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“The cavalry, in white coats and scrubs”

From Organizing for America Director Mitch Stewart:

The cavalry is here — and they’re in white coats and scrubs: More than a half a million doctors and millions of nurses are joining forces to help pass real health reform.

Americans listen to their nurses and doctors when it comes to health reform — and for good reason. If we can help them amplify their voices, it’ll be a huge boost to our campaign for change.

So we’re working on a new television ad featuring their voices explaining why doctors and nurses so strongly support President Obama’s plan — and asking Congress to pass it. We’ll run the ad in key states and districts all around the country to show folks where health professionals stand, cut through the spin, and build even greater support for reform.

But to produce and air the new ad before the Senate starts debating a final bill, we’ll need to raise $300,000 by Thursday. Can you donate $25 right away?

Please donate

The American Medical Association, Doctors for America, and a dozen other physicians groups representing 500,000 doctors are endorsing reform. So are the American Nurses Association and other organizations representing millions of nurses.

They’re speaking out because they see the shortcomings of our health care system firsthand, every day: patients denied the care they prescribe, families losing access to their doctors, and a system that forces them to spend more time with paperwork and less time with patients.

These voices need to be heard — with so much deception out there clouding the debate, it’s critical that medical professionals are able to focus the country on the simple fact that health reform is good medicine.

But the final congressional committee could vote on their reform bill as early as Wednesday — and debate on final legislation could start by the end of the week. So if we’re going to help make these doctors and nurses’ voices heard, we’ll need to do it right now. Can you chip in $25 or more to help get our ad on the air?

https://donate.barackobama.com/HealthAd

Thanks,

Mitch

Mitch Stewart
Director
Organizing for America

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“We’ve got to keep this great group together”

As September draws to a close, across the country volunteers are continuing their tireless, methodical work to push for health insurance reform. From phonebanks to canvasses, public rallies to meetings with members of Congress, they’ve continued to push for reform, while carrying on the tradition of campaign that was unlike anything the political world had seen before.

From the St. Petersburg Times in Florida:

Almost every day across Florida and the country, one can find volunteers marching into congressional offices, manning phone banks, knocking on doors and collecting signed pledges of support for Obama’s health care reform goals. The group signed up more than 3,000 volunteers in August alone and has held more than 500 events across Florida since June 6, collecting nearly 100,000 forms from people showing support.

"We’re getting our voices out there," Robin Rosenbaum, regional field director for Organizing for America, told about three dozen enthusiastic University of South Florida and University of Tampa students writing letters to Sen. Bill Nelson and to newspapers Thursday night. "The more folks we have writing letters, the more change we’ll see."

… "I met so many cool, like-minded people. After the campaign ended, it was like, ‘We’ve got to keep this great group together,’" said Safety Harbor artist Malanda Schmitz, whose group, United 4 Change, remains active and recently organized a 100-person health care rally on the Courtney Campbell Causeway. She works closely with Organizing for America.

"Every person that I talk to that understands health reform a little better," Schmitz said, "then they can talk to one other person and help them understand a little better and it will grow from there."

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Announcing the “Health Reform Video Challenge”

Yesterday, OFA/DNC New Media Director Natalie Foster announced the kick-off of the Health Reform Video Challenge:

In many ways, the fight for health insurance reform comes down to a battle over information. The more people know about how broken the system is and the President’s plan to fix it, the more they want change. But there are an awful lot of lies to cut through, and a whole lot of truth to get out.

So today, we’re proud to announce a powerful new way for you to help: Organizing for America’s Health Reform Video Challenge.

This is your chance — you ingenious, insightful, funny people out there — to make a 30-second ad telling the story about why the status quo has got to go, or explaining how the Obama plan will ensure we get the secure, quality care we need without breaking the budget.

The top submissions will be voted on by the public and a panel of experts, with the winning ad aired on national television. This is your opportunity to add your voice and creativity to the debate, get some great exposure for your work, and make a huge difference.

Click here to get started.

Get Started

No experience is needed — if you have an idea, we want you to give it a shot. And if you know someone who is especially handy with a camera, please forward this note along right away. Just make sure you submit your ad by October 18th.

Your video could be as simple as you talking straight into the camera, as complex as a full-blown production with a script and special effects, or anything in between.

We’re looking for serious videos: You can tell your personal story about how the broken health insurance system has affected you. You can illustrate the big picture about what’s wrong now and how the President’s plan will help with animations, charts, and facts.

We’re looking for funny videos: You can parody those trying to scare us into inaction (between the lying pundits and the insurance company spin doctors, they’ve given us some good stuff to work with).

And we’re looking for new ideas we never would have thought of but we know will blow us all away.

We know that compelling videos can touch people in a way that words alone simply cannot. The messages that regular people put together will make a bigger difference than any false smears or slick ads the other side can dream up. And who knows — your creative, powerful, or touching video could help tip the balance in favor of health reform.

So go get started today!

http://my.barackobama.com/videochallenge

I can’t wait to see what you come up with,

Natalie

Natalie Foster
New Media Director

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The President’s Weekly Address: Progress with the G-20 in Pittsburgh

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“Mom, It’s Hokum. It’s a Bunch of Malarkey.â€

On Wednesday, Vice President Joe Biden and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius hosted a town hall meeting with seniors at Leisure World, a retirement community in Silver Spring, MD.

In recent weeks, Republicans have been attempting to scare America’s seniors with false statements about what reform would mean for Medicare – namely, that the President’s plan would result in benefit cuts. Vice President Biden delivered a passionate rebuke of those scare tactics and set the record straight. He explained that reform will preserve and strengthen Medicare, lower prescription drug costs, make preventive services free and eliminate overpayments to private insurance companies.

A few key points on President Obama’s plan and Medicare:

• President Obama is committed to protecting and strengthening Medicare for America’s seniors — Medicare beneficiaries will not experience any cuts in benefits as a result of reform.

• His plan doesn’t use a penny of the Medicare trust fund to pay for reform; instead, it eliminates waste, fraud and abuse to strengthen the financial health of the program.

• The President has proposed to eliminate waste from the Medicare Advantage program to strengthen the financial health of the overall program:

      • Medicare Advantage is part of the Medicare program that allows beneficiaries to receive services through private insurance plans.

      • Currently, private insurance companies that participate in Medicare Advantage receive significant subsidies from the government. Medicare pays those private plans 14 percent more on average than they pay traditional Medicare – but doesn’t result in any better care for seniors.

      • Putting an end to these overpayments will strengthen the Medicare program, extend its solvency and lower costs for all beneficiaries.

• The scare tactics on Medicare are just the latest in a series of politically motivated attacks by some Republicans to stall and kill reform.

• Republicans have never championed Medicare – they’ve been waging a war against the program for years. In fact, as recently as last April, 80 percent of House Republicans voted to “end Medicare as we know it” by turning it into a voucher program that would have provided seniors a fixed sum of money to purchase private insurance, a plan one AARP policy official called “a very dangerous idea.”

Vice President Biden and Secretary Sebelius also released a new HHS report at Leisure World — Health Insurance Reform and Medicare: Making Medicare Stronger for America’s Seniors.

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Reality Check: Medicare Benefits Won’t Be Cut

A common lie being perpetrated about health insurance reform is that it will cut your medicare benefits. This simply isn’t true. Reform will, however, eliminate unwarranted taxpayer subsidies to private insurers that do nothing to improve your quality of care, and cost all beneficiaries more. And these subsidies will only go up in the future! Mike Hash, from the White House Office of Health Reform, explains the reality in this video:

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Watch Live: President Obama Chairs the UN Security Council Meeting

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President Obama at the U.N. General Assembly: “Join us in building the future that our people deserve”

This morning, nine months after taking office, President Obama made his first address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York. He spoke to the world leaders gathered there about their skepticism regarding America’s engagement with the international community, and reflected on how he has worked to change that in his first months as President of the United States.

I took office at a time when many around the world had come to view America with skepticism and distrust. Part of this was due to misperceptions and misinformation about my country. Part of this was due to opposition to specific policies, and a belief that on certain critical issues, America has acted unilaterally, without regard for the interests of others. This has fed an almost reflexive anti-Americanism, which too often has served as an excuse for our collective inaction.

