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Obama Care


How's that "Hope and Change" working out for you?

Take Two Aspirin
And Call Me When Your Cancer is Stage 4
by Ann Coulter
All the problems with the American health care
system come from government intervention, so naturally the
Democrats' idea for fixing it is more government intervention. This
is like trying to sober up by having another drink.
The reason seeing a doctor is already more like
going to the DMV, and less like going to the Apple "Genius Bar," is
that the government decided health care was too important to be left
to the free market. Yes -- the same free market that has produced
such a cornucopia of inexpensive goods and services that, today,
even poor people have cell phones and flat-screen TVs.
As a result, it's easier to get your computer
fixed than your health. Thanks, government!
We already have near-universal health coverage in
the form of Medicare, Medicaid, veterans' hospitals, emergency rooms
and tax-deductible employer-provided health care -- all government
creations.
So now, everyone expects doctors to be free.
People who pay $200 for a haircut are indignant if it costs more
than a $20 co-pay to see a doctor.
The government also "helped" us by mandating that
insurance companies cover all sorts of medical services, both
ordinary -- which you ought to pay for yourself -- and exotic, such
as shrinks, in vitro fertilization and child-development assessments
-- which no normal person would voluntarily pay to insure against.
This would be like requiring all car insurance to
cover the cost of gasoline, oil and tire changes -- as well as
professional car detailing, iPod docks, and leather seats and those
neon chaser lights I have all along the underbody of my chopped,
low-rider '57 Chevy.
But politicians are more interested in pleasing
lobbyists for acupuncturists, midwives and marriage counselors than
they are in pleasing recent college graduates who only want to
insure against the possibility that they'll be hit by a truck. So
politicians at both the state and federal level keep passing
boatloads of insurance mandates requiring that all insurance plans
cover a raft of non-emergency conditions that are expensive to treat
-- but whose practitioners have high-priced lobbyists.
As a result, a young, healthy person has a choice
of buying artificially expensive health insurance that, by law,
covers a smorgasbord of medical services of no interest to him ...
or going uninsured. People who aren't planning on giving birth to a
slew of children with restless leg syndrome in the near future forgo
insurance -- and then politicians tell us we have a national
emergency because some people don't have health insurance.
The whole idea of insurance is to insure against
catastrophes: You buy insurance in case your house burns down -- not
so you can force other people in your plan to pay for your maid. You
buy car insurance in case you're in a major accident, not so
everyone in the plan shares the cost of gas.
Just as people use vastly different amounts of
gasoline, they also use vastly different amounts of medical care --
especially when an appointment with a highly trained physician costs
less than a manicure.
Insurance plans that force everyone in the plan
to pay for everyone else's Viagra and anti-anxiety pills are already
completely unfair to people who rarely go to the doctor. It's like
being forced to share gas bills with a long-haul trucker or a
restaurant bill with Michael Moore. On the other hand, it's a great
deal for any lonely hypochondriacs in the plan.
Now the Democrats want to force us all into one
gigantic national health insurance plan that will cover every real
and mythical ailment that has a powerful lobby. But if you have a
rare medical condition without a lobbying arm, you'll be out of
luck.
Even two decades after the collapse of liberals'
beloved Soviet Union, they can't grasp that it's easier and cheaper
to obtain any service provided by capitalism than any service
provided under socialism.
You don't have to conjure up fantastic visions of
how health care would be delivered in this country if we bought it
ourselves. Just go to a grocery store or get a manicure. Or think
back to when you bought your last muffler, personal trainer,
computer and every other product and service available in
inexpensive abundance in this capitalist paradise.
Third-party payer schemes are always a disaster
-- less service for twice the price! If you want good service at a
good price, be sure to be the one holding the credit card. Under
"universal health care," no one but government bureaucrats will be
allowed to hold the credit card.
Isn't food important? Why not "universal food
coverage"? If politicians and employers had guaranteed us "free"
food 50 years ago, today Democrats would be wailing about the "food
crisis" in America, and you'd be on the phone with your food care
provider arguing about whether or not a Reuben sandwich with fries
was covered under your plan.
Instead of making health care more like the DMV,
how about we make it more like grocery stores? Give the poor and
tough cases health stamps and let the rest of us buy health care --
and health insurance -- on the free market.
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