Health Bureaucrat Pens Bland Op-Ed Saying Health Bureaucrats Deserve More Power
One thing you can certainly say about Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius: She knows her talking points. Her op-ed making the case for health-care reform in this morning's Washington Post is a nearly perfect example of the generic case for liberal reform: Lead with the moral need to cover the country's uninsured, proceed onward to bashing the health insurance industry, claim that expensive reform will actually save money, and finish by calmly reassuring the reader that no, there are no plans to give the U.S. medical system over to "socialized medicine."
As op-eds go, it's about as exciting as doing laundry, which seems to be par for the course for Sebelius, whose State of the Union response last year was a bigger snooze-fest than Andy Warhol's "Sleep." It also fails to tell the whole story about health-care reform.
Liberal health-reform advocates constantly tout the fact that there are roughly 47 million uninsured in the U.S. But that statistic ignores the fact that many of those individuals are already eligible for existing health-care programs, or only temporarily uninsured, or wealthy enough to be able to buy insurance on their own. The real number of chronically uninsured is, instead, about, 10 million.
The health insurance industry, meanwhile, isn't perfect, but there's a strong case to be made that it's actually a more efficient provider of quality care than the government. As Cato's Michael Cannon argued in a paper last week, government programs make their administrative costs artificially low by making little effort to root out waste and fraud, and by hiding their true costs in other parts of government. And part of the reason premiums are so high is that insurance companies are subject to various government-imposed coverage mandates that drive up prices by squeezing low-cost plans out of the market.
As for the claim that health insurance reform will save money, there's just no indication that currently proposed legislation will do so. As I wrote a few weeks ago, "according to CBO director Douglas Elmendorf, it will 'significantly expand the federal responsibility for health-care costs,' exacerbating rather curing the dire, health-care driven budget problems we already face."
Granted, Sebelius is right that, in the strictest sense of the word, current overhaul plans wouldn't "socialize" medicine, at least not in the government-employs-all-the-doctors British sense. But there's no deny that it would greatly expand the government's already-significant involvement in medical care. Of course, as Health and Human Services Secretary, that's exactly what Sebelius wants—an expansion of her agency's power and responsibilities. Overhauling the nation's health-care system in the manner proposed by Sebelius, Obama, and Congressional Democrats might not make the lives of most Americans better, as the op-ed claims—but it would certainly be a boon for Kathleen Sebelius.
I wrote a recap of what's wrong with health-care reform proposals here. Shikha Dalmia wrote about the myth of free-market health-care here. Reason's health-care archive is here.
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Shorter: We know what's best for you, and are going to give you all government, all-the-time, in every orifice.
Even the moral argument fails.
Forced redistribution is always immoral not matter the cause.
Not that newspapers are a significant player in the market of ideas anymore, but how is it that government officials can get column inches whenever they want them? I thought the press was supposed to be a check on government propaganda, not an avenue of dissemination for it.
That's OK -- I'm sure they'll print an op-ed from a health care opponent debunking her claims tomorrow. Ha!
Consider the entrepreneur sitting at her desk, dreaming about her idea for a new business. Right now, many entrepreneurs are paralyzed by our fractured health insurance system. They know that if they leave their job, they might not be able to get insurance for their families. So they, and their innovations, stay put. Health reform means unleashing America's entrepreneurs to chase their big ideas.
Why do you free-market fanatics hate entrepreneurs?
I just loved her "don't worry about those silly little details" tack. Gee, it doesn't matter what the "great change" actually consists of--it's change! Yes we can! Wheeeeee!
OBAMA! FUCK YEAH!!!
As an entrepreneur, I havent had any trouble getting insurance.
Right now, many entrepreneurs are paralyzed by our fractured health insurance system.
[citation needed, bitch].
They know that if they leave their job, they might not be able to get insurance for their families.
Then they are too stupid to run their own business. Small business and the self-employed can get health insurance "for their families."
What's that, you say? Its hella expensive? Because they can't buy a true hospitalization/catastrophic policy, but instead have to buy coverages they don't want to have to pay for? Whose fault is that?
That's because you're a corporate shill, robc.
There you go again RC. Shilling for Big Market. When will you open your heart to HOPE and CHANGE?
