Posts Tagged Health Care
Stephanopoulos Doesn’t Need a Dictionary
Posted by The Marginalist in Politics on September 21st, 2009
From Bonnie Kristian at Young Americans for Liberty:
There is one point on which the president may not be criticized: he is a skilled verbal gymnast and there is no denying it. Most recently, he has denied that the government taking more of our money as a penalty for not living up to our supposed “responsibility to get health insurance” would be a tax increase, despite the dictionary’s assertion to the contrary:
“I don’t think I’m making it up,” Mr. Stephanopoulos said. He then had the temerity to challenge the Philologist in Chief, with an assist from Merriam-Webster. He cited that dictionary’s definition of “tax”—”a charge, usually of money, imposed by authority on persons or property for public purposes.”
Mr. Obama: “George, the fact that you looked up Merriam’s Dictionary, the definition of tax increase, indicates to me that you’re stretching a little bit right now. . . .”
Riiight…because checking with the dictionary is always indicative of stretching the truth.
Very nice post, Bonnie. I wanna talk a little bit more about the individual mandate and taxes. Let’s take a look back at what Obama said during his campaign about tax increases at 1:20:
Now, let’s take a look at two different bills. The first one is the House bill, H.R. 3200. This is what the bill says about individuals who chose not to, or couldn’t afford to purchase health insurance:
Subpart A–Tax on Individuals Without Acceptable Health Care Coverage
`Sec. 59B. Tax on individuals without acceptable health care coverage.
`SEC. 59B. TAX ON INDIVIDUALS WITHOUT ACCEPTABLE HEALTH CARE COVERAGE.
`(a) Tax Imposed- In the case of any individual who does not meet the requirements of subsection (d) at any time during the taxable year, there is hereby imposed a tax equal to 2.5 percent of the excess of–
`(1) the taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross income for the taxable year, over
`(2) the amount of gross income specified in section 6012(a)(1) with respect to the taxpayer.
I’m not lying to you, I’m quoting the actual text of the bill. This part of the bill is found in a section that modifies the Internal Revenue Code. Stephanopoulos doesn’t even have to go to the dictionary to check whether or not this plan involves a tax, the word tax is literally written all over it. The tax is charged to any individual who does not purchase health insurance — regardless of his or her income.
Now, let’s look at the Baucus Bill. The text of the Baucus Bill is here (go to Page 32) and here (scroll down). What do you see?
Excise Tax. The consequence for not maintaining insurance would be an excise tax.
Not only is it written there, it’s italicized and bolded in the PDF.
Clearly the individual mandate is a tax. And what does our President say…?
STEPHANOPOULOS: But you reject that it’s a tax increase?
OBAMA: I absolutely reject that notion.
John Stossel on Health Care
Posted by The Marginalist in Links on September 12th, 2009
John Stossel: What if we had grocery insurance?
Back From Vacation: 10 Things I Read
Posted by The Marginalist in Links on August 25th, 2009
I’ve been on vacation these past few weeks (San Francisco, Yosemite, Napa Valley, New York, and Virginia Beach), but just because I’ve been away doesn’t mean I haven’t been following the news (and blogosphere!).
I have a couple things to take care of now that I’m (finally) in college, but I’d like to share a few interesting things I read.
The Top Ten Things I Read on Vacation
10. The math of a zombie attack
Freakonomics readers, however, point out that the model was flawed.
9. John Goodman notes a Joint Economic Committee report with this table

Or as I like to call it, we’re screwed!
8. How to publish a scientific comment in 123 easy steps
7. Jon Stewart shows why Fox News is stupid
6. Don Boudreaux explains why insurance should only cover catastrophic events
and why Medicare isn’t necessary
What’s funny (well not funny, really) is that we’ve totally forgotten the point of insurance and why it’s economically sensible. Insurance is designed for the unpredicatable. There’s nothing unpredictable about bad health when you get old.
Many of the current budget assumptions are laughably implausible. Both the White House and CBO predict that Congress will hold federal spending at the rate of inflation over the next decade. This is the same Democratic Congress that awarded a 47% increase in domestic discretionary spending in 2009 when counting stimulus funds. And the appropriations bills now speeding through Congress for 2010 serve up an 8% increase in domestic spending after inflation.
4. Political Math does an epic beatdown on Paul Krugman
My problem with Mr. Krugman’s “How big is $9 trillion?” is that he is aware of all the problems I pointed out. He didn’t explain how much $9 trillion is; he obfuscated it. By comparing the debt load in the heart of a world-shaking war to a debt load that was accumulated in (relative) peacetime, he has misled his readers to the real significance of the data.
