Socialists of Caltech
Healthcare and Disability Working Group
Mission
Under capitalism, the means of production and indeed the means of life itself are controlled by the capitalist class. Medical services, a crucial necessity for survival, become commodified and privatized such that healthcare becomes inaccessible and expensive for the working class. In the US, in particular, healthcare access is controlled by private health insurers, whose plans are offered to workers through their employers. This further ties one’s livelihood to the capitalist system, as access to medical care is tethered to one’s employment.
Decommodifying Health Care
Private health insurers reap enormous profits by imposing barriers that restrict access to healthcare. These restrictions include increasing premiums and out-of-pocket costs as well as plans that don’t cover certain types of treatment. For example, United Healthcare, which administers the Caltech student insurance plan, posted record profits in the spring of 2020, while also increasing the cost of the plan so significantly that Caltech administrators cut student insurance benefits to offset this cost increase. The fight for high-quality, affordable health insurance at Caltech is a symptom of this broader failure of the American medical system, in particular the private insurance industry. In order to make medical care available to all who need it, we must nationalize health insurance, and ultimately the entire private healthcare system.
The privatization of medical services harms chronically ill and disabled people the most, as it further limits their participation in a society built to exclude them from the workforce and public and private spaces in general. It forces chronically ill and disabled people to one the one hand consume high-cost, private medical services while at the same time being excluded from employment on account that our bodies “deviate from the norm,” a norm conceptualized around what would be most profitable for a capitalist. As socialists, then, we seek to build worker solidarity and power in our communities by 1) advocating for the decommodification of all medical services and 2) pressuring Caltech to offer a health insurance plan that works for all workers, and especially for chronically ill and disabled workers.
“The disability category was essential to the development of an exploitable workforce in early capitalism and remains indispensable as an instrument of the state in controlling the labor supply today …The disability benefit system thus serves as a socially legitimized means by which the capitalist class can avoid hiring or retaining nonstandard workers and can “morally” shift the cost of supporting them onto poverty-based government programs—thereby perpetuating their poverty.”
– Marta Russell
“Being oppressed means the absence of choices.”
– bell hooks
“There is often talk of human rights, but it is also necessary to talk of the rights of humanity. Why should some people walk barefoot, so that others can travel in luxurious cars? Why should some live for thirty-five years, so that others can live for seventy years? Why should some be miserably poor, so that others can be hugely rich? I speak on behalf of the children in the world who do not have a piece of bread. I speak on the behalf of the sick who have no medicine, of those whose rights to life and human dignity have been denied.”
– Fidel Castro
Current Projects
- Organizing for a high quality, affordable Caltech student health insurance plan with Caltech for Affordable Healthcare (CAH). SoC initiated the CAH campaign to oppose cuts to student health insurance benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic. We seek to pressure Caltech into offering a health insurance plan that works for all students, especially those who are chronically ill or disabled. Read CAH’s petition here, as well as SoC’s endorsement and critical analysis of the fight for better student health insurance.
- SoC members also collaborate with the Caltech Disability Coalition
To get involved, please use the contact form at the bottom of the page, email CAH at caltechaffordablehealthcare@gmail.com, or email the Caltech Disability Coalition at disabilityco@caltech.edu.
Past Projects
- Organized a local Pasadena action in solidarity with National Nurses United on the Medicare for All Day of Action, which involved chalking and postering our neighborhoods and then coming together to discuss the ways the privatized medical system has harmed us and our communities (August 2020)
- Worked with the California Nurses Association to canvas for The Healthy California Act (SB-562), which aimed to created a state-level, single-payer healthcare plan (2017)