Dammit Warty! Quit stealing the gag I stole from some other poster!
Both Warty and robc are in the pocket of big insurance companies.
Here's how libertarians answer that noinsense:
Lead with the claim that all freedom depends on a free market, proceed onward to bash all government agencies, claim that only the market can solve the health care problems, and finish by calmly reassuring the reader that any attempt to reform health care will inevitably lead to "socialized medicine."
Naga, stop shilling for Halliburton, you whore.
Shut the fuck up, Lefiti.
Wait Warty. This could be a good thing. More Edward postings at Urkobold. Bitchin!
Warty,
Also, where do you get the nerve to call me a whore after what you did to poor Dagny?
William = Morris = Lefiti = Edward, right? I have trouble keeping track.
First of all, this was an op-ed. Second, it echoed the political ideology of the Washington Post. Third, it came from their savior the gub'ment. So of course they would print it.
But beyond that, the press does not report any more, they publish press releases. If it doesn't come from AP or Reuters, isn't a press release, and isn't a local feel-good story, you will never see it in print.
Yes, Warty. Confirmed via Jesse checking IP addresses.
At least Sebelius and Specter got excoriated in a town hall meeting when trying to sell this boondoggle.
SugarFree - where was that thread? I love when Jesse "outs" people.
TAO,
I've been looking, but I can't put together a search string to retrieve it. It wasn't too long ago. Jesse popped in after a William troll and said "Oh goody, our favorite troll is back."
Or words to that effect.
Wait, I found it.
jesse walker william lefiti site:reason.com
"government programs make their administrative costs artificially low by making little effort to root out waste and fraud, and by hiding their true costs in other parts of government."
Yep - and also by shifting costs off onto the private insurance sector, driving up costs there.
Warty,
Your buddy Lindsey Graham was on The Today Show this morning. Did it stir up any, um, feelings?
"Granted, Sebelius is right that, in the strictest sense of the word, current overhaul plans wouldn't "socialize" medicine, at least not in the government-employs-all-the-doctors British sense."
I have never accepted the liberal trope that it isn't socialism unless the government is the direct owner of something and/or direct employer of the people involved in it.
When government deliberatly engages in wealth redistribution, when it effectivley takes control over companies and industries with massive regulations and mandates, that is indeed socialism regardless of whether the government takes direct ownership of something or not.
You watch the Today Show, SugarFree? You'd better have a good excuse.
The only feeling Lindsey Graham invokes in me is pity. And maybe rage. And possibly murder.
I have never accepted the liberal trope that it isn't socialism unless the government is the direct owner of something and/or direct employer of the people involved in it.
The word you're looking for is corporatism, aka fascism.
how does jesse get the IP addresses?
You know DefCon, the hacker convention? The people who go to that are the ones who weren't good enough to go to JesseCon.
domo, all web hostings have webmaster tools that record all incoming IPs and various other metrics. Whatever reason is using, it allows them to look up IP addresses related to comments. This is basic stuff, and includes where the IP originated from (the provider), etc.
oh - jesse walker of Reason... duh...
domo,
I'm assuming he has access to the web server records.
"Yes, Warty. Confirmed via Jesse checking IP addresses."
You kids get off my lawn!
Word of advice to people who want to change names to avoid ridicule: get some info on proxy servers.
I hope she remembered to point out that people "love" Medicare. Because it's, like free, and stuff.
Who wants to avoid ridicule from you verbally challenged dimwits?
Well, certain parties who keep changing their names. You know, people like...well...you, apparently, for example 😉
Stop spoofing me! I haven't even posted yet!
Was this the work of Jesse?
Malicious ATM Catches Hackers
funny - headline and subject read like the onion.
sad - headline and subject read like the...
guess the joke's on us.
Apparently Suderman missed this morning's memo. It is Health insurance Reform now. No one is to refer to it as Health Care Reform ever again. Toe the line Peter or you aren't going to be invited to the next cocktail party.
Utopia Versus Freedom
If you cannot tolerate imperfections, be prepared to kiss your freedom goodbye.
By Thomas Sowell
'Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom." We have heard that many times. What is also the price of freedom is the toleration of imperfections. If everything that is wrong with the world becomes a reason to turn more power over to some political savior, then freedom is going to erode away, while we are mindlessly repeating the catchwords of the hour, whether "change," "universal health care," or "social justice."
