About Me

Name: TheRationalRight
Email: MaverickBarracuda08@gmail.com Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Blog Roll

 

Rumors About Health Insurance Reform

My email to flag@whitehouse.gov:


Mr. President:

Per the plea on your blog, I feel obliged to report some rumors that I’ve heard circulating regarding your plan for Health Insurance Reform.  I urge you to find the source of these rumors and put an end to them immediately. 

Unsubstantiated rumors are identified by bullet points.  Rebuttal to these rumors follows in italics.

 

  • No Discrimination for Pre-Existing Conditions

Insurance companies will be prohibited from refusing you coverage because of your medical history.

For anyone who understands insurance, this is an absolute absurdity.  If this is true, then why would anyone pay for insurance prior to becoming ill?  Insurance is based on actuarial mathematics, not blind luck.  (Would you buy a vehicle from a newspaper ad that simply said “automobile:  $20,000” without insisting that you obtain additional information about it, such as make, model, mileage, and condition?)  To eliminate underwriting principles is to ensure the collapse of the private insurance industry, thus ensuring that the only option remaining is the public insurance option, thus ensuring that all except the ultra-rich will be subject to government-controlled medical care, thus expanding rather than contracting the gap between economic classes.

  • No Exorbitant Out-of-Pocket Expenses, Deductibles or Co-Pays

Insurance companies will have to abide by yearly caps on how much they can charge for out-of-pocket expenses.

“Exorbitant expenses” and such would be replaced by what?  The guarantee of corporate losses in an industry that is already struggling?  Any extra expense forced on a business must be made up for by either cutting costs (most likely jobs) or by finding additional sources of revenue.  Suppose every American were covered under a “competing” government plan.  These “exorbitant expenses” would be replaced by an additional source of revenue, meaning increased debt or increased taxes.  People who have never worked in a business environment seem to believe that corporations try to dream up ways to “stick it to” their customers.  People whose livelihoods depend on business understand that success depends on providing quality goods or services at a reasonable price while making enough of a profit to ensure that the business survives.

  • No Cost-Sharing for Preventive Care

Insurance companies must fully cover, without charge, regular checkups and tests that help you prevent illness, such as mammograms or eye and foot exams for diabetics.

This is a noble ideal.  However, it will add another expense that must be compensated somehow.  Again, this will result in either higher premiums or job losses.  Both consequences are the opposite of what you profess to be working towards.

  • No Dropping of Coverage for Seriously Ill

Insurance companies will be prohibited from dropping or watering down insurance coverage for those who become seriously ill.

I believe this to be a smokescreen.  For people covered under individual or small group plans, perhaps a particularly high claims experience may justify an increase in premiums that makes insurance become unaffordable.  This is certainly a problem that needs to be addressed.  However, for the majority of those Americans covered under large group insurance plans, I do not believe that coverage is dropped when insured persons become seriously ill.

  • No Gender Discrimination

Insurance companies will be prohibited from charging you more because of your gender.

I believe this, too, to be a smokescreen.  I believe this is not common practice.  However – fair or not – insurance is based on actuarial risk, and the medical expenses for a woman in childbearing years is most likely to be higher than the medical expenses for a man in the same age group.  This is not just a matter of mathematics; it is common sense.

  • No Annual or Lifetime Caps on Coverage

Insurance companies will be prevented from placing annual or lifetime caps on the coverage you receive.

Again, I would argue that since limitless care carries increased risk, the result would be increased expenses.  The natural outcome would be higher premiums or fewer jobs.

  • Extended Coverage for Young Adults

Children would continue to be eligible for family coverage through the age of 26.

Ditto to the above remark (again).  Does anyone in the federal government understand that increasing expenses necessitates increasing revenues?  Of course, that assumes that the entity paying the expenses cannot borrow without limits or manufacture its own currency.  It also assumes that the entity paying the expenses holds itself accountable to those who are impacted by its success or failure.

