Wikipedia:

Michael Johns

(executive)
Michael Johns
Born September 8 1964 (1964--) (age 43)
Flag of the United States Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation Health care executive, former federal government official, public policy analyst, author and writer
Website Michael Johns
[1]

Michael Johns (born September 8, 1964 in Allentown, Pennsylvania) is an American health care executive, former federal government of the United States official and conservative policy analyst and writer.

Biography

Johns was born in Allentown and graduated from Emmaus High School in Emmaus, Pennsylvania in 1982. He received a Bachelor of Business Administration from the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida, where he majored in economics and graduated with honors in 1986. While there, Johns was inducted into the Iron Arrow Honor Society, the University of Miami's highest attainable honor.

He also attended Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge University in Cambridge, England. He resides currently in Deptford, New Jersey.

Health care industry

A major force in corporate health care, Johns has served with global pharmaceutical powerhouse Eli Lilly, in the health care practice of a leading Philadelphia consulting firm and, since 2000, as vice president of Gentiva Health Services, a Fortune 1000 corporation.[2] As part of Gentiva senior management, Johns has helped lead a quintupling of the company's market capitalization and one of the largest health care acquisitions in recent years.[3]

He also was one of several influential proponents of the Bush administration's 2006 launch of Medicare Part D, which expanded the federal Medicare program to cover pharmaceuticals for the elderly and chronically disabled, arguing that Medicare was spending too much on preventable hospitalizations and surgeries and too little on disease prevention and management.[4]

In his health care roles, Johns has advocated a moderate course on American health care policy, supporting increased biopharmaceutical and free market health care innovation, while simultaneously defending the need to protect Medicare, Medicaid and other governmental health programs for the nation's elderly, poor and disabled.[5]

Government and public policy

A versatile and influential advocate for many of the prominent themes of mainstream conservatism, Johns also has held high-level posts in American government and public policy. His writings on American foreign policy in the 1980s helped shape and promote the foreign policy of the Reagan administration. He was one of the original advocates of the so-called "Reagan Doctrine", successfully urging the United States to support forces opposing Soviet client states and one of the first Reagan Doctrine advocates to actually visit the front lines of these hot spots (Angola, Cambodia, Nicaragua, and the former Soviet Republics) with regularity. Johns also was a close advisor to Angola's Jonas Savimbi, whose Cold War conflict with Soviet-aligned Angola became a central Cold War sub-plot.

He is credited with helping shift Washington's intellectual tide away from containment of the Soviet Union (as advocated by post-war American leaders, such as Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman) and toward a more aggressive approach dedicated to the "rollback" of global communism. Many historians now credit this latter approach with leading to, or at least accelerating, the collapse of the former Soviet Union.

Johns also was one of the most vocal U.S. conservatives in defending Ronald Reagan's controversial description of the former Soviet Union as an "evil empire." In a lengthy Policy Review article, "Seventy Years of Evil: Soviet Crimes from Lenin to Gorbachev," for instance, Johns labeled the Soviet system "history's most sophisticated apparatus of rule by terror" and lambasted its "crushing of the human spirit." He offered 208 examples, dating back to the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, that, he argued, warranted the labeling of the Soviet system as evil.[6]

Johns has advocated expanded U.S. humanitarian engagement in Africa, claiming that the magnitude of the crises facing that continent warrant U.S. assistance and humanitarian aid. He was an influential critic of Mengistu Haile Mariam's handling of the Ethiopian famine, alleging that the famine, which took over a million Ethiopian lives, was almost entirely a product of Mengistu's government-controlled agricultural policies and the Ethiopian leader's refusal to permit the free flow of foreign assistance.[7] In Windhoek, Namibia for that country's first independent election, Johns also supported expanded economic and political liberalization on the continent. He wrote for the The Wall Street Journal that a stable and democratic Namibia was "critical for the strategic and economic composition of the region."[8]

Following the Cold War's end, Johns helped advance pro-active American engagement in the post-Cold War world, running U.S. government-funded international economic and political development programs in post-Gulf War Kuwait, Turkey and other nations.

