Resist net and the TEABAGGERS have launched a massive call-in campaign and are bombarding the progressive members of Congress.

@SandiBehms has written about this here (but do NOT go there yet)

There is only an hour left to this critical day.  We need thousands of volunteers to

call Nancy Pelosi RIGHT NOW @ 202-225-4965,

and tell her: The Senate bill must pass, and use reconciliation for the public option.

You will probably get a fast busy signal, but they answered my calls twice after 10 seconds of it. 

When you get through, tell the operator that you have a message for the speaker, and you get patched through to the voice mail where you can leave the message.

If Box full, or you just can't get thru, divert to Sen. Harry Reid

202-224-3542

Thanks!

 

 

Organizing for America Volunteers,

I grew up in Massachusetts – with Teddy Kennedy as my Senator – and I was heartbroken when he died last fall as his life's work – reforming the health care system in America – was being negotiated in the halls of Congress. The health reform legislation that has passed the House and Senate are bills that would have made Teddy proud. Now that the final votes are coming up, we need to preserve our 60th vote on health reform and the other critical issues that face the American people.

There is a special election on January 19 (Tuesday) to fill Teddy's Senate seat, and it is urgent that we help Massachusetts recruit volunteers who will "Get Out The Vote!" Let's work together to ensure that Democrat Martha Coakley (MA Attorney General) carries on Teddy's legacy as a great progressive Senator from the Bay State.

Please help my home state, and make as many calls as you can TODAY and over the weekend. I am making calls today, please join me. With only a few days left, we need to rally our Rapid Response teams, neighborhood teams, and personally pick up the phones to make this happen.

3 Ways You Can Help:

  1. Host a phonebank: Contact norcal@ofaca.com for more information about hosting a phonebank and post your event here at: http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/create?source=sidenav
  2. Attend a phonebank: Find a phonebank near you: http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/search_simple?source=mybobar
  3. Make Calls from home (see instructions below)
GET A VOLUNTEER RECRUITMENT CALL LIST: http://my.barackobama.com/CoakleyVol/R1

(If this link has problems, try http://my.barackobama.com/CoakleyVol/R3

Please distribute this link and these instructions on how to make these neighbor-to-neighbor volunteer recruitment calls to your volunteers and teams.

Neighbor-to-Neighbor Quick Reference

1. LOG IN TO MYBO www.my.barackobama.com


If users do not have an account, they will need to create one in order to use the Neighbor-to-Neighbor calling tool.

(New MyBO accounts need to click the N2N link, fill out their full address, and may have to wait up to 10 minutes for Neighbor-to-Neighbor to grant access)




2. GET A VOLUNTEER RECRUITMENT CALL LIST



http://my.barackobama.com/CoakleyVol/R1

If this link does not work, you can use

http://my.barackobama.com/CoakleyVol/R3


3. MAKE CALLS

If you need more calls: click "GET MORE NEIGHBORS"

To print, select "PRINT CALL LIST"

4. ENTER YOUR CALL DATA AND REPORT YOUR TALLIES

All Data must be entered into the MYBO account that generated the list.

All Phone Banks need to be reported in National Field.

All virtual phone banks (calling from home) should be inputted at: http://tiny.cc/YOyrq


5. IF YOU NEED HELP

Check out the N2N user guide:

http://www.ofacalifornia.org/ofa/documents/N2NUserGuide12409.pdf

Help line: 1-866-495-2004

Ruby Reid
Regional Field Director – Northern California
Organizing for America

I find no shame in admitting that this entire health care issue can be  mind numbingly complex.  Reading clear explanations of them can really help.  If you have items for this page, please post them as a comment.

Why Do We Need Individual Mandates?

Because, the argument goes, it ensures there are enough health people paying into the system to keep costs and premiums down, and keep the entire scheme solvent.  The Reform bills are insurance solutions, not entitlement programs. Without that mandate, only sick people who can't or won't get insurance elsewhere would buy in, jacking the price up so high, that everyone pulls out.

The Case For Mandates, Uwe E. Reinhardt

Thus, both theory and the empirical record teach us that if we want to impose guaranteed issue and community rating on the private health insurance market — even within age bands — then we should be prepared also to impose on individuals a fairly strict mandate to have insurance.

Uwe E. Reinhardt (1936- ) is the James Madison Professor of Political Economy at Princeton University. bio

Why we need a Mandate, by Ezra Klein

This is called an insurance death spiral. If the people who think they're healthy now decide to wait until they need insurance to purchase it, the cost increases, which means the next healthiest group leaves, which jacks up costs again, and so forth.

Why We Need an Individual Mandate, CNN Money

Thus, while the individual mandate is necessary to make these markets work, it is also necessary to provide subsides to lower and middle class households who wouldn’t be able to purchase the insurance without such help.

 

Do Republicans Support or Oppose  Mandates?

Almost universally opposed (this month).

For Them Before They Were Against Them

Sen. Olympia Snow Opposes Them

Michelle Malkin and Hot Air Opposes Them

 

Do Liberals Support or Oppose

Opposes Mandates

Markos Moulitsas, Daily Kos

Strip out the mandate, and the rest of the bill is palatable. It's not reform, but it's progress in the right direction. And you can still go back and tinker with it at a later time.

Keith Olbermann, @MSNBC

And it completely delights Republicans. See this Newsbusters orgasm over his special comment.

 

Supports Mandates

Can Democrats Govern? Joe Klein, Time

There are those who say that Democrats shouldn't favor any system that continues to include private insurers. Good luck with that. I've been covering these issues for 40 years and I've come to this conclusion: anything that actually helps people is good, whether or not it fits into an ideological pattern.

The Left Is Playing With Fire, Jonathan Cohn, New Republic

I'm all for a loud, angry left. If nothing else, we need it to balance out the loud, angry right. But there's a fine line between being constructive and destructive. This latest gambit, I think, crosses it.

 

Are There Alternatives To An Individual Mandate?

Paul Starr's "5 Year Opt-out" Plan  — Basically, prevent people from dropping coverage until they are sick, but providing a penalty box timeout before they can buy back into the system.  I like punishing the stupid this way, but of course, we'll have a lot of stupid people who get sick.  Who pays for them when that happens?  We do. That said, this may still be a reasonable way to appease the people who want to bring the whole reform plan down over the existence of a mandate on which the entire plan rests.

Under my proposal, you could decide not to pay for insurance and therefore not to receive those subsidies for five years. After that time, you could reconsider and decide whether or not to take another five-year opt out. But what you could not do is go back and forth at will, paying for insurance only when you're sick and then dropping insurance when you're healthy. There is no health-insurance system in the world that allows people to do that. And to think that we could start out that way is just plain silly.

 


Related

Pass the Bill, by Paul Krugman