  • Guaranteed Insurance Renewal

Insurance companies will be required to renew any policy as long as the policyholder pays their premium in full. Insurance companies won't be allowed to refuse renewal because someone became sick.

Another smokescreen.  Rates may go up as an individual’s health declines, but that is an actuarially sound decision.  I do not believe that this is a significant issue.

 

I do believe that there are legitimate problems with our healthcare system.  Government healthcare – or government “insurance,” as it has been rebranded for some reason – is NOT the solution.

If you must reform insurance, perhaps you should initiate government-sponsored malpractice insurance instead.

I believe you have honorable ideals.  I believe your supporters believe in your fairness.  I believe your supporters would be horrified to think that a future Republican administration might be charged with administering whatever plan you sign into law.  There may not be a Republican administration soon, but surely there will be one again someday, and by that time, there may be no private insurance available to the masses.  Ask your supporters if they would vote for a bill that would put a bureaucrat appointed by the likes of George W. Bush in charge of a federal insurance program.  I doubt that they would feel reassured with that thought.

I have no issue with your ideals that we should look out for those among us who are less fortunate than ourselves.  I believe that is a requirement of being human.  However, it is also an issue of charity, and charity is a religious principle.  Government involvement in charity is therefore tantamount to government endorsement of religion, which violates the establishment clause of the first amendment.

To be a free people means to accept that bad things will sometimes happen to individuals through no fault or responsibility of the government.  For the government to take responsibility for individuals is to deprive us of our individual liberties.  It arrogantly assumes that someone either elected or appointed is better able to care for us than we are able to care for ourselves.  Such a government would be tyrannical.

I wish you success in restoring our individual liberties at the expense of governmental controls.  Your current health reform does not qualify for my support.

Sincerely,

Tom Comeaux

aka:     Member of a “Mob”

            Too well dressed to have a legitimate point

            Naysayer

 

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Email To Obama

I sent the following message to the current administration via www.whitehouse.gov:
 
One simple question for this administration: What are you trying to accomplish?

Whatever your answer is, please keep in mind the following bit of wisdom that is taught to education professionals as well as business professionals: Behavior that is rewarded tends to continue, whereas behavior that is punished tends to cease.

It appears to me that this administration’s policies reward failure and punish individual accomplishment. That is the absolute antithesis of the liberty that once was the cornerstone of this last, best hope for the world. It is why the tired, poor, huddled masses who yearned to be free flocked to this country and willingly bled to defend her.

And remember whenever you utter that line about how we must be our brothers’ keepers that many slaveholders of the 19th century believed that they, too, were doing a favor to people who otherwise would not be capable of caring for themselves. We know now how absolutely evil that philosophy turned out to be.
 
Should I be worried about repercussions?  By posting this here, have I jeopardized the entire Townhall community?
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Who Pays, Says

Who pays, says.

When I was a child, on the rare occasions when we went to eat at a restaurant, my father chose the restaurant. Why? Because he had the wallet.

Who pays, says.

When a manager wanted to treat my coworkers and me to a “thank you” lunch, she restricted our choices to the lunch menu. Why? Because she was picking up the tab.

Who pays, says.

When I take my kids out to eat, I often tell them they are only allowed to order water to drink. Why? Because I’m the one with the money.

Who pays, says.

When the federal government bailed out GM, the federal government insisted that the CEO needed to be changed. Why? Because they were footing the bill.

Who pays, says.

What can we expect to happen when the government pays for our healthcare? Is it possible that the entity that is paying for our healthcare might restrict our choice of doctors, restrict our choice of services, and limit the amount they’re willing to pay for?

If you believe in logic and rational thinking, then you must conclude that the federal government would definitely restrict our liberty in that area.

Why?

Who pays, says.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

LiberTY vs. LiberAL

I think I finally understand why conservatives are less effective than liberals at voicing our philosophy.

