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Healthcare: by Jake Silberg and Ben Donald

The REAL Act would provide federal funding for comprehensive sex education programs in schools, which have been shown to delay sexual activity and increase contraceptive use compared to abstinence-only programs. FOCA would codify the right to abortion established by Roe v. Wade in response to increasing restrictions on reproductive rights. The authors, two high school students, argue that these bills are important to ensure teens have access to medically accurate information and women can make their own healthcare decisions. They thank the senator for supporting these issues and urge continued backing of comprehensive sex education and reproductive rights

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Dan Cohen
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
149 views6 pages

Healthcare: by Jake Silberg and Ben Donald

The REAL Act would provide federal funding for comprehensive sex education programs in schools, which have been shown to delay sexual activity and increase contraceptive use compared to abstinence-only programs. FOCA would codify the right to abortion established by Roe v. Wade in response to increasing restrictions on reproductive rights. The authors, two high school students, argue that these bills are important to ensure teens have access to medically accurate information and women can make their own healthcare decisions. They thank the senator for supporting these issues and urge continued backing of comprehensive sex education and reproductive rights

Uploaded by

Dan Cohen
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Healthcare

by
Jake Silberg and Ben Donald

Thank you for taking the time


to meet with us. Today we are
here to address the issue of
health care. We know, and
greatly appreciate, the
commitment Sen. Lautenberg
has made to this issue based on
his votes for the expansion of S-CHIP, and the stimulus bill with its
provisions for public health reform. We personally feel that providing
health care for every American is the responsibility of a government
based upon the founding principle that all of us are created equal.
The United States has long been the beacon for social justice and
moral righteousness in the world. However, we are the only fully
industrialized nation that does not guarantee universal coverage among
its citizens. As it stands, 46 million Americans – 15% of the population -
live uninsured, with the constant fear that any illness could lead to
financial devastation and impoverishment. We cannot expect this
statistic to shrink on its own, as the rising cost of health insurance - with
premiums outgrowing wages by 400% over the last 8 years - puts it
further out of reach for our fellow citizens. President Obama urged
action last week, pointing out that this crisis creates perilous economic
instability. Basic American philosophy instructs us that we cannot sit by
idly as others suffer unnecessarily in our presence.
Our ultimate goal would be for Sen. Lautenberg to introduce a
companion bill to House Resolution 676, the United States National
Health Insurance Act. This ideal solution would provide insurance for
every American, in the United States and her territories, currently
without coverage. We realize that the implementation of a single-payer
system may not be politically feasible at this moment, but we ask Sen.
Lautenberg to support the elements of President Obama’s budget that
amount to steps in the direction of universal health care. Jewish
principles also form an underlying basis for our plea. In the Talmud, the
Book of Baba Kamma states, “whoever is in pain, lead him to the
physician.” Healthcare for all those who require it is not just an
American ideal, it is a Jewish ideal; it is a universal ideal.

My name is Jake Silberg, and I am able to be here today because I


am lucky enough to have parents with good insurance. In the summer of
2007, while on vacation in Italy, I was diagnosed with Stage 2 Burkitt’s
Lymphoma. I can personally attest to the success of a universal
healthcare program. I was treated at Ospedale Bambino Gesu in Rome
for 25 nights, had two major bowel surgeries, and would have been
covered for chemotherapy as well at a total cost of only 3000 dollars.
Had I been a citizen of the European Union, the care would have been
provided free of charge.
My three months of chemotherapy at a prestigious American
hospital amounted to 100,000 dollars in medical bills that my insurance,
among the best that money can buy in America, would not pay for.
Imagine if I had been of the 8.6 million children uninsured at that time.
The bills would have depleted my family’s assets and catapulted us into
bankruptcy. I was among the luckiest--I had access to the best doctors,
and the newest and most innovative treatments in the world. Since that
point, I have lost hours of sleep distraught over how the situation could
have unfolded more catastrophically had I simply been born into a
different family. An unforeseen medical tragedy is one of the leading
causes of homelessness in America. With all the suffering and hardship
forced upon children with life-threatening diseases, it is imperative to
my own conscience that financial volatility should not be one of them.
The Responsible Education about Life Act (REAL)
Sam Rosenblatt and Rachel Bain