3. “Radio Nowhere” by Bruce Springsteen
I flew Virgin America, which gives you loads of music to listen to. Luckily, they had 15 of The Boss’s best tracks. I hadn’t listened to Magic before, but that’s definitely the next album I’m buying. Unfortunately, I can’t embed the video.
2. TSA assaults pregnant woman, and arrests husband
There is now a division between the citizenry and the state. When that state is used as a tool against me, there is no longer any reason why I should owe any allegiance to that state.
What troubles me is when liberals decry the tyranny of the state when it comes to the police — but they’re perfectly willing to put the same folks in charge of health care, auto companies, and finance.
1. The best article I’ve ever read on health care reform
The most important single step we can take toward truly reforming our system is to move away from comprehensive health insurance as the single model for financing care. And a guiding principle of any reform should be to put the consumer, not the insurer or the government, at the center of the system.
The article is written by a Democratic businessman whose father died in a hospital. Although it’s 6 pages long, the author offers the best diagnosis of why health care is so bad in America. He ends with his idea of how government should support the sick and poor — if I were to design a health-welfare system, that’s how I would do it.
Numbers Lie, #I-Lost-Count-Already: Health Care (again)
Posted by The Marginalist in Numbers Lie on July 7th, 2009
After the public uproar over a health insurance plan that was going to cost as $1 trillion (or $2 trillion or $4 trillion, but who’s counting?), the Democrats have put forth a new bill that claims to cost “only” $600 billion dollars over the next ten years.
The plan carries a 10-year price tag of slightly over $600 billion, and would lead toward an estimated 97 percent of all Americans having coverage, according to the Congressional Budget Office, Sens. Edward M. Kennedy and Chris Dodd said in a letter to other members of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.
Don’t let the lower numbers fool you. What the government has done here is not lowered the costs, but shifted the costs. To poor people, actually. How did they do it?
Numbers Lie, Health Care Edition: $4 Trillion
Posted by The Marginalist in Numbers Lie on June 24th, 2009
Hat tip to John Goodman: The Kennedy Bill, if it covers all Americans, will cost about $4 Trillion.
Steve Parente and colleagues at Health Systems Innovations have scored the entire bill and come up with a ten-year cost of $4 trillion, including $460 billion in new spending in 2010 alone. This estimate assumes the mandates and coverage expansions will actually work and 99% of the population will be covered.
Why Waitlists Matter (and another story of a girl)
Posted by The Marginalist in Politics on June 8th, 2009
Because I’m a nerd…
I was talking with a classmate the other day about health care.
She was upset that many people couldn’t afford health insurance and favored a government-run program. I pointed out that in Canada and other socialized systems, people have to wait 10 weeks for an MRI and 17 weeks to see a specialist. While in the United States, access to health care is much faster. You ever watch House? Imagine House in Canada.
Get an MRI to confirm. Wait, we have to wait how long for an MRI?
The fact is that Canadians and Britons don’t have access to health care. They have access to health care waiting lines. But of course, as usual with most proponents of government-run health care, this did not deter my friend, who said:
Well, waiting 6 months for care is better than waiting forever to get care because you don’t have health insurance!
Ignoring the numbers
ON its face, that makes sense. It’s better to schedule chemotherapy later than never. But she seemed to forget that only a few Americans lack this access to health care. There are 47 million uninsured Americans; most of these are illegal immigrants that probably wouldn’t have health care anyways if we had a national program.
Of the remaining uninsured citizens, a good portion of these people are simply young, healthy people who, on average, would pay more into the system through premiums than they would receive through health care, so they just pay their health care costs themselves.
So when all is said and done — I’m fuzzy on the numbers, so excuse me if I’m not completely accurate — probably less than 10 million Americans lack health care simply because they cannot afford it. That’s a significant minority, but a small minority nonetheless considering there are 300 million people in this America.
For the great majority of Americans, health care is quick and accessible. But in Canada, everyone has to wait 6 months for their chemotherapy and other medical treatments — unless they dip into the illegal private health care system or fly to America to have their treatment.
What my friend ignored was the fact that waiting forever because of a lack of insurance only happens to a few people in America. Of course, unless she thinks that forcing everyone to wait 6 months for their treatment is better than a majority of them not having to wait.
And why is waiting so bad? I have a story for you.
Once upon a time
I knew a girl who once had cancer. She was young, beautiful, and had a brilliant mind. But one day, she started to feel nauseous and threw up a lot — eventually they discovered that she had a tumor in her liver.
The exact details of her medical journey are not so relevant. What is relevant is that despite the fact that we were all extremely devastated by this, there was one hopeful gem: She was able to catch her cancer early and start her chemotherapy soon enough to fight her cancer. Because of the timely treatment she received, she is still with us, and she was able to go back to school like any other girl.
