
Socialized medicine in U.S. is inevitable!
Posted: September 23, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com
Perhaps it has already occurred to you that Social Security isn't
exactly one of the grandest schemes ever devised by public servants.
Maybe you've also come to the realization that our system of
government-owned and union-operated indoctrination centers known as
"public schools" are doing a less-than-excellent job educating our
children. You might even understand that this Medicare prescription
program that seems to be the political rage right now will eventually
become an uncontrollable $100-billion-a-year nightmare.
Believe me, you ain't seen nuthin' yet.
Brace yourselves my friends, for it's time for a nasty dose of
reality. Socialized medicine is inevitable in the United States.
It's coming fast, and it's unstoppable. There's a perfect health-care
storm brewing just over the horizon comprised of two converging fronts.
This storm is going to destroy what's left of competitive influences in
American health care and, eventually, the system itself.
On the one hand, we have an onrushing public front which
overwhelmingly believes Americans are entitled to medical care – that
medical care is a basic right that they should neither have to pay for
nor be denied. We also have an extremely dangerous political front made
up of thousands of politicians and bureaucrats who are collectively
approaching a level-5 (as measured on the FDR scale) state of terminal
drooling over the possibility of having the entire population of this
nation by their medicinal short hairs.
Logic cannot support the premise that health care is a right. Health
care is a service that is administered by another human being with the
requisite skills and knowledge. To claim that healthcare as a "right" is
to claim a right to the services of the health-care provider. In effect,
this means you are claiming a "right" to a portion of that person's life
– both a portion of the time already spent developing his skills, and a
portion of the time spent practicing those skills on you.
Only through a mutual agreement, a contract, can one person claim a
right to a portion of another person's life. Anything beyond that is
either charity or slavery.
But, as I said, its coming. Socialized medicine is the future of
health care in the United States, and many of you couldn't be happier.
Forgive me while I proceed to attempt to burst your little
health-care-utopia bubble. There have been a few stories in the media
over the past few weeks that you might find a bit interesting.
A few weeks ago, the Telegraph of London had a rather interesting
story about major surgery under Britain's National Health Service as
compared to the current system in America. It seems that a patient is
four times more likely to go on to the eternal celestial dirt nap after
undergoing major surgery in Great Britain than in the United States.
This study was conducted by University College in London and Columbia
University in New York and followed 1,000 patients undergoing similar
surgeries. One of the researchers explained the results of the study by
pointing out the higher quality of post-operative care in the United
States.
I guess the Brits should quit complaining about this disparity,
shouldn't they? After all, it's not like they're paying for their
operations over there, is it? I guess you get what you pay for.
Another lovely little look into our socialized-medicine future comes
by way of a Sept. 13, 2003 New York Times article. Times reporter Gina
Kolata finds that visits to doctors offices have become a regular daily
part of the social life of certain wizened citizens in Boca Raton, Fla.
Kolata writes: "Many patients have 8, 10 or 12 specialists and visit one
or more of them most days of the week." She adds: "They bring their
spouses and plan their days around their appointments, going out to eat
or shopping while they are in the area.
Boca doctors report that there is "no apparent medical benefit" from
these daily or weekly visits. Kolata reports that researchers agree that
this is "... a case study of what happens when people are given free
rein to have all the medical care they could imagine."
There's our future, my friends. You want your "right" to health care,
and the politicians want their "right" to your vote. They'll end up
giving you what you think you want, and then, during every election
cycle, they'll frighten you by telling you that their election opponent
wants to take it all away again. In the meantime, you'll stand in line
waiting for the Boca matrons to finish their socializing so you can get
your turn with your government-employed doctor.
Question: When the post-surgical fatality rate in the United States
starts to go up under the auspices of government medical care, where are
you going to go for that surgery? Canada? You'll die waiting. |