In the 1990s, he was a prominent critic of several components of the Clinton administration's foreign policy. As the United Nations, with support from the Clinton administration, began repatriating Thailand-based Hmong veterans from Vietnam's "Secret War" to Laos, Johns was one of several influential opponents of the policy, labeling the repatriation a "betrayal."[9] Johns' position on the issue drew support, and the U.N. repatriation ultimately was halted. Tens of thousands of Hmong refugees at Wat Tham Krabok and various Thailand refugee camps subsequently were afforded expedited United States immigration rights.[10] However, when Clinton's decision to participate in a NATO intervention in Bosnia and Herzegovina drew criticism, Johns defended the Clinton decision, arguing that the conflict was a defining moment for U.S. engagement in Europe and that ignoring Serbian ethnic genocide against Muslim Bosniaks would prove permanently damaging to U.S. human rights credibility in the Arab world.[11]

Johns has proven an influential proponent of many of the policies of President George W. Bush, and has defended the Bush administration's military engagement in Iraq. "The Iraq War has become the epicenter in the global war against terrorism, and the outcome in Iraq will ultimately be a key factor in determining whether September 11, 2001 was the beginning of the end for al-Qaeda, or whether, conversely, it was just the beginning of an era of global terror that grows in both scope and duration," Johns wrote in a widely-cited May 4, 2007 essay opposing a timetable for the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq.[12]

Johns also has challenged the allegations of some of Bush's harshest critics that the Bush administration consciously misrepresented U.S. intelligence findings on Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Johns has responded that numerous Clinton administration officials, including Vice President Al Gore and National Security Advisor Sandy Berger, cited nearly identical intelligence conclusions regarding Saddam's possession of weapons of mass destruction in justifying Clinton's four-day 1998 bombing of Iraq, known as "Operation Desert Fox." Johns represents that the Clinton administration's nearly identical intelligence findings regarding Saddam's harboring of chemical and biological weapons is evidence that the Bush administration acted in good faith, and probably was technically correct, in alleging that Saddam was in possession of these weapons when the war was launched in 2003.

"It's certainly an extremely reasonable conclusion that Saddam's political maneuvering around United Nations-ordered inspections, which ultimately invited this war, were not designed to hide nothing," Johns argued in May 2007.[13]

Johns also has been one of a handful of prominent U.S. conservatives and other political leaders who, since the September 11, 2001 attacks, have strongly criticized the U.S. news media's decision not to rebroadcast footage of the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center because some viewers purportedly found the footage unsettling. Johns has countered that the U.S. runs the risk of forgetting the magnitude of the September 11 attacks "because some components of our modern culture seem to want us to forget."[14] "We should be unsettled. We need to be unsettled," he wrote.[15]

Johns has been a strong advocate for revisions to current U.S. energy policy, arguing that, while alternative energy sources such as ethanol may hold long-term usefulness in meeting some or all U.S. energy needs, U.S. access to petroleum is essential in the meantime and too little is being done to address this need, especially given vastly increased petroleum consumption in China and India. Johns has supported the relaxation of some U.S. energy regulations, including simplifying federal and state regulations that currently govern gasoline's formulated and unformulated contents, which the petroleum industry has said raises the cost of gasoline's production. Like other conservatives, Johns also has advocated expanding the U.S. oil supply by eliminating several federal and state regulations that currently prohibit petroleum drilling in various U.S. coastal waters and in the oil-rich portion of Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, known as ANWR.[16]

Federal government roles

Johns has been a leading national voice while at the conservative Heritage Foundation and has worked closely with leading figures on the American right in support of numerous conservative domestic and foreign policy initiatives. He also has served in several senior U.S. federal governmental capacities. In the U.S. Congress, Johns began his career in the U.S. House of Representatives as a Lyndon Baines Johnson fellow with Congressman Donald L. Ritter (R-PA). He later served in the U.S. Senate as a senior aide to U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME).

