ONLY IN AMERICA
Sixty-one years ago the National Health Service was rolled out across the UK. In that time two generations of men, women, and children have known nothing else except healthcare which is free at the point of need, involving no paperwork, no insurance company, no humiliating means testing, and no stress or anxiety over how to pay for treatment.
It was, and still is, a shining example of human progress, and still to this day stands as the finest achievement of any British Government, past or present, not to mention the high water mark of the Labour Party.
And, yes, though now it comes with certain limitations – e.g. the introduction of payment for dental care and prescription charges – and though the UK can no longer claim to have the best health service in the industrialised world and requires more investment in resources and staffing – it remains an island of social justice and egalitarianism in a society in which most of the hard fought gains of the working class have been rolled back in the midst of a neoliberal assault begun under Thatcher and intensified during 13 years of New Labour Government.
However as yet no British Government, either Tory or Labour, has dared mount a full on attack on the NHS. They know that no matter what, recession or no recession, this is one institution that firmly and unequivocally belongs to the people and is off limits to the market. Even attempts to usher in privatisation incrementally and piecemeal through PPP and PFI schemes with regard to funding infrastructure projects and providing ancillary services have enjoyed very little support among the British public, and are rightly viewed with a great deal of suspicion.
The NHS stands as a reminder of the kind of society that used to exist in this country, where a living wage, affordable housing, fully funded public services, a 40 hour week, and higher education as a right and not a privilege, all funded via progressive taxation, were the cornerstones of one of the most, if not thee, equitable societies in the industrialised world.
Compare this then to the furore currently taking place in the United States over the Obama administration’s attempts to reform what is the most barbaric healthcare system in the entire world, never mind the industrialised world.
In just eight months, Obama has gone from enjoying the stature and popularity of a fifth Beatle to being compared to Hitler and Stalin incarnate, intent on attacking that American holiest of holies – the freedom to be poor, get sick, and die without government interference.
Everyone knows that a fair proportion of our American cousins are victims of ignorance. After all, this is a country in which approx 40 percent of the adult population believes in that scientific theory otherwise known as ‘creationism’ – in other words, the theory that God created the world 5000 years ago at 12 o’clock in the afternoon and that Noah did exist, he did build an ark, aboard which the animals did come two by two. As for their knowledge of the world outside the land of the free, when only 13 percent of the population actually own a passport it’s understandable that geography isn’t a strong point. In fact, I still recall when living there being asked once what kind of food ‘folks ate in Scatland?’
As they say, though, you can’t blame a mushroom for growing in the dark.
But, in the year 2009, associating reform of a healthcare system which excludes a full 50 million human beings with communism and fascism takes the biscuit even for them.
It gets funnier. Over the past few weeks that quintessentially American breed of right wing right nutjob, whose representatives colonise the print and broadcast media, scumbags like Rush Limbaugh and Bill O’Reilly to name but two, have taken to describing our own NHS as ‘totalitarian’ and, wait for it, a ‘breeding ground for jihadists.’
At a series of town hall meetings across the US, designed by the Obama administration to take the message of healthcare reform to the people and thereby put pressure on a Congress which, despite Obama’s landslide election victory, remains in thrall to the corporate lobby, officials have been threatened, verbally abused, and fights have broken out. At one such meeting in Delaware a few days ago a woman in the audience stood up holding her birth certificate and questioned the current President’s bona fides as a natural born citizen. She then led the audience and the hapless Congressman, whom she’d interrupted from the floor while speaking on the platform, in a spontaneous recitation of the US Pledge of Allegiance.
All this in resistance to the concept of, not an NHS-style free healthcare system, but to a tinkering of the current US system in the form of government assistance for those who presently can’t afford even the lowest standard of insurance cover to secure some, funded via an increase in taxes for those earning more than $350,000 dollars a year.
But, no, this won’t do. It’s the first step on the road to communism as far as people like William Kostic are concerned. At the President’s very own town hall meeting in New Hampshire on Tuesday, Kostic staged a one-man picket outside, complete with hand gun and poster which read, ‘It’s time to water the tree of liberty’, inspired by the words of Thomas Jefferson, who once wrote: ‘The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.’
So as things stand it looks as though it’ll be quite some time before anything approaching a humane, civilised, and universal system of healthcare provision will come to pass in the land of the free.
Rosa Luxembourg’s ‘socialism or barbarism’ speech has never been more fitting.
Perhaps, however, the last word on the subject should go to Nye Bevan. In an essay on the NHS in 1952, he wrote:
‘A free Health Service is a triumphant example of the superiority of collective action and public initiative applied to a segment of society where commercial principles are seen at their worst’.
