by John Leonard
The public is being sold the idea of “free” healthcare where you go to the doctor or the hospital and all you pay out of pocket is what you choose to voluntarily spend on a gift basket to thank the doctors and nurses
The  attraction of universal healthcare (Medicare For All) should be obvious  -- it is all about receiving care for little or no money and not the  quality of healthcare one receives. If one simply scans the Internet  long enough, an article with anecdotal stories extolling the virtues of  Canada’s universal healthcare model can be found that paints a lovely  picture (my infant son spent a week in intensive care and it only cost us a gift basket!)  but even if the anecdotes are true, does that mean that the United  States should follow the example of Canada or the U.K. and implement a  single-payer healthcare system? That would be an extraordinarily bad  idea, for several reasons.
Nobody  is saying that the U.S. healthcare system is perfect, but the  socialists never talk about one of the best ways to fix the current  system—tort reform. Sleazy lawyers have driven up the cost of  malpractice insurance and forced doctors to order unnecessary medical  tests in order to avoid expensive and unnecessary future litigation.
According to the National Institute of Health, [C]hildren born by cesarean have no documented reduced risk of other childhood neurologic problems or cerebral palsy.”Yet parasitic tort lawyer  John Edwards fleeced doctors and insurance companies for somewhere  between $40-$80 million dollars by suing them under the false pretense  that a C-section could prevent cerebral palsy, in effect blaming the  physician for a birth defect.
But  the problem is that the public is being sold the idea of “free”  healthcare where you go to the doctor or the hospital and all you pay  out of pocket is what you choose to voluntarily spend on a gift basket  to thank the doctors and nurses for taking such excellent care of your  child.  But the reality is that you’re buying managed healthcare, which  is rationed healthcare. With a total population of only 37.59 million  people, maybe Canada really can afford to provide quality healthcare but  the problem is on a completely different scale here: California alone  has three million more people than Canada, and the difference in  population is probably “undocumented,” which used to be known as illegal, aliens.
 George  W. Bush might have been a decent president overall, and certainly a  vast improvement over the options presented by the Democrats, Al Gore  and John Kerry, but if for no other reason, he can never be called a  “great” president because of his horrific expansion of Medicare  to cover prescription drugs as he pandered to seniors and the AARP.  Socialists love to demonize the pharmaceutical industry and accuse them  of overcharging (somewhat tough to dispute, given the number of  commercials for new drugs that we see on television) but the price of a  drug is affected by several factors, and greed only plays one part. The  most important function of a pharmaceutical company is new research and  development into treatments and cures of serious diseases and traumatic  injury. Yes, people like Heather Bresch  ought to be put under the prison for jacking up the price of an Epi-Pen  so she could give herself a whopping $16 million dollar pay raise, but  don’t hold your breath because Heather happens to be Joe Manchin’s  daughter, and royalty doesn’t often go to prison.  Martin Shkreli’s worst crime was apparently not having the right father.
George  W. Bush might have been a decent president overall, and certainly a  vast improvement over the options presented by the Democrats, Al Gore  and John Kerry, but if for no other reason, he can never be called a  “great” president because of his horrific expansion of Medicare  to cover prescription drugs as he pandered to seniors and the AARP.  Socialists love to demonize the pharmaceutical industry and accuse them  of overcharging (somewhat tough to dispute, given the number of  commercials for new drugs that we see on television) but the price of a  drug is affected by several factors, and greed only plays one part. The  most important function of a pharmaceutical company is new research and  development into treatments and cures of serious diseases and traumatic  injury. Yes, people like Heather Bresch  ought to be put under the prison for jacking up the price of an Epi-Pen  so she could give herself a whopping $16 million dollar pay raise, but  don’t hold your breath because Heather happens to be Joe Manchin’s  daughter, and royalty doesn’t often go to prison.  Martin Shkreli’s worst crime was apparently not having the right father. Say it ain’t so, Joe.
American  hospitals are often harshly criticized for what appears to be obscenely  overpriced services.  Several years ago, my wife suffered a medical  emergency that eventually required an overnight stay in the hospital,  and the bill was over $24,000. After the sticker shock, I remembered a  call I’d received a few years prior from a hospital in Virginia,  inquiring about treatment I’d allegedly received but they had been  unable to bill to my insurance, probably because I hadn’t been in  Virginia. The person who claimed to be me and provided my Social  Security number as identification had received medical services using a  false identity. He had used mine, in fact.  Naturally, the hospital in  Virginia could not pursue me for medical expenses incurred using my name  and identity and had to write them off, but somebody has to pay for the  medical equipment and hospital staff. When my wife’s hospital bill in  Georgia was $24,000, I sort of understood why our bill was so high, even  after our insurance paid its part.
Doctors  don’t work for free. Nor should they. Medical school is ridiculously  expensive, and they suffer long and hard internships before they ever  earn the right to offer their services to the general public. One of the  biggest problems with single-payer healthcare is that doctor  compensation is suddenly mandated by government fiat, and the very last  thing we need to do is kill the incentive of our best and brightest to  pursue a career in medicine because the federal government has decided  to cap their earnings potential. If medical schools can’t produce future  generations of brilliant, innovative new physicians, the future demands  of single-payer healthcare will inevitably cause longer waiting times  for routine care and rationing for medical services. Wouldn’t it be  ironic if the imposter John Leonard and I both showed up at the hospital  at the same time in the distant future, requesting medical treatment  when healthcare services are being rationed and he received treatment,  but I was turned away? 
Irony would be one word for it. Criminal might be a better word.
Getting  back to the Canadian propaganda piece (the gift basket) for a moment,  one thing the article didn’t explain: why are there so many American hospitals  on the Canadian border? Is it possible that treatments are created and  developed in the U.S. long before they ever become available in Canada,  and that contributes to the overall cost of American healthcare? Here in  the Deep South, we have an expression: “You only get what you pay for.”  If you want the best healthcare system in the world, you shouldn’t  expect to be treated for free. Socialists have somehow managed to  convince the general public that universal or single-payer healthcare is  actually about healthcare when it’s really only about control of our  money.  If you think a socialist will care more about your health than you do, perhaps you deserve socialized medicine because it doesn’t really matter.
Socialists  only care about two things: their power and your money. Ignorance is  treatable, but stupidity is incurable. Implementing socialized medicine  as a solution to the problems with our current healthcare system is a  lot like hunting a housefly with a bazooka—yeah, you just might get the  job done (then again, you might not) but the only guarantee is that  you’ll make a terrible mess in the process.
This is what socialists always do—they promise the people the paradise of Sweden but deliver to them the hell of Venezuela.
Graphic credit: Piqsels
Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2020/02/the_propaganda_of_singlepayer_healthcare.html
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