Like all of you, my responsibility is to act in the interest of my nation and my people, and I will never apologize for defending those interests. But it is my deeply held belief that in the year 2009 – more than at any point in human history – the interests of nations and peoples are shared.

The religious convictions that we hold in our hearts can forge new bonds among people, or tear us apart. The technology we harness can light the path to peace, or forever darken it. The energy we use can sustain our planet, or destroy it. What happens to the hope of a single child – anywhere – can enrich our world, or impoverish it.

…This is what we have done. But this is just a beginning. Some of our actions have yielded progress. Some have laid the groundwork for progress in the future. But make no mistake: this cannot be solely America’s endeavor. Those who used to chastise America for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world’s problems alone. We have sought – in word and deed – a new era of engagement with the world. Now is the time for all of us to take our share of responsibility for a global response to global challenges.

The President then called on the nations of the world to engage in a new cooperative effort to secure international peace and prosperity. And he outlined four pillars that he believes essential to securing that prosperous future: non-proliferation and disarmament; the promotion of peace and security; the preservation of our planet; and a global economy that advances opportunity for all people.

This body was founded on the belief that the nations of the world could solve their problems together. Franklin Roosevelt, who died before he could see his vision for this institution become a reality, put it this way – and I quote: “The structure of world peace cannot be the work of one man, or one party, or one Nation…. It cannot be a peace of large nations – or of small nations. It must be a peace which rests on the cooperative effort of the whole world.”

The cooperative effort of the whole world. Those words ring even more true today, when it is not simply peace – but our very health and prosperity that we hold in common. Yet I also know that this body is made up of sovereign states. And sadly, but not surprisingly, this body has often become a forum for sowing discord instead of forging common ground; a venue for playing politics and exploiting grievances rather than solving problems. After all, it is easy to walk up to this podium and to point fingers and stoke division. Nothing is easier than blaming others for our troubles, and absolving ourselves of responsibility for our choices and our actions. Anyone can do that.

Responsibility and leadership in the 21st century demand more. In an era when our destiny is shared, power is no longer a zero sum game. No one nation can or should try to dominate another nation. No world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will succeed. No balance of power among nations will hold. The traditional division between nations of the south and north makes no sense in an interconnected world. Nor do alignments of nations rooted in the cleavages of a long gone Cold War.

Finally, he called on those assembled in the chamber to recommit to The United Nations as an institution, and to work together to build a strong future for all world peoples.

Now it falls to us – for this institution will be what we make of it. The United Nations does extraordinary good around the world in feeding the hungry, caring for the sick, and mending places that have been broken. But it also struggles to enforce its will, and to live up to the ideals of its founding.

I believe that those imperfections are not a reason to walk away from this institution – they are a calling to redouble our efforts. The United Nations can either be a place where we bicker about outdated grievances, or forge common ground; a place where we focus on what drives us apart, or what brings us together; a place where we indulge tyranny, or a source of moral authority. In short, the United Nations can be an institution that is disconnected from what matters in the lives of our citizens, or it can be indispensable in advancing the interests of the people we serve.

We have reached a pivotal moment. The United States stands ready to begin a new chapter of international cooperation – one that recognizes the rights and responsibilities of all nations. With confidence in our cause, and with a commitment to our values, we call on all nations to join us in building the future that our people deserve.

Read the full remarks at WhiteHouse.gov.

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Vice President Biden at the National Association of Insurance Commissioners: “An unsustainable position”

Yesterday, Vice President Joe Biden addressed a meeting of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners at Maryland’s National Harbor. He concentrated on the rapidly rising costs of health care in America, a factor in the debate known all too well to those charged with regulating our state insurance markets.

Vice President Biden also spoke about reform as a "moral issue," noting that no one can truly be secure in their insurance with our current system. Check out highlights from the speech below, or read the full remarks at WhiteHouse.gov.

You understand first-hand this crisis. You’ve seen the impact on families, and on businesses, of the skyrocketing insurance premiums. You’ve seen the pressure it places on hard-working Americans and on businesses, who in my view overwhelmingly want to do the right thing by their employees by providing health — decent health coverage, but are put in a really difficult spot.