Conservatives want to live independently, working to achieve our own definition of success so we can support our families and the causes of our choosing. Liberals want to live in unity with one another, pooling their resources together to ensure that everyone has an equal level of some arbitrary definition of success.

So it only makes sense that liberals who enthusiastically depend on others are more effective at pleading their case together than conservatives whose fundamental desire in life is to be left alone.

How odd it is that liberals have been so effective at painting conservatives as a sort of moral police force who wants to ensure that everyone lives by conservative rules. From my vantage point, it is the liberals who want to enforce sameness in our behavior (smoking is bad, so it should be banned even from privately owned establishments) and sameness in our results (failure is bad, so success should be punished in a fruitless effort to eliminate failure).

And since liberals have been so effective at stereotyping conservatives, I should point out to you that I fit into an economic demographic that would lead most people to guess that I am a liberal voter. I live paycheck-to-paycheck. I say this with no sense of pride. However, as a conservative, I recognize that I alone am responsible for this. To believe my personal economy is the fault of George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Congress, or any other individual or entity is to cede power to that individual or entity. I refuse to surrender my autonomy to anyone this way.

Conservatism is rooted in a strong belief in the power of the individual. I am responsible for my own success or failure, regardless of circumstances. Those who willingly relinquish this authority to others have no appreciation of the word “liberty.” Ironically, they label their philosophy “liberal,” which is the etymological cousin of “liberty” but has come to represent an entirely antithetical meaning.

So, in order to preserve liberty, conservatives need to adapt the liberal strategy that has proven effective. We need to band together to ensure that our freedom survives long enough for our progeny to enjoy it. Our ancestors did this for us. We owe it to their honor to pass their legacy on to future generations of free Americans.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Patrick Henry (Updated)

"Give me liberty or give me a government program to take care of me.”

You can’t give me one without depriving me of the other.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

John, Barack, and Ike

Watch the news reports showing the impact of Hurricane Ike on residents of the Texas Gulf Coast and you will get a glimpse of the future of this country if we begin moving in the direction Obama wants to take us.

People who depend on the federal government for sustenance are waiting in long lines for their allotment of supplies.  They have no choice in what they get -- ice, water, and a package of MREs -- from FEMA.  Lines at the few operational gas stations were measured in terms of the number of hours people waited until they reached the pump.

This is not a situation that anyone would wish to be in.  However, these are unusual circumstances, and this is a matter of survival.  I hope people look at this as an example of what it is like to become dependent on the government for survival.
 
FEMA has been criticized for the delay in getting the supplies to the appropriate people.  In stark contrast, a local radio station (KTRH-740AM) was able to bring in and distribute several truckloads of ice within a day of the storm's passing.  This is a clear example of how a private entity will work far more efficiently than a public bureaucracy.  KTRH did this as a charitable gesture, motivated by the strong desire to help the people of the community.

FEMA works as a large, slow-moving agency.  Their purpose is also noble, but employees get their paychecks whether they meet their requirements a day early or a week late.  If the oil companies are nationalized, as at least one Democratic congressperson suggested a few months back, the distribution of gasoline will certainly operate with similar inefficiency, and the current long lines will become the rule rather than the exception.
 
I believe the fundamental difference between the two major parties as they exist today is that Obama's Democratic Party wants citizens to rely on the government (like those waiting for FEMA supplies), whereas the Maverick's Republican Party wants citizens to rely on themselves and each other (like those who took the initiative to bring in supplies on their own to help their neighbors).
 
We should always band together and work to help our neighbors in their time of need.  That's part of the job description of being human.  It works very well when we accept this responsibility as independent individuals.  It does not work well when we deem this responsibility as too unimportant for human beings and relegate it to a non-human entity.
 
People who rely on the government for life's necessities are called dependent subjects.  People who rely on themselves for life's necessities are called independent citizens.
 
So, the choice in this year's presidential election comes down to this:  Give me liberty, or give me Barack!
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »