Making
Sense
by
Robert Klassen
Life
generally made sense to me when I was growing up. We plowed the
fields, planted the seed, and harvested the grain. We planted fruit
trees, trimmed them, sprayed them, and harvested the fruit. We fed
the cows and chickens and we got milk and eggs and meat in return.
It made sense.
There
was a large factory in town that built agricultural machinery. Steel
was shipped in by train from the mills and then transformed into
harvesters and hay balers and mowers and tractors. Most of the town’s
population worked there. I watched the long trainloads of shiny
new machines shipped out to farmers all over the country. It made
sense.
But
some things didn’t make sense. Government quotas and price supports
on crops were first on my list of nonsense, with taxes running a
close second. My dad was smart enough to figure out which crops
to raise for cash, but he was only allowed to raise so much. I could
see that this tilted the market in favor of somebody else, though
I didn’t know who. I viewed taxes as just plain theft; why should
we have to pay the county for the right to own and work the farm?
I
got part of the answer to that question one summer when the bee
inspector came around. We kept several hives of bees in different
locations so they would pollinate the fruit trees and the crops
and so we could gather their honey. Any beekeeper knows when his
hive is sick, so I didn’t know why the hives had to be inspected
by a stranger, but every year the man showed up. Finally, one year,
I noticed the county sticker on his car. I had met my first bureaucrat.
That
was fifty years ago. Life stopped making sense to me shortly thereafter.
Whereas I firmly believed that in order to get something useful,
like money, a person had to do something useful, like work, I began
to learn that a person could get something useful without doing
anything useful at all. But early impressions are hard to shake.
I
started working in a 200 bed hospital while I was in college in
1963. I was hired by the hospital administrator, who was also the
director of nursing and the purchasing agent (she shared an office
with the accountant). I did the job, I got paid. I understood that
my income derived from fees charged by the hospital to patients
who used the service; they either paid directly or their insurance
paid for them.
When
Medicare went into effect in 1965 the hospital business immediately
doubled and the administrative staff quadrupled. I understood that
my income still derived from fees for service, though much of it
now came from Medicare taxes.
Administrative
staff in hospitals never stopped growing and new hospitals went
up everywhere, financed on government-backed, that is tax-backed,
loans. Medicare contractors, the insurance companies, expanded their
bureaucracies as well. By 1985 the system was bankrupt, so Congress
changed Medicare. No more fee for service. Where was my income coming
from now?
The
Medicare Reform Act of 1985 eliminated payment for my profession’s
services and my profession went from being a major money-maker for
hospitals to being a major money-loser for hospitals. Medicare pays
for nothing that I do, but Medicare still requires hospitals to
employ my profession. What does that make me? A working welfare
recipient?
Socialized
medicine doesn’t make sense, but then neither does Social Security
or the Patriot Act or American Imperialism. Nothing emanating from
the District of Criminals makes sense, unless you happen to be one
of them. Their tentacles spread everywhere, into every business
and into our personal lives, stealing our privacy and our dignity,
as well as our money. They threaten us and they spy on us, then
they tell us to spy on each other. It doesn’t make sense.
I
wish I’d run that bee inspector off the farm when the world still
made sense to me. Maybe it would still make sense today.
July
25, 2002
Robert
Klassen [send him mail] is
a medical technician and writer. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2002 Robert Klassen
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