On July 30, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed  Medicare into law. In public memory, what ensued was the smooth  establishment of a popular program, but in fact Medicare faced a year of  nearly crippling rearguard attacks. The American Medical Association  had waged war to try to stop the program, and doctors weren’t about to  abandon the fight against “socialized medicine” simply because it had  passed into law. The Ohio Medical Association, with ten thousand  physician members, declared that it would boycott Medicare, and a  nationwide movement began. Race proved an even more explosive issue.  Many hospitals, especially in the South, were segregated, and the law  required them to integrate in order to receive Medicare dollars.  Alabama’s Governor George Wallace was among those who encouraged  resistance; just two months before coverage was to begin, half the  hospitals in a dozen Southern states had still refused to meet Medicare  certification.
As you can read in the full text, neither revolt occurred. 
Monday, March 29, 2010
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