And you’re working hard each and every day to combat these problems and to stop the unjustifiable increases in health care costs and insurance costs, I should say, in just as — just look at what you’ve been up against. I know you know it, but it’s important the public know it. A report released by the White House today finds that health insurance premiums in states have gone up between 90 and 150 percent in the last decade, far faster than wages and inflation.

…All around the country — all around the country we’re seeing these gaps widen. And all in all, there was a 5.5 percent rise in premiums for families just this past year. During this Great Recession, when inflation actually fell [point] 7 percent. Inflation fell [point] 7 percent, and premiums increased 5.5 percent.

So the soaring premiums are not only hurting families and killing small businesses, they’re hurting our competitive position all around the world. But as the report points out, they’re hurting — they’re hurting our whole free enterprise system. They’re hurting our ability to compete — the business — of business competing internationally.

…To state the obvious, this is simply an unsustainable position. Families, businesses, state budgets, our national economy — all demand a significant change. And you’re stuck in the middle of it all. You’re stuck in the middle of it all. You read the letters. You see the tears. The people — if it’s like my state of Delaware and a lot of small states, people actually importune you on the street. They know who you are. They know your job. They come up to you. I’ll bet you if I went around the room of insurance commissioners here, and ask you just to give me 10 stories, 10 stories you know first-hand from people literally approaching you — at your home, your neighborhood, the grocery store, the football game, church — it would be a literal saga. Well, it’s happening all across America.

…I want to restore stability in our health care system. And there are basic ground rules we need right now. One, no discrimination for preexisting conditions; no exorbitant out-of-pocket expenses, deductible or copays; no cost sharing for preventive care; no dropping of coverage for the seriously ill; no gender discrimination; no annual lifetime caps on coverage — (applause) — extended coverage for young adults; guaranteed insurance renewal.

…And far from running insurance companies out of business, we will be building the best thing about today’s — building on the best things about today’s system, with more competition, more choice for customers — and for the insurance companies, more customers, paying customers.

So when our critics say — the third argument I hear is they say, well, this is not a moral issue. And some of us say there is a moral component to this. Well, tell that to the father who is fighting cancer and is told that his insurance won’t cover any more treatment, because he’s reached the annual limits. Tell that to a little girl who is in a full body cast, requires speech and physical therapy to recover only to be denied coverage for that therapy because it’s deemed "maintenance" rather than "recovery." I could go to you and you could give me 25 other stories about why this is and does have a moral component to it. Or the mother with a diabetic child who is trying to cover the cost of insulin her child needs just to stay alive.

…So there’s got to be a solution. Now, I’m confident that the one we are proposing is just the solution we need. But let’s face it. Let’s face it, there’s a dire need to make this work. According to a stark report issued last week at Harvard University, as many as 45,000 people per year die owing to a lack of health insurance — 45,000 individuals, according to a Harvard study. How is that possible?

…If we do nothing, in 10 years one in every $5 Americans earn will be spent on health care; in 30 years, one out of every $3 will be spent on health care if we do not bend the cost curve. Spending by the federal government on Medicare and Medicaid alone will be 15 percent of GDP by 2040 — it’s now about 5 percent. Right now about 46 percent of health care is government funded through Medicare and Medicaid.

…You support reform. You’ve said it in your health care reform principles. You said we need to protect consumers and increase the affordability and access to insurance. You all get it. You know better than almost anyone about the inefficiencies, the cost shifting — the bad practices that presently corrode our health care system. You know these reforms will only serve to strengthen the vital work that you do each and every day. You’re the best equipped to educate consumers. You are the best equipped to field complaints. You’re the best equipped to serve as a critical line of defense against the abuse and fraud that had crushed families, crushed businesses, and crushed the dreams of millions of Americans. And you’ll remain so.

Folks, the problem is real. The need for reform is acute, and the time is now. The poet Virgil once said the greatest wealth is health. The greatest wealth is health. Well, we’re here to improve America’s health, and in the process not incidentally secure and maintain America’s wealth. They are not separable.

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Listen Live: Vice President Biden Hosts Town Hall on Health Insurance Reform and Seniors

UPDATED: Today’s town hall has ended, but we’ll have more coverage of the Vice President later in the day.

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