Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is an Obamacare Bus Bringing Salvation to the Mississippi Delta?
Is an Obamacare Bus Bringing Salvation to the Mississippi Delta?
Jul 5, 2025 9:10 PM

Images of Mississippi needing federal assistance are iconic. Robert F. Kennedy’s 1967 trip to Mississippi’s Delta region produced images of poverty not unlike LBJ’s War on Poverty tour. Jennifer Haberkorn has written a piece at Politico titled, “Obamacare enrollment rides a bus into the Mississippi Delta.” Her snooty lede to the story reads: “In the poorest state in the nation, where supper is fried, bars allow smoking, chronic disease is rampant and doctors are hard e by, Obamacare rolls into town in a lime green bus.”

It appears the author believes Obamacare could bring the good news of salvation if only Mississippians skeptical of the federal government would let it. Haberkorn writes:

The effort in Mississippi illustrates the obstacles the health law must e in many parts of the country, particularly in deeply conservative areas where antipathy toward Washington mixes with challenges of geography, education and general skepticism or ignorance of the Affordable Care Act. High rates of poverty and disease — which mark much of this state — don’t necessarily aid recruitment. Add the strident opposition of GOP leaders and enrollment gets that much tougher.

Haberkorn cherry picks a couple of positive stories where heavily subsidized consumers will save money under the Obamacare program, but totally ignores a ponent of all the skepticism with the plan. Obamacare premiums in Mississippi are the third highest in the nation, only surpassed by Alaska and Wyoming. As of September 2013, a mid range plan cost $448 monthly, with costs expected to rise.

Governor Phil Bryant has already turned down Medicaid expansion, which would have burdened the state to the point of bankruptcy. Mississippi will hand over 20 percent of their entire state budget to Medicaid in 2014. That leaves less money for education, infrastructure, public safety and other essential budgetary items. While those enrolled in Medicaid has expanded in Mississippi since the 1970s, the overall health of Mississippians has declined.

Instead of reforming the root problems of health care in Mississippi, Obamacare is exacerbating a climate that is making healthcare less affordable and less accessible for most citizens. An estimated 5 millions Americans have lost their health insurance coverage because of Obamacare. As the federal government races towards its own budget crisis, the cost for states of partnering with Washington in the entitlement business is lethal.

Poverty and dependency in the Mississippi Delta is plex problem. Like the systemic poverty of other regions, government programs hamper economic growth as well as the family and moral stability. It’s also not a region that can’t be painted with a broad brush as the author of the Politico piece does. It’s a problem best solved by Mississippians. The federal government and Obamacare has made a lot of promises to poorer states like Mississippi over the years and many of those problems have only grown worse. The entitlement relationship that states have with the federal government must be reversed. And some of the new leadership in the state is starting to take the necessary steps towards doing that for the first time.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
A modest, utopian proposal for the border crisis: commerce
The Democrats had their first presidential primary debate last week, and immigration was a central focus both nights. Poor conditions of refugees and others detained crossing the southern border have been in the news all year. The influx of immigrants in the last year has been so constant that detainment facilities are grossly overcrowded, to the point that the Trump administration has had to fly people to facilities in other states, according to one report this May. Indeed, while details...
The ghosts in Xi Jinping’s China Dream
Early on in Ma Jian’s new novel the main character has a vision: I saw elderly men and women smashing rocks against the ground under the steely gaze of teenage Red Guards. Among the sweat-drenched faces caked in dust, I saw my father looking up at me. There are many anguished recollections in the book but this one carries a special poignancy. It is central to a story that shows how the personal (with a hint of parricidal guilt) and...
Who are the EU leadership candidates?
The slate for the top positions in the European Union has been released, and the process of selecting candidates was nearly as discouraging as the nominees chosen. Ursula von der Leyen, who was chosen to e the next president of the European Commission, has particularly concerning views on economics. So, too, does Christine Lagarde, who would move from the IMF to the European Central Bank. Nomination chaos: The nomination ultimately ignored the agree-upon process ofSpitzenkandidat: Each of the European Parliament’s...
6 Quotes: Calvin Coolidge on religion and the Declaration of Independence
Tomorrow, for the 243rd anniversary celebration of Independence Day, President Trump will give a speech on the National Mall. As with all such addresses in the modern age, Trump’s remarks will pared to the presidential gold standard for Fourth of July speeches—Calvin Coolidge’s speech on the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Coolidge was so famous for his taciturnity that he earned the nickname “Silent Cal.” But when he did speak he could be moving and profound. Such was...
Dostoevsky: An author for all seasons
“Conservatism,” wrote Russell Kirk, “is the negation of ideology.” Kirk’s tradition rejects ideology, because “[t]he ideologues who promise the perfection of man and society have converted a great part of the twentieth-century world into a terrestrial hell.” The same view shaped one of the great canons of modern literature: Fyodor Dostoevsky’sThe Brothers Karamazov, writes Mihail Neamtu in a new essay for the Acton Institute’sReligion & Liberty Transatlantic website. As an added bonus, the essay is panied by a video of...
Is social media the source of our social problems?
The British economist John Kay made a powerful argument in his 2011 book Obliquity: Why our goals are best achieved indirectly that the best way to achieve plex of broadly defined goal is indirectly through a gradual process of risk taking and discovery. Means help us to discover ends, and thus our journeys through life are an integral part of our destinations. We see this in our ordinary lives all the time as chance encounters, casual conversations, and even moments...
Acton Line podcast: Antifa explained; America’s Founders in the crosshairs
On June 29, violent riots between alt-right groups and Antifa broke out in Portland, Oregon, leaving several people with severe injuries. Portland is ing a hotbed for violent, left-wing groups. Who is Antifa and what are they protesting? Rev. Ben Johnson, senior editor at Acton, joins the podcast to explain the events of the protest and Antifa’s objective. After that, Craig Bruce Smith, professor of history at William Woods University, joins the show to bring attention to an increasing dismissal...
The dangers of fiscal policy
Note: This is post #127 in a weekly video series on basic economics. In the early 2000s, Argentina’s debt reached 150 percent of GDP, leading to what was the largest government default in the history of the world. How does this happen? Why makes a country take on too much debt? In this video by Marginal Revolution University, economist Alex Tabarrok explains some of the dangers of fiscal policy. (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d...
Corruption’s consequences
Walmart agreed last month to a $282 million settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice, resolving charges of bribing foreign officials. pany mitted themselves to “acting ethically everywhere we operate,” reports indicate that Walmart allowed third parties in China, Mexico, India, and Brazil to make payments to government officials. Of course, while a $282 million settlement would ruin many corporations, it will barely dent the over $100 billion in profits that Walmart brought in last...
‘Regulated leisure’, the basis of culture?
Every summer, as I prepare for much needed vacation, I am reminded of my favorite book, Josef Pieper’s Leisure: The Basis of Culture. It was written by the neo-Thomistic philosopher who condemned a world of “total work.” The context in which Pieper’s masterpiece was authored is his native Germany in the late-1940s during a furious rebuilding of Europe after the Second World War. He argues for making time for not just rest, recreation, and the arts in our day, but...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved