In her latest plan to transform the American health care system, Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton invokes a word she usually reserves
for abortion: choice. It sounds good, but like all things Clinton, you have
to look behind the facade to discover reality.
There are some elements of Sen. Clinton's health care proposal worth
considering, especially the idea that if you like your current health
insurance, you can keep it. And she says this isn't about another big
government bureaucracy. Really? Then why does she acknowledge it will cost
$110 billion annually and require tax increases for those making more than
$250,000? She doesn't need a "new" bureaucracy, but can use the present
dysfunctional one.
In assessing any presidential candidate, one must first learn who that
person is in order to determine whether the individual is trustworthy, a
high bar for every politician, regardless of party. Washington Post
columnist Richard Cohen, a liberal, wrote this about Sen. Clinton: "The
issue with Hillary Clinton is not whether she's smart or experienced but
whether she has - how do we say this? - the character to be president." He
then lists the various "-gates" and other scandals with which she was either
associated, or enabled, during her husband's administration.
Can Hillary Clinton be trusted to do what she says? Yes, when it comes to
the tax increases she will impose on "the wealthy," as one way to fund this
non-bureaucratic bureaucracy. As U.S. News and World Report's James
Pethokoukis wrote, "Šraising income taxes on Americans making $200,000 will
bring in only $50 billion or so, which is already being spent several times
over by Democratic presidential candidates."
What is it about the free market system liberals detest? It allowed Sen.
Clinton and her husband to rake in $20 million in combined book advances. It
provides Bill opportunities to make six figures on the lecture circuit. If
the free market works for them, why shouldn't it work for others? The answer
is that liberals want you to feel good so you will vote for them. Their
policies are based on emotion, not fact, which often leads to disaster. Ask
anyone who put emotion ahead of sound judgment in picking a marriage partner
and you get the idea.
On ABC's "20/20" last week, reporter John Stossel devoted one hour to health
care. Anyone who didn't see it should go to ABC.com and read the summation.
Stossel showed what happens when prices for goods and services are forced
lower or offered for free. Demand increases, adding to wait times and lower
quality in order to control costs. When government pays for health care (as
it will under the Clinton plan for the estimated 47 million Americans who
don't have it) people wait. "In the United Kingdom, one in eight patients
waits more than a year for hospital treatment," noted Stossel, " and the
British government recently set its goal to keep wait times to less than 18
weeks. Š In Canada, almost a million citizens are waiting for necessary
surgery and more than a million Canadians can't find a regular doctor."
That's the future in America once government establishes a firm foothold in
health care.
Karl Rove, the former top adviser to President Bush and a bette noir to
liberals, penned an essay in The Wall Street Journal on how Republicans can
"win" on health care. Among other things, Rove proposes using the principles
of free enterprise, personal accountability, tax incentives (not tax
increases), portability of health plans and more competition. It is
ridiculous, he says, for medical procedures to cost one amount in one town
and a much higher amount in another. Pooling risks will lower costs, he
argues, along with greater cost transparency and stopping junk lawsuits that
drive some doctors out of business.
Do we want the federal government having more control over our health? When
the costs get too large and the taxes too high (even for liberals) the only
"choice" then will be who gets care and who doesn't. One of the proposals
accompanying Sen. Clinton's ill-fated 1994 plan was the creation of a board
that would determine who gets a life-saving operation and who does not. Do
we want to go down that road toward practical eugenics?
Some of this might make people feel good for the moment, but in the end,
they or their children and grandchildren, will feel very, very bad. By then
it will be too late, because once a government program is established, even
failure is not a reason for its elimination. |