Some observations about health care legislation...
This publication has not directly addressed health care reform, other than to state its unpopularity in the polls and a cite for the President’s continually sliding approval rating; but there are far more perturbing facts about so-called “health care reform” than just the enormous price tag.
In the latest Real Clear Politics average, 50.7% of the American people oppose health care reform while 38.6% are in favor. To this publication’s editors/contributors (which are composed of conservatives and libertarians) these numbers reflect a sad state-of-affairs in the nation’s history. That nearly 40% favor more government control or at the very least intervention is as disturbing as the fact that only 51/52% oppose it – if one was to turn back the clock just sixty years, the very thought of relying on the government to provide anything but national defense and a system of jurisprudence would insult the average American’s intelligence and self sufficiency.
Today however, is a very different time in American history – a sense of entitlement has become the last two generations and will likely besiege the current generation. This is in no small part the fault of voter apathy compelled by political betrayal. The last three presidents ran on platforms as something they simply were not – Bill Clinton ran as a moderate middle-class tax cutting candidate but within his first term, raised taxes on the middle class and tried to enact a nationalized health care system. George W. Bush ran as a fiscal conservative, but in his second term, spent a then-record amount. Barack Obama copied Bill Clinton’s campaign rhetoric and within his first year has already spent $787 billion on a flat-lining stimulus and is seeking to turn one-sixth of the American economy over to the federal government. With examples like these, it is little wonder why voter turn-out has been dwindling since World War II.
Another factor that cannot be discounted is the overall culture in which we reside in the
But I use the past tense purposefully in writing too many Americans in years past because that attitude is being lost in the latest cell phone texting, credit card debt piling generations. From their vantage, it is only fair or even just the federal government provide “free” health care. Too those I share an anecdote: years ago, a friend of mine from
-- Owen E. Richason IV
Chief Editor, Killswitch Politick
No comments:
Post a Comment