Universal Health Care Freedom on the Fourth of July

by | Jul 2, 2023

It is precisely because our health care is so important to each of us that we need to be especially careful to preserve and protect the rights of physicians and other health care providers.

“Universal Health Care” is the increasing drumbeat of advocates who want Americans to place all responsibility for their health care in the hands of the government. They say health care needs require us to put aside such considerations as personal choice and individual freedom as an outmoded ideology that should be dispensed with. First drop the context of individual rights, private property and privacy–then the government is liberated to micromanage every detail of the medical treatment you are allowed to have.

In this view, the loss of freedom is regarded as unfortunate but necessary on the grounds that most Americans cannot afford to pay for health care or even a fraction of the cost. Of course, if that were true, the government as well could not afford health care for everyone, regardless of cost. However, those who might be relieved to learn that they are not responsible for the cost of their own health care would soon discover that they have become responsible for the cost of everyone else’s. There is a much higher price than that: a government that pays for all of our health care would inevitably come to think and act as if it owns our bodies. That is a big bill to pay to avoid the difficulty of paying insurance premiums. The talk about a “right” to health care really means that no one should have the right to any health care at all except through the government. As we celebrate the Fourth of July this year we must remember that our right to manage our own health care as we see fit is as vital to our liberty as freedom of speech or freedom of the press.

Many of us find paying for health care challenging. Many more have difficulty making it a priority in our spending–often because we think it should be someone else’s responsibility. Some who sincerely make the effort can’t pay for all the services they need. Others, especially the young who know they will live forever, choose not to make provision for their health care even if they can afford it.

But the solution is not to resort to the government to force others to provide it, or that everyone in the country should be herded into the gray and barren landscape of a compulsory government medical system.

The fact that some people are hungry does not mean that everyone should be forced to obtain their food from the government, and be taxed to pay for it.

The existence of the homeless does not mean that everyone should be forced to find shelter only through the auspices of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

We are told that because health care is so important, considerations such as individual freedom and especially the rights of medical professionals must be overridden, even if all physicians must be drafted into government service as if they were property–so their practices can be micromanaged by the medical police. But it is precisely because our health care is so important to each of us that we need to be especially careful to preserve and protect the rights of physicians and other health care providers.

One assertion of advocates for Universal Health Care is that insurance companies are wasteful, bloated, corporate bureaucracies with high administrative costs, but that government health care, like Medicare and Medicaid, are models of administrative efficiency. This rationalization ignores the cost of the more than 100,000 IRS employees who collect Medicare taxes, as well as the tremendous administrative burden to providers of trying to understand and comply with 130,000 pages of Medicare regulations. Yet those regulations have not been effective in preventing billions of dollars in fraudulent payments, as documented in New York Medicaid by several New York newspapers last year. You can save a lot on overhead if you don’t mind pumping out billions of dollars without oversight; the administrative cost of burning money can be quite low. Advocates fail to explain how government will be cost-efficient for health care while it fails for the postal service.

Markets work better than Socialism. One wonders if any of the current health care collectivists noticed the twentieth century as it was going by.

Universal Freedom is the only proper moral and political foundation for health care policy. “Universal Health Care” must be rejected as a government threat to our liberty. American health care must be based on American values.

Originally published in December 7, 2005.

Richard E. Ralston is Executive Director of Americans for Free Choice in Medicine.

The views expressed above represent those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the editors and publishers of Capitalism Magazine. Capitalism Magazine sometimes publishes articles we disagree with because we think the article provides information, or a contrasting point of view, that may be of value to our readers.

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