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Low-Education Whites Most Likely to Benefit from Health Reform AND Most Likely to Oppose It

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 05:55 PM
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Low-Education Whites Most Likely to Benefit from Health Reform AND Most Likely to Oppose It
via AlterNet:



Posted by booman at 1:18 pm
March 28, 2010

Low-Education Whites Most Likely to Benefit from Health Reform AND Most Likely to Oppose It


This post originally appeared on the Booman Tribune.


Ron Brownstein:

Compared with earlier presidents, Obama focused his case less on helping the uninsured and more on providing those with coverage greater leverage against their insurers. That shift was especially evident in his final drive toward passage.And yet, polling just before the bill’s approval showed that most white Americans believed that the legislation would primarily benefit the uninsured and the poor, not people like them. In a mid-March Gallup survey, 57 percent of white respondents said that the bill would make things better for the uninsured, and 52 percent said that it would improve conditions for low-income families. But only one-third of whites said that it would benefit the country overall — and just one-fifth said that it would help their own family.


You can use these numbers to make any kind of argument. You could say that the majority of whites think that health care reform will help low-income people but they just don’t care. Or, you could argue that nearly half of whites refuse to acknowledge that access to health care will actually help people. The most important finding in the recent polling is that whites who have no college education are the most skeptical about health care reform even though they are the main beneficiaries. They tend to work jobs that lack insurance coverage and they pay higher prices in the individual insurance market (or they go without any insurance at all).

Brownstein says that the low-education whites (who were most resistant to Obama’s campaign) think the reforms are transferring wealth to minorities while the stimulus and bank bailout are transferring wealth up to bankers. They are conditioned to think that the government won’t help them. Changing that perception won’t happen overnight, even if they do eventually realize that Obama has done more for them than any president since Lyndon Johnson. For one thing, a lot of low-income whites are now eligible for Medicaid, but think Medicaid is something blacks and immigrants receive. In other words, they might benefit, but they’ll resent the help they get.

These voters are totally unpersuaded by the moral case for health care reform, but they are receptive to sticking it to the insurance corporations. That’s why the public option was consistently the most popular element of the president’s proposals. For all the cries of ’socialism,’ the charge only stuck when it meant helping black and brown folk. When it meant that you didn’t have to buy private insurance, people actually liked the idea.

A lot of bloggers told the Dems that it was all good to pass reform, but people had to like it. They don’t like this reform because it doesn’t have a public option. You can fix that now, while you have the majorities to do it, or you can take an unnecessary beat-down for it in November. In the longer term, people will understand the truth about these reforms and embrace them and those that protect them. But, not yet. Not now. Stick it to the corporations, on the public option, on the financial reform bill, on anything and everything, and these voters will begin to believe that you are on their side. The Republicans will always appeal to their bigotry, fears, and class-resentment. We don’t want to fight for those sentiments. But, when we do things to help these folks, we ought to make sure they know who helped them and how.


http://blogs.alternet.org/speakeasy/2010/03/28/low-education-whites-most-likely-to-benefit-from-health-reform-and-most-likely-to-oppose-it/


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Number23 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 06:37 PM
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1. Great read. Rec'd
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Turbineguy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 07:06 PM
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2. An Englishman once told me
those who are the most ardent supporters of the Monarchy are those who are most harmed by it.
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DearAbby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 07:13 PM
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3. extremely interesting.....Nt
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Fumesucker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 07:24 PM
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4. This is not going to happen..
"Stick it to the corporations, on anything and everything, and these voters will begin to believe that you are on their side."

We already know whose side the government is on and it's not the little guy, the fact that not a singe Republican voted for the HIR bill and yet there was no public option in it makes that quite clear.

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AnnieBW Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 07:41 PM
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5. They see it as taking from them to give to the "n*****rs"
Sorry about use of the n-word, but that's how some of the lower-class whites that I know describe the health care reform bill. It's taking from their already-small wallet and giving it to the undeserving black people. Race warfare wins again.
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teacher gal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 07:47 PM
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6. Great post
I think it demonstrates the power of fear mongering and propaganda. I suppose it has ever been thus.
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Maru Kitteh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-10 07:58 PM
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7. Well, that explains my Facebook for the last week
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