Obamacare:
Cure Or Curse?
By Louis R. Petolicchio
Posted August 1, 2009
With recent news that the
“Blue Dog Democrats” – Congressional Democrats reputed to be fiscally conservative
or ‘moderate’ – have reached an agreement with liberal Democrat leader
Henry Waxman (D-CA) on a ‘compromise’ version of national health care reform
(referred to here as “Obamacare”), it would appear that the federal government
is on target to take over America’s vast and advanced medical industry.
Advocates have praised the
movement towards nationalizing how medicine and medical services are delivered
to the American people, particularly the 50 million plus-or-minus uninsured
who have been the focus of Obama’s great angst. Critics have been
raising a host of concerns that Obamacare is the first step towards a federally
funded, single payer program that would eliminate individual choice of
doctors and treatment.
While some may say that both
sides on the issue may have valid arguments and are using hyperbole to
discredit each other, if one begins to review the House that is under consideration
(HB 3200), the case against Obamacare grows stronger and stronger.
In the past week a document
by Peter Fleckstein has been circulating through the Internet that essentially
outlines some of the most outrageous and disturbing elements of Obamacare,
many of which directly contradict the claims Obama has been making in his
efforts to promote this overhaul.
All of which raises some
serious questions that Pennsylvania’s confirmed liberal Senators Bob Casey
and Arlen Specter, as well as Congressmen like Tim Holden who claim to
be Blue Dogs, should be forced to account for:
-
Should the federal government
decide for every individual what medical treatments we should receive?
(Section 123 establishes a Health Benefits Advisory Committee to determine
who gets what treatment)
-
Should the federal government
have the access to every individual’s private medical history? (Section
142 outlines the ‘collection of data’ as one of the duties of the ‘Health
Commissioner’)
-
Should illegal immigrants and
non-citizens be provided health care coverage? (Section 152 provides
blanket coverage to everyone without regard to US citizenship)
-
Should the federal government
have real-time access to every individual’s private financial records?
(Section 1173A outlines the use of real-time access information to determine
medical coverage concurrent with implementation of a national health ID
card)
-
Should the private health insurance
plans be forced into the national program regardless of the desires of
the individual participants? (Section 202 outlines the creation of a ‘Health
Insurance Exchange)
-
Should the federal government
have the authority to ration healthcare for the American people? (Section
203 outlines the authority granted to the Commissioner to establish a ‘permissible
range of cost-sharing’)
-
Should the states be forced
to restrict the coverage mandates approved by their own representative
bodies? (Section 203 requires states to reimburse the federal government
for any state requirements that exceed federal minimums)
-
Should the federal government
have the authority to mandate cultural and linguistic services (Section
204.b.7 states: “The entity shall provide for culturally and linguistically
appropriate communication and health services”; Section 1122 reinforces
these type of services)
-
Should the federal government
have the power to tax private individuals who choose not to participate
in a health plan not approved by the federal government? (Section 207 outlines
how individuals and employers will be taxed for not providing “acceptable
coverage”; reiterated in Section 322 and Section 401)
-
Should the federal government
have the authority to interfere with the compensation relationship between
the private individual and their respective physician? (Section 224
notes that “payment mechanisms and policies under this section may include
patient-centered medical home and other care management payments, accountable
care organizations, value-based purchasing, bundling of services, differential
payment rates, performance or utilization based payments, partial capitation,
and direct contracting with providers”)
-
Who will pay for the treatment
of illegal aliens? (Section 152 provides blanket coverage to everyone without
regard to US citizenship while Section 246 prohibits payments for those
not legally present in the US)
-
When is a tax not a tax? (Section
59B.e.6 states: “The tax imposed under this section shall not be treated
as tax…”)
-
Should the federal government
have the authority to control the productivity of medical service providers?
(Section 1131 outlines those providers subject to federal quality oversight,
including ambulatory and laboratory services)
-
Should the federal government
interfere with the physician/patient relationship with regards to hospital
readmissions? (Section 1151 outlines how the national program will
be applied to limit readmissions)
-
Should the federal government
interfere with the physician/patient relationship with regards to post
acute care services? (Section 1152 outlines how the national program
will be applied to control post acute care services)
-
Should the federal government
control the expansion of hospital facilities? (Section 1156 outlines how
the national program will impact the expansion of medical facilities)
-
Should the federal government
determine whether special needs individuals should be eligible for health
care services? (Section 1177 indicates that a cost analysis will
be completed to determine the impact of costs as related to special needs
individuals)
-
Should the federal government
manage individual healthcare without involvement of a local physician?
(Section 1191 outlines implementation of a ‘telehealth’ [health care by
phone?] system)
-
Why should the federal government
provide end-of-life counseling to participants in the national health plan?
(Section 1233 outlines the use of ‘Advanced Care Planning Consultation’
including counseling for end-of-life services and supports)
Where do Pennsylvania’s
federal legislators stand on these questions? Do they really think
that the same government that spends $600 for a toilet seat and spends
hundreds of thousands of dollars for Social Security bureaucrats to dance
in Arizona can efficiently manage the American medical system?
Do Casey, Specter, Holden,
Murphy and the other liberals who make up this commonwealth’s Democrat
delegation, actually embrace such meddling in our individual health plans
and our individual physicians? Do they really think the federal government
has been granted the authority by the Constitution to tell doctors what
to do and what medical treatments a sick individual should receive?
Are they such tyrants that they want to steal away so much of our God-given
liberties?
Ironically, the Obamacare
bill does not simply relate to the creation of a national health care program.
Multiple references are made throughout that amended the Social Security
Act, Medicare, the federal tax code, and many other areas. To say
that the Obamacare bill is sweeping in its nature is an understatement.
And need mention be made
of the fact that there is no way to tell how this program will be fully
funded?
Presuming neither the House
nor the Senate actually try to sneak a vote in before their August recess,
it is imperative for the people of Pennsylvania to challenge their legislators
and demand both an accounting for their support of Obamacare. Opponents
of Obamacare must make it clear in no uncertain terms that political careers
are on the line, and must remain vigilante and vocal in publicly fighting
this assault on American liberty.
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