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Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Phyllis Schlafly :: Townhall.com Columnist
Reading the Fine Print in the Health Care Bill
by Phyllis Schlafly
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The House Democrats' health-care bill is titled "America's Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009." No clue is given as to how long we will have a choice, but it will probably be only until the "public option" chases private insurance out of business.

The bill's subtitle states its purpose as health care for everyone, reducing "the growth in health care spending ... and for other purposes." Note that the goal is not to reduce spending but only the "growth" in spending, and we need to worry about the "other purposes" that will be added by the bureaucrats' regulations.

The bill states that health-care benefits require "shared responsibility among workers, employers, and the government." That means the government will force all taxpayers to pay for health care for millions of people who don't now buy insurance because they don't need it, or because insurance doesn't cover what they do need. (Page 5)

The bill states that the government will investigate "self-insured employers not being able to pay obligations." Government agents will audit and then harass small-business owners to force them to pay for insurance they cannot afford. (Page 22)

The bill provides for optional "nurse home visitation services" without specifying who has power to exercise the option. Among the various purposes listed are "increasing birth intervals between pregnancies" (this reminds us of China's policies to reduce childbirth by married couples), reducing "child abuse, neglect, and injury" (giving more authority to the already too powerful Child Protective Services) and promoting school readiness (will homeschooling be scorned?). (Page 768)

The bill covers family planning. Those are well-known code words for taxpayer-funded contraception and abortion, and will impose mandatory coverage of abortion on demand in all health plans. (Page 772)

The bill provides for "culturally and linguistically appropriate communication and health services" and "shall give priority to applicants that have developed partnerships with community organizations or with agencies with experience in language access." This opens up plenty of funding for health and translation services for illegal aliens. (Pages 405 and 407)

Title II of the bill creates a "Health Insurance Exchange," pretending to be a marketplace for health insurance plans. Of course, so long as the "public option" is subsidized by the taxpayers, it can always undersell private plans. (Page 72)

The government will specify the health benefits that must be included in any plan participating in the Health Insurance Exchange. If all private plans must include all government-specified benefits (which will surely include benefits unwanted by many people and will inevitably drive up costs), whatever happened to choice? (Page 84)

Anyone who does not enroll in an Exchange-participating plan will be "automatically enrolled under Medicaid." The government will thus use force to achieve its goal of universal coverage. (Page 102) Continued...

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About The Author

Phyllis Schlafly is a national leader of the pro-family movement, a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Feminist Fantasies.
 
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Affordable HealthCare

A chain is only as strong as its weakest link.

The health of every American - including the health of congressmen, senators, presidents, governors,  lobbyists, bankers, titans of industry, multi-millionaires, talk-show hosts, and the friends and family members of each -  daily depends upon whether the following can obtain affordable adequate healthcare: maids; people who clean restrooms; servers,  dishwashers, and cooks  in fast-food restaurants and other restaurants;  childcare workers;   hospital employees; nursing home employees; other caregivers; all grocery store employees; people who pick fruits and vegetables; people who put fruits and vegetables on store shelves; people who slaughter chickens, turkeys,  hogs,  cattle,  sheep, and goats and people who process the meat for market; people who process fish for market; people who clean slaughterhouses; people who work in canning  and bottling factories, including all who clean the factories; food inspectors; and countless more.

These are our nation's first line of defense against bacterial and viral infections - botulism, influenza, tuberculosis, and MRSA, for example. If these people keep working when they have a contagious illness, and pass it on to others who cannot afford to see a doctor for it, the contagion will be more likely to get passed all the way up to the upper crust. Keep these people sufficiently worried about not being able to afford a doctor - for themselves and family members - and their work will not be up to par, which means that the rest of us will then be at greater risk of getting botulism, influenza, tuberculosis, MRSA and more. (When worried enough, they also will be more likely to crash into our vehicle as they drive to and from work.)

These people need affordable adequate healthcare coverage available to them, and all Americans need them to have it.

April22, Reply # 59
"Are you suggesting that prioritizing health care based on who can afford to pay is a more equitable system?"
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Where in the world you got that idea I can not even guess.
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How do you think limited resources are allocated in a free market economy?

While this may work fine for elective medical procedures, we're talking about basic medical care here. Why should anyone have to wait until their illness is serious enough to warrant an emergency room visit at taxpayer expense when it could be treated so much easier early on?
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