused Canadians with a promise: Courage, my friends; 'tis not too late to build a better world. That line always came to mind when I was with Gene, who died Friday at 86.
Gene was an internationally renowned physician, an originator of family practice residency programs and innovative public-health initiatives who finished a distinguished academic career as chair of the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Wisconsin.
Yet, his great passion was as a build a better world campaigner. The man who proudly recalled joining the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963 was still marching for those same causes in 2013.