Let your voice be heard

I just tried to call my representative in the House of Representatives.  Jim Matheson (D-Utah) voted no in November, but now has not said which way he will vote.  This really irritates me.  Nothing has changed from the bill in November to the one that will be voted on Sunday.  I tried calling his office, but the phone lines are busy.  If I still lived in the DC area, I would be downtown at his office.  But I no longer live there so I did the next best thing and that is send an email to let him know that if he votes yes on the health care bill, I will not vote for him in November.  Jim Matheson is in a tricky spot. He is a lone Democrat in a very red state.  The majority of Americans, 55%, do not support this bill.  We the people need our voices to be heard.  We cannot sit back and let Washington make choices for us and our families.  There is no doubt that our health care system needs reform, however, this bill is not the way to go.  We are already over $12 trillion dollars in debt and it goes up everyday.  We cannot afford this bill.  Let your voice be heard.  You can send a message to your elected representatives through Citizens Against Government Waste at  http://www.cagw.org

Some facts about the health care bill:

Myth: This legislation won’t cut Medicare.

Reductions in Medicare outlays finance about half of the legislation’s $1 trillion in new entitlement spending. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office verifies that the legislation would reduce Medicare benefits. President Obama’s top Medicare actuary verifies that it would reduce access to care for Medicare beneficiaries.

Of course, Congress needs to restrain Medicare spending. Otherwise, income-tax rates would have to double by midcentury. But the solution is to make Medicare more efficient, not to use price controls and bureaucratic rationing.

Myth: The legislation would contain health care costs.

The Obama plan would increase health care costs for the simple reason that it would put millions more patients, plus doctors and insurers, in a position where they are spending the taxpayers’ money. That never produces frugality.

Its command-and-control approaches to cost containment have failed over and over in Medicare and Medicaid because they don’t change the incentives that encourage cost growth.

The only provision that would change incentives is the president’s proposed tax on the sick and others with high-cost health plans. But he appears ready to abandon that, anyway.

Stanford health economist Alain Enthoven writes, “The American people are being deceived.” The Senate bill would “do little or nothing to curb [health care] expenditures.”

Myth: This legislation is a moral imperative.

The Obama plan would impose additional taxes on the sick — in part, to subsidize abortions — and would threaten people with jail time if they do not purchase health insurance. Where’s the morality in that?

Myth: This legislation is about saving lives.

Congress could save more lives with less money by creating smaller programs that fight high blood pressure, diabetes and other specific ailments.

By expanding health insurance instead, Democrats are implicitly showing that saving lives isn’t the primary goal.

Myth: This legislation would stop abusive insurance practices.

The Obama plan would encourage abusive insurance practices. Research by Obama adviser David Cutler shows that the plan’s price controls would force insurers who provide quality care for the sick into bankruptcy. Insurers would therefore use countless and covert means to deny care and avoid, mistreat and dump the sick.

Along the way, the legislation would shower private insurance companies with half a trillion dollars in government subsidies.

Myth: The public wants this legislation.

Polls that ask whether respondents like the legislation’s supposed benefits (e.g., reduced insurance premiums for the sick) without asking about the corresponding costs (higher premiums for the healthy, insurers denying care to the sick) are meaningless.

The public has consistently expressed its intense opposition to the Obama plan for eight solid months. Democratic pollsters Pat Caddell and Doug Schoen note that “four-fifths of those who oppose the plan strongly oppose it … while only half of those who support the plan do so strongly.” A small, radical, left-wing minority is foisting this legislation on an unwilling public.

Myth: This isn’t a government takeover of health care.

This legislation would force all Americans to purchase health insurance coverage. Government would control what kind of insurance you purchase, where you purchase it, how much you pay and what kind of medical care you receive. Our health care sector would be “private” in name only.

Once government controls those decisions, there will be nothing left to socialize. Make no mistake — this is a vote on socialized medicine.

Michael F. Cannon is director of health policy studies at the Cato Institute and coauthor of Healthy Competition: What’s Holding Back Health Care and How to Free It.

2 thoughts on “Let your voice be heard”

  1. I recently read an article on this and this Obama Care is being crammed down our throats by a tyrant who will not listen to the tax payers and he thinks he will be reelected….How arrogant he is and it is time for the American Tax payers to fight back and get this tyrant out of office!!!NOW! He is the down fall of our Nation

  2. I don’t have time at the moment to read your whole blog post, but what is interesting is that even though Matheson is a democrat, a democrat in Utah is way more conservative than a republican in Maryland . . . I would be REALLY surprised if he voted yes. REALLY surprised!

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