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Friday, September 19, 2008
Rich Tucker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Making Unaffordable Promises
by Rich Tucker
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


In difficult financial times, it’s important to make sure you’re taking the right steps toward long-term success.

That’s true of individuals, who must decide whether to invest in stocks or bonds or simply to bury their cash in the back yard. It’s true of corporations, many of which are now going, hat in hand, to Washington for a bailout. And these days, Americans need it to be true of our federal government, too.

The big question isn’t “will our financial system survive?” It certainly will, in some form. In the long term the only way to go broke is to bet against the American economy, which will outlast the Chinese economy just as it outlasted Japan in the 1980s, Germany in the 1970s, Britain in the 1950s, and so forth.

No, the big question is whether our government can afford all the promises it’s making. Policymakers are throwing money around like never before, and may eventually even run out of cash to spend.

For just one example, see Andy Serwer and Allan Sloan’s piece in TIME magazine. In recent weeks, they write, the federal government absorbed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, instantly adding “more than $5 trillion -- yes, with a t -- of the firms’ debt onto taxpayers, nearly doubling the amount Uncle Sam owes to his lenders.” More bailouts -- or more economic stimulus packages -- will just mean more billions that we’re all on the hook for.

At times like these, belt-tightening is in order. Luckily, Washington can cut costs while also improving life for millions of Americans. The key is to reform entitlement programs.

Let’s start with Medicaid, the program Washington and state governments both participate in to provide health care to poor Americans. Over the next decade, governments at all levels are expected to spend $5.1 trillion (again, with a t) on Medicaid. But we as taxpayers aren’t getting what we’re going to pay for.

“Medicaid is a paradox,” analyst Dennis Smith writes in a recent paper from The Heritage Foundation. “It is criticized as both too stingy and too generous; com¬prehensive but incomplete; unreliable yet essen¬tial; too complex and too inflexible; a program that is both shunned and embraced by individuals and providers.”

The way to fix the program is to convert it into one that helps people buy health insurance instead of a program that buys medical procedures for patients. The overwhelming majority of people on Medicaid are healthy. They would benefit from being on a traditional health insurance plan, but they often can’t afford the premiums. Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Tucker is an editor in Washington D.C. and a columnist for Townhall.com.

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An honest Supreme Court could just
declare all transfer payments and bail-outs and cabinet offices that do that unconstitutional, but finding five pairs of what organ is required in 4,000 politicians and attorneys is like finding a three-inch pearl in a one-inch oyster. The Commerce clause has been distorted beyond all intent and recognition.

They all need to stop taking their oaths on the Bible, and the Tree of Liberty is wilting.

The Community Redevelopment Act
This whole mess was initiated by the Community Redevelopment Act and follow-on legislation that required lenders to lend to poor risks or lose favor of the Federal government. Free market? I think not! The objective was to highjack a market process to accomplish social engineering. Well, the Fed. gov. has caused the problem with this rediculous legislation - from the Carter and Clinton administrations - and now the Democrats sit back and pretend that it is the market and the 'failed policies of the last eight years' that have brought it about.
Certainly the Republicans could and should have done something about it, but then they would have been accused of being hard-hearted and not caring for the poor. It was a no-win situation.
At least McCain spoke up two years ago while Obama did nothing but rake in political contributions from Fanny and Freddie.
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