If we can be so easily stampeded by rhetoric that neither the public nor Congress bothers to read (much less analyze) bills that make massive changes in medical care, then do not be surprised when life-and-death decisions about you or your family are taken out of your hands - and out of the hands of your doctor - and transferred to bureaucrats in Washington.
Let's go back to square one. The universe was not made to our specifications. Nor were human beings. So there is nothing surprising in the fact that we are dissatisfied with many things at many times. The big question is whether we are prepared to follow any politician who claims to be able to "solve" our "problem."
If we are, then there will be a never ending series of "solutions," each causing new problems calling for still more "solutions." That way lies a never-ending quest, costing ever increasing amounts of taxpayers money and - more important - ever greater losses of your freedom to live your own life as you see fit, rather than as presumptuous elites dictate.
More at:
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NmVlODY0YzFiMzcxNzYwNGE2Nzg2ZTBhZTA2YTU0NjM=
Lefiti's computer is currently broadcasting an IP address. Yours may be too. Download Bonzo Buddy to fix this problem.
Your freedom to keep your wealth interferes with my freedom to take it. What freedom you say? The freedom prevented only by publicly-funded armed law enforcers.
Shut the Fuck Up, Tony.
Good post, Peter.
The impact of state mandates in driving health insurance costs needs to be discussed much more and I'm glad you are talking about it.
In many ways, the reform bills in Congress are meant to federalize state mandates.
Evan Falchuk
It's getting kinda ugly.
I can't stand McCaskill.
As a health care provider, I'll throw in my two cents.
The day government becomes my de facto boss and dictates evvery aspect of patient care, I will find something else to do.
More than a few of my colleauges in private practice will not accept Medicare due to the long time payments are reimbursed, the ungodly paperwork to be signed and reviewed, and the extra oversight involved (like JCHAO isn't enough). They are fortunate because their practices are established thus they have the patient base to cover their overhead (often in the form of a multiple partner "pool" arrangments).
For they relative newbies fairly fresh out of residency with MASSIVE debt and lack of established practices and client base, we are pretty much at the mercy of medicare and medicaid as both pay most hospitals approx 60% of their billable revenue. With the ridiculous oversight AND malpractice insurance, it will take me 8-10 years to be in the black.
The problem is not the care: it is cost. Mandating that the insurance companies cover pre-exists regardless of WHEN said DZ process was diagnosed would kill the private insurance industry. I am a huge fan of TORT reform; I could eliminate a large chunk of overhead that way. I could also practice "common sense" cost effective medicine by ordering the proper tests NEEDED there by eliminating uneccessary testing.
Incidently, it was medicare in the 70's and "carte blanche" ordering of all sorts of uneccesary stuff to line physician's pockets that directly led to HMO's and DRG's (Diagnosis Related Groups). DRG's were also a brainchild of goverment by the way. Essentially, they base on average what a particular course of TX should cost. If less than cost, Hosp. makes a profit. If more, Hosp eats it. Either way, physician gets paid for service rendered. All the regulation and oversight aforementioned is what really kills the doc and results in shorter and shorter hospital stays for patients.
Hence the model of empty/refill beds as quickly as poss. for Hosp. to cover indigent patients.
Care standards are difficult to maintain when everyone wants cadillac care but many don't want to pay for it or get insurance WHEN they get catastrophically ill.
It rarely gets addressed that folks forego health insurance opting for a more extravagant lifestyle or younger pop. beacuse they tend not to be disproportionately catastophically ill (delusion of invincibility).
People need to realize the ultimate truth in life: it isn't fair, and that can include your health, sometimes regardless even if you make wise health choices in life.
GREEDY DOCTOR!!! HATES PEOPLE!!
GET HIM!!
(that was sarcasm if your detector is broken or you missed the all caps)
My finely tuned sarcas-o-tector is working perfectly. I like the smooth blend of inductive reasoning and facetious humor.
Tasty!
The angle the Political Class is pushing is not ownership of the means of production, including factories and people. What they are pushing is the prevalent form of government control in the U.S.: bureaucratic administration. Politicians hand over control to one or more government departments who then administer the rules and regulations.