Healthcare
Where our wealth is
I continue to organize for a prosecution of crimes committed as part of the development and implementation of the Affordable Care Act. I believe the severity of these crimes requires legal intercession in the form of appropriate judicial process, or potentially even a Congressional Hearing specific to its role in using people and their property for undisclosed processes that violate the Constitution. This also entails an investigation of practices connected to the use of prescription medications — specifically psychotropics — in the unfolding of these practices.
As such I intend to request a private, third-party audit of the major pharmaceutical companies that participated in the Affordable Care Act marketplace specific to their relationship with MediCare Part D and including any Medicare or Social Security support they got for any clinical trials. This would also include appropriations via the Food and Drug Administration. This would be a one-time offer to provide at their own behest this audit PRIOR to the election with an understanding that their cooperation would be considered cooperation with a federal investigation of a Criminal Drug Enterprise and would be reflected as such.
There should also be a comprehensive audit of the Social Security trust, including its fixed-asset program, to assure that there has not been any breach of the legal requirements regarding its status as a trust in the last ten years specifically. This audit can assure that any fixed-assets used in valuations of the Social Security system are accurate. It can also provide an appropriate foundation for assessing the intangible property costs associated with the Affordable Care Act’s implementation and impact on the rest of the economy.
I support a national campaign to address needed infrastructure overhauls with the purchase and provision of compost toilets in accordance with both rural and urban needs. Hygiene and sanitation are one of the major factors in considerations of sickness and disease. Additionally, one of the major consumers of local and national water resources is in its use for disposal of human biological waste. We can address our need to redefine our relationship with water and begin to take greater responsibility for our own role in addressing our healthcare needs by starting with that which is usually considered the most undesirable topic — human biological waste.
We should also offer incentives to workplaces to invest in options that increase their employee health, including even implementing a national program on a competitive basis that rewards workplaces or areas for their wellness. This is not my original idea, to be sure, and I do believe that others are recommending something comparable. I do, however, agree with this philosophy and see it as a great opportunity to redefine our concepts of responsibility in addressing public — and private — healthcare needs.
Appropriate healthcare also requires appropriate provider training. I contend there has been too much of a focus on directing our labor sector and future economy into the proliferation of jobs and technology associated with healthcare without also assuring that those in the appropriate positions are accountable for the influence they have on people’s health, well-being and other material resource access. This includes not only healthcare providers, but also legal representatives, people in the technology sector, and “investors” in healthcare that include public-private partnerships around other resources connected to or through healthcare access. A great deal of the value of the People of the United States is in literacy on and implementation of processes by which individuals can benefit from the role of “data” and “information” connected to healthcare.