EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT
Participate in the landmark, once-in-lifetime Candlelight Vigil to honor the Dead…Because we can’t allow the death of another uninsured American in these United States (Inspired by Rep. Alan Grayson)
Date: Sunday, October 18, 2009
Time: 7:00pm – 8:00pm
Location: State House
Street: 1101 Gervais Street
City/Town: Columbia, SC
Description
In a grassroots movement, we are coming together to honor those who die from lack of health care — we
are anticipating between 500-1,000 attendees at this event; including a number of political candidates.
• Nearly 45,000 people die in the US each year because they lack health insurance and cannot get quality care. That equals out to roughly one death every 12 minutes in the United States.
• In 2008, 46.3 million people in the United States lacked health insurance coverage.
Friends, health care reform can’t wait. America can’t wait. Our brothers and sisters can’t wait. Our children can’t wait. One person every 12 minutes…how many more are we going to allow to die needlessly on our watch?
Kindly consider attending, and spreading the word! If you’re not in SC, consider hosting your own candlelight vigil simultaneously in your town!
Event sign up on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=152493552557&index=1
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Would you please be so kind to put out a blast about this ASAP? Thank you — contact me @ cbaileylloyd@gmail.com or the Midlands PDA http://midlandsprogressivedemocrats.wordpress.com (Progressive Democrats of America) if you would like more details



2 Comments







We need to redefine the common notions associated with healthcare. Obviously, healthcare is not just being treated by a doctor. Good nutrition and physical exercise are forms of healthcare. National defense is also a form of healthcare. We need to protect our bodies from harmful bacteria, viruses, terrorists, and invading armies. If we, as a nation, are willing to fund national defense initiatives to protect American lives than we should also be willing to federally fund decent healthcare for all Americans to protect their lives.
As a nation, we are obviously willing to spend tremendous human and monetary resources to defend us from external forces. Just considering the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — we have lost many lives; many more have been physically and mentally injured; we have spent billions of dollars on waging the wars; and we have diverted precious human and physical resources away from more economically productive endeavors. In the Iraq war alone, over 4,000 soldiers have died and over 30,000 American soldiers have been injured. The military expenditure of human resources and monetary capital has been terribly expensive.
By a conservative estimate, the United States military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost our nation well over $900 billion and the cost is steadily increasing. However, the actual cost is largely a secondary consideration mainly because our nation has been galvanized to defend ourselves from terrorist attacks. We are very motivated in our battle to save American lives from external forces. And because lives are at stake, our national defense has been performed without any notion of budget deficit neutrality.
National defense is a form of national healthcare. We are quite willing to spend whatever is needed to protect us from external threats. Unfortunately, as a nation, we’re unwilling to protect all of our citizens by providing healthcare for them. Each year many people in this country die because they don’t have healthcare coverage at all or because they don’t have adequate healthcare coverage. Two reputable studies report we currently have either 20,000 or 45,000 people in the US dying each year because of a lack of healthcare coverage (Institute of Medicine study – “Analysis on the Impact of Uninsurance on Mortality” at http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/411588_uninsured_dying.pdf and Harvard study – “Health Insurance and Mortality in U.S. Adults” at http://www.ncpa.org/pdfs/2009_harvard_health_study.pdf). If we average the total deaths per year from the 2 studies, that’s 32,500 people dying each year just because they don’t have healthcare coverage.
To many of us, the fact that 32,500 people needlessly die each year is a flat statistic. Please allow me to animate it. The number of people in the US dying each year for lack of healthcare coverage is approximately the same as the number of students enrolled at one of our large universities. If this degree of mortality occurred at universities over 8 years, it’s like all University of Iowa students died one year; all University of Utah students died the next year; all Boston University students died the next year; all University of Tennessee students died the next year; all George Mason University students died the next year; all Colorado State University students died the next year; all University of Kansas students died the next year; and all San Diego State University students died the next year. This represents more than 230,000 people dying in 8 years simply because they didn’t have healthcare coverage. This is a disaster and it is preventable!
President Obama and many other elected representatives have stated they want a healthcare reform bill that will not increase the federal deficit. Given the annual death toll from insufficient healthcare coverage, how can we ever begin to consider that this problem should only be solved in a manner that doesn’t increase government spending?!? Have we as a people and our democratically-elected representatives lost our minds? I’m outraged at this type of mean-spirited solution. We need to stop the needless suffering and dying in this country by supporting decent healthcare coverage for all – even if we have to spend some money to do it. It’s worth it.
Thank you for taking the time to respond — I am hopeful we will get a BIG turnout. We need to put SC back on the map in a more positive light; and hopefully, will encourage others to support real health care reform because our citizens desperately need it. :)