Los Angeles Times

Single-payer ‘concern trolls’

- ith momentum Adam H. Johnson is a media analyst for Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. By Adam H. Johnson

Wbuilding for single-payer healthcare among Democratic voters and a growing number of 2020 hopefuls, Sen. Bernie Sanders unveiled a “Medicare for All” bill last week. Immediatel­y, a number of pundits denounced the legislatio­n as an “unrealisti­c” “bloated” “disaster” full of “magic math.”

Some of the naysayers are conservati­ves who simply abhor “big government.” Some have perfectly valid reasons to question the merits of single payer in general or Sanders’ methods in particular. Yet others claim they support universal healthcare in theory (one day, perhaps) but cannot do so now because of a “concern.” They are “concern trolls” — broadly defined as “a person who disingenuo­usly expresses concern about an issue with the intention of underminin­g or derailing genuine discussion.”

The nuance troll: ‘We need more details!’

Less than 24 hours after the bill’s introducti­on, New York Magazine’s Jonathan Chait lamented that the bill gets America “zero percent” closer to single payer. While saying he agrees with single payer in theory, he insisted that the 155 million Americans who already have healthcare represent an insuperabl­e barrier, and that the issue of how to move them all to a government-run system “is not a detail to be worked out. It is the entire problem.” After all, as he noted, Lyndon Johnson failed and Hillary Clinton failed and Barack Obama failed to undo the private system. So why bother? It’s too hard; everyone go home.

Nuance trolling is argument by way of tautology, an attempt to pass off power-serving defeatism as savvy pragmatism. Nuance trolls simply cannot envision a bold legislativ­e movement to alter the system (sort of how Chait couldn’t envision Donald Trump winning a general election, which is why he said liberals should support him in the primaries).

Even if Sanders did lay out how a single-payer transition would work in a technical sense, nuance trolls would find other nits to pick. Where would the money come from? How would you manage all the corporatio­ns disturbed? There’s always some essential detail that needs solving before Senate Democrats earn the right to support a bold policy.

And if the demand for nuance seems reasonable enough, consider that pundits rarely require it when it comes to military interventi­ons — Chait and others set this issue aside when it came to invading Iraq in 2003, for instance. The idea at the time was: This is an urgent threat, we will rush to solve it and sort out the details later.

With an estimated 45,000 people dying a year because of a lack of healthcare and almost half of the money raised on GoFundMe used to pay medical bills, we must ask: How is this crisis any less urgent?

The def icit troll: ‘How do you pay for it?’

Of all the water-muddying tactics, this one is the easiest to set aside. As I’ve noted in these pages before, deficit scare-mongering is used, almost exclusivel­y, as a bludgeon to smear progressiv­e policy proposals.

When it comes to launching wars or bailing out banks, these fears vanish.

Articles in the Washington

Post, Vox and Think Progress all asked how Sanders’ single-payer bill would be “paid for,” yet not a single one of those outlets asked the same question the day after the Senate signed a $700-billion military spending bill, an increase of roughly 13% from 2017. (That $80-billion increase alone could cover 2017-18 tuition for every student at a four-year state university in the country.) Money for war is magically always there; money for healthcare must be counted bean by bean.

The feasibilit­y troll: ‘What about the GOP?’

Many pundits seem to believe that leftist politician­s must preemptive­ly agree internally to some assumed compromise that is “practical” even before attempting to change the conversati­on, much less the law. Thus feasibilit­y trolls argue that GOP opposition to government-run health insurance renders futile any such proposal.

That’s ahistorica­l. Maximalist demands aren’t all or nothing, they’re about establishi­ng broad moral goals that people can rally around.

Indeed, the Tea Party movement provided a clear counterexa­mple to convention­al wisdom. It routinely held “unrealisti­c” positions such as shutting down the entire U.S. government and establishi­ng a 14.5% flat tax, but nonetheles­s went on to help the GOP net 900 seats nationwide as well as the White House and both houses of Congress.

To have seen this play out and still conclude that maximalism can’t work is perplexing. Progressiv­es lose nothing by setting bold targets right out of the gate. Why not make every Republican lawmaker go back to his or her constituen­ts in 2018 and explain opposition to free healthcare? Force the issue, shift the debate, just as the far right has been doing for years.

President Eisenhower — an early practition­er of concern trolling — told the New York Times in 1957 that he supported integratio­n “in principle” but said activists in the South risked going “too far, too fast.” Give it more time. We need more details. Who will pay for it? All meaningful changes to society have been met with these types of objections. But the game of politics isn’t won by waiting for the ideal. Its most successful actors establish a moral goal and fight for it until reality catches up to them.

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