Sometimes I can’t help but think that if we lived somewhere where people had to wait 6 months between seeing their physician and receiving treatment for cancer, she might not be with us now. Maybe, maybe not, but those few months are crucial in cancer treatments. Certainly she would be less healthy if she had to wait. If we lived in Canada or Britain, she would have had to wait 6 months while cancer attacked her still-young body.
I also had a violin teacher who had cancer in her brain, liver, and lungs. She was told she had 6 months — at maximum — to live, but beacuse she was able to start treatment soon, she was able to live for almost a year longer than her doctors first thought. If she lived in Canada, she would have never gotten that extra year, and I would have never learned the Mendelssohn Concerto.
You see, waiting lists for health care are worse than you might think. People die on waiting lists. People resort to the illegal and underground medical communities to receive treatment. People from socialized systems come to the US — where we still have some private health care — to escape that. Sometimes as a last resort, people resort to trying to treat themselves.
Health Care is not the Same Thing as Health Coverage
JUST because you don’t have health insurance doesn’t mean you lack health care. The two are different things. Health insurance means you pay into a pool that pays for your medical costs — you share your risk with other people. Health care is the actual visit to the doctor. Health insurance is a way of paying for health care, but it’s not the only way.
Think of it this way: Do you eat food? Yes. Do you have food insurance? No.
Therefore: Does a person who lacks health insurance necessarily lack health care? No.
My friend said that people “have to wait forever if they don’t have health insurance.” But not having health care coverage does not mean you have no health care. Even without health insurance, there are other ways to get health care. The most obvious way is paying out of pocket for your expenses.
In fact, some doctors have embraced this form of paying for medicine, offering cheap, low rates and quality care to those who are poor, uninsured, but not poor enough for welfare.
Of course, government seems to hate everything that makes things better. Oops.
Freedom Friday: Who Knows Best?
Posted by The Marginalist in Freedom Fridays on June 5th, 2009
I found an article that saddened me today.
A little girl was diagnosed with a rare medical condition from birth. For twelve years, she lived under the fear of losing her life because her body was weakened by her condition. But, through the use of doctors, she and her family put together a fairly effective treatment plan. For twelve years, it looked as if this cute girl would be able to live a normal life.
But then she moved. She went to a new hospital. She had new doctors. These doctors didn’t know her as well, and suggested a new treatment regiment. The parents refused — the original treatment plan had worked so well, and they were concerned for her health. They contacted her old doctors, who opposed changing the treatment plan, which they thought was dangerous for her.
The new doctors insisted on the new plan, and even threatened to call the police on the parents — they believed the parents were being unreasonable and preventing their daughter from receiving the treatment she needed. The parents had no choice but to go along with the new treatment plan.
The new treatment plan killed her. Her name was Francesca. She was twelve years old when she died of respiratory failure.
Perhaps the government should have done something, one might say. Perhaps the government should have taken them to court and decided which treatment was better? Perhaps the government should have set some sort of standard for the treatment of this disease?
Oh, but here’s the real kicker: this didn’t happen in America. This happened in Britain… where health care IS run by the government. Government officials decided they knew what was best for this little girl based on their regulations and guidelines determined by government bureaucrats. And it killed her.
You see, government regulation often tries to dictate what they think is best for us. They think we’re too stupid to choose correctly what’s best for us — oh, but they, the infallible regulators, somehow do. Never mind the fact that they’ve never met you or your doctor. They know what’s best for you, not you or your doctor.
Isn’t that at least a little bit insulting? For someone to come in and dictate to you your personal choices under the guise that somehow they have some god-given power to know what’s best for you. But government officials don’t know. They may know what’s best for the majority of people, but they can’t make all of these decisions on an individual basis.
Who better to make the decision than the individual? Yes, perhaps the average person knows little of medicine. But he knows who to ask, he knows where to find the information; he can ask a doctor for his own, personalized advice. But he can’t do that with a government official. Government officials don’t know him. The average person also knows little about cars and computers, but we still allow them to make personal decisions about what car or computer to buy.
The key thing in regulation of personal decisions is that the best course of action is different from person to person. Government officials cannot replicate those best decisions; they’re not in the shoes of every person, and therefore they cannot determine what the best course of action is. Imagine if we did that with food, if we decided de-individualize food choices. We’d just have the same thing every time, and some people would like it. But some people would hate it, and we would deny them the choice to choose their own lifestyle.
So government regulators take what’s best for most people and force it on everyone. Those in the minority, like Francesca, suffer — greatly.
Good Thing Healthcare Isn’t Run This Way (Yet!)
Posted by The Marginalist in Links, Personal on June 4th, 2009
HAT tip: Health Care BS (Health Care BS is a seriously good blog)