Exactly.







If I remember correctly, in his fine work The National Health Service: A Political History, Charles Wesbter makes the point that the foundations of the NHS were in fact put down by the Tories, and that some sort of NHS would have been instituted if the Tories had won in 1945. That should not surprise us. After all, throughout the NHS’s lifetime the differences in policy between Labour and Conservative have been relatively minor.
The only thing that surprises me is that anyone in their right minds outside the private medical industry would want to privatise the NHS, as New Labour wants to. Any sane capitalist needs an NHS so as to keep costs down in their respective industries. Look at the US. Leaving aside the US car giants inability to produce many models the rest of the world want to buy, many of the industry’s current difficulties can be found in the price of insuring its workers. The costs are crippling.
Comment by Tawfiq Chahboune — 13 August, 2009 @ 10:34 pm
Actually, the blueprint for the NHS was drawn up as part of the Beveridge Report of 1942, under the provisions of which Labour fought and won the 1945 General Election.
Comment by John Wight — 13 August, 2009 @ 10:43 pm
Health care is our national shame. Our seeming inability to do something about stems, in large part, from the easy convertibility of money into political influence, that is, corporate political power, another national shame.
In January 2008, Paul Krugman presciently wrote about what’s going on now:
“Whatever hopes people might have had that Mr. Clinton would usher in a new era of national unity were quickly dashed. Within just a few months the country was wracked by the bitter partisanship Mr. Obama has decried.
“This bitter partisanship wasn’t the result of anything the Clintons did. Instead, from Day 1 they faced an all-out assault from conservatives determined to use any means at hand to discredit a Democratic president.
* * *
“. . . Any Democrat who makes it to the White House can expect the same treatment: an unending procession of wild charges and fake scandals, dutifully given credence by major media organizations that somehow can’t bring themselves to declare the accusations unequivocally false (at least not on Page 1).”
But I would not give up all hope just yet. Public opinion surveys show Democratic voters remain strongly committed to the success of the Obama Administration, in general, and to reform of national health insurance, in particular. Especially if the economic data continue to show improvement, enough independents are likely to come round, and also see through the idiocy of the opposition ‘arguments.’ Never having seen Obama as a messiah-figure, however, I do fear that he may abandon a meaningful public option.
For a progressive, liberal, social democrat, democratic socialist in America — call us what you will — it’s steady work.
Comment by David A. Guberman — 13 August, 2009 @ 10:48 pm
i just finished nitghtshift in a surgical ward in dundee.
u want to see the reality of the nhs in 2009, the nhs is a good thing but reality of my world is being exhausted, stressful shifts where me and 2 other nurses are left to look after 30 seriously ill patients.
and now we read that the local health board is warning of savage cuts coming down the pipeline.This before the tories even get in.
I believe in the nhs, so do my colleagues and so do our patients.But the disparity of what it could be to what is actually delivered at the front line is too great.
but then i guess you could say that about most things in a profit driven society.
we should be proud of our nhs and fight tooth and nail to defend it. and make it better.
Comment by graham — 14 August, 2009 @ 10:07 am
Top article this. Good to see the great man Bevan being rolled out again so we can all remember what he managed to achieve.
He faced the same thing bringing in the NHS, the US is just about 100 years behind us on this
Comment by Bearded Socialist — 14 August, 2009 @ 10:59 am
Great to see Mr Guberman’s post from the US.
Watching some of the TV news reports over here from “small-town America,” it all looks quite unbelievable. Posters depicting Obama as a nazi with a Hitler moustache and placards saying :Socialized healthcare = death for grandmother.
Standing up to what seems to be becoming something of a loopy witchunt atmosphere will clearly be a tough task and we over here must try to offer support to US progressives like Mr Guberman in what appears to be shaping up to be a very tough fight indeed.
(So much for Andy Newman’s “liberal democracy” where our poor Gary McKinnon is being sent!!)
Comment by Communist — 14 August, 2009 @ 11:04 am
there is a few nut jobs in the US but i think there is more good americas then we first think but at home the back door privatisation is at work ,this MOST by show up .
Comment by steelcityred — 14 August, 2009 @ 6:53 pm
Scatland has something to do with that Untied Kingdom place, right? Must be next to Cuba because you’re all socialist fascists.
Seriously, the more deranged here in the good ole US of A have been calling Obama a fascist socialist. Which certainly demonstrates they haven’t a clue what either term means.
Great piece, John.
Comment by Bob Morris — 14 August, 2009 @ 7:15 pm