Because Bush Loves the Children(s)
In a widely expected move, President Bush last week vetoed a bill that would have expanded government health coverage for children without insurance. The bill would have more-than doubled the funding (and presumably the number of children the program would be able to help) over a 5-year period and the expansion in the program would have been funded entirely by a 65-cent (per pack) cigarette-tax hike.
I'm sure at least a few smokers would be upset about this, but when I saw Bush on National television saying this was the first step towards implementing a national healthcare system I momentarily thought he was saying, "This bill is a good thing". Silly me, to forget that Bush backs big-business and a national healthcare system would mean fewer political handouts from drug and insurance companies.
Of course, much of the American public has been brainwashed over the issue of National Healthcare for decades. Let the record show that Canada's healthcare system, which is by no means perfect, costs half of what Americans pay, and despite the flaws in the system Canadians still manage to live several years longer than the average U.S. citizen.
The truth of the matter is that the U.S. method of healthcare means that the LESS care an insurance company covers, the MORE profit it can pass along to its executives and shareholders. To me, it does not seem morally correct that a company should profit from NOT saving someone's life, but that's the way the U.S. system works.
Turn that into a government-run system and then whatever the bureaucratic drawbacks, you are at least eliminating the need to pay profits to shareholders and the executives running the program aren't making $10 million salaries with millions more in stock options and perks. THAT is why the Canadian's healthcare costs half of what ours does.
And I think the Doctors themselves, many of whom have traditionally stood against the idea of nationalized healthcare, are starting to realize that they're being squeezed to death by insurance companies anyway. Public companies are expected (unrealistically) each year to post larger profits than the last. Insurance companies have been squeezing on all fronts: Reducing their (low-level) employees salaries and benefits, Increasing their clients rates and (simultaneously) the list of reasons they can deny a claim, and reducing the dollar amounts they will pay out to the doctors providing the services.
These companies cannot continue on like this indefinitely, and if they do it will be all of us (who don't own their stock) who suffer, doctors included. But while Hillary takes her handouts from the healtcare industry and pushes her weak plan for national healthcare, Bush stands up strong for his belief that National Healthcare is bad in every form, and that taxing a pack of cigarettes so that a child might live is wrong for this country.
Mr. Bush may be "Dead Certain" that he is sending our children the right message, but I hope they see it for what it is, because as Bush himself pointed out a couple of weeks ago in New York, the "childrens do learn".
- one











