I feel  that it is necessary to begin with the title of this piece itself.  Republicans, of course, are not proposing to repeal healthcare--that  statement is inane--they are intent on repealing the regulatory  legislation on health insurance and passed by the past Congress and  signed by President Obama. This is a deliberate confusion that liberals  make to refute libertarian ideas, one which dates back 150 years to the  famous French economist Frederic Bastiat. Bastiat writes:
"Socialism,  like the old policy from which it emanates, confounds Government and  society. And so, every time we object to a thing being done by  Government, it concludes that we object to its being done at all...They  might as well accuse us of wishing men not to eat, because we object to  the cultivation of corn by the State."
This is an important point  in that your argument is built upon the notion that undoing health  reforms would be tantamount to eliminating healthcare. It would not be  so.
Second, you charge that the January 19 vote to repeal the  legislation was "partisanship at its finest." The vote to repeal the  legislation passed with a far larger majority (245 votes) than did the  original bill (218), so would it not be fair to describe the legislation  as "partisanship at its finest"? Additionally, 3 Democrats voted  against their party in favor of repeal, whereas no Republicans voted  against their party in its favor at the time it was originally passed.  38 Democrats even voted against the bill. Your charge of high  partisanship is eminently a double standard.
When you venture in  to deficit analysis, your reasoning is terribly misleading. First, you  fail to note that the legislation has been gamed to produce a favorable  outcome for Democrats at the Congressional Budget Office. For example,  the bill pays for 6 years of subsidies with 10 years of taxes by  delaying the start of subsidies by four years. Naturally, this budget  trick will become obvious in a decade when it is discovered to be  insolvent. The idea of any budgetary savings from this legislation is a  statistical artifact and a convenient political myth for Democrats.  Second, "fiscally responsible" is not increasing taxes more sharply than  you increase spending -- the nature of the President's health policy --  it is reducing the size and scope of government through cuts to both  spending and taxation.    
While the definition of a right is a topic outside the scope of this  reply, suffice it to say that the idea of healthcare as a right is  utterly inconsistent with the rights of Americans at the federal level.  Observe, for example, that the Bill of Rights as framed by our Founders  safeguard negative liberty, as opposed to the notion of "positive  liberty" espoused by those hungry for centralized authority. Rights "to"  something, such as healthcare, are positive; rights "from" something,  such as tyranny, are negative. Consider, additionally, the implications  of your immediate moral assumption that "health care is a right for all  human beings." If A is considered a universal right, than why not B, C,  D, and so forth?
Your third assertion is that "there [sic] lack  of choice has not lead [sic] them to miss out on anything." This is  plainly untrue. The world operates on the idea of scarce resources --  this should be familiar to the reader -- and the efficiency of their  allocation is the operative answer to whether the world is prosperous or  poor. Fundamentally, there is an enormous opportunity cost to mandating  that the government provide healthcare. The required levels of taxation  alone are enough to crush an economy -- consider the slew of debt  crises across Europe -- and the government is forcing a decision upon  its constituents. They must trade the set of all possible outcomes  (using that money to attend college, open a business, buy equipment,  etc.) for a suboptimal one that operates in a zero-sum, not mutual-gain,  economic paradigm.
As to your final point, I would remind you of  the Democratic heroes who strove to achieve a goal that many naysayers  deemed to be unattainable. Your dismissal of our own goals is  unwarranted.
I write this in good faith that I have clarified the issues at stake for you and whoever else may happen to read this response.
Best,
Evan Soltas
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Monday, January 24, 2011
A Response to Health Care Post
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Good response buddy. I would also add that because government subsidies ensure that there will be a buyer, pharmaceutical companies raise their prices. Ditto for university tuitions. Can't the Democrats see that this hurts the poor more than the rich? The rich can pay either way, the poor are now fixed government dependencies.
ReplyDeleteFrom FDR - "Democracy cannot succeed unless those who express their choice are prepared to choose wisely. Since we can't risk democracy to the wisdom of the American people's choices, this administration is prepared to make and enforce them through executive order."
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