I’m Sam Rosenblatt and this is


Rachel Bain, we are both High
School students from Essex
County, New Jersey, and active
members in our Temples. We are
here to talk about the importance
of proper sexual education, and
reproductive rights. The
Responsible Education about Life
Act (REAL) which would
establish the first-ever federal
funding stream for comprehensive sex education in public schools. The
content of the act would provide young people with medically accurate
sexual and reproductive health information that is proven to be affective
in delaying the onset of sexual intercourse by increasing contraception
and condom use.
Currently, 25 out of 50 states accept funding for abstinence only
education, therefore, failing to educate about the proper information that
is needed at the highschool level. As a result, in 1996 Title 5 was passed
spending 50 million dollars a year toward abstinence only education,
failing to recognize its ineffectiveness, as well as the risks and
consequences of having sex. The inability to access or receive influential
or any sex education in school can lead to teen pregnancies. Also, as a
result, many have been diagnosed with STIs and other life threatening
conditions. Sadly, one in every three women today get pregnant before
the age of twenty, That’s 750,000 Americans, which is an
overwhelmingly unacceptable number. That’s twice the amount of teen
pregnancies in Great Britain and Canada, and four times the amount of
France
As Jews, we are taught to work hard for what will best benefit our
people and best ensure their safety. Abstinence only education programs
serve no effective purpose and are only decreasing our abilities to keep
both children and teens safe.
As a High School student I have been provided with a comprehensive
sexual education program and it has positively impacted the decisions
I’ve made.
However, with half of the countries schools taking federal funding for
Abstinence only education program (a program that is clearly
ineffective) Teen pregnancy and abortion rates are out of control.
(Teen pregnancy and abortion rates are out of control.)

Thankfully the right to have an abortion is protected by the bill that


Senator Menendez cosponsored. The Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA), is
an act which gives every woman in America the right of choice. We’d
like to first thank Senator Menendez for his actions in cosponsoring the
bill and urge him to please continue his support of the Freedom of
Choice Act in the 111th Congress.
It is important for the US to continue to maintain the reproductive
rights that FOCA provides for various reasons. First, abortion is an
extremely personal issue, and women are capable of making their own
moral decisions. Sadly, many people are denied or limited in their choice
to get an abortion. Regulations, such as the inability for women serving
in the military abroad to get an abortion, disregard the ability for some
women to make these decision for themselves. Since the Roe v. Wade
case, the impacts of anti choice legislation have significantly eroded
many reproductive rights. States considered 464 anti choice measures in
2007, and 19 states enacted 43 anti-choice measures. Additionally in
April 2007, the Supreme Court upheld the first ever federal ban on an
abortion method WITHOUT an exception to protect a woman’s health.
This is a clear example of how reproductive rights are being overridden,
and the importance of restoring the rights granted under the 1973 Roe v
Wade Decision. The support of The Freedom of Choice Act is so
significant because if it is brought to the Supreme Court, The legality of
the law is jeopardized, and at risk for drastic change.
In various Jewish texts, there is tremendous emphasis on a
woman’s right to choose to get an abortion. Traditionally, A woman has
priority of life over her fetus. Mishna explains that a woman has existing
life, and her fetus has potential life. Therefore, as rabbi Moses Sofer
said, “ No Woman is required to build up the world by destroying
herself.” These texts show that the Woman is given the responsibility to
know what is best for both her and her fetus, and act accordingly,
whether she choose abortion or to bear the child is circumstantial and in
all ways her choice. For example in a case of rape, a woman should not
be forced to live with the child who is a constant reminder of the mental
and physical stress of a rape situation.
As teenagers, we are extremely concerned with how these laws
will affect our futures. The Freedom of Choice Act is an unbelievably
important law that protects teenagers like myself from dealing with a
situation that
I would not be responsible enough for.
The 1973 Supreme Court decision on Roe V Wade must be
protected against all attempts- legislative and judicial to deplore it.

We would ultimately like to say that his past and hopefully future
support of these bills is crucial for the proper education of teens, and the
right of woman’s choice. The success off these two bills lie hand in hand
in support of each other. Thus, they must both be approved and must
also continue to be carried out as laws efficiently and effectively, in the
present and future.

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