Pills, Profits, and Promises: How Hospital and Pharma Subsidies Save Lives—and Get Hijacked cover art

Pills, Profits, and Promises: How Hospital and Pharma Subsidies Save Lives—and Get Hijacked

Pills, Profits, and Promises: How Hospital and Pharma Subsidies Save Lives—and Get Hijacked

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Most subsidies in America started with good intentions: to help people through hard times and get them back on their feet. They were built for the couple who just found out they’re having a baby and are terrified of the hospital bill. They were built for the parent who just lost a job and is scrambling to keep health coverage. They were built for the grandparent whose body can’t do it anymore after forty years of work. They were built for the person who just heard the word “cancer” and now needs help paying for food, childcare, and gas to get to chemo. They were not built so hospital CEOs and their minions could turn compassion into a business model. In this fiery World of Payne deep dive, Tanner pulls the curtain back on how hospitals and pharmaceutical companies use government subsidies like 340B drug discounts, Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments, NIH research funding, rural hospital support programs, and nonprofit tax breaks. On paper, these subsidies are supposed to keep safety-net hospitals alive, expand access for low-income patients, fund breakthrough research, and keep rural ERs from going dark. In reality, many have been quietly hijacked and turned into profit engines that inflate costs, drive consolidation, and enrich executive teams while families drown in medical debt. Tanner breaks down how 340B really works in the wild—hospitals buying drugs at steep discounts, billing full price, and pocketing the spread with almost zero transparency about how much actually reaches poor patients. He exposes how nonprofit hospitals collect tax exemptions and DSH dollars in the name of charity while still suing low-income families, garnishing wages, and slapping liens on homes. He walks through NIH funding and overhead, showing how universities and health systems can treat taxpayer-funded research as a revenue stream while labs fight for scraps. He takes you into rural America, where nearly 200 rural hospitals have closed in two decades, almost half of those left are losing money, and one closure can turn a 10-minute ambulance ride into a 45-minute gamble. This isn’t just a rant—it’s a conservative blueprint for reform. Tanner lays out how to force radical transparency on subsidies, tie nonprofit and 340B privileges to real charity care and clear patient benefits, cap and expose NIH overhead bloat, and make rural support money follow actual access instead of political connections. He argues for a “subsidy-light” future where we attack the root price disease—insane hospital facility fees, opaque drug pricing, rigged contracts, and monopoly power—so we can shrink and sharpen subsidies instead of endlessly throwing more money at a broken system. If you’re tired of being told “healthcare is complicated, just trust us,” this episode gives you the receipts and the language to start asking the questions no one in power wants to answer. It’s unapologetically conservative, fiercely compassionate toward patients and families, and absolutely ruthless toward the hospital systems, pharma giants, and academic empires that have turned safety-net programs into cash machines. “Pills, Profits, and Promises” will leave you informed, fired up, and ready to demand a healthcare system where compassion isn’t a marketing slogan—it’s the standard.

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