Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Worse Not Better

If you want a preview of President Obama's health-care "reform," take a look at Massachusetts. In 2006, it enacted a "reform" that became a model for Obama. What's happened since isn't encouraging. The state did the easy part: expanding state-subsidized insurance coverage. It evaded the hard part: controlling costs and ensuring that spending improves people's health. Unfortunately, Obama has done the same.

Obama dodged the tough issues in favor of grandstanding. Imitating Patrick, he's already denouncing insurers’ rates, as if that would solve the spending problem. What's occurring in Massachusetts is the plausible future: Unchecked health spending shapes government priorities and inflates budget deficits and taxes, with small health gains. And they call this "reform"? (Robert J. Samuelson, Washington Post, 7/19/10)


Republicans argued during the health debate that the IRS would have to hire hundreds of new agents and staff to enforce ObamaCare. They were brushed off by Democrats and the press corps as if they believed the President was born on the moon. The IRS says it hasn't figured out how much extra money and manpower it will need but admits that both numbers are greater than zero. (WSJ, 7/19/10)


Obama and the Dems are constantly reminding us that we will like the health care reform bill once we begin to see it take effect. We don't think so!

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