The
Bipartisan War on Medical Liberty
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
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These days
it sometimes seems like a foregone conclusion that we’re going to
have socialized healthcare in this country. This is quite a tragedy
to contemplate.
America, for
all its militarism and prisons, has had one sector where there has
remained more room for freedom and less for bureaucratic power than
can be seen in other Western nations: the healthcare industry. Some
of these nations are much less cruel to foreigners and much less
draconian with prisoners and outcasts, including those guilty only
of victimless crimes. But there are some ways in which America still
scores some major libertarian points over Canada and Sweden, and
one of the most significant is that the US has not nationalized
its healthcare sector. So for years after young Americans stopped
fleeing to Canada to escape military slavery, Canadians have fled
to America to avoid socialist medicine and rationing and pay cash
to get operations they needed.
The conservatives
have for decades rightly warned about socialized healthcare in America.
It was a big goal of the communists, then the socialists, then the
social democrats. Now it seems like a centrist policy goal.
National healthcare
along with global warming was the progressive left’s biggest issue,
perhaps, before 9/11 forced them into their more libertarian stands
on war and civil liberties. But they still want socialized medicine
bad, as is apparent whenever you hear them defend practically any
foreign government, no matter how dictatorial, so long as it finances
clinics and penicillin for its subjects. The left still seems to
oppose capitalism in healthcare more vociferously than in nearly
any other area.
Not that America
currently has a free market in medicine. First off, there is licensing,
a horrible injustice by which the medical establishment protects
itself by forbidding free competition. Then there’re Medicare and
Medicaid, which constantly deplete supply and inflate demand. And
we must never forget the Food and Drug Administration, a corporatist
agency that distorts the market, imposes huge costs on drug production
and tramples the fundamental individual right to consume whatever
one wishes to. In so doing, it has kept live-saving drugs off the
market at the cost of many, many thousands of Americans dead.
America’s healthcare
system has long been a twisted hybrid between free enterprise and
fascism. The fascist part – the part that destroys individual choice
and empowers Big Pharma and the medical establishment – should be
the part that leftists decry, but instead they have for the most
part focused on our remaining medical freedom as the supposed ill.
They are correct when they say America spends more than some other
countries on healthcare, sometimes for less actual benefit to the
consumer than people get under more egalitarian socialist systems.
But this isn’t America’s free market at work; it’s America’s government.
The only solution is freedom.
In any event,
despite the many problems, there are pockets of medical liberty
we still have that others don’t, such as with the aforementioned
operations that attract Canadian refugees. We would lose most of
these remaining spheres of freedom if the left were to get its way.
The Republicans,
for their part, have not mounted an organized resistance to nationalizing
healthcare since gaining federal power. Far from it. With Bush’s
prescription drug program, Republicans saddled us with the largest
expansion of medical socialism at the national level since the introduction
of Medicare. In his last State of the Union, Bush did say some free-market-sounding
stuff about tax deductions and health savings accounts – but he
also alluded to something quite frightening: He wants the feds to
dole out money to states that come up with programs to give free
health insurance to the poor. This comes, perhaps not coincidentally,
within weeks of Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposal
for socialized health insurance for the poor in California, and
to make it illegal not to have health insurance in the state. This
medical despotism is a grave, horrific assault on the fundamental
rights over one’s personal life.
Unfortunately,
the masses, generally more favorable to the market on other issues,
have been duped by nonsensical arguments that healthcare prices
are bound to rise steadily in a market economy, and only the government
can fix the problem. Supposedly, technology and new innovations
make rising costs inevitable – and yet in every other sector not
so strangled by regulation, we see real prices drop and ever-increasing
quality. Troublingly, the masses don’t see how much of a role government
has played in ruining healthcare.
Somehow, the
left’s healthcare agenda, which was seen as subversively collectivist
and pinko fifteen years ago, has now become a popular priority and
something top Republicans can talk openly about implementing over
time. Indeed, the Republicans have already been giving us all the
worst of Hillary-care, one piece at a time, and are poised to do
more through "market-reform" gimmicks and with the state
governments as proxies, along with some extra gigantic programs
to protect the profits of their friends in the medical industry.
When you think
about it, we shouldn’t have expected medical freedom from the Republicans.
How could conservative drug warriors, for example, really be enemies
of the FDA? Take away the FDA’s power to nationalize choices of
what medicines and drugs one can consume, and the drug war disappears.
Give the feds this kind of awesome power, and fascist or socialist
medicine can’t be too far away.
Leftists, on
the other hand, have long been either clueless or disingenuous on
these issues. They have called for more regulation of herbal supplements
and alternative medicine, naïvely thinking that anything worth promoting
is worth getting the federal government interested in. They defend
the FDA not realizing it is the twin of the DEA, as well as the
great ally of the established pharmaceutical companies. Most hypocritically
and unrealistically, the left claims to want freedom over their
bodies even as they don’t want the responsibility of taking care
of them.
So the mainstream
Republicans, almost all Democrats, and the ideological left are
horrible on healthcare issues. Most moderates support moving toward
more centralized control. We appear to be doomed for the short term
on this issue.
It is a supreme
tragedy that America might lose what’s left of its medical freedom.
It would be one of our greatest domestic losses in some time.
What’s more,
if the US government becomes adamant enough, it could even use imperialism
to spread its version of "healthcare freedom and democracy"
around the world. Just as it has tried to push US labor regulations,
US disability regulations, and, indeed, pharmaceutical regulations
on the rest of the world, perhaps the US will become even more internationally
belligerent in regard to the global democratic revolution of socialized
medicine. A right to healthcare already made it into the US-approved
Iraqi Constitution. The US already pressures virtually every other
major country to accept its policy on drugs and pharmaceuticals
– "regulatory harmonization" is the imperialist euphemism.
And what if the US begins forbidding Americans from going abroad,
such as to Thailand, as many of them already do, to get medical
services less encumbered by paperwork and thus cheaper? What if
the US tries to impose its hospital and licensing regulations on
these other countries? What if socialized medicine is indeed a goal
of world government, as the 1990s rightwing feared, and yet it will
be implemented not by the men in blue helmets, but by soldiers donning
Old Glory?
There are a
million reasons we should have medical freedom, and they must be
articulated if we are to avoid a disaster in the next several years.
Libertarians must go beyond what we often hear from free-market
wonks: the usual denial that there’s anything wrong at all with
the system, as if it’s already a free market, and the usual defenses
of the largest pharmaceutical companies as the most persecuted minority,
what with its inflated, FDA-protected, federal-patent-ensured mega-profits
under attack. We must mount a principled, radical and informed intellectual
assault on the fascist and socialist threats to medical liberty
if we are to restore it or even defend what’s left of it.
The economics
should speak for itself, but the right to control one’s own life
and body is the core, moral argument for medical freedom. Life and
death are intimately involved with the healthcare issue as with
few others. Unfortunately, for the time being, it appears that creeping
healthcare totalitarianism is on the agenda of both parties. They
only disagree on how fast to run us off the cliff, and who should
navigate us there.
January
31, 2007
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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