spacer
 HOME |  MY NEWT.ORG | AMERICAN SOLUTIONS | CHT | PARA LATINOS |
Recommended Sites
Untitled Document
ASsmall.jpg
CHTsmall.jpg
CHTsmall.jpg
http://theamericano.com/
Three Reasons Why Government Can't Run Health Care
Facta, non verba.

For those of you who have forgotten your Latin, it means "deeds, not words."

There's been a lot of overheated rhetoric about health care reform, but this saying is one that all Americans should return to when considering plans for a government-dominated health system.

In other words, we should judge government, not by its words, but by its deeds.

With this simple principle in mind, what follows are three examples why government can't - and shouldn't - run our health care system (at least not any health care system you or I would want to be dependent on).

Reason No. 1: Government Can't Be Trusted With a Credit Card

Every family knows about making a budget and living within its means. Government, to put it bluntly, does not.

What if your husband had come home last Friday night and announced that he had racked up almost 30 percent more debt on the family credit card - including the mortgage and car loans - than he had told you about just a month ago?

Would you trust him to go out and start spending money to remodel the kitchen? And do you think he could get a loan to do it?

But that's exactly what the Obama Administration did with their weekend news dump. They announced late Friday that the amount of money they don't have but are nonetheless planning on spending over the next ten years isn't the astonishing $7 trillion they estimated in May but is instead an astounding $9 trillion.

Add this to the fact that, after the administration sold its health care reform proposal on the grounds that it will reduce costs to the Treasury, the independent Congressional Budget Office determined that the House plan will actually cost an astounding $1 trillion-$1.5 trillion in the next ten years, which will be added directly to the federal debt. The director of the CBO testified before Congress last month that "[i]n the legislation that has been reported we do not see the sort of fundamental changes that would be necessary to reduce the trajectory of federal health spending by a significant amount. And on the contrary, the legislation significantly expands the federal responsibility for health care costs."

Which do you have more faith in, the government's happy talk of "bending the cost curve" or its record of out-of-control spending?

Deeds, not words.

Reason No. 2: Government Can't Even Give Away Money Effectively

As the inimitable Andy McCarthy of National Review put it, "Compared to the infinite complexity of healthcare and health-insurance, cash-for-clunkers is kindergarten stuff. You trade in your old car for a new one that gets (slightly) better mileage and the government gives you money - between $3,500 and $4,500. How hard is that?"

Too hard for government bureaucrats, it turns out.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has boasted that the cash-for-clunkers program provided "a lifeline to the automobile industry, jump starting a major sector of the economy and putting people back to work.''

But look at the deeds, not the words.

Last week, cash-for-clunkers ended in a bureaucratic morass of red tape, failed promises and unanticipated costs.

Air Traffic Controllers Manning the Cash-for-Clunkers Hotline

Only a government bureaucracy could mess up a program designed to give away free money.

The government wizards who set up cash-for-clunkers initially budgeted to sell 250,000 cars in three months.

The program sold that many in four days.

And because the central planners who think they can provide government "competition" to the private health insurance market failed to accurately estimate how many government workers it would take to administer cash-for-clunkers, they had to take employees from the FAA - air traffic controllers, no less - to help manage the demand.

And what about the car dealerships the program was supposed to help in the first place? Even though the rebates were supposed to be paid within 10 days, only 7 percent of federal promises under cash-for-clunkers have been paid so far, leaving dealers with millions of dollars in unfunded government promises.

More Than Bureaucratic Incompetence, Political Business as Usual

But there's more to the cautionary tale of cash-for-clunkers than just bureaucratic incompetence.

This is a case study in what happens when politicians get involved in the marketplace.

Despite all the rhetoric of jump starting the auto industry, politicians' priorities are to give free goodies to their constituents. So as far as they're concerned, cash-for-clunkers has been a resounding success.

Forget the fact that they're spending money they don't have, or that car dealerships are left holding millions of dollars in empty government promises. They're not concerned with the long-term, just the next election.

So tell us again why should we think bureaucrats and politicians will perform any better with our health care?

Reason No. 3: Government Would Rather Pay Crooks Than Manage Efficiently

There's been a lot of worrying about the inevitability of government rationing health care under the Democratic reform bills in Congress.

Economists have known about this inevitability for a long time. Well, Americans can stop worrying. Government is rationing care already - and doing it in a particularly stupid way.

