When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed Medicare into law on July 30, 1965, did my five-year-old self truly comprehend the personal milestone that I would someday reach?
Nah. My five-year-old self couldn’t comprehend that Christmas 1965 would ever arrive, let alone that I would someday have my own brand spanking new Medicare card.
It’s right here in my wallet. I really should have it laminated. The same probably goes for my rotator cuff and prostate.
It’s sobering to think of all the people who didn’t live long enough to receive Medicare coverage, including Elvis, Michael Jackson and my beloved Granny Tyree.
Likewise, pause to realize that every single person who was in the initial batch of Medicare enrollees is now deceased. Before Medicare, 40 percent of seniors had no health insurance. And now you can’t interview any of them about how life-changing Medicare was. (Although, if you have a top-notch Ouija board, they just might reveal who they voted for in the last primary.)
Speaking of Medicare’s launch, the program’s first recipients were former president Harry S Truman and his wife Bess. In honor of the plain-spoken chief executive from Missouri, I now tell my wife, “If you can’t stand the heat…don’t crank up the AC, because the money has to go for Medicare premiums!”
Sure, some Americans are dismissive of Medicare’s value. This includes the codgers whose daily routine includes smoking four cartons of unfiltered, deep-fried Lucky Strike cigarettes and doing 100 one-handed push-ups until the day that they die peacefully in their sleep. Too bad the peace doesn’t always last. (“Is that as fast as you can make this hearse go? Let me get out and push.”)
Copyright 2025 Danny Tyree, distributed by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.