Kevin Graham wrote:The dailycaller bcspace, really? It says the Right Wing Libertarian think tank, the Fraser Institute, is a non-partisan organization?
Correct. It, like Heritage, Hoover, Hudson, etc., has no party affiliation.
Its stated mission is to "to measure, study, and communicate the impact of competitive markets and government intervention on the welfare of individuals." Uh huh, no agenda there, right?
Yes, it has a political philosophy. It is not partisan, as it states.
The fact that you guys have to lie about it being "nonpartisan" tells us plenty right there.
It tells me that either your intellectual capacity has now descended to below that of a soggy cheerio, or, more likely, you are not intellectually ethical enough to simply engage bc and the authors of the piece on the merits of the case, a case which, empirically speaking, has been long ago settled.
This myth you're propagating was refuted a long time ago.
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-k ... adian.html1) First, they surveyed United States border facilities in Michigan, New York, and Washington. It makes sense that Canadians crossing the border for care would favor sites close by, right? It turns out that about 80% of such facilities saw fewer than one Canadian per month. About 40% saw none in the prior year. And when looking at the reasons for visits, more than 80% were emergencies or urgent visits (ie tourists who had to go to the ER). Only about 19% of those already few visits were for elective purposes.
2) Next, they surveyed “America’s Best Hospitals”, because if Canadians were going to travel for care, they would be more likely to go to the most well-known and highest quality facilities, right? Only one of the surveyed hospitals saw more than 60 Canadians in one year. And, again, that included both emergencies and elective care.
3) Finally, they examined data from the 18,000 Canadians who participated in the National Population Health Survey. In the previous year, only 90 of those 18,000 Canadians had received care in the United States; only 20 of them had done so electively.
See also these articles exposing this myth.
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/21/3/19.longhttp://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/myt ... are-part-ihttp://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_12523427Essentially it manipulates the numbers to come up with these outrageous conclusions that Canadians are intentionally "fleeing" to the US for healthcare, without addressing the fact that a tiny fraction of them who receive health care here came here for that purpose. Many of them were here as tourists when they got sick or injured, but interviews with many Canadians prove that some of them would rather suck it up and fly back to Canada before paying for American health care.
Klein is either a bald liar or a tool, and probably a bit of both. The empirical
facts about Canadian and British healthcare are
mountainous and they've been well documented for many, many years.
Here's Frasier's detailed empirical and statistical study of waiting times in Canada.
http://www.fraserinstitute.org/uploaded ... n-2011.pdfAnd something else for Red Kevin to chew on:
http://www.nationalcenter.org/NPA547Com ... ealth.htmlSocialized medicine is a vast scheme of rationing and scarcity, who's most catastrophic effects can be seen where a system as been fully and completely socialized, along with the rest of an economy - in Cuba.
Over the years, I've posted countless empirical studies by distinguished scholars from well known and respected think-tanks and I'm not going to rehash it yet again for our resident court jester of neo-Communism. The facts have been in for a long, long time.
This ought to tickle him pink as well:
http://www.fraserinstitute.org/uploaded ... ff0712.pdfAs is well known, large segments of the healthcare industry supported Hillarycare, as did the big pharmaceutical companies. The same dynamic is in play at the present time with Obama's expropriation of the means of medical production. Why? Because a universal healthcare system, just as with "green" energy mandates and forced technology usage, creates monopoly conditions that few pharmaceutical companies and any number of physicians, at least in certain areas, would be able to turn down. "Free" healthcare and a guaranteed income for doctors, hospital systems, and pharmaceutical companies, and the vast overuse of healthcare services a "free" system will encourage is a dream come true for those who favor stability over risk and for large corporate entities who's services will now be in far greater demand now that health insurance is now mandated by law.
True, as in Canada and Britain, you may get critically ill or die before you ever see an operating table, but at least everyone will be
equal (which is all that really matters to the socialist mind) with regard to the long waiting lists, the crowded hallways filled with sick people for whom there are no hospital beds, the critical scarcity of core technology, like CAT scans and MRI machines, long months waiting to see a specialist, get a biopsy, or have a hip replaced; the inevitable flight of doctors from the profession, and other key features of any universal system.
Single payer systems do not create wealth. They cannot, as they are not market based and do not respond to or are affected by market forces. There is no money in these systems save that infused by confiscating it from the private sector (or, if this runs out, creating out of debt). As a non-wealth creating healthcare system, it is always:
1. Critically short of resources, and hence, a system of rationing and cost control.
2. Parasitic. It cannot support itself through the competitive and dynamic principles of the free market, and hence, is dependent upon ever escalating taxes.
3. A fiscal bubble waiting to burst. The actual cost of medical care in Canada is utterly out of control, just as it is in this country and in Britain and for exactly the same reasons:
medical care is not free, and making it free by fiat to the consumer creates massive inflation of the cost of its provision to the single payer - the state. All nationalization of any industry does is mask and shift the functioning of the laws of economics to another sector of the economy, where it manifests itself anyway, but out of sight of the average citizen.
The cost of drugs in Canada is in the stratosphere, but the average Canadian doesn't know that because he's been shielded by the state from the actual cost of his own healthcare. Thinking it all "free," demand explodes, and costs, following the laws of economics that underlay all market forces, rise exponentially. That's why drugs are much lower in price in Canada, and Americans go to get some of them there. That's also why a number of life saving and health enhancing drugs available in the United States are not available in Canada at all - the government cannot afford them and must ration drugs just as it rations procedures and operations. Unlike a true free market system, there is only so much to go around in the socialist commons. Once that runs low, some have to get out of the lifeboat. Period.
The documentary SIcko
Graham attacks bc for using a study from a respected think tank and then sends us, as an alternative, to a roundly panned cinematic propaganda screed created by one of the most notoriously vacuous and intellectually dishonest demagogues in American pop cultural history; a movie filmed as a paean to the Third World healthcare system available to the average Cuban in the famed Caribbean worker's paradise.
One guy was golfing in Florida when his tendon snapped and his bicep slung into his chest area. He found out that it would cost him $76,000 to have the necessary surgery in Florida, so he endured the pain and flew back to Canada to have it done for free.
Its not "free." Economic illiteracy and intellectual ineptitude of this kind is what makes the Left so frustrating to debate and so monstrous in its implications for real human beings.
Thus far, I'm going to go on the suspicion, based upon years of researching this issue, that the Healthaffars study is deep fat fried. Without seeing the original article and its methodology, little can be gleaned from a couple op-eds. This is how AGW has been kept alive long passed the date of its brain death: factoid articles breathlessly claiming the the magic beans have sprouted, but without digging much deeper into the details of the actual studies, its all propaganda until its fleshed out at depth.
Secondly, as a matter of well understood economic theory and history, the economics of nationalized healthcare
cannot work effectively. No matter how loud the wails of leftist moral sanctimony, it cannot be made to function at anything approximating the level of a true free market, individual choice-based system.
Of course all of this was handed to bcspaces on a silver platter in the past, but he isn't interested in information unless it comes from his second rate "news" blogs written by liars who don't have the balls to admit their Right Wing agenda:
http://mormondiscussions.com/phpBB3/vie ... 0&p=439799
Kevin's balls have "left-wing agenda" branded across the entirety of their sweaty exterior, and that must have been a painful process, but perhaps worth the suffering to a committed gnostic ideologue.