Republicans Propagating Falsehoods in Attacks on Health-Care Reform

Earlier this month, Steven Pearlstein wrote in the Washington Post, “As a columnist who regularly dishes out sharp criticism, I try not to question the motives of people with whom I don’t agree. Today, I’m going to step over that line…”

I was late to the party; comments on the Post site are already closed.

Mr. Pearlstein propagates three significant falsehoods in stepping over his critical line.

(1) It may be true to say the recent attacks by the ideological right … [are] a flat-out lie whose only purpose is to scare the public and stop political conversation, but Mr. Pearlstein ignores the fact that the recent attacks by the ideological left … [are] the same lies whose only purpose are to scare the public and stop political conversation.

(2) The vast majority of Americans will likely not be able to to buy health insurance from private companies when, as happened in Vermont, the ever tightening rules run private insurers out of town.

(3) The centerpiece of all the plans is not a new health insurance exchange. The centerpiece of all the plans is a new trillion dollar tax, a fact Mr. Pearlstein calls “Another lie.” The fact is, Mr. Pearlstein, that health care in America is a TWO trillion dollar annual expense. If the government raises that amount in taxes and dispenses it for health care, that makes it a TWO trillion dollar annual tax.

I agree that “Health reform is a test of whether this country can function once again as a civil society.” One that both sides have failed. It is a test, in fact a war, that so far only the media, the lawyers, and the politicians have won.

Sorry, Mr. Pearlstein, but fighting a war with fiction isn’t right no matter which side of the angels you think you are on.

Read all about ObamaCare here.

Vermont Police to Curb Profiling

For the past three years, a “blue ribbon” committee of Vermonters has studied the possibility of racial profiling by police officers in this state.

Hello? Vermont is, of course, the least diverse state in the Union. The Census Bureau reports that 2008 population of the state is about 621,000, up from 609,000 nine years ago. The population breaks down as 96.4% white and 0.9% black which means that if one non-white person is ticketed, it must be profiling. The community group Uncommon Alliance raised the concerns about racial profiling.

The committee report says Vermont minorities believe they are the victims of pervasive racial profiling by police on traffic stops. The report also shows there is absolutely no data anywhere that support the idea. None.

The Vermont state police say they do investigate about ten racial profiling complaints out of thousands of traffic stops each year.

Reminder: The report shows there is absolutely no data anywhere that support the perceived profiling. None.

Law enforcement leaders have chosen “pro-active responses.”

Vermont Public Safety Commissioner Tom Tremblay said, “We recognize that law enforcement in Vermont needs to address the perception and/or the reality of racial profiling.”

Reminder: The report also shows there is absolutely no data anywhere that support the perceived profiling. None.

Police will create yet another new data collection system and document each person’s race, gender and age at traffic stops. We can expect video cameras in all police cruisers as well as more anti-racial-bias training for cops.

Meanwhile, pigs are a Vermont tradition at county fairs but kids won’t chase any pigs at the Caledonia County Fair in Lyndonville this year. “No swine at the fair,” said Richard Lawrence. It turns out the public could be afraid of pigs because people think the pigs could spread the flu. (The fact is that pigs should fear the people, not the other way around.)

Fair officials say they know that pigs are not spreading the H1N1 virus but they banned them anyway. State and county fairs came to life to promote science and agriculture.

The Fair made its decision “not based on sound science but based on public perception,” Vermont state veterinarian Dr. Kristin Haas told WCAX TV. “In this instance we have an example of a pretty big difference between the two.”

As an aside, a federal program later this month will focus exclusively on drunk driving. By women.

News reports show a host of community forums on profiling will begin Wednesday.

Reminder: The report shows there is absolutely no data anywhere that support the perceived profiling. None.

Don’t confuse me with the facts. It is crucial that we sacrifice truth and dignity on the altar of the politically correct. And left-leaning public perception.

Throw Cash at It

My friend Lido (“Lee”) Bruhl is a true believer in universal health care. He continues to campaign for a single payer system. “And yet we still have all these vehement protests that our health care system is fine just the way it is,” he said this morning.

Not from me. I vehemently protest that ObamaCare will take a health care system that delivers decent care for way too much money and turn it it to a system that delivers lesser care for way more than way too much money.

Lee took a new tack. “The US already spends more on health care than most other nations, but it gets less,” he said.

Semi-true. Here’s another one: The US already spends more on primary and secondary education than most other nations, but it gets less. And this: The US spent more “stimulus money” on job creation than any other nation, but it got fewer jobs created.

A better question to examine is this: Why do we as a nation throw so much cash at problems and get such a (relatively) poor return?

One Piece At A Time

With apologies to Johnny Cash and writer Wayne Kemp who inadvertently chronicled our present health care delivery system, One Piece At A Time: Mr. Cash left Kentucky back in ’49 and went to Detroit workin’ on the assembly line. He smuggled out a piece, he smuggled out a pair, and sooner or later he had a car out there.

Well I left Kentucky back in ’49 and
Went to Washington work on the assembly line
The first year they had me puttin’ peeps on Medicare
Every day I’d watch them beauties roll by
And sometimes I’d hang my head and cry
Cuz I always wanted me one that was big and fair
One day I devised myself a plan
That should be the envy of most any man
I’d sneak it outta there in a lunchbox in my hand
Now gettin’ caught meant gettin’ fired
But I figured I’d have it all by the time I retired
I’d have me a plan worth at least 100 grand

I’d get it one piece at a time
And it wouldn’t cost me a dime
You’ll know it’s me when I come through your town
I’m gonna ride around in style
I’m gonna drive everybody wild
Cuz I’ll have the only one there is around

So the very next day when I punched in
With my big lunchbox and with help from my friend
I left that day with a lunchbox of blood smears
I’ve never considered myself a thief
But America wouldn’t miss one little piece
Especially if I strung it out over several years
The first day I found me a breast lump
And the next day I got me a freestanding birth center
Then I got me an ambulance and all the chrome
The little things I could get in my big lunchbox
Like pins and gowns and electroshocks
But the big stuff we snuck out my buddy’s mobile home
Now up to now my plan went alright
‘Til we tried to put it all together one night
And that’s when we noticed that somethin’ was definitely wrong
The insurance checks were from ’53 and
The hospital bill was a ’73 and
When we tried to put in the bolts all the holes were gone
So we drilled it out so that it would fit and
With a little help from an adapter kit
We had that hospital runnin’ like a song
Now the OR lights, they was another sight
We had 2 on the left and 1 on the right
But when we pulled out the switch all 3 of ’em come on
The back end looked kinda funny too
But we put it together and when we got through
Well that’s when we noticed that we only had 1 bed pan
About that time my wife walked out and
I could see in her eyes that she had her doubts
But she opened the door and said
“Honey, take me for a spin”
Drove uptown just to get our subsidies and
I headed her right on down main drag
I could hear everybody cryin’ for blocks around
But up there at the Congress they didn’t laugh
Cuz to type it up it took the whole staff and
The final Health Care Reform Act weighed 60 pounds

I’d got it one piece at a time
And it didn’t cost me a dime
You’ll know taxes ain’t never going down
I’m gonna ride around in style
I’m gonna drive everybody wild
Cuz I’ll have the only one there is around

Uh, yeah Red Rider this is the Cotton Mouth in the
Psycho Billy HMO, come on
Huh?
Uh, this is the Cotton Mouth and neg-a-tory on the
Cost of this moe-sheen there Red Rider
You might say I went right up to the factory and
Picked it up, it’s cheaper that way
Uh, what model is it?
It’s a 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59
patchwork blanket
It’s a 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70
holey basket.

We built our Health Care system pretty much that way. One Piece At A Time. And just like that 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70 automobile, the gas tank leaks and the engine makes funny noises.

Everybody in this discussion, from the most fervent ObamaCare supporter to the most ardent contrarian, has a good answer for patching up a rusty old car that runs on three cylinders and has two flat tires. It might keep us going to the next exit, but it won’t carry the family across the country on vacation.

The same Democrats pushing patches on the current system want to reinvent the automobile from the ground up but all they want to do with health care is find a few more people to cover and another way to pay for it.

The same Republicans opposing changes to the current system want to keep that clunker but all they can to do with health care is keep the money from flowing to Washington.

We deserve better. We need to start from scratch. And if your Congress Critter or President tries to pay this new 1,000 page tax bill with your wallet, throw da bum out.

Sing it with me now,
It’s a 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59
patchwork angina
It’s a 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70
insurance black hole.

Big Cuts or Flummery?

“We’ll cut hundreds of billions of dollars in waste and inefficiency in federal health programs like Medicare and Medicaid and in unwarranted subsidies to insurance companies that do nothing to improve care and everything to improve their profits.” President Obama wrote in the NYTimes.

Cool.

Um, wait a minute, Mr. President. Aren’t Medicare and Medicaid already government programs? Why do we need a brand new 1,000 page bill to “cut hundreds of billions of dollars in waste and inefficiency” from the programs you are already the boss of?

Why can’t we just cut hundreds of billions of dollars in waste and inefficiency out of those right now?