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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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Healthcare Reform Passes
Powell Gammill Date: 03-22-2010 Subject: Healthcare Those
in favor of this bill touted their good intentions of ensuring quality
healthcare for all Americans, as if those of us against the bill are
against good medical care. They cite fanciful
statistics of deficit reduction, while simultaneously planning to
expand the already struggling medical welfare programs we currently
have. They somehow think that healthcare in this
country will be improved by swelling our welfare rolls and cutting
reimbursement payments to doctors who are already losing money. It
is estimated that thousands of doctors will be economically forced out
of the profession should this government fuzzy math actually try to
become healthcare reality. No one has thought to ask what good mandatory health insurance will be if people can’t find a doctor.
Legislative hopes and dreams don’t always stand up well against economic realities.
Frustratingly,
this legislation does not deal at all with the real reasons access to
healthcare is a struggle for so many â€" the astronomical costs. If
tort reform was seriously discussed, if the massive regulatory burden
on healthcare was reduced and reformed, if the free market was allowed
to function and apply downward pressure on healthcare costs as it does
with everything else, perhaps people wouldn’t be so beholden to
insurance companies in the first place. If costs
were lowered, more people could simply pay for what they need out of
pocket, as they were able to do before government got so involved. Instead,
in the name of going after greedy insurance companies, the federal
government is going to make people even more beholden to them by
mandating that everyone buy their product! Hefty fines are due from anyone found to have committed the heinous crime of not being a customer of a health insurance company. We will need to hire some 16,500 new IRS agents to police compliance with all these new mandates and administer various fines. So in government terms, this is also a jobs bill. Never mind that this program is also likely to cost the private sector some 5 million jobs. |