Studies have shown that early use of home health care after hospitalization - allowing patients to go home and be visited by a nurse to manage their care - saves Medicare billions of dollars.

So here is a case where an innovative government program actually saves the government money. Home health care is both more compassionate and more efficient. It reduces the likelihood a patient will be readmitted to a hospital by allowing her to heal in a more familiar setting.

Home Health Care Works, So Naturally Medicare Bureaucrats Cut Its Funding

So naturally bureaucrats at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services cut $34 billion from this compassionate, efficient program last week.

And if the House health care reform bill becomes law, an additional $56.8 billion will be cut from the program - an amount equal to almost the entire federal budget for home health care services in 2007.

What makes rationing care to the homebound all the more immoral is the fact that there is a much bigger pot of savings available to Washington if it only had the political will to look.

Instead of Seeking Savings from the Homebound, Why Not the Crooks?

As a new book by the Center for Health Transformation's Jim Frogue details, criminals rip off the taxpayers to the tune of $80 billion to $120 billion each year in the current Medicare and Medicaid programs.

We're not talking about inadvertent bill errors but outright fraud. Government health programs are currently paying men maternity benefits, giving taxpayer dollars to pizza parlors that are supposed to be HIV transfusion centers, and even paying dead patients federal health care benefits.

If ever there was a reason not to turn our entire health care system over to government it is this: Government can't run the health care programs it already has. It would rather ration compassionate, effective programs than do the hard work of rooting out and punishing the crooks who are stealing our taxpayer dollars.

Facts are Stubborn Things

Americans have already heard a lot of rhetoric about health care reform, and we can expect to hear a lot more.

But as Ronald Reagan used to say, facts are stubborn things. And the facts of government's track record in managing our money and delivering on its promises speak louder than any televised presidential speech or stage-managed town hall ever could.

So as the summer winds down and the debate rages on, let this be our mantra:

Facta, non verba.

Make a bumper sticker out of it.

Put it on a tee-shirt and wear it to a town hall.

And when someone asked you what it means, tell them that before we hand over more of our lives to government, we should consider how they've treated us so far.

Your friend,
Newt Gingrich
Newt Gingrich

Newt's Quick Links

Real Change Is Back: I'm pleased to announce that the paperback version of my book, Real Change: From the World that Fails to the World that Works was No. 9 last week on the Washington Post bestseller list. To get a copy for yourself or someone you care about, go here .



TagTag | Email Email | Print Print |
Comments
By springer32 @ Monday, August 31, 2009 12:11 PM
Oh wait, you don't have to answer that question because I already know the answer. I'm always amazed at how people outside our profession (MD) have the all the answers on how we should run healthcare in this country. I really wish I had time to contemplate how to fix everyone elses business in this country...the housing markets, Walstreet, car companies, etc. I think that all the doctors in the nation should put our heads together and see if we can save GM...yes...I've driven a car before even bought a few. Several of my friends who are physicians have automobiles. I think we could pull this thing together.

The smartest thing I've heard Obama say was in his first speech to the country regarding this healthcare debate. He mentioned a physician panel put together to advise the politicians on ways to improve healthcare (a republican idea) and he gave the republicans credit. His revelation was to actually require the politicians to vote on the panel's recomendations. How long did it take Washington to figure this one out?

By springer32 @ Monday, August 31, 2009 11:48 AM
What area of the medical field do you work in NDNchief?

By NDNchief @ Sunday, August 30, 2009 11:02 PM
$12million

By NDNchief @ Sunday, August 30, 2009 11:00 PM
AmericanEagle1 $12 is spent in one day in many major hospitals so that is chicken feed for illegals... It is time something is done about health care or it will bankrupt the federal system when baby boomers hit the Medicaid and Social Security years.

Americans need to wake up and realize that Canada has had a similar health care system for their citizens as what is being discussed for over 25 years.

Washington is still being dictated to by the pharmaceutical and insurance lobbyist. That also needs to be changed making it criminal when lobbyist attempt to influence Congressional votes.

If the current federal system is so broken as to pay pizza parlors as HIV treatment centers then someone in DC is asleep at the wheel. Make such things criminal with about 50 years in the pen and a federal reward for anyone reporting such things and those kinds of issues will be policed by the private sector.

