Netanyahu Gives an Option to Terrorists Still Holding Hostages in Gaza
Did You Catch Kamala's Awkward Pause When Bret Baier Asked This Question?
Look Away, Democrats. Obama Has Some Unfiltered Observations About Kamala.
The NY Times Plagiarism Expert Steals Its Thunder, and Public Trust in the...
Anti-Gunners Overstating Research on Mandatory Storage Laws
How Black Voters View Trump
Trump to Headline Catholic Dinner While Kamala Will Send In Pre-Recorded Tape
View Co-Host Accuses Fox News of 'Racism, Sexism' After Kamala Interview
This Is How Many Million Illegal Aliens Would Be Imported Into the U.S....
Here's What Cardinal Dolan Has to Say About Kamala Harris Skipping Out on...
One Country Just Made It Illegal to Seek Surrogacy Abroad
Liberal Poll Shows Republican Bernie Moreno Ahead in 'Toss-Up' Ohio Senate Race
These Media Headlines on Harris' Fox News Interview May Reveal a Larger Pattern
'There Is Something Pathological Going on Here': JD Vance Reacts to Harris' Fox...
Investigative Task Force Commissioned by Mayorkas Urges Overhaul of Secret Service Leaders...
OPINION

Hey, How About a "Private" Option?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

It's about time we conceded that proponents of the "public option" in health care reform have offered up a tremendously constructive idea.

In his pitch to the masses on health care, President Barack Obama said that a public option would "give people a broader range of choices and inject competition into the health care market ... and keep the insurance companies honest."

Advertisement

So let's agree, then, that the more we inject competition into a marketplace the more consumers benefit from lower prices and innovation. Consequently, there should be no problem infusing this open-minded brand of policymaking into an array of issues. You know, to keep everyone honest.

Culture of Corruption by Michelle Malkin FREE

All one needs to do is employ the president's logic and it becomes patently obvious that the time is right for a "private option" in Social Security. This would free citizens to extract themselves from a failing program and pay into a private one that offers more than a 1 percent return (like a savings account or a tooth fairy, for instance). Seeing as injecting competition into markets is healthy and desirable and all that good stuff ... it should be painless.

How about those payroll taxes most of us pay to fund Medicare? Isn't it time that Washington instituted an opt-out clause so that future generations are able to select private options if they wish? This would bring down costs and raise accountability because, as the president so astutely points out, enhanced competition keeps shysters in line.

And what about those vulnerable children? If health care is "right," then education is sacred moral imperative. How could an enlightened society allow a "public" education monopoly to run our precious schools into the ground? Let's get moving on a private option by means of vouchers so parents -- or "victims," in this case -- can blunt the influence of "villainous" super-funded special interest groups, such as the National Education Association.

Advertisement

Sad to say, the present system simply doesn't meet Obama's free market criterion of offering a "broader range of choices." And as we all know, the status quo is unacceptable -- unless you hate children.

It's a question of morality, actually. Unions not only abuse the working stiff by underpaying high-performing employees and shielding low-performing employees but also "target" poor and inner-city kids by trapping them in failing schools and denying them the bright future that every American deserves.

This kind of transformational change would necessitate an ideological U-turn, considering Congress and the administration have been working to kill the successful vouchers program in Washington, D.C.

Then again, the entire "competition" argument is one gigantic rhetorical hoax.

It is fortuitous that the president decided to invoke the U.S. Postal Service this week when defending the public option, claiming, "If you think about it, UPS and FedEx are doing just fine, right? No, they are. It's the post office that's always having problems."

Actually, if you really think about it, the Postal Service holds a monopoly on first-class mail. Without that monopoly, it would not exist. But at least the post office pays its own way. The public option would not. It is not competition. It is the antithesis, a program designed to undercut markets, create artificial price controls and, inevitably, produce a single-payer plan.

Advertisement

How do we know all this talk of competitive markets is disingenuous? History. If the progressive left, which runs Washington today, truly believed in more market competition, the public would be able to point to a single illustration of the Obama administration or Democratic leadership "injecting" more free market activity into a government-run monopoly -- or anywhere else in the market, for that matter.

That's not the mission.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos