The current health care conundrum is filled with health care
non-sequiturs, or conclusions that don't make sense based on their premises.
This has resulted in confusion and confabulation due to people arguing the
conclusions -- when the premises used to reach those conclusions do not make
sense.
Health care reform uses the word reform, therefore it
must be good. No, it depends on what is passed into law. We
should simply refer to "health care changes."
If you are against the House and Senate bills, then
you are against health care reform. No, in fact it only means you
are against the House and Senate versions of health care changes. You could
be for or against health care changes in a different version.
You would also be with the majority of American voters.
According to a Rasmussen Report published last Saturday, 54 percent of
voters say "no health care reform passed by Congress this year" would be
better than the current bill. Only 35 percent of voters say passing the bill
"would be better than not passing any health care reform legislation this
year."
A public option will result in lower cost and more
access for citizens.
No, a public option will result in a large government entity.
There is no evidence that such an option would provide lower cost and more
access -- many believe it would result in inefficiency and less personal
control.
The government has money to fund health care changes.
No, the government does not have any money -- the government
gets citizens' money either through taxing people or borrowing from future
generations.
Doing something with health care is better than doing
nothing.
It could be better or worse than doing nothing. It depends on
what ends up in health care changes.
If you are against President Obama's proposal, then
you are against a system that provides choice and competition.
No, you might believe that the path the president is taking will not lead to
choice and competition for the consumer.
What are the underlying beliefs that are leading to these
different trains of thought? The underlying determining factor might be
whether you believe more government is helpful or hurtful.
Americans are overwhelmingly conservative. When describing their
views in a Gallup poll released in June, conservative is the answer given by
40 percent of Americans. Thirty-five percent say moderate, and 21 percent
say liberal. This means that more Americans are inclined to believe less
government is better than more government.
In addition, government activity in other areas has not inspired
citizens to believe that more government is better.
More than half of Americans "say it would have been better for
the government to have spent less money to stimulate the economy," according
to another Gallup poll released Tuesday. Many of these same people might be
skeptical that the government should spend even more money, regardless of
how good the intent.
"Americans provide a less-than-enthusiastic endorsement of the
impact of the No Child Left Behind Act," according to a Gallup poll released
Wednesday. "Of those familiar with the act, 21 percent say it has made the
education received by public school students in the United States better,
while almost half, 45 percent, say it has made no difference, and 29 percent
say it has made public school students' education worse."
So, if it didn't work on education, why would you think big
government would work on health care?
We should first fix the system we have (Medicare inefficiencies,
fraud, tort reform, allow purchasing between states and electronic medical
records) before creating a new government entity. In addition, we should
continue to reach the underserved through Federally Qualified Health
Centers, which "currently serve about 20 million people and receive
approximately $2 billion a year from the federal government," according to a
column written last Friday by Bob Herbert titled "Hard to Believe."
In the 50 states and the District of Columbia, the only area
where liberals outnumber conservatives is in Washington, D.C., according to
a Gallup poll released Friday. This discrepancy in core beliefs between the
American people and Washington, D.C., might explain why "Democrats Seem Set
to Go It Alone on a Health Care Bill," according to a New York Times article
published Wednesday, while the majority of the country is conservative.
One more health care non-sequitur.