Johns was a senior aide to New Jersey Governor Thomas Kean prior to Kean's appointment by President George W. Bush as Chairman of the 9/11 Commission. He also was a White House speechwriter to President of the United States George H. W. Bush[17].

In the George H. W. Bush White House, Johns was one of several senior Bush aides who helped define and advocate some of the policies that have come to be known as "compassionate conservatism," focusing on outreach to low and middle-income Americans and non-traditional Republican constituencies.[18] In a June 2007 interview, he echoed a similar theme, saying: "the American dream is a great concept, but it's just that--a dream--if it doesn't touch people's lives in tangible ways."[19]

In addition to his industry, government and public policy roles, Johns is also one of several prominent U.S.-based conservative blog authors. As of August 2007, his blog ranked highly, among the top 0.5 percent of all blogs on the World Wide Web in terms of total readership, according to the blog index Technorati.[20]

Career

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

Notes

  1. ^ Michael Johns at the Notable Names Database, accessed September 7, 2007.
  2. ^ "Customer Concerns Mount in Tragedy Aftermath," by Kimberly Hill, Customer Relations Management, September 12, 2001.
  3. ^ "Gentiva Makes $415 Million Deal," Newsday, January 3, 2002.
  4. ^ "The Great Society Meets the 21st Century," by Michael Johns, Orthopedic Technology Review, January 2004.
  5. ^ United States Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Washington, D.C., September 13, 2005, with Michael Johns challenging unclear HHS clinical qualifications and medical documentation requirements required by Medicare for Medicare patients requiring power wheelchairs for ambulation, pp. 30-31 of 57.
  6. ^ "Report Card: Civil Rights in Soviet Union," National Review, January 22, 1988.
  7. ^ "A U.S. Strategy to Foster Human Rights in Ethiopia," by Michael Johns, Heritage Foundation Backgrounder #692, Washington, D.C., February 23, 1989.
  8. ^ "Namibian Voters Deny Total Power to SWAPO," by Michael Johns, The Wall Street Journal, November 21, 1989 (entered in United States Congressional Record, December 11, 1989).
  9. ^ "Acts of Betrayal," by Michael Johns, National Review, October 23, 1995.
  10. ^ "Long Wait is Over: Hmong from Wat Tham Krabok Begin Arriving in U.S.," United States Department of State, Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration, July 23, 2004.
  11. ^ "How to Save Bosnia," by Michael Johns, The World and I magazine, July 1994.
  12. ^ "One Iraq Option Only: Victory," by Michael Johns, May 4, 2007.
  13. ^ "One Iraq Option Only: Victory," by Michael Johns, May 4, 2007.
  14. ^ "One Iraq Option Only: Victory," by Michael Johns, May 4, 2007.
  15. ^ "One Iraq Option Only: Victory," by Michael Johns, May 4, 2007.
  16. ^ "It's Still About Oil," by Michael Johns, April 30, 2007.
  17. ^ Michael Johns at the Notable Names Database
  18. ^ Michael Johns at the Notable Names Database, accessed August 27, 2007.
  19. ^ "Michael Johns: Former White House Speechwriter," by Tad Lichtenauer, Cross & Crescent, June 2007.
  20. ^ Michael Johns at Technorati, accessed August 27, 2007.
  21. ^ "Rascal Insurance Services Presents at National Multiple Sclerosis Society Annual Meeting," November 29, 2005.
  22. ^ Gentiva Health Services, Long Island, New York, at Yahoo Finance.
  23. ^ Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, at Yahoo Finance.
  24. ^ International Republican Institute at Notable Names Database.
  25. ^ Policy Review magazine at Notable Names Database.
  26. ^ Finding Our Roots, Facing Our Future: America in the 21st Century, with chapter contributions by Michael Johns, et.al., Madison Books, Lanham, Maryland, 1997.
  27. ^ Iron Arrow Honor Society at Notable Names Database.

Adapted from the SourceWatch article, Michael Johns, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.


 
 
 

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