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[personal profile] calimac
I've just spent two and a half hours on the phone with Medicare representatives, trying to straighten out a problem with my late mother's claims.  That's on top of the hour I spent yesterday on the same thing.

Am I ready to disavow my liberal faith in government and let the lean and mean private sector take over our business?  Absolutely not, and here's why.

1) Most of these people were actually trying to be helpful, even if they didn't know anything, and went beyond the call of duty in trying to get me information.  Especially the last one, who was in the wrong department, but who listened when I explained that hers was the only department I could reach, and who really went the extra mile by contacting the right department (unreachable by outside phone) and getting a definitive answer, and chatting agreeably as we waited.

2) These departments that I was communicating with were those of a private contractor, not the government in the strict sense.  And I reached them because I was given the number by a volunteer assistance program whose representatives also took a little extra effort to help.

3) All around, it was far less frustrating than the oceans of time I spent waiting on hold and being shuttled back and forth to the same numbers that had previously been unable to help me, and being assured that something was done when it was not done, and being told I should have asked the previous person to do something they'd told me they could not do, that I had trying to set up AT&T internet service a few years ago.  In this case today, when I reported that someone else could not help me, I was listened to, and something else was tried.

Winston Churchill once said (quoting an old proverb, or so he claimed) that democracy was the worst form of government except for all the others.  So I can say that government bureaucracies are the worst bureaucracies in the world, except for all the corporate ones.

Date: 2014-07-15 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sturgeonslawyer.livejournal.com
If you think of the current crop of 435 congresscritters as "ombudsmen" or "useful"... Well, just if.

Date: 2014-07-15 07:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
Of course they can be. Your member of Congress is Barbara Lee. Don't tell me you think she's in the pocket of the government agencies and refuses to help constituents. My congressman is the one who called on the UN to oversee US elections after the 2000 debacle. His proposal didn't get very far, but was it ever in the right place. Even conservative representatives like to help their constituents with the federal bureaucracy, especially when they can use it to show how much they dislike the federal bureaucracy.

Naturally it doesn't always work, but it's certainly more reliable than the satisfaction one would get by thinking that if you don't like AT&T, you can just switch to Comcast. Now that's self-evidently stupid.

Date: 2014-07-15 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sturgeonslawyer.livejournal.com
I agree that AT&T vs. Comcast is a game of two-card monte, and that most such choices are. But not trusting corporations (which, in general, I don't) doesn't make the government trustworthy. That's a false dichotomy - you can trust both, or neither. What I trust is laws (and a Constitution) that rein in the power of both, and policing organizations (especially the press ... which has become something of a joke, alas) to tend to those laws (and Constitution).

Date: 2014-07-15 08:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
doesn't make the government trustworthy

Did you read my last paragraph? Did you read my post at all? Did you think I enjoyed 3.5 hours dealing with bureaucracy? All I said was ... it could be worse, and with corporations it probably would be.

You say you trust the laws ... it's the government which makes and enforces those laws. As we are now sometimes seeing, the value of the laws lies in the trust the government deserves to abide by them, because if it chooses not to, it's trouble.

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