What needs to happen is for Americans to circulate a petition amending the Constitution making it mandatory that the annual budget created by the government must be balanced each year through taxation.

There is little doubt that the wealthy and those within the health care industry are going to fight affordable health care with all that they have. But that is just symptomatic of the unhealthy greed that has gotten us to the brink of disaster today.

Its time to finally tax those who have become independently wealthy under the freedoms and prosperity America has afforded.

Its time for the rich to give back a greater portion of what they have so freely made off the backs of the poor and middle class. Else our economic system may very well implode leaving chaos in the streets with the poor and desperate taking whatever they need to survive from whoever that has it in a Civil War our Forefathers could not have imagined.

By AmericanEagle1 @ Friday, August 28, 2009 11:40 PM
Health Care Bill loophole gives illegal aliens (12 million) to receive free health care paid by US taxpayers. No proof of citizenship is asked of the illegals at time of health care service.
Illegals keep streaming in F E R T I L E!! Do something Congressmen and Senators.

By jacktidwellmd @ Friday, August 28, 2009 12:38 PM
The Doctor-Patient relationship seems to get lost in the hubbub over power and money, whther it is GovInsurance or PrivateInsurance. The governments solution will result in the same rationing of care as the commercial insurances.... the new problem is that to make up for its inefficiency, the government will ration care by declaring when the beginning and end of life will be.

This is altogether a reason for the 2nd Amendment.... to protect the Doctor-Patient relationship. Mark my words, medical care will go underground or offshore and then the govenment won't have that source of income. Tough, huh.

By Hot @ Thursday, August 27, 2009 6:27 PM
There is NOTHING wrong with Medicare or the Social Security Systems.

The problem, that 98% of the voters don't get, is that those they elect KEEP TAKING FROM these two systems for their own projects.

You can't pay your bills if you keep letting someone with GREED take the money first.

But the voters are VERY HAPPY with the system for they keep electing the SAME QUALITY OF PEOPLE TO OFFICE.

You elected these people SO YOU MUST BE HAPPY.

By dukie @ Thursday, August 27, 2009 12:50 AM
If government can't do anything right, and can't run Medicare right, then why not dismantle Medicare completely and replace that system with private insurance?

Newt's arguments would be pretty compelling, if we didn't already know that many other countries had not already put medicare systems in place effectively.

Why have the government intervene to try to regulate anything actually, since politicians are such an inefficient bunch let's leave private industry to itself? This seems to be an extremist argument.

Also, do we really think that our fellow Americans who are sick need to prove that they deserve to have health care? Or in a country that can spend billions putting a man on the moon, fighting wars and bailing out banks, can we make it a priority to make sure that *all* Americans in pain have the RIGHT to medical treatment? What does a human being have to do to deserve our compassion?

Obviously, I am a liberal, but I am posting this because I respect the opinions of conservatives and would like to hear why you believe what you believe, since we all want what's best for America.

Respectfully yours.

By ladyk1127 @ Wednesday, August 26, 2009 9:43 PM
A clip of a Ted Kennedy speech has been played on TV several times today, in which he asserts that health care should be a right, not a privilege. Rights, such as the right to a free press, right to assemble, right to bear arms, etc., have to do with things that you DO, not things that you GET from the government! While there does need to be some steps taken to make health care more affordable and accessible, calling it a "right" seems to me to go too far.

By lja0265 @ Wednesday, August 26, 2009 5:37 PM
How about one reason: It's un-Constitutional. No other rasons needed.

By GaryHenderson @ Wednesday, August 26, 2009 2:27 PM
Here's a bumper sticker, for those who agree! Thanks, Newt! http://bit.ly/S4UTU

By ericrobinson @ Wednesday, August 26, 2009 12:19 PM
When you live off someone else, there is an automatic conflict of interest created, and the bigger government gets, and more expensive it becomes, the greater that conflict comes between what's good for the People, and what's good for the government that lives off those people. Sooner or later, there comes a time when these two entities have to decide who is going to survive and prosper, and that's what we call "Revolution". If the government has all the guns, the government prevails, and if the people have guns, they prevail. This is an absolute Truth, and the American people should remember that truth, every time they hear a liberal politician talk about gun control, and about expanding government.

Click Here to post a comment

About Newt

Contact

Internships

FAQ's

Terms of Use

 
Powered By: Powered By iBelong Networks
spacer