A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

The health care “debate”

I don’t have a strong specific policy preference as far as health care reform goes, but I was out eating with some friends this weekend and was provided, courtesy of the CNN playing on the TV at the restaurant, with a telling example of how the health care debate is being carried on. (Usually I avoid cable news like the plague.) It was a special on health care reform (hosted by Wolf Blitzer, I think) and they kept talking about the dread “slippery slope” toward Canadian- or UK-style “socialized medicine.” There are several problems with this including 1) it presumes that “socialized medicine” is an inherently undesirable end point (slipperly slopes are not generally considered to carry us toward good things); 2) it conflates a Canadian single-payer system with a more genuinely “socialist” system where the state actually provides health care services, like in the UK; and 3) it implies that Canda and the UK are (or viewers will assume that they are) backward hellholes that no normal person would ever want to take as providing models or ideas for policy in the U.S.

4 responses to “The health care “debate””

  1. As a resident of one of the said backward hellholes I say long live “socialised medicine” – I tend to to agree with Nye Bevan:

    “The collective principle asserts that… no society can legitimately call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical aid because of lack of means.”

    A slippery slope indeed.

  2. We should live in such a Hell hole!

  3. The Canadian system does have its problems, but the single-payer system is one of the things about it that seems to work more or less as it’s supposed to work. The American status quo is something of a crazy quilt; but I think there are those who regard any move toward making the system systematic as a move toward socialism.

  4. It seems to me a rational discussion would involve laying out the details of various systems as they exist in other countries (say, Canda, the UK, Scandanavia, Germany, and France, which all have systems of varying degrees of “socialization” as I understand it), and comparing the costs and benefits of each, in light of how difficult it would be to transition from our current system (a crazy quilt indeed!). That strikes me as the kind of service a news organization might be well suited for!

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