Wednesday, September 12, 2007

No socialized medicine?

Look again.

It's already here to an extent larger than you realize.

Key points:

"Consider two distinguishing features of socialist economies. The first is that the government decides what individuals may produce, what they consume, and the terms of exchange.

That is largely true of America's health care system Government controls production and consumption by determining the number of physicians; what services medical professionals can offer and under what terms; where they can practice; who can open a hospital or purchase a new MRI; who can market a drug or medical device; and what kind of health insurance consumers may purchase.

Government bureaucrats even set the prices for half of our health care sector directly, and indirectly set prices for the other half. When you read about Medicare over-paying imaging centers and hospitals, or that it's impossible for Bostonians to get an appointment with a general practitioner, it's largely because the bureaucrats got the prices wrong, and those rigid prices do not automatically eliminate shortages and gluts like flexible market prices do.

A second feature of socialist economies is that there is little incentive to make careful economic decisions, because government has put everyone in the position of spending other people's money. "



"To paraphrase Keyser Söze, the greatest trick that advocates of socialized medicine ever played was to convince the American people that we don't already have it."

2 comments:

  1. Bubba, this was a great article. And of course, the author is precisely right. The current elements of socialism are administered at both the state and federal levels.

    ...if people only understood what is going on.

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  2. "...if people only understood what is going on."

    If only we could put a stop to the dis-information campaign about this, and many other issues that the public needs to know about.....

    It's tough when Dems/Lefties/"Progressives" control a majority of the vehicles for information distribution.

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