That’s Where the Money Is
Geezers beware Obamacare.
By Thomas Sowell
When famed bank robber Willie Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he said:
“Because that’s where the money is.”
For the same reason, it is as predictable as the sunrise that medical care for
the elderly will be cut back under a government-controlled medical system.
Because that’s where the money is.
My experience is probably not very different from that of many other people in
their seventies. My medical expenses in the past year have been more than in the
first 40 years of my life — and I did not spend one night in a hospital all last
year or go to an emergency room even once.
Just the ordinary medical expenses of keeping an old geezer going along in good
health are high. Throw in a medical emergency or two, and the costs go through
the roof.
So long as my insurance company and I are paying for it, it is nobody else’s
business what my medical expenses are. But once the government is involved,
everything is its business.
↓ Keep reading this article ↓
Boyles: August Anniversaries
Hemingway: When Boulder Starts Rolling Away
Warren: Kentucky’s Scrappy Go-Getter
Goldberg: Why ‘Obamacare’ Is Failing
Sowell: That’s Where the Money Is
Kudlow: Robert Novak, R.I.P.
Stuttaford: Playing the Joker
Kahane: The Harder He Falls
Sowell: Whose Medical Decisions?
Lowry: Obama’s Option Play
Charen: Up North
Editors: Rationing and Rationality
Hemingway: Poisoned Water in Green Hell
Lopez: Hillary Snaps
McCarthy: Terrorists Get Appeals, Obamacare Patients Don’t
Murdock: Up, Up, and Away
It is not just a question of what the government will pay for. The logic of
collectivist thinking — and the actual practice in some countries with
government-controlled health care — is that you cannot pay for any medical
treatments with your own money if the powers that be decide that “society”
cannot let its resources be used that way, or that it would not be “social
justice” for some people to have medical treatments that others cannot get, just
because some people “happen to have money.”
The medical-care stampede is about much more than medical care, important as
that is. It is part of a whole mindset of many on the left who have never
reconciled themselves to an economic system in which how much people can draw
from the resources of the nation depends on how much they have contributed to
those resources.
Despite the cleverness of phrases about people who “happen to have money,” very
few people just happen to have money. Most people earned their money by
supplying other people with goods or services that those people were willing to
pay for.
Since it is their own money that they have earned, these people feel free to
spend it to give their 80-year-old grandmother another year or two of life, or
to pay for a hip-replacement operation for their mom or dad, even if some
medical “ethicist” might say that the resources of “society” would be better
used to allow some 20-year-old to talk over his angst with a shrink.
Barack Obama has talked about the high costs of taking care of elderly or
chronically ill patients in terms of “society making those decisions.” But a
world in which individuals make their own trade-offs with their own money is
fundamentally different from a world where third parties take those decisions
out of their hands and impose their own notions of what is best for “society.”
Calling these arbitrary notions “ethics” doesn’t change anything, however
effective it may be as political spin.
More is at stake than the outcomes of medical decisions, extremely important as
those are. What is also at stake is freedom and the dignity of individuals who
do not live their lives as supplicants of puffed-up power holders who are
spending the money taken from them in taxes.
One of the many phony arguments for government-controlled medical care is that
Americans do not have any longer life expectancy than people in many other
countries, despite much higher medical expenditures.
This argument is phony because longevity depends on health — and “health care”
and “medical care” are not the same, no matter how many times the two are
confused in the media or in politics. Health care includes things that doctors
cannot do much about.
Homicide affects your longevity, but there is not much that doctors can do about
it when they arrive on the scene after you have been shot through the heart,
except fill out the paperwork. Rates of homicide, obesity, and narcotics usage
are higher here than in many other countries, reducing our longevity.
But in the things that medical care can do something about — like cancer
survival rates — the United States ranks at or near the top in the world. But
that can change if we give up the real benefits of a top-flight medical system
for the visions and rhetoric of politicians.
— Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. © 2009 Creators
Syndicate, Inc.