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Wednesday, July 15, 2009
John Stossel :: Townhall.com Columnist
Health-Care Competition
by John Stossel
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Will Congress pass Obamacare by the end of the year?

The statist establishment would love a single-payer health-care system like Canada's if it were politically achievable. Barack Obama said that if we were starting from scratch, single payer is what he'd back. But, thankfully, Americans are still libertarian enough to cringe at turning the medical system entirely over to government.

So with single payer out of reach, the fans of government control have grabbed for second best: the "public option." This would be government-run health insurance that would "compete" with private insurance. (It wouldn't compete fairly because it could do something no private firm can do: milk the captive taxpayers.) But the public option is proving hard to get. Even some Democrats are nervous about it.

What's a statist to do?

Leading Democrats in the Senate say the answer might be nonprofit health cooperatives. Sen. Charles Schumer wants some method "to keep the companies honest," and if the "public competitor" can "do those things in a co-op form, I think we're open to it".

One sign that this may be the way things are heading is that the New York Times, the mouthpiece of the statist establishment, ran a front-page article last week that begins with glowing praise for a co-op where doctors have lots of time to spend with patients because of its "collaborative model of primary care." Among the media it's an article of faith that the "collaborative model" is more consumer friendly than a profit-seeking business.

The Times connects the dots in case anyone missed the point. "On Capitol Hill, those innovations have made Group Health a prototype for a political compromise that could unclog health care negotiations in the Senate and lead to a bipartisan deal. ... [T]he Senate Finance Committee seems poised to propose private-sector insurance cooperatives ... as its primary mechanism for stoking competition and slowing the growth of medical costs."

Give me a break. Since when is government needed to stoke competition? Competition is what happens when government lets people alone. I defy anyone to give me an example of lack of competition that doesn't have its roots in government intervention.

Since co-ops are nonprofit organizations owned by their members, the Times' story subtly implies that the profit motive is responsible for the absence of competition and higher medical costs. But that's ridiculous. In a free market without government barriers to entry, it's the quest for profit that produces competition and lower costs. Continued...

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About The Author
John Stossel blogs at http://blogs.abcnews.com/johnstossel/ is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
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Competition is the American Way
The current Healthcare System is a fine example of what happens when you have unmitigated competition: You end with just a few companies that work together to keep prices high, and service becomes pointless -- what can consumers do? Who can they appeal to and where can they go?
We are founded on the (often sited by the right wing) the right to pursue life, liberty and happiness. How happy can you be if you can't afford healthcare and the inevitable time comes when you need medical care? 46 million Americans are in that place right now, and some will give up their lives to the for-profit healthcare industry's dedication to its bottom line.
Healthcare shouldn't be a profit center -- its an essential need for a quality, modern life. I think the right wing wouldn't mind returning to times when our lifespans were far shorter -- because people died all the time of illnesses that we now know how to cure. Check the 20th Century: according to the CDC, the average U.S. lifespan increased by more than 30 years; 25 years of which can be attributed to advances in public health.
After all, its only profitable to insure healthy people, so the industry has a fiduciary duty to its shareholders to accept such clients. Then kick them out when they need care, let them die if that's what God wants. He would have provided insurance if they were worthy, right?

Free Market Quagmire
John, John where is your compassion, Oh yea I remember followers of Mammon don’t feel compassion they feel their Gold. So John's solution is to deregulate and let the free market work. Ha Ha Ha ,oh John we tried that on Wall Street with the Banks and we got 401K sucker bets and the Meltdownbailout Blues. What we need is a single payer system where everyone and everything is covered. We do it because we are compassionate and because we are not followers of Mammon’s ways but of Higher moral values .
Another thing John our Constitution starts with the sentence “ We The People… “. We are the State, The United States of America . It is our government and in the Preamble which is Americas Mission Statement it call for our government to “… promote the general welfare…”. It is within our power as a People to take care of each other. We can’t leave it up to Insurance Corporations were in their mess now. The “Don’t take away Medicare” folks love their Medicare. I say lets extend it to everyone and cover everything.
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